Tag: Nigerian Newspaper

  • NSCDC arrests kidnap kingpin in Borno

    The Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) Command in Borno, says it has arrested a 45 year-old man, Ibrahim Ali-Jobo, suspected to be a kidnap kingpin in Biu Local Government Area (LGA) of the state.

    The state Corps Commandant, Mr Ibrahim Abdullahi, made disclosure in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday in Maiduguri.

    Abdullahi said the suspect was arrested on Monday following a report by a resident, Isa Bello, about alleged abduction of his brother, Haruna Bello, at a helmet in Biu.

    READ ALSO: NSCDC arrests 2 for having sex in public

    He said that the suspect requested the victim’s family to pay N4 million ransom, to enable them secure his release from captivity.

    The commandant added that men of the command tracked the suspect and stormed his hideout, rescuing Bello and four other victims in the process.

    “Preliminary investigations indicated that the suspect has been terrorizing communities in Biu, He has been on the police wanted list,” he said.

    He further stated that the command had already transferred the suspect to the police for further investigation and possible prosecution.

    (NAN)

  • UPDATED: UK court orders stay of $9.6b award execution

    • · FG to deposit $200m within 60 days

    A United Kingdom Commercial Court has ordered a stay of execution of the $9.6billion damages secured against Nigeria by Process and Industrial Developments pending the determination of an appeal by the Federal Government.

    It however asked the government to make a security payment of $200million to the court within 60 days

    The court also granted Nigeria’s leave to file an appeal against the award.

    But the court upheld the award and refused to reverse the damages.

    The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami (SAN) said the battle to quash the award has shifted to the UK Court of Appeal.

    He, however, hinted of the possibility of challenging the legality of the $200million security deposit within the 60-day window.

    Read Also: $9.6b award: Fed Govt raises 13 points against P&ID, exposes trick clause in MoU

    P&ID secured the damages against Nigeria following a failed Gas Supply Project Agreement (GSPA) contract between it and the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources.

    A brief from London by the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami (SAN) said: “Leave to appeal has been granted.  Stay of execution is also granted subject to payment of $200m security payment to court pending the determination of the appeal the leave for which has been granted by the commercial court.

    “The steps we will consider are to study the ruling and act in a way beneficial to the interest of the nation.

    “We will study the court rulings, exercise the right of appeal and consider the legal options available at our disposal as it relates to the payment of $200m in view of the 60 days window stipulated by the court.”

    Malami, who admitted that he was pleased with the judgment, said: “I see this as a positive resolution that constitutes an important step in the government‘s efforts to defend Itself in a fair and just process.

    “We look forward to challenging the UK Commercial Court’s recognition of the Tribunal’s decision in the UK Court of Appeals, uncovering P&lD’s outrageous approach for what it is: a sham based on fraudulent and criminal activity developed to profit from a developing country.”

  • Police arraign Sowore’s ally Jalingo in court

    The police on Wednesday arraigned Agba Jalingo at the Federal High Court in Calabar, the Cross River State capital, after keeping him in detention for 34 days.

    Jalingo, an ally of RevolutionNow Convener Omoyele Sowore, is a journalist and publisher of an online news site, CrossRiverWatch.

    The journalist was reportedly picked up at his Lagos home on August 22 by security operatives from Cross River State Police Command and conveyed to Calabar, where he was detained for days without trial.

    The police charged him with alleged terrorism, treasonable felony and attempt to topple the Cross River State government.

    There was widespread condemnation of the charges when they were leaked to the public before the arraignment.

    Jalingo pleaded not guilty to the four charges preferred against him.

    Justice Simon Amobeda, who presided over the court, remanded the accused in prison when the application for his bail could not be considered.

    The judge held that the counter-affidavit the prosecution filed in response to the motion for bail by the defendant’s counsel was added to the file.

    Read Also: Court orders DSS to release Sowore to Falana

    He said there was not time to look at it.

    Justice Amobeda also said he perused the file on Tuesday night and did not see the counter-affidavit.

