Tag: Suspect

  • Night Lagos govt officials were forced out of sleep over Ebola suspect

    Night Lagos govt officials were forced out of sleep over Ebola suspect

    How do you do your work of monitoring the various entrance and exit points into the country?

    My staff  send reports to me every minute. This is 3.16 pm the next flight will depart from Umaru Yar’Adua Airport. The report is from Katsina. Every one hour, I can tell you what is happening across the country. I get reports with the pictures.

    How are you able to do this?

    You see, I told all my staff that they have to be IT compliant. For example, when my staff told me that Abuja is going to start airlifting pilgrims, I told them that this year; no pilgrim shall leave Nigeria sick. So, before they open the camp, my staff will go and inspect the camp, certify it to make sure that it is swept, cleaned and from there, they will show me the picture of the toilet, I will see it here.( Holding up his phone) I will tell them that “your toilet is not clean. Go and make sure that the toilet is cleaned, open the taps, let me see the water rushing”. They will open it, I will see it. I will ask them to show me the water tank. ‘Show me the food that they are eating’ because we certify food also. Port Health staff educate the food handlers- check their finger nails, check the water those going on Hajj drink, the environment they sleep in, the toilets they sleep in, where there are mosquitoes, snakes, scorpions, we fumigate and kill them. The camp has been closed for one year, so, by the time we go and check  and fumigate it, the rats, scorpions will die and by the time we go and wash the place, we will see all of them and it is then that the pilgrims can enter. As they are going on hajj, we take their blood pressure, check them for diabetes and as they arrive at their destination, their diabetes and hypertension will be treated. If they are pregnant, we ground them because they cannot travel to Hajj with pregnancy. We have tests for pregnancy. They give lectures through which they train pilgrims on what sicknesses to expect, what to avoid,  take their blood pressure and advise them. Our pilgrims have never been better educated than what we did this year because we are afraid that there is a new epidemic in the Middle East and if it comes into Nigeria, we would be in trouble- that’s the Middle East Respiratory Virus, MERS. So, all our staff have it on their finger tips, including even a youth corps member. If he comes here, he must learn how to train travelers. If you wake them up from their sleep, they must know how to train travelers. We check the planes before they enter, check the cleanliness. We check the contraband items seized from travelers too. Port Health Service staff are struggling to send me reports all over every minute. They will show me the water facilities, what type of emergency toilet arrangements are there when the figure is high, I have more than 2000 pictures from around the country here (inside the phone) because they come in from around the country every hour. When aircrafts come, they have to go and fumigate it to make sure there is no mosquito inside the aircraft. We also check ships, land border, airport, border, sea ships when they arrive we check how they cook food inside. My staff take speed boats, go to the high seas to check the ships. As you sit here, I have received reports from airports, ground crossings and I couldn’t have arranged it. Let me see if I can see any report from ground crossing (checks the phone).  Yes, this is from Kaduna State, from Maiko border( ask journalist to read report) “Vehicles no, 12, passengers, 222, temperature above 37 degree, 0, good morning sir.” If there is anybody with temperature above 37, I will be informed immediately and we have a signal code- red code, yellow code, green code- you can see that we have the green code in most of these places, but by the time we have a temperature alert of over 37 degree, we switch to red alert, all of us are on alert, and they know I will not sleep until the alert is over. The Perm Sec himself does not sleep, even if it is 2 am, I wake him up that ‘Sir, there is a problem, we have so, so case.” Like last week, we had a case of somebody who came from Sierra Leone with high temperature, my coordinator in Lagos spent the night with her. She was a director, but she was reporting by the minute to me and I in turn was waking the Permanent Secretary. I said there is a problem and I am going to be waking you up to give you update. He said go ahead. When the day broke, I sent him a text to inform him that the  result was out and informed  him  the person had no Ebola and had been discharged.

    When did you begin to have these comprehensive operations?

