Tag: Nyanya

  • ‘We’ll tackle Nyanya-Keffi traffic’

    The Federal Capital Territory Administration has intensified work on the ongoing construction of the Karshi–Ara/Apo Road project to serve as alternative for motorists moving towards the Northeast axis of the country.

    This is in order to tackle the traffic congestion with its associated problems along the Nyanya – Keffi Road.

    The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Senator Bala Mohammed, revealed this after meeting with some engineers of the FCT Administration on how to tackle head on the traffic bottlenecks along that axis.

    According to a statement issued by Assistant Director/Chief Press Secretary to the FCT Minister, Muhammad Sule, Mohammed noted that the FCT Administration is concerned about the plight of residents of the Federal Capital Territory plying that route, hence the serious attention being given to ongoing construction work of this segment of the road.

    He emphasised that President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration is a responsive one and would do everything possible to make the traffic problem along that axis a thing of the past. According to him, the construction work of Karshi – Apo is already 65 per cent complete, while Karshi – Ara is 25 per cent complete.

    He revealed that the total length of the Karshi-Apo axis of the road is 13.2 kilometers and that the entire distance has been cleared with all the culverts completed.

    The minister further revealed that 9.0 kilometers formation of the road has already been achieved, with 5.0 kilometers of sub-base.

    His words: “The FCT Administration has conveniently achieved the laying of stone base as well as asphalt on this road reaching 4.2 kilometers and 3.0 kilometers respectively.”

     

  • Nyanya blast: Row over prosecution of mastermind

    Nyanya blast: Row over prosecution of mastermind

    The inability of the Ministry of Justice, the Police and Department of State Service (DSS) to agree on which agency should prosecute the suspected mastermind of the April 14 bomb blast in Nyanya, Abuja, Aminu Ogwuche, stalled his arraignment on Friday.

    Ogwuche has been in the DSS custody since his extradition from Sudan over a month ago.

    His arraignment on Friday before Justice Adeniyi Ademola of the Federal High Court  by counsel to the Police and the DSS  agencies had the authority to prosecute the suspect.

    The police, who filed the charges, could not produce Ogwuche and his co-accused because the suspects were held by the DSS.

    DSS lawyer  Cliff Osagie, urged the police to withdraw the initial charges against the accused to enable the DSS complete its investigation.

    “I expect them (the police) to have withdrawn the charges to enable us (DSS) complete our investigation, and hand, over the case to the attorney-general of the federation, who is empowered to prosecute cases such as this,” he said.

    Osagie said after the accused was extradited from Sudan, the DSS on September 11 obtained an order from Justice Gabriel Kolawole, to keep the accused in custody for 90 days “in the first instance.”

    Counsel to the police, Oloye Torugbene, said he would not withdraw the charges, as he was not instructed to do so.

    The charges were filed by the police to facilitate Ogwuche’s extradition from Sudan, where he allegedly escaped to after the incident.

    Justice Ademola held that the police had not presented the documents to show investigations had been completed.

    The judge, who expressed surprise about the lack of “collaboration” between the two security agencies, asked them to sort out the issues and agree on a date.

    He adjourned the case till November 10.

    Over 100 persons died in the blast, which was said to have been masterminded by the accused.

    Ogwuche and others were reportedly arrested in Sudan with the assistance of the Interpol.

    In one of the three counts, Ogwuche was alleged to have conspired with others (at large), to commit terrorism by detonating improvised explosive devices at the Nyanya terminus, which resulted in the death of 75 persons. Over 100 were injured.

  • Nyanya bombers and Ogar’s Freudian slip

    Nyanya bombers and Ogar’s Freudian slip

    LAST Monday, the Department of State Service (DSS) announced a breakthrough in the April 14, Nyanya, Abuja motor park bombings that embarrassed the Jonathan government about three weeks before the World Economic Forum (WEF). Some 75 people had died in that bombing, and about 20 more lost their lives in a follow-up bombing in the same vicinity, both giving the impression that Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, was under siege. Boko Haram, the sect waging a fierce war against Nigeria, claimed responsibility. It then warned that its fighters had breached the security of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and was prepared to carry out more attacks on Abuja and oil installations.

