Tag: Nigeria newspaper

  • Police not after me, says Lagos NURTW chieftain

    A chieftain of the National Union of Road and Transport Workers (NURTW) in Lagos State, Mustapha Adekunle a.k.a Sego on Friday denied being wanted by the police for any crime.

    He said he had no link with a recent attack on the new chairman of NURTW in Lagos State, Alhaji Musiliu Akinsanya aka MC Oluomo who was stabbed in the neck during a rally organized by the All Progressive’ Congress(APC).

    Adekunle said some people orchestrated false news to discredit him following his recent appointment into the state executive council of NURTW.

    Read Also: NURTW crisis: MC Oluomo, predecessor settle rift

    “The news that I am being wanted by the police is fallacious and misleading. First, let me make it clear here that, I am not on the wanted list of the police. The issue they were referring to was the violence which occurred at an APC rally in which myself and Alhaji MC Oluomo were the targets of the aggressors. This issue was reported to the police by those who actually masterminded the attack with a view to implicate me. The police instead of carrying out due investigation on the matter decided to take side with the mastermind of the crisis.

    “They went over board to declare me wanted for an offence I never committed. Because of this, I confronted the police to clear my name. Alhaji MC Oluomo who was the prime victim of the organised attack also testified to exonerate me of any wrong doing. The police, sensing that they had goofed on the matter tactically withdrew their statement against me. And since then, I have been going about my legitimate activities as a law abiding citizen.

    “It is funny to hear now that I am being wanted by the police. The question to ask those who are sponsoring the malicious story is that, why is such story coming up now that I am being made a member of the caretaker committee of Lagos NURTW? If i am being wanted, how come the Nigeria police have not arrested me all this while that I have been moving freely about and carrying out my business activities? At least, it is in the public knowledge that, I don’t live a fugitive life as i go out to attend social functions, business engagements and religious activities without any fear.

    “Anyway, I know this is the handiwork of my enemies within Lagos NURTW who are not happy about my appointment as a member of the caretaker committee of the union. They were the ones who sponsored the malicious story,’’ he added.

  • Why do men prefer fair-skinned ladies to the dark-skinned?

    Omo pupa o, omo pupa lemi n fe, omo pupa o, jowo mo feran re o. Ti n ba de London, maa wa fowo oko ranse, omo pupa o, jowo mo feran re o (Oh! Fair-skinned lady, I am in love with fair-skinned lady and when I travel to London, I will send flight fare to the fair-skinned lady I love).

    History has shown that black people with lighter skin were treated better. The above popular number from the highlife maestro, Victor Olaiya, gives credence to this fact.

    In the days of slavery, the dark-skinned blacks worked on the fields while light-skinned blacks worked in the houses. Hence, the terms, field Negroes and house Negroes. It got so bad that not only did the slave owners, who were often responsible for the higher shade of brown slaves give lighter-skinned blacks more respect, but so did the dark-skinned blacks. This evolved into generations of blacks both consciously and subconsciously teaching themselves that one is better than the other which eventually led to billions of naira being made in fake or artificial hair industry.

    Obviously this, by every standard, is a very sensitive subject, but I need to get it off my mind because I have secretly nursed this thought in my head for long. I have always wondered why men prefer fair-skinned ladies to us, the dark-skinned. Just to buttress my view, I have met and known ladies who were once dark-skinned and suddenly became fair-skinned. They would spend fortune just to lighten their skins. Some even go overboard and become too light for their own good.

    From toning a bit, they graduate to full-blown bleaching; and when this cannot be maintained due to the huge financial implications attached, their skins become damaged and they end up with rashes different coloured skins all in an individual. Do the men even know the trouble some women take just to meet up with their expectations?

    Don’t get me wrong. I have nothing against my fair-skinned sisters and friends. As a matter of fact, my childhood friends, Ayisat and Helen Egume, now in Abuja are all fair-skinned and we have been friends like for ever. We are closer than ever. At the risk of sounding a little jealous, even way back when we were in school, they had all the toasters in the world. For every 10 men that made passes at them, I had only one. Haba! Is it a crime to be dark-skinned? Must all of us be fair-skinned at all cost?

