Tag: thieves

  • Thieves experience in rhymes

    Thieves experience in rhymes

    As a literary biographer, who had been writing short stories and poetry, it was an easy transition for Mnguember Vicky Sylvester to write a memorable historical novel based on the Tiv Uprising of the early 1960s following Nigeria’s political independence.

    In fact, Long Shadows encompasses the Tiv experience of interaction with the colonialists from WW I through WW II and later involvement in divisional and regional politics in the young Nigerian nation through the first military coup to the civil war that began in 1967 to its end in1970. Sylvester writes a hybrid novel, partly historical and partly fictional, which recounts the Tiv experience through the actions of characters reflecting some known figures such as Joseph ( Suswam) Tarka and others during the tumultuous period.

    With this novel Sylvester inscribes minority discourse into Nigerian/national and regional political experience. So often does one hear or read about what majority groups do in history but it is refreshing that here Sylvester does something different by registering in a compelling narrative mode not only Tiv resistance to oppression, discrimination, marginalisation, and exploitation but also the search for plurality and fair government in the regional dispensation of the time. The novel also proffers a vision of what other ethnic groups can imbibe for a free, fair, and just society.

    Long Shadow begins in a captivating manner with resistance to the tax of two pounds and six shillings imposed on Tiv men, with the Damkor raiding and humiliating Tiv men, quite unlike in Makurdi and other areas where non-Tiv live and where the tax enforcement is not pursued with such vigor. While a tax to develop the area would have been a good thing, according to a leader like Suswam, they feel this tax was exploitative and discriminatory; hence the resistance, which further led to the highhanded local government police attack of Tiv villages. Suswam and other Tiv men also resist imposing a Tor Tiv on them from Kaduna as the NPC was trying to do. In one of such raids on a Tiv village, a Native Authority police attempts to rape Torkwase and she ingeniously killed him with an iron rod. The persecution of the Tiv intensified after the formation of the UMBC, a party of minority groups in Nigeria’s Middle Belt, as opposition to the NPC in the Northern Region. The UMBC, led by Suswam, allied with Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s Action Group, the predominant party in the Western Region. The new party focused on education of the young ones. The Tiv also created a Suswam Brigade to counter the influence of the Sardauna Brigade.

    The narrative later focuses on Jime, son of Hemba who has been discriminated against, and who belongs to the UMBC with others in the party, lost his regional government job. With the discrimination, exploitation, and oppression of Tivs at divisional and regional levels, Jime and others took the Tiv cause to fight for. With many Tiv people being killed through attacks apparently organized by the Damkor and the Sardauna Brigade on Tiv towns, men and women mobilize to fight back. Feeling the safety of his family threatened, Jime flees to Jos and asks his wife, Ayima, and the children to join him later through a clandestine network assisted by a Catholic priest. Jime gets a job in Jos in the tin mines and later steals into Makurdi to take his wife and children from a secret rendezvous. By this time, Suswam was gravitating towards the NPC and lukewarm to Tiv matters because he wanted to enlarge his political base in the North so that he could vie for a national position. The story ends with the end of the civil war (1970) with many Tiv men joining the army and the sick Jime about to leave for England for treatment.

    Long Shadows is a historiography of the Tiv people, their origin, and migration to their present abode. They are a people who cherish bravery and honor; hence they “die standing.” One of the most moving episodes in the novel is how Agbo, a Tiv clan head, was humiliated (75). The reader is forewarned that Agbo would soon join the ancestors. Then Agbo’s wife, Mnguhemen, prepares food with poisonous mushrooms for him to eat and die in sleep rather than leave him to hang himself (77-78).

    With a sharp mind and very keen sensibility, Mnguember Vicky Sylvester portrays full-blooded characters that are so realistic that they appear like people with whom we share the same society. The writer succeeds in not only making history real but also makes the actors of that history living people who have the same character traits we have. Suswan, modeled on J.S. Tarka, comes out very alive from history. The Middle Belt politician is a versatile leader of his people and forms the opposition to the NPC. He aligns with Chief Obafemi Awolowo and his Action Group because he wants his people to have education.

