Tag: offences

  • Stealing, breach of peace top offences in Lagos

    Stealing and breach of peace topped the list of most committed criminal offences in Lagos State between January and March this year, the Lagos Criminal Information System (LCIS) has revealed.

    According to the report, the two accounted for 65 per cent of offences committed within the period reviewed; others accounted for 35 per cent.

    Out of the 17,941 prison inmates  enrolled on the LCIS as at March, the report showed that 1,038 were in prisons for stealing and 776 for breach of peace.

    For the remaining 35 per cent, 158 are for cultism and unlawful society offences, 108 for assault, 90 for robbery,  83 for murder, 80 for armed robbery, 75 for obtaining under false pretence, 57 for fraud, 53 for damage of property, 48 for defilement, 43 for illegal possession of firearms,  39 for drug trafficking, 25 for accident, 24 for illegal tampering, 22 for breaking and entering, 17 for kidnapping,  13 for sexual assault, 12 for forgery, 11 for rape, nine for abduction, eight for illegal possession of drugs and seven each for money laundering and manslaughter.

    Male offenders accounted for 98 per cent and female offenders with two per cent of the total prison inmates of 17,941.

    A total of 1,266 offenders are within the age of 18 and 25, 1,337 are within 26 and 40 years, 375 are within 41 and 55 years, 73 are within 56 and 65 years, 19 are within 15 and 17 years while 17 are 66 and 76 years of age.

    The 17 juvenile inmates enrolled for the period January and March marked an improvement over 66 juveniles enrolled for the previous quarter, October to December, 2018.

    Defilement of children under the age of 18 is top on the table for sexual related offences with 68 per cent and followed by sexual assault and rape with 17 and 15 per cent respectively.

    Top five locations where inmates committed offences in Lagos are Eti-Osa  with 218 inmates, Apapa with 170 inmates, Alimosho has 169 inmates,  Ojo has 155 inmates and Ikorodu with 142 inmates while the least five are Ifako-Ijaiye 20 inmates, Bariga 22 inmates, Epe 40 inmates, Ikoyi/Obalende 44 inmates and Ajeromi with 53 inmates.

    The top five states that have indigenes in the five federal prisons in Lagos are Ogun with 442 inmates, Oyo 359 inmates, Lagos 276 inmates Osun 208 and Kwara with 194 inmates while the states with the least number of inmates include Taraba, with six, Gombe with seven, Niger has nine, while Rivers and Zamfara states have 10 inmates respectively.

    Actual prison inmates in the five prisons as at the time of the report was put at 9,044 compared to total prisons capacity of 4,087. The breakdown showed that Ikoyi has 2,976 as against prison capacity of 800; Kirikiri Medium prison has 3,925 as compared to its built-in capacity of 1,700; Maximum Prison has 1,645 as against capacity of 1,056; Badagry has 298 inmates as against its capacity of 320 while the female prison has 200, eleven less than its built-in capacity for 211.

    The status of the inmates showed that 2,359 are awaiting trials, 61 are on remand, 117 are convicted, 18 are condemned, 80 have been released on bail, 235 have had their cases struck out.

    The Directorate of Public Prosecution (DPP) issued 382 legal advice, representing 94 per cent of total 408 case files received; 20 case files, representing five per cent, are pending while six case files, representing one per cent are returned for further investigation.

    The breakdown of Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) advice issued showed that 131 were issued for sexual related offences, 99 for robbery, 81 for stealing, 41 for homicide and 30 for fatal motor accident.

    The report showed that 40 of the awaiting trial inmates have spent between one to nine years in prison without being taken to court.

    Fifty-four of the awaiting trial inmates have been unable to perfect their bail, with 34 of them having a bail sum of between N5,000 and N10,000.

    Meanwhile, 56 per cent of the inmates do not have legal representation, 98 per cent are not sure of the status of their DPP advice while only two per cent are with DPP advice.

     

     

  • 20 jailed in Ekiti for sanitation offences

    20 jailed in Ekiti for sanitation offences

    Twenty residents of Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, were sentenced at the weekend for failing to participate in the monthly environmental sanitation.

    The offenders were arrested by the state’s environmental sanitation officers for indiscriminate dumping of refuse and disregard for official restriction of movement during the sanitation period.

