Tag: publisher

  • Robbers attack Vanguard publisher Sam Amuka

    Robbers attack Vanguard publisher Sam Amuka

    Suspected armed robbers yesterday invaded the Lagos home of Vanguard publisher Sam Amuka, injuring him and carting away cash and some items.

    The raid was the second on Amuka’s home in about two years.

    The invaders  allegedly hit the octogenarian  with an iron rod. He was rushed to a private hospital.

    Ten suspects arrested in connection with the attack are being quizzed at the Special Anti-Robbery Sqaud (SARS), Ikeja.

    Detectives were said to be screening Amuka’s private guards, domestic staff as well as all the the estate’s security personnel.

    It was gathered that the criminals stormed Amuka’s Anthony Village residence at about 1:30am after scaling the high fence.

    They were said to have broken the burglarproof on one of the windows.

    They smashed the ceiling leading to his bedroom where he was found and ordered him to bring ‘the money’.

    The Nation gathered that the criminals overpowered and tied the private guards at Amuka’s compound and held them hostage for over 45 minutes.

    According to one of the guards, after tying their hands and covering their faces, four of the armed men went into the building, leaving one to watch over them.

    The guard said: “I was on a chair at the entrance gate when I saw five young men moving from the wall close to the gate towards the house. I accosted them but they subdued me and my mate.

    “They tied our hands and covered our faces while one of them kept watch over us at the gate. Other members of the gang  went inside the house only to come out about 45 minutes later and ordered us to unlock the main gate.

    “As soon as we obeyed them, they left the compound and we heard the screeching of tyres of a car zooming off.”

    An employee with the Vanguard newspaper, who usually brought dailies to the publisher’s house claimed that  he saw an ash colour car sped off as he approached the main gate to deliver yesterday’s dailies.

    It was learnt that efforts by the Commander, Rapid Response Squad (RRS), Tunji Disu, an Assistant Commissioner of Police  (ACP), to apprehend the criminals were unsuccessful because all the gates leading to Amuka’s place were locked.

    Disu, who was the first policeman to arrive at the scene with his men, were said to have contacted the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) at Anthony, Chima Agha, a Superintendent of Police (SP) to create access, but the bandits had fled before that was achieved.

    The Police Commissioner, Mr. Fatai Owoseni, who arrived at the scene much later and also visited ‘Uncle Sam’ at the hospital, assured that the culprits will be fished out and prosecuted.

  • Publisher, tobacco firms lock horns over 25,000-acre land

    Publisher, tobacco firms lock horns over 25,000-acre land

    Since 2001 when it launched its operations in country, the British American Tobacco Nigeria (BATN) has not shied away from controversies. Now, a veteran publisher is accusing the company of massive land grab in Iseyin, Oyo State. Assistant Editor Seun Akioye reports

    It may have served as his retirement get-away plan. After many decades in publishing educational books and teaching many generations of Nigerians, Jonathan Olusanya Onibonoje, came up with the most novel idea yet. In collaboration with Chief Mrs. QVN Babalola, he bought a large parcel of land measuring about 25,000 acres on Adoawaye-Okeho-Iseyin Road, Iseyin Local Government Area of Oyo State. A new company, Q-JON Farms was born. That was way back in 1987.

    “The purpose of the land is to create a farming industrial estate,” Onibonoje told The Nation.

    “We had good intentions and we wanted to create employment for the people of Iseyin. There would be different industries there, dairy farms too,” he said.

    It was a tall dream and Onibonoje and his partner wasted no time in putting the plan to work. The same year, the survey of the land was done and on January 11, 1988, the Certificate of Occupancy (CofO) was granted to the farm with registered number: KARA/OY/1095/87 and registered as number 39 page 38, Volume 2796.

    “We planted cash crops and trees; there were mango trees and melina, we had food crops too. It was a massive investment and a very ambitious project. But we also needed foreign partners because of the industries that we planned to have which would produce juice and other drinks from the various fruit-bearing trees on the farm,” Wale Olakojo, who was the General Manager of the farm said.

     

    A shattered dream

     

    After managing the farm for about six years, Q JON farms began serious partnership talks with a couple of foreign investors. “ We were bringing Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) to the country, our plan was that with the successful kick-off of all the functional sections of Q-JON farms, there would be hundreds of employment for people in the community and beyond,” Gloria Onyeukwu , a director in the company said in 1993.

