Tag: release

  • Malala pleads for Chibok girls’ release

    Malala pleads for Chibok girls’ release

    •300 days after

    Nobel prize winning education campaigner Afghanistani Malala Yousafzai yesterday called on world leaders to do more to free the abducted Chibok schoolgirls, who have been in captivity for 300 days.

    Writing on her website she said: “If these girls were the children of politically or financially powerful parents, much more would be done to free them.

    “But they come from an impoverished area of northeast Nigeria and sadly little has changed since they were kidnapped.”

    “Nigerian leaders and the international community can and must do much more to resolve this crisis and change their weak response to date.

    “These young women risked everything to get an education that most of us take for granted; I will not forget my sisters.”

    Boko Haram kidnapped 276 schoolgirls from the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok in Borno State last April, triggering global outrage expressed through the #BringBackOurGirls campaign. Although a few girls managed to escape during the kidnapping, 219 of the girls remain missing.

    Women who have escaped Boko Haram tell of the brutalities they experienced at the hands of the militants, including forced marriage and being sold into sex slavery.

    Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau also said in one of the videos the sect posted on you tube that he would “sell the girls” and marry them off.

  • Union urges release of N50b facility

    Union urges release of N50b facility

    The Agro-Allied Commodities Cooperative Entrepreneurship Multi-Purpose Union, has urged the Federal Government to release N50 billion out of the N220 billion Micro, Small and Medium Entreprises (MSME) loan from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to its members.

    The group said it has utilised and refunded previous credit facilities extended to it by the government, adding that  the government should hasten the release of the fund.

    Its President, Prof. Victoria Adesuyi said it was important to reduce poverty and ensure food sufficiency in the nation.

    Adesuyi who spoke in Abuja, said: “The agro-allied ventures are embraced by the middle and low class Nigerians, therefore we use this medium to solicit for the immediate release of money the for these categories of people who have taken cooperative system seriously as the only channel through which they could team up to create self-help for themselves.

    “Concerning our request for N50billion, it is for our farmers, artisans, marketers, traders, processors, industrialists, agro-allied commodities and service producers all across the nation. It is primarily for the cooperatives.”

    According to her, the union was certified by the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development through the Federal Director of Cooperative and Farmers Organisation, Dr. Dickson Okolo in August, last year as well as the CBN in 2002.

    Adesuyi said the union had been under the cover of the Nigerian Agricultural Insurance Corporation (NDIC) since 2002 with partnership with the Nigeria Export Promotion Council (NEPC).

    She added that if the 15 million cooperative members from the six geo-political zones could access the facility, it would contribute positively to the nation’s food security programme and national development.

    Representative of First Bank Nigeria Plc (FBN), Mr. Osaze Owaifo said the bank is known for clear participation on retail business and grassroots lending especially  agriculture.

    He said the bank will give the group the needed requirements to access the loan at nine per cent interest rate.

    Owaifo expressed optimism that the gesture would contribute to better livelihood for the farmers.

    Kogi State Coordinator of the Union, Mr. Mohammed Dansulieman said members were already losing hope on the loan. He said it was important for the government to release the credit in order to sustain the trust of the farmers.

    Southeast representative of the union, Ms Ijioma Chikeze said the members should be registered by the government before they can access the credit.

    Chikeze who is also the Anambra State Coordinator emphasised need for awareness such that women and youths could benefit more from the facility.

    She expressed optimism that the larger per cent of the N50 billion would be accessed by women.

  • Missing $20b: Buhari demands release of audit report

    Missing $20b: Buhari demands release of audit report

    All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate Gen. Muhammadu Buhari has demanded the relaese of the forensic audit on the missing $20 billion oil cash.

    Gen. Buhari, in a statement yesterday, said the report must be released “in the spirit of the war against corruption”.

    The APC presidential standard bearer accused the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of “digging graves in search of rumours” to confuse the voters.