    Jime, Hemba’s son, carries the torch of the middle generation (his children the younger/third generation). While he is an individual, he represents the Tiv resistance in a middle ground—not violent like Gums and Biri but unswerving in loyalty to the Tiv cause; unlike Suswam who changes. He is a good husband and father involved in the struggle to win rights for his people. We see him closely and his flight to Jos reflects the dislocation of families resulting from the resistance. His wife, Ayima, is fully portrayed as a caring mother and a loving wife. A seamstress by profession, she holds her forte during the calamitous period when her husband is not around. She combines gentleness with emotional strength.

    Two other characters that stand out in the novel are Gums and Biri. Gums is used to forment violence to keep the Tiv Uprising in the news. Biri, the ugly one whose name literally means monkey, is violent and commits heinous crimes in the name of the uprising. Sylvester uses his character to show the extent to which a good uprising could be hijacked to needless bloodletting. He is the hatchet man whose actions Gums describes as bestial. In the end, he falls victim of revenge, as the man whose wife he has killed kills him.

    Mnguember Vicky Sylvester is an accomplished storyteller who uses her narrative resources to tell the story which flows on like a tumultuous river towards the ocean. Her major narrative technique is suspense. One example is when Gums, before the raid on the market, “had sent word to the Ameer and the Igbo transport union leader in Gboko through their representatives that it would rain that Ikyurav market day” (124), a password for violence. Another interesting suspense is in the statement that “Agbo will soon join the ancestors, perhaps tonight” 77) after being publicly humiliated. One expects him to commit suicide by hanging but the wife provides him a more honorable death by preparing for him a food of poisonous mushrooms which kills him. Ayima’s flight to Jos with the assistance of Fr. O’Connel is also suspenseful as the reader fears she may be caught. She escapes narrowly from being caught by the catechist.

    There are also flashbacks to give depth and background to the story. Chapter 8 narrates how Hemba, Jime’s father, died. Jime was about to fetch water from a well and the memory came back to him. Sylvester absorbs oral tradition to tell her story. Much of this occurs when Suswam visitsVandeikya (160-161) with the use of traditional salutations, proverbs and axioms.  Vicky Sylvester has the power to make episodes memorable by their significance. One of such is when the Tiv soldiers returned from WW II and they were being welcomed back home; others received a handshake and the Tivs were given sticks that were again taken from them to avoid shaking hands with them. It is instructive that Jime’s father refused the stick and handshake.

    Long Shadows uses the Tiv Uprising as a window not only to view the world of conflict and uprising but also women’s response in such a period. Sylvester demonstrates feminist tendencies in the novel with the examples of Torkwase’s killing of the potential rapist and Dooshima beating her husband to show that Tiv women defend themselves. The women also meet to discuss how they should respond to the violence around them. Ayima’s care of the children and daring escape to join her husband show how active she is. The female characters thus exercise their agency and do not just stay passive and be victims.

    Long Shadows is not just a historical novel but a saga of Tiv trials and triumphs over decades and throws into relief the contrast between then and now. The novel reminds us of problems still common in the Nigerian polity. Only resistance, Sylvester seems to espouse here, makes a people throw off the yoke of oppression, discrimination, exploitation, and marginalization and become a free and dignified people. The novel is very interesting to read as the writer uses narrative ploys to propel the story to accelerate to a climax at the height of the Uprising when there was much violence culminating in the civil war. The Nigerian civil war ends and Jime is to go abroad for treatment. The small prints need to be improved upon in the next edition,. However, Mnguember Vicky Sylvester has accomplished a marvelous task in making us re-live a period of Nigerian history that we should now try to avoid under a 20th century democracy. This is a book that enriches our sensibility and I enthusiastically recommend it to everyone to read.

     

  • War against oil thieves begins in Nembe

    War against oil thieves begins in Nembe

    It is oil and gas everywhere. In fact, the ancient kingdom of Nembe is the home of the black gold. Almost every community in Nembe, one of the eight local government areas, in Bayelsa State, produces the mainstay of the country’s economy.

    Nembe is the host to two major oil multinationals – Shell Producing Development Company (SPDC) and the Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC). The rich oil block famously known as Oil Mining Licence (OML) 29 operated by Shell is domiciled in Nembe.