    But the company’s expansion programme could not have come at a worse time as political events of the era under the leadership of the late Head of State, Gen. Sani Abacha, ensured that the foreign investors who had already arrived in the country left in a hurry. The partnership programme was left on a life support.

    “Things slowed down a bit after that. The political situation was unfavourable to any investment. So, we allowed the local people to cultivate part of the land for farming because the company’s passion was to do something for the people of Iseyin. We felt it was a way of empowering them, though not on the large scale that we would have loved but it would help some families,” Gloria said.

    If the management of the farm had been disappointed at the inability to secure foreign partnership, they were unprepared for more heartbreak.

    Olakojo said: “In 2011, we noticed that our signboards were taken down and signboards of a tobacco company, British American Tobacco (BAT) had been put up around a section of our farm. We also noticed that the company has destroyed a large part of our farmland.

    “We went there to try and find out what was going on, but BAT totally ignored us. I went there more than 10 times trying to get a hint of what was going on, but the company began to threaten us,” Olakojo said.

    The land which has been allegedly encroached measured a little over 1000 acres. It is an expanse of land which the management of Q-JON farms was not willing to give away.

    According to Olakojo, the encroachment was discovered when he took some interested foreign partners to the farm. “We look like 419s when the partners saw the signs of BAT,” Olakojo said.

    According to Q-JON, when every effort to get a “reasonable” solution to the problem failed, the management approached its solicitors, Royal Solicitors to write to the BAT.

    The first letter to BAT was written on August 15, 2011 and signed by Udo Ofurunna. The letter titled: “Notice to stop further encroachment unto the 25000 acres of land situate at Iseyin, Oyo state, property of Q-JON farms Ltd”, warned BAT that if further encroachment is not halted on the aforementioned land, court action will be instituted against the company. It ended with a caution: “A stitch in time saves nine.”

    According to sources, the letter and subsequent warnings meant nothing to the tobacco merchants. And to Olakojo and Gloria, BAT behaved irresponsibly by claiming ignorance of the core issue in the letter.

    Persistence on the part of the land owners finally brought the BAT management to the table, but on BAT’s own terms.

    “When I was eventually able to get BAT’s attention, its management began to make series of demands like asking for a letter from Daddy (Onibonoje) to confirm that I have the power to act for the farm. They requested for the life size survey plan of the land, requested that I come to physically show them our land, they were literarilly asking me to come almost every week,” Olakojo said.

    The matter dragged from 2011 to 2015 with BAT claiming to be the rightful owner of the land. The company alleged that the land had been leased to it by a family in Iseyin since 1990.

    “The question to ask is whether BAT was in Nigeria in 1990, because we know they came into the country in 1990,” Gloria claimed.

    She also accused the company of being manipulative. “They wanted to wear us out, they didn’t consider the age of the owners of the farm, they were just manipulating them.”

    In August, what could best be described as a silver lining appeared in the horizon when BAT asked for a peace meeting between the parties.

    “We went to the meeting with our lawyer in their office in Ibadan. They subjected us to a most humiliating search before entrance. And when we asked them to bring their documents to the land, they claimed it was in the archives, they never showed any documents,” Gloria claimed.

    Things went from bad to worse since then. All the 42 signs erected by Q-JON were removed almost immediately by BAT officials, who carted them away. It claimed most of the Melina trees were cut by BAT to cure tobacco leaves and the company used the remaining trees as a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) claiming it was practicing reforestation.

    The farm also alleged that BAT later changed its position on the ownership of the land, saying it rented it. The company claimed its agent was arrested and humiliated by the police on the orders of BAT.

    “They called for a second meeting and they did not bring any documents to their ownership of the land. The company was constructing road on the farm, reported us to the police that we were trespassers on our own land. They even dared us to go to court,” Gloria said.

    Q-JON accused BAT of playing the game of manipulation in order to frustrate them out of their land. The situation left them with no choice than to institute a court action against BAT.

    In the suit number 1/737/15 filed in Oyo state High Court, between Q-JON farm and Chief Mrs. QVN Babalola against BAT, the plaintiffs are asking for a total claim of N935,000,000.

