Tag: prosecuted

  • ‘Sanitation offenders to be prosecuted’

    Ekiti State Government is to institute mobile magistrates’ courts in all the local governments, Deputy Governor Bisi Egbeyemi has said.

    He said the courts are to prosecute defaulters of environmental sanitation laws during the exercise.

    The deputy governor, in a statement after monitoring last Saturday’s environmental sanitation, berated the level of compliance to the exercise in Efon Alaaye Local Government. He warned that stiffer sanctions would be enforced to bring about attitudinal change in people towards the exercise.

    Egbeyemi ordered the Coordinating Director in Efon Alaaye Local Government, Mr. Lawrence Ogunsakin, to embark on rigorous programmes that would enlighten and sensitise the people to the exercise.

    Ogunsakin claimed that residents did not turn out in large number for the exercise because of the funeral of one of the illustrious sons of the local government and the fact that the day fell on a market day.

    He said the council had embarked on awareness programme and written security agencies to enforce the sanitation law.

    The coordinating director promised to liaise with the monarch of Efon Alaaye to form a synergy with the waste management agency to make his subjects turn out in large number for the next exercise.

    He ordered the security agencies to delay offenders, including private and commercial motorists, till the end of the exercise.

    Ogunsakin said he was surprised that people would still hold ceremonies and open market on a day meant for the cleaning of their environment.

    Expressing displeasure at the rate people and motorists moved around during the exercise, he said subsequent environmental exercise would witness the enforcement of law on offenders.

    Ogunsakin said: “We caught some motorists. I told security agents not to release them until after the exercise.”

    He said the absence of mobile magistrates’ courts made it difficult to punish offenders.

  • Lawyer wants Fayose’s aide prosecuted for threatening reporter

    Human rights lawyer Morakinyo Ogele has called for the prosecution of an aide to Governor Ayo Fayose, Lere Olayinka, for threatening the life of The Nation reporter, Odunayo Ogunmola.

    Ogele, who is the National Coordinator of Ekiti Redemption Group (ERG), also urged security agencies to protect journalists in Ekiti State before, during and after the July 14 governorship poll.

    The activist said that he may be compelled to file a writ of mandamus to force security agencies to prosecute Olayinka in court, if they fail to act on the reporter’s petitions.

    Ogele, who lamented that press freedom was under threat in Ekiti State, urged all Nigerians to condemn the attempt to muzzle reporters by what he described as “an emerging civilian dictatorship.”

     

  • Station owners to be prosecuted for violating DPR order

    Proprietors of eight filling stations in Akwa Ibom State are to be prosecuted for violating the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) seal off order, the Controller (Operations), Mr. Tamunoiminabo Kingsley-Sundaye, has said.

    He spoke yesterday in Uyo when the surveillance team of DPR carried out operations.

    Kingsley-Sundaye listed the stations as ABC filling station, Oil Link Lubrication Ltd, UdyChris filling station, Tonimas filling station, Sannil filling station, First Indices filling station, Nickgloson filling station and Spicy filling station.

    He said they were located on Ikot Ekpene road, Uyo, Abak road, Uyo and Aka Itiam in Uyo Local Government.

    “We are writing to the police and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) to arrest owners of these stations and prosecute them,” Kingsley-Sundaye said.

    He said when the team visited the stations that had been sealed off to find out the level of compliance, eight of them were caught selling fuel with DPR seal.

    “We had sealed off the eight stations for selling above approved government pump price of N145 per litre,” Kingsley-Sundaye said.

    He said the marketers disrespected the Federal Government price regime, adding that they would be prosecuted.

    Kingsley-Sundaye said the stations would be suspended from loading at the depot.

    “We are writing to the depot to stop these stations from lifting petroleum products,” he added.

    The      DPR controller of operation said their suspension would act as a deterrent to others.

    He warned independent marketers to desist from selling fuel to black marketers carrying jerry-cans.

    Kingsley-Sundaye said the department seized 50 litres of petrol and 100 jerry-cans of the product from black marketers, who sold fuel opposite NNPC filling station in Uyo.

  • 28 prosecuted for open defecation, dumping of refuse

    Twenty-eight persons have been arraigned at a mobile court in Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, for open defecation and indiscriminate dumping of refuse.

