Tag: Nigeria

  • ‘Ex-footballer’ arrested for dealing in drugs

    A man who claimed to have played for Shooting Star Football Club, Oyo State has been arrested by the police in Imo State for unlawful possession of cocaine.

    28-year-old Aidomoaki Samson was arrested on September 30 at Aleke Hotel, Nekede, Imo State alongside with his girlfriend, Ezinne Iwuagwu who he contracts to send text messages in pretence as his sister overseas.

    Upon interrogation, he confessed at the State Command headquarters that he was an ex-footballer barred from playing football due to drug related offence.

    Read Also: Police arrest one-eyed man over serial murder of 15 people in Ogun

    Police Commissioner Rabiu Ladodo said while parading them that the suspect claimed he was based in Benin Republic and Ghana.

    “He impersonates as a national of Ghana while investigation has revealed that he is from Edo State, Nigeria,” he stated.

    The Police boss said that the suspect deals with hard drugs in several countries like Uganda, Addis Ababa, Turkey, Ghana, Morocco, Colombia and then Nigeria.

    “His syndicate member one Mr. Eric in Italy disappointed him in Nigeria hence he then started the manufacturing of fake hard drugs with the intention to dupe and defraud people,” he alleged.

  • Analysis: Boko Haram, prayers, indoctrination and science

    In recent times, two individuals dominated public discourse pertaining to the war by other means against Boko Haram: Lt. General Tukur Buratai, Chief of Army Staff and Governor Babagana Zulum of Borno State. They advocated the involvement of Muslim clerics in the war against Boko Haram. While the Borno Governor believes that with prayer, God could deploy Angel Gabriel and the hosts of heaven to smoke the insurgents out of their holes, Buratai’s position tilts more towards the pre-emptive approach of ideology or indoctrination.
    The two men will be ranked in history along with men like Sun Tzu, author of Art of War and Carl von Clausewitz, a Prussian general and military theorist who wrote the classic, On War. While Clausewitz argued that war “is the continuation of politics by other means,” Buratai and Zulum also advocated that religion is a continuation of war by other means!
    Let us start with the latest. On 6 October Governor Babagana Zulum of Borno State engaged 30 clerics from Saudi Arabia to pray over the insurgency in the North East, especially, Borno the epicentre. Zulum, a professor of Soil and Water Engineering at the University of Maiduguri before he became governor, according to The Punch, interacted with the devotees on 5 October at the Ka’aba, the Islamic holiest place located inside the grand Al-Haram mosque in Makkah, expressing gratitude and seeking continued prayers.
    He told the devotees: “Rather than sending anyone, I am here, on behalf of the good people of Borno. I thank you so much for your empathy and the compassion in devoting yourselves to prayer for us every day at the Ka’aba which, for us as Muslims, is the most sacred place. We need prayers more than ever before; we are handling our problem from different approaches. Prayer is key to everything that we seek. We will continue to seek prayers from many fronts. We will keep supporting our clerics of different faiths in Nigeria for prayers and we will seek the same from all of you that are always here around the holy Ka’aba. I beg you; continue to pray for us towards achieving three things: first, for us to regain peace in Borno State, the North and Nigeria in general. We will have to continue to pray on a permanent basis because we need peace to be sustained. Secondly; we need prayers for us to achieve our ambitious plan for Borno State; and lastly, for Allah to make us remain focused and not to get carried away by power.”
    In a statement signed by his image-maker, Isa Gusau,  Zulum signed the agreement with the selected persons “who are residents of Makkah, to permanently offer daily ‘Dawaf’ (circumambulation of the holy Ka’aba), to offer prayer for the return of sustained peace in Borno and the country.” He revealed that the men of God hailed variously from Borno, Katsina, Zamfara, Kano and parts of the northwest and they had been “spending hours at the Ka’aba daily for the purpose of worship.” One of them, as Gusau wrote in his press statement, had “been a Ka’aba devotee in the last 40 years.”
    Guasau wrote further: “The critical move is aimed to combine different approaches that include sustained support for the Nigerian Armed Forces, aggressive mass recruitment and equipping of more counter-insurgency volunteers into the Civilian Joint Task Force, hunters and vigilantes as well as socio-economic approach to enhance access to education, job opportunities and provide other means of livelihood through social protection initiatives.”
    Buratai, on the other hand, in a speech delivered on his behalf by Chief of Administration, Maj. Gen. Sani Yusuf on Monday, 30 October, submitted that insurgency cannot be stopped alone by the military “unless religious bodies and organisations in the country come to the forefront of the spiritual battle.”  It was at a spiritual warfare seminar at the Nigerian Army Resource Centre, with the theme, ‘Countering insurgency and violent extremism in Nigeria through spiritual warfare.’ However, Buratai advised Islamic and Christian clerics to join the fight “against terrorism and reorient the people against negative ideologies.”
