Tag: trouble

  • TROUBLE IN IJOKO: Residents recount days of violence and arson

    TROUBLE IN IJOKO: Residents recount days of violence and arson

    Many people could remember where they were the day about 15 armed men forcefully gained entry into Ijoko town in Ado Odo Ota local government, shooting sporadically at the residents and leaving a trail of blood and destruction in their trail.

    Tuesday, December 23rd began like every other day in Ijoko -a small town about 100 kilometers from Lagos- most of the residents work in the neighbouring Sang-Ota or in Lagos.

    The invaders

    Then at 5:30 pm, when the youths and the working class were away and the elderly enjoyed a lazy evening outside their porch, tragedy struck. Prince Muhammed Ogunseye remembered exactly what he was doing when chaos began. “I was sleeping in the palace when people rushed into the palace shouting that some people were shooting at the gate. I got up and heard sporadic shooting. They were just shooting at everybody. Immediately I organized all the people in the palace and shielded them to safety, I also ran and hid myself because they (the attackers) were so many,” he said.

    According to eyewitnesses, the armed men approached the gates of the town and seized it, passersby and residents scrambled for safety while the attackers continued shooting indiscriminately wounding some people in the process. The palace of the Onijoko of Ijoko, Abdulazeez Kolapo Ogunseye was about 1,000 meters from the gate. In the palace were vassal chiefs of the Onijoko, who were having a meeting though Ogunseye himself was absent.

    The attackers took over the main streets of the town and began to vandalize properties along their path.  Two cars were burnt down while several others were destroyed, houses and shops whose owners ran away in panic were not left out as they were also vandalized.

    The attackers seem to have a target: The palace. According to some eyewitnesses who could not be named for fear of a reprisal attack, the attackers descended on the palace and began to destroy it.  A guard dog resisted the uninvited guests and it was shot, the dog died instantly. “I heard them asking for petrol, they said they were going to burn it down and kill whoever they met in the palace,” one witness said.

    But Muhammed said he had a good look at the faces of some of the attackers. “They began to vandalise the palace and then entered the new building at the back and destroyed all the windows and everything they can lay hands on. I saw one guy called Gafari another one called Sir Kay. There were Lukman and Monsuru Matanmi too,” he said.

    The attackers were not done, after destroying the palace, they set it ablaze and watched it burn for about 30 minutes. Muhammed said he called the police for help from his hiding place and when the assailants left he tried to put off the fire before the arrival of the Police and the Fire Service. It was too late; the palace was completely razed along with all the important documents in its archives.

    The assailants withdrew from the palace but continued their murderous rage. In Itabo, they burnt to the ground the house of the Baale, Sikiru Tijani. The Baale of Surulere, Ojelabi Atanda also had his house razed while a car belonging to his friend was burnt. In Ogba-Ayo area, a house belonging to the community leader, Alhaji Ike Anobi was burnt while the car belonging to Baale Alabede of  Pare Ifelodun was also razed.

    But the brutality of the attack was best manifested in the account of an eyewitness who had a near-death experience with the assailants. “I was working in my shop when I heard the gunshot, I quickly locked my store and stayed inside. Then I heard them saying they will burn the palace and kill anyone they met inside, they were talking on the phone. They opened my store and forced me out and then grabbed my son and threatened to kill him. I was begging them that he was my only son, then they left him,” the eyewitness said.

    A royal rumble

    Muhammed and many of the witnesses put the blames of the attack on Fatai Matanmi, a man who is in dispute with Ogunseye over the kingship of Ijoko town. Since Ogunseye was installed as king in 2006 by the Olowu of Owu, Matanmi has consistently maintained his opposition to his rule claiming he is the rightful king of the Ijoko people.

    But the camp of Ogunseye maintained that Ijoko belongs to the Egba and Matanmi as an Awori, is ineligible to the royal stool. In fact, they claimed that the population of the Awori is so negligible in the town that Matanmi’s family is the only Awori clan remaining.

    The Ogunseye’s said after a bloody battle in 2008 in which no less than eight chiefs lost their lives, Matanmi had relocated from the town. “Since 2008, Matanmi had relocated from this town because the people rejected him. He claims he had court judgment while the case is still on appeal before the court. When he was away, the town had peace, then about four months ago, himself and his boys resurfaced in this town and they have started unleashing mayhem on the people,” one of the chiefs said.

