Tag: Nigerian Newspapers

  • RTEAN exco rejects dissolution

    Members of the State Executive Council (Exco) of the Road Transport Employers Association of Nigeria (RTEAN) rose from an emergency meeting on Monday with the rejection of the purported dissolution of the exco by its National President Osakpamwan Eriyo.

    The aggrieved members claimed that the dissolution, which was not ratified by RTEAN’s National Executive Council (NEC), is null and void.

    They advised the Lagos State government not to recognise the purported dissolution, which happened 48 hours after Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu had directed his Chief of Staff, Mr Tayo Ayinde, to call a meeting today for an amicable resolution of the grievances among the union’s members.

    Read Also: RTEAN dissolves Lagos excos, sets up caretaker committee

    The aggrieved members accused Eriyo of attempting to destabilise the Lagos State council and urged the government to disregard any attempt to instigate violence in the state.

    Reading the communique signed by the 46 members at the emergency meeting, the state’s Secretary Rahman Lekan Amusan listed seven reasons why the illegal dissolution of the state exco should not stand.

    According to him, not only did the NEC not hold any meeting ratifying the decision, in accordance with Article 7, Section 2(d) of the association’s constitution, the current tenure of the state exco had not elapsed and the Secretary General, being an employee of the union, cannot implement a decision that was not decided by the NEC.

  • Adamawa director held for ‘certificate forgery’

    The Director of Administration in Adamawa State Health Management Board (ASHMB), Halilu Abba has been taken before the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) for allegedly forging a Master’s degree certificate.

    Abba is alleged to have tendered the document issued by the Adamawa State University, Mubi, in 2013, to gain promotion into the office of Director of Administration in the Board, following which the ICPC, after a complaint to it, made its investigations and found that the degree was not validly issued to him.

    Investigations showed that he had actually been a student in the university but did not complete the Master’s programme.

    Concerned citizens blew the matter open in a letter dated May 28, 2019, alerting the ICPC, which in turn wrote to the university on June 11, 2019, to verify the truth.

    The management of the university, in a letter signed by its registrar, Yahya J Bobboi, said the candidate who was of the Department of Public Administration of the Postgraduate School of the university, had MPA 7091 (Research Methodology) as outstanding carryover as of July, 2019.

    Read Also: Flood hits Yola North, 4 other Adamawa LGAs

    “The statement of result issued on 4th September, 2013 was issued without the candidate completing the MPA programme,” the university said.

    The ICPC has evidently responded to the reply from the university by demanding Abba’s immediate prosecution.

    The whistleblowers are said to have told Governor Ahmadu Fintiri through the Head of Service to act appropriately, especially against a history of forgeries in government circles, including a celebrated case just before the exit of the last administration, of a secondary school leaver who, using someone else’s medical qualification, practiced for years as a doctor under the state government.

    Abba could not be reached for comment, as he repeatedly shifted requests for interview.

  • Police probe ‘stabbing’ at Akure nightclub

    ONDO State Commissioner of Police, Undie Adie has ordered full scale investigation into the alleged stabbing of nine persons by a policeman Taiwo Orisadare at a nightclub in Akure, the state capital.

    A statement by the command’s spokesman, Femi Joseph, a Superintendent of Police(SP), said the investigation became imperative because of the distortion of facts

    The command urged members of the public to disregard social media reports on the matter, saying the story is concocted to deceive the  public.

    The statement reads, “The attention of the Ondo State Police Command has been drawn to a story trending on the social media, captioned “Police sergeant stabs self, eight others with broken bottle in Ondo”.

    “ To set the record straight, there was a social gathering organised by a friend to one of our policemen, Sergeant Taiwo Orishalade at a popular eatery in Akure to celebrate the birthday of his girlfriend.

    Read Also: Ondo varsity lecturers mourn kidnapped colleague

    “The police officer who was not on official duty and also not in uniform sat with some other invited guests at the party. At a point, some boys who apparently identified the police officer even though he was in mufti, approached him to buy drinks for them.

    “The policeman humbly told them that he was just invited by a friend to the party and besides, he did not have enough money on him to accede to their request.

