Tag: The Nation newspaper

  • Parties beyond the 2019 poll

    Now that outcomes in about all outstanding constituencies under the 2019 general election cycle have been electorally – take note: not judicially – decided, attention must turn to life beyond the poll.

    While awaiting the final reports of the many international and domestic observers of those recent elections, and, of course, the upshots of associated litigations, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has served notice that it is already looking ahead to off-season governorship poll in Kogi and Bayelsa states. The public’s expectation is that the electoral body will mine lessons from practical circumstances of the just-concluded poll to improve its processes for future elections. But that is concerning INEC. For Nigeria’s legion of political parties, it seems just the perfect time to head back to the smithery and rework their brand if there’s one, or freshly forge one if there’s none. The whole idea is to prospect for better relevance in the scheme of things.

    Before the electoral commission called a halt to registering political parties ahead of the 2019 general election, it had a haul of 91 of them on its roll, out of which 73 parties put in appearance for the February 23rd presidential poll. For most part, that appearance was tokenistic, because the election was in actual terms a two-horse race between the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Considerably fewer numbers of political parties pitched in respectively for the other elections into the national assembly, governorships and state houses of assembly. Still, the 2019 poll featured a grossly crowded field of contending parties compared with the 2015 general election for which only 30 parties were on INEC’s register, out of which 14 parties stepped up to the plate for that year’s presidential poll.

    Now that the 2019 general election is behind, the statute of time limitation on INEC to register more parties has lapsed. And you need no special skills to forecast that new associations will soon begin to file applications to get on the electoral roll. With the minimalist criteria prescribed in our laws, the commission can’t help enlisting most fresh applicants; and that means the number of registered parties in Nigeria will yet swell beyond the present level that many would argue is already bloated. The catch here is: other than the few political parties with some stake in power at different constituency levels, nothing typically gets heard from the fringe parties until the next election cycle when they – some, certainly not all – barely manage to rouse and put in nominal appearance on the ballot for select constituency elections.

    Under Nigerian electoral law, there is virtually nothing stopping any party getting on the ballot for any election. But then, the electoral commission has never shied from making clear the challenges that huge numbers of fringe parties pose for its logistics and other processes in the context of elections – among them, its statutory mandate to monitor the parties’ primaries before the poll, and the time it would take after voting to return winners through the forest of also-rans. The immediate past leadership of INEC under Professor Attahiru Jega attempted resolving those challenges by applying the provisions of Section 78(7) of the Electoral Act 2010 (as Amended) in deregistering some dormant political parties. Only it was overruled by the courts, which held the said Electoral Act provisions inconsistent with freedoms guaranteed by our country’s Constitution. By the way, it curious (isn’t it?) that those provisions yet remain in the Electoral Act as of today.

    But having a crowd of political parties on the electoral roll is not by itself the problem. Many of the world’s pluralist democracies parade bloated registers of political parties that do not, for that very reason, hobble their electoral system. A recent publication by the Election Commission of India, the world’s largest democracy, which kicked off its marathon (six-week-long) election just last Thursday, showed that the country had 1,841 registered parties. But those parties were restricted to jurisdictions and couldn’t play beyond their respective sphere. Of the whole number, there were seven as national parties, 51 as state parties, and 1,785 ‘unrecognised’ parties – so designated because they did not enjoy the privileges attached to ‘recognition’ by the electoral commission such as a reserved party symbol, free broadcast time on state-run media, being consulted in the setting of election dates, and making input to electoral rules and regulations. Meanwhile, the electoral body periodically reviews the parties’ respective status based objective criteria.

    In the United States, the country whose model we have adopted in Nigeria, the historical duopoly of the Democrats and Republicans has not shut out other players. Although those two parties exclusively alternate power and share the seats in Congress, there are at least three minor parties at the national level namely the Libertarian Party, the Green Party and the Constitution Party. That is not mentioning scores of other parties at the state and regional levels. But here’s the catch: whereas the fringe parties do not hold any seat in Congress, their existence is sufficiently justified by their active preoccupation with self-assigned social and ideological agenda. For instance, the Libertarians advocate non-interventionist foreign policy and civil liberties; the Greens are left-wing environmentalists who promote social democracy and respect for diversity, peace and non-violence; while the Constitutionalists canvass American nationalism, greater attention to the U.S. Constitution, and conservative ethics of Christianity such as opposition to abortion.

