Tag: Nigerian Newspapers

  • Safety of life, property key to growing tourism, says Adenuga

    Globacom Chairman, Dr. Mike Adenuga (Jnr.), has advised the three tiers of government to work harmoniously and design strategies to arrest the security challenges facing the country in order to gain from the huge tourism potentials across the country.

    Adenuga said the nation’s tourism industry can only blossom in an atmosphere where peace, security of life and property of citizens, residents and visitors are guaranteed.

    The business mogul stated this in a goodwill message in Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State, at this year’s Ojude Oba Festival.

    He added that Globacom was always conscious of its pact with Nigerian to support, grow and develop noble causes, such as Ojude Oba, which had assumed international status with far-reaching tourism potentials.

    The Globacom chairman, who was represented by Mr. Folu Aderibigbe, congratulated the Awujale and paramount ruler of Ijebu land, Oba Sikiru Kayode Adetona, for the numerous achievements recorded in Ijebu land during his reign.

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    The businessman said the Ijebu were lucky to have him as an outstanding monarch.

    He felicitated with the Ijebu for being alive to witness this year’s Ojude Oba Festival on Tuesday.

    According to him, Globacom, which is a major sponsor of the annual festival, assured that Nigerians would enjoy constant delivery of optimum quality service and products as the acclaimed game changer in the nation’s telecommunication industry.

    “We are proud that the Glo brand has, in the last 16 years, transformed into a household name with innovative solutions and pocket-friendly rates that have been enabling Nigerians to breathe easy in various ways. Our products and services are second to none and ahead of the pack,” he said.

    The festival closed on a more exciting note as 10 subscribers of the telecoms network won a tricycle, popularly called Keke Marwa/NAPEP, having won the prizes in the raffle draws conducted by Oba Adetona himself.

    Winners of the three-wheeled vehicles included Isaac Olawale, Johnson Olakitan, Michael Adeniyi, Henry Olayemi, Julius Agofure and Daniel Adebambo.

    Others are: Kazeem Mustapha, Shola Gbilesanmi, Monsurat Sebiotimo and Mr. Asiwaju.

    Over 100 customers were given raffle tickets as they purchased items from any Gloworld in Ijebu-Ode and its environs weeks before and during the main festival.

    Some of the winners told reporters that they were elated to hear their names were called.

    Sebiotimo, a petty trader, said a device worth N5,000 and recharge card worth N50,000, which he bought from Glo, gave him the lucky win.

    Olawale said he simply bought a phone for N3,200 and recharge cards worth N1,800 from Gloworld, the network’s sales and service  outlet in Ijebu-Ode.

    Olawale, a secondary school Biology teacher in Ijebu-Ode, said he would use the tricycle for transportation.

  • Sowore: DSS, police, others stop protesters at Unity Fountain

    Protesters yesterday in Wednesday, at the nation’s capital, demanded the release of former presidential candidate of African Action Congress (AAC) in the last general elections and Convener of #RevolutionNow protest, Omowole Sowore.

    But truckloads of security operatives at the Unity Fountain, venue of the protest, prevented them from entering the area.

    The Unity Fountain was a semblance of a war zone with heavy presence of soldiers, policemen, operatives of the Department of State Services (DSS), Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) and officers of Nigerian Prison Service.

    Sowore, who is also the publisher of Sahara Reporters, was arrested by DSS operatives last week after he vowed to mobilise Nigerians to the streets for the #RevolutionNow protest.

    The Federal Government has also used the DSS to secure a Federal High Court ex parte order to detain him for 45 days.

    Despite the barrage of security operatives at the Unity Fountain, activists demanded the immediate release of Sowore and other “prisoners of conscience”.

    The protesters, led by Deji Adeyanju, the Convener of Concerned Nigerians (CN), said President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration had  continued to imprison Nigerians who dared to criticise his “maladministration” and had no deference for divergent opinion.

    Adeyanju, who said proponents of #FreeSowore protest would not be cowed by government’s battalion of security operatives, added that the President pretended that he was a repentant democrat to get the confidence and votes of Nigerians.

    He said Sowore, Dadi Yata, Jones Abiri, Steven Kefas and other social and media critics held by the present administration as prisoners of conscience, represent uncountable numbers of other Nigerians he called victims of Buhari’s government.