    “The boys who were apparently drunk and appeared like miscreants, insisted that the officer must buy them drinks or leave the scene, or in the alternative be ready to be killed just like they did to his colleague inspector sometime ago.

    “The officer pleaded with them to take things calmly, but in a twinkle of an eye, one of the boys slapped him why the other one took a bottle, smashed it and stabbed the Sergeant with it. Naturally, he had to fight back which resulted into injuries to the three of them.”

     

  • Akwashiki defeats Mike-Abdul for Nasarawa North’s seat

    Senator Godiya Akwashiki of the All Progressives Congress (APC) on Monday defeated Chief John Mike-Abdul of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for Nasarawa North’s senatorial seat at the Court of Appeal in Makurdi, the Benue State capital.

    One of the lawyers to the APC senator, Dr. Mubarak Tijani Adekilekun, confirmed to our reporter that the matter had been concluded at the Court of Appeal in Makurdi.

    He said Mike-Abdul was challenging the election of Senator Akwashiki in this year’s general election.

    Read Also: Election petitions: Elections tribunal declines to compel Sanwo-Olu’s appearance

    Adekilekun stressed that the court had dismissed the appeal filed by Mike-Abdul, a banker and former Deputy Governor of Nasarawa State.

    He added that the matter lacked merit and it was thus dismissed with a cost of N200,000 against Mike-Abdul.

    The National Assembly and State Election Petitions Tribunal sitting in Lafia, the Nasarawa State capital, had dismissed the petition filed by Mike-Abdul of (PDP) challenged the election of Senator Godiya Akwashiki on the platform of the (APC) in the 2019 general election.

    INEC, on February 27, declared Akwashiki, winner of the election having scored 54,104 votes to defeat his closest opponent Mike-Abdul, who pulled 48, 133 votes.

  • 116,623 cases pending in Federal High Courts, says CJ

    The Acting Chief Judge (CJ) of the Federal High Court, Justice John Tsoho, has said about 116,623 cases are pending in the courts.

    The High Court CJ said 16,144 cases were filed this quarter alone out of which 12,692 had been disposed off.

    He promised to take measures that would lead to improved efficiency and workers’ welfare.

    The CJ stressed the need for judges to uphold the Constitution for the unity of the country and the enhancement of law and order.

    He hailed the court’s judges for their contributions to the promotion of democracy, particularly their efficient handling of election matters.

    Justice Tsoho spoke in Abuja at the beginning of the 2019/2010 new legal year of the Federal High Court.

    The Federal High Court CJ promised to ensure the appointment of more judges for the court due to the high volume of pending cases.

    “From the reports received, about 116,623 cases are pending in the Federal High Court; 16,144 cases were filed in this quarter alone in which 12,692 have been disposed off.

    “It is obvious that the judges were over-burdened with work in the last legal year. We, therefore, need to engage more judicial officers to help out.

    “However, it does appear that there was no provision for appointment of judges in the current budget.

    “I will make efforts to discuss with the relevant stakeholders to see to the possibility of facilitating the recruitment of more judicial officers in the course of the year.”

    Read Also: The limitation of court cases

    The Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Abubakar Malami, yesterday urged judges and lawyers to always ensure that their conducts promote the dignity and sanctity of the Judiciary to retain public confidence in their activities.

    The minister, who hailed the Judiciary for sustaining and growing democracy in the country, assured its stakeholders of a robust cooperation between his office and the third arm of government.

    He promised a relationship “that promotes genuine cooperation without undermining the independence of this hallowed arm of government”.

    Malami said: “I urge my noble lords to maintain sanctity and credibility and to ensure that the sacred integrity reposed in your lordships remains unshaken at all times in order to foster and promote public confidence in all judgments and rulings that emanate from this court.

    “I assure you that the promotion of these values will continue to guide your lordships to the greatest heights of our legal profession.

    “I humbly urge this court, as part of the judicial arm of government, to remember that it is the anchor upon which our legitimate claim to a civilised society rests and revolves.”

    To the lawyers, the AGF stressed the need for them to work with the courts to ensure that its dignity, integrity and credibility are not ridiculed in the eyes of the public.