    After I had managed to put my school experiences behind me, I met and fell in love with my man. My man is dark-skinned like me, and we were just fine with each other. Until their office recruited a tall and fair-skinned lady to work directly with him, it is was fine by me because I knew that my man needed an experienced assistant who would help reduce his workload. Before his chairman recruited the lady in question, we actually discussed it over lunch one day and I was like, why not?

    When I ran into this lady, her beauty struck me. You know, for a lady, she was on the tall side, light-skinned, I am sorry, did I say she was light-skinned? No! I mean, she was dangerously fair-skinned! O’boy, I became uneasy with the realisation that they had to work and tour almost half of the country together, alone for that matter. It, therefore, came as little or no surprise to me when it filtered into my ears that they were having an… no I mean they were becoming too close for comfort. Without wasting much time, I did a quick check with my pastor and after ceaseless praying and fasting sessions, my bobo is safe back into my hands. But I tell you the truth, I almost lost him to that African oyibo.

    Anyway, the bitter truth is that research has shown that 70 percent of men would rather go for fair-skinned ladies rather than dark-skinned ones. Perhaps, it is because they are more notifiable or perhaps it is because the men want their kids to also be fair-skinned. I don’t know, I am not a man, but I do know that they go for them before they come for us. I once worked for a boss who swore never to date a skinny or slim lady. He said to me that no matter how pretty a lady is, he would never approach her for anything unless she is on the fleshy side.

    Jokingly, we asked him to consider a situation where he was trapped with a slim lady on an isolated island. Again, he said never, he would not go for her. For him, to win his heart, a lady must have lots and lots of flesh on those bones. Thereafter, we had a client we had to handle a brief for, and the client had a very slim, very pretty and yes, very fair-skinned daughter. Before we could say Alhaji! Our boss found himself spending hours conversing with this lady.

    I don’t know how his fiancé then now his wife, got wind of it and to prove to his finace that he had nothing to do with our clients daughter, he brought her to formally introduce to the lady. After the introductions and exchange of pleasantries, they decided to call it a day and drove home. What jolted my boss to reality was when he asked his finacee what she thought of his platonic friendship with the lady, the finacee said: “Alhaji forget this lady, I know say she dey lim side, but this one yellow o”.

    Need I say more?

  • Two ministers suspected as moles in $9.6bn P&ID judgment debt

    Insinuations in some quarters that the $9.6bn damages secured by P&ID against the federal government in respect of the latter’s purported failure to honour a contractual agreement it had with the former was arranged by some interests to defraud the government may not be far from the truth if feelers from the inner circles of the Presidential Villa are anything to go by.

    Sentry gathered during the week that some suspected moles in the President’s cabinet are urging the federal government to pay the $9.6bn ordered by the courts for purportedly breaching its contractual agreement with the Irish firm.

    At a session held in Aso Rock between President Buhari and some members of his cabinet on how to tackle the debt overhang, two ministers suspected to be serving other interests were said to have been adamant that the Federal Government should initiate “necessary action” to pay the foreign company the sum specified by the courts.

    The ministers in question were even said to have recommended two people who should meet with the representatives of P&ID to negotiate the terms for the payment of the debt.

    But President Buhari was said to have put his foot down, saying that the federal government was prepared for a fight to the finish with P&ID on the matter.

    The President’s declaration of his resolve was said to have put the two ministers in very uncomfortable positions and they are now doing everything they can to regain the President’s confidence.

  • Immigration Service intercepts 32 illegal migrants in Niger

    The Niger state command of the Nigeria Immigration Service has intercepted 32 illegal Migrants in Niger state.

    The migrants who are mostly Nigeriens and Malians had sneaked into the country through illegal routes, the Comptroller, Mamman Ango disclosed.

    According to him, the arrest was made in a bid to secure the country’s border and bring an end to illegal crossing by migrants.

    Ango said that the migrants were between the ages of 12 to 35 and were interrupted in Kontagora adding that when interrogated confessed that they were heading to Lagos in search of greener pastures.

    He said that the illegal migrants were created by the Joint Border Operation Drill codenamed “Ex-Swift Response” which comprised of men of the Immigration Service, Nigeria Customs Service, and Police.

