Tag: Nigerian Newspapers

  • Suspect’s re-arrest will clear doubts, apprehension

    A SOURCE at the Defence Headquarters on Tuesday said that the Joint Investigative Panel probing into the killings of three police detectives and a civilian in Taraba during the escape of kidnap suspect Hamisu Bala Wadume would ensure that justice is served.

    Reacting to the re-arrest of Wadume in Kano by police detectives, a top military source said the re-arrest of Wadume would clear all doubts, apprehension and the perceptions that have been created around the case.

    The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said: “I can tell you that the joint panel constituted by the Defence Headquarters would do a thorough job regarding this case. There is no cause for apprehension any more.

    Read Also: Finding Wadume

    “I don’t want to pre-empt the work of the Panel, but I can assure you that justice will be served to all parties involved in this matter. I have confidence that the Panel will unearth the truth and clear doubts of everyone.”

    However, the Nigerian Army as at the time of filing this report was yet to re-act to Wadume’s re-arrest by police detectives in the ancient city of Kano.

    Army spokesman Col. Sagir Musa could not be reached as sources within the Army Headquarters confirmed that he was out of the country.

    The source added that the Army would not like to put spanners in the work of the panel by way of commenting on issues that are already before the panel.

     

  • Kwara monarch arraigned for alleged threat to life, trespass

    The Kwara State Police Command yesterday arraigned a second- class monarch from Odo-Owa, Oke-Ero Local Government, Oba Joshua Adeyemi Adimula, for alleged trespass to land and threat to life.

    In the case number MCIA/374/2019, the cleric in charge of St Thomas Catholic Church, Odo-Owa, Rev Pius Obikwelu, accused the monarch of trespassing into the church’s parcel of land in the community.

    In the police First Information Report (FIR), dated February 25, “the case was transferred from the Area Commander, Omu-Aran, in Irepodun Local

    Government to the Criminal Intelligence and Investigation Department, Ilorin for discreet investigation.”

    The Catholic reverend father in a petition dated November 20, 2018 reported that Oba Adimula “trespassed into his church parcel of land situated beside St Thomas Catholic Primary School, Odo-Owa and placed an object suspected to be juju on the land. In the process, the monarch also threatened that evil would befall anybody who dared to remove the object.

    Read Also: Woman arraigned for N22.9b allegedly received from ex-NSA Dasuki

    “Investigation conducted by the state CIID Ilorin revealed that you Oba Adimula who ought to be a promoter of peace within your domain criminally trespassed into the complainant’s land.”

    Hearing of the case slated for commencement yesterday could not hold, because the prosecution counsel, Nasir Yusuf, got the case file at 8:30am of the same day.

    Mr. Yusuf told the court that “ordinarily the case is slated for hearing today, but I got the case file this morning. Upon perusal, I discovered that it will not be appropriate to continue with the hearing based on my discussion with my senior learned colleague. We are, therefore, applying for another date for hearing.”

    Presiding Chief Magistrate A. M. Ibrahim adjourned the case till September 24 for commencement of hearing.

  • Two tried for ‘possession of firearms’

    The police in Lagos on Tuesday arraigned Sadiq Azeez, 25, and Gbolahan Wasiu, 40, at an Ikorodu Magistrates’ Court in Lagos State for alleged conspiracy and unlawful possession of firearms.

    The men, whose addresses were not provided, are facing a four-count charge of conspiracy, felony, membership of unlawful society and unlawful possession of weapons.

    The defendants, however, pleaded not guilty.

    Prosecuting Sergeant Mary Ajiteru said the defendants committed the offences in June at Igbo-Olomu area of Ikorodu.

    Read Also: Two arraigned for allegedly stealing recharge cards

    She alleged that the men had in their possession, a locally-made pistol with the intent to commit felony and cause terror on others.

    Ajiteru alleged that sometime in 2014, they were members of (Alura confraternity), knowing same to be an unlawful society.

