Tag: Nigerian news

  • PDP governors meet in Port Harcourt

    Governors of seven states of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) met on Friday in Port Harcourt, News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    According to Mr Simeon Nwakaudu, Special Assistant (Electronic Media) to Gov. Nyesom Wike, the meeting was attended by Govs. Umaru Fintiri (Adamawa), Emeka Ihedioha (Imo); Seyi Makinde (Oyo); Samuel Ortom (Benue); Aminu Tambuwal (Sokoto); and Mohammed Mattawale (Zamfara).

    After the meeting, Tambuwal explained that the governors were in Rivers to commend Wike “for his sustained projects delivery’’.

    He said the governors urged him to continue to deliver quality projects and sustain good governance for the development of Rivers State.

    Read Also: How ex-PDP gov’s deal with Buhari’s men went awry

    Tambuwal also said that PDP remained strongly united in friendship and brotherhood.

    He said: “We are here as brothers and friends to the Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike, in the spirit of brotherhood and friendship.

    “We are here to encourage and support him for the good governance he has given to the good people of Rivers State.

    “The 100 days of the second term of Governor Wike is also why we are here.

    “The spirit in Port Harcourt and Rivers State is that of celebration and thanksgiving and gratitude to God for such a wonderful leadership by Governor Wike.

    “We are also here to join him and the good people of Rivers State in thanking God for his leadership and to thank God for giving the state a wonderful leader like him.”

  • How ex-PDP gov’s deal with Buhari’s men went awry

    A former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governor in one of the northern states is biting his finger after a deal he struck with some foot soldiers of President Muhammadu Buhari in the build-up to the 2019 presidential election went awry.

    As part of their efforts to ensure victory for Buhari in the election, the President’s men were said to have approached the former PDP governor, asking him to support their candidate’s re-election bid with a promise that the former governor would be appointed as the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)

    With the end of the first term of the Central Bank governor, Godwin Emefiele, only a few months away, the former governor considered the proposal a good and realistic deal. He had no problem agreeing to it, particularly because he believed that his pedigree eminently qualified him for the position.

    His moves thereafter were said to have aroused the suspicion of his party members but he kept assuring them that he had no deal whatsoever with the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Presidential Villa in particular.

    The election came and APC won the state hands down. His party, the PDP, was livid, with many of the party’s top shots accusing him of betrayal. Today, he is not in the good books of the PDP and the powers that be in the party while the APC and the Villa have since sidetracked him with Buhari renewing Emefiele’s appointment.

    Now an outcast in the PDP, the former governor is said to be feeling terribly bad, wondering if he had not been used and dumped.

  • How Masari’s dialogue caged banditry, kidnapping in Katsina

    The resolve by Governor Aminu Bello Masari of Katsina State to engage bandits and kidnappers in the state in dialogue appears to have paid off as evident in the quick return of peace and reconciliation in the state, AUGUSTINE OKEZIE writes.

    The option of dialogue as a way out of the insecurity that held Katsina State by the jugular was first blown open by Governor Aminu Bello Masari on August 29 when he engaged representatives of bandits, killer herdsmen and community elders from the eight frontline local government areas in the state with a view to finding a permanent solution to the incessant attacks and kidnappings that have gripped the state for some time.

    The meeting, which was held at the state secretariat, also had in attendance the heads of security agencies, the Deputy Governor Alhaji Manir Yakubu, traditional rulers and districts heads, led by the Emir of Katsina, Alhaji Abdulmuminu Kabir Usman; the Secretary to the State Government Alhaji Mustapha Inuwa; transition committee chairmen of the affected front line local government areas and representatives of the association of cattle rearers popularly called Myyeti Allah.

    The Nation gathered at the meeting that attendance by representatives of the bandits was made possible by the recent amnesty declared by North West governors at a recent meeting held in the state.

    Masari, who spoke in Hausa, had warned at the meeting that the insecurity rocking the affected local government areas (LGAs) in the state had become embarrassing to both the state government and President Muhammadu Buhari, who is also an indigene of the state, adding: “Enough is enough!”

    He further restated the commitment of his government to deploy whatever means possible in dealing decisively and ruthlessly with the activities of bandits and kidnappers in the state. He also expressed the belief that securing the lives and property of Katsina citizens lies not only in the hands of government or security personnel but also in everyone.

