Tag: Nigerian Newspapers

  • Truth has finally prevailed, says Oyetola on Appeal Court judgment

    Osun State Governor Gboyega Oyetola has described the Appeal Court judgement affirming his election on Thursday as the triumph of truth over falsehood.

    In a statement shortly after the judgement by his Chief Press Secretary, Adeniyi Adesina, Oyetola said the ruling validated the mandate Osun voters gave him on September 22 and 27, 2018.

    The governor said: “We give praise to Almighty God for today’s victory at the Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja.

    “The victory has validated the mandate you freely gave to us on September 22 and 27, 2018.

    “You spoke with conviction; your voice and choice are clear to the world, and the judiciary, the last hope of the people and arbiter of the truth, has proved to the world that it is always on the side of justice.”

    He went on: “After months of uncertainty and wait in judicial wilderness, truth has finally prevailed over falsehood and the voice of the majority has ultimately gained dominance over the phoney manipulation of an unscrupulous minority.

    Read Also:  Appeal Court voids judgment sacking Osun Gov’nor Oyetola

    “This victory has proved to all and sundry that there is a limit to the extent falsehood and propaganda can thrive over truth and the will of the people.

    “I would like to thank you all, the good people of The State of Osun, for your robust support and steadfastness throughout the needless periods of political travail and tribulation.

    “I am persuaded by your indisputable mandate and the sound judgment of the Court of Appeal, that the road to ultimate victory is smooth and unshakable.

    “My Administration took off on a note of equitable and quality service delivery to you the people. That resolve is on course.

    I urge you all to be peaceful and to go about your legitimate businesses as we revel in this well-deserved victory.”

  • Ohanaeze, Afenifere not on same page with Miyeti Allah – Ohanaeze

    Apex Igbo socio cultural organisation, Ohanaeze Ndigbo has disagreed with the Presidential spokesman Garba Shehu that Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Afenifere and Miyetti Allah group are on the same page or level.

    In a statement by the deputy publicity secretary of the organisation, Chuks Ibegbu, Ohanaeze expressed shock at the comparison.

    It noted that Afenifere and Ohanaeze can only be compared to Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) which is the Umbrella group in the North.

    “Garba Shehu committed a grave sin by such comparison between Peace and Pieces. Ohanaeze and Afenifere represent Peace and Miyetti Allah pieces.

    “It is like comparing the Vatican to Afghanistan. How can a group that encourages, supports, clap for and prod killers and terrorists be compared with Ohanaeze Ndigbo or Afenifere, ” queried Ibegbu.

    Read Also: Implement new minimum wage to avoid rebellion –Ohanaeze tells S’East govs

    Ibegbu insisted that Garba Shehu must render an apology to Ohanaeze and Afenifere for such verbal mismanagement.

    He also advised that if herdsmen are to be given N100b, then IPOB, MASSOB, area boys, Niger Delta militants, Bakassi militants, Book Haram, Shittes and hoodlums in Nigeria should also be paid to fight insecurity in the country.

    He finally advised the Election Petition tribunals in the country to live above board and not compromise judgements.

    “On no account should election riggers be allowed to occupy public offices so the tribunals must protect Nigerians by ensuring election riggers lose at the tribunals.”

  • Updated: Appeal Court voids judgment sacking Osun Gov’nor Oyetola

    The Court of Appeal in Abuja on Thursday set aside the March 22, 2019 majority judgment given by the Osun State Governorship Election Tribunal, sacking Governor Adegboyega Oyetola of Osun State.

    The appellate court held, in three judgements delivered on three appeals filed by Oyetola, the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), that the trial tribunal erred in its majority judgment.

    Although one member of the court’s five-man panel dissented on the judgments in the three appeals by Oyetola, APC and INEC, the panel was, however, unanimous in dismissing the cross-appeal by Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its candidate in the election held on September 22 and 27, 2018, Senator Ademola Adeleke.

    The panel led by Justice Jummai Sankey decided the three appeals (which were substantially similar) mainly on issues raised and argued by lawyer to Oyetola, Wole Olanipekun (SAN) in the appeal he filed for the Governor.

    As it was the case at the Court of Appeal on Thursday, the three-man panel of trial tribunal was also divided in two-to-one in its judgment of March 22, 2019, with the majority judgment upholding the petition by the PDP and Adeleke.

    It was a harvest of losses for the PDP and Adeleke at the conclusion of proceedings as they lost in the four judgments delivered on Thursday.

    Justice Sankey read the lead judgments in the appeals by Oyetola and INEC, with which Justices Abubakar Yahaya, Isaiah Akeju and Bitrus Sanga agreed, while Justice Ita Mbaba dissented.