    The prosecution counsel, Denis Terhemba, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), claimed the counter-affidavit was filed on September 18, but Jalingo’s counsel Attah Ochinke said he was served before the court began sitting.

    But after a brief discussion with the Clerk of the court, who whispered a few words to him, Justice Amobeda ruled that Jalingo be remanded in Afokang Prisons in Calabar.

    He adjourned the matter till today.

    Responding to the ruling, Ochinke said: “We had an application for him to be granted bail, but because of the reaction, the counter-affidavit was only brought to the attention of the court today (yesterday). The court graciously granted us to come back tomorrow (today) for the argument on the application for bail. We hope that by tomorrow, the court will give a considered opinion on it and Agba will be admitted to bail.”

    The lawyer, who described the charges preferred against Jalingo as “sensational”, added: “We have looked at the proof of evidence and we know that they have no basis. We are ready to stand trial.”

  • Benue Police uncovers 9 corpses in secret graves

    The Police in Benue said they have uncovered hidden graves in Gbatse village with nine corpses of people suspected to have been killed by criminals in Ushongo Local Government Area of the state.

    The Police Public Relations Officer, ASP Catherine Anene, disclosed this to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in an interview on Thursday in Makurdi.

    Anene said one suspect has been arrested, adding that ” as soon as we have concluded interrogating him, we will give out the full information”.

    She said, for now

    NAN gathered that the suspect, a gang leader of a kidnapped and armed robbery syndicate, was arrested following tip-off by members of the community.

    The suspect and his gang were alleged to be killing their victims and burrying them after collecting their motorcycles in order to conceal their crime and avoid arrest.

    A resident of Ushongo town, who pleaded anonymity, said they had already uncovered over 10 bodies from different graves at different times.(NAN)

  • You cannot waive your immunity for adjudication, Lawyer tells Osinbajo

    Dr Kayode Ajulo, a Constitutional Lawyer says Vice President Yemi Osinbajo cannot waive his constitutional immunity for adjudication of claims of libel and malicious falsehood against his person in the court

    Ajulo told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday in Abuja against the backdrop of an alleged falsehood peddled in a newspaper by Mr Timi Frank and Mr Katch Onanuju against Osinbajo.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) report that Osinbajo said he had instructed the commencement of a legal action against two individuals who put their names to the odious falsehood.

    Ajulo however said that the provisions of Section 308 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, as amended frowns at it.

    According to him, the implication of the foregoing provision of the law is that the person holding the office does not have the right to waive the immunity.

    “Because any of such waivers is ineffective as the immunity is not that of the person holding the office but of that particular office he represents during the tenure of the office.

    Read Also: Yemi Osinbajo, ‘incestuous’ bullies and tumours

    The lawyer said that the position further found backing in the use of the word “shall” which was the operative word in the section which admitted no discretion whatsoever.

    He said that the immunity granted to Osinbaji prescribed an absolute prohibition on the courts from entertaining any proceedings and civil or criminal in respect of any claim or relief against him.

    According to him, no question of waiver of the relevant immunity by the incumbent of the office concerned or indeed by the courts may therefore arise.

    “The court has laid it down as a rule that the time a person spends in office will not be reckon with in the calculation of time for the purpose of statute of limitation,’’ he said.

    Ajulo said the immunity clause remained of great antiquity in Nigeria’s nascent constitutional law jurisprudence.

    He said that the vestige of the doctrine of immunity in favour of the occupier of offices had always been a consistent feature of each successive constitutions of Nigeria.

    Ajulo however said that the only option available to the vice president in his bid to waive his immunity was to resign, adding that “Nigeria is not yet tired of the services of Osinbajo’’.

    (NAN)

  • El-Rufai’s son’s public school enrolment deceptive, says Shehu Sani

    The lawmaker, who represented Kaduna Central Senatorial District in the eight National Assembly, Senator Shehu Sani, has reacted to the action of Governor Nasir El-Rufai, who on Monday enrolled six-year-old son, Abubakar, in a public school.