    Two, who are minors, were, however, discharged and acquitted. Others were sentenced to fines ranging from N2,000 to N4,000.

    The Magistrate, Modupe Afeniforo, hoped that the sentence would act as a deterrent to others.

    Environment Commissioner Chief Bisi Kolawole said the government would implement environmental and sanitation laws to eradicate open defecation and indiscriminate dumping of refuse.

    Warning that the administration would begin a continuous house to house monitoring exercise to ensure compliance with the policy of having at least one toilet in every house, the commissioner stressed that culprits would be punished.

  • ‘Nobody has been prosecuted for cybercrime in Nigeria’

    ‘Nobody has been prosecuted for cybercrime in Nigeria’

    Olusola Teniola a computer engineer, is the Managing Director/CEO of Internet Solutions Nigeria, a pan-African information communication technology (ICT) firm. He also doubles as the President of the Association of Telecommunications Companies of Nigeria (ATCON). In this interview with Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf he speaks on the resurgence of cyber crimes vis-à-vis prospects and challenges besetting the nation’s telecommunication industry. Excerpts: 

    s Nigeria seriously under any cybercrime threat and which sectors are prone to these threats?

    All sectors that have adopted IT systems into their organisations and these same systems are connected to Internet in some way are at risk of attack, whether criminal or otherwise. In Nigeria right now, there is a growing usage of IT systems in the financial, telecommunications, FMCG and aviation sectors, though other sectors not mentioned are slowly adopting computers into the way their industries are operated, the lessons from recently purported attacks by the Lazarus Group must be fundamental to how IT systems are built and adopted across all sectors. The threat of cybercrime will only increase in Nigeria as the country becomes more IT connected to the World Wide Web (WWW).

    Do you honestly consider these threats as clear and present dangers?

    The recently reported experiences of large organisations that have had their IT systems compromised by Lazarus Group in 2014 and the breach in data that occurred, mostly personal and financial, poses some serious concerns for Nigeria and can be viewed as ‘clear and present dangers’ to Nigeria’s digital journey to ensuring e-Gov, e-Commerce, e-Banking etc are safe and secure. The most revealing lessons of wide publicised cybercrimes is that personal data belonging to the citizens of a sovereign country must be preferably held locally in the country of origin and we need to build data protection infrastructure in the way and manner personal data is securely handled in our IT systems.

    As a critical stakeholder in the cyberspace, do you think the country is prepared for the present challenges and for the future?

    The country is not prepared on the skills set front, on the capacity front and frankly we run a degree of danger of national security threats to systems that have been deployed by foreign oragnisations that may use the same systems to monitor and spy on us using the very systems sold to us by them.

    Are these threats by hackers on our space unfounded or real?

    Without a strong local content presence in the Nigerian ICT industry, it is a real threat that hackers that are more knowledgeable about how systems deployed in our banking, defense and commerce applications are able to launch cyberattacks fairly easily and remotely from other sovereign states without detection and to a degree our laws and court systems need to be more prepared to fight this in a manner that has not been witnessed before.

    What are the legal framework and safety nets in place to help anyone mitigate losses against cybercrimes?

    It is my strong opinion that evidence to date suggests that Nigeria hasn’t prosecuted perpetrators of this crime and thus the legal frameworks (if any are in place) have not been rigorously tested to suggest any precedence. We are at the moment relying on technical solutions in our attempt to prevent the occurrence of such crimes. This is laudable, however, loopholes, lapses and system failures do occur and are a reality in the World Wide Web and any network that is interconnected to exchange information.

    As an association, what measures have you taken to protect the integrity of your infrastructure, especially working with clients across the sectors?

    Most of our members adopt international standards when implementing complex networks and over the past four years the association has been advocating for member organisations and other important institutions to migrate their Internet Protocol systems from Version 4.0 to Version 6.0 (i.e. IPv6). This newer version provides a great deal more protection over the current Version in place (IPv4). Also the Cybercime Bill needs to be fully implemented to the letter by all stakeholders including government entities and the Association of Telecommunications Companies of Nigeria (ATCON) will continue to advocate that this is done in the proper manner.