    This year, the Ebola issue has woken us all up.  Things that we were a bit relaxed about before, we are now doing better. And one thing that this Permanent Secretary did which I always applaud is that in the midst of fighting Ebola, all of us were on what we called ’emergency mode’ but he was insisting that we must leave residual institution benefits after the emergency, and that is what has helped Port Health Service. Most of the investments made were not just transient investments, they are investments that we could fall back upon even when the epidemic is gone. And the staff morale is phenomenal. Whenever we have a threat, we have an emergency team made of well trained epidemiologists- there are three categories of them- many of them are doctors, veterinary doctors and the third group are laboratory staff who have excelled, and working in the field.  They have come back for their Masters degree. They are the foot soldiers that handle this data for us, they are very good at statistics. Some of them are doing their residency programmes while some are already consultants in other fields. If there is an emergency that will last 24 hours, I will activate another emergency mode. I will give you the example of the emergency group that I did when some Nigerians went to Liberia and came back, so we had to monitor them-before they left and after their return, for 21 days.  We created what we called an EVD response group and everybody that is concerned is added to the group. So, if I send a message, everybody concerned will react immediately and send their report and everybody is carried along until the matter is closed. We have successfully concluded the monitoring of the people from Liberia.  They are all healthy and this emergency group is closed, so everybody is disbanded. As soon as another threat arises, if it is solvable within 24 hours, we deal directly with the field office, if it is not, we reactivate an emergency team for it.

    What is your staff strength?

    Our staff strength is 607, but to cover our 180 posts, we need 1, 725 staff immediately.  That is the ideal, it is well calculated and nothing is left to chance here. We know the locations, we have done the distributions and we know where the staff need is high and we know how many shifts they run. And we know what an ideal shift should be like. So, we calculate that and know that we are short staffed by 1, 122 workers. It will even be better for us to have 2000, because of redundancies, you want to move people around or allow them to go on vacations.

    Are you making efforts to employ more people then?

    We have a presidential waiver to employ and the process is going on. What the former President approved then was 660- 330 for another department and 330 for us. But that is not enough.

    What are the categories of staff you want to employ?

    We employ several cadre- doctors in small number, nurses in larger number, but the bulk of staff that we need are environmental officers because they are the foot soldiers on the frontlines and they are the people officially certified by WHO to do certain functions- like certifying an aircraft, a ship. The environmental health officers can go into the ship, certify the ship, the crew, the environment, their food, everything and issue a valid document that can be used anywhere in the world. And that is why the most important staff we have in Port Health are the environmental health officers. Every other person follows. We are not presently in about 200 posts.

    But are all our borders covered?

    Now, when I hear people talking about the porosity of our borders, I understand their anxiety and I tell you, when you work in an environment, you get more intelligent and wiser by the day. And I will give you an example- when you come in through Kwara State which is one of our most important and difficult borders, people can come in through different routes, but ultimately, all the routes lead to a main road.  They must merge from the different tributaries and pass through that main road. But when you look at all the tributaries, you will think our borders are porous, but they are not. We have mobile teams that attend to them. Then, we have field teams that also block these major tributaries; we also have another large team that monitors the smaller routes. So, if they escape from one, they cannot escape from the other, and ultimately, we will pick them. That is what is happening in Chikanda. But the public will say Nigerian borders are porous, but we know what we are doing. That’s why we called them expansive borders.

    You said all these began this year?

    No, we have been doing it. But because the staff have been in the field, they’ve lost their sense of touch with headquarters because government is not providing them with what to work with, so many of them were relaxed. And that is one thing that has changed in the past one year- there is now improvement in logistics, up till late last year; the entire Nigeria Port Health Service had only three vehicles- one in Abuja which is not serviceable, one in Lagos  which is about seven years old. What we did during this Ebola thing fetched us 18 vehicles. Though, it is still a far cry from what we need, it is totally different from what we had before.

    How many of those cameras do you have?