    Besides, U.S. parties all have strict jurisdictional fields of play. But the places to really find political parties for whom political power isn’t the major objective are the states and communalities. Yes, you read that right: the operational relevance of most parties, by design, is restricted to the states and provinces. Other than Independents, allowed by the country’s Constitution, minor parties include the United States Marijuana Party, which obviously is keen on marijuana legalisation; the New Black Panther Party, which promotes Black Nationalism; the United States Pacifist Party, concerned with pacifism; and the United States Pirate Party that is focused on Pirate politics. Among a throng of others, regional parties include the Natural Law Party in Michigan; New York State Right to Life Party, Rent Is Too Damn High Party, and Women’s Equality Party – all in New York; and then, Ecology Democracy Party and Grassroots-Legalize Cannabis Party – both in Minnesota.

    Even in United Kingdom where the Liberal Democrats pose a third force to the parliamentary duopoly of the Conservative and Labour parties, there are other major parties that contest within specific regions – say, in Ireland and Scotland. And those are national parties. Several local parties contest only within a specific area, a single county, borough or district.

    The point here is that even though Nigerian electoral law, as we already observed, does not prescribe jurisdictional limits for political parties, the parties could by themselves consolidate their base jurisdictionally ahead of the 2023 general election. One ready way of doing that, perhaps, is by gunning for a stake in respective local government elections.

    And that is for parties keen only on political power. Nigerian parties should begin to commit to social and community causes, on which basis they could connect with the public and drive for membership that would evolve to become their regular support base. That should be a foundation on which to subsequently build the quest for political power.

    But to really tidy up the clogged electoral system in this country, INEC must itself pursue evolving regulations for ballot access by political parties, or, at least, status regulation of the parties as is the case in India.

     

    • Please join me on kayodeidowu.blogspot.be for conversation.
  • Abe: my 2019 governorship ambition has ended

    Senator Magnus Abe (Rivers South East) has said his 2019 governorship ambition in Rivers State has ended.

    The declaration followed last week’s Supreme Court judgment on the governorship candidacy of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Abe, who noted that court pronouncement has killed factions in the party, called on members to unite to move the party forward.

    The senator, who spoke yesterday at a stakeholders meeting in Port Harcourt, noted that by the development, the APC’s dreams for elective political positions in 2019 has been laid to rest.

    He, however, restated his determination to rebuild the party, and called on members to join hands together to achieve the dream.

    Abe said: “With last week’s pronouncement on our candidacy matter, I have ended my ambition for 2019 here in Rivers. This time again, the court upheld the Rivers State High Court judgment of Justice Chiwendu Wogu, which authenticates the leadership of Peter Odike as the current APC state chairman.

    “We have come to fight for representation in government; every human being should be treated with respect. We have sacrificed so much; we may not be holding anything now but because of what we have done, politics will be better in our country.

    “We need to be realistic so that we can move forward. The dream that we have in the state is laid to rest, because of the pronouncement of the Supreme Court of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in our suit before it.

    “We know that the Supreme Court is infallible. Its pronouncement ended our agitation. But God knows the reason, He who knows what we do not know.”

    Senator Abe also advised the National leadership of APC to stop inciting problems that will keep dividing the party.

    “The party’s national leadership should stop doing things that will put the party and state in chaos. It should instead recognise the leadership of Odike at the state level.”

  • Zamfara banditry et al

    Two closely related events last week, brought to the public domain the inherent complications in the insecurity that had reduced Zamfara State to a verity of the state of nature in the last couple of years.