    Briefing newsmen on Monday, the spokesperson of the DSS, Marilyn Ogar, indicated that five suspects who already confessed to playing roles in the attacks had been arrested. One of the two masterminds of the attacks was to be arrested a few days later in Sudan where he took refuge. One is still wanted, even after N25m bounty had been placed on each of their heads. The breakthrough in investigations is indeed remarkable, and the DSS should feel justifiably proud of their achievements. From their interactions with newsmen when they were paraded, the five suspects appeared very convincing in describing the roles they played in the bombings. There is no reason to doubt them or the involvement of the two masterminds.

    Had Ms Ogar, however, limited herself to merely narrating the DSS angle to the bombing case, it would have been an excellent day for the secret service and a great day for Nigeria’s ability to rise up to major challenges, especially of insecurity. But while illustrating the bottlenecks they encountered in the case of one of the masterminds of the attacks, Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche, a military deserter, Ms Ogar had said: “Ogwuche is a criminal who was earlier arrested in 2011, but was released on bail following pressures from human right activists who consistently accused the service of violating Ogwuche’s rights by being locked up while under investigations.”

    It was clear Ms Ogar had reservations about suspects’ rights and the involvement of human rights groups when it comes to security matters. Yet, there are provisions in Nigerian laws guiding the arrest and detention of suspects, especially how and why such suspects could be detained for much longer than the law ordinarily permits. Why did the service not avail itself of such provisions? Ms Ogar also went ahead to commit a Freudian slip with her impassioned plea to Nigerians to ‘set aside their beliefs’ (in order words, their opinions or convictions or suspicions) when security and public safety are in focus. But she was being disingenuous. Not only are there provisions that empower the service and other security agencies to detain a suspect for much longer than required by law, those provisions are nonetheless circumscribed by the need to present evidence proving that the suspects if let loose constitute a threat to peace and stability of the society.

    If the DSS had satisfied the provisions, it does not seem they could easily have been forced to release Mr Ogwuche on bail. Ms Ogar uncharitably blames human rights activists, even alarmingly insinuating that the public must have implicit trust in the service to do whatsoever it pleases on security matters. Regrettably, the DSS must be told that even in the face of the gravest threat to the country, the society must still be governed by laws properly enacted and scrupulously adhered to. The alternative is to unwittingly empower the secret service to become a leviathan. This must never be countenanced. Ms Ogar shook with anger and missed a word or two while suggesting that the public should set aside their beliefs. No, the public must never entertain this heresy. Instead, let the secret service and all other law enforcement agencies do their work diligently and present their investigations neat and tidy before a court, either in open or closed sessions, and fulfil the guidelines regarding the arrest and detention of suspects. There must be no shortcuts.

    The public must also remember that in the early years of the Boko Haram revolt, neither the federal government nor the DSS was sure how to treat the sect’s militants. Both the government and the secret service eventually agreed to experiment with a form of rendition used by the Americans in Afghanistan. This was why some suspects were released to either their parents or traditional rulers. It was a dubious process, and this writer and many others condemned it. But the government went ahead nonetheless. If human rights activists fought the prolonged detention of a suspect, it was because the DSS did not satisfy the courts that it needed to keep the suspects for much longer than the about 11 months Mr Ogwuche, for instance, was locked up. Ms Ogar’s suggestion about what the disposition of human rights defenders should be to security matters is fraught with landmines. She gives the impression that the service could whimsically operate above the law. In any case, even if Mr Ogwuchi was admitted to bail in 2012, it did not preclude the service from putting him under close surveillance. If they didn’t do so, they and Mr Ogwuche’s surety, not human rights groups, are to blame. Let the law stand as it is, and let human rights activists not be discouraged from serving as the conscience of the society even in these trying times. It is the DSS that should fine-tune its processes.

  • Nyanya blast: DSS  parades five suspects

    Nyanya blast: DSS parades five suspects

    The Department of State Security (DSS) yesterday in Abuja paraded five suspects allegedly linked to the April 14 bombing at Nyanya on the outskirts of the Federal Capital Territory in which over 75 persons were killed and more than 100 injured.

    Also yesterday, the DSS placed a N25 million reward on two fleeing suspects, Rufai Abubakar Tsiga and Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche, who were alleged to have masterminded the attack.

    Disclosing this at a joint briefing held at the headquarters of the security agency, its spokesperson, Ms. Marilyn Ogar, said Tsiga, assisted by Ogwuche, drove the explosive laden car to the scene of the blast a day to the incident.