    We have 12- two are in Abuja, two in Port Harcourt, two in Kano and six in Lagos. But Lagos requires minimum of 12, because I can put 24 in Lagos. But we have statistics to show that those six have made a difference in Lagos. We have reduced the volume of our volunteers  gradually from about 500 to about 300 and by the end of last month, to zero because of the cameras. You can calculate the payments the volunteers would have received, you can imagine the speed of passenger flow when they are being manually checked and the speed when they are going through a camera which they don’t even see- we only sit behind the camera and monitor and if we want, we can rewind it to see who has high temperature and if a staff is not doing well, we can detect it because we can see if a person with a very high temperature has passed through the system. But they are very vigilant because the records are kept. So, the cameras have helped to reduce cost, personnel. They have  brought orderliness, and  help to keep records which we can retrieve anytime making our accuracy to be improved. We are very careful with three words in Port Health- healthier, safer and easier. We combined the three words in our work. Whatever will be healthier, safer and safer for the travelers we take it. So, the Dangote cameras have really made the job easier for us, safer for us, safer for the traveler, healthier for the traveler and healthier for the country.

    How much does the camera cost?

    I don’t have an idea, but I know that even installing it, training, printing of the manuals, training on servicing, cost him a lot of money because he brought experts from Dubai to go round and train 20 people per camera. So, he trained 240 people and in our bid to create redundancies, we now make sure that virtually every staff that is in any airport has had an opportunity to train with the cameras. So, every staff of the Nigeria Port Health Service in the airport can handle those cameras.

    How do you monitor these things?

    It is very easy- the first thing you do is to automate your system to make sure that there is delegation. I can also let you know that we are monitoring every corpse that comes into the country. People don’t just wake up and bring corpses. No airline can bring a corpse here until we certify it and there are corpses we have denied, including those of VIPs.  There was a VIP that died somewhere and we said I cannot sign that death certificate, the Perm Sec kept receiving calls and I went to him and said, ‘sir, this is what is happening,’ he said ‘Dr. Gwarzo, go and do what is right’. That man was not buried in the country. He was buried where he died because bringing him in would have opened us up to further challenges. He didn’t have Ebola, he didn’t have a health problem, but bringing that corpse back would have broken our fundamental policy and I told the Perm Sec that ‘if we do this, we are going to derail our policy that has saved us. You can give an administrative approval, but it is not good’. He said we don’t need to do that. Let’s do the right thing. He has empowered us, so we did the right thing. And I can tell you, any corpse that gets our certificates is genuine based on scientific evidence because there are documents we look for before we give it. Also, to reduce our workload, I have automated that system. I sat down with the staff and drafted a policy- who handles this level of approval? If it is this, this, don’t look for me, go and type the certificate, I will sign it. My staff who is a level 7 officer can call you and say, if you apply, this thing is going to be denied because he has not seen one, two, three documents and when they call me, I will say he is right, listen to him. And we have support from various agencies- ICPC has done us tremendous help. My own signature and that of my key staff are all over the world and instead of doing the right thing, some people will go and fake it. Somebody came in here with a fake certificate, he wanted me to endorse further. I called ICPC, they came here and picked him up. He is in jail now because if we don’t do that, we are going to open up this country to danger. Every death certificate that we signed is genuine, it is not hazardous to Nigeria. We handled about 35 different certificates on different issues- food handling, fitness to travel etc.

    How are you handling all these, especially in the past three months when there is no budget?

    Some of the activities we do are funded by government directly, for example, yellow card. Government produced the first batch, but now, the programme is funding itself because we charge money for the yellow card which goes back to the central account. Then, as we issue certificates, we also issue receipts from government treasury and the money paid go directly into the Ministry of Finance, but we keep the records and now go and tally at the end of the quarter or at the end of the year as the IGR collected by the ministry. But one unfortunate thing is that none of our airports, seaports or land crossings has been gazzeted as internationally accepted POE- Point of Entry or Point of Exit because there is an accreditation that takes place and you are now certified as designation. Then you can issue certificates that are even more recognized and can charge money. So, we are losing that money because we are not certified.

    What does it take to get that certification?

    A lot- some structural changes in the airports- how people come in, where they sit, where they are screened and the services you provide and also, the way you work with the other agencies, ICAO and all the agencies even the one dealing with shipping lines. So, when you have everything in place, you invite the WHO to come and certify you, but we are not qualified and we are losing a lot of revenue.

