Tag: security

  • NOA tasks Kuje residents on Security

    NOA tasks Kuje residents on Security

    The National Orientation Agency (NOA) has called on residents of Kuje Area Council in the Federal Capital Territory to increase vigilance around their neighborhoods in order to forestall crimes and security threats in the community.

    Director General of NOA, Mr. Mike Omeri made this call during a public sensitization programme on security consciousness organized by the Agency at the Gomo of Kuje’s palace in Kuje.

    Represented by Mr. Ado Solomon, Director, Human Resource Management of the Agency, the NOA Director General stressed the need for Kuje residents to know their neighbours and reports suspicious characters to security agencies, pointing out that the rapid development of Kuje from a rural settlement to a town in recent years has the tendency to attract all sorts of characters.

    He urged residents to arm themselves with relevant distress call numbers and always keep their phones on and credited at night in case of emergency.

    The traditional ruler of Kuje, His Royal Highness, Alhaji Haruna Tanko Jibrin described the security of lives and property of subjects as a paramount responsibility of the traditional institution and expressed his commitment to helping government maintain a peaceful and secure community where persons of all social, political, ethnic and religious leanings coexist without fear or intimidation.

    The Gomo of Kuje however called on government to provide traditional institutions the necessary support by creating job opportunities for the teeming population of unemployed youths thereby making them unavailable for criminal activities.

    It would be recalled that Kuje suffered from twin bomb blast attacks last month; a situation alien to that community. Resource persons, Mr. David Dogo and Mr. Kayode Bolaji drew lessons from the attacks to school participants on early warning signals and measures to avert security failure in the communities.

    Participants commended the effort of NOA at sensitizing the public on security consciousness, asking that such sensitization be continuous. Participants were drawn from among community leaders, security agencies, students, public servants, farmers, traders and voluntary organizations.

  • Security needs massive investment, says expert

    The security sector requires massive injection of funds to guarantee protection of lives and properties, the Chief Executive Officer of Solidpro, a professional security outfit, Mr. Francis IEA, has stated.

    He said security operatives need a lot of technological installations to work with to boost their efficiency.

    IEA spoke last week at the commissioning of the outfit in Lekki, Lagos.

    Technologies, according to him, can improve intelligence gathering and help the nation’s fight against terrorism.

    He said: “Security is more than physical structures but more of technologies and invisible gadgets. Nigerians need to embrace more of these to save costs.”

    Chairman of the occasion, Dr Iruofagha James, called on Nigerians to show more than passing interest in security matters and stop leaving it alone to government.

    He said Nigerians and government must be willing to invest in security to protect the nation.

    According to him, “No amount of time and resources invested in security is wasted.

    “I am optimistic with the state of the art of technology and security equipments displayed, adequate effort will be made to overcome any security threat and also fortify its intelligence gathering.”

    Lagos Commandant, Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Gideon Abafi, stated that with the advance of technology, Nigerians should increase their support for security agencies to tackle the waves of criminal challenges.

  • The economist’s illogic on traffic, security in Lagos

    The economist’s illogic on traffic, security in Lagos

    Published consistently since September 1843, The Economist magazine wields enormous power, influence and professional respectability. Its longevity and prestige also serve as a deceptive veneer, many times, over the publication’s unwarranted intellectual arrogance, jaundiced judgements, ideological extremism and often embarrassingly shoddy journalistic practice. The Economist’s shortcomings in this regard were in graphic display, once again, in its latest edition ((November 7th – 13th) where it features an article on Urban Traffic in Lagos titled ‘Paralysed: Why Nigeria’s largest city is even less navigable than usual’.

    The article begins with a clear understanding and awareness of the challenges of traffic management in Lagos even at the best of times. In its words “Traffic is a way of life in Lagos, Africa’s most populous city. Home by some counts to over 20m people, it is among the most notoriously congested places in the world. The “go-slow” piles up long before dawn as businessmen in SUVS and traders in battered buses hit the overburdened roads. It lasts until well after dark. Often the queues can be unfathomable: a rainstorm, a breakdown or a public holiday can condemn a driver to hours in horn-honking hell. Tardy workers proffer one irrefutable excuse: “Traffic is bad”.

