Tag: secretary

  • Ondo APC candidate sues INEC, Party Excos over primary

    A House of Assembly candidate for Okitipupa II Constituency under the platform of the ruling All Progressives Congress(APC) Ololade Gbegudu has dragged the party and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to court for failure to publish his name as candidate after winning the party’s primary.

    In a suit filed by Gbegudu’s counsel, A.A. Solagbade-Amodeni of Femi Emadomore& Co also joined APC State Chairman, Ade Adetimehin, Secretary, Sina Alaye, and an Assembly Aspirant, Sina Emmanuel as defendants.

    Ololade-Gbegudu in the suit, said he instituted the case after APC and its officers refused to send his client’s name to INEC in line with the 2010 Electoral Act having won the primary exercise was conducted through direct primary on October 5, 2018 and duly monitored by the officials of INEC led by Etukumo U. Andrew, policemen and the Department of State Services (DSS) personnel.

    Justice Olabode Adegbehingbe granted an application brought by the counsel to enable the claimant served INEC and the APC headquarters in Abuja.

    He promised to give the case an accelerated hearing in view of its nature.

    The lawyer urged the court to declare as illegal the substitution of the claimant’s name with Akinwunmi’s name and compel INEC to recognize and publish Gbegudu’s name as the APC candidate for the Okitipupa Constituency II in the 2019 State House of Assembly election.

    The Claimant averred that he won the direct primary for the Okitipupa Constituency II for the Ondo State House of Assembly with 4,000 votes to beat five other aspirants including Akinwunmi whose name was wrongly submitted to INEC by the party’s officials.

    Read Also: Cross River government urged to invest more in sports

    The Plaintiff’s lead counsel, Emadomore said, “the total number of accredited voters at the said direct primary election as recorded by the representatives of the 1st Defendant (APC) were 7,000 while the total valid votes were 6,500, out of which he scored the 4,000 due to his overwhelming popularity at the constituency and was declared winner of the primary.

    The Lawyer alleged that, “the falsified result, the name of the Claimant (Gbegudu Ololade ) is still visible in the certification column at the bottom of the Result Sheet as the winner.

    ” The Claimant’s name was however simply crossed out with a biro/pen (not even completely wiped or blurred out with paint) and on top of it was written in ink the words: Winner-Sina Akinwumi Emmanuel, as against the proper certification column already printed in the result sheet”

    Emadomore claimed that, “the 4th Defendant (Akinwunmi) in this case scored zero (0) as attested to by the APC Ondo State Legislative Primaries Election Committee.

    He said”The Claimant shall in this regard rely on the original (counter-part) of the Summary Result Sheet for State House of Assembly duly signed by Abuh Andrew Abuh and Ahmed Musa Momoh as the Chairman and Secretary of the APC Ondo State Legislative Primaries Election Committee respectively and given to each of the candidates, including the Claimant”.

    ” We want an order of mandatory injunction directing the 5th Defendant (INEC) to recognize, publish and/or treat the name of the Claimant as the candidate of the 1st Defendant (APC) for the Okitipupa Constituency II of the Ondo State House of Assembly for the general election for the said constituency seat scheduled to hold on March 2,2019 or such other date(s) as the 5th defendant may fix for the election”.

  • Ondo: PDP nullifies Owo/Ose primary election

    The House of Representatives Electoral Committee of the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP ) on Friday nullified the primary election held in Owo/Ose federal constituency in Ondo state.

    The cancellation was hinged on irregularities and errors during the exercise.

    A statement jointly signed by the Committee’s Chairman, Bimbo Adepoju, Secretary, Modupe Johnson and member, Dayo Ogunmodede said the conduct of the election negates the laid down guidelines of the party.

    Read Also: Jimi Agbaje wins Lagos PDP guber primary

    The election according to the statement was conducted in flagrant disregard to the PDP guidelines and constitution, thereby subjecting the process to incredible handling.