    “We must collectively shun fraudulent practices and render sound and unbiased advice to our clients based on laid-down laws and not on sentiment. We should also not be seen encouraging our clients in a bit to ridicule this court into doing the impossible.

    “As ministers in the temple of justice, we must together foster the desired growth for a better society, because this court, on its own, can only do little as permitted by law,” he said.

    The AGF hailed the leadership of the Federal High Court for its many policies aimed at enhancing the court’s efficiency.

    He recalled the recent incident, which included the innovative provisions contained in the court’s new Civil Procedure Rules (2019 Rules).

    Malami noted that the court’s speedy handling of pre-election matters before, during and after the last general election “helped the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to effectively field the right candidates for the elections and the efficient conduct of election processes”.

    Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) President Paul Usoro (SAN) frowned at what he called undue criticism of judges and judicial decisions by senior government officials in a manner that seemed to intimidate the Judiciary.

    Represented by Offiong Offiong (SAN), Usoro stressed the need for stakeholders to work for the sustenance of judicial independence, rule of law and the doctrine of separation of power.

    Usoro noted that in the face of the unwarranted attacks on the Judiciary, the society required independent-minded judges, who would be empowered to dispense justice to different persons, including government departments, without fear or favour.

    He said: “The Executive arm of government and its agencies are increasingly and unceasingly critical of the Judiciary and its decisions, particularly in matters that the government and its agencies may be interested in.

    “It is not unusual these days to hear high officials of government talk down the Judiciary and ridiculously and rather ill-advisedly dump all the ills of society on the Judiciary. “Decisions by your lordships are sometimes brazenly denigrated and attributed to ulterior and ill-motives – and these on social and traditional media platforms.

    “Veiled and sometimes open and, in all cases, audacious attempts are made to tele-guide and programme the decisions of courts.

    “These are very dangerous practices that destroy the independence of the Judiciary and, by extension, the rule of law and indeed the fabric of our society.

    “The society needs and can only survive if we have independent-minded judges who are empowered to dispense justice to all manner of men, including government departments, without fear or favour.

    “We can only survive as a nation if the independence and vibrancy of the Judiciary, particularly the non-interference with the thoughts and decision-making processes of your lordships, are guaranteed and protected.

    “Society is diminished when judges are robbed of their independent minds and thought processes and the confidence of the ordinary person in the Judiciary is thereby diminished, if not destroyed.

    “Self-help and anarchy ultimately become the available remedy. Of course, our economy suffers in the process: the investing public, both local and international, lose confidence in our justice system consequent upon these denigrations of our Judiciary and there follows a consequential downturn in our economy with the attendant fallout on the socio-economic well-being of our people.

    “In summary, the ultimate losers when judges are robbed of their independence, in thoughts and discretions, is the society and all of us, including our rulers of today.

    “However, we are not entirely without remedy. To paraphrase the poet, the man dies in him who fails or is not able to stand up and/or speak against tyranny.

    “The courage to stand up and speak out is what we all need, both the Bar and the Bench, in our present circumstances.

    “My lords have, at critical moments shown such outstanding courage even in the face of danger and our prayer is that such courage and grit should never depart from our lordships.

    “These are indeed moments that require courageous Judges with the candour and fortitude to speak truth to power, to borrow the hackneyed phrase, and to dispense justices to all manner of men without fear or favour, as demanded by your lordships’ oaths of office.

    “We have no doubt that your lordships will continue to live up to these dictates of your lordships’ oaths and our prayers and thoughts will, as always, be with my lords in that regard.”

  • 13 persons killed, 11 injured in Nasarawa crash

    NO fewer than 13 persons including three kids have been killed and 11 others injured after a Benue Links bus with registered number plate BDG530SU collided with a truck with registration number MSA513 XA along Akwanga-Makurdi Road in Nasarawa State.

    It was gathered that the accident occurred Sunday night at a sharp bend near “Many Have Gone” hill near Unguwan Ciyawa in Eggon Local Government Area of Nasarawa State where 11 persons died in a freak accident last Monday.

    An unconfirmed report indicated that 17 persons including the driver were killed in another accident involving an 18-seater bus along the same road on Monday.