    The statement, signed by the Director of Communication of the Buhari Campaign Organisation, Mr. Dele Alake, reads: “There is a clear linkage between the billions of naira lost to corruption and the poor living conditions of our people: it is the resources meant for the  development of our people that are diverted to service the greed of a few. It is the fear of the unknown in a country where both family and government social welfare have collapsed that fuels the avarice of those in offices to steal for generations unborn.

    It is indeed true that, by sheer force of personal examples, I and my running mate, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, have demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt that it is possible to live above the greed that dominates the system.

    “I believe our spiritual anchors as men who fear The Almighty and are resolved to live our lives according to His admonitions have played very critical roles in developing our capacity to lead. As Christians go and return from churches, as Muslims and men of other faiths observe their spiritual obligations, we believe our individual commitments to serve our Creator will inspire us to shun corruption.

    “We say this fully conscious of the need to strengthen these spiritual values by creating a system that cares for the poor and the downtrodden; a system that gives jobs to the unemployed; provides electricity so that the artisans and the middle class can be productive and expands infrastructure to enable the corporate sector reduce cost of operations.

    “The details of the roadmap to prosperity has been powerfully articulated in the manifesto of our party, the All Progressives Congress. We have signed this manifesto to commit ourselves to faithfully execute it as our contract with the people of Nigeria.

    “Let us reiterate that we have already declared war against corruption, resolved to achieve food security, provide accelerated power supply, integrate the country’s transport network, promote free education and provide affordable health care service.

    “What we bring to the table is not just these ideas. What we offer Nigerians is that we shall, day and night, 24 hours per day, seven days a week, stake our intergrity as men of discipline and transparency to make life better for the average Nigerian by executing these policies in the shortest possible time.

    “What we bring to the table is an unblemished record of patriotism to our country and an enviable standard of hardwork and fulfillment of pledges that we have not seen in the handling of our national affairs in the last few years.

    “In the spirit of the war against corruption, we demand the release of the Audit Report of the Missing 20 billion dollars.

    “Clearly unable to oppose us with an equally clean and unassailable ticket, we can understand why our opponents are running from pillar to post, digging graves in search of rumours in the impossible hope of misinforming unsuspecting voters and spinning a web of blackmail and deceit.

    “In this electoral contest of vision and moral stature, only the guilty needs to be afraid. Luckily, our lives are like the open book. We challenge our opponents to stake their desire to lead Nigeria again on what they have achieved with the billions of resources they received. This is not the time for distractions and red herrings. Nigerians are the ultimate judge of stewardship. They will deliver their verdict, loud and clear to the world on February 14, 2015.”

    Speaking at a media parley at the weekend, Osinbajo said his party would return the country to the path of progress, if elected next February.

    The professor of Law said the APC would not treat the issue of governance with levity and that its leaders will take responsibility and not offer excuses to Nigerians as it is being done today.

    According to him, what Nigerians expect from the government is solution to problems and not explanations on why the economy is bad, why they cannot get protection from terror attacks and why commercial kidnapping rages on in some parts of the country.

    Osinbajo bared his mind in Lagos at an interactive parley with the media. He said the APC was on a rescue mission as it has drawn up a blueprint on how to revamp the economy and give Nigerians hope.

    He blamed the dwindling fortune of Nigerians on the mismanagement of the people’s commonwealth by the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which he said had run out of ideas on how to get the country on the right track.

    Osinbajo also defended Gen. Buhari on his role in the enforcement of a retroactive Decree and the romance with the Organisation of Islamic Countries (OIC) in his days as military Head of State.

    He described as a wrong notion to link his emergence as Gen. Buhari’s running mate to an imposition by the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.

    According to the eminent lawyer, he emerged after two attempts to arrive at a consensus running mate collapsed.

    He told his audience that he was picked by Gen. Buhari and the APC National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, with approval of the party’s leadership.

    Osinbajo said the problems of the land would have been more than 50 per cent solved with Gen Buhari in the saddle as President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces.

    His words: “It’s going to be the first time that Nigerians will see the Commander-in-Chief as somebody who will not condone indiscipline and corruption.