    According to him, even if the President withdraws all the security operatives deployed to fight insurgency in the Northeast and other parts of the country to stop the #FreeSowore activists, the protest will not stop.

    Another activist Rapheal Adebayo said even if President Buhari arrests more protesters, one million others would fight his policies.

    Adebayo added that the protest was not just for the freedom of Sowore and other “prisoners of conscience” but for the soul of Nigeria.

    Also, Middle Belt Forum’s Deputy President Ndi Kato said the protest would be sustained until the government learns to respect the will of the people.

    She said: “It is high time we let go the shackles of our military dictatorship. We cannot have 20 years of military dictatorship and still allow the shackles to remain with us. The modus operandi of criminal and government’s abduction has remained the same. When someone is taken, we do not know where the person is taken to.”

    #RevolutionNow
    •Members of #RevolutionNow group and other civil society groups protesting in Abuja…yesterday.
  • Fed Govt, Labour disagree on registration of new pension unions

    The decision of the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment to split the pension union into three has pitched the government against organised labour and pensioners, it has been learnt.

    Acting on a petition to President Muhammadu Buhari against the decision taken in the last days of the immediate past Minister of Labour, Senator Chris Ngige, The Nation learnt that the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) wrote the ministry, demanding explanation on why the union should be split into three.

    Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President Ayuba Wabba also wrote the SGF, informing him that the decision to create two new unions out of the Nigeria Union of Pensioners (NUP) was a violation of the laws of the land which stipulate that no new union shall be registered to represent workers where a union already exists.

    Responding to the letter from the SGF, the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Labour and Employment, William Alo, said Ngige’s action was based on the powers conferred on him by the Trade Union Act.

    Alo said the ministry had received applications from different interest groups seeking to register other trade unions of retirees who fall under the jurisdictional scope of the NUP.

    The permanent secretary conceded that “Part B of the Third Schedule of the Trade Unions Act CAP T.14 (LFN) stipulates the jurisdictional scope of the NUP covers all pensioners from me civil service of the Federation, including local government salutary corporations, government-owned companies, educational institutions for which the government of the Federation is responsible; all such similar establishments, also private sector pensioners”.

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    He said: “The reasons adduced for the agitation that other unions should be carved out of the NUP included, amongst others, alleged structural defects with particular focus on the state and local government pensioners, lop-sidedness in the appointment of national leaders, aged/dysfunctional leadership, lack of accountability, general inefficiency and failure to effectively represent the interest of its teeming members.

    “Sequel to the above, it became evident to the ministry that the NUP, as the only existing trade union for pensioners, had become too big and could no longer cope with the burden of catering for all retirees in the country.

    “The then Minister of Labour and Employment, pursuant to the powers vested on him by the provisions of Section 3(2) of the Trade Unions Act, CAP. T14 (LFN) 2004, which states that the minister on his being satisfied that it is expedient to register the union either by regrouping existing trade unions …decided to regroup the NUP and create other unions for retirees with a view to making the unions more effective, considering the myriad of complaints from members against the size and the leadership style of the NUP.

    “Arising from the need of the ministry to holistically look at the extant labour laws with the objective of enhancing continued stability, viability, including adequate coverage of the vulnerable groups of retirees as part of constitutional requirements, Dr. Ngige constituted a six-man Technical Working Committee (TWC) to look into the possibility of regrouping the NUP with a view to addressing the issues raised by the different groups.”

    Alo explained that with the new registration, the NUP, Federal Civil Service defined, state and local government pensioners, Federal tertiary institutions and state tertiary institution pensioners, Association of Retired Public Servants of Nigeria, Federal corporations, state corporations pensioners, Electricity sector pensioners and other private sector pensioners and contributory pensioners, Federal contributory pensioners, state contributory pensioners, local government contributory pensioners are redefined.

    But in his letter to the SGF in response to the letter from the Ministry, Wabba said the Permanent Secretary was being economical with the truth when he said that Ngige’s action was to create a union that would be more effective.

    He said: “Section 3(2) of the Trade Unions Act states that ‘…no trade union shall be registered to represent workers or employers in a place where there already exists a trade union’. The former Minister of Labour and Employment, yielding to other interests lesser than noble, violated this section of the law by registering other unions where there already existed the NUP.