    Is there any move to do that?

    Yes! We have gone through almost stage two now because it is lengthy process. We have started and that is what is contained in the document of our reform process.

    What are the major challenges that you are facing?

    First of all, most of our policies are old. The Port Health Service was established in 1925, but the latest review of our laws was in 1968, then Nigeria is behind schedule in implementing the WHO/AITA 2005 regulations and that is why we cannot charge money. Nigeria is yet to designate point of entry in line with IATA. We’ve been given seven years now to do it. It involves a lot of changes- you have to work with FAAN, the Nigeria Port Authority, shipping lines to change certain structural issues.

  • Arik crew arrest: NDLEA impounds two more vehicles, invites brother of main suspect

    Arik crew arrest: NDLEA impounds two more vehicles, invites brother of main suspect

    •Gets CCTV footage of main accomplice

    The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has obtained closed-circuit television (CCTV) footage of how Arik Air staff, Ikechukwu Chibuzor Oliver who works as a catering loader smuggled three bags of cocaine among food supplies for flight W3101.

    The Agency also invited the younger brother of the main suspect, Chika Egwu Udensi for questioning.

    Udensi, 32, was invited in connection with alleged complicity in the ongoing investigation of 20kg of cocaine seized by the United Kingdom Border Force at Heathrow Airport.

    The vehicles seized from Udensi include a Land Rover, an Equinox Chevrolet and a Dodge Hemi Magnum.

    Narcotic investigators are still working on evidences so far gathered on the case. The management of Arik Air is giving necessary assistance to the Agency.

    Meanwhile the Chairman/Chief Executive of the NDLEA, Ahmadu Giade who expressed satisfaction with the success of investigation, directed investigators to further widen their search for more collaborators.

    “I am impressed with the success recorded in the ongoing investigation. The swift arrest of the main accomplice reflects our determination to speedily bring to justice all parties to the crime. Let me reassure Nigerians and the international community that those behind this crime have no hiding place” Giade stated.

    Further investigation has shown that Mr. Chika the main suspect lives ostentatious lifestyle far beyond his salary. He is also believed to be involved in laundering illicit proceeds of drugs under the cover of automobile importation.

    The operational tasking order issued by NDLEA Chairman to its operatives to look inwards into the activities of the Agency and other airport workers is an immediate measure to avert acts of compromise calculated to undermine airport security.

  • I can’t die of hunger says, suspect

    I can’t die of hunger says, suspect

    A 72-year-old fisherman, Michael Dansu, yesterday said he took to pipeline vandalism because he can’t die of hunger.

    The Lagos State-born suspect was paraded yesterday alongside 12 others in Ikeja by the Lagos State Command of the Nigeria Security Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC).

    Dansu said: “I have two wives, five children and 19 grand children. For a while now, I have not been able to fish because of the season and when member of my family were almost starving and I can’t die of hunger. So, I took the offer from my friend, Kwame. I was given N15,000 by one Nicholas Ajalesan, who owns the petrol. It was when we were about to take off from the high sea, we were arrested. We were sent. It is not what we do for a living.”

    Another suspect, Yusuf Arowolo, a driver, said he was promised N2000 after the trip.

    He said: “I was caught with 10 drums of diesel in Ojo. I have been idle for a while now since Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) officials seized my bus for passing Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) lane.

    “At times my friends gave me a bus to work for half day. It was my first time. I was sent. I didn’t know it was illegal. I needed something to eat. I have been gathering money for my wedding. Please I was sent.”

    Tola Kwame, a Ghanaian, said he took the job because he had nothing to eat.

    “I am married with two children. I was told about the job by one Nicholas Ajalesan who resides in Badagry. I gathered six people who are also fishermen because we have been starving lately. I was given N20,000 being the captain while others were given N15,000 each. This is my first time. If not because the fish season is dry, we won’t be here,” he said.