    The Akwanga-Makurdi accident, it was gathered, plunged the Mass Transit bus and a black car with RBC45AT into a ditch.

    According to the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) Sector Commander Ismaila Kugu, the injured were moved to Nasarawa Eggon Hospital.

    The Nation learnt that a man Tervershina Jebe lost his wife and three children in the crash, while a yet-to-be identified woman was said to be the only survivor in the 18-seater accident reported to have occurred yesterday along the same route.

    At a stakeholder meeting on Road Traffic Accident (RTA) organised by the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) on Monday, Director General of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Emergency Management Agency Idris Abbas said almost 50 persons were killed in accident on that road.

    Read Also: 11 killed in Nasarawa road crash

    He said the spate of road accident was worrisome, adding that the government was only paying lip service to it.

    “Road Traffic Accident (RTA) is one of the main daily disasters we face in this country. Unfortunately we are paying lip service to it. If there is a plane crash and one person died, the whole world will know but when there is a road accident where 100 people died apart from the responders, probably few of the media report it and they will not make a major headline of it.

    “This morning, I received a report that one of the buses of Benue State Transport Service had an accident and killed over 50 people and if not because I have the privilege of knowing, we would have been in dark.

    “We need to sit up and educate the populace and also sensitise our leaders and government to place priority in this sector. We need to also keep exploring means and ways to improve. We must stop blaming the responders for every disaster and be patient, responsible,” he said.

    Reacting to Sunday’s accident,  Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom in a statement by his media aide Terver Akase said it was painful.

    He assured that the government would support the treatment of the survivors and assist the bereaved families to bury their loved ones.

    Ortom directed the Ministry of Works  to liaise with the FRSC and Management of Benue Links to ensure that survivors were given urgent attention and the deceased properly deposited in the morgue.

  • Musings on the PEC’s verdict

    MEANING no disrespect to the rank and file of the formation that used to advertise itself as the largest political party in Africa and to its legal team, I was not surprised that the Presidential Election Court dismissed their challenge to President Muhammadu Buhari’s victory in the    March 2019 election for lack of merit, or that all five justices of the court concurred in the ruling.

    I anticipated this outcome not from lack of confidence in the judiciary as a whole or in that branch of the institution, although evidence abounds there of perversity, a not infrequent flight from justice, timidity, and high susceptibility to unwholesome influences.

    Rather, I came to the expectation from the case laid out before the Tribunal by the combined legal team of the PDP’s candidate, Alhaji Abubakar Atiku, and the PDP, as reported contemporaneously in various media outlets.  There was a great deal to complain about and even challenge in the election, but the case made by for the petitioners did not rise to proof of the skullduggery alleged in their depositions.

    Here, I must enter several caveats. The Court  is yet to furnish a transcript of the proceedings, against which the accuracy of media reports can be measured.  The reporting, it has to be said, was far from comprehensive and was generally marked by a scatter-shot approach.  However, to the extent that none of the parties nor the Tribunal has questioned its fidelity, the reporting must be judged substantially accurate.

    Atiku’s case rested crucially, first, on the existence of a server controlled by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), to which the authentic election returns from the field were posted directly.

    A senior INEC official in one of the states had disclosed this arrangement at a news conference ahead of the election, according to testimony by a witness for Atiku. Any documentation of election returns that differed in any material particular from those retrievable from INEC’s master server must therefore be presumed to be a forgery.

    Now, several such documents had turned up, crediting Atiku with far fewer votes than he had actually scored as entered on INEC’s private server by field operatives.  If INEC had not knowingly collated Atiku’s votes downwards to rob him of his hard-earned victory, it must at the very least have somehow connived in that act.

    INEC rejoined that it hosted no private server.  It produced documentary evidence to the effect that its chair, Professor Mahmood Yakubu, had stated for the record that electronic transmission of election returns was not allowed under the electoral law, and that INEC had hosted no server for that purpose.

    While the PEC was grappling with claim and counterclaim, Atiku filed a lawsuit at the Supreme Court seeking to compel INEC to produce the alleged server.  The Supreme Court held that the existence or otherwise of the server was a substantive issue before another court, and that asking INEC to produce it would be prejudicial to the outcome of that other case.