    As far as The Economist is concerned, the worsening of traffic gridlocks in Lagos and the attendant robbery of vehicles stuck in traffic in recent weeks can only be blamed on what it perceives as the weakness and incompetence of the new governor, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode’s administration compared to the higher efficiency and effectiveness of the preceding administration of Mr Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN). According to the magazine, “The state’s former governor, Babatunde Fashola, who left office in March, was lauded for improving traffic and security. He curbed dangerous motorbike taxis and brought local “area boys” (street children) under control. Cars were terrified into order by a state traffic agency, LASTMA, whose bribe-hungry officers flagged down offending drivers”.

    The Economist does grave damage to Mr Fashola’s hard earned respectable image and reputation by suggesting that the former governor and now federal minister encouraged or condoned the use of terror, intimidation and corrupt extortion by LASTMA to enforce traffic order and sanity in Lagos. If The Economist does not believe that Nigerians are inferior human beings no better than beasts, it would not have so brazenly sanctioned such barbaric and primitive methods to maintain traffic sanity and security in Lagos. Would The Economist magazine have written in such glowing endorsement of such brutishness by any public agency in the advanced western countries?

    Mr Ambode’s crime that makes his administration culpable for the traffic conundrum in the mega city with the attendant negative security spin offs, to The Economist, is his determination to curb the excesses of LASTMA and ensure more civilised and dignified methods of traffic control and management in the state. As the magazine puts it, “…Akinwumi Ambode, is full of excuses, but few solutions, for the worsening gridlock…Yet the root of the problem is in policy: Mr Ambode cut the powers of traffic controllers by banning them from impounding cars. In retaliation, officers have refused to enforce the rules”.

    The import of this strange piece of illogic on the part of The Economist is that Mr Ambode must helplessly allow LASTMA to continue on its path of corruption and impunity because, as the magazine puts it, “Reform in a culture riddled with corruption is never easy”. As I noted earlier, this kind of reasoning is grossly unfair to Mr Fashola who, incidentally, has just received an eminently deserved award by the International Crisis Group (ICG), a worldwide conflict prevention organisation, “for his commitment to resolving social, economic and security challenges in one of the world’s most challenging urban environments”.

    If disgruntled traffic officers are deliberately sabotaging Ambode’s operational reforms by compounding the state’s traffic woes for selfish pecuniary reasons, as The Economist insinuates, the solution cannot be for the governor to capitulate and allow the continued reign of arbitrariness and impunity. We must never as a people become mentally enslaved to the widely held and dangerously disempowering notion that we are inherently incapable of running our lives in accordance with the highest civilised standards. While no one can credibly deny the fact that Fashola built with passion, commitment and brilliance on the socio-economic and infrastructural foundation he inherited from his predecessor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the truth is also that the excesses of agencies like LASTMA alienated his administration from a broad cross section of the grassroots populace.

    This was evident in the surprisingly narrow margin with which the APC defeated the PDP in the last governorship election in Lagos State in spite of Fashola’s superlative performance. Of course, this column does not discount the influence on the polls of Dr Goodluck Jonathan’s divisive ethno-religious politics in Lagos as elsewhere and the impact of a PDP campaign awash with slush funds. However, no one can blame Ambode for wanting to quickly reconnect governance in the state to the grassroots by, for example, giving traffic enforcement a human face. As the governor’s riot act to Okada riders and commercial drivers this week demonstrates, he knows that he cannot afford to be perceived as being soft on law-enforcement.

    Even then, the fact that drivers and motor bike riders saw the governor’s desire for greater civility in law enforcement as an opportunity for a return to lawlessness shows that there is still a great deal of work to be done in the direction of positive and voluntary behavioural change in Lagos.  As Chinua Achebe said in his book, ‘The Trouble with Nigeria’, discipline is nothing if it is not, first and foremost, self-discipline. The Tinubu administration created outfits like the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA), Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI) to enforce environmental laws while re-organising and re-equipping the anti-crime squad inherited from Brigadier-General Marwa, ‘ Operation Sweep’ into the current ‘Rapid Response Squad’.