    Before these developments, the real texture and character of the security challenge in that state had remained largely cloudy even as thousands of lives were lost and properties of inestimable value destroyed. Initially, we heard of cattle rustling as the main challenge.  But later, kidnapping for ransom crept in.

    This was followed in quick sequence by the more devastating phase of armed banditry that manifested in constant attacks and burning down of markets and villages for reasons that remained largely inexplicable. These combined to cast an air of confusion on the background; character and motivation of those who constantly levy unmitigated violence on that state.

    It was thus not surprising that the apparent inability of our security agencies to decode and understand the real nature and dimension of the insecurity in that state had largely accounted for its degeneration. That is perhaps why the criminality has festered with our security agencies unable to figure out effective therapeutic responses.

    When therefore, the acting Inspector General of Police, Mohammad Adamu announced the banning of all mining activities in that state as one of the measures to curb the rising spate of armed banditry, insurgency and general insecurity which had reached a boiling point in the gold-rich hinterlands of the state, many were pleasantly surprised.

    For the police chief, the measure was to “bring an end to the wave of bandits’ attacks and kidnappings as the miners are accessories to the crimes and to cut off the collaboration between the miners, the bandits and the kidnappers”.

    Minister of Defence Mansur Dan-Ali was also handy to issue a strong statement in which he accused some highly placed traditional rulers in the state of aiding and abetting the bandits to perpetuate criminal activities and of “compromising military operations”.  The minister while announcing comprehensive plans to smoke out the bandits from the state warned any person or group of persons who choose to connive or sympathize with the bandits of dire repercussions.Early January this year, the same minister had while on a fact-finding tour of the state said the possibility of links between bandits wreaking havoc in rural communities and Boko Haram could not be ruled out. This came even as the Miners Association of Nigeria had lamented the frustrations of its members who hold legitimate mining titles with huge investments in the affected areas but had been chased out by fully armed bandits.

    The association said, the bandits turned illegal miners, were mostly from Burkina-Faso, Chad, Niger and even Ghana and their efforts to draw federal government’s attention to the nefarious activities of the bandits in the past did not yield any fruitful results. That perhaps, explains why the bandits had operated without let or hindrance.

    It is good a thing the government appears to be coming to terms with the complications posed by banditry, kidnapping and insurgency in the northwest zone of the country. This is more so given the prevalence of the same cankerworm in Katsina, Kaduna and Sokoto states among many other parts of the country that are regularly under the siege of one form of marauders or the other.

    By far, Zamfara has suffered more than its counterparts in the northwest region in the hands of all manner of demented serial killers. According to the state government, 3,526 persons have been killed by the bandits in the last five years with nearly 500 villages devastated and 8,219 injured. This is in addition to unrecorded crimes and criminal activities regularly committed by the marauding bandits.

    The matter was even such that President Buhari had at the heat of the killings arising from clashes between herders and farmers especially in the north-central zone, drawn parallels between them and those arising from the activities of bandits in Zamfara State. Though his intention then may have been to debunk allegations of government’s complicity in herders-farmers clashes together with all colorations associated with them, the comparison was seen as insensitive since it remains the prime responsibility of the government to protect all lives and properties.

    It was unexpected of a president to seek to whittle down the gravity of the killings arising from the insurgency of the herdsmen by comparing the casualty figures with the killings perpetrated by armed bandits whose real motivation had before now, remained largely inexplicable. Now, we have been told that it is all about illegal mining of gold in the hinterlands of that state. We are also being made to realize that some highly placed traditional rulers have been collaborating with the bandits to the extent of compromising military operations. It is surprising that the government is coming to terms with these realities very belatedly.

    These are very startling revelations that may have been responsible for the relative ease with which the bandits operate, kill and main defenceless people forcing them to flee their ancestral homes. Many have since been displaced and deprived of their livelihood with villages remaining ghosts of what they used be.