    Also in Odigbo/Ile-Oluji/Okeigbo federal constituency,the primary was said to have been marred with irregularities.

    The Committee urged the National Secretariat of the PDP to do the needful to avoid internal political rancour.

  • Ortom sacks Benue Exam Board Secretary

    Governor Samuel Ortom has approved the sack of Mr Andrew Torhide Uchi as Executive Secretary of the Benue State Examinations Board.

    In his place, Mr Isaac Iorbee Hom has been appointed.

    A statement issued by the Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Professor Dennis Ityavyar, said Mr Uchi’s removal is due to the fact that his continued stay in office is not in the best interest of the board.

    The statement added that the appointment of the new Executive Secretary is with immediate effect and directed the former Secretary to complete handover to Uchi within three days.

  • Kano poll agency gets secretary

    Kano State Governor Abdullahi Ganduje has approved the appointment of Wada Bashir Isiaku as secretary of the Kano State Independent Electoral Commission (KANSIEC).

    A statement by the Commissioner for Information Garba Muhammad said Isiaku was a former Secretary of the commission from 2003 to 2007.

    Isiaku holds a Master’s degree in Special Education and Bachelor’s in Law from Bayero University, Kano.

    He worked with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) as electoral officer in Bagwai, Gezawa, and Ajingi Local Government Areas, and Head of Logistics, state INEC headquarters.

    Isiaku was also a part-time lecturer with the Aminu Kano College of Islamic and Legal Studies, Kano.

    His appointment takes immediate effect.

  • FCT PDP  adopts Adejoh-Audu for National Publicity Secretary

    The Secretary of the Of the People’s Democratic Party(PDP) in the Federal Capital Territory(FCT) , Hon Bako Angulu, has  said the decision to adopt Faruk Adejoh-Audu  (aka FAA) as the chapter’s candidate for National Publicity Secretary was based on the candidate’s antecedents as a professional with identifiable track record.

    Bako, who was addressing a cross section of state youth leaders from across the country,  said the FCT chapter had reviewed the background of the four candidates jostling for the office and came to the conclusion that FAA parades superior credentials.

    “We still remember when this gentleman, almost two decades ago, was Chief Press Secretary to Speaker of the House of Representatives, Ghali Na’Abba, and we remember how he dominated the headlines then when the National Assembly had this impeachment problem with ex-President Olusegun  Obasanjo.

    “Every day we woke up believing that ex-President Obasanjo was already a goner.  The State House Villa was always on the defensive then, denying allegations and clarifying claims of the National Assembly.

    “It is that kind of aggressive PRO that we need now that we are in the opposition. And he performed this feat almost two decades ago. Today, he has gained more experience on the job after serving for almost 10 years in Kogi, doing the same job.”

    Angulu, who said  competence should be the primary criteria for whoever must be elected, maintained that none of the other candidates could boast of FAA’s experience.

    Besides,  he said, FAA joined the party in 1998 in FCT and had remained a loyal member ever since.

    “This gentleman is a core PDP man. Imagine that for 19 years he has remained loyal to the party. He has never defected or worked against the party. We believe he is consistent and has the interest of the party deep in his heart,” he added.

    Angulu urged the youth leaders to equally adopt FAA if they want a focused and purposeful information management for the party whose fortunes are down at the moment.

  • British Queen, Saraki, Trump’s secretary, others named in fresh tax havens’ papers

    British Queen, Saraki, Trump’s secretary, others named in fresh tax havens’ papers

    •Tax Justice Network seeks UN summit to end financial crime

    A huge new leak of financial documents has revealed how the powerful and ultra-wealthy, including the Queen’s private estate, secretly invest vast amounts of cash in offshore tax havens.

    The world’s biggest businesses, heads of state and global figures in politics, entertainment and sport, who have sheltered their wealth in secretive tax havens are being revealed in a major new investigation into Britain’s offshore empires.