    The Magistrate of a mobile court, Mrs. Modupe Afeniforo, who sentenced the convicts to prison terms – ranging from one to two months – gave them options of fine between N3,000 and N500 in lieu of the prison sentences.

    Mrs Afeniforo noted that the sentences would not only serve as punishment but also as a deterrence to people that may be tempted to commit similar offences.

    Reacting to the development, the Commissioner for Environment, Chief Bisi Kolawole, warned the residents that government would continue to prosecute anybody caught flouting environmental and sanitation laws.

    Stressing the need for residents to take care of their environment to prevent flooding and outbreak of epidemic, Kolawole noted that because of the devastating effect of flooding, the people should not allow anybody to indiscriminately dump refuse in the waterways or do anything that would block canals.

    The commissioner called for continued support for the government to make life more meaningful for the residents.

    He urged them to make judicious use of the waste bins the government provided at designated areas to enable the government achieve a healthy environment.

  • Act on electoral offences tribunal, independent candidacy, Bourdex tasks Senate

    Act on electoral offences tribunal, independent candidacy, Bourdex tasks Senate

    All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Board of Trustees member, Dr. David Onuoha-Bourdex, has expressed surprise that the Senate did not go the whole hog to strengthen the Electoral Act by prescribing stiffer punishment for poll offenders.

    While commending the 8th Senate for the bold and timely review of the 2010 Electoral Act, he noted that apart from legislating fines for electoral officers that may engage in tampering and manipulation of votes, there is need for an electoral offences tribunal.

    Bourdex, who was the APGA Senatorial candidate for Abia North District in the 2015 National Assembly Election, disclosed that experience has shown that whenever such revolutionary legislations, as the inclusion of full electronic voting are made, unscrupulous politicians begin to explore loopholes.

    “Therefore because of imperfection of human insight, there is need to institute electoral offences tribunal to show seriousness over electoral malfeasance. It is the lack of appropriate mechanism to punish offenders that has helped to embolden enemies of real democracy to breach the law,” he stressed.

    Recalling the imperfections of the 2015 election, the telecom expert noted that the use of incidence forms proved a ready gateway for unpopular candidates to undermine popular vote, insisting that until there is institutional checks and enforcement mechanism, good laws will remain impotent in addressing flaws in Nigeria’s electoral system.

    The APGA BoT member urged the National Assembly to use the opportunity of constitutional reforms to ensure that all loopholes for toying with the civic decisions of the citizens were blocked.

    He suggested that school enrolment and number of taxpayers should be applied as necessary controls to check the number of registered voters, adding that the allegation of under-aged voting in certain polling units was not entirely frivolous.

    His words: “It beats every sane imagination that certain areas with high voting population do not return commensurate tax returns and school enrolment figures. This new thinking about our electoral system should incorporate school enrollment and internal revenue generation to shadow voting numbers.

    “Also as electoral officials are punished, efforts should be made to equally punish their collaborators, the parties and candidates. All in all, citizen vigilance remains the greatest check against electoral malfeasance. Therefore, the electoral body should increase voter enlightenment and education on what constitute electoral offences.”

    Bourdex renewed his call that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) should be the respondent on election petitions, pointing out that the cost of losing election petitions should also ginger INEC to ensure the credibility of elections it conducts.

    To ensure full democratization of the electoral process, Onuoha-Bourdex implored the National Assembly to make room for independent candidacy, stressing that that was a sure way to limit the extortionist propensity of some party leaders, who use the platform for trading purposes.

    “With independent candidacy, communities can elect a preferred candidate even when the political parties do not consider him or her; it would also offer opportunity to responsible people who detest the dirty side of partisan politics, to participate in politics and serve the people,” he stated

  • Again, election offences tribunal

    Again, election offences tribunal

    •This time, we must get it right

    Once again, a case has been made for the establishment of an electoral offences tribunal in the country. The Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, who renewed the call for such a tribunal said this was due to the Federal Government’s concern over the spate of electoral malpractices.

    Malami spoke last week Tuesday in Abuja, while inaugurating the Senator Ken Nnamani-led committee on constitution and electoral reform. “The issues of internal democracy structures and the need to prevent the use of illicit funds in the electoral processes as well as the establishment of an electoral offences tribunal are pertinent, if we must evolve globally acceptable electoral system”, the minister said.