    In his words: “It is easier to defeat Boko Haram and ISWAP terrorists than their ideology because while we degrade the terrorists and their havens, the narrative of the ideology grows the group. Therefore, communities, families and groups should join in the fight and narratives to reject and prevent the ideologies of the terrorists and extremist groups. Religious bodies and organisations in particular, which interface regularly with the grassroots, should be at the forefront of this spiritual battle and fashion out ways of stepping up their roles.
    “It is a well-known fact that terrorism and terrorist groups cannot be totally eliminated by mainly military actions. This means focusing our efforts on the underlying narratives through ideologies employed by these terrorists to lure innocent citizens into their fold. The need to defeat the ideologies of Boko Haram and ISWAP is based on the awareness that it is the ideologies that enhance their resources and help to recruit new fighters to their fold and as such, kill their ideology and the terrorist movement withers and dies.”
    Here is the difference between what Zulum and Buratai stood for. While the former advocated contemplative meditation and prayers, the Army Chief wanted clerics to target the area of ideology or indoctrination. Buratai’s position sounds more plausible for many reasons. The heart is from where every act originates and it is what comes out of the abundance of that organ that defines a man. That is why a man can be brainwashed to tie a bomb on his own body, go to a market place and blow himself and innocent persons into smithereens, his boldness made possible by the reward of heavenly bliss, complemented with beautiful virgins!
    How the heart of man can be twisted this way happens from a child’s school impressionable age. An adult’s mind can become skewed too with the type of sermons or messages or religious books and exegeses he reads. Government, as I wrote on this platform in an article, Our National Pride, published on Wednesday, 21 May 2014, government at all levels has to do something decisive about the social condition that threw up Abubakar Shekau: poverty and the right education. Two examples will suffice here, one real, the other fictional.
    On education, whether it is Western or Arabic, I wrote that it could be misdirected as was the case in the formative years of Osama bin Laden, the late leader of al-Qaeda, the international terror group that operated from the Middle East but caused mayhem in far-flung places.
    ‘As a pupil of Al-Thagher Model School, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, young Osama was indoctrinated by his Physical Education teacher, a Syrian. It was a time when King Faisal of Saudi Arabia needed expatriate teachers and some of those Muslim Brotherhood members, driven into the four winds by President Gamel Abdel Nasser of Egypt, became useful. After school, the man would gather the pupils, in the name of sports, to recite the Quran and narrate some parts of the Hadith. Then the man would veer off tangent and delve into some stories that were not parts of the teachings of their religion. One of such narratives is entitled, “A Boy Who Found God”.’
    Steve Coll, in his New Yorker magazine piece, entitled “Young Osama”, wrote that there was this righteous and brave boy who wanted to please God. Since his father stood between him and quest for God, the teacher explained how the boy procured a bullet, loaded the gun, and made a plan. Strategically, the teacher would deliver the punch line: “Finally, the boy shot the father. Lord be praised.”
    The pupils’ eyes would now be as wide as saucers, and as I wrote earlier, the faces of young demons in the making! Such instances of indoctrination abound in the Middle East and they happen during the impressionist age of school pupils. This reminds me of a Palestinian teacher in one of Leon Uris’ novels (Hajj or Exodus, I am not sure now). In an Arithmetic class, he asks the pupils: “If a Palestinian kills five out of six Zionists, how many Zionists do you have left?” The children would chorus “five Zionists”. It was a subtle way of brewing anti-Jew hate in the minds of Palestinian kids. And it worked.
    I concluded that piece this way: ‘In Nigeria, therefore, it is not enough to build educational infrastructure. Parents and governments at all levels must monitor what teachers, pastor and Islamic clerics pack inside the brains of their wards in the western schools, churches and the various madrasas in the North. When you give all children (not only sons and daughters of emirs and chiefs) good education, you have provided a level playing field for wealth creation. Moreover, government should create more jobs to close the gap between the rich and poor.’
    It is my humble submission that those criticising Buratai are uncharitable; they should revisit the speech read on his behalf. The man acknowledged how strong ideology and religious doctrines could breed monsters and war mongers. Buratai did not say he would not be brutal against Boko Haram the way President Muhammadu Buhari (as he told this magazine in 1993), gave the Chadian rebel, Hissen Habre, “a bloody nose” when he invaded part of Nigeria’s terrotory.
  • Tribunal: Sokoto APC rejects ruling, heads for Appeal Court