    The farm listed: Cassava plantation valued at N5 million; maize plantation valued at N2 million; 200 mango trees worth N20 million, 600,000 Melina trees as some of the economic trees destroyed on the 963.904 acres of land. Each tree was valued at N1000.

    The BAT also allegedly destroyed 16 pillars valued at N200, 000 and 12 signboards at N108, 000.

    When The Nation went to Iseyin on investigation, BAT had installed no fewer than 10 signboards, claiming the expanse of land as its own. It was also learnt that at least three other families have their lands encroached on by BAT in the Iseyin axis.

    In its reaction through the Head, Corporate Affairs, Seyi Ashade, BAT told The Nation that the land belonged to the tobacco giants.

    He said: “British American Tobacco Nigeria has constantly advocated for the conservation of the environment. The lands being contested by Q-JON farms are afforestation sites, which have Melina trees grown on 710 hectares of land as a demonstration of our support to the protection of the environment.

    “We have been in lawful and undisturbed possession of this land for more than 20 years having obtained title from the original owners of the land including writing a petition to the Nigerian police. Q-JON had been approached repeatedly for settlement on the alleged dispute in a civil manner, as we have evidence of ownership which can be made available on request.

    “Instead, different underhanded ways, like blackmail, arrests of our tobacco out-growers and others not to be mentioned have been explored by them.

    “As a law abiding corporate organisation, we put the true facts through to the police and our lawyers have been briefed on this persistent harassment over our lawful property. We would have thought if Q-JON had a valid claim to this land it would have approached the court to exert its alleged rights rather than resorting to the police who have no jurisdiction in such land matters and now also trying to settle a civil matter in the newspapers.”

    Ashade also said his firm expected the farm to conduct itself in a lawful manner as the land belongs to it by right.

     

    A tradition of controversy

     

    BAT has been in and out of controversy since it signed a $150 million Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Federal Government to establish a tobacco industry in the country.

    It was once accused by Anti-tobacco campaigners of preventing a bill on tobacco control which was eventually signed into law by former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The company, which had been accused of directly targeting the youth through tobacco advertising by promoting what has been tagged: “secret smoking parties”, was also berated for pauparising tobacco farmers and using child slaves on their farms in Iseyin.

    Perhaps the most recently accusation hauled at BAT was an allegation that it has been bribing government officials in East African countries, to frustrate the passage of tobacco control laws.

    The battle line seemed to have been drawn between BAT and Q-JON farms as no fewer than 12 states have gone to court in lawsuits against BAT

     

  • Social media no match for print, says publisher

    The Publisher of Happenings, a new lifestyle magazine, Mr. Edirin Abamwa, has described the buzz around the death of print media in the face of Internet newspapers and magazines as a ruse.

    Abamwa, who uses all-colour and gloss format for his magazine, spoke during its unveiling at the Colonades Hotel, Ikoyi, Lagos.

    He said those who are expecting the fortune of the print media to rise should look for a way to synergise both the online and print media.

    “We found that print will not die. I, initially, thought that print will die when we started two years ago but at a point in the business, we discovered that it was not happening quickly. We also discovered that print has attraction. The two platforms should co-exist and to make any impact it should be mixed by media buyers and marketers. That’s why we started the print edition,” he said.

    Meanwhile, Happenings, which offers a rich blend of fashion, lifestyle and entertainment, also unveiled its second edition with the theme The truth issue.

    Abamwa said to appeal to both online and offline readers, the magazine started as an online via www.happenings.com.ng and started the print edition because of the need to satisfy and reach a wider range of our ardent readers.

    He also said Happenings would soon start her own online radio station – Happenings Online Radio – where he hoped to feed more listeners with entertainment, fashion and lifestyle bits.

    “We wish to appreciate the support of all our sponsors and guests who graced the occasion. Your generosity is absolutely amazing,” he added.

  • Publisher arraigned for ‘adultery’ report against bank chief

    The Police Special Fraud Unit (SFU) yesterday arraigned the publisher of Best of Nollywood magazine, Mr Seun Oloketuyi at the Federal High Court in Lagos over a story that Fidelity Bank Managing Director Nnamdi Okonkwo impregnated a staff.

    He was accused of publishing the report on his website – www.naijahottestgist.com.

    Oloketuyi, who is the organiser of the yearly Best of Nollywood Awards (BON), was arraigned on a two-count charge.