    A stronger indication of his willingness to dialogue irrespective of location or environment was clearly indicated in his decision to meet with bandits wherever they invited him to, since he was not afraid to meet with anyone that could end the problem

    He said: “As a leader, I must find the solution to the problem of my people, so that if today I die, I know how to defend myself before God. I will not allow this to continue. Enough is enough. I have directed the security operatives to take all necessary measures to change the narrative on insecurity in the state by any means necessary.”

    Tortuous journey to dialogue

    Travelling to the hideouts and dubious strongholds of bandits to dialogue with them was one of the most challenging and daring journeys Governor Aminu Bello Masari had undertaken. Not a few people in the state had expected that arrangements would be made to bring the bandits to the comfort zone of the governor. But they were disappointed because the governor rather chose to go into the forests, wade through bumpy and rough terrains, sometimes finding his jeep stuck in the mud on the way to Faskari-Geza and Banda in Faskari and Danmusa Local Government Areas.

    The first day of the dialogue meeting, which held at Gbagegi Primary School, Dankolo for Dandume and Sabwa local government areas, witnessed a heavy downpour which threatened to disrupt it, but the governor and other top government functionaries at the meeting deployed umbrellas and other improvised covers to endure the weather condition.

    Although the journey to the respective strongholds of the bandits was definitely tortuous, it presented a firsthand opportunity for the governor to appreciate the challenges and living conditions of the people and the need to urgently address them

    Governor’s appeal/message to bandits and kidnappers

    Masari’s message to the bandits at each meeting point was consistently hinged on the bandits realising the futility of their engagements and isolation in the bush, the need to fear God in dealing with their brothers and community, embracing peace and concord and not daring the ability of government to win the war against banditry and kidnapping should they persist.

    He further told the people who turned out in their numbers that it is better they abandon the bush and killing of their brothers and embrace peace and amnesty.

    He said: “If you gather all the cattle, get all the money in this world and shed innocent blood, there is yet no benefit. You can never defeat government. If you kill 10 soldiers, government will bring 100 more and also bring thousands of guns. We will look into your requests, build roads and schools and ensure better quality of lives.’’

    Governor Masari further assured residents of the state that the dialogue would bring peace to Katsina State, North-West and Nigeria, saying: “We believed that we have started well and there is nothing better than peace.”

    While restating the commitment of his government to rendering assistance to the Fulani people living in forest areas, he urged them to embrace dialogue and live peacefully with one another in their respective territories. He promised to rebuild the schools and other decayed infrastructure and address other requests they had made.

    Complaints/grievances of repentant bandits

    Repentant bandits who appeared at the dialogue meetings with Governor Masari at each point, never ceased to accuse security operatives, particularly SARS and the Nigerian Army, of extorting money and cattle from them in exchange for their support and supply of weapons.

    Idris Yayande, one of the group leaders of the bandits, told the governor that large scale extortion perpetrated by the security operatives had seriously undermined efforts by any government to address insecurity challenges in the state and country.

    He said: “Some soldiers, policemen and other security agents are fuelling banditry, kidnapping and other heinous crimes bedevilling the state through large scale extortion in return for supporting us.”

    Earlier, the leader of the Volunteers (Yan-sakai) in the state, Lawal Tsoho, had accused the army, police and other security agencies in the state of fuelling bandits’ attacks on innocent civilians.

    He said: “Soldiers, policemen and other security agencies and politicians in the state are against the ongoing dialogue between the bandits and the state government because they are benefiting from it. I have all the evidence to prove my statement.”

    He urged the state to help facilitate the release of their members arrested by security agencies and detained in various prisons across the country.

    He said: “Some of our members were apprehended in villages across the state and detained for numerous years without committing offence.”

    One of the bandits, whose name was not immediately known, said: “We have some complaints. Our biggest complaint is that some of our members were arrested and detained in different prisons across the state. Government should release them before dialogue.

    “They are: Alhaji Lawal Bandu, Ibrahim Nabutamu, Sani Marji, Sani Zafi, Lawal Mairuwa. And and there are some of our children that were arrested by the army in Layin-Mahuta last year: Ali, Adamu and Abdurrahman. And since then, nobody has told us where they are and what happened to them.

    “So, we are pleading with the state government to release them to us. We don’t have anybody in our custody now. We promised before that nobody will farm within this area. But because of the dialogue, we have surrendered. If you hear of any attack, it is not from us.”

    Another of the repentant bandits, Haruna Mazge, blamed the prevailing security problem in the state on farmers who blocked cattle routes, saying 70 per cent of the cattle routes have been blocked by farmers.