    THE All Progressives Congress(APC) has rejected the tribunal ruling delivered against its Sokoto State Governorship candidate in the March 2019 General elections, Alhaji Ahmed Aliyu Sokoto.

    The party said it will end to the Appeal Court to further pursue justice, stating ” we believe that the judgment has turned justice on its head.”

    The Tribunal, which sat in Abuja, at its verdict, validated Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal’s reelection after dismissing the petition filed by APC’s guber candidate, Aliyu Sokoto challenging the victory of Tambuwal declared by INEC.

    In a statement on Thursday morning by APC Sokoto Chairman, Alhaji Sadiq Isah Achida, the party said: “In view of the unfair and unjustifiable ruling delivered by the Sokoto state Governorship Election Petition Tribunal, on Wednesday 2nd October, 2019 the party wishes to state categorically that it rejects the ruling.

    Read Also; Sokoto: Tribunal admits facts presented by APC’s Lead Counsel

    ” Our lawyers are studying details of the judgment , with a view to filing an appeal at the appropriate court of law.”

    “Meanwhile, the APC wishes to call on its teeming members across the state to remain calm and peaceful , while the party explored all available legal means to reclaim its stolen mandate.

    “We wish to thank all our members and electorates in the state for their continued support and loyalty . We remain committed to defending your interest at all times.”

  • Nigeria, South Africa to review 32 agreements

    The Presidency on Thursday disclosed that President Muhammadu Buhari’s three-day state visit to South Africa will enable more harmonious relations between the two largest economies in Africa.

    It said it will also open up more frontiers of opportunities for prosperity by encouraging more exchange and investments, especially for Nigerians.

    This was disclosed in a statement by the Senior Special Assistant to the President, Media and Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu.

    According to him, 32 agreements and Memorandum Of Understanding (MoU) signed at the Bi-National Commission and mutually beneficial to both nations, will get opportunity for progress review during the meeting.

    “President Buhari is on a state visit to South Africa. While in South Africa, the two leaders will review a number of issues in our Bi-National Commission, including issues that affect citizens,’’ he said.

    The Bi-National Commission meeting, he said, was elevated to the level of Presidents’ participation, following the strategic position of the two economies in Africa and need for stronger relations.

    According to him, President Buhari and his host, President Cyril Ramophosa, will co-chair the meeting on Thursday.

    Read Also; Buhari, others mourn NSCIA Deputy President General Babalola

    The statement said President Buhari had arrived in Pretoria, South Africa on Wednesday night for a state visit and 9th meeting of Bi-National Commission, which will for the first time witness participation of the two Heads of State after an elevation.

    “The President’s plane arrived in the South African Air force Base, Waterkloof, at 9.10pm, and he was received by Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Dr Naledi Pandor and Minister of Social Development, Ms Lindiwe Zulu.

    “Before the meeting, which will be held at the Union Building, both Presidents will have a tête-à-tête to discuss issues of mutual interests relating to the welfare of citizens, and expanding economic and cultural ties.”

    Before returning to Abuja on Friday, he said President Buhari will hold an interactive meeting with Nigerians in South Africa.

  • Fayemi appoints four new Permanent Secretaries

    Ekiti Governor Dr Kayode Fayemi has approved the appointment of four new Permanent Secretaries in the civil service.