    Justice Yahaya read the lead judgment in the appeal by the APC, with which other members of the panel agreed, except Justice Mbaba, who also dissented.

    The last judgment was on the cross-appeal by the PDP and Adeleke, which was read by Justice Akeju, with other members agreeing that the cross-appeal was unmeritorious and deserved to be dismissed.

    In upholding the appeal by Oyetola, Justice Sankey, in the lead judgment, resolved 10 of the 12 issues raised for determination, in favour of the Governor.

    Justice Sankey, in resolving the first issue, upheld Olanipekun’s argument that the absence of Justice Peter Obiorah (who authored and read the lead majority judgment at the trial tribunal) at the tribunal’s sitting on February 6, 2019, rendered the proceedings of the tribunal and its majority decision a nullity.
    She held that Obiorah’s absence on that day implied that the tribunal was not properly constituted to conduct proceedings, which, the judge analysed and relied on in the majority judgment he authored and read.
    “I find and resolve the first issue in favour of the appellant and against the 1st and 2nd respondents (PDP and Adeleke)

    “I declare the entire proceedings and the judgment of the Osun State Governorship Election Tribunal a nullity. I hereby set aside the entire proceedings including the judgment,” Justice Sankey said.

    She noted that having nullified that proceedings of the tribunal and set its judgment aside, the court would have ordered that the petition be re-heard, but for the fact that the 180 days provided in the Constitution, for the hearing of election petition, has lapsed.

    Justice Saankey said a re-hearing could not be ordered, because Section 285(c) of the Constitution which provides that an election petition must be heard and determined within 180days from the day of its filing.
    She noted that the petition, having been filed before the tribunal on October 16, 2018, the 180 days had lapsed on April 15, 2019.

    Read Also: APC hails Appeal Court’s judgment on Oyetola

    Justice Sankey also upheld the submission of the appellant to the effect that the petition was incompetent as per the reliefs sought therein, which the appellant had argued, were contradictory and ungrantable.

    She faulted the trial tribunal for declaring the rerun election held on September 27, 2018 illegal.

    Justice Sankey equally faulted the trial tribunal for holding that the petitioners established substantial non-compliance in 17 polling units in which the tribunal voided election results.

    She noted that, having found that the petitioners did not prove over-voting, it ought not to have voided the results from the 17 polling units on the grounds that some portions of the results sheets were not recorded.
    Justice Sankey said: “The absence of proper ballot accounting in the Forms EC8A in the 17 polling units is not a substantial non-compliance and did not substantially affect the results of the election.

    “The only appropriate other is for a rerun election as provided under section 140(2) of the Electoral Act but not to recompute the results of the election and proceed to declare the 1st respondent or any other person the winner of the election.

    “The tribunal was in patent error when it set aside the rerun election especially when it found that the conduct of the rerun was not marred by malpractices and non-compliance with the Electoral Act, leading to the unwarranted disenfranchisement of the voters in the seven polling units.”

    In his dissenting decision, Mbaba dismissed the appeal by Oyetola with N200,000 cost in favour of the PDP and Adeleke.

    He disagreed with the majority position that the appellant justified its claim that Obiorah was absent from the tribunal’s proceedings of February 6.

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  • Updated: Buhari reappoints CBN governor Emefiele for second term

    President Muhammadu Buhari has reappointed the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Godwin Emefiele, for another five-year tenure.

    President Buhari in a letter to the Senate President, Bukola Saraki dated May 8th, 2019 said that the reappointment followed the expiration of Emefiele’s first tenure.

    Saraki read the presidential letter on the floor of the Senate on Thursday.

    Read Also: Senate confirms Dabiri-Erewa as Diaspora commission chairman

    The letter entitled “Renewal of the appointment of Godwin I. Emefiele as Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria” was received in the Office of the Senate President on May 9th 2019.

    The letter read: “In view of the expiration of the first tenure of the current Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria on June 2, 2019, and pursuant to the provisions of Section 8 (1) and (2) of the Central Bank of Nigeria Act 2007, I hereby present for confirmation by the Senate Mr. Godwin I. Emefiele for re-appointment as Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria for a final term of five (5) years.

    “It is my hope that the Distinguished Senate will consider and confirm the nominee in the usual expeditious manner.

    “Please accept, Mr. Senate President, the assurances of my highest consideration.”

    No date has been fixed for the consideration and approval of the nomination.