    There has been no love lost between the two families. Matanmi himself has not been quiet; he continues to insist that he is the rightful king of Ijoko and that he has over 77 court judgments to back up his claim. When The Nation contacted Matanmi, he was furious when Ogunseye was referred to as the king.

    “Who is the Kabiyesi?” he asked in a voice full of contempt. “You are a journalist and you should not mislead people, did you ask him proof of his kingship?  Were you there when he was crowned, if not then you should ask for proofs like his government letter and gazette.”

    He continued in anger, “He made himself king because he had no proof. This is not a drama where actors play king and you humour them with a crown. You should not deceive the public for your sake and your papers. I also worked for 10 years at Daily Times in the Editorial Department; you should have asked him for the proof that he is truly a king,” he fumed.

    Matanmi also claimed to have a court judgment to take possession of the recently razed palace. “The house in Ijoko belongs to me, I obtained a judgment against them that gave the house to me, so he (Ogunseye) does not have a house.”

    But when asked why he has not been able to execute the court judgment and take possession of the house, he said the judgment covers about five villages. But if the kingship tussle had remained at the level of litigation and reason, maybe the peace which has now eluded the town would not.

    Muhammed said Matanmi had written a petition against him alleging a threat to his life. He was questioned by the police and released. “Kabiyesi had said this is a stock-in-trade for Matanmi whenever he was to attack us. He would precede such attack with a petition against a member of the family and then attack. In this case, the attack came the next day after the petition was written.”

    But Matami denied any involvement in the attack. He told our correspondent that he was not in town when the incident happened. “What I learnt was that it was Ogunseye that came to disrupt the annual prayer for one of our aunts. They were led by one Muhammed and Ibrahim, they beat up my people, so they were the aggressors,” he said.

    But Muhammed denied the allegation: “Nobody attacked Matanmi, I didn’t lead anybody to his house, it is all a lie and that is not the first time he would say it. I was in the palace on the day he was talking about; there is no truth in it.”

    But what is true is the uncovering of a member of the gang that allegedly carried out the attack. Members of Ogunseye’s family said they found two identity cards at the scene of the attack belonging to the same person: Kayode Bambi who allegedly led the rampaging gang to

    Ijoko.

    One of the identities which was shown to our correspondent belongs to the Vigilante Service of Ogun State (VSO), with the name and picture

    of Kayode Bambi. It has registration number, VGN/OGN/08/003630 with the designation “Operation Officer.” The other is a voter’s card with the name Bambi, Kayode Ajala with the residence of the holder at Ilupeju Estate, Agoro.

    The Ogunseye family believes this has proven beyond doubt that Matanmi was behind the sundown attack on the town.

    Starting afresh

    But the tussle has degenerated into chaos and destruction. Lives have been lost and properties destroyed. When The Nation visited the community on December  25, the anxiety in the air could almost be cut with a knife. From the gate of the town, armed policemen not less than 15 were positioned strategically. The police men from the Ota Division had been on a 24-hour surveillance since the day of the attack. But despite the presence of the armed security, the people were afraid.

    Babatunde Tajudeen, Baale of Okesuna said the thugs were still in the town armed with guns and other dangerous weapons and still threatening to come for another round of attack. This has set the people on the edge and every stranger is viewed with suspicion. Those who spoke to The Nation did so on account of strict anonymity while a large number refused to grant any request for interviews.

    “We don’t want Matanmi in this town, he has caused so much harm and he can never be a king here. His boys are still around in his house, if you go there you will see them displaying guns in the open. They harass and threaten citizens and there is nobody to save us,” a resident, who pleaded anonymity, said.

    But it is a new start for Ogunseye and members of his extended family.

    His palace and all the personal properties of his family members were lost. “We now have to start all over again, we had only the clothes that we wore on that day because the rest were burnt, we had to look for money and get new clothes,” one of the members said.