    The prosecutor said the offences contravene sections 330(D), 312(C), 51 and 42(A) of Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    Magistrate O. M. Dawodu admitted the defendants to N200, 000 bail each, with two sureties each in the like sum.

    He adjourned the case till September 12

  • One crushed to death

    One person died on Tuesday in an accident at Agric bus stop in Ikorodu, Lagos. The crash occurred around noon. It happened inward Ogolonto, on Ikorodu Road.  The accident involved a 20-feet fully loaded container, a commercial Volkswagen Vanagon bus and a Toyota Corona car.

    The Nation gathered that a truck coming from Aruna towards Agric bus stop had a break failure and ran into the entrance of the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) pavilion at Agric. It crushed a woman and she died on the spot.

    The truck also ran into and crushed the bus and the commercial car parked by the road side, damaging them.

    An eyewitness, Lateef Olorunloba, said the woman died on the spot.

    A security official on the scene, who preferred anonymity, said the driver and his motor boy were taken to Owotu Police Station.

    Read Also: Hit-and-run driver kills NAN’s Technical Director

    He said lack of proper care for the vehicle led to the accident.

    A hit-and-run driver has killed a commercial motorcyclist (okada rider) at Alagbado, a Lagos suburb.

    The Nation learnt that the accident occurred last week.

    It was gathered that the man was confirmed dead after the accident.

    The deceased’s sister, Mary Abiodun, told our reporter that her brother, Joel Bamgbola, 35, was knocked down by a Pathfinder Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV) with number plate AGI 739 EP while on his motorcycle.

    The Nation learnt that the suspected hit-and-run driver did not stop, but was later arrested by the police.

    The victim, who was reportedly taken to the General Hospital in Ota, Ogun State, was pronounced dead on arrival.

    It was gathered that the motorcycle and the vehicle were later taken to Alagbado Police Station.

    Police sources confirmed the accident. They said investigations were on.

  • ‘Nigerians expect quick results from ministers’

    ALL eyes are on you, President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday told the ministers-designate. He reminded them that Nigerians expect quick results from his administration.

    He spoke at the end of the two-day Presidential Retreat organised for the ministers-in-waiting ahead of their inauguration today.

    The President noted that majority of under-privileged Nigerians hope for a better future.

    According to him, it was the responsibility of the government to meet the great needs of the people.

    Buhari said: “After two days, we have come to the end of a successful retreat. However, you will agree that our work is just beginning.

    “These last two days have been very instructive for me personally, because I have had the opportunity to know many of the ministers-designate better. I was also pleased to see that you have all equally enjoyed debating and deliberating on the various challenges before us over the next four years.

    “Majority of our people are poor and anxiously hoping for a better life. A Nigeria in which they do not have to worry about what they will eat, where they will live or if they can afford to pay for their children’s education or healthcare.

    “Our responsibility as leaders of this great country is to meet these basic needs for our people. As I mentioned on Tuesday, this administration inherited many challenges from our predecessors.”

    He listed the challenges faced at the inception of his regime in 2015 as the 18 local governments in the Northeast under Boko Haram control; decayed infrastructure; a rent-seeking economy that depended largely on oil revenues and imports; significant unpaid pensions, subsidy debts and legacy contractor debts.

    According to him, his administration in the past four years laid the foundation to rebuild Nigeria.

    The Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Boss Mustapha said that the incoming ministers will be responsible for the implemention of agreed initiatives and that a monitoring evaluation framework will be put in place to check their performance.

    Read Also: Nigeria’s population explosion frightening, says Buhari

    He said: “We have spent the past two days agreeing to and prioritising the key strategic initiatives required to drive accelerated economic growth in our country as well as the critical enablers required for seamless execution.

    “We have also agreed on the appropriate Key Performance Indicators (KPls) and measures of success for each initiative. Some of the agreements from our deliberations include to consolidate and accelerate on the agricultural agenda to achieve full food sufficiency Increase revenue, implement measures to reduce leakages and drive cost optimization; ensure effective coordination between monetary and fiscal policy.