    Sani said the governor’s intention was to deceive people outside the locality, who might not know the level of decay in public schools in the state.

    He said it was designed to score points ahead of 2023 political dispensation.

    Sani described the action as a badly written Kennywood or Nollywood script, designed for the media, preparatory to 2023.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Kaduna, he said the governor’s action “was simply a 2023 political stunt set up for the media and people who live outside Kaduna because those who reside here know what public primary schools look like.”

    Sani said: “It is not because I have political difference with him, no. But whoever lives in Kaduna State knew that what the governor did with his son by enrolling him in a public school was just a comedy.

    Read Also: As El-Rufai’s son goes to public school

    “Although, it was a badly written Kennywood or Nolywood script, as far as I am concerned that was a bad and poorly written script for the media preparatory to 2023 and nothing else.

    “He would have done better by upgrading schools in Kaduna. You cannot spend N195million in a particular school and then take your son and the media to that school and think you have done anything different.

    “Let me tell you, we had a governor in this state, Balarabe Musa, who never lived in the Government House when he was in power. He lived in his private house. I know that the children of former Governor Ahmed Makarfi attended this same Capital School.

    “I also know that other public officials’ children go to that school too. So if you are not being cunning, deceptive and comical, you would have allowed all your children to enrol in public schools. Public school doesn’t mean primary schools alone, there are public secondary schools and public universities.

    “He is not new in this kind of drama. It was the same person who was moving around Kaduna-Abuja road with cameras, saying he was chasing kidnappers. So, this is a new script, but as far as I am concerned, that is comedy since we are in an era in this state of using public utilities, public hospitals and now public schools.

    “So it is also in order that public officials, both elected and appointed, should patronise public toilets in Kaduna. That is the highest form of patriotism and selfless service. You should use what the masses are using, which is public toilets.”

  • Obiano proposes 137.1 billion for 2020

    Anambra Governor Willie Obiano has proposed N137.1 billion budget for 2020 fiscal year

    This is the first time a Governor of Anambra State since the berth of Democracy had presented a budget for any fiscal year in September.

    Presenting the budget to the Anambra House of Assembly on Thursday, he projected N58.69 billion representing 43 percent for recurrent expenditure while 78.3 billion, representing 57 percent, was for capital expenditure.

    The budget, with the theme :Accelerating Infrastructural Development and Youth Entrepreneurship , had road works and Infrastructure as the highest with a vote of N22.2 billion.

    It was followed by education with a vote of N 8.3 billion for the year while Health came third with N6.98 billion.

    Obiano, said his vision remained to “make Anambra state the first choice investment destination and Hub for industrialization and Commercial Activities ”

    Also, his mission, is “to make Anambra state a socially stable, business friendly environment that would attract both indigenes and foreigners to seek wealth creating opportunities”

    READ ALSO: Anambra lawmakers to Obiano: we don’t need your Prado jeeps

    According to him: “In the past fiscal year, the operating environment has presented the stiffest challenges in recent national memory, herdsmen -farmers clashes, widespread kidnappings and general insecurity, heavy flooding of coastal Communities and increasing boldness of ethnic militia groups and agitators have created the fear of the unknown and adversely affected investors confidence in the National economy”

    “Over the same period, we have made great efforts to grow the economy of Anambra state, curb insecurity and preserve our reputation as Nigeria’s safest state”

    “Consequently, we have grown our GDP from 3.8 trillion naira in 2016 to 4.0 trillion in 2017 at the rate of 5.73 percent and it is expected to hit 4.2 trillion mark in 2018 GDP report, based on the preliminary figures from state Bureau of statistics. We have retained our position as the fourth largest economy in Nigeria, our target is to leapfrog to number 1” Obiano said

    The Speaker Uche Okafor commended the Governor for being the first to present his 2020 budget in the country.

    He promised that the cordial relationship existing between the legislature and the Executive must continue to achieve the aims of Ndi Anambra.