    “Similarly, pursuant to/enforcement of the provisions of S. 3(2) of the Trade Unions Act, the Supreme Court held in the cases of registered trustees of National Association of Community Health Practitioners of Nigeria and Two Others v. Medical and Health Workers Union of Nigeria [2008) 2 NWLR [Pt. 1072) 575, and Osawe v. Registrar of Trade Unions (I985) l NWLR (Pt. 4) 755, that new unions cannot be registered where there is an existing union.

    “Resort is often had to S.40 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, I999 (as amended) (as is the case in annexure ‘A‘ Page 3 of 4 para 7 (i) to the Permanent Secretary’s letter) as a basis for wanting to create new unions.

    “However, we find it necessary to point out that S.40 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria [as amended) is not absolute but subject to the provisions of S.41 and S.45 of the Constitution. In other words, the right to freedom of association is only exercisable subject to the fulfilment of the conditions spelt out in Ss. 41 and 45.

    “And although a sub-section of S. 3(2) of the Trade Unions Act does state that the Honourable Minister ‘on his being satisfied that it is expedient to register the union either by regrouping existing trade unions…’ This power is not without some conditions as per S. 4(4) TUA, which states inter alia: ‘The Registrar shall not register the trade union if it appears to him that any existing trade union is sufficiently representative of the interest of the class of persons whose interest the union is intended to represent.

    “The jurisdictional scope of NUP in Part B of the Third Schedule of the Trade Unions Act CAP T.l4 (LFN covers ‘all pensioners from the civil service of the Federation, including local governments, statutory corporations, government-owned companies, educational institutions for which the Government of the Federation is responsible; all such similar establishments, also private sector pensioners’.

    “Clearly, the jurisdictional scope of NUP has never been in doubt, and over the years, it has diligently serviced this constituency, in spite of the challenges in the Pension sector.

    “We, therefore, do believe it is inappropriate and unlawful to regroup or register new unions in a sector where a union already existed on the basis of a minor dispute arising from an election issue. This will be tantamount to validating vaulting ambition of a select few, driven not by passion for service but filthy lucre and inordinate ambition.

    “For instance, one of the promoters of these unions, Temple Ubani, is a former unit chairman at NUP…”

  • Gunmen kidnap Baptist pastor in Kaduna

    Gunmen suspected to be kidnappers have abducted Rev. Noma Elisha of Nagarta Baptist Church, Angwan Makiri, near Udawa in Chikun Local Government Area of Kaduna State.

    The kidnap is happening barely two weeks after a pastor in charge of Living Faith Church, Angwan Romi, Kaduna, Jeremiah Omolewa, was killed and ransom was paid to free his wife.

    The kidnappers, about 20, reportedly stormed the village around 1:30am yesterday and forced their way into the pastor’s house. They abducted him and his son.

    But the gunmen later released the son, Emmanuel, who was told to go and raise an unspecified amount of money as ransom to free his father within five days, or else he would be killed.

    The pastor’s son said: “The gunmen came around 1am. They were about 20. They banged on the door, but nobody opened it. Then they forced their way into the house and vandalised our belongings. The hoodlums carted away valuables, including phones and clothes.

    Read Also: Gunmen attack first Abia female ‘governor’s’ father

    “They kidnapped me and my father and took us to the bush. But after a while, I was released. They went away with my father. One of them was dressed in a military camouflage.

    “They threatened that if we failed to bring the money in five days, they would kill my father. They didn’t mention the ransom.

    “We are yet to report to the police because when we had a similar experience in the past and we contacted them, they did not do anything. So, it is of no use.”

    Police spokesman Yakubu Sabo did not respond to an SMS sent to last night.

  • Police rescue businessman from abductors

    Anti-Robbery Squad of the Benue State Police Command has rescued a 61-year-old businessman, John Akombo, from kidnappers in Gboko, Benue State.

    The victim, John Akkmbo, is a major distributor with the Nigeria Breweries PLC in Gboko.