    “Sector 3 of the Joint Border Operation Drill located in Kontagora axis intercepted the migrants who are all males and brought them this morning to the command.

    “We have profiled them and ascertained the nationality of each of them for immediate repatriation back to their respective countries.”

    The Comptroller further said that two 18-seaters buses are being ready to transport the migrants to Kamba Control Post in Kebbi state stating that from there, they would be handed over to the representatives of their respective countries.

    Ango then said that the Immigration Service has no problem with anyone coming into the country in search of greener pasture but stated that they need to go through the right channel and procedures of entering the country.

    He called for cooperation from the public to avail the Immigration Service and other security agencies with useful information to ensure the end is seen of illegal migration into Niger state.

  • Man hangs self over wife’s alleged infidelity

    A man has taken his life in Lagos after finding out that his wife of over  12 years  was cheating on him.

    The body of the middle age furniture maker, Abiodun Tijani was found dangling from the ceiling of his one room apartment at 1, Abeokuta Street in Alagbado area of Lagos  penultimate Tuesday.

    Sources said Tijani decided to end it all when he suspected that his wife was  indulging in extra-marital affairs.

    The Nation gathered that the deceased was residing in Abeokuta, Ogun State, until he recently relocated to Lagos to join his wife who had been living in the house for nine years now.

    Residents described him as an easy going man who ran his furniture workshop around the AIT Road in the area.

    A source said: ‘’His wife moved into this building about nine years ago and she is a quiet woman.

    Read Also: Man threatens suicide over father’s unpaid gratuity

    “The man (Tijani) used to live in Abeokuta, Ogun State, until he joined his wife here about a year ago. The couple is blessed with a 12-year-old boy, called Wasiu

    “Although the man was unassuming , he had been feuding with his wife who sells soft drinks and grocery at the  old toll gate in Ota.”

    Wasiu, , the only child of the deceased, recalled how his father tricked him out of the house on the fateful before taking his own life.

    He said: “ He went out the day before the incident and returned home the following  morning.

    “By then my mother had gone out; he gave me money to go to a barber’s shop to cut my hair. By the time I returned home I met him dangling from the ceiling.

    “He didn’t share his problems with me and I wouldn’t know what could have led him to commit suicide. He lost his father several years ago but his aged mother is still alive. He hailed from  Ago Ika, Abeokuta.’’

    The incident was reported to the Alagbado Police Station, while men of the station assisted in evacuating Tijani’s body from the scene.

  • Court remands ‘okada’ rider in prison custody for throwing baby into river

    A Chief Magistrates’ Court in Minna has ordered that a 20-year-old commercial motorcyclist popularly called ‘Okada’ rider, Mustapha Aliyu be remanded in prison custody for throwing his three-month-old baby boy into a river.

    Aliyu is standing trial on a charge of culpable homicide contrary to Section 221 of the Penal Code.

    The prosecutor, ASP Daniel Ikwoche, told the court that Amina Zakaria, the   mother of the baby had reported the matter to the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) on Sept. 8.

    Ikwoche said that the complainant of Keranbadi village in Borgu Local Government Area of Niger alleged that she had the baby for the defendant out of wedlock.

    Read Also: Okada operator beats wife to death for refusing to breastfeed baby

    The prosecutor said that the complainant alleged that the defendant had visited her at about 9:30p.m., on Sept. 7 and took the baby away.

    Ikwoche said that the defendant took the child to his own village, Tamanai.

    There, he threw the baby into a river where he eventually drowned, the prosecutor said.

    When the charge was read to the defendant, he pleaded guilty and begged the court for leniency.

    Chief Magistrate Hauwa Yusuf, however, declined to take his plea, saying that the court lacked jurisdiction to hear the matter.

    Yusuf directed the prosecuting police officer to forward a duplicate copy of the case file to the State Director of Public Prosecution, (DPPs) for legal advice.

    She, thereafter, adjourned the case until Oct. 10 for further mention.