    Tsiga was said to have left the car at the Nyanyan bus station and went back to detonate the explosives early in the morning of April 14.

    The DSS spokesperson said Tsiga ran a patent medicine kiosk as a decoy at Utako in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), from where he allegedly recruited other sect members who disguised as his apprentices.

    Ogwuche was described as a British born Nigerian from Benue State who was in November 2011 arrested at the Abuja airport on his arrival from the United Kingdom, in connection with terrorism.

    Ogar, however, said the suspect was released on bail to his father, Col. Agene Ogwuche (rtd), in October 2012, following intense pressure from the human rights community who alleged violation of his human rights.

    The DSS spokesperson added that Ogwuche deserted the Nigerian Army in 2006 after serving in the Intelligence Unit at the Arakan Barracks, Lagos.

    He was said to have absconded when he was posted to the Nigerian Defence Academy, , Kaduna, in 2006. Ogar gave his service number as SVC 95/104.

    Ogwuche is said to be studying Arabic Language at the International University of Africa, Sudan.

    Ogar pledged that “Nigerian security forces shall not rest on their oars until every individual or group of persons involved in the Nyanya bombings are brought to book.”

    The other five suspects in the custody of the DSS who were also paraded are: Ahmad Rufai Abubakar (43); Muhammadu Sani Ishaq (30); Yau Saidu (28); Adamu Yusuf (43); and Anas Isah (22).

    They all confessed to having played various roles in preparations before the bombing of the Abuja bus station.

    Before bringing out the five suspects to be photographed and questioned by reporters, Ogar said the suspects were told the bombing was in retaliation for the killing of a Boko Haram member the week before at the bus station.

    She added that no member of the sect was killed.

    But she revealed that lower level Boko Haram militants were still hiding in Abuja.

    “Terrorist elements are disguising daily by taking up various businesses and menial jobs in Abuja and its environs.  Therefore, security awareness of the public and prompt response to information sharing will continue to play a pivotal role in the war on terror,” said Ogar.

    Boko Haram has killed thousands of people in five years of insurgency, in attacks on churches, mosques, schools, markets, villages and the government.

    Also at yesterday’s briefing were: Director of Defence Information Maj.-Gen. Chris Olukolade; Director of Army Public Relations Brig.-Gen. Olajide Laleye and Force Public Relations Officer Mr. Frank Mba.

  • Photo: Nyanya Boko Haram suspects

    Photo: Nyanya Boko Haram suspects

    Suspected Boko Haram Members  Ahmad Rufai Abubakar(left) Muhammadu Sani Ishaq Adamu Yusuf Yau Saidu and Anas Isah that masterminded April 14 El.Rufai bMotor Park Nyanya paraded yesterday by joint security at DSS headquarters in Abuja on Monday photos Abayomi Fayese
    Suspected Boko Haram Members Ahmad Rufai Abubakar(left) Muhammadu Sani Ishaq Adamu Yusuf Yau Saidu and Anas Isah that masterminded April 14 El.Rufai bMotor Park Nyanya paraded yesterday by joint security at DSS headquarters in Abuja on Monday photos Abayomi Fayese
  • Police recover snatched school van

    Police recover snatched school van

    There was panic in Abuja yesterday following rumours that a bus–filled with pupils on the way to school was snatched by gunmen and the children abducted.

    The rumour was quickly dispelled by the Ministry of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) which clarified that armed men snatched a school bus  without any child in it.

    The bus belonged to Divine International Academy at Nyanya.

    The police later recovered the school van, a Toyota Hiace bus with registration number XG 246 GWA.

    Police spokesman Frank Mba said the bus was recovered by police operatives attached to the Nasarawa State Police Command following a manhunt.

    Mba added that two suspects, Victor Essien (40) and Ubongpong Bassey (49)  were arrested.

    The statement quoted the Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar to have assured members of the public of enhanced security in the federal capital territory and its environs

    It added that the police would remain committed to the task of providing the citizens and participants at the World Economic Forum (WEF) world-class security services during and after the event.

    The IG was also quoted to have enjoined the citizenry to remain vigilant and continue to support security agencies in the task of securing the nation.

    News of the early morning robbery sent panic across the capital city, owing to the tense security situation by recent bombing at public places within the territory.

    As soon as the news broke caused parents and guardians rushed to primary and secondary schools to bring back their children and wards, as information spread across the city that it was a case of abduction of school pupils.