    “Invest in human capital development with strong focus on early education and health insurance to facilitate investment in oil and gas sector by ensuring speedy passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill and Deep Offshore Oil and Exploration & Production Bill, Resolve the liquidity challenge in power sector and facilitate private sector investment.”

  • Landlord’s son charged with N350,000

    A landlord’s son, Quadri Adebayo, on Tuesday appeared at a Tinubu Magistrates’ Court in Lagos for allegedly defrauding a shop seeker of N350,000.

    Adebayo, 26, is facing a charge of fraud to which he pleaded not guilty.

    Prosecuting Inspector Ajaga Agboko told the court that the defendant committed the offence on July 16 at 11am at Harmony Estate, Langbasa, Ajah, Lagos.

    He alleged that the defendant collected the N350,000 from a shop seeker, Mr. Solomon Adelana, on the pretext that one of his father’s shops was available for rent.

    “He paid and took a carpenter to work in the shop, but when he later went back there, he discovered that the shop had been locked.

    Read Also: Lawyer arraigned for alleged N1.2m fraud

    “The defendant told him they had a family issue and promised it would be resolved so that the complainant could start his business.

    “Adebayo, who rented out the shop without his father’s consent, absconded with the money, but was later apprehended,” the prosecutor said.

    Agboko said the offence contravened Section 314 (1) (b) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    Magistrate T. A. Anjorin-Ajose granted the defendant N500,000 bail with two sureties in the like sum.

    He adjourned the case till August 27.

  • Lawyer arraigned for alleged N1.2m fraud

    The Lagos lawyer, Lolade Johnson, on Tuesday appeared at an Ebute Meta Chief Magistrates’ Court in Lagos for alleged N1.2 million fraud.

    The police charged Johnson, 49, with four counts of fraud, stealing, malicious damage and breach of the peace.

    Prosecuting Inspector Oladele Adebayo said the defendant committed the offence in July 2017 at 7, Ondo Street, Apapa Road, Ebute Meta.

    He alleged that the defendant obtained N1.2 million from the complainant, Mr. Ayo Ayeni, for a two-bedroom flat.

    The defendant, he alleged, collected the money and refused to provide the keys to the apartment.

    Read Also: Tax agent faces N2.4m fraud charge

    Adebayo said she maliciously damaged the two padlocks the complainant used in locking the apartment.

    He alleged that the defendant issued a false Letter of Authority to take over the flat from the complainant.

    Johnson, however, pleaded not guilty.

    Chief Magistrate O. O. Olatunji admitted the defendant to bail on self-recognition.

    She ordered the defendant to deposit her Call to Bar Certificate.

    The case was adjourned till September 30.

  • Traders count losses after Ile-Epo market clash

    Traders at Ile-Epo market in Alimoso area of Lagos State are lamenting the loss they incurred during Sunday’s scavengers and miscreants clash.

    They said they lost goods worth millions of Naira.

    The clash, which lasted for about four hours, left four persons injured, makeshift structures destroyed and goods worth millions of Naira damaged.

    Although peace has been restored, a police van was seen yesterday at the market.

    Many of the traders are yet to get over their losses.

    A yam seller, who identified himself as Musa, said he lost N150, 000 tubers of yam.

    He said other yam sellers lost large quantities of yam.

    Musa said: “On Sunday, I got to the market and began business as usual. I don’t know what caused the fight. We all ran to different directions when the fight began and by the time I returned, my tubers of yam were gone.”

    He said the Yoruba and the Hausa lost goods worth millions of Naira.

    Read Also: Fire destroys 32 stalls, generators, clothes at Gatankowa market

    Musa begged the government to assist them restart their business, saying he does not know where to start from.

    A trader selling soaps, detergents and provisions, who preferred anonymity, said the suffering was too much.

    She said she lost goods worth thousands of Naira to what she knew nothing about.

    “We are suffering in this market. The fight has affected us. My goods were destroyed over what I knew nothing about. I was not involved. This is unfair.”