    We agree with the minister that our politicians have not learnt any lesson on proper conduct before, during and after electoral contests, and this is largely because violators of the electoral process are hardly arrested not to talk of prosecuted. We have instances where electoral officers, including innocent youth corps members were killed or kidnapped by political thugs during elections. When the killers are not identified or prosecuted, those killed died in vain. Even though convicting the criminals would not necessarily bring back the dead, it at least sends the signal to others who might be criminally minded that they have the law to contend with if they toe the same path.

    Of course, we can argue that the establishment of such tribunal is a duplication of the role of our regular courts, the point is, the courts already have their hands full as they cannot even cope with the many civil and criminal cases pending before them. The result is that justice has been travelling at a snail’s speed in the country. And, as the saying goes, “justice delayed is justice denied”.

    It is in realisation of this weakness of our regular courts that electoral petition tribunals were set up to quickly dispose of election petitions. So, if we have election petition tribunals addressing  matters arising from electoral contests, what stops us from having electoral offences tribunal to also try cases of electoral malpractices?

    This is something the country had been considering in the past few years. The Late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua himself admitted that the election that produced his presidency was flawed and set up the Muhammadu Uwais-led electoral reform committee, which recommended, among other things, the establishment of an Electoral Offences Tribunal. Unfortunately, ill-health, which ultimately led to his death, prevented him from seeing such through. Dr Goodluck Jonathan who succeeded him similarly acknowledged the need for an election offences tribunal while receiving the report of the National Stakeholders Forum on Electoral Reform presented by the same Nnamani, in Abuja, in 2014.

    He said: “We need this body (electoral offences tribunal) so that people who commit electoral offences will not get away with them. After elections, the matter goes to the tribunal. The only person who loses is the person who contested that election. Any other person who committed all kinds of atrocities gets away with it as nobody punishes him/her. That is why we continue to have that kind of impunity”. Again, he too could not set up such tribunal until he was voted out of office last year.

    We call on the Buhari administration not to pay lip service to the setting up of this important tribunal. The beauty of democracy is for votes to count. True, election results had been upturned by some tribunals in the past, thus redressing some injustices at the polls, the best place to slug out political contests is through the ballot box.

    The Nnamani committee has its job cut out for it because there are existing reports it can fall back on to facilitate its assignment. We hope the government will also muster the will to implement its recommendations this time around.

  • Lagos mobile courts convict suspects for different offences

    The Lagos Mobile courts were busy at different locations in the metropolis Monday trying suspects arrested for different offences bordering on traffic and environmental offences.

    At Ikeja, under magistrate Nurudeen Layeni convicted 15 offenders, 12 were arrested for street trading and were fined N3000 each or 1 month imprisonment while two others were convicted for street fighting that could lead to breach of peace contrary to section 166 (1) h and punishable under section 166 (2) of criminal law of Lagos state and they were given four hours community service as punishment. One tricycle arrested was however, discharged and acquitted.

    At Obalende under Magistrate Patrick Nwaka convicted five people who were fined N1000 each for unlawful parking even as each driver presented tickets issued to them by the local government, four commercial bus drivers were convicted for dropping and picking passengers from unauthorized bus stops and were fined N20,000 each or six months imprisonment. One person was convicted and given one hour community service for hanging on d door of a commercial bus.
    Under Magistrate Olalekan Aka-Bashorun conducting trial at Oshodi-Isolo local government where 10 people were arrested for obstructing traffic by crossing highways, they were however, set free with warning not to cross the highway again. Five street traders were convicted and fined N5000 each. 10 were convicted for street trading.

    From last week till Monday, the Public Relations Officer of the task force, Taofiq Adebayo said Task Force impounded 113 motorcycles, charged 199 out of 239 arrested miscreants while 31 were screened out.

    25 both commercial and private vehicles were arrested and issued tickets for various traffic offenses.

  • The Sexual Offences Bill: Soyinka got it wrong, says Senator Anyanwu

    I have read your open letter published in PM NEWS and re-published on BELLA NAIGA, Premiumtimesnig.com and a number of on-line papers and also The Nation.