     

     

  • Economic summitry:  Getting back to basics

    Economic summitry: Getting back to basics

    If conferences ever developed a continent or helped solve its most pressing problems, Africa would be one of the most developed continents and its problems would long have been solved.

    At bilateral, multi-lateral, regional and continental levels, one conference or another is being  staged at any given moment, with some of the most knowledgeable experts and policy-makers participating.

    They are staging yet another conference, the  World Economic Forum on Africa, in Abuja this week, from Wednesday through Friday, with the bombed-out remains of Nyanya  still smouldering and a full accounting of the casualties yet to be rendered.  They are staging  while the authorities are yet to summon the will and the resolve to locate, to say nothing of rescuing, more than 100 female students abducted from the Government Secondary School, Chibok, in Borno State.

    They have not disclosed the cost of the conference, but it won’t be cheap. They are shutting down Abuja for three days, not on account of what the elusive Boko Haram might do, they say, but to ensure that the visiting political officials and, most especially, all those irritable and disobliging investors, would not be incommoded in the least by the gridlock that often paralyses vehicular traffic in the city.

    There is no need to worry about the loss to productivity during the shutdown.  The new rebased economy that will be a major talking point in President Goodluck Jonathan’s opening address and a theme that Finance Minister and Coordinating Minister for the Economy Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala will insinuate into every aspect of the proceedings can easily absorb it.

    A communiqué bristling with diplomatic gobbledygook will be issued at the end of the conference. Grand intentions will be proclaimed and affirmed, and ringing resolutions will be passed. Another Plan of Action will be formulated to replace previous plans of action.

    But the problems will remain, and in some cases grow more intractable. Rarely are the agreements reached at these conferences followed up and followed through.  Several years later, the same officials and experts convene at another venue to make the same proclamations and pass the same resolutions.

    I was reminded of this unproductive summitry the other day when I stumbled upon the notes  I had taken at the Conference on Africa on the Eve of the 21st Century held in Maputo, Mozambique, from September 9-11, which had in attendance some 65 senior political figures, policy-makers and academics from 31 African countries.

    The deliberations were prefaced by a background paper detailing where Africa stood in the scheme of things on the eve of a new millennium. The profile was sobering, grim even.

    One-half of the continent’s estimated population of 720 million subsisted on less than one U.S. dollar a day. Africa’s children were the most likely, in comparison with children in other parts of the world, to die before age 5, and its adults least likely to live beyond age 50.

    On the average, Africans were more malnourished, less educated and more likely to succumb to fatal diseases.  Of the 24 countries at the bottom of the United Nations Development Programmes Human Development Index – the so-called Misery Index – 22 were to be found in Africa.

    Africa had the highest population growth rate in the world; at an annual rate of 2.61 per cent, it was set to reach 1.05 billion by 2010 and double 25 years later.  But in most African countries, economic growth lagged behind population growth. More than 50 per cent of African youths under age 30 were unemployed.  Where physical infrastructure existed, it                was in disrepair.

    In the face of the growing population, agricultural production was declining as a result of wars and conflict which made farming hazardous, if not impossible, and also as a result of environmental degradation.

    Africa accounted for 12 per cent of the world’s population but only 2.4 per cent of global GNP, and more than one-half of this figure was contributed by South Africa and Nigeria. Africa continued to be almost entirely an exporter of raw materials.  It also accounted for only two per cent of global telephone density.

    In the health sector, the picture was just as grim. Malaria continued to send some 2.7 million Africans to premature deaths every year. Some 14 million Africans, constituting more than 50 per cent of the total number of HIV- positive persons, most of them children, were to be found in Africa. One in 13 women in Africa died during pregnancy or childbirth, compared to one in 3,200 in Europe and one in 35 in Asia.  More than 60 per cent of drugs sold across the counter in Africa were fake and quite possibly harmful.

    Despite all the talk about economic cooperation and regional integration, intra-African trade accounted for only 7.5 per cent of the continent’s total. Capital accumulation and saving rates stood at less than one half of Asia’s 30 per cent and fell considerably short of the level required to attain and sustain a rate of growth that would have any significant impact on the economy.

    And all his was happening as the flow of private capital into emerging markets had almost entire bypassed Africa.

    The commitment to regional integration was weak. With the exception of Senegal, no African country could boast of having a ministry of regional integration or a designated agency with sufficient authority to deal with the subject.