    An eyewitness, Jimin Ayo, told The Nation that the Joint Task Force (JTF) comprising the Police and Army from ‘A’ Division, Area Command in Gboko    pursued the kidnappers, who were in a vehicle and shot the two tyres around Mbaamandev, Mkar- Ameladu Road in Gboko.

    Speaking with The Nation, the rescued victim said: “The four gunmen came in a tinted ash colour Honda Pilot Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV), entered my office and forced me into their vehicle.

    “My son entered my car and followed us behind closely. He alerted the police officers on patrol, who trailed them and opened fire on the abductors’ vehicle. They shot two tyres, deflating them.

    Read Also: Police rescue seven kidnap victims, arrest 41 suspects

    “The policemen overpowered them near Mbaamandev settlement on Mkar-Ameladu Road and I was rescued.”

    The victim’s wife, Mrs. Rebecca Akombo, who shed tears of joy while speaking with The Nation, thanked God for the safe return of her husband.

    The Nation gathered that the kidnappers escaped with bullet injuries around Mkar hills.

    They abandoned the bullet-riddled Honda Pilot SUV.

    A policeman, who preferred anonymity, said the case had been transferred to Makurdi for investigation.

  • Food importation: Buhari’s directive stokes controversy

    The directive by President Muhammadu Buhari that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) should not sale foreign exchange (Forex) to food importers has attracted varied reactions from stakeholders. While some people believe that the order will help Nigeria become self-sufficient in food production, others insist that it will further make it difficult for Nigerians to afford stable food. For foreign investors, the order is an affront on CBN’s independence and is capable of hurting foreign capital inflows, write NDUKA CHIEJINA, COLLINS NWEZE and DANIEL ESSIET.

     

    NOT many people saw it coming. And when President Muhammadu Buhari directed the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) not to sell foreign exchange (forex) to food importers, it took many stakeholders by surprise.

    President Buhari said he asked the CBN to stop providing foreign exchange for food importation.

    In a statement issued on Tuesday by Garba Shehu, presidential spokesman, the president said the directive is to ensure the steady improvement in agricultural production and attainment of full food security.

    The president, who hosted All Progressives Congress (APC) governors to eid-el-Kabir lunch at his country home in Daura, said the foreign reserve will be conserved and used for the diversification of the economy, and not for encouraging more dependence on foreign food import bills.

    “Don’t give a cent to anybody to import food into the country,’’ he said.

    The president said some states like Kebbi, Ogun, Lagos, Jigawa, Ebonyi and Kano had already taken advantage of the federal government’s policy on agriculture with huge returns in rice farming, urging more states to plug into the ongoing revolution to feed the nation.

    “We have achieved food security, and for physical security, we are not doing badly,’’ he said.

    Buhari said he was delighted that young Nigerians, including graduates, have started exploring agriculture-business and entrepreneurship, with many posting testimonies of good returns on their investments.

    But the order has attracted several reactions from farmers, industrialists, economists and financial pundits. But while many of the speakers said the directive will resurrect Nigeria’s long-time dream of being sold-sufficient in food production, others believed that it will make access to stable food elusive to the common man on the streets.

    But a larger group of people with interest in foreign direct investment said the President’s directive was an affront on the independence of the CBN, as is the practice across the world where the central banks are expected to operate without government interference.

    Former Executive Director, Keystone Bank, Richard Obire, also said the President’s directive will help grow the agriculture sector. He said there is need to also provide the infrastructure needed to move food from where they are produced to where they are needed. ” It is not enough to produce food. You need to also have the infrastructure to move the foods to areas of need. I also believe that the forex that would have been used for food import will now go to education, and health sector,” he said.

    Continuing, Obire said: “With the President directing the CBN to stop giving a cent of forex for food imports, investors and businesses will be increasingly concerned about the independence of the country’s central bank. These concerns were already there with the multiple exchange rates regime seen to be driven by the Government. This new directive will heighten those concerns”.

    Director-General, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Muda Yusuf, said there was a need to get more details and clarifications on what exactly constitutes food items in the context of the Presidential directive.

    “The Harmonised System codes of the items affected need to be indicated. It is hoped that these details would be made available in subsequent releases by the CBN. This is essential for proper analysis of the possible impact on investment, the welfare of citizens and the economy. Meanwhile, the CBN before now had placed many food items on the forex exclusion list. It will be interesting to see what additional food items are being contemplated as additions to the list. In all of these, we need to worry about the implications of policy pronouncements for investors’ confidence and the general sentiments of investors,” he said.