    The woman said she had just collected cooperative money to begin business again.

    “I saw my soaps, detergents and provisions on the floor damaged on Sunday. I was helpless. There was nothing I could do, so also were other traders.”

    She implored the government to help them ensure peace at the market.

    The trader said they now do business at the market under fear.

    “We are afraid of reprisal. The Hausa used to fight here before the Sunday clash, but the Yoruba retaliated on Sunday. The government should intervene to prevent causalities,” she added.

    Another trader, Ekundayo Lateef, who sells rice and beans at the market with his mother, said he could not leave his goods because they belonged to his mother.

    He said many goods, including pepper, onions, provisions, yam, gari and soaps were destroyed in the fight.

    “We lost millions of Naira at this market. I don’t know what caused the fight, but I saw boys turning everybody’s goods upside down and marching them. They vandalised three commercial buses and a tricycle.”

    Lateef urged the government to intervene and ensure peace is restored.

    A resident, Ekundayo Onilude, advised the government and market leaders to prevent a recurrence.

    He advocated standby security at the market, saying the government was making money from the place.

    Ekundayo alleged that some boys at the market own illegal structures on a big refuse dump called Oribola (between Gotangowa and IIe Epo market), saying the government should ensure that there are no illegal structures at the market.

    “Most of those guys are from the North. As soon as goods arrive, they sleep in the market. They cannot be traced, as they don’t belong to any association or union. Nobody can control them; they have no regard for anybody. Something has to be done about Oribola,” he said.

  • A Butcher’s judgement …… typically British

    A POOR reading of the verdict by the London court slapping a historic penalty of $9b on Nigeria last Friday is viewing it as an affirmation of the law of contract. No, it is not. Rather, it is the orchestration of international politics and neo-colonial power-play at their vilest.

    Indeed, let no one be deceived that objectivity is assured in the interpretation of international law by even angels, especially when the interests of multinationals are in dispute concurrently across jurisdictions. In such circumstance, pure nationalistic instinct is likely to trump fidelity to reason or the universal principle of fairplay.

    For ages, the doctrine of sovereign immunity was, for instance, often invoked by powerful nations of the West to commit blue murder anywhere across the universe. But good students of history will recall that attempt later in the 70s by newly independent African nations to draw on the same principle ended ghastly. In the international court, it now became fairly convenient to invert Lord Denning’s new theory of “market place” to hand Nigeria the short end of the stick in the landmark case of Swiss-owned Trendtex versus Central Bank of Nigeria.

    A similar – if not identical – conflict is what is being stoked invariably by P&ID vs Nigeria. In choosing not to view things from the prism of the U.S. court (which can justifiably be seen as unencumbered by any possible nationalist bias), there is, therefore, a compelling reason to see the London court’s Justice Christopher Butcher as bending the arch of justice to favour a home company, with a covetous eye on Nigeria’s substantial assets domiciled within the U.K.

    Given the severity of the penalty awarded, it was as if Justice Butcher opted to literally act out his fearsome name by dealing savage knife blows on Nigeria’s jugular.

    What then appears ludicrous back at home has been the attempt by some cynical elements to scrounge some mileage from this sad development for their petty partisan politics. Only genuine patriots would have seen the development first as more of a huge slap on the nation by foreign interests, even if our leadership failing to an extent would still be admitted.

    Note, the local airwaves had barely crackled by midday with the highlight of the London judgement when the social media was drowned with the hysteria of PDP agents against President Muhammadu Buhari as the sole culprit. They claimed the fine resulted essentially from his malicious discontinuation of another of Jonathan’s visionary projects.

    But when more media insights began to pour in, that spin had to be modified ingeniously. The following day, Jonathan’s salespeople decided to sweep the entire blame to the gravesides of both ex-President Umar Yar’Adua and Rilwan Lukman now incapable of defending themselves.