    African heads of government – and their wives — were well integrated, but not the people, not the infrastructure, not the economic operators and not the markets.

    Very little seems to have changed in the 14 years that have passed since the Maputo Conference. Inter-regional trade has ticked up, accounting for between 10 and 13 per cent of Africa’s trade. This figure probably does not take into account trade in the informal sector which, judging from the commercial traffic from Nigeria to ECOWAS countries as well as Cameroun and going so far south as Zaire, is considerable. Still, it is puny compared with comparable figures in Europe, Asia and Latin America.

    Africa’s telephone density has grown dramatically since the introduction of GSM phones. The continent’s emerging markets are being touted as hot destinations for foreign capital, but that is more hype than actuality.

    During his first term, President Olusegun Obasanjo appointed to his cabinet a minister for regional integration. I can claim some responsibility for that appointment. Drawing on the Maputo Conference, I had sent him a memo urging him to give practical effect to his well-known commitment to regional integration by making it the subject of a cabinet-level appointment.  To rule myself out of contention, I recommended that the appointee should be bilingual in English and French.

    Unfortunately, the position – and the appointee — did not survive Obasanjo’s first term.

    One of the key resolutions of the Maputo Conference bears re-stating. The time had come,  it said, to try a new approach to tackling the problems of the continent.  That approach would emphasise the integration of production and infrastructure and include business and economic operators as well as social formations, not just heads of state and their wives and top officials.

    A good starting point, the Conference said, would be to streamline and rationalise some 40 existing intergovernmental organisations performing tasks related to integration.

    More than two decades after the Beninois statesman and former Minister of Information, Professor Albert Tévoédjrè proposed un jour sans frontières(a day without borders) as a first step toward giving concrete expression to the movement of goods and persons in the ECOWAS region, it has remained that: a proposal.

    The World Economic Forum on Africa will most likely take a global perspective on the African condition.  But it will do well to consider the internal dimensions as well and urge a return to basics.

  • From Chibok 276 to President Jonathan

    SIR: It is with deep sense of anger, resentment and desperation that we write you this letter. You would recall that on April 14, after an explosion rocked Nyanya a suburb of Abuja killing over 75 persons and wounding many others, some individuals in military camouflage came to Chibok Girls Secondary School with the guise of assisting us escape an imminent Boko Haram attack. Conversely, the “good Samaritans” have turned out to be dare-devil Boko Haram abductors. Twenty one horrible days after, we are helpless hostages languishing in the den of these sheep in wolf clothing. The attendant depression and hopeless experience is better imagined.

    We learnt that our abduction naturally hit you like a thunder bolt and our country knew no peace since then. But a day after, your presidential train moved to Kano where you danced away the shock in reception of Ibrahim Shekarau and other defectors to your party the PDP. How would one conscientiously reconcile your shocking disposition to our plight to what happened some hours later in Kano? If we were truly your children, would you have gone to Kano? Being in government should not make us lose our sense of decency and humanness.

    We also learnt that government postponed the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting of Wednesday  April 30, to honour the younger brother of the Vice President Namadi Sambo who unfortunately lost his life in a ghastly motor accident along Lugbe Airport Road, Abuja. We pray Allah to receive the soul of the departed in al-jannah Firdaus and through this medium send our heart-felt condolences to the Vice President and his entire family. It is customary in our clime to honour the dead but should we conclude that the dead are more important that the living in Nigeria?

    At the time we were abducted, we were putting on only school uniforms. Has anyone thought of how we feed, sleep, take bath and care for ourselves as young girls?

    Boko Haram menace needs a concerted national and patriotic effort to surmount. We are hostages today; tomorrow it might be people in position of authority. If drastic steps are not taken, the nation will be consumed. The doom’s day is imminent.

    Our abduction coincided with the untimely death of more than 200 school children like us at a resort island off the nation’s southwestern coast of South Korea as a result of crew malfeasance. The Prime Minister took responsibility and threw in the towel. The crew members are currently facing the music. Who will take responsibility for all these calamities that have been befalling us as a nation?

    The world is expected to mark Children’s day on May 27. Would you like us to celebrate ours as hostages in the bush with gun trotting insurgents whose well established principle is that education is a sin and are out to stop it?