    No one who read that letter could miss the fury embedded in your words. I know where that fury comes from: moral fiber, good conscience, and love of people. I want to assure you that it was the very same sentiments that drove me to come up with that bill and the same sentiments that led senators and members to pass it.

    As always, your aim was to speak as the voice of reason in our increasingly confused society.  I know you meant well. I know you acted out of your deep compassion for Nigerians and fatherly love for the children. But as I read your open letter, my heart sank because this time, my dear Baba, my dear icon, you are wrong; very wrong.

    You have been misled by the misinformation circulated by someone who could not read or comprehend a legal draft; someone who did not have the patience to read through a proposal, see what was recommended and what was finally accepted. You were misled by someone who deliberately distorted the content of one of the most profound bills ever passed by the Nigerian legislature, scandalised the proponent and the institution for reasons that you and I may not know.

    No where in the SEXUAL OFFENCES BILL That I proposed; no where in the bill passed by Senate was it stated that you can defile an 11 years old. No where in the bill passed by the Senate was the age “11 years”  mentioned. Here is what was passed in relation to your area of pre-occupation which is defilement clause 6 (2):

    “A person who commits an offence of defilement shall upon conviction be sentenced to imprisonment for life”.

    You claimed that the bill re-defined “female adulthood as marital status”. Where in the bill proposed by me and where in the bill passed by Senate did you see adulthood linked to marital status? The extreme distortion of the spirit, intent and even content of this bill leads me to think that you may be talking about an all-together different piece of legislation. For emphasis, let me state that the bill makes no such linkages as you erroneously stated. I think it may be fear of Senator Yerima that is at play here. For  your information, Senator Yerima and all other Senators who  participated in the debate the two times the bill came up on the floor supported it as a vehicle for instituting a stringent law barring all ranges of sexual offences in Nigeria. They did this because they also have children, wives, daughters, even mothers and cannot afford to leave them in the current state where abuses are rewarded with a slap on the wrist of the perpetrators

    because our laws are outdated, without strong in-built deterrence and mechanisms for monitoring and control are absent.

    This is just another case of people demonizing what is clearly in the public good because of deeply-set negative pre-dispositions towards individuals in an institution. By your strong advocacy against the bill, you have unwittingly stamped your feet in favor of maintaining the statusquo. Where we are now..the statusquo.. is a world in which a six year old child is raped to death and then set ablaze. Where we are now is a place where a father rapes his 3 year old boys repeatedly and the mother weeps at night and cannot speak out out of shame and fear of her life. Where we are now is a place where young Cynthia in her struggles for self employment ran into a gang who drugged her, raped and murdered her. Where we are now is a place where foreigners come for tourism and turn children into their objects of tourism.

    With all due respect Sir, I want to express my deep disappointment with your hastiness in flowing with the mob on this matter. I blame your press officers. I think they should have advised caution.  You have known me since the 1990’s. There is no way you could have sent fellers and I would not jump into the next flight to answer you.  Infact, a mere telephone call could have dispensed with the matter. If you had even asked someone to get you a copy of the Votes and Proceedings of Senate for that day which published the exact words in the legislation passed, you would have spared yourself the time and emotions spent over what is clear mischief circulated through the web. The people who started it all are hate-mongers. They merely took advantage of the negative public feelings they have built up against the legislature. You have no business with such people Sir.

    I am sure in the most inner recesses of your mind you know I cannot in anyway be associated with any anti-people law. Nothing in my personal history, professional antecedents or even the hard work I did to push through pro-people legislations in Senate, could lead anyone to think of me as capable of working against children, the very people I fought for over the course of my 8 years in Senate. The Sexual Offences bill is only one of many I did. I also proposed the Occupational Safety and Health bill protecting workers in virtually all sectors of the economy from hazards at work.  The only group excluded are those in the oil and gas sectors who have been extensively provided for in the PIB.

    There was no “accident” as you call it involved in this legislation. Neither was there an error in judgement. The bill has been fabricated to provide a strong deterrence against abuses. When implemented, It will mitigate the private sufferings of parents; reduce their fear of what happens in their absence to their children at school, in the play grounds, in the neighborhoods, even in religious spaces.