    He said: “Farmers in the state have blocked all cattle routes. Even roads that our cattle do pass, they blocked them. If you look at our problem, consider that of farmers too,” he said.

    He, however, said the effort of the state government to tackle the security challenges in the state had prompted some of them to repent from their deadly attacks.

    Mazge further called on other bandits whom he said were terrorising villages in the state to surrender their arms to sustain the peace.

    He said: “This forest that we are hiding from is not beyond government’s power. Since the governor has forgiven us, we should not betray government in this dialogue by attacking any village in the state again.”

    Another bandit, Yahaya Fulani Dangogo, who appeared to set the tone for the dilemma of the Fulani, described them as browbeaten and left to despair in the circumstances they found themselves in.

    While listing their grievances as demanded by Governor Masari, which warranted their descent into banditry, he mentioned deprivation, denials and isolation, deceit by those in authority, including traditional rulers, DPOs and security operatives, including the Yansakai and SARS, and several other members of the political class.

    He said: “Yansakai and several other security operatives’ attacks and harassments are never checked and no action is taken. If you are killed, no one asks a question; your people will cry until they are tired.

    “I am begging the governor that any group that does not follow Islamic teachings should be dissolved. We don’t want armchair leadership. Every appointee of government must be transparent and up an doing.’’

    Swap agreements between government and bandits

    A major fallout from the various dialogue meetings held between the governor and the bandits was the offer to swap victims of banditry with the release of arrested bandits between both sides.

    The leader of one of the gangs, Alhaji Mansuni, who spoke on behalf of others, told Governor Masari at one of the dialogue meetings held at Angwa Tsamia Primary School, Birni Gogo, in Faskari Local Government Area, that the groups were pleased with his presence and drive to ensure peaceful coexistence in the state and the country. And to reciprocate his gesture of freeing their kinsmen and fellow bandits who were in the custody of security operatives, they were renouncing banditry and would immediately begin to free the abductees in their camps.

    He further told the governor that fear of insecurity, deprivation and indiscriminate arrest and killing of herdsmen by security agents led them to arm themselves and engage in banditry.

    He said: “We are happy with your coming to visit us right in our hideouts. We the Fulani have challenges which government should look into, including construction of roads, education, infrastructure and social living conditions.

    “Again, indiscriminate arrest by security agencies and extortion by members of SARS, as well the attitude of the Hausa in the rural communities, who refused to coexist with the Fulani, requires we all sit down and iron out our differences.”

    The state government also acceded to the swap arrangement by offering to release those arrested.

    Speaking on efforts to implement the terms of the agreement, the governor said those in detention in Katsina and Kano states had already been brought back to Katsina as the first step in the release process.

    He said: “They can talk to them now. But what we are saying is that we have hundreds of people being detained for ransom, so we want these people back. It is easier for them to bring them back than we bringing them back because all of them are detained in Zamfara.”

    Latest reports indicate that the swap agreement has begun with daily exchange of releases from both parties.

    Remediation efforts by government

    Government plans to reconstruct and reintegrate repentant bandits and herdsmen were unfolded during the dialogue meetings where the governor insisted that with the return of peace in the areas, development activities and the provision of needed infrastructure like roads, education and commerce would no longer be delayed.

    He said: “If there is peace, most of the things they requested are things we have already started under the first amnesty programme. So, if peace returns to the areas we have visited so far, we assure that developmental projects will continue to come.

    “It is most important. You can see the large turnout of Fulani community leaders, those leaving in the forest and those living on the fringes of the forest. And for them to agree to come here, all of them, including the farming community, to discuss and talk peace, that is the most important thing.

    “So, if they agree together in harmony because this is the foundation, we are starting with the bottom up approach. With the communities, the neighbours living peacefully with one  another, we can transit to local government and state levels.”

    “So, I do believe that we are on the right course, and we will follow up on all the promises we made to them, especially regarding those that have been detained for years without being charged to court. Why are you detaining people for years without going to court and without granting them bail?

    “We intend definitely to bring them out on bail and hand them over to their respective communities and watch developments in the next one month in these areas.’’

  • Fayemi, Wike’s newfound friendship set tongues wagging

    There is no gainsaying the fact that recent weeks have been challenging for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The opposition party has been battling with cold since one of its  pillar of strength , perceived financier and governor of Rivers State, Nyesom Wike, sneezed.