    The events that led to our abduction has offered your government the impetus to scrutinise the activities of those saddled with the responsibility of making sure that the state of emergency is implemented. How could these people have unbridled access to roads that are supposed to be manned by soldiers? We learnt that our government agencies do not even know how many of us thatare missing. Even if it is one person, a good shepherd will leave 99 sheep and go after the missing one.

    We salute the courage of our mothers in Chibok, mothers all over Nigeria who have worked, prayed and marched the cities of Nigeria to demonstrate and register their displeasure over our abduction and lack of government proactive measures for our release. Finally, we thank God for preserving us till this day and for mercifully granting 53 of us freedom and safety. Our gratitude goes to all Nigerians for standing by us and our families in this trying time. We still look forward to our freedom someday.

    • Sunday Onyemaechi Eze

    Zaria

  • Nyanya Park to be relocated

    Nyanya Park to be relocated

    •Minister asks relatives to claim corpses of blast victims

    As a way of solving the perennial traffic gridlock on the Nyanya border area of the Keffi-Nyanya-Abuja express road, the Federal Capital Territory Administration has resolved to build a new motor park.

    The new park will be within a reasonable distance from the expressway while all buildings, shops and business premises located along the road corridor in the area would be demolished immediately in overriding public interest.

    FCT Minister, Senator Bala Mohammed, disclosed this yesterday after an inspection of the scene of Thursday’s bomb blast in Nyanya satellite town.

    The minister further disclosed that an integrity test would be carried out on the Nyanya interchange (flyover bridge) to ascertain its current structural strength in the aftermath of the two successive terrorist bomb attacks near the foot of the bridge. He also pleaded with relatives of the bereaved to step forward and claim the bodies of their loved ones in the various hospital morgues in FCT.

    He disclosed that work would commence at the new motor park within the next one week. He added that a team comprising top officials of Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA), the FCT departments of Urban and Regional Planning, Survey and Mapping, Abuja Metropolitan Management Council, the Transportation Secretariat, the Abuja Municipal Area Council, security officials and other relevant professionals has been put in place to facilitate a speedy construction and opening of the new park together with the removal of all encumbrances.

    While calling on those who lost their dear ones in the bomb blasts to come up and claim their remains, Mohammed stressed that all government mortuary facilities in FCT have been overstretched. He said the FCTA was ready to provide logistics supports such as free ambulance services for conveying the remains to any part of the country for burial. He also disclosed that the FCTA has reached agreement with the Police authorities with clearance secured for the release of the victims’ corpses.

    In order to decongest the general hospitals in the Territory, the minister said that FCTA has decided to bear the cost of treating all indigent patients on admission in the FCT hospitals for other ailments beside injuries from the bomb blast.

    Secretary of Health and Human Services of FCTA, Dr. Demola Onakomaiya, had earlier told the minister that while many of the corpses from the first blast were yet to be claimed by relatives for burial, all the 20 corpses in the second blast are equally lying in the various mortuaries. He said the death toll of Thursday’s blast has risen to 20.

    While admitting that the swelling population of FCT particularly in areas like Nyanya has remained a big challenge, the minister said the FCT Administration was doing its best in synergy with the various security agencies to deepen security intelligence in the Nation’s capital. He appealed to the residents to continue to be vigilant and to always volunteer useful security information to the Police and other security agencies.

     

    Those who accompanied the minister on the visit include the FCT Minister of State, Oloye Olajumoke Akinjide, the Permanent Secretary, John Chukwu, the Chief of Staff to the FCT Minister, Alhaji Mohammed Yau Gital, the Commandant of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps, FCT Command, Alhaji Abdullahi Kofarsoro, the representative of the FCT Commissioner of Police and many others.

     

  • Photo: FCT Ministers visit Nyanya blast victims

    Photo: FCT Ministers visit Nyanya blast victims

    Minister of State FCT, Oloye Olajumoke Akinjide, Minister of FCT, Senator Bala Mohammed and the Secretary of Health, FCT Administration, Dr. Demola Onakomaiya during their visit to victims of Nyanya bomb blast being treated at the Maitama District hospital, Abuja...Saturday
    Minister of State FCT, Oloye Olajumoke Akinjide, Minister of FCT, Senator Bala Mohammed and the Secretary of Health, FCT Administration, Dr. Demola Onakomaiya during their visit to victims of Nyanya bomb blast being treated at the Maitama District hospital, Abuja…Saturday