    What has emerged from the measures taken by the federal government is that all this while it lacked proper understanding of the real causes and motivation of those who have over these years sworn that Zamfara will know no peace. And that is a sad commentary on the professional competences of those charged with the management of the nation’s security affairs. Since the diagnosis of an ailment is half way to its cure, it is little surprising that in the absence of clinical understanding of what the security profile of the state entailed, the situation had remained largely hopeless.

    If the actions of the federal government and the reasons adduced to justify them are anything to repose confidence on, a dramatic improvement in the security situation of that state will soon begin to emerge. But traditional rulers from the state have picked holes with the claims that some of them are supporting the bandits. They have tasked the minister of defence to name the suspects or take responsibility for failure to get a handle to the degenerate situation in the state.

    One other thing that emerged from the disclosures is the existence of large quantity of gold deposits in that state which in turn, brought about illegal mining activities and banditry. It also came with the revelation that some companies were licensed by the government to mine gold in that state. This should come as a surprise to many. Before now, the overall contribution of gold to the nation’s revenue base has largely remained unknown to many.

    It is clear that the insecurity that has left Zamfara a ghost of its former self; bears the same imprimatur with what has overtime been known in the oil bearing states as militancy. Yet, those in authorities were unable to understand that banditry in that part of the country was essentially, economic deterministic. It is really surprising that the same government that has been waging relentless battles against oil bunkerers and militants that sabotage oil production could not understand the incalculable harm the activities of illegal miners and sundry criminals have wrought to the national revenue base.

    Beyond all this, the security situation in the country is really something to worry about. President Buhari must demonstrate through foolproof measures that he has what it takes to secure lives and property in this country. It is not enough to dish out orders to security chiefs to take drastic measures to tame the scourge. We have seen these orders time without number without solution at sight. A government is challenged by crisis of relevance and legitimacy when it fails to live up to the very reason for its existence.

  • Puyol lands in Nigeria for UEFA Champions League tour

    Carles Puyol Saforcada, UEFA Champions League legend and former FC Barcelona ace defender, more popularly known as Puyol, is set for arrival in Nigeria today with the iconic UEFA Champions League trophy which will be on Tour in Uyo and Lagos.

    It is in the continuation of a tradition already established by the most International Premium Lager beer,

    Heineken which has been a major sponsor of the Champions League since 2005/06 season of the competition.

    Ahead of his arrival, Puyol, who clocked 41 last Saturday, has sent a video clip to Nigerians urging the citizens to be part of the excitement that will envelop Lagos and Uyo from April 16th to 18th, 2019. In a 16 seconds video clip, excited Puyol announced to teeming Nigerian football fans his intention of leading the Chairman Team against that of ‘Shine Shine Bobo’, to be being captained by Nigeria’s legendary Austin Jay Jay Okocha in an Unmissable match which comes up at the Godswill Akpabio Stadium in Uyo. It is the first time the UEFA Champions League Tour would be held outside Lagos.

    The match will feature 20 minutes each half, with a mixture of footballers from Akwa United Football Club, selected Heineken consumers and ex-Nigeria international footballers such as Mutiu Adepoju, Daniel Amokachi, Austin Eguavoen and Uche Okechukwu, playing for either side of Unmissable Match.

    Puyol spoke of the two days he would spend in Lagos on the 17th and 18th of April during the UEFA Champions League Tour presented by Heineken. Hello there, teeming football fans and consumers of the most international premium lager will have the unique opportunity to come close to the iconic trophy and have a photo opportunity with it and its ambassador, Puyol.

  • Rice millers’ lament

    WE are not surprised at the finding by the Rice Processors Association of Nigeria (RIPAN) that over 20 million bags of rice (approximately one million metric tonnes) were smuggled into Nigeria between January and March. According to RIPAN chairman, Mohammed Abubakar, investigations conducted by the association in the last few months indicated that “all our international borders have been converted to smugglers’ route and our markets are filled with smuggled foreign rice.”

    “Nigeria currently loses huge revenues, foreign exchange and jobs to this menace. Nigeria rice processing companies are shutting down because of their inability to gain market access. More painfully, millions of small-holder farmers are stuck with their paddy because the millers can no longer afford to buy from them”, he told newsmen in an interview in Abuja, last week.