    According to Premium Times, Senate President Bukola Saraki, is among the more than the 40 world politicians whose offshore hideaways were exposed by the fresh Internation Consortium of Investigative Journalist (ICIJ) investigations.

    The details come from a leak of 13.4 million files that expose the global environments in which tax abuses can thrive – and the complex and seemingly artificial ways the wealthiest corporations can legally protect their wealth.

    The material, which has come from two offshore service providers and the company registries of 19 tax havens, was obtained by German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung and shared by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists with partners, including the Guardian, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and the New York Times.

    Donald Trump’s Commerce Secretary is shown to have a stake in a firm dealing with Russians sanctioned by the United States (U.S.).

    The leak, dubbed the Paradise Papers, contains 13.4 million documents, mostly from one leading firm in offshore finance.

    Two Russian state institutions with close ties to Vladimir Putin funded substantial investments in Twitter and Facebook through a business associate of Jared Kushner, leaked documents reveal.

    The investments were made through a Russian technology magnate, Yuri Milner, who also holds a stake in a company co-owned by Kushner, Donald Trump’s son-in-law and Senior White House Adviser.

    The discovery is likely to stir concerns over Russian influence in  U.S. politics and the role played by social media in last year’s presidential election. It may also raise new questions for the social media companies and for Kushner.

    Alexander Vershbow, who was a U.S. Ambassador to Russia under George W Bush and to NATO under Bill Clinton, said the Russian state institutions were frequently used as “tools for Putin’s pet political projects”.

    Vershbow said the findings were worrisome in the light of efforts by Moscow to disrupt U.S. democracy and public debate. “There clearly was a wider plan, despite Putin’s protestations to the contrary,” he said.

    The Paradise Papers help to unravel complex arrangements that led Russian state money to fund investments in the U.S. social media companies.

    They involve a bewildering array of companies using similar names and acronyms, some registered offshore in places that offer secrecy about ownership. The arrangements are legal, but have led campaigners to demand more transparency.

    The trail begins in December 2005, when Gazprom Investholding began putting money into Kanton Services, a company registered in the British Virgin Islands. Usmanov was at the time General Director of Gazprom Investholding, which the Kremlin has used to renationalise assets sold off in the 1990s.

    Gazprom in effect took control of Kanton in 2009 in return for $920 million. In 2011, Kanton in turn took a majority stake in DST USA II, a vehicle publicly associated with Milner. By 2012, DST USA II had bought more than 50 million shares in Facebook, according to filings at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, amounting to more than three per cent of the social media company.

    Over the following months, ownership of DST USA II was transferred to an Usmanov company, which sold off $1 billion worth of the shares in Facebook at a significant profit after the social network floated on the stock market.

    The papers also involve two Premiership teams – Arsenal and Everton – and two billionaires as well as how their close relationship and the opaqueness and secrecy of the companies they own in offshore tax havens has led to questions over who owns what.

    As a result, campaigners are calling for changes to the rules intended to safeguard the independent ownership of Premier League teams.

    The story begins with Arsenal and a very rich supporter, the Uzbek-Russian oligarch Alisher Usmanov. Ten years ago, Usmanov decided to buy a stake in the London Premier League giant whose home is the 60,000-seat Emirates Stadium, and he turned to the Isle of Man law firm Appleby to get it done.

    There are also details from 19 corporate registries maintained by governments in secrecy jurisdictions – Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, the Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, the Cook Islands, Dominica, Grenada, Labuan, Lebanon, Malta, the Marshall Islands, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent, Samoa, Trinidad and Tobago, and Vanuatu.

    BBC is part of nearly 100 media groups investigating the papers.

    As with last year’s Panama Papers leak, the documents were obtained by the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung, which called in the ICIJ to oversee the investigation. The Guardian is among the nearly 100 media partners involved in investigating the documents.