  • Nurturing the Sino-Nigerian Friendship: The Sam Maduka Onyishi’s way

    To the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Peace Mass Transit Ltd, Chief Samuel Maduka Onyishi, awards and recognitions have become a common thing. Make no mistake -they don’t come cheap by any means. But since he has distinguished himself and business in an indigenous way, these rewards always come his way.
    On a daily basis, Dr Onyishi, a minister of the gospel of Jesus Christ, does various kinds of philanthropic acts. For some of these acts, he hardly keeps track of them all.
    He was once quoted as saying, “Whatever act of kindness or philanthropy I do is between me and my God. I don’t do them to get any special praise or recognition from anybody or government. “Let the beneficiaries tell their own story.”
    Indeed, as foretold, the beneficiaries are “telling their own stories,” by themselves, as evidenced by the recent award by the Chinese Alumni Association of Nigeria, on Chief Onyishi as “Outstanding Nigerian Advocate on China/Nigeria Relations.”
    The recognition is part of the “October 1st Awards”, for the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China, and Nigeria’s 59th Independence anniversary.
    The Peace Mass Transit founder Onyishi has been at the forefront of the Nigeria-China relations with business connections and investments, dating back to nearly three decades. Remarkably, his involvement with China isn’t all about business: In 2009, he sponsored five Nigerians to China on fully paid undergraduate scholarship. All of them are back after graduation and are in different spheres of life, promoting Chinese language and Sino-Nigeria relations in general.
    Dr Onyishi’s citation read at the “October 1st Awards,” highlighted some of his investments in, and association with Chinese blue-chip companies, including Foton Motor Corporation, Tianji Meiya Automobile Vehicle Company and Xiamen Kinglong Automobile Motors.
    The award, which came with cash, was presented to him by the Chinese Language Coordinator at the Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti, Ejemezu Charles. Charles is one of the members of the pioneer team that benefited from Dr Onyishi’s scholarship.
    Everything being equal, for Dr Onyishi and Peace Mass Transit Ltd, these awards are not about to dry up.
  • Our raw deal with killer soldiers in Taraba

    Two of the five operatives of the Inspector General of Police Intelligence Response Team (IRT), Inspector Sanni Abib a.k.a. Osha and his team member, Abu Yunus, have revealed how they managed to escape from the IRT operation vehicle in Ibi town, Taraba State when soldiers allegedly rained bullets on the vehicle in a bid to rescue the millionaire kidnap kingpin, Hamisu Bala Wadume.

    The IRT operatives had captured Wadume and were conveying him from Ibi to the police headquarters in Jalingo when some soldiers attacked their vehicle, killing three police officers and one civilian while they also left other occupants of the vehicle with bullet wounds, after which they unshackled Wadume and set him free.

    Narrating how he managed to escape being shot dead by the soldiers allegedly on a mission to rescue Wadume, who was believed to be very close to some of the soldiers, one of the lucky survivors of the attack, Inspector Abib, said: “I am the team leader of the IRT operatives who went to Ibi, Taraba State to arrest the kidnap kingpin Wadume. I was face to face with death but I conquered by the grace of God Almighty.

    “We had first gone to Jalingo, Kari Area Command to process our documents, after which we went to Ibi Police Station and booked our movement. There is only one road that leads into Ibi town, and it is the same road one must take to get out of it.

    “There are also three checkpoints on the road. The first is manned by soldiers. The second is manned by mobile police officers while the third checkpoint is also manned by soldiers. It means that if you are entering Ibi, the first checkpoint you see is one manned by soldiers. And if you are leaving the town, the first checkpoint you see is soldiers’ checkpoint. There is a gap of two to three kilometres between the checkpoints.

    “When we arrested the kidnap suspect Wadume, we handcuffed him and also chained his legs, put him inside our IRT operation vehicle and started our journey back to the police headquarters when the soldiers started attacking us.

    “At the time we left Ibi town and were about to cross the three checkpoints, we did not expect that the soldiers would attack us. So, it was a big surprise, because they were aware of our official movement and our mission.

    “On our way into the town, we got to the first checkpoint manned by soldiers and they passed us. The second checkpoint manned by mobile police officers passed us and the third one manned by soldiers also passed us.

    “After due documentation, we went and arrested Wadume. And as we headed back to the police headquarters, we passed the first army checkpoint and the second checkpoint manned by mobile policemen. But as we were getting near the last army checkpoint, we noticed that one Picnic vehicle was following us, and at a point, they started firing at our vehicle.