    What role can the government and its agencies play in all these?

    The government needs to provide an enabling conducive environment for the training, awareness and promotion of cyber-related education, skills development and local content development across every aspect of society, in particular the infrastructure must be put in place to ensure that Nigeria’s data remains sovereign and is secured and protected from unauthorised access.

    There is so much talk about the internet of things. What opportunities does this portend to Nigeria as a country if any?

    Internet-of-Things (IoT) in Nigeria will more than likely trend behind the envisioned launches by two major operators in South Africa, who are planning IoT applications that addresses: Smart metering and Smart water. These are on the back of 4G (LTE) network roll-outs and the demand for Africa centric type Use Cases that addresses real-life African problems.

    What can be done to bridge the existing digital divide in the country?

    Investments that addresses fiber infrastructure roll-out across national, regional, and intra-country connectivity gaps. We need to build more tower infrastructure, more base stations, more spectrums (more bandwidth). This is just as there is an urgent need for more government incentives that addresses lack rural broadband penetration. There is need for more education in ICT, more local content development and more digital literacy across all demographics.

    Most countries of the world invest heavily on ICT in different sectors of the economy. But the reverse is the case in Nigeria. Does it mean that the cost benefit analysis of ICT is not so positive as manifest in the lukewarm attitude by the authorities?

    Until ICT is viewed as a critical sector in the development of our nation in this millennium, it is always going to be treated as a peripheral in the wider society. Our reliance on oil and gas as the sole foreign exchange earner is a major inhibitor in us changing our mindset. In other advanced societies, innovation, technology superiority and science are viewed as key essentials to the development of any countries, future existence – this begins right from the age of five years old.

    Besides the government, is the organised private sector also investing enough towards their ICT infrastructure?

    The private sector alone is the main contributor of investment in Nigeria. When it concerns ICT infrastructure the Federal Government of Nigeria lacks the will-power or the financial capacity to fund all ICT developments across all sectors. The private sector has invested more than USD$68bn in telecoms infrastructure alone in just over a decade. IT systems investments are also in the region of USD$50bn plus in the wider ICT space.

    Nigeria has remained a dumping ground for all junk ICT software and electronics with rippled negative effect on the economy, environmental wellbeing. What can be done to curtail this menace?

    The National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), National Office for Technology Acquisition and Promotion (NOTAP) are the government agencies that are responsible for working with Customs and other organs of government to ensure that sub-standard products are not dumped into Nigeria. I believe that a lot more can be done by these agencies to prevent this practice from continuing.

    There’s been a lot of advocacy as to why the telecoms sector should be listed on the Stock Exchange. What’s your take on this?

    Capital funds required to grow the telecoms industry is a welcome source to the traditional manner of private equity and debt loans to fund the build out of telecommunication networks. Access to the NSE to fund further growth in this industry is encouraging and provides the Nigerian citizen a stake in the growth of this very dynamic industry. The NSE will also benefit from the diversity that these listings provide in terms of the potential increase in the daily volume of the transactions that this will bring.

    How has your leadership impacted on the Association so far?

    My leadership is one of service and to this, I set myself three top priorities to do within my first 100 days in office. They are collaborating more with all stakeholders in the industry and this has happened in the first 30 days; attended West Africa Telecom Awards in Accra and gave keynote speech – this is the first time that this has been done and the outcome is that under my leadership, ATCON will introduce industry awards in the near future to match that being performed on an annual basis in Ghana and also, we are revamping our web presence and portal, which effectively brings a total rebranding of our image. This brand identity is key to ATCON’s future in this digital age.

    Beside ATCON, you are also managing a pan-African information communication technology firm, Internet Solutions, how do you combine these roles?

    In fact, I’ve been fortunate to have a great team around me in both ATCON and Internet Solutions. They provide the necessary support for me to remain effective. With them, there’s no vacuum.

    What has been the contributions of Internet Solutions to Nigerian telecommunications system?

    Internet Solutions has been involved in providing communication services to a majority of well-known banks, government agencies and key security institutions.

    A major challenge besetting the country today is insecurity. How do you think technology can be used to tackle this menace?