    Now, let us concede that Jonathan was completely locked out of Aso Rock while the sneaky contract was being facilitated by “the cabal” as the then ailing president was gasping for oxygen and Lukman (the oil minister) seemed too self-absolved in hauteur to submit the details of the contract agreement to the scrutiny of Michael Aondoakaa commonly regarded then as essentially a comical Attorney General.

    But nothing can absolve Jonathan of liability for the non-consummation of the contract beginning from February 2010 as acting President and three months later as the substantive following Yar’Adua’s demise. P&ID began to complain more than a year later. By the time the company eventually resorted to arbitration in 2012, Jonathan’s much beloved Diezani Allison-Madukwe had of course become entrenched as almighty oil empress.

    From what we now know, she obviously was too preoccupied with either signing Nigeria’s patrimony away to her younger “admirers” like now fugitive Kola Aluko in sweetheart oil-swap deals or immersing herself in the sheer effulgence of her mammoth jewelry collection to have mustered the presence of mind to grasp the contract idea, much less contemplate what benefits might accrue therefrom to the nation.

    So, it bears restating that national interest was least served by those who committed Nigeria into such contract with improbable terms to begin with. That rape of Nigeria was not helped by Jonathan’s subsequent sloppiness. Today’s sorry outcome is traceable to yesterday’s tardiness.

    But by far more atrocious is the taste of British jurisprudence the nation was offered brusquely by the London court last Friday. While the dereliction of Nigerian officials is regrettable, nothing can however explain the juridical logic summoned by Justice Butcher to enter a judgment that negates morality and mocks all the principles of natural justice.

    Note, to corner this windfall, nothing in the convoluted narration made in British and American courts in the last seven years suggested that P&ID engaged in much toil between 2010 and 2012 other than its officials carrying briefcases around Abuja and meeting with Nigerian officials. It never as much as cracked any soil in Calabar to erect the envisaged gas processing plant (as expressly stated in the contract pact), to which Nigeria was expected to lay hundreds of kilometre of pipes.

    To generations of blacks still stuck today with the trauma inflicted by the colonial disruption of African civilizations, Justice Butcher’s latest travesty must be a sad reminder of the culture of plunder and predation for which imperial Britain was quite exceptional even among fellow European exploiters in history.

    Were the verdict to be enforced to the letter, it should qualify as the single most punitively prohibitive fine ever imposed in history on a sovereign nation relative to her fiscal strength. The $9b sanction represents a whopping twenty percent the nation’s present foreign reserve and a third of the current national budget.

    At the arbitration court in London in 2012, P&ID began by filing claims of $40m expenses and proceeded to add “lost earnings” in the twenty-year tenure of the agreement based on impossible operation benchmarks of more than ninety percent capacity utilization and a patently unrealistic expectation that oil never fell below $100 per barrel.

    As if that was not already shylock enough, the judge opted to play Father Xmas by granting the petitioner’s additional prayer that compound interest be paid on the fine imposed on Nigeria. That explains how P&ID’s preliminary claim of $40m in 2012 mushroomed exponentially to the $9b awarded last week.

    No sane person will accept such sham without a fight in the first place. Buhari could, therefore, be said to have acted most patriotically by refusing the initial hefty $800m payout proposed by a departing Jonathan in May 2015. In any case, with Nigeria technically insolvent by the time PMB was taking over having lapsed into a recession described as the worst in a generation, there practically was no way Nigeria could have paid, assuming the new administration was even willing.

    Expectedly, the government soon mounted a vigorous counter-attack by filing appeal in the U.K and the U.S. against the claimant. Whereas the U.S. upheld Nigeria’s objection to the enforcement of the claim by pleading sovereignty, the British court chose to dismiss the plea as “frivolous”.

    What makes the Butcher’s verdict all the more curious is a subsequent media expose suggesting a determined conspiracy to raid Nigeria’s exchequer. Ahead of the judgment, a whopping twenty-five percent stake of P&ID was snapped up in a strange deal by a hedge fund manager known as VR Capital Group in March. Since the Friday judgment, the sidetalk in global financial circles is that the hedge fund manager had all along been pulling levers of influence in the U.K. and the U.S. to make Nigeria either settle or be willing to forfeit her assets. So, it would then seem the vultures had long been hovering overhead as the nation began to wallow in the British dock.