    NSCDC Commandant Gabriel Abafi said seven out of the suspects were arrested last Friday in Badagry, Lagos, with 706 Kegs of 25-litre of fuel.

    According to him, the suspects attempted to move the products to neighbouring countries before they were held.

    Abafi said: “On August 5, officials of the Nigerian Navy Ship Beecroft (NNS Beecroft) handed over five suspected petroleum vandals to our command. They were said to have been on their way to Benin Republic with 81 drums of 250-litre petrol around 12.15am.”

    Abafi enjoined people to look for legitimate jobs.

  • Why I beheaded my neighbour, by suspect

    A suspect, who allegedly killed a farmer and cut off his head, has confessed that he wanted to use it for rituals.

    Raphael Agazi, after allegedly killing his neighbour, cut off his head and buried his body in a shallow grave at Utonkon in Ado Local Government Area of Benue State, on Monday.

    The Nation investigation showed that the two farmers had been quarrelling over a parcel of land.

    Agazi was arrested while attempting to escape with the victim’s head and handed over to the police in Otukpo.

    He confessed during interrogation that they were fighting over a land.

    The suspect said a fight ensued between them on Monday morning and he cut off his head.

    Asked what he wanted to do with the victim’s head, he said he intended to use it for rituals.

    Police authorities said the suspect would soon be arraigned.

  • Counsel’s absence stalls arraignment of suspect

    Counsel’s absence stalls arraignment of suspect

    The absence of a defence counsel yesterday stalled the arraignment of  Seun Oladapo, the suspected killer of a Lagos community leader, Kunle Fadipe.

    At a Lagos High Court in Ikeja, the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP), Mrs Idowu Alakija, told the court that they were ready to begin trial.

    However, there was no counsel to defend the suspect.

    When Justice Oluwatoyin Ipaye questioned the defendant , Oladapo told the court that he had no counsel as he did not know he was going to appear in court.

    “I will call my family. I did not know I was coming to court,” he said.

    Justice Ipaye ordered the DPP to send his case file to the Office of Public Defendant (OPD) and notify it of the adjourned date.

    She ordered the defendant to make arrangement for a lawyer as the court cannot wait endlessly for him.

    “Because of the nature of the charge against you, the court cannot wait till eternity.

    “You should make arrangement for a lawyer but if you cannot afford one, you can get one from the Office of Public Defender,” the judge directed.

    Justice Ipaye ordered the Office of the DPP to forward a letter to the OPD so that a counsel could be made available before the next adjourned date.

    The DPP is also to furnish the OPD with the advice from the directorate and proof of evidence to enable it prepare its defence.

    Justice Ipaye adjourned the matter till July 22.

    Fadipe was stabbed to death on July 3, last year, at his house in Harmony Estate, Ifako Ijaiye.

    It was gathered that at 11:30 pm, the victim sent his son to switch on the electricity generating set.

    As the boy came out of the house, an assailant ordered him to take him to his father.

    It was alleged that as soon as the suspect got to Fadipe, he stabbed him in the neck and back.

    Fadipe’s mother-in-law, daughter and son were also allegedly stabbed before his daughter ran out of the house, shouting for help.

    The suspect was overpowered and shot in the leg.

    He was first arraigned at a Yaba Magistrate’s Court before the matter was transferred to the State High Court, Ikeja.

  • Police arrest man with fake Euros

    Police arrest man with fake Euros

    The Airport Police Command has arrested a 45 year old Mr. Lawrence Agbe for allegedly being in possession of Euros 1,250,000 about (N274 million) suspected to be fake.

    The Commissioner of Police Airport Police Command, Mr Fredrick Lakanu, who   disclosed this Monday, explained that Agbe was arrested while boarding a flight at the international wing of the Murtala Muhammed Airport (MMA), Lagos enroute Abuja.

    Lakanu further explained that in the course of Police investigation, a search warrant was executed by a team of detective from the Domestic Airport Division to search the suspect’s printing press in Agege, Lagos, where over 2,000 Police statement forms were recovered.