    OML 29 is believed to be the most lucrative asset. Its output is said to have increased to 62,000 bpd of oil and 40 million standard cubic feet of gas per day (mmscf/d). It also holds reserves of 2.2 billion barrels of oil equivalent (boe). Shell’s Santa Barbara Flow Station, Tora Manifold and Odema Flow Station are located within the council. Agip also boasts other oil producing platforms in the council.

    Indeed, Nembe is said to have the largest oil field in Africa. But, the Ijaw-speaking Nembe, just like Ogoni in Rivers State, appears to have the largest share of oil curse. Its development belies its wealth and its environment is ravaged and devastated by oil exploration and exploitation. Gas is still flared almost everywhere in the ancient city.

    Apart from anti-environmental activities of oil companies, Nembe is suffering the diabolic and criminal menaces of pipeline vandals, oil thieves and illegal bunkerers. Niger Delta Report learnt that many communities have taken to the illegal business of setting up illicit refineries and breaking pipelines as their major sources of livelihood.

    In a decisive move, however, the new administration of the council led by Mr. Eminah Bioghoemi, has declared war on economic sabotage prevalent in the council. Bioghoemi in a rare display of courage and patriotism has evolved strategies to combat the menace.

    Niger Delta Report found that the council chairman has already established a task force consisting of notorious oil theft converts and opened discussion with the the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) for partnership.

    It was learnt that the chairman held discussions with the state Commandant of the NSCDC, Mr. Desmond Agu, to fine-tune the tactics and logistics required to flush economic saboteurs out of the council. He believes that if each council should deal with the problem, oil theft would soon be history in the state.

    Bioghoemi said his council decided to partner with NSCDC in recognition of the corps’ mandate as provided by the Act of 2007. He said: “We have already set up the task force and what we are looking at is for the operational arm of the civil defence to also come and back up the task force.

    “Facing criminals in the creeks will not be mere surveillance affair. We need to confront people who are seriously in that bunkering activity. You can’t fight drug without arming yourselves the way it happened in Colombia.

    “That is why we are partnering with the civil defence. We are happy that the state commandant and the whole of the service in Bayelsa State have promised to give us the needed support by following us to the creeks.”

    He confirmed that former oil thieves and operators of illegal refineries gave up their criminal ways to help the task force realise it’s mandate. He said the former vandals repented because of government interests.

    “They have listened to the government and have also agreed to work with civil defence to ensure that this menace is arrested,” he said.

    To begin the operation, he said the council has acquired two boats of 250 horse power each, gunboats against light ammunition and other facilities. He is optimistic that the arrangement will end  the problems of oil thieves.

    “We held a meeting with the civil defence and we were impressed with what we heard from them. With the cooperation of most of these men who have declined to be involved in that business and volunteered to come back and support the government, we are going to get results”, he insisted.

    Apart from the warfare, the task force will engage in widespread sensitisation of communities on the negative effects of oil theft. The chairmen of community development committees, youth leaders and community leaders will be persuaded to support the war against illegal bunkering.

    The chairman said: “Youth leaders, the CDC chairmen and the community heads will be engaged. The arrangement is for them to concede to government and see reasons why this notorious activities must stop”.

    He added: “These things are not done in the moon, they are done in communities. We are aware before now that these criminals were even paying community leaders pretending to love them while they come to sabotage their economy.

    “We want to take the message to the communities that if anything like that happen in your area, the first clamping will be on you the community leaders for abetting the criminality. It is conspiracy in crime. We want them to see reasons why security must start from them.

    “They need to give us vital and security information to enable the government act. The task force will also go from community to community for an awareness campaign. Youths are mainly involved in this criminality. They will engage them and tell them the reason why vandals will not be allowed to operate in the local government area.”

    Confirming the partnership, Agu said the chairman was motivated by a similar intervention in the Southern Ijaw Local Government Area. Agu disclosed that the task force in Southern Ijaw lead by civil defence operatives has so far destroyed 225 illegal refineries operated in 17 communities, discovered and clamped 70 spill points.

    Describing the exercise as successful, he said persons arrested had been arraigned by the corps. “Having studied the ongoing successful operation at Southern Ijaw, the Chairman of Nembe became interested and we have finalised to begin the operation.”