    “We were all the more surprised when we noticed that the occupants of the vehicle were soldiers. And as we were still wondering about the attack by soldiers in a Picnic vehicle, another vehicle, a Hilux GPMP with soldiers carrying machine guns, overtook the Picnic vehicle and started firing at our vehicle.

    “The way they sprayed bullets made our vehicle to summersault three or four times. To get out of our bullet-riddled vehicle which had tumbled, I had to use my leg to break the window glass. Seeing that the soldiers had not stopped firing, I crawled some distance before I dashed into a nearby bush. But on noticing that about three soldiers were pursuing us and firing at the same time, I jumped into a river and remained in it for about 30 minutes. When they could not see me, they went back to their checkpoint with their AK47 rifles and I came out of the river and continued my escape bid.

    “I walked carefully through the bush, knowing that it could contain various traps and dangerous snakes.

    “When I got to Ibi Police Station, I heaved a sigh of safety, then I fell down any fainted. When I rediscovered myself, I discovered that I had bullets brushes on my right leg and in the back. The officers at the police station rushed me to the general hospital in Ibi for medical attention.

    “It was at the hospital that I met my other colleagues who had also escaped from the bloody scene. That was where I saw Mark being operated upon to remove the bullets the soldiers had pumped into his tummy. I also met Mathias with bullet wounds on his right leg. I stayed in the hospital for five days before I was discharged and I went to Ibi Police Station from where we finally left.”

    Abib described the death of his colleague, Mark, in the hospital as a particularly painful experience, saying that he wept profusely when he saw the deceased colleague’s condition before he eventually gave up the ghost.

    Another survivor, Abu Yanusa, described his escape as sheer miracle.

    “My survival was a miracle. The way the soldiers were firing made me to think that the bullets got me. But to God be the glory, there was no fatal wound when I got to the general hospital,” he said.

    Asked how he managed to escape, he said: “It was the team leader that showed us the way when he used his leg to break the vehicle’s window glass. When he jumped out, I followed him. Even when he was crawling I followed suit. Because of persistent firing by the soldiers, crawling was the only safe way to get away from the scene as fast as possible.

    “However, when we noticed that about three soldiers were pursuing us fully armed with AK47 and firing indiscriminately, we ran in different directions. As for me, I ran in the direction where I could quickly get to the main road. But my mind skipped a beat when I saw some natives with machetes and clubs advancing aggressively towards me. They surrounded me and asked me to identify myself, and I did so immediately.

    “I told them how we came to arrest the suspect Wadume and how the army came to rescue him and how they fired our vehicle and wanted to kill all of us, hence our decision to run in order to save our lives.

    “After explaining to them, they believed me. They said they knew Wadume as a notorious kidnapper.

    They asked where I was going and told them that I was going to the area command, and they followed me down to the area. When we got to a point a few meters to the area command office, they pointed at the place and went back.

    “From the Area Command, I was taken to the hospital where I met my team leader, Inspector Abib and others who had escaped. I also saw Mark who they were operating on as a result of the bullets in his tummy.”

    The suspected kidnapper, Hamisu Bala Wadume, had confessed his murderous escape from the grip of the operatives of Intelligence Response Team on August 6 in  Ibi, Taraba State. Speaking in Hausa language, Wadume said he escaped from the custody of IRT operatives when they came under attack from soldiers attached to Battalion 93, Takum, Taraba State, as they conveyed him from the scene of his arrest.

    The Army later explained that the soldiers attacked the IRT operatives because they mistook them for criminals, following a distress call they had received. In the said attack, three policemen and a civilian were killed, while five other operatives sustained injuries.

    Wadume was, however, re-arrested on the eve of Monday, August 19, as revealed by the Force Public Relations Officer, Mr. Frank Mba, a Deputy Commissioner of Police.

    In his confessions, Wadume, virtually implicated soldiers at the Battalion 93, Takum, Taraba State over his escape from the IRT custody. He said the soldiers were the ones who set him free by cutting his leg chains and handcuffs at an army base and he went home a free man before he was rearrested by IRT operatives in Kano.