    The new Permanent secretaries are Mr.Tokunbo Ayokunle Alokan, Mr.Ezekiel Olufemi Adedipe, Mr. Sola Ogunmiluyi and Mr. Adedapo Kayode Akinola.

    Read Also; I’ve no candidates for council polls, says Fayemi

    According to a statement signed on Thursday by the Chief Press Secretary to the governor, Mr. Yinka Oyebode, the appointments take effect from October 1, 2019.

    Oyebode added the swearing-in ceremony for the new permanent secretaries would take place on Wednesday, October 9, 2019 at the Conference Hall, Governor’s Office, Ado-Ekiti.

  • FUOYE student emerges Miss Ekiti 2019

    Akindele Justina Temitayo, a 200-level student of History and International Studies department, Federal University Oye-Ekiti has emerged Miss Ekiti 2019.

    The event was witnessed by students, captains of industries, traditional rulers, political persons and entertainment personality at AB Civic Centre, Ado Ekiti at the weekend.

    Saheed Balogun, a popular veteran actor and Taiyelolu, were host and co-host for the event while OAP AyNigeria and Queencyglo were red carpet hosts.

    Raji Abimbola 23 Foundation is the organizer of the event.

    The purpose of Miss Ekiti yearly is to encourage young ladies across the Continent to live their dreams.

    The judges for the pageantry show were Miss Ekiti 2017, CEO of DE Elegant Expertise Palais; Owajoba Busayo, CEO of Seatop Media/Printing and Publishing; Seun Awopegba and Award winning Nollywood actress; Dupe Jaiyesimi.

    The process of selecting the winner by the Judges was based on “Communication, Education, Health, Entrepreneurship, Arts & Culture, Environment, Welfare, Technology and Financial Management, the sole objectives are to uplift, empower and cater for the dignity of young ladies, women and the less privileged in all facets of life using this Vital Values”, as announced by the organiser.

    Temitayo emerged defeated 20 others contenders while Iyeku Peace emerged as first runner up and Adesioye Adetutu as second runner up.

    The winner of Miss Ekiti 2019, is entitled to a Brand new car, one year wardrobe allowance, trip abroad and a well furnished office.

    Read Also: 42nd Miss Nigeria grand finale holds tomorrow

    First runner up is entitled to N200,000, well furnished office, one year free makeover, spokesperson and brand ambassador for every child deserves to be in classroom campaign.

    Second runner up is entitled to 100,000, well furnished office, one year free makeover, spokesperson and brand ambassador for every child deserves to be in classroom campaign.

    The winner expressed excitement over winning the contest and promise to impact the society through her office.

    ” I felt very good and so happy that I was crying. I didn’t expect it We were 20 that participated in the contest.

    “I intend to use my office to impact the society in the best way I can. I have a project am working on which will be revealed very soon. I am sure by the time I carry out my project the impact will be felt in Ekiti and outside Ekiti,” she said.

    Awodola Oluwaseun, The Students Union President of Federal University Oye-Ekiti, in a statement congratulated Miss Ekiti 2019 for bringing the crown home.

    He said: “Projecting the beauty and royal dignity of the institute,even in adverse, we choose to be of positive impact and being of virtue.

    “The Student Union hereby felicitate and congratulates our very own Justina for topping and bringing the crown home.”

    Miss Ekiti 2019Miss Ekiti 2019Miss Ekiti 2019

  • Jubilation as Ganduje floors Abba at tribunal

    There was jubilation in Kano city on Wednesday, as residents trooped to the streets to celebrate the victory of Governor Abdullahi Ganduje at the Governorship Election Petition Tribunal.

    The tribunal reaffirmed the electoral victory of Ganduje.

    It said the petition of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its candidate, Abba Yusuf, challenging Ganduje’s victory, lacked merit.

    The Chairman of the three-member panel, Justice Halima Shamaki, in a judgment read for over three hours, dismissed the PDP’s petition seeking the nullification of Ganduje’s victory in the March 9 and 23 governorship election.

    Read Also: Tribunal upholds Ganduje’s election

    The tribunal ruled that the governorship candidate of the PDP failed to prove his case against Ganduje and the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the March 9 and 23 governorship poll beyond reasonable doubt.