    The CP added that on further interrogation, the suspect mentioned one Steve residing in Abuja now at large as the owner of the said 1,250,000 Euro.

    Meanwhile, the Commissioner also disclosed that the Command has impounded over 30 motorcycles popularly known as Okada and about 35 airport touts at various parts of the airport.

    He stated that those arrested had been charged to court for unlawful entry, touting and other similar offences.

    Lakanu appealed to members of the public for cooperation to checkmate the activities of undesirable elements at airports across the country.

    Also speaking, the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Assistant Superintendent of Police, Livinus Chukwuma, solicited the cooperation of the media towards ridding airports of touts and commercial motorcycle operators also known as Okada from the airport.

    The media, he stated has very important role to play in tackling the menace of touts, Okada riders and other illegal activities airports.

  • Court discharges murder suspect for ‘showing remorse’

    An Ijede Magistrate’s Court near Ikorodu, Lagos yesterday discharged a man, Kazeem Ajiga, who allegedly lynched another man for stealing his aluminium roofing sheets.

    Ajiga was arraigned for taking laws into his hands by executing jungle justice on a suspect, Raheem Omoyele, whom he accused of stealing his property.

    Omoyele was on Monday brought before Magistrate Jumoke Olagbegi-Adelabu on a charge of stealing 25 aluminium roofing sheets belonging to Ajiga.

    Olagbegi-Adelabu ruled :“Since Ajiga has shown remorse, caution and did not waste this court’s time by pleading guilty, I hereby discharge him and strike out the case.

    “I ordered the arrest and subsequent arraignment of Ajiga and his accomplices still at large for almost blinding a suspect they arrested and for obstructing the police from doing their job.

    “This court is not against citizens arresting criminals in support of the course of justice, but will not tolerate the use of excessive force, beating up and violence on them.

    “Many Nigerians have been killed in such acts which clearly is anti-social, barbaric and against human rights and contrary to being sane in this 21st century.

    “No sane mind should justify transferred aggression on an apprehended petty thief because of a perceived loss or theft.

    “This message I hope will sink into the minds of the Oke-Eletu people and Nigerians that jungle justice, lynching and harm to arrested suspects by them is criminal and unacceptable by law.”

    Earlier, Prosecuting Sergeant Friday Ekunday had apologised on behalf of the accused, Ajiga, on the grounds that he did not know the implications of his action.

    “He was the complainant in the case that led to this charge against him and acted out of ignorance for not knowing that a crime was being committed by beating up the person who stole from him.

    “Ajiga has leant his lesson after sleeping at the police cell for the night, and I beg this court to temper justice with mercy,” he said.

    He said the accused violated Section 166(d) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011 when he committed the offence on June 26 at Oke-Eletu area of Ikorodu.

    Before the ruling, the accused had pleaded guilty to the charge of breaching public peace by executing jungle justice on Omoyele.

    In an interview with NAN, a lawyer, Mr Victor Nwadike, attributed the lynching of criminals to ignorance and the high rate of illiteracy in the country.

    “‘Mob action and jungle justice are a reflection of the level of education that Nigerians have about basic issues of their rights and about what is legal and permissible.

    “The need for more enlightenment cannot be understated and for an overhaul of our educational system, its philosophy and its approach to transform the people.

    “Even many so-called educated people cannot understand simple legal documents, many cannot interpret our constitution and cannot explain a contractual agreement.

    “Our backwardness even in the administration of justice is largely because of the pervasive ignorance and illiteracy in this nation.

    “We need to ensure every person gets educated up to secondary school and review our curricula at all levels to imbue critical thinking as an essential ingredient of our education system,” he said.

    Nwadike urged government at all levels to step up their enlightenment programmes on such issues.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • No insurgency suspect sent to Anambra, says Ogene

    A former member of the House of Representatives, Victor Afam Ogene, has urged Anambra State residents, especially traders, to discountenance the rumours of the transfer of Boko Haram convicts to the state.

    The former lawmaker urged them to reopen their markets and businesses, which were shut at the weekend, following the apprehensions the rumour caused among the residents.