    The party has suffered one sleepless night after the other since the Rivers State governor stormed out of the venue of the presidential primaries of the party from which Alhaji Atiku Abubakar emerged the presidential candidate of the PDP in the build-up to the 2019 general elections. Since then, he has taken various other actions that left the minders of the party worried.

    For instance, in the aftermath of the National Assembly elections where Hon. Kingsley Chinda, the candidate he and other party chieftains supported for the minority leader’s seat in the House of Representatives lost to Hon. Ndidi Elumelu, Wike roundly condemned the panel set up by the party to investigate the ‘coup’ against the party, describing it as corrupt.

    Then came the dismissal of Atiku’s petition in the case he filed at the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal against Buhari’s re-election. While the leaders and chieftains of PDP kicked against the judgment, Wike openly congratulated Buhari. Wike’s move sparked anger in PDP’s camp as chieftains of the party called his loyalty to question.

    In the midst of these came the rapport the Rivers State governor developed with his Ekiti State counterpart, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, since Fayemi took his stand on Wike’s side in the latter’s alleged demolition of a mosque in Port Harcourt. Fayemi has since followed this up with a visit to Wike in Port Harcourt where he also commissioned projects.

    The development has left many wondering if Fayemi’s actions were impelled by his position as the Chairman of Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) or a prelude to an agenda that is yet to unfold. The more curious observers are even asking if Fayemi is the one anointed to midwife Wike’s final parting of ways with the PDP as  is being speculated in some quarters.

  • Confessions of an alleged serial killer

    • ’How I murdered seven women’
    • Says I enjoy killing when the urge comes on me
    • ’I killed my first victim in a Lagos hotel’

    It was confession time on Friday for the man believed to have been responsible for the serial killing of young women in Port Harcourt over the last few months.

    Thirty-nine year old Gracious David West told reporters in the Rivers State capital that he had also killed in Lagos and Imo States.

    He put the number of his victims at seven.

    He was arrested on Thursday by the police while en route Uyo from c.

    His arrest came hours after protests by women groups in Port Harcourt calling for the security agencies to fish out the brains behind the mysterious killings of women in hotels.

    West, who hails from Buguma in Asari-Toru Local Government Area of Rivers State, claimed that he  killed five women in Port Harcourt and  one each  in Ikeja and Owerri.

    His modus operandi was to take his victims to a hotel, confiscate their ATM cards and thereafter kill them.

    He would then proceed to the nearest ATM and clear the accounts of his victims.

    His first killing was in Lagos.

    “I started the killing in Lagos, that was where I got money because the first girl had N85,000 in her account,” West said.

    “After that, I went to Port Harcourt, then Owerri. I returned to Port Harcourt. The last girl I killed I met her at the club.”

    Read Also: #ProtectPHGirls trends as Nigerians react to ‘serial killer’ in PH

    West said he was on his way to Akwa-Ibom when he was arrested by operatives of the special anti-robbery squad, Bori in Rivers.

    ”When the urge comes, I move into a hotel, invite a girl after and after eating and making love, I will bring out a kitchen knife and threaten her not to shout,” West said.

    He added: “I don’t know what comes over me to kill. After I have killed, I feel remorse and cry for killing, but after that, the irresistible urge to kill comes over me again. I kill alone.

    ”I was a member of the Degbam Cult group, I have since repented. I am not killing for any cult group. I just kill. I don’t know what comes over me to kill.

    ”The first woman I killed in one of the hotels in Ikeja had about N85,000 in her account. Before I strangled them after love making, I used the knife to cut the hotel bedding into a semblance of a twine which I used to bind their hands and feet, and also used the knife to threaten them.

    “The kitchen knife was sold to me by an aboki. I would threaten that if they raised the alarm, I would kill them with the knife.

    “Out fear, they kept quiet while I raised the volume of the television set in the hotel room to prevent any noise from my room. I never killed with the knife.”

    West also revealed that before he killed his female victims, he insisted on knowing their account balance and ATM pin number.

    “After strangulating them, I would steal their ATM cards, empty their accounts from any nearby ATM machine and move on.

    “It was not all the girls I slept with that I killed. I only killed whenever the irresistible urge to kill overwhelmed me.

    “l don’t have a house. My mother died through poisoning from her mate and I am homeless. I sleep in hotels.”

    He said that the phones he stole from his victims were sold to a customer in Waterlines Junction, off Port Harcourt/Aba Expressway and another buyer around MTN office by Oil Mill Market in Port Harcourt.