    Indeed, Tinubu’s government introduced such draconian measures as imposing a N50,000 fine on vehicles driving against traffic as well as requiring that offending drivers undergo psychiatric tests to determine their state of mental health. These measures attracted vehement denunciations from the political opposition and sections of the populace. Fashola stringently and rightly enforced the ban on okadas from major highways, strengthened LASTMA and initiated the Security Trust Fund, which significantly enhanced the capacity of the state to equip and motivate the police to fight crime in the state more effectively.

    Ambode has also, within a very short period taken steps to further strengthen all these law enforcement agencies even while striving to civilize and sanitise their methods. Yes, effective law enforcement is key and imperative. But equally critical is the need for Ambode and his communication team in particular to come up with creative strategies to help achieve positive, responsible, voluntary and thus sustainable behavioural change among a critical mass of the populace.

    The Economist magazine’s report also creates the impression that criminals have suddenly invaded the state in recent times due to the alleged weakness (whatever that means) of the Ambode administration. In truth, the problem is more complex than that. The Fashola administration has been rightly commended for its aggressive beautification of open spaces and clearance of slums in different parts of the state. Thus, while highly visible areas of the state like Oshodi, Apapa, Surulere, Ikeja, Ikoyi, Ikorodu road, Obalande, Lekki or Victoria Island among others were made aesthetically appealing to the sophisticated elite including foreigners and tourists, hundreds of poor, derelict, vagrant and vulnerable members of the populace were pushed deeper into the margins of society where, for all practical purposes, they became invisible.

    A number of them were from time to time deported from Lagos to their home states – a measure which did not stem the daily steady flow of a stream of desperate economic migrants into the state in search of economic succour. These marginalised elements only seized the opportunity of the transition from one administration to another to resurface and register their continued presence and pitiable plight in the country’s model mega city through crime. Of course, they must be vigorously checked but an enduring solution requires greater depth of thought.

    In his contribution to the magisterial book, ‘Mega-City Growth and the Future’, edited by a group of scholars, Yok-shiu F. Lee makes the pertinent point that “Despite the pressures created by rapid urban population growth, most third world governments have given relatively low priority during the last three decades to the provision of appropriate, affordable housing and infrastructure for their urban populations, particularly the poorer households. The result is that the majority of urban residents have no alternative but to live in self-built settlements or in dilapidated tenements”. And for many of those in this category, a life of crime is the only option for survival within the context of protracted economic crisis, chronic unemployment, pervasive poverty and criminal inequality.

    Not only must governor Ambode ensure that social justice and equity become the cornerstone of his socio-economic policies but the APC government now in control at the centre must bring an urgent end to the continued marginalisation and unjust treatment of Lagos in the political economy of Nigeria – a situation that makes it impossible for the state to live up to its responsibilities as the country’s economic and commercial capital.

  • Lagos is committed to community development, security – Ambode

    Lagos is committed to community development, security – Ambode

    Governor of Lagos state, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode has said that his government is committed to community development as well as intensifying community security as a way of strengthening the communities because growth and development starts at the community level.

    Ambode stated this in his address at the grand finale of this year community day celebration which held at the Police College parade ground at Ikeja Thursday.

    To achieve the stated objective, the Ambode said his government has initiated a bottom to top approach to governance by making the communities an integral part of decision making process. “It is our communities that must decide what they want from the government and bring it forward.

    “In keeping with our promise to intensify community security, we have donated to the Neighbourhood Watchers 48 patrol vans, 385 walkie talkies, 11 base and repeater stations, 1,150 uniforms, 570 handcuffs, 1,150 belts, berets and boots to equip them to keep our communities safe,” Ambode said.

    He also disclosed that his government is working at a higher level with the Nigeria police and other security agencies to ensure the state is safe and secure for residents and investors assuring that Lagos state government is “totally committed to the implementation of community policing with active involvement of our people.