    Nothing daunted, Atiku’s claim produced a field worker for INEC who said he had, as instructed, personally used some device furnished by INEC to transmit election returns to INEC’s server.  His testimony did not hold up during cross-examination.  More dramatic was the testimony of a computer specialist from Kenya, who said that certain characteristics of a document under review showed that the document could only have come from a server hosted by INEC. His testimony  shed no light on the controversy.

    The controversial server will go down as the dodgiest piece of electronic hardware in the annals of polling.  If it actually existed, was it kept in proper custody?  Was INEC the only entity that had access to it? If not, who else?  Is it inconceivable that another party, a rogue element, could have posted on it material that did not originate from INEC, or corrupted material obtained from it?

    In whatever case, its existence was not proven.

    The server certainly was not the trump card, the “Joker” (shades of Richard Akinjide and the 1979 presidential election) that was supposed to be the clincher. But the very prospect of bringing the existence of the dodgy server to light was enough to send PDP functionaries rhapsodizing about the certainty of the election being voided, and of the party’s imminent return to power and the good old days.

    By the way, where is Akinjide today, in these contentious times, when his hugely inventive forensic skills would have helped clarify and resolve many a mystery?   But I digress.

    Atiku’s case also rested, secondly, on proving that Muhammadu Buhari did not possess the minimum educational qualification for the office of president.  He should not have been allowed to run as a candidate in the first place.  Too bad he was allowed to run, but the lapse could be remedied by disqualifying Buhari after the fact, Atiku’s team contended.

    If INEC’s server was dodgy, Buhari’s West African School Certificate has been dodgier.  At one time, it was said to be in the custody of the military authorities.  Not so, the military authorities replied severely.  Perhaps the certificate did not exist, in which case Buhari must have been smuggled into the Nigeria Defence Academy, his determined adversaries said.

    Then the certificate was reported missing, not lost irretrievably.  Thereafter, it was said to have been replaced with a copy authenticated by the West African Examinations Council, and presented to Buhari by WAEC Registrar Dr Uyi Uwadiae, at a well-publicized ceremony, the issuance of an original back in 1961 having been ascertained.

    Still the controversy deepened.

    They challenged the name on the certificate.  They disputed the subjects Buhari offered and passed at the examination.  They said the school through which Buhari earned the certificate did not exist at the time he took the examination. They said anyone seeking evidence that the document was a forgery need not look beyond its shape and design.

    In vain was it pointed out that WAEC is an examining body comprising five member-nations, all of whom would have had to conspire to manufacture and award a certificate that was never earned, even if it was to a presidential candidate in one member-country.  That scenario seemed inconceivable.

    Still, they kept stoking the manufactured controversy.

    “Facts are stubborn things,” a learned man once said.  “They never go away.”

    The truth is that lies are even more stubborn.  They never go away.  They just grow and spread and ramify, as the controversy over Buhari’s School Certificate for his office has shown.  They defy commonsense and the rules of evidence.

    The Presidential Election Court saw through the subterfuge and held that Buhari was in terms of academic achievement, more than qualified to be president of Nigeria.

    Even so, I am not sure that its pronouncement will lay the matter to rest.  I will not be surprised if the matter is raked up before the Supreme Court on appeal, or continues to be litigated in the court of public opinion in the unlikely event that the Supreme Court finds for Buhari.

    Nor, switching gears, will I be surprised, if Buhari’s team continues to press the ludicrous claim that Atiku is a foreigner, to wit a citizen of Cameroun who had in all his adult life falsely paraded himself as a Nigerian citizen, and in the process risen to the second highest office in the land and amassed riches beyond the dreams of the most avaricious, especially since the Presidential Election Court  declined to consider the question.

    The penalty, the more desperate among them might even insist, is to strip him of his wealth and fortune and every distinction Nigeria ever conferred on him, and send him back to Cameroun.

    The silly season never ends here, remember.

     

  • Minimum wage: Workers threaten strike as negotiation breaks down again

    Workers, under the aegis of the Joint Public Sector Negotiating Council (JPSNC), are threatening to go on strike as a meeting of the Federal Government and the unions ended yesterday in a deadlock.