  • Sugar’s death: Court grants Oyo Assembly Chief Whip bail

    An Oyo state High Court sitting in Ibadan on Thursday granted bail to Hon. Olafisoye Akinmoyede, the Chief Whip of the Oyo State House of Assembly, who was arrested, detained and arraigned as suspect in the gruesome killing of a federal lawmaker, Hon. Temitope Olatoye a.k.a. Sugar.

    Akinmoyede, through his counsel, Mr Michael Lana, had filed an enforcement of fundamental human right suit against the police for detaining him since March 11 without charging him to court.

    The slain federal lawmaker, Olatoye represented Lagelu/Akinyele Federal constituency until he was shot dead during the March 9 Gubernatorial Election around Lalupon motor park, area of Lagelu Oyo State.

    Lana had urged the court to declare the continued detention of his client in police custody in Abuja as unlawful and a violation of his fundamental human right.

    He urged the court to grant bail to his client pending the arraignment of his client at the court of law.

    Meanwhile, the counsel to the respondent, the Commissioner of Police was absent at the hearing.

    The presiding judge, Justice Mashud Abass, said that he considered the action of the police as arrogant, unlawful and unconstitutional.

    Abass said that all actions of the police must be seen to have justification in law and the fundamental right of the applicant must not be restrained by any technicality.

    The judge said that the practice of the police making arrest before investigation was not proper.

    “The power of the police to arrest and detain is not in doubt but the constitution stipulates that any person detained must be arraigned within 24hours.

    Read Also: Slain Oyo lawmaker Sugar buried in Ibadan

    “The remand order obtained by the police from an Iyaganku Magistrate court had expired since April 4 and detaining the applicant beyond this period is flagrant disobedient to the constitution.

    “Obedient to court order should be the responsibility of all who believe in the stability of Nigeria,” the judge said.

    The judge also held that the police had not provided any justification that would warrant the court not to grant bail to the applicant.

    In his ruling, the judge held that the applicant should be granted bail with a surety who is blood relation with landed property worth N50 million among others.

    The judge said that the other surety should be a civil servant with grade level 14 or member of the state House of Assembly or National Assembly.

  • Pastor, mistress sentenced to death for murder of NNPC staff

    An Edo State High Court has sentenced one Pastor Udoka Ukachukwu and his mistress, Eniobong Isonguyo to death for the 2013 murder of a senior staff of Nigerian National Petroleum Company NNPC, Engineer Victor Gabriel Isonguyo.

    Late Engr. Isonguyo was the husband of Eniobong who was killed by the convicted Pastor.

    Engr. Isonguyo was killed and set ablaze while his body was found after some days.

    Pastor Ukachukwu who was having an affair with late Isonguyo wife was arrested when the vehicle of the deceased was tracked to him.

    He could not explain how he got burnt injuries in his hands.

    Justice G. Imadegbelo heard that the deceased was killed by a sharp object in his car by the said pastor and set ablaze in the car on agreement with his wife who was then pregnant for the pastor.

    Read Also: Police confirm six dead, houses burnt in Taraba communal clash

    During trial, the court was informed how some millions of naira and landed properties belonging to the deceased were transferred to the said pastor.

    Witnesses testified that the murder was carried out by the convicts to cover up the pregnancy accusation by the deceased who insisted on knowing how his wife became pregnant while he was away.

    Justice Imadegbelo sentenced the two persons to death by hanging.

    Eniobong who was four months pregnant at the time of the incident was said to have given birth at the Benin prison.

  • Police confirm six dead, houses burnt in Taraba communal clash

    The police in Taraba have confirmed the death of six people following Thursday’s clash between Kona and Fulani groups in Jalingo Local Government Area of the state.

    The state command’s spokesperson, DSP David Misal, confirmed to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Jalingo on Thursday that while several others, who sustained severe injuries were receiving treatment at different health centres in Jalingo, many houses were burnt down during the clash.

    Misal explained the incident followed a misunderstanding between the two groups over farming and grazing land.

    He said that the command had deployed its personnel to restore peace in the affected areas.

    He further told NAN houses in Abbare Maikinta and Wuro Malam Nuhu communities were set on fire during the clash.

    Read Also: Police arrest eight suspects over death of Abuja lady

    According to the command’s spokesman, the police are monitoring unfolding events in the area with a view to restoring sustainable peace.

    He disclosed that the command had so far arrested five persons in connection with the incident while further investigation into the incident was ongoing.

    An eyewitness, Aliyu Mohamed, who is taking refuge in Jalingo, said he had counted at least 15 corpses as he was fleeing his community.

    NAN reports that hundreds of displaced persons are currently taking refuge at the secretariat of the Muslim Council in Jalingo, Kona Village, and Malam Ali villages.