    Yusuf said unemployment levels in the country has reached a disturbing level of over 23 per cent and rising. “Youth unemployment is even much more. Yet the panacea for dealing with the scourge of unemployment and poverty is an investment. If policy and regulatory risks continue to escalate as we are currently experiencing, the chances of stimulating investment, whether domestic or foreign, would remain dim. Current forex policy conceptualisation and management are adversely impacting investment,” he said.

    He said it was critical to scale up stakeholder engagement on the strategies for economic diversification and self-reliance.

    He said rigorous impact study should precede major policy changes, supported by empirical data. This is necessary to minimize shocks and dislocations in the investment environment. This is also imperative to stem the increasing cases of job losses.

    “Over the last couple of years, food inflation had been a source of worry. It has consistently been ahead of core inflation. This is a reflection of the productivity challenges in the agricultural sector which has lately been complicated by security challenges across the country and attacks on farming communities. The sector is still largely dependent on smallholder farmers, with little mechanisation and application of technology. Transportation is another key impediment to food security in the country. These are fundamental issues that need to be addressed, and urgently too,” he added.

    Former President, Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) Mazi Okechukwu Unegbu, said the president’s pronouncement was in order. He, however, added that there was the need for him to take into consideration, Nigeria’s peculiar environment before making such pronouncement. “Are Nigerians feeding well and producing enough at the moment. What is the gestation period for the policy implementation?”.

    He said the President’s pronouncement is not bad, provided there is enough time for farmers to produce the right quantity of food for the population.

    Chairman, Rice Farmers Association, Kebbi State, Alhaji Muhammad Sahabi Augie, said President Buhari asking the CBN to stop providing forex for the importation of food into the country was a welcome development.

    For instance, in Kebbi State, he said the Government‘s ban on rice importation which occasioned increased local rice production led to the fall in the price of paddy.

    He said the volume of rice harvested from different farm locations in the state was unprecedented under the Anchor Borrower’s dry season rice farming programme.

    He said the harvest was so high that it forced down the price of paddy at the market.

    He added that the government’s ban on food importation crashed the price of a bag of maize from N10, 000 to N7, 000, that of a bag Sorghum from N13, 000 to N7, 000.

    According to him, restricting forex for food import will boost local food production.

    The South-West Chairman, All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN), Chief Femi Oke expressed gratitude to President Buhari on the matter.

    He explained that importers in the food industry were killing the efforts of the local processors to implement massive processing of food products which hitherto were imported expressively into the country.

    He said the Government ban on importation of rice has helped the sector to take advantage of the policy of the Federal Government to generate huge returns.

    According to him, the decision will ensure forex savings, job creation and investments in farming and local processing of food products.

    He said the CBN’s action will help to unlock the huge potential of the sector by developing agricultural value chains and agro-allied industries that process and add value. This, according to him, will help local farmers to become competitive and raise their incomes.

    The Chairman, Agriculture and Non-oil Group, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, African farmer Afioluwa Mogaji said the restriction was a positive one, adding it was capable of bringing development if efforts were made to stimulate investment in infrastructure.

    While the restriction is targeted at protecting the local industry and saving forex,  Mogaji said the government must mobilise the different agencies to work together to create synergies in production, regarding infrastructure to boost food availability and distribution.

    For example, he added that while Nigeria’s climate is perfect for tomato production, some of it goes to waste due to lack of refrigeration and transport facilities. This is why the country is heavily dependent on tomato imports and local farmers struggle to survive.

    He noted that while the Presidency has placed irrigation and other farming equipment on zero duty, the Customs is yet to enforce it, thereby working at cross purpose with the government’s goal to achieve food security through provision of infrastructure for farming and local food processing.

    According to him, the challenge of value-added features in all areas of agriculture, attributing it to low levels of investments in agribusiness and the macro level and lack of capital and even economies of scale at the micro level for rural farmers.

    According to him, the Group shares the commitment of the government to addressing agriculture and food security issues, as the issues are critical not only to economic development but to the future of food production.