    It upheld Ganduje’s election, saying the cancellation which followed the Gama Ward poll and others that brought about the March 23 rerun was not only constitutional, but also valid.

    Giving judgment, Justice Shamaki, who gave reasons why the PDP prayers were struck out, said: “The difference between the outstanding votes at Gama was 128, 000 votes, compared to the 26,000 votes which the PDP governorship candidate, Yusuf, was leading with on March 9. There was need for the election to be concluded through the rerun of March 23.”

    Reacting to the judgment in a statement signed by the former Commissioner for Information, Malam Muhammad Garba, the government urged the PDP to accept defeat and support the APC to take the state to the next level.

  • P&ID: UK judgment saved Nigeria’s assets, says Fed Govt

    The Minister of Information and Culture,  Alhaji Lai Mohammed, on Wednesday said the judgment of the United Kingdom’s  Commercial Court saved Nigeria’s assets from being seized by an Irish firm, Process and Industrial Developments (P&ID).

    He said granting of the stay of action on the enforcement of the $9.6 billion award granted P&ID was historic and good for the nation.

    Mohammed added that the Federal Government had mandated its lawyers to file an appeal against the court order for a security deposit of $200 million to make the stay of execution valid.

    He said Nigeria will be able to demand a refund of the £250,000 payment to P&ID after winning the appeal

    Mohammed explained that all but one of the six proposed grounds of appeal by the Federal Government were  allowed by the Commercial Court.

    The minister spoke in Abuja on the outcome of the proceedings in the UK Commercial Court against the backdrop of allegations that the Federal Government failed in its application before the UK Commercial Court.

    Read Also: P&ID: Fed Govt probes six other suspicious petroleum deals

    Nigeria sent a delegation to the UK, comprising the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Abubakar Malami; Mohammed; Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Godwin Emefiele; Inspector-General Mohammed Adamu; Assistant Inspector-General (AIG) Ibrahim Lamorde;  and Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC),  Ibrahim Magu.

    The minister said the delegation went to London with three objectives which were achieved.

    But he said the stay of action on the $9.6billion award averted economic setback for Nigeria.

    Mohammed said: “For those who may still not understand the gravity of the judgment of the Commercial Court in London last week, let me say this: Had we lost our quest for a stay of execution and application to appeal in London last week, P&ID would by now be attempting to seize our assets all over the world.

    “Remember they boasted, before the judgment, that they have started compiling a list of our assets which they will attach. But now, that’s an empty boast, thanks to the successes recorded in the court of law and the court of public opinion last week.”

    He said Nigeria did not lose out in the UK Commercial Court. “It was indeed a huge victory, and P&ID has every reason to be worried that the $9.6billion arbitration award to it has a good chance of being overturned.”

    On the $200 million security deposit, Mohammed  said Nigeria had instructed its lawyers to seek the leave of the Court of Appeal to appeal against that payment

    He said: “ Please note, gentlemen that Nigeria will be able to demand for a refund of the £250,000 payment to P&ID where the government wins on the appeal. This fact is being hidden by those who have been spinning the London judgment in their own favour.

    “On the $200 million payment as a condition for the granting of the stay of execution, Nigeria has instructed its lawyers to seek the leave of the Court of Appeal to appeal against that payment.

    “In the words of Mr. President at the 74th session of the UN General Assembly in New York last week, we are giving notice to international criminal groups by the vigorous prosecution of the P&ID scam attempting to cheat Nigeria of billions of dollars.

    “The Federal Government has succeeded in changing the false narrative being peddled by P&ID both within and outside Nigeria by putting across strong evidence that the company is nothing but a fraud.

    “Please permit me to thank the Nigerian media for its largely objective and patriotic reportage of this whole issue, despite the attempts by the desperate P&ID to muddy the waters.”

    The minister gave insights into the activities of the delegation in the UK.

    He added: “The team set off to achieve three main objectives which, even to the greatest optimist, seemed an uphill task at the time:

    • Change the narrative, especially on the international stage, on the entire P&ID issue, more so in the run-up to the 26 Sept 2019 court hearing on the case.
    • Apply for leave of the commercial court to appeal the judgement that recognized the humongous and unprecedented arbitration award.
    • Seek a stay of execution on the UK judgment that recognized the approximately 9.6 billion-dollar arbitration award to P&ID over a botched, 20-year gas deal with Nigeria.