    He did not spare officials of the Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) at the borders, some of whom he accused of colluding with smugglers to undermine the nation’s quest to attain self-sufficiency in rice production, warning that the magnitude of loss to stakeholders would be too devastating to cope with.

    “The development, if left unchecked, could impact negatively on the integrated rice processor’s capacity, which had increased from 800,000 metric tonnes in 2014 to 1.6 million metric tonnes in 2018″, he said.

    We sympathise with the millers’ body. Indeed, the threat from smuggling, given their exposure to other players in the rice value chain, borders on an existential one. The issue, however isn’t that the problem of smuggling, particularly of rice, is a recent phenomenon but the failure of the Federal Government to recognise it for what it is – a serious act of economic sabotage – and confront it accordingly. Surely, the Federal Government has a surfeit of intelligence to  stamp it out. For instance, only last December, Heineken Lokpobiri, Minister of State for Agriculture had cause to decry the abuse of the Economic Community of West African States protocol allowing neighbouring countries to bring in rice into Nigeria.

    According to Lokpobiri, “people from Thailand would go to Benin Republic with their parboiled rice and then re-bag them as though they were produced in Benin Republic and then smuggle them into Nigeria, thereby denying the people of Benin the opportunity to grow rice and then benefit from the Nigerian market”.

    Earlier in 2018, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, acting on intelligence on three shiploads of 120,000 metric tons of Thailand rice headed for Nigeria via Benin Republic could not but raise the alarm. The preceding Christmas, he spoke of some 500,000 metric tons of rice also denied entrance from the same country.

    Unfortunately, as if part of an incipient culture of denial, the Federal Government continues to tout the decline in import of Thai rice from 644,131 metric tonnes in 2015, to 58,260 metric tonnes in 2016, and 23,192 metric tonnes in 2017 as achievement while pretending to be oblivious of the corresponding figures from our other neighbours. For instance, rice imports from  Benin Republic rose geometrically from 805,765 metric tonnes in 2015, to 1,427,098 metric tonnes in 2016, and 1,811,164 metric tonnes in 2017.  Cameroun also witnessed a surge in Thai rice imports from 449,297 metric tonnes in 2015, to 505,254 metric tonnes in 2016 to 744,508 metric tonnes in 2017. In the circumstance, only the Federal Government still lives under the illusion that those dramatic surges in imports are headed anywhere other than Nigeria – sadly for an administration that has acquired a reputation for aggressively pushing for self-sufficiency in the nation’s major staples which the illegal trade directly undermines.

    We  agree with RIPAN that the time to tackle the menace of rice smuggling is now; just as we shudder to think of the grave risk of the failure to act on the initiatives and the linkages that they have spawned in the rice value chain. While we agree that the customs management can do more to curb corruption and indolence in the ranks of its men, the nature of the problem is such that require engagement between the Nigerian government and our ECOWAS neighbours. For far too long, our ECOWAS neighbours have taken advantage of our good neighbourliness to undermine our economy; the rice issue obviously provides one avenue for the Federal Government to demonstrate, for once, a clear resolve to defend our national interest.

  • Yari hails military operations

    ZAMFARA State Governor and Chairman, Nigeria Governors’ Forum Abdul’aziz Yari Abubakar has hailed the ongoing operation by the Army and other security agencies against bandits and criminals.

    The governor expressed his delight when the Force Commander of the Operation Sharan Daji Major General Hakeem Oladapo Okiti visited the Government House, Gusau, at the weekend.

    Yari said reports from the areas, where the deadly acts of the bandits had been intense, indicated that the efforts by the combined military operations are yielding positive results.

    The governor told the commander the extent at which the people of Zamfara State suffered from the killings of innocent lives and destruction of property by bandits. He added that the situation has halted commercial activities in many areas.

    The governor explained that the state in 2015 had not experienced kidnapping, but cattle rustling and reprisal attacks until thereafter when the menace became the order of the day.