    Former Presidential candidate of the Young Progressives Party (YPP), Kingsley Moghalu faulted President Buhari’s directive to the CBN, on non-provision of forex for food importation.

    In a series of tweets on his official handle, the former deputy governor of the CBN also asked Buhari to allow the apex bank to discharge its mandate independently.

    Moghalu also noted that political interference in CBN’s economic policies leads to poverty and also weakens institutions.

    He wrote on Twitter; “Is @cenbank now a ministry to be “directed” by President @MBuhari? Article 1(3) of the CBN Act 2007 states ‘To facilitate the achievement of its mandate under this Act…the Bank shall be an independent body in the discharge of its functions.

    “The issue here isn’t whether or not CBN should allow access to forex for food imports. It is about whether such an economic policy of a central bank should be imposed by a political authority. A major reason for our poverty, instability and a weak economy is weak institutions.

    “Our marketplace should be regulated and guided in a rational manner that creates a level playing field. Our economy will not be saved by Ad Hoc political decisions like this, handed down by the very institutions that should be shielded from the whim and caprice of politicians.

    “Nigeria’s entire economy appears to have been sub-contracted to our central bank, including industrial and trade policy. In the process, the economy has fared poorly and the Bank has lost its independence. This is sad!

    “@NGRPresident should leave @cenbank alone to discharge its mandate independently within the ambit of the CBN Act and stop “directing” it. @cenbank should on its part assertive its independence (assuming it actually believes it should be independent, but the Act says so, clearly!”

    Recall that while giving the directive at his hometown in Daura, when hosting APC Governors, Buhari said that his order to the CBN to starve food importation of foreign exchange stemmed from the steady improvement in agricultural production and attainment of full food security in the country.

    Former president of the Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN), Samuel Nzekwe, commended President Buhari for the directive.

    He said that the Federal Government’s decision to put a halt to the practice was a welcome decision which would go a long way in stabilising the economy and freeing forex for more crucial items.

    He, however, urged the Federal Government to be cautious in the implementation of the directive while also ensuring that the nation produces enough food for local consumption.

    Nzekwe noted that a situation where imported foods on the list of banned items were not met by local production may cause some discomfort in the country. “The nation is currently facing insecurity and other challenges which had prevented farmers from going to the farm.

    “A shortfall in the production of those banned food items could create another problem for the country,” he said.

    Nzekwe stressed the need for government to urgently address the security challenge in the country to ensure that food insufficiency that could hinder the implementation of the forex ban was tackled.

     

     

  • Man remanded for allegedly raping minor

    An Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court in Lagos yesterday remanded in prison custody a man, David Okotie, who allegedly raped an 11-year-old girl.

    Chief Magistrate Olufunke Sule-Amzat made the order following an application by the police.

    Sule-Amzat, who did not take Okotie’s plea, remanded Okotie in Kirikiri Prison and ordered the police to send the case file to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) for advice.

    Prosecution counsel Benson Emuerhi, who made the application, alleged that Okotie, who lives off Highway Patrol Barrack, Ikeja, Lagos, committed the offence on January 15.

    The court heard that the case was reported by the girl’s mother at the Gender Section, Ikeja Police Command.

    Emuerhi, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), said the offence infringed Section 137 of the Criminal Laws of Lagos State, 2015.

    Sule-Amzat adjourned further proceedings till October 31.

  • Nine feared killed in Rivers communities

    Nine persons are feared killed, as gunmen reportedly attacked two communities in Rivers State.

    The communities are Taaba and Okwali in Khana Local Government.

    The Nation learnt that the suspected cult attack occurred between Tuesday night and early yesterday, leading to the death of the victims and razing of several houses.

    A source, who preferred anonymity, said yesterday that the gunmen invaded Okwale community about 8pm on Tuesday, killing five persons, while another set of assailants attacked four people at Taaba community yesterday morning.

    Read Also: Five confirmed killed in Rivers communities

    He said: “The attackers raided Okwali community yesterday (Tuesday) evening around 8pm, shooting sporadically at their targets. They killed about five people. They also burnt several houses.

    “This morning (Wednesday), they attacked Taaba community, a neighbouring community to Okwali, shooting and killing about four persons too.”