  • Rooting out pension thieves

    They toiled for the country. They gave their best for Nigeria’s growth and development. Unfortunately, they are living in abject poverty. Some have lost their lives while waiting for their entitlements as a result of some of the stringent procedures introduced into the processes of collecting their pension arrears.

    This is the sad story of many pensioners in Nigeria, no thanks to pension thieves who manipulate and beat the system to divert pension funds to their private bank accounts.

    Large sums of money running into billions of Naira have been stolen by many top officials who are saddled with the responsibility of managing and ensuring payment of pension arrears. They transmuted from petty thieves to racketeering syndicate.

    Initially, they modus operandi was lodging the funds meant for paying the pensioners into their private accounts and deliberately allow the funds to be in their accounts for months before eventually paying the poor pensioners their entitlements. This was with a view to earning fat bank interests. But now, total diversion of the funds is made with no payment made at all to some of the pensioners on flimsy excuses.

    Even as some of the thieves from Police Pension Funds and other government agencies have been exposed, taken to court, convicted and released on bail, it appears there are no strict laws in place aimed at discouraging those at the helm of affairs from tampering with the funds for their selfish gains.

    Two months ago, the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) arrested 13 senior civil servants in connection with a fresh fraud in the pension unit of the Office of the Head of Service of the Federation.

    On the fresh fraud, the Media Consultant of PRTT, Mr. Olajide Fashikun told journalists that some saboteurs were bent on destroying the future of retirees in the country by falsifying documents to defraud government to the tune of N35 billion.

    Alhaji Kazeem Musa, who worked for several years and retired from the Department of Biological Sciences of the University of Sokoto, has not received any pension arrears since 2007. There are many other worst cases which have resulted in the untimely death of some of the affected retirees.

    Apart from other measures already taken to sanitise the system, President Goodluck Jonathan, before the commencement of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting last Wednesday, inaugurated a new board for the National Pensions Commission (PenCom).

    He urged the new team to bring to a halt bad reports associated with pension payments in the country by ensuring that pensioners receive their retirement benefits as at when due.

    Jonathan said: “Government is also mindful of the fate of retirees who have served this great nation. It is therefore of paramount importance to this administration that pensioners receive their retirement benefits as at when due. PenCom is statutorily charged with the responsibilities of regulating and supervising all pension matters in Nigeria.

    “The enormity and sensitivity of the mandate of the Board of PenCom can therefore not be over-emphasised. The negative reports associated with the administrations of pension under the old scheme in the public sector in recent past have become an issue of grave national concern.”

    Stressing that several radical measures have recently been taken to restructure the scheme, he said: “This included the setting up, as provided by law, the Pension Constitutional Arrangement Department. It is our expectation that the Board of PenCom will work in synergy with this agency to engender a more robust pension system.

    “In addition, it is expected that the board will work to secure increased compliance with the Pension Reform Act, expand the coverage of the contributory pension scheme to include the informal sector, explore means of utilising the pool of funds towards Nigeria’s economic development in line with global best practices and maintain the existing culture of transparency and accountability in the management and custody of the contributory pension fund.

    “We know that other countries that have similar funds are even coming to invest in Nigeria, there is no reason for PenCom not to invest within and outside this country to even improve on the funds,” he added.

    Former Bauchi State governor, Adamu Muazu newly inaugurated as the Chairman of PenCom said: “Mr. President, your inaugural speech is very instructive. I have heard and I assure you under my supervision, PenCom will comply with your instruction and with the law.

    “I also assure you that we will ensure that compliance is made by the various states that have not complied, that the various Federal Government’s agencies and, indeed public sector and all informal sectors, will be made to comply as soon as possible.

    “In addition to that, Mr. President, we will take due diligence and we will consult with various government agencies, private sector organisations, the PFS and indeed, if need be, with other very successful pension commissions abroad to find ways and means of unveiling these monies that are made available for providing infrastructure and housing to the public.

    “In so doing, I want to assure you that these monies that are in the confines of the PenCom are owned by individuals. We will make sure, with the best of our ability, that whatever investment we make, is capital guaranteed.”

    Promising that pensioners will not only get their entitlements as at when due, but will also get good returns on their funds, he said: “We will make sure that the returns on the investment must beat inflation and possibly make very good returns for the pensioners.