    “Whatever anybody says about the former Head of State, there is no controversy that he is widely respected for his anti-corruption posture and his penchance for discipline.

    “I think what is important is leadership. As it is today, the leadership is unsure of itself. The leadership is uncertain. The Commander-in-Chief must take responsibility for everything. It is not good enough for the Commander-in-Chief to say my enemy did this, my enemy did that.”

    On how the APC plans to make a difference in government, Osinbajo said the mismanagement of resources and not lack had been the bane of the country, even as he disagreed that the size of government was weighing the economy down.

    “The size of government is not accountable for corruption. What is responsible is stealing and mismanagement of public funds,” Osinbajo said, pointing out that the APC will break away from the routine way of running government, which he alleged has never produced the desired result.

    He said a Gen. Buhari administration, if elected, will implement to the letter the APC manifesto as contained in the party’s “Roadmap to a New Nigeria” blueprint.

    The APC running mate listed the contents to include: provision of immediate relief, jobs, quality education, affordable housing, qualitative healthcare services and social welfare for the less advantaged and the aged.

    Osinbajo said the APC will accord security of lives and properties priority, adding that the dearth of equipment in the military and inadequate kitting of the security outfits was unacceptable after the government’s claim that it has invested trillions of naira in security.

    He said the Federal Government got it wrong from the scratch by accusing the opposition of being the promoters of terrorism even without first investigating.

    According to him, it will be difficult for any government to win the war against terror without radically addressing unemployment, adding that the devil will always find work for every idle hand.

    Osinbajo urged Nigerians to stop seeing Gen. Buhari in a military garb but as a law-abiding Nigerian, whose action will be guided by the rule of law, pointing out that there are marked differences between the military and democratic dispensations.

    Osinbajo reminded that it took extra-judicial killings of some former Ghanaian leaders by the then President Jerry Rawlings to return the West African nation to the path of greatness.

    He said being on the same ticket with the retired General to serve the country has not in any way compromised his faith as a pastor, his calling as a teacher and his stand as a lawyer.

    His words: “As a pastor, I preach in my church on Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. And my message is on grace. Even David, an adulterer and murderer received grace from God and he was forgiven.

    “That Gen. Buhari made mistake, in the heady days of the military does not mean he is not capable of doing good in a democratic dispensation. Even as a military Head of State, Gen. Buhari stood for discipline and against corruption. These are attributes nobody can take away from him.”

    Osinbajo noted that the impunity under the PDP government was unacceptable.

    He cited the attack on two High Court judges in Ado-Ekiti by supporters of then PDP governor-elect, the refusal to reinstate the former President of the Appeal Court, Justice Ayo Salami, despite court rulings, and the unilateral stripping of House of Representatives Speaker, Aminul Tambuwal of his privileges as the number three citizen by Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Suleiman Abba, as some of the impunities under the present democratic dispensation.

    “Nigeria cannot continue like this. It is unacceptable,” Osinbajo said.

  • NNL to release Ranchers Bees/ Kwara United verdict today

    NNL to release Ranchers Bees/ Kwara United verdict today

    The verdict on the disputed Nigeria National League (NNL) Week 30 tie between Ranchers Bees and Kwara United will be made public today, a top official of the lower league body has disclosed.

    The replayed National League tie had to be abandoned about 10 minutes to the end of proceedings after suspected fans of Ranchers Bees swooped on the match officials and beat up the centre referee, Charles Ozigbo of Anambra State and his Assistant Referees. The action of the fans came after the referee blew for an infringement against Ranchers Bees in the 18-yard box which invariably handed a penalty lifeline to Kwara United.

    The Kaduna side needed only a draw to qualify for the Premier League while Kwara United would get the ticket by winning the tie.

    The chairman of the NNL Emeka Inyama told SportingLife that the match report of the disputed tie had been received and deliberated upon already and that its verdict would be made available to the media today.

    “We have received the match report and have duly deliberated on the botched game. The verdict will be released to the media tomorrow (today). We don’t want to pre-empt anything at all,” Inyama told SportingLife.