    Big data is the key to solving security problems in the country. Information is the ingredient of intelligence agencies and systems (more automated) are the enabler, alongside reliable connectivity across the country that will transport information to the relevant users. All technology does is to provide an opportunity to change the way we do things and solve problems. When we embrace ‘Big Data’, we have an opportunity to address security issues in the country.

  • Southern Kaduna ‘killers’ to be prosecuted, says El-Rufai

    Southern Kaduna ‘killers’ to be prosecuted, says El-Rufai

    Those found culpable in the Southern Kaduna killings will be prosecuted, Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai, has said.

    Many people have been killed in the crisis in the area.

    Describing the killings as unfortunate and condemnable, El Rudai spoke when the Council of Traditional Chiefs and Emirs, led by Emir of Zazzau, Alhaji Shehu Idris, visited him.

    Giving an outlook of his plans for the volatile part of the state, El-Rufai said “Those involved in attacking and killing people and those behind the violence are being tracked and we hope, with the arrests, they will be prosecuted.”

    He continued: “We have to go back to the dialogue and reconciliation efforts we have started in the past. We have a Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue that has been working in southern Kaduna in the past two years.

    “They have done similar work in Jos in reconciling the conflicting communities in Plateau and when they completed that assignment we invited them to come to Southern Kaduna. They facilitated the signing of Kafanchan Declaration in April 2016.

    “This is not something to talk about because I am not the first governor to receive this kind of treatment, every governor in the last 15 years in this state has been treated this way and it is part of the challenges and burden of leadership. So I am not disturbed.

    “As you know, leaders especially in any political dispensation, must learn to tolerate a lot of things because you have those who like you and those who oppose you because of political differences.

    ” That is why I did not take this personal, but what we will do is to prosecute all those responsible for the killings. And we are working hard with security agencies to ensure our citizens are safe and secure,” the governor said.

    He said the biggest assignment was for the citizens to unite and should do their best to see that they have peace and unity, which is prerequisite for progress and development.

    “Besides security challenges, we are faced with poor infrastructure, poor social amenities, poor schools, bad roads, lack of power and potable water and that is what this government is working to provide for the people.

    We have cut down the gains and monetary profits people get in government just to be able to provide democratic dividends to the people. In your domains, you can see on-going projects at various stages of completion.

    “We are also committed to demonstrating fairness and equity in the way we execute projects all over the state. I and my deputy and all those who work under this administration, have taken oaths with either the Quran or the Bible that we will be fair and just in our affairs. I am giving you my promise that we will be guided by this oath in all our dealings.”

    He said the government had adopted measures to tackle the persistent crises in the area.

    “I have met the Chief of Army Staff and he has approved the establishment of two battalions in Sothern Kaduna; one in Kafanchan and the other one in Kachia.

    “I thought the one in Kachia will be sited elsewhere because of the presence of both the Nigerian Army and Navy Schools but I know the military has a reason of putting it in Kachia.

    “Kaduna state government is looking for a temporary place in Kafanchan to provide the army a temporary settlement before a barrack will be constructed for them.”

    He said, they are starting with Kafanchan, then that of Kachia will follow.

    “We hope that this will douse the fear in the mind of people and that the military presence will build confidence and we hope that their presence will help in confronting the attackers, especially with the added surveillance aircraft.

    “We also know that this is a harvest period for farmers so we are asking the traditional rulers and community leaders to arrange with security operatives to plan how soldiers and police drafted in these areas will provide cover for farmers to go and harvest their crops.

    “Our royal highnesses, I want to let you know that drafting security men alone will not give us the desired peace we want, except people are ready to tolerate and embrace one another, as well as choosing the path of forgiveness and unity.”

    Alhaji Shehu Idiris said the council condemned the cycle of killings and reprisals in parts of southern Kaduna  describing them as senseless and inhuman.

    The council appealed to security agencies and government to urgently tackle hate speech, divisive rhetoric and incitement.

    “Killings and counter killings are senseless and ungodly; they are not solution to any problem.  It is quite disheartening and worrisome. We must work hard against these threats to our peace and unity,” the leader of the delegation said.