    “By the grace of God, we will do whatever it takes. We will make you proud of our work in Pension Commission.”

    The provisions of the law should be reviewed to stipulate stiffer penalties for offenders in order to act as deterrent to others.

    Offenders also ought not to enjoy options of fines and bail grants when convicted since their actions, even though not through violence or gunshots are silently sending thousands of Nigerians to their early graves.

     

  • ASUU strike: Thieves  invade Nasarawa varsity

    ASUU strike: Thieves invade Nasarawa varsity

    When the ongoing Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike is called off, students of the Nasarawa State University, Keffi (NSUK) will be shocked on their return to school. Reason: Their hostels have been invaded by burglars and petty thieves. Properties in off-campus hostels are being carted away by the thieves suspected to be students and members of the university’s host community.

    Hostels in Students’ Village, Ungwan Lambu and High Court areas, where many students reside have become a safe haven for the thieves, who invade students’ rooms daily.

    When CAMPUSLIFE visited those places last week, rugs, carpets, mattresses, television set, home theatres, gas cookers, fans and wall clocks had disappeared from there. The doors to many of the invaded rooms were left open.

    Finding revealed that more than 30 rooms were burgled. The thieves broke the doors and windows to enter the rooms. There were signs of broken ceilings, indicating that some of the intruders may be living in those buildings.

    Worst hit are Transport Lodge, Pinnacle House, Jarkasa Palace, New Jersy House, Ta’al House, Green House, Mambila House and Celebrity Lodge.

    Ruth Maga, a 200-Level Geography student, whose room was stripped bare, told our correspondents: “A neighbour called to inform that the door to my room had been broken and some of my property stolen. I could not believe it until I got here. As you can see, nothing is left in the room except the photos I pasted on the wall; even my cooking pots and stove were stolen. I wonder if the police are patrolling this area. Two other rooms in my hostel are also broken. My fear is, how do I start buying these items again when school resumes going by the current economic situation? I don’t know what the landlord association is doing about this”

    Baba Idris, the ward head of Angwan Lambu, blamed the incident on security lapses, saying there was no police patrol in the night when the criminals operated. “You see, when the students were in school, there was an arrangement which brought together students, local youths and police. They always went on patrol at night around Angwan Lambu and High Court areas. Through this arrangement, there were fewer cases of robbery and burglary.

    “But now that the students are not in school, the police no longer come here; our youths cannot carry out the task alone. I will advise that students should come and pack their belongings till the time the strike will be called off.”

    A security guard, who did not want his name in print, said strangers visited the areas from time to time, claiming that outsiders were the perpetrators. “Every day, strange faces come around and I suspect that they may be capitalising on the fact that most of the houses have no security watch to carry out the crime. In my opinion, I think the respective landlords should provide security guards in their houses. The police hardly come around and when they do, they would come to that primary school (pointing) and turn back,” he said.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that two burglary cases were reported at the Angwan Lambu Police Post and a suspect, said to be a student, is being prosecuted in court.

    An affected resident in Green House told CAMPUSLIFE last week it was the second time his room was invaded.

    “The first time, they broke into my room and stole my home theatre. I came back to mend the door and put a new padlock. They came back and stole every item left in the room,” he said.

    The Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Keffi Police Station denied that the place was not being well patrolled. Rather, he said crime rate had reduced in Angwan Lambu since he assumed office. He said his men could not be everywhere, adding that the burglaries were rare cases.

    A student, Bala Ibrahim, urged landlords to ensure the protection of tenants’ properties.

    “Charging high rent should entail securing our properties whether or not we are in school. Besides, why are they not remitting part of our rent to us to cover the period we are not in school?” he asked.

    A landlord, Mr. Emma Sharafon, who owns Sheraton House in Angwan Lambu Phase II, said there was no way he could hire private security personnel because his tenants still owed him.

    “Some are yet to complete their rent for the outgoing year. I don’t see myself providing security guards for the tenants when they have refused to pay their rent. I don’t even stay in Keffi, so there is practically nothing I can do to help the situation.”

    Contacted, Rabiu Tijani Omame, suspended Students’ Union Government (SUG) president, said he could not speak on the matter because he is on suspension. Attah Douglas Arre, chairman of Faculties’ Presidents, said he was not aware of the incident but promised to investigate.