    The governor further highlighted other efforts by the government to make life easier for the communities, these are: provision of 26 transport ambulances and 20 mobile intensive care units; 22 generators for General Hospitals; recruitment of 1,300 primary school teachers; 100 fire fighters; rehabilitation, repair and maintenance of over 268 inner township roads; blue light rail transportation; supply of transformers and electricity to 112 communities that were hitherto in darkness.

    “Each one of us has a role to play in the achievement of the future, today; therefore, we must all continue to contribute in various ways to the community. The communities exist to support its members. The community is our connection, identity and can only develop with our cooperation”, Ambode said.

    He charged the community people to involve themselves in the process of governance at the local council area level and to also engage their Ward chairmen and executives as well as Executive Secretary of local councils “because they represent your interests.

    “While you engage your representatives, remember your duties to be law abiding and responsible citizens. Join the crusade for zero tolerance for street trading and enforcement of environmental sanitation. If we do not buy, they would not sell in traffic. If they do not sell, criminals will not be able to mingle with them and make commuting a danger for members of the public,” Ambode said.

    He urged them to pay their taxes, keep the environment clean and obey the laws against smoking in public places, urinating in public and polluting the neighbourhood with needless noise. “Fellow Lagosians, let us work together to build strong, prosperous and committed communities that would be the bedrock of the development of Lagos state,” he said.

    The governor thanked the over 3,241 Community Development Associations in Lagos for their deep passion for service to humanity and their various self-help projects that have been initiated and implemented to complement government efforts in the local communities. “You have by these actions demonstrated your belief in the fact that development is a collective effort and cannot be left alone for government.”

    There was match past by all the community development associations from all the 57 local councils in the state, while prizes were also given to the CDAs who executed the best self-help projects. While the governor also presented 48 patrol vans to the Neighbourhood Watchers.

    Dignitaries present at the event includes; Hon. Jimi Benson, House of Reps member representing Ikorodu federal constituency; commissioner for local government and community affairs, Hon. Muslim Folami; SA on community and communication, Kehinde Bamigbetan; SSA on community affairs, Alhaji Tajudeen Quadri.

  • Council sensitises public on security

    Iru/Victoria Island Local Council Development Area (LCDA) Executive Secretary Muideen Daramola has called on residents to be vigilant.

    Daramola who made the call at a Pea,ce and Security Stakeholders’ meeting at the council, said residents must be conscious of activities around them because of the security situation.

    The council, he said had been doing a lot to keep members of the community abreast of security situations in the state.

    “In terms of awareness, what we are doing is one of the ways to curb the menace of insecurity. We have been to market places, motor parks to sensitise people and we have also told them not to allow strangers in their domains that will later constitute nuisance.

    Victoria Island is the heart of the nation, we make sure that every month we have security meetings to review security situations in the community,” he said.

    Victoria Island Divisional Police Officer (DPO) Olusegun Ajamolaye, a chief Superintendent (CSP), urged members of the community to report crime cases in their neighborhood to the police and other security agencies.

    Urging the citizens to be conscious of their security, Ajamolaye gave them the slogan “see something say something” as a way of passing information to the security agencies to track hoodlums.

    “We should be conscious of our security, we should see something and say something, we are not magicians you need to see something and say something, so as to help us improve security in the state,” he said.

     

  • Leadership, mischief and security

    I   write  with  mixed  feelings on the issues I want  to highlight today because they are quite serious  matters with some tinge of  rather   dark  humour. The  problem here is in seeing the humor early enough otherwise it may be difficult to know whether  to laugh or cry. It  is my  contention today that leaders in government and politics, lawyers in the temple  of justice, and  professionals in business and diplomats working in the comity of nations, have a great sense of humor in spite  of the tedious schedule of their various  unique callings in life. That  really is what I want to ponder over and ruminate about today.