    Yesterday’s revelations form only a small part of a week of disclosures that will expose the tax and financial affairs of some of the hundreds of people and companies named in the data, some with strong UK connections.

    Many of the stories focus on how politicians, multinationals, celebrities and high-net-worth individuals use complex structures of trusts, foundations and shell companies to protect their cash from tax officials or hide their dealings behind a veil of secrecy.

    The Paradise Papers show that about £10 million ($13 million) of the Queen’s private money was invested offshore.

    It was put into funds in the Cayman Islands and Bermuda by the Duchy of Lancaster, which provides the Queen with an income and handles investments for her £500 million private estate.

    There is nothing illegal in the investments and no suggestion that the Queen is not paying tax, but questions may be asked about whether the monarch should be investing offshore.

    There were small investments in the rent-to-buy retailer BrightHouse, which has been accused of exploiting the poor, and the Threshers chain of off-licences, which later went bust owing £17.5 million in tax and costing almost 6,000 people their jobs.

    Most of the data comes from a company called Appleby, a Bermuda-based legal services provider at the top end of the offshore industry, helping clients set up in overseas jurisdictions with low or zero tax rates.

    Its documents, and others mainly from corporate registries in Caribbean jurisdictions, were obtained by Süddeutsche Zeitung. It has not revealed the source.

    The media partners say the investigation is in public interest because data leaks from the world of offshore have repeatedly exposed wrongdoing.

    But Tax Justice Network (TJN) said that ‘Paradise Papers’ have once again highlighted the failure of governments around the world to deal with the scourge of tax dodging and financial crime facilitated by offshore financial centres.

    Hailing ICIJ on their fearless investigative journalism, the Network called on world leaders to commit finally to ending tax abuse and financial secrecy.

  • Benue APC secretary dies

    Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Benue State Onov Tyuluugh is dead.

    Tyuluuh died yesterday after a protracted illness.

    Many, especially the APC family, described him as a great asset to the party, who will forever be remembered for his role in the change agenda.

    Governor Samuel Ortom has commiserated with the deceased’s family and the party’s leadership. He described the late Tyuulugh as a dependable party leader and one of those whose selfless contributions led to the enthronement of the change administration in Benue State.

    According to him, Tyuulugh’s legacy of ensuring a better Benue, where the rights and aspirations of the people take prominence, will not be forgotten.

    He prayed God to grant the deceased eternal rest and give his family the fortitude to bear the loss.

  • PACAC Secretary: don’t blame NJC alone for corruption in judiciary

    PACAC Secretary: don’t blame NJC alone for corruption in judiciary

    •Banks, Customs should declare assets, says Owasanoye

    Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC) Executive Secretary Prof BolajiOwasanoye yesterday said the executive must complement the judiciary’s efforts to rid its ranks of corrupt elements.

    He disagreed with PACAC Chairman Prof Itse Sagay (SAN), who earlier said the judiciary was not on board in the anti-corruption fight.

    Sagay had faulted the National Judicial Council (NJC) for recalling some judges accused of corruption, including Justice AdeniyiAdemola, whose case is on appeal.

    Owasananoye believed the NJC’s statement blaming the Ministry of Justice for not being swift in prosecuting the judges had merit.

    Justifying its decision, the NJC said the Ministry of Justice officials failed to turn up to compile and transmit records of appeal in Ademola’s case until the 45 days allowed for the exercise expired on May 22.

    It claimed the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation only filed additional grounds of appeal last Tuesday, three days after the Council directed the judicial officers to resume duties.

    Owasanoye, in a telephone interview with our correspondent yesterday, said the Ministry of Justice could have done better in the judges’ prosecution.

    He said the onus was on Attorney-General of the Federation AbubakarMalami (SAN) to respond to NJC’s claims.

    Owasanoye said: “Prof Sagay’s comments needs to be taken in context of whatever conversation he was having with the journalists. My view is that it is not only the judiciary that is responsible for the present state of affairs with regards to our prosecutions.