    Count One reads in part: “That you, Seun Oloketuyi on or about June, 2015 did knowingly or intentionally send a message and other matters by means of computer systems or network on one Nnamdi Okonkwo the Managing Director/CEO of Fidelity Bank Plc which you know to be false, for the purpose of causing him annoyance, insult and ill-will on www.naijahottestgist.com.”

    In Count Two, Oloketuyi was accused of publishing “defamatory matters” against Okonkwo “with malice” while knowing that the information was false.

    Prosecution counsel Olakanmi Omisope, said the alleged offence contravened Section 24(1)(b) of the Cybercrime (Prohibition) Act, 2015 and Section 375 of the Criminal Code Act, Cap C38.

    Oloketuyi pleaded not guilty.

    The story claimed that Okonkwo impregnated the bank’s “top marketer” known as Justina, which resulted in her husband, Ben, leaving their matrimonial home. The story also claimed that Okonkwo took responsibility for the children’s welfare and schooling.

    Oloketuyi had apologised and retracted the story via www.bestofnollywood.tv, saying: “Naijahottestgist hereby apologises to the Managing Director, Mr. Nnamdi Okonkwo and the management of Fidelity Bank Plc over a story published on www.Naijahottestgist.com on June 18 and titled “Fidelity Bank MD, Nnamdi Okonkwo breaks Justina’s home, impregnates her”, where we had erroneously alleged that Mr Okonkwo was having an extra marital affair with Mrs Justina, the Head of Marketing team of the bank.

    “Regrettably, Naijahottestgist has discovered that the story wasn’t true as there was never a time Mr Nnamdi Okonkwo indulged in an extra marital affair with the said staff member, Justina.

    “We hereby tender our unreserved apology to Mr Nnamdi Okonkwo and the entire management of Fedelity Bank Plc.

    “Similarly, we hereby retract the story and appeal to all bloggers and news site that might have copied the story from Naijahottestgist to remove the story with immediate effect.”

    Justice Mohammed Yunusa adjourned to September 1.

  • Publisher urges students to promote free press

    If media practitioners are protected from censorship and victimisation, the nation’s quest to become a major economic hub would be achieved, Mr Ndama Abubakar, a publisher, has said.

    He said there was a linkage between free press and socio-economic growth attained by the developed nations, noting that journalists could only contribute their quota to societal development if they were allowed to discharge their responsibilities with limited restrictions and in accordance to the development media theory as propounded by Dennis McQuail.

    Abubakar, who is the Managing Director of Niger Printing and Publishing Company Limited, spoke at the internship orientation for Mass Communication students of Fati Lami Abubakar College for Legal and General Studies (FLACLGS) in Minna, Niger State.

    He said gone were the days when Nigerian journalists discharged their duty without interference from any quarter, noting that media practitioners gallantly played twin roles of being the society’s watchdog and keeping the masses abreast of the goings-on in the country. Today’s journalism practice, he said, leaves much to be desired.

    While bemoaning the decadence in the profession, Abubakar said many journalists now collect bribe brazenly to slant their stories according to the dictate of their paymaster. In the process, he said, they undermine the ethics of the profession and distort information being passed to the public.

    According to Abubakar, journalists who make effort to get useful information are assaulted despite the existence of Freedom of Information (FOI) Act.

    He advised the students to be focused, while urging them to use print and social media to advocate for press freedom through articles, features and open letters.

     

  • Publisher promotes culture at 80

    To adequately prepare today’s children who are tomorrow’s leaders to govern Nigeria well, the Chairman, Literamed Publications, Otunba Olayinka Lawal-Solarin, has urged Nigerians to teach their wards the nation’s history.

    Speaking to The Nation at a lecture to mark his 80th birthday and 50th wedding anniversary last Wednesday at the MUSON Centre, Onikan, Lagos, Lawal-Solarin advocated for education about the culture and history of the Nigerian people even before colonization.

    “We should start educating our children and let them know the history of our nation and how we started…we had a history before we were colonized,” he said.

    The publisher wants Nigerians to embrace candour, which he described as honesty of purpose, rather than acts of dishonesty that can divide any nation. He advocated that intermarriage is a way to move the country forward and keep the nation as one.