    The negotiations on the consequential adjustment, which was earlier adjourned till September 4 to allow the government’s team brief President Muhammadu Buhari, was rescheduled for September 16.

    But it suffered another setback as both parties failed to reach an agreement, despite minor adjustments in their separate positions.

    The Nation gathered that at yesterday’s meeting, which was chaired by the Head of Service of the Federation (HOSF), Mrs Winifred Oyo-Ita, both government and the union leaders only made minor adjustments to their earlier positions.

    The government moved from its earlier position of 9.5 per cent to 11 per cent for Grade Levels Seven to 14 and 6.5 per cent from 5.5 per cent for Levels 15 to 17.

    Read Also: Minimum wage: Workers consider strike option as negotiations breaks down again

    The workers insisted that the government adjust salaries of workers on Grade Levels Seven to 14 by 30 per cent and those on Levels 15 to 17 by 25 per cent.

    Chairman of Labour’s team and National Auditor of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Simon Anchaver said workers stepped down to 29 per cent, from 30 per cent, for Grade Levels Seven to 14 and down to 24 from 25 per cent for Levels 15 to 17

    According to him, the negotiating council resolved to write to the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) on their advice about a possible industrial action.

    Also, Secretary of the negotiating council, Slade Lawal said organised labour would decide on the next line of action on the minimum wage.

    The labour leader said in due time, Nigerians would be informed.

    Lawal said: “The meeting is deadlocked. We found out that the Federal Government officials are not serious about it at all. We are suspecting foul play or a hidden agenda somewhere. So, we have decided to report the development to our principals, including the labour unions. Nigerians will be adequately briefed about our next line of action very shortly.”

    Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, recently told reporters that President Muhammadu Buhari had directed that the process of negotiations be concluded as soon as possible to enable workers begin to enjoy the new wages.

  • National Assembly to help Katsina tackle banditry

    House of Representatives Speaker Femi Gbajabiamila on Monday said the National Assembly would help the Katsina State government to end banditry, kidnappings and other forms of criminality.

    The Speaker spoke in Katsina during a working visit to assess the security challenge in the state in order to find lasting solutions to them.

    He said the dialogue and peace initiative of the Governor Aminu Bello Masari administration, which brought together the two warring groups to a roundtable, was a great feat that would lead to lasting peace in the state.

    This is coming as repentant bandits in the state released 10 more victims, bringing the number of those freed to 61.

    Gbajabiamila assured the governor that the National Assembly would also ensure that the Federal Government to develop a workable plan that would end banditry and kidnapping in Katsina and other states facing similar challenges.

    He said: “States cannot deal with an issue like this on its own. Such issues are complicated and very complex. We believed the Federal Government must do something to assist the state in ending this nagging problem.

    Read Also: Hold Atiku responsible for upsurge in terrorism, banditry – Group

    “As a National Assembly, beyond all the motions that we move on the floor of the House when these issues happen, we will support you and the Federal Government to end this problem.

    “Your members who represent Katsina in the House (of Representatives) have been so proactive and passionate about what is going on here.

    “We pray and hope that we will be able to complement what you are doing to find lasting solutions to this nagging problem of insecurity.”

    Masari said the peace initiative of his administration was yielding fruitful results as 61 kidnapped victims had been released by their captors without collecting ransom.

    He said: “Even yesterday (Sunday), 11 people were brought back from their abductors in Batsari Local Government Area and early hours of this morning (Monday). We took five. We are following events in Batsari and we are able to locate where the problem is coming from.”

    The governor regretted that herdsmen were being neglected by government at all levels, hence the recurring herders/farmers clashes and other forms of criminality across the country.

    “This has been systematic. There have been supports to farmers and other occupations but there was never a single programme that was designed to address the issue of herdsmen.

    “They were left in the forest uneducated to have Islamic and Western education. And the grazing reserved areas are being abandoned and overtaken by farmers. By 1987, when the state was created, the population was about 3.7 million. Today, we are talking of between 7 million to 7.5 million people.

    “We must have a rehabilitation programme on how to make the forests conducive for people who live in it. What we are trying to do now is to normalise the situation and start addressing the fundamentals because unless you normalise the issue, the area will not be peaceful enough for you to do anything,” he said.