  • EFCC arrests Kwara lawmaker over alleged N4m fraud

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Ilorin Zonal Office, says it has arrested a member of the Kwara House of Assembly (name withheld), for alleged N4 million fraud.

    The commission’s Zonal Head, Mr Isyaku Sharu, disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Ilorin on Thursday.

    Sharu said that the legislator was arrested over alleged cheating, obtaining by false pretence and money laundering involving about N4 million.

    He said that the lawmaker had sometimes in 2015 sold some plots of land to six retired teachers, prior to his political ambition.

    “The lawmaker also issued receipts to the land buyers with the name of a company, which does not exist.

    “The complainants, Mary Kolade, Ezekiel Babatunde, Felicia Adebiyi, Grace Awolola, Julius Omole and Abiodun Balogun alleged that the suspect sold many plots of land to them, claiming to be the owner.

    “They, however, later discovered that the land belonged to the Federal Ministry of Land and Housing.

    “After paying about N4 million to the lawmaker, they decided to survey the plots of land so as to put their survey number on the deed of transfer between them.

    Read Also; EFCC: no going back on Saraki probe

    “They then discovered through the officials of the Kwara State Ministry of Land and Housing that the land belonged to the Federal Ministry of Land and Housing.

    “They were also barred from constructing anything on the land. All efforts made by the retirees to retrieve their money from the Kwara State House of Assembly member proved abortive,” he said.
    Sharu further told NAN that the commission also arrested six suspected internet fraudsters and recovered from them some cars, laptops, different types of phones and charms, among other items.

    He said that two of the suspected fraudsters were arrested at the Ilorin International Airport while trying to board a plane in order to run away.

    According to the zonal head, all the arrested persons will remain in the EFCC custody until they are charged to court.

  • Breaking: Senate confirms Dabiri-Erewa Chairman of Diaspora Commission

    The Senate on Thursday has confirmed the appointment of Hon Abike Dabiri- Erewaas the Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Diaspora Commission (NDC).

    Details Shortly…

  • Nigeria extradites suspected Pakistani drug baron to US

    The Federal Government has extradited to the United States of America (USA) Muhammad Khalid Khan, a Pakistani citizen indicted for drug dealing and money laundering.

    Khan, 31, was extradited on April 28 through a collaboration of the U.S. Department of Justice, Nigeria’s Ministry of Justice, prosecutors from Nigeria’s Central Authority Unit (CAU) and the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

    According to a statement by the United States Consulate-General, Lagos, Khan was arrested at the request of the U.S. Justice Department in Nigeria pursuant to a federal arrest warrant issued in the Southern District of New York.

    It said Khan trafficked heroin into the US and Australia, among other places.

    He also allegedly used a Lagos-based Nigerian narcotics transportation network to distribute southwest-Asian heroin to global markets.

    The U.S. Federal indictment out of the Southern District of New York charges Khan on three counts: “attempting to import heroin into the United States, international promotional money laundering, and international concealment money laundering.”

    The statement said: “Muhammad Khalid Khan controlled an international drug trafficking and money laundering network responsible for trafficking narcotics to the U.S., Australia, Africa and Europe.

    Read Also: Court opens hearing today in suit querying Atiku’s claim to be Nigerian

    “His money-laundering network was widespread throughout the U.S. Australia, Canada, Africa, Europe and Asia.

    “Khan has been the target of multiple DEA (US Drug Enforcement Agency) investigations including those conducted by international DEA Offices in Lagos, Nigeria, Islamabad, Pakistan, and Sydney, Australia, and domestic offices in New York and the DEA Special Operations Division, as well international partnerships with the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

    “Beginning in October 2017, DEA began investigating this Southwest Asia-based drug trafficker.

    “Over the course of several investigations, Khan was found to be responsible for trafficking multi-kilogram quantities of heroin and the importation of said heroin into the United States and Australia.

    “NDLEA investigators in conjunction with the DEA Lagos Office ran a parallel investigation into Khan’s utilization of a Lagos-based Nigerian narcotics transportation network, in furtherance of distribution of southwest-Asian heroin to global markets.

    According to the US, Khan, if convicted, faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment and a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in prison on Count One, and a maximum sentence of 20 years on each of Counts Two and Three.

    The U.S. Justice Department and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the DEA Lagos Country Office said they looked “forward to continuing a collaborative effort between the Nigerian Ministry of Justice and their Nigerian law enforcement partners in furtherance of identifying and bringing to justice transnational criminal organizations whom are determined to saturate our communities with illegal, and dangerous controlled substances around the world.”