    West claimed to be an  ex-militant  rehabilitated by the Omega Power Ministry (OPM) which also got  a job for him at the Federal University of Science and Technology, FUTO, Owerri, through the Church.

    He ditched the job after stealing students’ property.

    Police Commissioner, Mustapha Dandaura who paraded the suspect  does not believe that West was acting alone.

    “The suspect is definitely not alone in these killings, though he had made useful confessions, but the command will go beyond his confessions to ensure that a conclusive end is achieved that serves the interest of justice ,” he said.

    Dandaura said his insistence that hotels in the state should install Closed Circuit Television Cameras, CCTVs, was beginning to yield positive results.

    He vowed that the Police, under his Command would fight crimes headlong in the state, adding that with joint operations with the army and other security agencies, the killings in Ogoniland was dropping, while “I have stabilized East-West road, the Elele-Owerri road.”

  • ‘I masterminded the killing of my gang’s leader’

    A notorious kidnapper, Nwobodo Uchechukwu, has revealed that he masterminded the beheading of the leader of his gang, Christian Nkemjika a.k.a School Boy, because he was very greedy.

    Uchechukwu was arrested alongside other members of his gang- Tony Rafael; Nnaji Romanus; Nwobodo Uche and Uchechukwu Ibekwe, by the operatives of the Inspector General of Police Intelligence Response Team (IRT).

    The suspects were arrested from their hideouts in Rivers and Imo States.

    They were said to have kidnapped the Chief Accountant of Plantgeria Limited, an oil firm based in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Dr. S.M.C Maduagwu in February 2018 and collected N20 million ransom.

    Uchechukwu, 38, disclosed that School Boy collected more than the amount he collected as ransom on a kidnap victim he kidnapped on behalf of the gang.

    He stated that School Boy deceitfully declared a sum of N10 million instead of N20 million ransom he was paid by family members of the victim.

    He said: “I am a full time farmer, but I went into kidnapping when my wife fell sick and was down with stroke. Her doctor demanded the sum of N200, 000 deposit (for her treatment) and I approached School-Boy my gang leader; he gave me the sum of N100, 000 to give to the doctor. He told me about the accountant I was to closely watch or monitor and I did as he instructed for about one month till the day he was ready to kidnap the man. I trailed the man (victim) from the time he left his office and when he got to Oil Mill junction, Schoolboy and other members of the gang who were decked in polce abd army uniform abducted the man and took him away in their Toyota Hilux van.

    Read Also: Three suspected kidnappers shot dead in Kogi

    ‘’The man was taken to my farm where he was kept and negotiation for his ransom was concluded.  I wasn’t in the farm with them, but after the kidnapping, School-Boy gave me the balance of N100,000 to give to my wife’s doctor. Two weeks later School Boy informed me that N10  million had been paid as ransom for the release of the accountant release and that the man had been freed.

    ‘’At that time, I didn’t doubt him and all of us that took part in the operation to the home of a native doctor known as Romanus Nnaji and he started sharing the money. He handed me the sum of N1.5million to give to Ibekwe and Stanley, the informants that brought the job and he also gave me N500, 000 as my own share.

    ‘’Few months after that operation, I got a call that my brother had been arrested by the police over the kidnapping of the accountant and that the actual amount paid for the man’s freedom was N20million. I felt bad that School-Boy cheated every one of us by declaring N10 million as the only ransom that was paid and he kept the other N10million to himself and shared the one he declared with us.

    ‘’I said nothing at that time because the police were looking for me and I ran to a church in Akwa Ibom for prayers to ask God for forgiveness and told the people at the church about the police that were looking for me. But while I was at the church, the policemen trailed me  down to the church and luckily for me I was in the church’s toilet when I saw the police van and I fled into the bush.

    ‘’I trekked in that bush to Ndoni area of Rivers State. When I got back, I called School Boy and told him that the police were looking for me and I could not continue to run and I assured him that I will surrender myself but he threatened to kill me.

    ‘’I then ran to Imo State and I stayed there for three weeks and the police came again to look for me but I escaped. While I was running away to hide for the tide to pass, I called School-Boy to give me part of the N10million he refused to declare to the gang so that I could run out of the country, but he refused, and I felt the best thing I should do at the moment was to set him up and have him killed.