    Masari urged opposition elements, whom he said were out to blackmail the All Progressives Congress (APC) administration, to desist from making inflammatory statements that could truncate the federal and state governments’ efforts in tackling insecurity.

    “I urged all the people, especially those in the opposition, who think this is an opportunity to bash the government either at the Federal, state or local government level, to stop. What Nigeria is facing now is beyond party line. We should operate as a people and a nation,” he added.

    Gbajabiamila received 10 freed captives from repentant bandits as part of the ongoing dialogue between them and the state government.

  • Police accuse IPOB of using blackmail to win Igbo sympathy

    THE proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has been accused of whipping up sentiments to win the sympathy of the Ndigbo by its claim that the police were planning to arrest the father of its leader, Nnamdi Kanu.

    Debunking the claim, the Abia State Police Commissioner (CP), Ene Okon, said the group was blackmailing the police by raising the alarm about the presence of policemen and other security personnel around Kanu’s home.

    The IPOB claimed also that the target of the security agencies was to arrest Kanu’s father, who reportedly arrived his compound almost two years after his compound was invaded by soldiers.

    But, Okon said the police have no such plans.

    Also on Monday, the Labour and Employment Minister, Dr. Chris Ngige, and a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Nze Modestus Umenzekwe, reminded members that IPOB was set up as a non-violent organisation.

    In a telephone interview with our reporter on Monday, CP Okon said: “What IPOB has given to you people is completely false. As a matter of fact, we received intelligence report that IPOB is going to have a meeting in Nnamdi Kanu’s house.

    “They prepared also for a protest over the alleged killing of their members during the Operation Python Dance and as an organisation that is charged with maintenance of law and order and to ensure peace, based on the intelligence that we gathered, we have to fortify the already existing police points within the area, which has been there for the past two years.

    “All what we did is to put in more number of police in that area to ensure that there is peace . No policeman entered Nnamdi Kanu’s house or his father’s house.

    “IPOB is pushing out propaganda to blackmail the police. The police didn’t even know whether Nnandi Kanu’s father is at home or not. Under what offence will the police go to arrest Nnamdi Kanu’s father; a 90-years-old man?

    “If police have anyone to arrest, it is Nnamdi Kanu because he has been declared wanted and not the father.

    “It is a mere propaganda or blackmail to win the sympathy of the Igbo by the IPOB. Remember that IPOB has been proscribed by law and they remain proscribed.

    “Any of their activities and gathering is illegal. If we get intelligence of their gathering which will disrupt the peace of the area, I don’t think that we should sit back and look at them disturbing the peace of the area.”

    Ngige and Umenzekwe recalled how IPOB was was set up as a violent organisation.

    Read Also: IPOB alleges genocide plot in Kanu’s home

    Speaking with The Nation in Awka, the one-time Anambra governor said that IPOB was registered by the former Ohaneze Ndigbo President-General, the late Dr. Dozie Ikedife, and other big wigs from the Southeast.

    Ngige, who once represented the Anambra Central Senatorial District, noted that what was going on in the group was not part of the work plan.

    The minister said he visited the United States (U.S.) and was welcomed well by IPOB members, instead of attacking him, adding that they knew he fed them when he held the fort as governor.

    He said the proscribed IPOB should follow the workplan when it was formed instead of being a menace to the society, adding that the Shi’iite group was also  proscribed by the Federal Government and not only IPOB.

    The Igbo leader chided some evangelists for “killing Ndigbo” through what he called misinformation by them on the pulpits, warning that they should desist from such act.

    Chief Umenzekwe said what Ndigbo needed was peace and not war.

    He told The Nation: “We have some of our leaders as ministers at Abuja and we need to follow them. Sen Ike Ekweremadu is one of the Igbo leaders and he has served this country well as deputy Senate president. Why should IPOB attack him outside our shores.

    “Let us queue behind our leaders and apply to avoid violence because violence will not bring peace. We have fought war in the past we don’t want any war again.

    “There are more civil ways of making our agitations known. The issue of harassing him abroad is wrong and condemnable and we will never support that from IPOB or any other group.