    Now the big question: did VR Capital Group read Justice Butcher’s mind ahead? Or, could his judgment be mere coincidence?

    Developments like this will only reinforce long-held suspicion that the British jurisprudence is half of the times tainted and can, therefore, not be trusted to avail us justice on own accord without us standing up to the system, nor can its integrity be vouched for to protect our interest behind our back.

    For instance, a survey conducted sometime ago by an anti-corruption group, Transparency International’s Global Corruption Barometer, came with the damning report that one in five people using the courts in the U.K. said they or a household member paid a bribe for favourable outcome, even as one quarter of people in the country believe the courts and judiciary are corrupt. But the supreme irony is that British leaders or officials are often the first to label us as the most dubious or “fantastically corrupt”.

    A decade ago, I had a rather funny encounter with a British “expert”. I had been invited by a Nigerian-born promoter of a start-up to sit in during a presentation by the visiting consultant. Because the service concern would be prospecting in the international market beginning with Europe, it was necessary that an high-profile office be opened in London. So, the guy’s brief was to design an international marketing roadmap.

    To me, the visiting specialist had sounded authoritatively smooth with his power-point presentation with a laptop inside the dimly-lit penthouse office until he veered into the media aspect. Not knowing my media background, his proposal here was nothing short of a crafty splitting of what ordinarily should be a single activity into assorted briefs for the sole purpose of escalating the costs to justify about a million British Pounds he was demanding as fee for the London outing.

    Once the presentation was over and I was invited to comment, I took out a hammer, went straight to the media section and mercilessly knocked down the castle of fraud our friend had meticulously erected.

    Apparently now seeing things differently, our host did the smartest thing by aborting the signing off on the deal.

    Needless to say that the trio didn’t as much as utter a word to me while we flew back in a private jet to Lagos that day, nor offered me a handshake while departing at the local airport.

    Till date, what I still cannot understand is how they expected me to betray a man, my own countryman, so trusting to have invited me to join the session in the first place. And the lesson I learnt is never to assume a white guy will not try to fleece me given the opportunity even while customarily affecting superior airs.

    Reacting to the London judgement, the Nigerian government has pledged to not only appeal but also vigorously defend national interest to any length possible. It is the most sensible thing to do.

  • Tax agent faces N2.4m fraud charge

    A tax agent of a Lagos-based company, Kehinde Babatunde, who allegedly defrauded the company of N2.4 million meant for tax payments, on Tuesday appeared at an Igbosere Magistrates’ Court in Lagos.

    Babatunde, 44, was arraigned on a six-count charge of fraud, forgery and stealing by the police, before Mrs. K. S. Abdulsalam.

    Prosecuting Sergeant Friday Mameh alleged that the defendant committed the offences from 2017 to sometime in 2018 in Lagos.

    The court heard that the defendant obtained N2.4 million from his employer, DKR Associates, for remittance to the Lagos State Inland Revenue Services (LIRS), as the firm’s annual tax payments, but converted it to his use.

    Mameh alleged that the defendant forged LIRS receipts of February 6, 2017 with serial number 35911480/MINOHGAG and that of May 8, 2017, marked 35742568/UJKEHKND.

    Read Also: Man charged with theft in Asaba

    He alleged that the defendant also forged three Skye Bank tellers in the name of LIRS deposit slip “so that the documents will be acted upon as genuine to the prejudice of DKR Associates.”

    According to the prosecutor, the offences contravene sections 287, 314, 336, 337, 365(3) and 411 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    The defendant pleaded not guilty.

    Magistrate Abdulsalam granted Babatunde N500, 000 bail with two sureties in the like sum, who must show evidence of three years Land Use Charge payments to the Lagos State Government and a six-month bank account statement.

    The case continues on October 10.