    Nigeria today is not a safe place for children; not a safe place for girls; not a safe place for small boys; and it is not a safe place either for old women.  This legislation is proposes condign punishments for abhorrent crimes such as we are seeing in our country today. It even covers crimes yet to arrive our shores. Under this bill, pedophiles will be put away for life not made rock stars as we do today. This bill will bring sanity to our society. It will make Nigeria a better place for all.

    I suspect that some of those fighting against the bill are fixating on the short title. Its long title shows what it is:  a sexual offences prevention bill; a tough deterrence to crime.  I want you to take time and read the final copy of the bill. You will be proud. You will realize that good things can come from Nigeria and Nigerians. It is not only legislations initiated by outsiders and handed to us locals to push for their passage that should be deemed as good for us. By passing that bill, National Assembly has kept faith with the people of Nigeria. It has provided the cover of protection under which Nigerian children can live normal lives of fulfillment without fear. By your robust advocacy against the bill preventing sexual abuses of children, you foreclose the future of children in this society. But if I read you correctly, I have no doubt that you will reverse yourself on this once you have the correct information. This is why I have written you this letter.

    You have made your first “imposition” on Mr. President based on your understanding of the false information circulated by the very offenders you despise. I plead with you as a man who has been found to be a great man of honor and bestowed with the highest literary honor in the world to reconsider.

    Let me on behalf of the innumerable victims of abuse in Nigeria; let me invoke the spirit of Cynthia who fell victim in Lagos; and let me plead  on behalf of the many wives and husbands deliberately infected with HIV by their partners whose suffering impelled this bill, that you reverse your instruction to Mr. President.  The President of the Federal Republic looks to old sages like you for positive direction. That was what you intended to give him. But now that you know the truth, for the sake of your long established reputation and known love for Nigeria, turn it around and urge Mr. President to sign this bill that will protect our people, restore sanity to society and make Nigeria a better place for all.

    I remain your loyal admirer and sister.

  • Falana seeks establishment of electoral offences tribunal

    Falana seeks establishment of electoral offences tribunal

    Lagos lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) has urged the Federal Government to set up an  Electoral Offences Tribunal to successfully tackle violence and irregularities during elections.

    The tribunal, he said, would be  “an autonomous and ad hoc body, as it may not have much to do in between election period”.

    Falana’s advice is in consonance with Ahmed Lemu Panel’s recommendation  in 2011, which said electoral offenders ought to be prosecuted in order to stop electoral violence.

    In a statement in Lagos  titled: “How to stop political violence”, Falana said: “It is high time an end was put to the official endorsement of politically motivated violence in the country.”

    According to him, President Goodluck Jonathan should set up the tribunal having signed the  non-violence accord  with the presidential candidates of other political parties.

    Falana said should the federal government  declined to do so, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)  should prosecute electoral offenders in accordance with  Section 150  of the Electoral Act.

    “But since the INEC  lacks the capacity to discharge the onerous statutory duty,  the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) should take up the task of prosecuting electoral offenders throughout the country.

    To ensure the success of his proposal, the lawyer said  the NBA should be prepared to collaborate with the Body of Attorneys-General and the Nigeria Police, emphasising that “unless electoral offenders are punished as envisaged by the Electoral Act  and the Constitution,  the subversion of the democratic process would  continue unabated”.

    Ahmed Lemu Panel had in 2011, made a strong case for the setting up of “an autonomous and constitutionally recognised Electoral Offences Tribunal, but which may be an ad hoc body as it may not have much to do in between election period”.

    Falana recalled that in 2007,  President Umaru Yar’adua admitted that the election which brought him to power was flawed and that in a bid to sanitise the electoral system,  he set up the Muhammadu Uwais’  Electoral Committee .

    “Among other recommendations the Committee called for the establishment of an Electoral Offences Tribunal. The Yaradua Administration rejected  the recommendation without any justification. However, following the political violence, which greeted the announcement of the results of the presidential election in some states in the North and Akwa Ibom in April  2011, President Goodluck Jonathan set up the Ahmed Lemu Panel to investigate the crisis.