    He assured the Governor and the people of the state that the 2020 budget would hit the ground running by January 1st, 2020

  • BREAKING: $9.6b award: UK court orders stay of execution, demands $200m security deposit

    The English Commercial and Arbitration has ordered a stay of execution of the $9.6billion damages secured against Nigeria by Process and Industrial Developments (P&ID) pending the determination of an appeal by the Federal Government.

    It however asked the government to make a security payment of $200million to the court.

    The court also granted Nigeria’s leave to file an appeal against the award.

    P&ID secured the damages against Nigeria following a failed Gas Supply Project Agreement (GSPA) contract between it and the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources.

    A brief by the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami (SAN) from London said: “Stay of execution granted subject to payment of $200m  security payment to court pending the determination of the appeal the leave for which has been granted by the commercial court

    Read Also: Firms linked to P&ID ‘withdraw $700,000 in cash’

    “Application for leave to appeal against the award and enforcement of the award is granted.”

    The Nation had exclusively reported that the Federal Government had opted for a fight-to-the-finish legal battle against the Irish firm.

    The first leg of the war is applying for a stay of execution of the judgment when the court resumes later this month.

    It was also reported that applying for a stay of execution, the Federal Government will file an appeal against the judgment.

    Further findings by THE NATION revealed that the Act bars UK courts from attaching assets of a foreign state without the consent of the state.

    In an article, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP (the largest law firm in the world devoted solely to business litigation and arbitration) said the Act allows a written consent of a foreign state before the enforcement of a judgment which could lead to seizure of assets or freezing of accounts.

    The March 20, 2019 article was titled “Sovereign Immunity in the United Kingdom—Lexology”

    The firm  said in part: “Section 13(2) of the Act provides that:(a) relief shall not be given against a State by way of injunction or order for specific performance or for the recovery of land or other property; and (b) the property of a State shall not be subject to any process for the enforcement of a judgment or arbitration award or, in an action in rem, for its arrest, detention or sale.

    “Pursuant to section 13 of the Act, state assets ‘shall not be subject to any process for the enforcement of a judgment or arbitration award or, in an action in rem, for [their] arrest, detention or sale’ unless the state has provided its written consent (see, for example, Gold Reserve Inc v Venezuela [2016] EWHC 153 (Comm), finding that Venezuela had submitted to arbitration in writing by entering into a bilateral investment treaty (BIT) with Canada) or the assets in question are ‘in use or intended for use for commercial purposes’ (section 13(2)-(4)). These provisions apply in respect to states alone as defined in section 14 of the Act, and do not therefore extend to separate entities (see question 8).

    “See Hazel Fox and Philippa Webb, The Law of State Immunity (Oxford University Press, Oxford 2015), pp. 504-5.

    “This provision is subject to sections 13(3) and 13(4) of the Act. Pursuant to section 13(3), a state may provide written consent to the grant of any relief against it. It follows that a state may consent to the grant of interim or injunctive relief against it; however, the mere submission to the jurisdiction of the UK courts does not constitute such consent.”

    Details shortly…

  • Two children beaten to death ‘for defecating in public’

    Two children have been beaten to death in India after they were seen defecating in the open near a village council building, police say.

    The victims, a 12-year-old girl named Roshni and Avinash, a boy aged 10, were cousins from the Dalit (formerly Untouchable) community. Two men, brothers from the upper-caste Yadav community, have been arrested on suspicion of murder.

    The attack took place at around 6.30am on Wednesday in the village of Bhavkhedi, Madhya Pradesh state, at almost the precise moment when – 7,500 miles away in New York – India’s prime minister Narendra Modi was being honoured by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for his work to eliminate open defecation.

    The family of the victims in the Bhavkhedi attack told reporters they have no toilet in their home, and that despite being eligible have been unable to access funds to build one under Mr Modi’s flagship Swachh Bharat – or Clean India – programme.

    They, like millions of others living across India, had no choice but to defecate in public, a practice which is known to put women and children at risk.

    Police believe the children’s attackers took pictures of them on their mobile phones before “beating them mercilessly with lathis [sticks] resulting in their death,” local station chief RS Dhakad told the Hindustan Times.