    He, therefore, called on the Army and other security agencies to put an end to banditry by sustaining the ongoing operations.

    Maj.-Gen. Hakeem Okiti briefed the governor on the operation being carried out in diverse locations. He thanked the governor on the support the Army is enjoying while carrying out their duties.

  • NUPENG, PENGASSAN to FG: shun counsel on removal of fuel subsidy

    Workers in the oil and gas sector on Sunday advised President Muhammadu Buhari to shun any counsel that would destabilise or cause chaos in the economy.

    The Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association (PENGASSAN) gave the advice in a statement in Lagos.

    The statement was signed by Mr Okugbawa Lumumba, PENGASSAN General Secretary and Afolabi Olawale, NUPENG’s General Secretary.

    The Managing Director, International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde had on April  12 called on the Federal Government to remove fuel subsidy because of low revenue mobilisation that existed  in terms of tax to Gross Domestic Product.

    They said that the IMF advice on how to recover Nigerian economy was worrisome as it had become counter productive.

    “Any economic policy that is devoid of human feelings can lead to more social dislocations and upheavals, which will later become counterproductive as currently experienced,’’ it said.

    The unions said that IMF had created panic in the country with associated hoarding of petroleum products, panic buying, skyrocketed increases in prices of goods and services in the country.

    Read also: Fuel: NUPENG, IPMAN say no reason for panic-buying

    It said that earlier, the IMF chief praised the significant progress the nation had made in terms of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) that increased by 1.9 per cent in 2018 from 0.8 per cent in 2017.

    It said that the IMF was not considering the pains and agonies the people went through to achieve the  gains of 2018, with almost two-thirds of the world’s hungriest people among Nigerians.

    The unions also cautioned that imposing more stringent reforms in domestic revenue mobilisation including increase in VAT and securing more domestic oil revenues through subsidy removal was an attempt to destabilise the nation.

    The unions in the statement appealed to President Buhari to put in mind the current hardship the people were going through in their collective journey to economic recovery. (NAN)

  • Inspector declared wanted, five officers arrested for killing woman

    There were outcries on the social media on Sunday over the killing of a 20-year-old woman by policemen in Ajegunle, Ajeromi-Ifelodun Local Government Area of Lagos.

    Ada Ifeanyi was shot dead at 4b, Amusa Lane, off Ojo Road, Ajegunle on Saturday morning.

    The policemen also shot 32-year-old Emmanuel Akomafuwa, of 52, Babatunde Street, Olodi Apapa, at Akpiri Street, Olodi Apapa.

    However, Lagos State Police Command has arrested and detained five police officers involved in the dastard act.

    As the command’s Public Relations Officer (PPRO) Bala Elkana, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP) releases the photograph of the officers, many took to social media to demand justice for the slain women.

    The officers, they said, should be tried as quickly as possible and be made to face a similar fate.

    This, some said, would teach others lesson.

    Donatus Igwe tweeted that the killing of innocent people by policemen is one too many.

    “We cannot continue like this. We deserve a better policing that what we are getting. There is a need for psychological tests on our officers before we hand over guns to them,” he said.

    May Ubeku @maybeks wrote that for every Nigerian killed by the police, they are pushing Nigerians to the wall.

    “They (the police) make us feel helpless and hunted. This may backfire someday and the hunter would be hunted irrespective of the guns they carry. #endpolicebrutality,” she said.

    Another tweeter @IchieDNonsHRM wrote: “Unfortunately, it is not the @PoliceNG that is the enemy of the youths in Nigeria. It is the Nigerian government itself that is the enemy of the youths.”

    Yemi Fasipe on @YemieFASH responded that “Today, it is okay to say that the Nigerian Police is an enemy of the Nigerian Youths.

    ‏According to him, “We are yet to get over the murder of Kolade Johnson by men of the @PoliceNG, and just barely a week after they have killed another innocent Nigerian youth. Jessica (Ada) did not commit any crime. Looks like they have concluded to be killing us weekly. #EndPoliceBrutality.”