    “From the detailed report of the Panel, 943 people were killed while 838 others were injured.  While the Federal Government has paid over N10 billion as reparation  to  the victims of the riots,  the 626 suspects, who were arrested in connection with arson, culpable homicide and other grave offences perpetrated during the civil disturbances have been left off the hook on account of official impunity that has become the order of the day under the current political dispensation,” he recalled.

    He argued that since Nigeria  claims to operate under  the Rule of Law, there is  no justification that suspects involved in sabotaging  the electoral process  have not been charged to any criminal court.

    According to him, “the crisis of impunity in the land has been compounded  by the partisan involvement of the authorities of the police, the armed forces and other security agencies  in the political process. “Although there are adequate and elaborate provisions in the Electoral Act, 2010 as amended and the penal statutes to deal with political violence and  electoral malfeasance, the managers of the neo-colonial state lack the political will to bring electoral offenders to book,” he said.

    Falana recalled that a few weeks ago,  former Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN), Mr. Kofi Anan and  the former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku,  jointly presided over the signing of a Non-Violence Accord by the presidential candidates of political parties that are taking part in this  month’s Election.

    “At the well celebrated ceremony which held in Abuja the candidates of the two leading political parties embraced each other. While the media and several people were excited with the development. I expressed the view that the so called peace accord would not stem the tide of political violence in the country due  to the violent nature of the electoral system coupled with official impunity.

    “In a number of decided cases, the courts have held that candidates  sponsored by political parties cannot be held vicariously liable for  politically motivated violence and electoral malpractice carried out on their behalf  unless they can be directly linked with instigating or directing their supporters to engage in such criminality. Indeed, political leaders usually dissociate themselves from acts of violence by condemning the perpetrators.

    “However, if the suspects are charged to court the leaders turn round to engage the services of lawyers to defend them. In many cases, attorneys-general are directed to file nolle prosequi to stop the prosecution of suspects, who belong to the ruling parties. Hence, the cases of the hundreds of suspects charged to court by the Police for electoral offences committed during the 2003, 2007 and 2011 general elections  were abruptly terminated   in all the states of the federation,” he argued.  Falana said Nigerians have witnessed a reign of terror by armed thugs, who have engaged in the  bombing or burning of  party secretariats;  destruction of vehicles belonging to political parties;  harassment  of political opponents; wearing of masks by “security personnel” at campaign rallies; the extra-judicial killing and brutal attacks of innocent people at party congresses and primary elections; the unprovoked assault on judges; the throwing of stones at leaders among other vices in the last few months.

    He noted that in spite of the warning by the electoral officials,  the illegal use of official vehicles by public officers for political campaigns has continued adding: “top political leaders have continued to make inciting statements. A governor published  a death wish advert, which could have provoked ethno-religious riots. Another governor attended a meeting where ex-militants threatened to declare war on the Republic if the President is “dethroned” in the forthcoming general election.

    “ It is hoped that  those who are beating the drum of war will be called to order by President Jonathan. After all, they never took part in the streets protests held in Lagos and Abuja, which compelled  the National Assembly to recognise Dr. Jonathan as the Acting President in May 2010.  Neither did they blackmail  Nigerians from all parts of the country  to vote for the President in 2011.

    “With respect to the stoning of President Jonathan during a political rally  in Bauchi, last week, Governor Isa Yaguda has pointed accusing fingers at some unnamed members of the ruling party. This is a serious allegation, which should be investigated by the Police with a view to bringing the culprits to book,” he said.

    He said the bulk of the infractions of  the Law  highlighted above took place after the signing of the peace accord. The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has said “signing a peace pact is easy, the more difficult part is to ensure that the political  office seekers and their supporters work within the rules of engagement”.

    Falana pointed out the fact that office seekers and their supporters cannot operate within ‘the rules of engagement” if they are treated like sacred cows.

    He posited that there is need to let political office seekers realise the fact that executive immunity does not cover election petitions and electoral offences.

    Citing Turaki v. Dalhaltu (2003) 38 WRN 54 at 168 he said: “Oguntade JCA (as he then was) held that “If a governor were to be considered immuned from court proceedings, that would create the position where a sitting governor would be able to flout election laws and regulations to the detriment of other persons contesting with him. This will make a nonsense of the election process and be against the spirit of our national Constitution, which in its tenor provides for a free and fair election.”