    Ogene, who represented Ogbaru Federal Constituency of the state, was the House spokesperson.

    He noted that although the prisons were under the Federal Government, it was inconceivable that persons awaiting trial for insurgency would be transferred to states outside the jurisdiction where they are being tried.

    In a statement yesterday in Abuja, Ogene said: “So far, I don’t think there are more than five convictions for Boko Haram offences in Nigeria. Indeed, the bulk of those in custody for insurgency are awaiting trial inmates, who are routinely brought to court near their places of remand – certainly not anywhere near the Southeast.”

    The former lawmaker recalled that, following last Saturday’s protest, he contacted some officials at the Presidency and was assured that nothing of the sort was being contemplated.

    He said there was a political motive behind the rumours.

    Ogene wondered why the Anambra State Government was silent for over 24 hours, when the state’s economy and life in its commercial cities were grounded.

    He queried: “Could there be a correlation between Governor Obiano’s recent boast that he would not allow the All Progressives Congress (APC) to gain a foothold in Anambra State and the recent protests to malign the APC-led Federal Government?”

    Ogene reminded Obiano that electioneering was over, adding that the governor should not covertly or overtly pitch the people of Anambra State and the Southeast against the APC administration of President Muhammadu Buhari.

  • N12billion bank fraud: court orders quarantine of suspect

    N12billion bank fraud: court orders quarantine of suspect

    •Accused persons to remain in prison throughout trial

    Justice Ayo Emmanuel of the Federal High Court sitting in Ibadan yesterday ordered Nigeria Prisons officials to quarantine Mr. Salami Ibrahim, one of the accused persons in the alleged N8billion mutilated currency fraud.

    The judge also ordered that the accused persons should remain in the prison custody throughout the trial.

    The accused, Salami Ibrahim, had through an application sought for freedom based on health grounds.

    Ibrahim of Sterling Bank, according Justice Emmanuel, did not disclose the nature of his illness in the affidavit before the court.

    In his ruling on a bail application for the accused persons, Justice Emmanuel, who refused bail for all the accused persons, also ordered that a health certificate must be produced after medical examination by prison officials and a federal hospital on Ibrahim.

    Justice Emmanuel said: “I have considered the evidence before the court; the offences are mind-boggling and weighty. I have not been persuaded by the submission before me to think otherwise. Evidence before me point to a new wave of economic crime. I must state that the court does not have the power to detain an accused person beyond constitutional limit. The discretion to grant bail resides with the court but such discretion must also be judiciously applied.

    “The alleged crimes have adverse effect on the economy of the nation and the offence carries a maximum of 21 years in prison. It is a capital offence against the economy of this country. It is a common knowledge that the first, second and third accused are answering other criminal charges in suits before me.

    “In view of evidence before me, I have not been persuaded or convinced by the sworn affidavits tendered by the accused persons that if granted bail, they will not interfere with court processes.  In concluding, the accused persons have not persuaded me to exercise my discretion to admit them to bail. The bail application is hereby dismissed and I grant the order of accelerated hearing. This court will not tolerate frivolous applications.”

    The accused persons are Kolawole Babalola, Olaniran Adeola Muniru, Toogun Kayode Phillips, Ibrahim and Oddiah Emmanuel.

    Others are Patience Okoro Eye, Afolabi Olufemi Johnson, Ilori Adekunle Sunday, Kolawole Babalola, Olaniran Muniru Adeola, and Fatai Adedokun Yusuf.

    Also facing trial are Kolawole Babalola, Olaniran Muniru Adeola, Toogun Kayode Phillips and Tope Akintade.

    The accused are facing a 31-count charge ranging from conspiracy, abuse of office, stealing to false declaration of actual amount and concealing of property.

    Seven cases are filed on the fraud totaling N12 billion.