    Another tweeter @dubbledizzle said: “These police officers are usually in a unit headed by a leader/superior officer.  Until their unit commanders are also held responsible, these killings will still continue. #holdtheirsuperiorsresponsibleToo”

    Elkana gave the names of the arrested officers as Inspector Adamu Usman, Sergeants Adeyeye Adeoye, Kashim Tijani, Lucky Akigbe and Paul Adeoye.

    According to him, Inspector Dania Ojo, who escaped immediately after the shooting, is declared wanted by the command.

    The Commissioner of Police (CP), Zubairu Muazu, he said, called for calm, as the command will leave no stone unturned in ensuring that justice prevails.

     He added that the CP expressed the command’s deepest condolences to the family and friends of Ada Ifeanyi and promised to foot the bills of Emmanuel Akomafuwa.

    REad also: We ‘ll provide adequate security in Ogun during Easter — Police

    Elkana said: “The victims were taken to a hospital and Ada was confirmed dead. Emmanuel is on admission receiving treatment for the injury he sustained.

    “Members of the team suspected to be involved in the shooting are from Trinity Police Station and are facing internal disciplinary proceedings at the command’s headquarters in Ikeja.

    “Their rifles have been retrieved for forensic analysis by ballisticians. If found wanting, they will be prosecuted at a conventional court for murder.

    Wanted Insp. Dania Ojo who escaped after the shooting.

    “The policemen arrested are:

    “Lagos State Police Command condemned in total, these senseless killings of unarmed civilians by few ‘bad eggs’ in the command, who are bent on denting the image of the police.

    “The command will not relent in its efforts in ridding the force of these criminals. Those involved in extrajudicial killings and abuse of power are promptly identified, isolated, tried through internal disciplinary proceedings, dismissed from service and prosecuted in conventional courts.”

    Elkana added that the command had in the last one month dismissed four policemen for abuse of power and conducts unbecoming of police officers and punished 41 others.

    “The four dismissed policemen were charged to court and remanded in prison custody. Our resolve in building a more humane, professional, dedicated, courageous and people-oriented force is a task that must be done and together we can make it a reality,” he said.

  • Insecurity: SERAP seeks disclosure of spending on ‘security votes’

    Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has asked President Muhammadu Buhari and the 36 state governors to provide information on specific details of spending of appropriated public funds as security votes between 2011 and 2019.

    The request dated April 12 was made under the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act 2011 and signed by SERAP Deputy Director, Kolawole Oluwadare.

    In the separate requests to Mr Buhari and the governors, SERAP said: “given the current security realities in the country, we need the information to determine if public funds meant to provide security and ensure respect and protection of the rights to life, physical integrity, and liberty of Nigerians have been spent for this purpose.

    It stated that its request is limited to details of visible, specific security measures and projects executed and does not include spending on intelligence operations.

    SERAP urged President Buhari and the governors to: “disclose including by publishing on a dedicated website, details of spending of public funds appropriated as security votes between 2011 to date, and specific security measures and projects on which such funds have been spent; put in place concrete measures to end the patently unconstitutional, illegal and widespread appropriation of public funds as security votes.

    It also asked them to establish Joint Security Trust Funds with strong legal framework, oversight and auditing mechanisms, as a permanent replacement for the illegal and unconstitutional appropriation of public funds as security votes.

    The organization contended that “Section 14(2)(b) of the 1999 Nigerian Constitution (as amended) provides that the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government emphasizing that it is the security of the citizens that is intended and not the security of select individuals in public office.

    SERAP said: “We are concerned that rather than serving the citizens, the appropriation of public funds as security votes over the years would seem to serve high-ranking government officials at all levels. We are also concerned that the practice of security votes entrusts discretionary powers to spend huge public funds on certain elected public officials who may not have any idea of operational issues on security matters.”