  • TWO YELLOW CARDS OFFENCES: Oliech, Origi to miss Nigeria game

    TWO YELLOW CARDS OFFENCES: Oliech, Origi to miss Nigeria game

    Harambee Stars have been hit by a major setback after news that captain Dennis Oliech and first choice keeper Arnold Origi will miss June’s 2014 World Cup qualifier against Nigeria due to suspension.

    Both Oliech and Origi have both accrued two yellow cards in the qualifiers meaning they automatically have to miss one match.

    Stars coach Adel Amrouche was devastated after receiving the news which was delivered to FKF by CAF as he termed it unfortunate coming at a time the duo were needed a lot.

    “Yes I can confirm to you both Oliech and Origi will miss our return match against Nigeria and to me this is very sad news. I am not happy because I just got this information from the federation and no one knew about the previous booking which I should have been told,” Amrouche told supersport.com.

    “I now have to change strategy especially in the goal keeping department as Origi is the best ever goalkeeper I have worked and now I have to find his replacement immediately and that of captain Oliech. I have urged the federation that we should embark on very serious early preparations as we have no time to waste,” he added.

    Amrouche is currently in the coastal city of Mombasa where he has been scouting for talent to boast the squad.

  • Someday, traffic offences will attract death penalty

    Someday, traffic offences will attract death penalty

    The Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) was reported in the Wednesday edition of The Punch to have submitted a proposal on constitutional amendment to the National Assembly. One of the striking recommendations the northern political group made, the paper said, was capital punishment for those found guilty of corruption. This startling suggestion is bound to attract more than a cursory attention from the public, especially against the backdrop of the Edo State governor’s insistence on executing two state convicts on death row. The convicts, Messrs Daniel Nsofor and Osayinwinde Agbomien, were condemned to death many years back. Their sentences have now been confirmed by the Supreme Court.

    It is unlikely the ACF proposal was inspired by Governor Adams Oshiomhole’s resolve, but the northern group probably sustains its argument with the same philosophy that undergirds the Edo approach to crime fighting. Hear Oshiomhole’s argument: “I am convinced that those people (the two convicts) need to die. In the interest of society they need to die under the law. The rule of law is different from resolutions by some NGOs and nations are not governed by NGO resolutions. We must have a balanced view of human rights in which the rights, not only of the man they killed but the right of his relations, and much more importantly, to send a clear message to would-be murderers, that when you kill a human being and you are caught, you are likely to die. If you don’t want to die, then abstain from killing. If criminals abstain from killing, fewer people would be killed by robbers and other murderers and that is the truth.”

    Oshiomhole’s rationalisation is not too different from that of the ACF. Hear the northern political group: “The law classifies crimes according to the severity of their consequences both on the individual victim, the community or the country. If crime holds a high potential to gravely harm or kill its victim, the more severe the punishment, which was designed to punish and deter offenders. This is to say that punishment must always fit offences. One crime that has proved capable of gravely harming or killing its victim, Nigeria, is corruption. Sadly, our laws have not recognised corruption for what it is. ACF recommends that corruption be recognised as a capital offence and made to carry capital punishment.”

    Neither the governor nor the ACF is right about the capacity of the death penalty to deter capital crimes. There is no country where capital crimes have inverse relationship with capital punishment. In fact, even in the United States, which still retains capital punishment in the statutes of a few states, states with capital punishment have higher incidence of capital crimes than states without the death penalty. Both Oshiomhole and the ACF should avail themselves of the numerous studies on the topic rather than rely on general impressions and suppositions. They must recognise from available statistics that robbery rate has not declined in Nigeria since the Gen Yakubu Gowon administration promulgated a decree to make robbery punishable by death. Robbery has in fact increased. And in spite of extra-judicial killings by policemen, robbers have not become less vicious or less fecund.

    It is disquieting that we have found ourselves in the position of recommending the death penalty for certain categories of corruption instead of examining scientific ways of curbing the malaise. Would we not someday get the brainwave to extend this extreme measure to traffic offences? Life has been made very cheap by both lawbreakers and security agencies; we should not now make it even more worthless by extending capital punishment to sundry crimes, further vitiating the little claim we have left to decency and civilization, and reducing ourselves, like the lynch mob, to the bestial level robbers would like us to sink.