     

  • NERC to prosecute thieves, vandals

    The National Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) is planning to sanction vandals and those who steal electric appliances belonging to Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) successor companies and the National Independent Power Project (NIPP) operators, the Commission’s Secretary, Ada Ozomena, has said.

    She told The Nation that the Commission is talking with relevant bodies to come out with punitive measures for people who steal cables and meters, among other appliances, as private operators get ready to take over the power sector.

    Ada said: “Before now, there were no clearly stated procedures for prosecuting people who engage in electricity theft in the country. Now, the Commission has stepped up monitoring activities to check cases of theft and vandalism in various power projects.

    “One way of checking the ugly incident is that we are coming out with penalties for people who commit such crimes. Such activities need to curtailed in view of the steps being taken by the government in repositioning the sector for growth.”

    She said severe penalties would be meted out after the Commission must have concluded work on the issue, adding that it is disturbing to hear that people are stealing and vandalising equipment meant to provide electricity for consumers.

    Ozomena said it is common knowledge that PHCN recorded several cases of theft and vandalism, leading to power outages in the affected areas, adding that only recently, the Ikeja Electricity Distribution Company asked members of the State Security Service(SSS), the Police and other law enforcement agencies to help arrest people stealing electricity materials in the zone.

    The company advised Community Development Associations (CDAs) to report cases of theft and vandalism to the police. It added that equipment worth millions of naira, ranging from transformers, insulators and streetlights, among others have been stolen between January and June this year.

     

  • JTF arrests 608 suspected oil thieves

    •Seizes 24 vessels, 133 barges

    The Joint Task Force (JTF) in the Niger Delta, code-named ‘Operation Pulo Shield’, said yesterday that it arrested 608 suspected oil thieves in 594 raids carried out between January and June.

    The JTF spokesman, Lt. Col. Onyema Nwachukwu, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Yenagoa that oil theft was on the decline.

    “So far, we have carried out 594 illegal oil bunkering patrols and several arrests have been made.

    “In the two quarters we are talking about, we’ve scuttled about 748 illegal refineries within the region and we have impounded 24 vessels; we equally arrested 133 barges involved in oil theft.

    “And 861 giant open wooden boats, popularly referred to as Cotonou boats, have been seized.

    “About 910 large surface tanks which oil thieves engaged in illegal refineries use to reserve the crude have been seized.

    “We’ve taken into custody about 608 suspects who are involved in oil theft and oil theft related cases.’’

    On the rate of oil theft which reportedly led to a combined shut-in of 190,000 barrels per day production in Bayelsa, Nwachukwu said the JTF was making a positive impact.

    The spokesman said: “Two major pipelines were shut down and before these pipelines were actually shut down our patrol troops had reported breaches on these pipelines.

    “And if the oil companies had reacted in time to these reports, the breaches would have been clamped, and it would not have resulted in this shut down of the pipelines.

    “So, I would say that if you take an overview of the area, you will find that most of the illegal refineries that were in operation have been shut down completely.’’

     

  • Police nab fuel tanker thieves

    The Ondo State Police Command has arrested the leader of an armed robbery gang that specialises in hijacking trucks loaded with petroleum products.

    Police spokesman in the state, Mr. Wole Ogodo, told journalists in Akure at the weekend, that the suspect, Osamuyi Irabor, was arrested at Ore in Odigbo local government area of the state by policemen and members of the state strike squad, following a tip off after complaints about the disappearance of a tanker loaded with fuel.

    The suspect, according to the police, confessed during interrogation that he and his accomplices were taking the truck to Benin, in Edo State, where the product and the truck were to be sold to waiting buyers.

    The truck with registration number Lagos XD 802 YAB, which was loaded with thirty three thousand litres of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) was hijacked at Sagamu by the suspect and his gang.

    Ogodo said a Pathfinder Jeep with registration number LSD 154 AG, cloths, four handsets and charms were also recovered from the suspects.

    He added that three other members of the gang identified as Brown, Ugbor and Anthony Elo escaped when they were accosted by the police and men of the strike squad. He, however, assured the populace that other suspects linked with the incidence will soon be apprehended.