    Let  me start with Israel where PM Benjamin Netanyahu  has just engaged a spokesman  Ran  Baratz who  in March wrote that US President  Barak  Obama was anti  semitic, that the US Secretary  of State, John  Kerry, the quintessential  diplomat has a mental age  of a boy  of twelve and that the current Israeli  president is such a nonentity that he could never be taken as hostage. That  is the first salvo. The  second  is  the walk out of the CCT  tribunal  by the lawyers of the Senate  president who accused  the tribunal of judicial  rascality for  continuing with  the case and  the admonition by the CCT prosecutor  to senators  who  attended the proceedings that the court is not the senate and you play  politics in the senate and not  in the law court. Which  throws  wide any discussion such as we are  about to have,  not only on the context of judicial rascality but the content of senatorial aggression and intrusion. The  third is the proposition by the opposition PDP to  remove fuel  subsidy which  APC Rep  Gbajamila said was speculative and false because the Vice President Yemi  Osinbajo  had just paid a huge sum to oil   marketers and  the President has never said he was removing fuel  subsidy. Which showed  clearly  that the  PDP was getting more catholic  than the Pope in running government down with fuel subsidy  rumour while pretending to be helping it out  by giving it a political hemlock that will make it hated  and unpopular.

    Fourthly  the air  disaster in the  Sinai desert in which a Russian plane  carrying 224  people was blown up with no survivor  had Egyptian  president Sissy travelling to meet British  PM David  Cameron at 10  Downing Street after  the British PM stopped  flights   to  UK from the Egyptian Airport,  Sharm  el – Sheik    where the ill fated Russian metro  jet  took off before exploding in the Sinai. The  UK  and  US  have pointed their suspicion on terrorism but  Russia has said that was speculative yet  Russia is the major victim of the disaster whose analysis would  now  be coated somewhat with the poor diplomatic relations between the US, UK, Russia  and Egypt  in the last one year or so,  and  I will  soon show why.

    Let  us now go back  to  Israel  where Netanyahu has  disassociated himself from the views expressed  by his hand picked spokesman whose  appointment he promised to review on his return from a trip to the US to  see US  President Barak  Obama. To  me that is just a ruse as the Israeli PM has  achieved his objective of embarrassing the US leadership over the appointment. Could Netanyahu not have known the excesses of his spokesman before appointing  him to such a sensitive position ?  Surely Israeli intelligence and screening for such jobs are more efficient  than that.  To  me Netanyahu‘s   spokesman  simply  said  his master’s  mind and the malice for the appointment, revelation and job review have  their  root  in the US –Iran  nuclear  deal which  the US president  spoke so  much  for and which  Netanyahu   railed  so  much  against,  as threatening  the  security  of  Israel. The  body  may be that of Esau  but  the voice is definitely  that  of Jacob. You  may  now cry or laugh.

    In  the case  of the walk out of the CCT tribunal by the Senate President’s  lawyers it  is amazing  that lawyers  can call a court proceeding’ judicial  rascality’ even in open court. The  tribunal chairman has roundly  condemned it as  rude and  there  is no better word. A Senior  Advocate of Nigeria reportedly said it was like defecating  in the lawyers common pool so I think something should be done to prevent collective legal and judicial diarrhea arising from such unhygienic verbal  gymnastics in our  chequered temples  of  justice all over the nation. Especially in this era when a new government has just been elected and is committed to fighting corruption, reducing poverty  and shoring up our collective security. In the courts, lawyers and judges are supposed  to cross swords on  arguments and weighty  points of law and crack  open the Gordian knots of the inner workings and riddles in the law  in such a way  to make justice affordable, swift and for  the improvement of the values  and traditions  of justice, transparency  and integrity  inherent in any democracy including  ours in Nigeria.  However it   was  comforting that the Senate president has opted to call new lawyers in case those who left him without saying why at the mercy of the CCT refuse   to come back. It  was also nice that senators were present although the prosecutor’s admonition  and warning that the court is not a place for politics was  very much in place and instructive for  our distinguished senators present   because   justice is blind and is no respecter of offices and positions as no one is above the law in our constitution .

    The  House of Assembly debate and proposal  to remove fuel subsidy by the PDP was a  clean ploy, not even a plan,  to make the ruling party fall on a positioned banana peel. Here was a party in power  for 16 years  during which it could not remove the fuel  subsidy asking a new government to commit   political  hara kiri. That was clearly  mischievous and was designed to embarrass  the new government. Luckily the new president has identified poverty alleviation and security as prime objectives.  Both removal of fuel subsidy and devaluation would affect these two government goals adversely as  fuel prices will rise and drive prices up  generally  and increase hunger and collective anger, leading to social unrest  culminating in massive insecurity. The  PDP  is definitely not a friend of this new government and that should be obvious from  the fuel subsidy  removal   proposal this week  in the House  of Representatives in Abuja.