    Responding to the ruling yesterday, EFCC counsel Adeola Aborisade said: “The ruling is not different from every other ruling on bail application. Bail application is at the discretion of the court and the court has exercised its discretion not to admit them to bail because the court said that the accused persons have not convinced the court based on the affidavit before the court that they were entitled to bail and the court in looking at the proof of evidence before the court that the evidence against the accused persons are so weighty that if they were granted bail, they may not be able to stand their trial. Well, we are the ones that suggested accelerated hearing instead of bail; once we were able to prove our case or they were able to defend their case, if the court finds them guilty fine, if the court finds them otherwise, they will go their houses.

    “So, accelerated hearing is in the interest of the accused persons so that them will know the case before them on time and dispose them one way or the other. It is the constitutional right of the accused, if you are dissatisfied with the ruling of any High Court, you have the choice to either go to the Court of Appeal or take the ruling as it were. So, if they decide to go on appeal, that won’t in anyway hinder the hearing of the case since the case will be going on here. Since the case is substantive, the bail application is just integral part of it to secure their freedom nothing more.”

    Also, counsel to Phillips, Mr Olalekan Ojo, said: “The ruling certainly was against our expectation, but we have always known that any ruling or judgment could go either way, either in your favour or against you. So, to that extent, I will say I am not surprised. But I am only worried because there is no justification why there should be no parity of treatment as far as this application is concerned. Like you know, several ex-governors have been charged with one economic crime or the other, several bank chiefs, you remember that they were charged to court after the crash in the bank industry during the era of former CBN Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, these were also alleged offences against the economy of Nigeria. But I stand to be corrected sir, that none of them was denied bail.

    “I remember one of the dictum of Justice Oputa of blessed memory, that there should be no different scale of justice for the wealthy and another for the not too wealthy, or those who are lower in the hierarchy. If ex- governors, ex-bank chiefs are granted bail, I am at a loss why it should not be so for those who are just managers and security guards.  But nevertheless, it is an exercise of discretion. Well, the clients have immediately informed us to appeal the ruling and we shall do that. You know we tried our best possible to let the Lordship know that it is dangerous at this stage to go into the substantive issue ,there are pronouncements made in the ruling in the bail application which touch on the substantive issues at the trial to the detriment of the defendants; that is why we are worried.

    “Indeed, as far as we are concerned, some of the accused persons even said it’s like this court has found us guilty already. That is what they said. In fact, one of them said, when the judge said having regard to the pulse of the nation, he asked: ‘how did the lordship know the pulse of the nation? He also asked: did he go to Oje market or some other markets to find the pulse of the nation? But nevertheless, we are worried.”

    Relatives, families, and friends of the accused were hoping that the court would grant them bail. When it became known that the court refused them bail, many of them broke down in tears, weeping profusely. Lawyers were seen consoling and reassuring them that hope was not lost.

    The case was adjourned to July 6 and 7 for accelerated hearing.

  • I was on my way to kill, says suspect

     A 31-year-old electrician, Sunny Owen, who was arrested for alleged armed robbery, has said he was on his way to commit murder when the police arrested him.

    Owen was arrested with his “accomplice”, Salli Momodu, for alleged robbery.

    The police said a gun and the car they allegedly snatched for the mission were recovered from them.

    Owen spoke with reporters when he was paraded with Momodu at the police command headquarters in Benin, the Edo State capital.

    They were said to have pretended to be passengers when they boarded a cab at 7pm.

    The allegedly hijacked the vehicle at gunpoint from the driver near Santana Market on Sapele Road in Benin.

    Although the suspects were paraded for alleged robbery, Owen said: “I do not rob; I am a cultist! We are members of Eiye (Confraternity). We wanted to go and kill one Aye member. We blocked the man (driver). I told him that he should come down, that we wanted to use his car to go and kill somebody.”

    Momodu admitted to being a member of Eiye Confraternity and Owen’s friend.

    But he denied involvement in the operation.

    Among the exhibits the police showed reporters were one cut-to-size single barrel gun and live cartridges.

    Police spokesman Stephen Onwonchein, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP), said the arrest reaffirmed the command’s resolve to make Edo hot for criminals and their collaborators.

    Onwochei urged criminals to leave the state or be prepared to face the law.