    He said the suspects would be taken to court after investigations into the matter are concluded

     

  • NSCDC arrests suspected oil thieves

    NSCDC arrests suspected oil thieves

    The FCT command of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) has confirmed the arrest of three suspected oil thieves at Berger Junction in Abuja.

    The FCT command spokesman, Mr David Akinbinu, who made this known, alleged that the suspects were caught in possession of the product after a tip-off.

    He said civil defence officers rushed to the roundabout and made the arrest.

    According to him, the officers turned down the offer of N40,000 bribe allegedly offered to them by the suspects.

    “The commandant has always drummed it into our ears that any officer who collects bribe in the discharge of his or her duties will be arrested and prosecuted. So our watchword here is “collect bribe and die,” he said.

    He added that the suspects are in custody and will soon be charged to court after the conclusion of investigations.

     

  • Billionaire thieves and the Judiciary

    In Nigeria, all things are possible. This is a country of big things. If you want to do anything, just do it the big way. If you do it in a petty way, you would have fixed a date with agony. All one needs to do is to “grow a liver” and just do it with a bang. Men and women will talk and bicker but beyond that, nothing happens. Nigerians in authority know their size – monumental corruption and big scandals. The business of sleaze is transacted in billions.

    The nation was held spellbound, a few weeks ago, when an Abuja High Court convicted a self-confessed police pension fund thief and former director in the Police Pension Office, Mr John Yakubu Yusufu. The convict was sentenced to two years imprisonment with an option of fine.

    Yusufu stole big. He is an example of Nigerian billionaire thief. He siphoned 37 billion naira from the pension coffer. The ill-gotten wealth was withdrawn from the retired police officers’ funds, which he and his co-travellers were entrusted to administer.

    This is not new; it happens every day in Nigeria. No shaking. Alas, what appeared to be a grim picture of our national in the grand conspiracy to rob and assault the sensibilities of the Nigerian people is the miscarriage of justice perpetrated by Justice Abubakar Talba.

    Yusufu was sentenced two years in prison or a fine of N750,000. Now, let us do the calculation: N37 billion minus N750,000 gives us N36.250 billion. It means that Yusufu could pay the fine and the convict would still be a billionaire all his life. This is a dividend of stealing big!

    Every day, the Nigerian population decries the manner in which corruption is encouraged and nourished by disturbing judgments coming from the courts. It is only in Nigeria that a court can grant a permanent injunction, preventing public officers from standing trial over financial misappropriation.

    The judgment of Justice Talba has further buttressed the fact that judiciary is a cauldron of corruption itself. The verdict will surely encourage massive stealing and diversion of public funds. Instead of stealing in millions, a serving public officer can steal billions and go scot free.

    Dare the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) and the Nigerian public. Go to court. Tell the judge you actually stole the money. No qualms! Of course, you will be asked to return some of it. The judge – if he is the Talba kind – would simply appreciate you for not wasting time and being honest to the court.

    Your lawyer could even argue that if you are simply fined and released, it will encourage other thieves to come over and return part of what they have stolen! Is this not a confirmation that Nigeria is an animal farm where some thieves – sorry animals – are more equal than the others?

    Now, we are not talking of funds that were idle somewhere – even though that would not in any way justify the theft. We are talking about pension funds. Police pension funds! Men and women in the force spent their lives facing danger so the rest of us could live in safety. In their old age, they get robbed of their life savings through the satanic and insatiable greed of the likes of Yusufu. Why should I encourage my little brother, who wants to be policeman, to join force?

    We are all witnesses to the needless stress our senior citizens are subjected to whenever they are called to receive their pensions. Some have had to travel from their villages to far places to participate in screening exercises that may last many weeks, even though many of them are too old for that kind of exercise. We have seen many who have died in the course getting their pension money. That is how they get rewarded for serving Nigeria!

    One thing, however, is certain: the people of Nigeria are not amused with this and similar stories. Big thieves like Yusufu may never face justice in the courts. They own the courts! But we remember Dele

    Giwa’s words that: “Evil done by man to man shall never go unpunished. If not now, then later, and if not by man, then by God, for the triumph of evil over good is but temporary.”

    A revolution is imminent in this country, and it is being hastened and precipitated by the actions of big thieves and the judges that set them free in the full glare of the suffering masses.