    3SC, Wikki Tourists and Gabros FC all booked their places in the top flight at the end of last season in the NNL.

     

  • Family Family s release of son’s body

    Samuel Eze of Umucheke village in Umunze, Orumba South Local Government Area of Anambra State has demanded the release of his brother’s body from the police.

    Samuel’s younger brother, Emmanuel, was allegedly shot dead about two weeks ago by a police officer on his way home from a nearby grocery store.

    The incident occurred during a protest.

    Narrating how his brother was killed, Samuel said the deceased was not part of the protest.

    A petition has been sent to the police commissioner. It was signed by the Chairman of the village union, Sylvester Madumere and the Secretary, Livinus Nwafor.

    They urged the police to release the body for burial.

    The petition said: “The police officer, who perpetrated the act, should be arrested and prosecuted. Compensation should be paid to the deceased’s family, as he had people depending on him.”

    The chairman said the community was still in shock. He described the late Emmanuel as a quiet and easy-going person.

    The Nation learnt yesterday that the elders and leadership of the village visited the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Umunze Division, who assured that the matter would be looked into.

    “But one week after, nothing has happened. The body of the deceased has been seized,” our source said.

    Police spokesman Uche Eze said: “We are willing to release the body, but we cannot do this except the family comes forward.”

    He added that no sane policeman would shoot a person except he constituted a threat to the society or to policemea.

    Eze recalled that on the day of the protest, the protesters torched a hotel and advanced to the police station to burn it, but the police dispersed them.

    Recounting how his brother was killed, Samuel said Emmanuel sold palm kernel and had just returned from the market.

    He went on: “About 4pm, my brother headed for a nearby shop to buy soap, but he was shot in the head by a policeman.

    “On that fateful day, protesters from Ndikpa village, whose plots of land were sold, protested the arrests of their colleagues (youths) by the buyer. They were on their way to the police station when some officers stopped them. One of them shot Emmanuel, who had just bought a soap he wanted to use to bathe.

    “We have no reason to suspect anyone because we are landlords to the police in Umunze. We have a cordial relationship with them.

    “The way my brother was killed is suspicious.

    “He was not one of the protesters. We have been neglected by the police. After the incident, nobody has apologised to us. The most painful thing is that we have not seen our brother’s body.”

  • SSS release Maigari

    SSS release Maigari

    Immediate past President of the Nigeria Football Federation, Aminu Maigari has been released after being arrested by operatives of the Directorate of State Security (DSS) at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja on Wednesday.

    Maigari arrived Abuja from Zurich, where he had gone for a FIFA Players’ status committee meeting, and was immediately picked up by the DSS, even though no reasons were given.

    It is however believed that it may not be unconnected to the recent crises at the NFF, but SL10.ng understands that he has been released from the DSS custody. Efforts to get across to him have so far proved abortive.

    It is also believed that General Secretary Musa Amadu was also invited by the DSS ,but it still remains unclear why he has been invited, but it is believed that it is also connected to the recent NFF crises and the forthcoming elections slated for September 30.

  • Children pray for release of Chibok girls

    Over 100 kids under the auspices of African Children of Peace Club (ACPC) drawn from across Lagos State last weekend interceded for the release of the over 200 abducted Chibok girls.

    The prayer marked with the mid-year children‘s intercessory prayer and valedictory service by ACPC, an arm of African Foundation for Peace and Love Initiatives in Egbeda, Lagos

    The session with the theme for the sake of our children we pray featured drama, song rendition and bible recitation, among others.

    One of the children at the intercession, Otimayin Naomi, said the Chibok girls’ abduction has “become a source of concern for us and we believe God that with our prayers, they will be released.”

    She explained: “We are children and we feel the pains, agony and trauma of our friends who have been held captive by the Boko Haram group.

    “We are praying that God will touch their heart and our friends will be released soon.”

    The founding president of APLI, Rev Titus Oyeyemi, said: “Our work is to intercede. Intercession will make the Almighty God, who has the power to release the Chibok girls, to arise.