    In addition to conventional education, the guest speaker at the occasion, Akin Oyebode, a Professor of International Law at the University of Lagos (UNILAG), called for cultural education and personal empowerment that would enlighten people about their rights, such as the right to vote, in order to achieve the change Nigerians desire.

    He also advised the guests to imbibe the attitude of the celebrator, Otunba Lawal-Solarin by being humble but resilient in their pursuit of success.

    Responding to Oyebode’s admonition, a guest, Mrs Titilola Johnson, said that promoting the reading culture in homes, as well as educating youths about the current state of the nation, would help to improve Nigerian’s future.

    Also celebrating Lawal-Solarin at the occasion was his wife, Bjorg, a Norwegian, who said that what kept her marriage going for 50 years was “togetherness”.

    Beaming, she said: “We do everything together all the time. Togetherness is what has kept us going and that is what marriage is truly about.”

    Lawal-Solarin’s Literamed Publications has published over 200 titles of storybooks and educational books for the different categories of readership.

    Going forward, his youngest son, Olatunde, who will take over the publishing business, said there are plans for Literamed Publications to produce musicals and other forms of entertainment for children to make learning fun.

  • Publisher rallies Ndigbo at magazine launch

    Publisher rallies Ndigbo at magazine launch

    It was a gathering of who-is-who in the Igbo community in Lagos as a new publication, Igbo Ezuo, was launched. The event which took place at Euc De Modern Hotel and Suites, Okota, Lagos, witnessed a large turnout of guests.

    Welcoming guests to the event, publisher of the magazine, Prince Kelechi Torti said that the aim of taking on the venture stems from the need to afford the Igbo far-away from home an opportunity to socialise and come together. In his words, Igbo Ezuo is purely an Igbo magazine designed to boost cultural integration.

    The magazine, he said, covers the social life of Igbo at home and in the Diaspora. Torti stated further that his wish for the Igbo Ezuo is that in 10 years, it must have expanded more.

    “Our undoing as a race and people is that we misplace religion in terms of our nature and calling as God’s own children. We were Igbo people before we became Christians. A people without God’s given culture, customs, tradition and language are a valueless people. Today, we embrace with alacrity the Western culture in disguise, believing we are worshiping God. Many have stopped giving Igbo names to their children. Igbo Ezuo magazine is born to correct our misconception as people and embrace our values,” Torti stated.

    This first issue of the magazine presents the great and ancient clan, Nnewi, its history, culture, custom, tradition and great people. A section of the publication is dedicated to celebrating the life and times of HRH, Dr. K.O.N Orizu III, the Igwe of Nnewi Kingdom and Nigeria’s longest serving monarch.

    Present at the occasion were Eze Ebube Nna, Engr. J.O.C Ezenuo, the Chairman of the occasion and a lot of prominent Igbo Chiefs resident in Lagos.The event also witnessed a high dose of comedy music and dance.

  • Customs chief sues publisher

    Customs chief sues publisher

    The Comptroller General of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Abdullahi Dikko, has sued the publisher and Editor-in-Chief, Shipping World magazine, Asu Beks, at an Abuja Magistrates’ Court, Life Camp, Abuja, for allegedly publishing a defamatory report against him.

    In its July edition, Dikko said the magazine published a five-page article, with the headline, “Dikko’s Customs stinks” with a rider: “Presidency shops for his replacement”.

    In the report, the magazine allegedly accused Customs chief of bribery in the bid to retain at his position, despite running “a corruption-ridden NCS” and “squandering” N25 billion from a Customs dedicated account that had been dormant since 2012.

    Dikko said the publication also alleged that the anti-graft agency had compiled a long list of “sins” to send the Customs chief to prison.

    Dikko said the publication claimed that out of desperation to clean himself, he allegedly paid huge bribes to curry favour from the Presidency and the National Assembly.

    Angered by the allegations in the article, Dikko, through his lawyer, Amobi Nzelu, filed a suit pursuant to Section 143(d) and (e) of the Criminal Procedure Code.

    The Customs chief prayed the Senior Magistrates’ Court to issue a criminal summon against Beks, the magazine’s Managing Editor Sylvanus Ekpo and Editor Chukwunonso Udeh for alleged defamation and misrepresentation of facts.

    He claimed that the article jointly authored and published by the accused persons concerning him were false, malicious, baseless, as well as highly libelous and a calculated attempt to destroy his hard earned reputation and professional career without justification.