    The kidnap suspect, who was alleged to have received millions of naira as ransom from his victims, had confessed thus:  “My name is Hamisu Bala Wadume. The police came to arrest me. When they arrested me, the army chased after them and opened fire. From there, they (soldiers) took me to their headquarters, and cut off my handcuffs. I went back to my house and the police came to re-arrest me.”

    Preliminary investigation reportedly revealed that the suspected kidnap kingpin and the Divisional Crime Police Officer in Ibi community had exchanged 200 calls.

    However, it is still not clear when the army authority will release the findings of the panel they appointed to look into the matter towards proper trial of those indicted in the ugly incident.

  • Legality, politics and justice

    The  dismissal  of the  2019   Presidential  election petition  of by the Election Tribunal in Nigeria this week,  together  with the allegation in   the   UK  that the British PM  Boris  Johnson lied to the Queen  in getting her consent to prorogate  Parliament,  provide  food for thought today. We  shall  look  at these two  issues in the light of  the statement that the law  can  be  an  ass  at times and also  wonder  aloud   how   legal  erudition can   somewhat   turn to  buffoonery given  the reasons that eminent lawyers pursue in open court to  advance their clients cases and interests. We    also  take a peep  at how the US President Donald  Trump is using  the US Supreme  Court as a’ weapon’ to  advance his policies on immigration  in the  American   presidential   system of  politics.

    These  events throw  up  the issues of legitimacy, legality, the rule of  law and the pursuit  of justice in any  political  system  and are  not peculiar  to Nigeria, the UK  and the US. On  each  scenario  however we shall  highlight what  we deem to  be  the mood,  guiding  principle  or motivation.  We  shall  therefore  as in Nigeria’s  case  ask    why the legal  luminaries that  represented the opposition PDP thought  that a presidential  candidate like the incumbent  Nigerian  president can  be disqualified on account of his educational  qualification given his background as an Army General  and someone who had  contested and lost elections for the same office four times in the past . In  Britain we shall see  the implications of mendacity  by  the PM for  Brexit  and the future of  the British  Parliamentary  system. In the US   we  examine  the rancorous  cowboy  politics of  the US President in filling the US Supreme Court with crony  judges  who  give him legal  backing for  his political  agenda and see  how that is affecting US politics consequently. Let me now  dilate  broadly  on these highlighted  situations  in the three nations.

    Of all  the five grounds of  appeal,  by the  PDP  dismissed  by the Election tribunal   it  is the educational qualification that  I  found  most  interesting. How  it got  to be an  issue to disqualify  this particular  candidate  on this   ground  is  simply  unbelievable. It  happened before when legal  luminary GOK Ajayi   brought up  the issue of educational  qualification of former President Olusegun Obasanjo in the presidential  election he won  at the time. The  two  events are  similar  but  in the case of President Muhammadu  Buhari I  think it is a  provocative insult  and shows that  the lawyers  for Atiku lack  the erudition they  parade in not seeing the absurdity of a plea for  disqualification  on  lack  of requisite  qualification  of a candidate  who  went to NDA, became a general in the army, was a military  Head of State and had  contested election four times before and lost,  till  he won in 2015 and 2019.

    One  does not need the lengthy judgment that threw  out  the disqualification on account of education given by the tribunal  because simple  common  sense   showed  the buffoonery of  the plea. Indeed  the president deserved exemption from  educational qualification given his military service and the height he reached and not the disgrace of disqualification  based  on his   education  as his opposing   lawyers averred  at  the tribunal. This really  was a lesson in absurdity and a great  mistake  of seeking to make an ass  of the law. I  can recall what Agrippa the judge told Paul of Tarsus  in the bible, ‘Paul, Paul  thou  art mad, thine too  much  learning doth turneth  thee to  madness ‘Really  too much  erudition especially  in the law  can make  lawyers  fall  from the sublime to the ridiculous.