    ‘’I contacted some members of De-Gbam confraternity who had been looking for him and I gave out his location to them and they attacked and beheaded him. After they succeeded in the killing of School-Boy, I approached a lawyer in Owerri Imo  State where I was hiding with my pregnant wife to seek a legal advice on what I could do since the police were hunting for me everywhere. I was there when the nurse at the hospital where my wife had gone to deliver her baby told me on the telephone that policemen had trailed my wife to her hospital and I ran away again. I was later arrested in June 2019 by the operatives in Orlu Imo State,’’ he added.

  • Bauchi governor, NLTP and imperfect identity

    Before it is over, the controversy over whether to execute a Rural Grazing Area (RUGA) programme for herdsmen or serve it in the somewhat more inoculated version of National Livestock Transformation Plan (NLTP) will have cost jobs, denuded political influence and prestige, and stoked pain, anger and suspicion all over the country.

    RUGA, which is hated in some parts of the country for its provocative and culturally flagrant acronym, was to be anchored by the Federal Ministry of Agriculture in ways that stupefied many. NLTP on the other hand, though still viewed with extreme suspicion, emanated from the National Economic Council (NEC). Who first conceived it? It is not clearly stated. For now, flowing from the acrimonious debate over the relevance and security implications of RUGA, the more inclusive NLTP appears to be on the ascendancy, with a hefty budget of about N179bn proposed for its execution over a 10-year period.

    Neither NLTP nor RUGA is devoid of controversy, and may not even be the best scientific approach to solving the so-called herdsmen-farmers clashes. Both programmes came out of many decades of slovenly approach to tackling climate problems and desertification, which pushed herdsmen contentiously farther afield in search of grazing lands, and the increasing conurbation and population explosion that have constricted grazing lands. Unable to find the antidote to a fast-growing and menacing problem, the federal government simply watched, sometimes with futile gestures, as herdsmen and farmers locked horns. Now the problem has reached epidemic levels, and is demanding for a solution whether the government likes it or not.

    But rather than look at the problem carefully and cautiously and weigh every suggested solution against the backdrop of the country’s cultural sensitivities and political complexities, the government has made a fairly conventional assessment of the causes of the problem, stunted the need to seek more modern and efficacious solutions, and is now attempting to impose a solution whose future ramifications are unpredictable. RUGA was the more insensitive of the two solutions, but there is also no proof that even the NLTP has met with anything more than cautious and reluctant acceptance from so-called willing states. Indeed, there is no proof that governors, who are members of the NEC, have all confidently signed on to the sanitised variant of the two programmes, especially with the ongoing subterranean and contentious attempt to settle Fulani herdsmen in some unwilling parts of the country.

    To further muddy the waters, the declaration by the Bauchi State governor Bala Mohammed that the Fulani of West Africa have a transcendental identity, and must willy-nilly partake of the NLTP, has stoked controversy and imbued the programme with a suspicious hegemonic quality. The NEC is proposing an initial N100bn budget, fully funded by Nigerian taxpayers. According to Mr Mohammed, however, it would be pointless to attempt to exclude Fulani herdsmen from neighbouring West African countries, because you couldn’t tell the difference: they are all one and the same. They migrate seamlessly and share the same nationality. The governor was, in other words, declaring that the Fulani everywhere see themselves as Fulani first and foremost rather than through the lens of the countries of their birth. This is hugely controversial, ignorant and provocative.

    According the governor:  “I think there is a lot of mistrust and misconception as regards the Fulani man. The Fulani man is a global or African person. He moves from the Gambia to Senegal and his nationality is Fulani. As a person I may have my relations in Cameroon but they are also Fulani. I am a Fulani man from my maternal side. We will just have to take this as our own heritage, something that is African. So, we cannot just close our borders and say the Fulani man is just a Nigerian. In most cases, the crisis is precipitated by those outside Nigeria. When there is a reprisal, it is not the Fulani man within Nigeria that causes it. It is that culture of getting revenge which is embedded in the traditional Fulani man that attracts reprisal…We are already accommodating them. Do you delineate and really know who is not a Nigerian Fulani man? They are all Nigerians because their identity, their citizenship is Nigerian even though they have relatives from all be a $30bn [£22.8bn] company in terms of revenue,” said Dangote.

    Wao! Dangote is renowned for doing good business. Our sports administrators must sit up and embrace the reality that sports increases the GDP of countries that understand the dynamics of the industry. Spain’s economy, a growing one like Nigeria’s, relies greatly on the volume of cash generated from the sports sector.