    Fourthly the  murder in the skies of the Sinai desert has brought out the smoking gun of adversarial diplomacy between the four nations I mentioned earlier. This  can  be seen in the context of a security expert’s  views  on CNN this week  on the exploded Russian metrojet. He  said if the disaster was confirmed as terrorist it would be the first  time that terrorism  has succeeded  in the Aviation industry   after  9/11  and  that to me raises a lot of questions. First, why  such murderous success  so soon after Russia pitched its camp in Syria to fight ISIS?  Why now  on  Egyptian  soil when the Egyptian army is buying arms from the Russians after the US suspended the sale of sophisticated F16 planes to the Egyptian army  because it manouvred elections to put its Commander in power as an elected president.  Again it is an open secret that tourism is the mainstay , economically,  of Egypt after agriculture which makes Egypt the Gift  of the Nile,  why  should the UK PM quickly suspect and ban flights from the Egyptian Airport so decisively ?These  are questions begging for answers and  there is no denying that a lot of mischief , malevolent ones too,  are in the air snuffing the light out of clear , genial  diplomacy and creating bad blood and bloodier terrorism and   insecurity   not  only on the ground but also death in the clear  skies of the desert  not only in Sinai  but in  the   entire  Middle  East  or  Arabia as we know it today . One  should really pray  that personal  animosities in  global   high places do not derail the role of diplomacy  in bringing peace and harmony to  our world of today . Again , long live the  Federal  Republic of Nigeria .

  • Arrogance, power and security

    Leaders  of the two global  power blocs supervising the carnage and murder of innocent citizens in Syria, this week  held  a meeting in Vienna – the old but well  known   home  of  such cloudy  diplomacy for long- this time to determine the fate of Syrian  dictator Bashar  Assad whose  rule has led to  over  half  the population of Syria,  put at about 12m  fleeing or trying to leave the country for Europe. That  such  a meeting could be convened at all beats the imagination given the fact that there is no love lost amongst those who  gathered  in Vienna  for the meeting. It  is even an understatement to say that they are strange bed fellows  as  some  of them loath each  other  even  more  than the opposition in Syria hate their blood thirsty president, who  has refused to relinquish power because he believes  the weight of leadership of Syria can only be carried on his rather  peculiarly   narrow  shoulder and thick  neck. Which  really is not only pathetic  but a great pity indeed as his narrow will and perspective have  prevailed  and dominated his nation so  far,  at such great human cost and the destruction of the  security of his nation which is quite an ancient  country.

    Today  we shall consider the Vienna  talks on Syria  together  with  the result of  the referendum in Congo  Brazaville  which overwhelmingly  gave veteran President Sassou Nguesso the  needed  go  ahead  to contest  for a third term which  the constitution of his country expressly forbid. We  will  round  up with the news  that I have just seen  on  the internet that the Court of Appeal  has  dismissed  by a spilt decision the appeal  by the Nigerian  Senate President  Bukola  Saraki  against the Code  of Conduct  Tribunal – CCT – in which he questioned the jurisdiction of the tribunal to prosecute him  for false declaration  of assets.

    We  shall  look at these issues in the light of the topic of the day. The  import here is to show that when power, legitimate or not,  exceeds  its bounds  and limit, it overheats the socio economic and political environment because to sustain it will require additional political will and drive which  inevitably   affect the peace and sanctity of the  polity, as  legal  authority     recedes   or  is lost   in hubris  and arrogance. Ultimately collective security whether  local  or international  becomes a culprit that takes  flight in the face of the creation  of a violent and  insecure   environment similar to the Hobbesian theory  of ‘ might  is right’ and  where life is’ brutish and  short.’