    In  the UK  the rule  of law  is facing   a huge test  over  Brexit  that  is bound  to task  Britain’s  monarchical  democracy  that has hitherto  served it so  brilliantly in providing political  stability. On  occasions like this one can recall  a statement on the beauty of the role of British  monarch  that says –‘ with the Queen in Buckingham Palace every  Briton sleeps well in his bed. ‘This  statement puts absolute trust  of the British in their  monarchy as a bastion of stability and security. Now  if a PM is adjudged  to  have lied to  the Queen, a  charge Boris Johnson  has denied, then  the British  people should have great  cause for  concern  about the workings of their Parliamentary  democracy. But  credibility  is an asset  that  Boris Johnson is losing fast  on Brexit .

    He  has promised that Britain will  leave the EU deal  or no deal by  October 31. But  Parliament last week passed a law prohibiting No  Deal and when asked if he would  implement that he said he would rather  be seen dead in a ditch . But then even though a court in England ruled his prorogation legal, another court in Scotland  has ruled otherwise noting judicially that his  prorogation  was to stymy Parliament and  a higher  court is expected to resolve the legality of the Prorogation presently. Already  the Speaker  who has said he would  leave his post by October 31 has vowed  that  Parliament will  not allow anyone to bypass the laws it has enacted on Brexit. There  is  no doubt  in my mind that Boris Johnson is  going to do  something nasty and illegal  while Parliament is on suspension . The  saying is quite apt here that while  the cat  is away mice would  pay.  Surely the British  PM  knows  his onions  on Brexit but he should be careful  that Brexit , deal or know deal, does not become his political hemlock.

    We  round up with US President Donald  Trump  who  had the backing of the US Supreme Court   this week  in his policy  of reducing the rate of immigration from named nations as well  as from Central  America through its neighbor Mexico. The  US Supreme Court  has ruled to allow  government  to severely limit the ability of migrants to ask  for asylum in the US once they  failed to do so in a transit nation before. Lower  courts have ruled against this before and stopped the Trump policy in its tracks to his  chagrin. Now that Trump  has majority of judges on the Supreme Court, who share his world views on many issues,  he is using the rule of law  to  have his way. While some may accuse him of subverting the   checks  and balances inherent in the   presidential   system  there are those  who  will say that separation of powers does not necessarily preclude symmetry between  the executive and legal  arms of a presidential  system  of  government.  Once again long live the Federal  Republic of Nigeria.

  • Landlord, son ‘beat female tenant to coma’ in Anambra

    A lady, Miss Ogochukwu Igwe, was allegedly beaten to coma by her landlord, identified as Obidike in Umudim Nnewi, Nnewi North Local Government Area of Anambra State.

    The victim, a hairdresser, was reportedly beaten up by the suspect, together with his son for asking them to stop using their vehicles to block her salon shop.

    The Nation gathered that trouble ensued when the landlord, on arrival to his house, parked his car in front of the salon, which resulted into a brawl.

    Speaking to newsmen on her hospital bed at Glory hospital and Maternity, the victim alleged that the landlord strangled her after hitting her with the drier in her salon.

    She said, “I pleaded with him to shift the car from blocking my shop but instead of yielding, the landlord told me to pack out of the shop and that he would deal with me when his son returned in the evening.

    “The son later arrived with his tipper, came with his father into my salon and used the drier in my salon to hit me.

    “He held me by the neck and tried to strangled me and I fell down unconscious. The next place I saw myself was at Glory hospital and Maternity,  Umudim Nnewi.”

    Read Also: Conductor charged with beating up policeman

    Ogochukwu said it was after she recovered that she saw a female police officer who introduced herself as Inspector Nneka, the investigating police  officer (IPO), from Central Police Station, Nnewi.

    “She took my statement and told me that Onyeka who beat and tried to strangled me has been arrested but that they were yet to arrest his father.

    “I later learnt that he was granted bail while his father has not been arrested,” she added.

    She appealed to the state commissioner of police, Mr John Abang, to come to her aid by ensuring that the suspects face the wrath of the law.

    The counsel to the victim, Mr Kanayo C. Muoneke, in a petition to the state Commissioner of Police, CP, Mr John Abang made available to newsmen, urged the CP to intervene, adding  that the victim had almost passed away if not for divine interventiom.

    “Presently, the victim can’t conviniently eat because of the injuries sustained and the suspects are celebrating the victim’s fate,” he said.