    FC Barcelona, Real Madrid, Atletico Madrid, Sevilla, Villarreal, Valencia are not all about football. They have basketball clubs, volleyball clubs, athletics clubs etc, which are professionally run. But football serves as the fountain where others seek succour, considering its followership as the king of sports.

    La Liga’s contribution in Spain’s national economy is no less than any other top-run industry in the country. The two elite division football leagues in Spain generate 185,000 jobs, €4.1 billion ($4.66 bn) in taxes and a turnover equal to 1.37% of the national GDP. This is one sport – football. Others are also run as businesses. Sample: Vuelta a España, a race around Spain and one of cycling’s biggest events.

    Europe’s ‘big five’ leagues spent a record £5billion on players this summer despite Premier League clubs, usually the continent’s most active shoppers, slightly reining in their spending, Deloitte has revealed.

    Honourable minister sir, sponsorship isn’t donation but value exchange based on inventories of benefits accruing to the firm(s) or individual. Indeed, sponsorship without television as a key element amounts to winking in the dark. Our sports is more of having a half empty glass than a half filled one, largely because those who administered it in the past lacked the political will, which Dare is exhibiting with his reposition of issues in so short a time.

    Indeed, there was no funding of sports here because most of the ministers were interested in fighting NFF chiefs and other federations’ helmsmen than creating a financial sponsorship model driven by the principles of Public Private Partnership (PPP).  Dare needs to find out what happened to all the Sports Lottery Fund and some others like the fund-raisers before the last two World Cup tournaments for the Super Eagles.

    The country seriously needs a Sustenance fund for our athletes which should be tied to big firms and/or rich individuals so that we can chart these sports ambassadors’ growth in the events. Besides, we need to re-introduce the fund-raisers we did at least one year before attending major competitions. President Buhari could commence it with a dinner where the big players in business are told what they stand to gain supporting sports. Such incentives as tax rebates would propel them to support sports for as long as they can be assured that the cash isn’t misapplied. The fund raisers will then be taken round the country for all the states to contribute their quota. However, a deliberate attempt should be made to let everyone know how much was realised and how the cash was spent. The minister could use the visits through the states to dialogue with the governors on his vision for sports.

    It is instructive for the minister to meet with sports friendly firms who have left the industry to find out what informed their exits. That way, past mistakes are corrected so that others can be encouraged to participate.

  • Unease in soldiers’ camp in Katsina

    Not a few eyebrows were raised when the governor of Katsina State, Rt Hon. Aminu Masari, recently took the decision to go into the hideouts of the bandits that had held the state by the jugular for years and engage them in dialogue.

    While some people felt that the move amounted to a great risk on his considering how ruthless the bandits had become, others believed that it was administratively unethical that such anti-social elements would be engaged in a dialogue rather than the fire-for-fire approach.

    It would seem, however, that Masari’s decision has turned out a wise one, going by the revelations that have emerged from it.

    The bandits did not only respond positively to Masari’s olive branch by their decisions to drop their arms and cooperate with the state government in its developmental efforts, some of them were also said to have dropped useful hints to the effect that many of the soldiers and policemen deployed to check the activities of the bandits had been compromised.

    Some of the security agents were said to have entered into agreements with the bandits to look the other way while they carried on with their nefarious activities or even provide them with arms and ammunition while the bandits pay back in cash or rustled cattle.

    Since two leaders of the repentant bandits reportedly opened the Pandora box, security agencies have been working on clues to uncover the soldiers and policemen fueling banditry in the state. Sentry gathered that many of the errant soldiers and policemen are already cringing, with some of them desperately seeking to be transferred away from the state.

  • Unidentified woman steals two-month-old baby in Ekiti

    A yet-to-be-identified woman has reportedly stolen a two-month-old baby boy from his mother in Ado Ekiti

    The incident occurred on Friday around 1PM at the State Secretariat in Ado Ekiti, Ekiti state capital.

    A source who spoke on condition of anonymity said the woman tricked  the baby’s mother, Funmilayo Sunday to follow her to the State Secretariat under the guise to help collect some relief materials being given by government to flood victims.

    “On getting there, she sent the mother to help her to procure recharge card but ran away with the baby before the arrival of the woman, a source said.

    Read Also: Son fakes own kidnap to defraud dad of N500,000

    Narrating her ordeal, Funmilayo who was drenched in tears explained  that the abductor whom she suspected to be from the Eastern part of the country, had been patronizing her consistently at the Oja-Oba market, where she sells soup ingredients.