  • Zaria killings: El-Zakzaky to be prosecuted -El-Rufai

    Zaria killings: El-Zakzaky to be prosecuted -El-Rufai

    Kaduna State Governor, Nasir el-Rufai, rose from the Northern States Governors Forum (NSGF) meeting yesterday evening to say leader of Islamic Movement of Nigeria popularly known as Shi’ite Movement, Sheikh Ibrahim El-Zakzaky would be prosecuted over the recent clash between his members and men of Nigerian Army that left some persons dead in Zaria.

    The Governor stated this while fielding questions from newsmen shortly after the Chairman of NSGF, Governor Kashim Shettima, read the communiqué issued after the emergency meeting aimed at proffering solutions to upheavals in the region especially, that of Zaria, Kaduna State .

    El-Rufai said all the parties involved in the incident will be weighed by the constitution and anyone found culpable will be prosecuted accordingly. He added that a Judicial Commission of Inquiry set up by the state government would examine the remote and immediate causes of Zaria incident.

    Earlier, Governor Shettima has said in the communiqué that all Nigerians should respect the law and constituted authority, just as he directed every organization, religious or social to operate within the confines of the law.

    The communiqué read in part, “the Governors frowned at arbitrary blockage of highways through unauthorized processions causing inconveniences to other citizens. Henceforth, processions must necessarily be with Police permit and protection as prescribed by the law.

    “NSGF endorsed all the step taken so far by the Kaduna State Governor to contain the situation and assure citizens of its readiness to maintain law and order while respecting the constitutional rights of citizens to practice their faith in a manner devoid of infringing the rights of others.

    “NSG reaffirmed their commitment to take measures to revive and grow the economies of Northern states to create jobs and other opportunities as efforts already in top gear to revive agriculture and industries related to agriculture.”

  • Why T.B. Joshua should be prosecuted

    SIR: It is time the authorities in Nigeria did the right thing and arrest Temitope Balogun Joshua, General Overseer of The Synagogue, Church of All Nations (SCOAN). Here is why:

    On Friday, September 12, a guest hostel located within the premises of Joshua’s sprawling church at Ikotun-Egbe, Lagos, collapsed. The most recent media reports put the death toll from the calamity at 115. So far, rescuers have pulled out more than a hundred survivors from the rubble.  Because Joshua’s church has always drawn an international audience, the continental profile of the list of victims is hardly surprising. For instance, at least 84 South Africans have been confirmed dead. There are also Nigerians and citizens of other African (and possible non-African) countries among the dead.

    The church has done everything humanly possible to cover up the truth about this tragedy. First, in the first three days after the incident, members illegally barred officials of the National Emergency Management Authority (NEMA) from accessing the site and rescuing survivors. Second, while this illegal interdiction was in effect, the leadership of the church attempted to dictate the narrative and deflect possible culpability by blaming the incident on a mysterious ‘small plane’ which had purportedly hovered above the church complex moments before the collapse. The church leadership even released an ‘exclusive’ footage of the ‘strange’ plane. Third, as public anger mounted in South Africa, the pastor, TB Joshua declared the dead ‘martyrs of faith’ and sought to change the subject by promising to ‘take his teachings’ to the country every month for the foreseeable future.

    Joshua’s entire conduct since the tragic news broke has been that of a man who feels that he is accountable to no one, and who is too preoccupied with his image as a ‘man of God’ to worry about the many victims of this tragic incident, whether injured or dead. His attempts to somehow portray a collapse that most probably has to do with failure to comply with building regulations as a personal attack is an example of his self-promotion and is nothing short of callous.

    Yet, if he has comported himself as one above the law, it is precisely because the Nigerian state has offered him every license. In this wise, neither President Goodluck Jonathan nor Governor Babatunde Fashola has covered himself in glory. The president’s visit to the scene of the collapse in which he commiserated with him was painful to watch. Why would the Nigerian president visit and express solidarity with the leader of a church who should be a person of interest in an ongoing police investigation? And is this the same president who does not know the way to Chibok? Whatever his motive, President Jonathan strengthened Joshua’s arm, gave him the assurance of presidential protection, and threw police investigations in jeopardy. In the same vein, the cloak and dagger nature of the meeting between Governor Fashola and Joshua can only have comforted the latter. Nigerians deserve to know what transpired during their meeting, and whatever assurances, if any, Fashola gave Joshua. That said, Fashola is putting at risk his own hard-earned reputation for transparency and legality.  Simply put, should visits have taken place, they should have been to the hospitals where the injured are being treated and the homes of the deceased.  The site should have been barricaded by the relevant authorities—the police, town planning, etc.— to secure evidence, given that the presumption ought to be that even if it is not immediately clear that a crime has been committed, something definitely has been remiss in the entire tragedy.  Getting to the root of the matter should be the only concern next to solicitations for the welfare of the survivors.