    “We will ask God not to forget the sighing of these imprisoned girls.”

  • First Lady decries delay in Chibok girls’ release

    First Lady decries delay in Chibok girls’ release

    Nigeria’s First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, has expressed concern about the delay in the release of the abducted Chibok girls by members of the Boko Haram sect.

    Mrs Jonathan spoke in Windhoek, Namibia, when she met with the Nigerian community.

    She empathised with families of the girls and the entire Chibok community, saying that soon the girls would be released.

    “As a mother, I am very worried over the abduction of these girls; I share the pains of the mothers whose children were abducted,” Mrs Jonathan said.

    “We women of Nigeria, we have fasted and prayed that  wherever they are, they will be released safely and that God will touch the minds of members of the sect,” she said.

    She commended the security agencies for their efforts, adding that the girls would be back home soon.

    Mrs Jonathan also praised the Nigerian Armed Forces for their patriotic zeal in fighting terrorism and urban violence, especially in the Northeast.

    The First Lady urged Nigerians in the Diaspora to support government and the military in putting an end to the insurgency across the country, especially in the Northeast.

  • Cleric calls for Chibok girls’ release

    Founder of Husseiniyya Islamic Foundation, Sheikh Hussein Muhammed, has called for concerted efforts from religious organisations, groups and individuals to secure the release of the over 200 girls abducted from Government Secondary School, Chibok in Borno State.

    The renowned cleric called for more prayers to ensure the safe return of the Chibok girls to their parents.

    While condemning in strong terms the activities of the Boko Haram insurgents, Sheikh Muhammed deplored the killing of innocent people by the terrorist group, insisting that Islam is a religion of peace which abhors violence.

    Quoting relevant verses from the Holy Qur’an to back up his assertion, the cleric referred to Verse 151 of Chapter 6 of the Qur’an where Allah said: “Take not life which Allah had made sacred, except by way of justice and the law.”

    The cleric urged Muslims to continue to pray with dedication and sincerity of purpose, as according to him, Allah is ready to grant such requests.

    He announced that prayer sessions will hold every Jumat service as part of efforts to assist the government in rescuing the abducted Chibok girls.

  • August date for Half of a Yellow Sun release in Nigeria

    August date for Half of a Yellow Sun release in Nigeria

    Following its eventual certification by the National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB), distributors of the much-talked-about high-budget Nigerian film, Half of a Yellow Sun, have fixed August 1, as release date for the film in Nigerian cinemas.

    Producers of the movie had cancelled the initial release date of April 25, knowing it will be afoul with the law to go public, without the endorsement of the regulatory agency.

    The Censored Board had frowned at some violence scenes in the movie, which it said could incite ethnic unrest in the country.

    The movie, an adaptation of Chimamanda Adichie’s book on the Nigerian civil war, is a directorial debut by Biyi Bandele, a Nigerian playwright based in England.

    Although, the flick, which features Oscar-nominated actor Chiwetel Ejiofor, BAFTA award – winning actor Thandie Newton, Anika Noni Rose and AMAA winners Genevieve Nnaji, Onyeka Onwenu, Zack Orji and O.C Ukeje is being promoted as a love story, centered around the Biafra war, snapshots of genocide, plotted around the love characters to elicit emotions are the likely offensive scenes the filmmakers were advised to expunge.

    Yielding the advice, the filmmakers, who were initially reluctant to have a different version of the film for the Nigerian audience said the adjustment has cost them N20 million.

    The August 1 final release date will follow another premiere of the film at the Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) in Durban, South Africa, later in the month.

    Bigsam Media, a Public Relations handler of the work who described it as a breath of fresh air, said the movie has raised the standard of Nollywood movies from good to excellent. “Kudos to the producers of the movie, they did a good job. The producers of the landmark movie would like to say a big thank you to Nigerians for their love, patience and support,” the outfit said in a statement.

    Distributed by FilmOne Distribution and Shareman Media Company, the movie has been classified “18”by the NFVCB.