    No nation illustrates that   vividly  in today’s world  more  than  Syria and  Iraq where Islamic  State –IS  has  taken more  territories  than in any other part or nation  of the Middle East just as  we  know  the participants in the Vienna Talks at  first  treated the issues involved with kid gloves.  Now that they are ready to tackle IS,  it  is as if they are reacting to close the stable after the horses, this  time horses of war, have simply vanished into   the thin air of  Arabia. This  is because those at  Vienna  have very  irreconcilable  differences within themselves and do not even agree on the status of Bashar Assad  the dictator  of Syria and the destroyer  of his nation and people.

    Just  listen to their plea on Bashar Assad. The  US  says  Assad cannot be part of the solution and should leave power although the US has no stomach  or will power so far to execute that fantasy. Russia says he cannot  go because that would create a power vacuum similar to the removal of Saddam Hussein in Iraq which destroyed the sovereignty, peace and stability  which Saddam  assured albeit as a ruthless dictator.  Saudi  Arabia wants Bashar Assad to leave at all costs while Iran, the sponsor of Hizbollah in Lebanon and traditional supporter of Assad  will have nothing to do with the Saudi wish. Indeed  Saudi Arabia will  have nothing to do with not only Assad  but also  Iran, as they are ancient enemies on the brand of Islam they practice stemming from the succession  of the Holy Prophet  ages ago. That the two nations are in Vienna is because the Russians and US are there to  keep them at arms length as there is no way they can back down on their take on  Assad, so boldly and eloquently spoken  and backed with violence so far before their journey to Vienna.  So  on that score nothing good can come out of Vienna over the removal of Assad  from power in Syria.

    That notion is further  buttressed by the acrimony  that has ensued between the US and Russia over  Syria, and the glaring fact  that the Russians  have established a military presence in Syria whose sole aim is to keep Assad in power.  So who is fooling who over the Vienna Talks on Syria? Not  many  analysts and people are deceived on the use of diplomacy to buy time on both sides but  Syrians are not deceived and that is why they  are fleeing their nations in droves, while  confirming the well  known truism that life has no duplicate, no  matter the manner and level  of diplomacy in Vienna.

    With regard  to the referendum giving President Dennis Sassou Nguesso the right to contest for a third  term one only needs  to state  facts  of  the  Congolese president’s  life to show that he has  no intention of dying out of power and I will explain. If  he rules for a third term he will be ruling for 21 years since he has ruled for two terms of 7 years  so far from 2002. Before  that he ruled from 1979  to  1992  when he was defeated in a presidential election.  There was a civil war in his nation before he won the first of the three 7 year terms in 2002. Nguesso  is over 70 and the constitution  has been shunted aside to allow  him to contest as the constitution had a two term limit and age limit of 70 on presidential candidates. Please  reach your conclusions on how  he will ever contemplate dying anywhere other than  in the Presidential Palace in Brazaville.

    Lastly  the  decision  of the Court  of Appeal  that the CCT has  the jurisdiction to try the senate president is a  boost to the rule  of law  in our nation. The  Senate President has said in the dock when his plea of guilty or not was sought that he was being tried because he was president of the senate. Now  the Court  of Appeal  has  ruled he could be tried and the CCT has such jurisdiction. This is a victory  for the rule of law in Nigeria even though  his lawyers  have vowed  to go to the Supreme  Court to contest the verdict of the lower court on the jurisdiction of the tribunal. That  too is a healthy legal  and  political development as nobody  is above the law according to our constitution,  which also states clearly that an accused is assumed innocent until proven otherwise in open  court. This  too is applicable  to our present Senate  President.

    We  wish the Senate President a nice  day in court at the Supreme Court as his lawyers have given  notice as this shows that our separation  of powers is not  only working  but working well. Nigerians are being shown that in our constitution the judiciary adjudicates in disputes  between the executive and the legislative but more specifically this time around between a former governor and the President of the senate from the ruling party  and  the state.  Definitely Nigerians are  watching  to see  that  justice is   not only  done but must be seen to have been done. Again  long live the Federal  Republic of Nigeria.

  • NSITF urges harmonised social security policies

    The Federal Government has been urged to harmonise and coordinate the social security programmes in ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs).