    The requests read in part: “SERAP urges you to open-up on the matter and provide information and documents as requested. This will be one step in the right direction. Unless the information is urgently provided, Nigerians would continue to see the appropriation of public funds as security votes and the institutionalization of this cash in ‘Ghana Must Go bags’ practice as a tool for self-enrichment.”

    “We would be grateful if the requested information is provided to us within seven days of the receipt and/or publication of this letter. If we have not heard from you by then, the Registered Trustees of SERAP shall take all appropriate legal action under the Freedom of Information Act to compel you to comply with our request.

    “The most general purpose of State power is to provide security for citizens and other residents and to enable them lead a life that is meaningful to them. However, the growing level of insecurity, violence, kidnappings and killings in Zamfara State and other parts of Nigeria suggest that successive governments have been unwilling or unable to satisfactorily implement this fundamental constitutional commitment.

    “SERAP believes that there is a strong link between corruption and insecurity, violence, kidnappings and killings in several parts of the country. Available evidence would seem to suggest that many of the tiers of government in Nigeria have used security votes as a conduit for grand corruption rather than spending the funds to improve and enhance national security and ensure full protection of Nigerians’ rights to life, physical integrity, and liberty. In fact, former governor of Kano State Musa Kwankwaso once described security votes as ‘another way of stealing public funds’.

    “The huge financial resources budgeted for ‘security votes’ by successive governments, at both federal and state levels, have not matched the security realities, especially given the level of insecurity, violence, kidnappings and killings in many parts of the country.

    It said the current security realities in the country would seem to suggest massive political use, mismanagement or stealing of security votes by many governments.

    “SERAP believes that by providing the information, your government would help put an end to any insinuation that security votes are spent on political activities, mismanaged or stolen. This would in turn contribute to better opportunities for citizens to assess the level of spending and commitment of successive governments to ensuring the security of lives and property of the people.

     “We note that the obligation to provide security and protect people’s rights to life, physical integrity, and liberty ought to be a shared responsibility of the federal and state governments, and not just for the federal government, as state governors also appropriate huge public funds each year as security votes. Many governors reportedly hide the security votes in their budgets as the funds are not expressly stated in their appropriation acts.

    “By Sections 2(3)(d)(V) & (4) of the FOI Act, there is a binding legal duty to ensure that details of spending on specific security measures and projects are widely disseminated and made readily available to members of the public through various means, including on a dedicated website.

     “As revealed by a 2018 report by Transparency International (TI), most of the funds appropriated as security votes are spent on political activities, mismanaged or simply stolen. It is estimated that security votes add up to over N241.2 billion every year. On top of appropriated security votes, governments also receive millions of dollars yearly as international security assistance.

    “According to TI, security vote spending exceeds 70 percent of the annual budget of the Nigeria Police Force, more than the Nigerian Army’s annual budget, and more than the Nigerian Navy and Nigerian Air Force’s annual budget combined”, it stated.

  • Cult clash: Four killed, two arrested in Lagos

    Four suspected cultists were killed during a clash between two rival cult groups of Aiye and Eiye in Ajah area of Lagos State on Sunday.

    A very reliable source told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that two suspects were arrested by operatives from police Area “J” Command, Ajah over the killings.

    Sources told NAN that the cult groups had been at logger heads over supremacy in the Sangotedo area of Ajah in recent times.

    NAN learnt that the suspected cultists used machetes and other dangerous weapons in the fight and inflicted fatal wounds on themselves.

    “The police recovered four dead bodies and deposited them at the public mortuary. Three cutlasses were also recovered from the suspects.

    Read also: Five policemen arrested after another woman, 20, shot dead in Lagos

    “Security has been beefed up in the area with more patrol policemen deployed. The area is calm now,” the source told NAN.

    NAN further learnt that policemen were also combing the bushes on the road between Ogonbo community and Abraham Adesanya Estate in Ajah area for more victims.

    The spokesman for the police in Lagos, DSP Bala Elkana, did not respond to calls and messages sent to him for the command’s reaction to the killings as at press time. (NAN)