    We cannot resurrect the dead; but it is a duty we owe to their memory that the truth of this matter is not buried with them. Therefore, it is important that the police and other investigative agencies be given the necessary backing (both financial and moral) in order to carry out their duties. Joshua is a person of interest, not for his callousness, but for his cynical and persistent attempts to obliterate the truth and pervert the course of justice.

    • SGD

    Olufemi Taiwo,

    Cornell University,

    Ithaca, New York

    Ebenezer Obadare,

    University of Kansas, Lawrence

    Akin Adesokan,

     Indiana University, Bloomington

    Wale Adebanwi,

     University of California, Davis

    Tejumola Olaniyan,

    University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison

  • Amaechi: killer-driver must be prosecuted

    Amaechi: killer-driver must be prosecuted

    The Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF), Rotimi Amaechi, has said that the driver, who knocked down and killed the Vice-Chairman of The Sun Publishing Ltd, Pastor Dimgba Igwe, must be arrested and prosecuted by the police, to act as a deterrent to others.

    Amaechi, who is also the Rivers State governor, spoke yesterday in a condolence letter to the management of the Sun, addressed to Mr. Femi Adesina, the Managing Director of Sun Publishing Ltd.

    Igwe was jogging near his Okota, Lagos home on Saturday morning, when he was hit by a car. The driver sped off, abandoning him.

    The NGF chairman said: “I received with shock, the news of the sudden passage of one of the leading lights of journalism, Pastor Dimgba Igwe. He was passionate and painstaking. He was a thoroughbred professional and one of Nigeria’s brightest and best.

    “His demise at this time, when our nation is in dire need of men of honour and courage and when his younger colleagues need his steadying hands to guide their practice is most painful. We in Rivers State feel a deep sense of personal loss, because of our close relationship with him.

    “We enjoin the police to ensure that the driver is brought to book. It is unfortunate that this great man was cut down in his prime, as life only begins at 40.

    “While we wait for justice to be done, we assure the deceased’s family and his friends and colleagues that we share in this grief.”

    Amaechi also expressed the sympathies of the government and people of Rivers State over the great loss and assured the Igwe family, his relatives and friends of the prayers and support of the Rivers people.

  • Polio: 100 parents prosecuted for rejecting vaccines

    The Niger State government arrested and prosecuted over 100 parents for allegedly refusing the vaccination of their children and wards against polio in the last two years.

    The state Director of Primary Health Care Development Agency, Dr Shehu Yabagi, spoke yesterday in Minna, the state capital, on the activities of the agency.

    Yabagi said the agency took the action in line with the law, which forbids the rejection of the vaccine.

    The agency chief said some of the erring parents were found guilty and convicted.

    He said: “Some of the arrested and prosecuted parents have paid fines for their actions; others have served various jail terms to serve as a deterrent to others.”

    Yabagi said the agency would kick out polio from the state through advocacy and the enforcement of various laws.

    The director also said a bill had been sent to the House of Assembly to criminalise preaching against the administration of the polio vaccines in any part of the state by the clergy.

    He said offenders would pay huge fines or go to jail, if found guilty.

    According to him, traditional rulers and religious leaders have been mobilised to ensure that parents and guardians accept the polio vaccination for their children and wards.

    Yabagi explained that the vaccine would protect the children against polio and its negative consequence on the sufferers and their families.

    The agency chief stressed that because of the state’s proximity to some states with cases of polio, the agency has begun a cross-boundary immunisation to halt further transmission of the disease.

    He hailed some parents for cooperating with the agency during its immunisation programmes.

    Yabagi attributed the success of the immunisation programmes to the various local and international organisations’ assistance.