    The children were rushed to hospital, but declared dead on arrival.

    Avinash’s father, a labourer named Manoj Balmiki, said Dalits faced abuse and discrimination in the village and that the two arrested brothers had already scolded the children on other occasions in the past.

    He said he had previously clashed with the pair, named by police as Hakim Yadav and Rameshwar Yadav, after cutting the branch of a tree next to a field owned by the brothers.

    “There is a lot of untouchability issues in our village,” Balmiki, 32 told Reuters, adding that previous altercations between the two families had involved “casteist slurs”. “Our children cannot play with their children,” he said.

    Police superintendent Shivpuri Rajesh Chandel said investigations were ongoing into “if the murder is related to superstition” linked to open defecation, “or untouchability”. The case is being treated as a possible violation of laws designed to protect Dalits and other caste and tribal communities subjected to discrimination.

    But the killings also highlight the shortcomings of the government’s sanitation programme, launched after Mr Modi’s first election victory in 2014, with the aim of making the whole of India “open defecation free” by 2 October 2019 – the imminent 150th anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi’s birth.

    READ ALSO: Pastor, eight others jailed for defecating openly

    The government says it has helped build more than 100 million household toilets in the past five years, and a tracking website for the Swachh Bharat programme claims nearly 600,000 villages have achieved “open defecation free” status.

    Bhavkhedi itself was declared “open defecation free” in 2018, according to Anugraha P, the district’s top civil servant.

    Yet civil society groups have criticised the government’s record keeping track of its own progress, saying that plenty of households in rural areas still remain without access to toilets.

    A January 2019 study by the independent Research Institute for Compassionate Economics (RICE) found that as many as 23 per cent of rural schools surveyed had toilets that were unusable due to lack of water supply or failure to keep up maintenance. The study concluded that as much as 44 per cent of the rural population across four states “still defecate in the open”.

    During Tuesday night’s event with Mr Modi in New York, at which the prime minister was given one of four 2019 Global Goalkeeper Awards, Bill Gates admitted that “managing human waste is one of the world’s oldest and toughest challenges”, before saying India’s efforts could be a “model” for other to follow.

    “I would say most leaders are not willing to talk about [sanitation], in part, because the solutions aren’t that easy,” he said.

    (www.newsnow.co.uk)

  • Seven nabbed for threatening, kidnapping man in Adamawa

    The Adamawa State Police Command has arrested a gang of seven men for threatening to kidnap a man and going ahead to carry out the threat.

    The Spokesman of the Command, DSP Sulaiman Ngurore, gave the details of the incident on Thursday.

    He said, “On the 19th of this month, at about 10.00 hours, one Gloria Godwin, a female resident of Ujanda village in Gombi LGA, reported at the Gombi police station that at 1 midnight, an unknown person called her and threatened to kidnap her son, and dropped a letter written in Hausa language, demanding N5 million or they would go ahead and kidnap her son.”

    Ngurore said that when Mrs. Godwin failed to pay, they abducted her son, following which she reported to the police.

    READ ALSO: Kidnapping: Army dismisses three soldiers in Borno

    “Immediately she reported this to the police in Gombi, the Gombi DPO mobilised his men who, using intelligence and in collaboration with some volunteer contacts, they moved against the kidnappers.

    “They were able to rescue the son. They also succeeded in arresting seven suspects now reasonably determined to have been the kidnappers.”

    The seven suspects, according to the PPRO, are Abdullahi Musa, Bello Isah, Atiku Abubakar, Yahaya Isa, Mallam Tukur, Kabiru Bawa, and Alhaji Jambi.

    He said one Bello Alhaji, indicated as being a member of the gang, escaped arrest, and is currently being hunted by the police.

    He listed items recovered in the course of investigating the suspects to include one locally made pistol, three counterfeit N1,000 notes, two airtel sim cards, 14 cartridges of single-barrel guns, two bows and arrows, a copy of their treat letter, and two brand new motorcycles.