    “Gentlemen, without being immodest, I can say categorically that we achieved all three objectives.

    He said: “The Federal government now has an unconditional permission to appeal against the decision of the Commercial Court recognising and converting the $9.6 billion UK  arbitration award in favour of P&ID to a domestic judgment. The Nigerian government won a leave of the commercial court to appeal the judgment which P&ID had vehemently resisted.

    “The judge also recognised that the ownership of P&ID was opaque, and that a vulture fund stands behind it which had engaged lawyers determined to pursue a strategy including the temporary seizure of assets, regardless of state immunity claims.

    “The Federal Government is pleased that the Judge fairly recognised the merits of its arguments and the true nature of P&ID and its strategy, and that he granted permission to appeal against his own decision and a stay pending appeal.

  • Fed Govt to attach 104 unity colleges to govt hospitals

    The Federal Government on Wednesday said it had decided to attach the 104 unity schools in the country to government hospitals that are close to them.

    The government said where government hospitals are not very close, it would attach the college to private hospitals not more than 500 metres from the gate for rapid response.

    The Permanent Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Education (FME), Mr. Sonny Echono, stated these during a briefing to celebrate this year’s World Teachers’ Day in Abuja.

    Echono said this would allow for quick response during outbreak of any epidemic or disease within the school.

    Read Also: No outbreak of epidemic in Queens College – Perm Sec

    He said: “We have taken some policy measures in the ministry that all our unity schools must be attached to government hospitals that are at close proximity. Where the government hospital is not very close, we will allow them to also be attached to private hospitals not more than 300 to 500 metres from the gate for rapid response.

    The permanent secretary also said some colleges, including Queen’s College, Lagos, would be provided with ambulances for rapid response.

    He said the government decided to employ more health personnel to assist the colleges in their clinics.

    Echono added: “Unfortunately, we have not reached the stage where we have doctors and the full complement of medical personnel in all our schools. But it is a big community. Going forward, we are looking towards that.

    “Right now, most schools are headed by nurses with community attendants. So, some times, that affects the response time and the ability to contain it immediately when they are overwhelmed by huge numbers.

    “We have also directed that from next year, all those who do not have ambulances will be provided with ambulances dedicated to attending immediately to health and similar cases. That is under implementation.

    “Many of them already have, but some, like Queen’s College, do not have. We are going to be assisting Queen’s College to acquire one in the next few days. We are also engaging a few more health personnel within the level of the ministry’s approval threshold to assist them in their clinics.”

  • Tribunal affirms Tambuwal’s victory

    The Governorship Election Petition Tribunal in Sokoto State on Wednesday in Abuja affirmed the election of Governor Aminu Tambuwal.

    The three-man tribunal dismissed the petition of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and its governorship candidate, Ahmed Aliyu, for lacking in merit.

    Delivering judgment, tribunal Chairman Justice Abbas Bawale said the petitioners had failed to establish their claims to non- compliance with the Electoral Act and the issue of over voting.

    He said the evidence of the petitioners’ witnesses, especially witness number 10, amounted to hearsay which could not prove any of the allegations.

    Read Also: Wild Jubilation in Kano as Ganduje floors Abba at Tribunal

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Aliyu had gone to the tribunal seeking to upturn the victory of Tambuwal of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2019 governorship election.

    he poll, held on March 9, was declared inconclusive following cancellation of 75, 403 votes, which were higher than the 3, 413 votes margin between the leading candidates.

    A rerun was conducted on March 23, which led to the victory of Tambuwal, who won with a slim margin of 342 votes.

    Dissatisfied with the outcome, Aliyu approached the tribunal challenging the return of Tambuwal as the governor-elect, on the grounds that the election was marred by irregularities.

    Tambuwal and PDP had objected to the petition, which the tribunal unanimously dismissed, saying it disclosed substantial cause of action and was properly signed by the petitioners.

    In addition, the tribunal ruled that the petitioners duly paid the filling fees.

    It further held that the non-joinder of the running mate to the petitioners is not enough to render the petition incompetent.

    The Justice Bawale-led tribunal held that the application lacked merit and constituted a waste of judicial time.