    “The judiciary has taken certain steps. Unfortunately, the Ministry of Justice has not matched them. The statement issued by the judiciary vindicates my position.

    “Clearly, the judiciary has taken certain steps. It was up to the Federal Ministry of Justice to follow through, but those steps had not been taken, and so we have the situation that we have right now.

    “The judiciary has responded to say that the ball is in the court of the executive, especially the Ministry of Justice, to do what it said it was going to do.

    “I totally and absolutely agree with the position of the judiciary. The judiciary has not said they have been completely above board, but they’re saying they’ve made some effort. Can those efforts be complemented? I agree that those efforts need to be complemented.”

    Owasanoye, however, urged judges to show more firmness in the adjudication of corruption cases by not tolerating delays.

    “Once we see that, the stretch – the interminable delays to prosecution should significantly reduce. We want to judges who will no longer tolerate nonsense, such as requests for adjournments for unimaginable reasons.

    “Given the recent statement issued by the judiciary, the ball is in the court of the Ministry of Justice to respond.”

    Owasanoye said there was an existing law which requires banks and customs officials to declare their assets annually.

  • Police arrests council chairman, others over council secretary murder

    The Akwa Ibom State Police Command has arrested the transition chairman of Ukanafun Local Government Area, Mr. Abasiono Udomfu and three others over the killing of the council’s secretary, Mr. Ime Atakpa.

    An aide to the chairman, Mr. Akaninyene Ibout, was said to have been arrested on Wednesday after the visit of the wife of the Akwa Ibom State governor, Mrs. Martha Emmanuel to inaugurate building for widows on Tuesday.

    A sister to Atakpa’s wife, who did not want her name in print, told newsmen  in Uyo yesterday that Udomfu, during Emmanuel’s visit, raised up his hands saying: “God knows that my hands are clean concerning the murder of the LG secretary.”

    She said that after the chairman had made the declaration, Ibout also said that his hands were clean and that he did not have anything to do with the killing of the late LG secretary.

    It was learnt that the police intelligence who were in the area at the time they were making the statements, arrested Ibout on Wednesday.

    He was said to have named the chairman and two other people of involvement in the alleged murder of the council secretary.

    Our correspondent gathered that Udomfu had made attempts to bribe the policemen that arrested him, asking them not to disgrace him.

    The two other people were said to have been arrested from Port Harcourt, Rivers State. They were said to have confessed to the police that Udomfu gave them N300,000 to kill the LG secretary.

    On April 16, 2017, four unidentified gunmen shot and killed Atakpa.  He was said to have been shot when he was in his farm, an Integrated Farming scheme, which is a boys’ quarter in his house in Ukanafun on that date.

    The Police Public Relations Officer in the state, Mr. Chukwu Ikechukwu, who confirmed the arrest, explained that all the suspects would be charged to court as soon as investigation is concluded.

    He said: “Investigation is on and soon as we conclude it, the matter will be charged to court.”

  • Former NANTA publicity secretary for burial next week

    FORMER National Association of Nigerian Travel Agencies (NANTA),  Dr. Charity Chikodi  Iriobe,  who died in November last year in United States of America (USA)  will be laid to rest next week.

    In a release signed by her husband, Captain Victor Iriobe, her remains will be buried at Ebony Vaults,  Alagbon Close,  Ikoyi.

    Until her death,  Dr Iriobe was a lecturer in the Department of Educational Foundation, Faculty of Education, University of Lagos, Akoka.

    Before moving over to the academia, Dr. Iriobe was a successful tourism practitioner and consultant, erstwhile Managing Director Odafane Travel and Tours Limited and former Publicity Secretary of the NANTA.

    Her funeral rite begins on January 19 with a commendation service at the University of Lagos main auditorium by 9. 00 am and later there will be a service of songs and Christian wake at the VGC Recreation Park from 5 p.m.