    Police spokesman Nnamdi Omoni confirmed the attacks. He said security had been tightened in the communities to restore peace.

    He, however, could not confirm the number of casualties.

  • How ‘drunk soldiers’ allegedly killed three, injured six

    Soldiers drafted to secure Kara market have allegedly killed three people and injured six.

    The incident occurred on Monday during the Isheri Day Festival in Ogun State.

    The Nation learnt that the festival was held at the Local Government Primary School, Isheri Olofin.

    The villagers told our correspondent yesterday that before two of the soldiers, who escorted Babalola Tirimusiu, the son of the market owner,  arrived the venue of the festival, they were allegedly drunk, adding that the soldiers harassed people, slapping and pushing some to create access for their principal, Tirimusiu.

    Among the victims were Nurudeen Jimoh alias Tayese, alleged to have been shot and taken to Gent-Gilbert Hospital in Isheri, where the soldiers allegedly saw him when they came for their injured colleague and stabbed him to death.

    Other victims were identified as Adelani Dare, allegedly shot dead while urinating about 300 metres from the venue; an unnamed guest alleged to have been hit in the chest by bullet. He allegedly died while being taken to hospital; as well as Saheed Ojekunle, Rasheed Adeleke and one old man identified as Michael, who sustained injuries.

    Read Also: Soldiers’ invasion, threat to freedom and democracy

    Recalling how the soldiers allegedly stabbed his brother to death at the hospital, Saheed Jimoh said they were four. He alleged that they dragged him on the floor while stabbing him.

    Jimoh alleged that the soldiers also pointed a gun at the doctor, who was treating the victim, adding that a friend of his, who helped in taking his brother to hospital, was stabbed in the hand and he fled.

    He said: “Tayese was my younger brother. We were having our carnival here and it was very peaceful until Tiri (Tirimusiu) brought in the soldiers. I heard that they had been drinking at a hotel before they came to our carnival.

    “The two soldiers and Tiri were drunk before they entered the primary school venue. They slapped people when they got to the venue.

    “Before they killed my brother, they had already shot a man in the leg. I ran for safety. It was while I was running that I heard my brother had been shot and his intestine came out.

    “I went back to the place, he was with my motorcycle and my friend helped me to carry him while I drove the motorcycle. We got to the hospital that is not far from here, the doctor attended to him.

    “While there, four soldiers came in. Apparently, the community people had fought back and injured one of the soldiers and they (soldiers) brought their colleague to the same hospital where my brother was admitted.

    “When the soldiers arrived and saw him, (my brother), one of them pointed his gun at the doctor treating him. Others brought out their knives and stabbed my brother till he died.

    “They dragged him on the floor as they were stabbing him. My friend, who protested what was happening, was stabbed in the hand. They left him there, saying they would bring a vehicle to take him away.

    “My friend ran away and I took my brother to Shagamu General Hospital mortuary.

    “We don’t have power and we don’t know anyone. I am only begging the government to help us.”

    Efforts to speak with the hospital management were not successful last night.

    Spokesman for the 81 Division, Olaolu Daudu, a Lieutenant Colonel, denied that soldiers were responsible for the deaths and injuries.

    He said the soldiers were invited by the community to rescue them from a cult clash, adding that they did not fire gunshots while there.

    Rather, one of the soldiers was injured by the residents while responding to the distress call, Daudu said.

    Ogun State Police Commissioner Bashir Makama has vowed to bring the perpetrators to justice.

    He corroborated Tayese’s brother’s account of the incident at the hospital.

    A statement by spokesman Abimbola Oyeyemi, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), said Makama has ordered investigation, adding that the military authorities in Ogun State have been contacted.

    He said: “Police Commissioner Bashir Makama has ordered investigation into the “Isheri Day” shooting in Ogun State. The incident occurred on August 12. The shooting was carried out by suspected soldiers believed to be from the Ikeja Cantonment, with a view to bringing the suspects to justice.

    “Information at the disposal of the command has it that on the fateful day, four soldiers believed to be from the Ikeja Cantonment and posted to Kara market, left their beat and went to Isheri Olofin, a border town between Lagos and Ogun states, where the indigenes were celebrating their annual ‘Isheri Day’.