    She said the woman informed her on Wednesday that she would take her to the State Secretariat where her husband works and that the husband would facilitate the relief materials for her.

    The woman, who preferred to be anonymous, explained that the woman came to her shop with a list of possible beneficiaries and included her name making her to believe that she was being favoured.

    According to her, “the woman who had become a regular customer had this morning invited me to the Secretariat and pretended to be waiting for someone, having entered one or two offices under the pretence of making some arrangements.

    “She later took my baby and set from me and asked me to go and buy recharge cards and before I came back, she had fled with my baby,” she stated.

    The poor woman, who claimed she had lost a child recently before the delivery of the stolen boy, said the suspect  collected her phone to prevent her from  contacting the police

  • Oyetola inaugurates governing boards for Osun health insurance agency, primary healthcare

    The Osun State Governor, Adegboyega Oyetola, on Friday, inaugurated the Governing Boards of Osun Health Insurance Agency and Osun Primary Healthcare Board.

    He said the boards were inaugurated as part of the administration’s commitment to ensure quality, qualitative, affordable and accessible healthcare delivery to the people of the state.

    The governor also charged members of the newly inaugurated boards to discharge their duties with a high sense of responsibility, probity, selflessness, commitment and diligence.

    Inaugurating the boards in his office, Oyetola noted that the constitution and the inauguration of the boards marked the effective take-off of the health programme of the administration.

    Members of the  board of Osun Health Insurance Agency, include: Hon. Adeoye Andrew Adelakun (Chairman); Executive Secretary, Osun Health Insurance Scheme, Dr. Niyi Ogini; Director Health Planning and Statistics, Ministry of Health, Mr. Gbenga Oyebode; Director Medical Services, Dr. Ayobami Oni; Coordinating Director Ministry of Economic Planning, Budget and Development, Mr Akinola Adekunle Layiwola and Director Ministry of Finance, Mrs. Abolude Ganiyat Titilola.

    Read Also: We are adopting Edo-HIP to revamp Edo healthcare sector – Obaseki

    Others are: Director, Local Government and Inspectorate Service, Mr. Olusola Adedokun; Director P.S.O, Mr. Najeem Akintola; Director Medical Laboratory Services, Mrs Gbonjubola Akinola; State Coordinator, NHIS, Mr. Ahmed Yahaya, Osun NLC Chairman, Comrade Jacob Adekomi; Mr Titus Olufemi Aiyedun; Dr Olatunji Olabisi Odebunmi and Comrade S.O Faniran.

    For the Primary Healthcare Board, the members are: Executive Secretary, OPHCDB, Dr. Oluwole Fabiyi; Assistant Medical Laboratory Scientist, Mrs. Biyi Adesina; Mr. Kayode Adetola who represents Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria; Mr. Olusola Kolawole Adedokun from Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs; Dr. Oladeji Gbadamosi from Ministry of Health; Mr. Olusegun Alao Adebayo Akeem Oladepo who represents Alternative Medicine Practitioners; Comrade S. O. Faniran from National Association of Nurses and Midwives; Mr. Olaniyi Olatunji from National Association of Community Health Practitioners; Mr. Muraina Mutiu Olayinka from Health Information Managers Association of Nigeria; and Mr. Gbenga Oyebode from Medical Health Workers Union of Nigeria;

    The governor, who reiterated his administration’s determination to ensure equitable health service delivery, expressed confidence that the inauguration of the boards would contribute in no measure to advance the health sector in the state.

    He said the boards would serve as a driven force towards the actualisation of the government’s goal at taking quality healthcare to the people’s doorsteps.

    In their separate remarks, the Chairman Osun Health Insurance Agency, Hon. Adeoye Andrew Adelakun and the Executive Secretary, Osun Primary Healthcare Board, Dr. Oluwole Fabiyi, commended the governor for reposing confidence in them to serve the state.

    Those who witnessed the inauguration are: Speaker Osun House of Assembly, Hon. Timothy Owoeye; Secretary to the State Government, Prince Wole Oyebamiji; Chief of Staff to the Governor, Dr. Charles Akinola; Head of Service, Dr. Festus Oyebade; State Chairman of the All Progressives Congress, Prince Gboyega Famodun; State Chairman, Nigeria Labour Congress, Comrade Jacob Adekomi, and members of the state Steering Committee among others.