    The General Manager and Head of Social Security, Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF), Mr. Ismail Agaka, who spoke in Abuja on the challenges of implementing social security initiatives, explained that though the Federal Ministry of Labour and Productivity is charged with regulating implementation of social security, it has not been empowered to carry out the function.

    According to him, Nigeria does not have a structured social security system, hence, the need to urgently address it.

    “What Nigeria has are various social security programmes that are simultaneously implemented in at least nine MDAs. Therefore, the lack of synergy is really affecting the implementation of these programmes. Nigeria does not have a national policy on social security,” he said.

    Agaka noted that the last attempt at having a national social security policy was the Gowon Committee report. The committee, he said, submitted a report but several years after, there is no white paper published to enable legislation on the recommendations of the committee report. He, therefore, said there is an urgent need for a national social policy.

  • Bank gets security recertification

    Wema Bank Plc has completed Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCIDSS) recertification.  With this recertification and issuance of Certificate of Compliance (COC), the lender has been certified on Version 3.1 level of PCIDSS certification  and currently  seeking an ISO 20000/27001 (Information Security) Certification for its business operations.

    “This success was achieved with the support of our partner, Digital Encode – an Information Security, Governance, Risk and Compliance Firm,” the bank said.

    The bank’s Managing Director/CEO,  Segun Oloketuyi said the lender was fully committed to ensuring and maintaining delivery of quality information technology service to both external and internal customers.

    He added that the adoption of PCIDSS Version 3.1 was necessitated by the constantly evolving and changing sphere of information security, which has added new controls in line with the current landscape of payment systems threats and risks.

    He also said with this development, the Bank was already pushing towards achieving the next ISO certification in Information Security.

    The PCI requirements were developed by the PCI Security Standards Council, which includes the five major payment card issuers, MasterCard, Visa, American Express, Discover and JCB International, to help facilitate broad adoption of data security best practices worldwide.

    PCIDSS is a global security standard that helps in preventing card and data fraud by evaluating payment account data security and assessing an organisation’s network architecture, software design, security policies, procedures and protective practices.

    Recently, the Central Bank of Nigeria made it mandatory for all Banks  to comply with PCIDSS to improve card holder’s security and privacy in line with international standards.

  • Oyo: Tight security as tribunal set to deliver judgement

    Oyo: Tight security as tribunal set to deliver judgement

    There was heavy security mounted by thousands of armed to the teeth policemen, operatives of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Department of the State Security Service (DSS), including those on an Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) stationed at the High Court, Iyaganku, Ibadan and adjoining roads as the Governorship Election Petition Tribunal has began the delivery of its judgment at 10:06am

    Also Vehicular and pedestrians movements were fenced off the area while all residential buildings within 60 meters radius of the Isabo high court, the venue of the Tribunal sitting, were also taken over by armed security agents in bids to ensure adequate security around the Court.

    The governorship candidate of Accord, Sen. Rashidi Ladoja is challenging the election of Governor Abiola Ajimobi of All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Ladoja is challenging the April 11 governorship election in the state in a suit number EPT/IB/Gov/22/2015.

    The three-man panel to give the judgement is headed by Justice Muhammad Aliu Mayaki, with Justices Muhammad Karaye and J.E Ikede as members.

    The Oyo State Commissioner of Police, Leye Oyebade and the NSCDC commandant, led their men to the court.

    As at 7am, over 600 security operatives were stationed around the court premises to forestall law and order.

    Also, seven Hilux police trucks and two Armoured Personnel Carrier was used to block the main gate of the court.

    As at 9am, the security men have commenced strict accreditation exercise for the lawyers, journalist and political party chieftains trying to gain entrance into the court.

    Reacting on the heavy security presence, the Police boss, Oyebade said his men have being positioned at stratgic locations within the metropolis and Oyo State at large to ensure that there is peace before and after the tribunal judgement.

    “We must ensure peace and order and that is why we have stationed our men in strategic places in Ibadan. The people of the State should remain calm and ensure that the peace we have been enjoying is sustained and improved upon,” he said.

    Oyebade urged the people of the state to celebrate in moderation and should not breakdown law and order.