    “The soldiers, on getting there, had a minor disagreement with some youths, which made the soldiers to start shooting sporadically into the air. Consequently, one Damilare Adelani was hit by bullets and he died on the spot.

    “The incident infuriated the people on the scene, who reacted violently against the soldiers, leaving one of the soldiers and three civilians injured.

    “The soldiers took their injured colleague to a hospital where they met one of the injured civilians being attended to by a doctor.

    “A statement by the hospital workers showed that the soldiers ordered the doctor at gunpoint to leave the injured man and attend to their colleague. They then dragged the patient from the bed and stabbed him to death with a knife.

    “The command has contacted the military authorities in Ogun State and efforts are on to ensure that the suspected killer(s) are brought to book.”

  • Buhari suspends panel boss Obono-Obla

    FOLLOWING allegations of misconduct, abuse of office, intimidation, unauthorized and malicious investigations, Chairman of the Special Presidential Investigation Panel (SPIP) for the Recovery of Public Property, Mr. Okoi Obono-Obla, was on Wednesday suspended by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The suspension will remain in force until the conclusion of ongoing probe of his academic records and financial impropriety allegations levelled against Obono-Obla by the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC).

    An August 14 letter by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Boss Mustapha, conveyed the suspension.

    The letter reads: “I write to convey the directive of His Excellency, Muhammadu Buhari, President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria for your suspension from office as Chairman, Special Investigation Panel for the Recovery of Public Property with immediate effect.

    “This suspension shall subsist until the conclusion of the on-going ICPC investigations into cases of alleged falsification of records and financial impropriety against your person.

    “You are required by this instruction to strictly observe and comply with the provisions of PSR 030405 of the Public Service Rules. For the avoidance of doubt, the Solicitor-General of the Federation and Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Justice shall be the authority to whom you shall report.”

    Obono-Obla, it was learnt, might be prosecuted by the anti-crime agecy after investigation.

    The government will also review the activities of SPIP following a protest by four members of the five-man Panel working with Obono-Obla.

    The SPIP has a mandate to investigate only cases referred to it by the government but not to arrest, seize assets and prosecute.

    The Presidency was shocked that Obla was implicated in illegal secondment of over 100 policemen to the SPIP.

    The SPIP chairman was found to be engaging lawyers to file charges against suspects without recourse to the Attorney-General’s office.

    Read Also: EFCC, Obono-Obla and anti-corruption war

    It was gathered that the government was in receipt of many petitions against the SPIP which ought to be immediately addressed.

    It was learnt that the Presidency drew the attention of Obla to his excesses and he signed an undertaking to follow the procedure. But the Presidency was disturbed that Obla reneged on his promise.

    A top government source said: “The activities and conduct of the chairman of the SPIP have been under critical review for some time in the Presidency. So far, his outright dismissal and likely prosecution is imminent.

    “The Presidency has also received an indicting report on the Panel Chairman bordering on acts of forgery and misconduct.

    The source said the Presidency was disturbed that despite the confirmation of the abuse of the mandate of the pane by the Court of Appeal, Obla has not changed in his approach.

    The source said:  “In fact, the matter of the mandate of the Panel became an issue of judicial interpretation at the Appeal Court in the case of Tijani Musa Tumsah v. Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “In that case, the Appeal Court held that the Panel headed by Obla lacks prosecutorial powers and cannot seize properties belonging to anyone or obtain forfeiture orders against any public official.

    “The Court also held that the duty of the Panel upon conclusion of an investigation is to submit its report to the President and that the Panel, as against the conduct of the Chairman, cannot act outside its enabling Statute, the Recovery of Public Property Special Provisions Act.

    “Actually, once when confronted with some of his alleged misconduct and other allegations, Obono-Obla pleaded and was  made to sign an undertaking to mend his ways, but no sooner, he signed he abandoned the undertaking and continued violating the law and regulations in place in the conduct of the work of the panel.

    “Following a series of violations for which he was queried,  Obla submitted a written undertaking to the effect that the panel under his leadership would only act on a written mandate received from the Presidency, and will seek authorization from the Presidency to undertake fresh mandates in accordance with extant laws of the Federation.”

    The source gave insights into why the Presidency had decided to wield the big stick against Obla and SIP.