    On Christmas day, the family refused to let the tragedy dampen the mood of the season, the women made use of whatever tools they could find to prepare meal for the family and visitors. In the background, the smell of the burnt palace still lingered in the air and with an enthusiastic spirit, the family confronted their woe.

    An uncompleted palace which was being built behind the old one now serves as a refugee camp for the family. Whatever property they could salvage had been piled into the rooms and in the night, they sleep, at the mercy of the elements.

    Oba Ogunseye came in around 3pm followed by some of his aides. He was dressed in a simple buba and an abeti aja cap on. He walked slowly through the passage of his burnt palace and on reaching the backyard began to pray for the women of the palace who shouted an enthusiastic ‘amen’.

    “Nobody should greet me in sorrow, there is no need for that, I assure you things will only get better from now on,” he said after he had taken his seat under a canopy which serves as a temporary palace.

    Ogunseye practised what he preached, he shook hands with everyone and encouraged them, some of them expressed fear of another attack. Their fear proved not unfounded because on December 26, armed thugs invaded the town again. Before they were repelled from the town by the police, they burnt down the houses of three Baale as they initially promised.

    Muhhamed said: “They came today again and burnt the houses of three

    Baales’ in Itabo area but the police later repelled them. The police searched our house and that of Matanmi and confiscated about 50 guns from them. They also arrested Matanmi’s thugs and took them away.”

    The Police Public Relations Officer of Ogun State Command, Muyiwa Adejobi, a Deputy Supritendent (DSP) confirmed the arrest saying guns and charms were recovered. Those arrested have been transferred to the Command Headquarters, Eleweran, Abeokuta for further investigation.

    According to Adejobi, “Following the recent crises that rocked Ijoko Otta town in Ado Odo Otta Local Government area of Ogun State, the  Ogun State Police Command has embarked on proper investigation by pouncing  on  the perpetrators of the crises that lasted for days and arrested nine suspects with arms and ammunition.”

    He added that “some suspected hoodlums had been on rampage in connection with the lingering Onijoko Obaship crises and set ablaze some houses while several people were injured.”

    The Police spokesperson also said a team of police detectives raided the palaces of both Ogunseye and Matanmi. “This investigation prompted the police teams from the Department of Criminal Investigation, Police Mobile Force, coordinated by the Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of department of operations Ogun State Command DCP Egberebi Egbuson to conduct search and raids on the palaces and premises of the two disputing rulers, Oba Montanmi and Oba Ogunseye on 27th December at night time, where nine suspects were arrested and 12 locally made single barreled guns, two pump action guns,191 cartridges, two cutlasses, one axe, charms and masquerade clothing were recovered in the palace of Oba Montanmi and one butt of a locally made single barreled gun was recovered in the palace of Oba Ogunseye.”

    It was also gathered that the Ogun State Police Command had invited both Matanmi and Ogunseye but it was learnt that it was only Ogunseye that honoured the invitation.

    Meanwhile, residents are pleading with the government to step into the matter and resolve the lingering crisis.  “The government should help us, this problem is too much, we need protection in this town, that is the only thing we are asking from the government,” Muhammed said.

    The incessant attack has taken its toll on the town. It is a major setback for the town which hosts two major industries, Dangote Salt and Union Dicon Salt. Ijoko is also a major railway terminus and its close proximity to Lagos and Ota makes it attractive to investors.

    “People are living in fear and the residents have complained to the government, those who have houses are moving out en-mass for fear of being killed, the morale of this town is low and people are not happy,” one of the chiefs said.

    When will the government stop this living in fear for the residents and restore sanity?

  • The trouble with Nigeria

    Leaders of the Western world never cease urging the countries of Black Africa to embrace “democracy”. For instance, when President Obama, a man of African descent, stood on the soil of Africa in Accra, Ghana, he took the opportunity to speak the message of democratic governance to all of Africa – and in a strong and family language that no white leader of the Western World can ever do.

    Most informed members of the Black African elite understand the goodwill behind the message. The modern history of our world has demonstrated very definitively that human freedom, reliably democratic political life, and strong institutions that have integrity, are the only really sure way to bring order, success and prosperity into the lives of countries and peoples. As Obama put it in Accra, what Africa needs is not strong men but strong institutions. “We must recognize the fundamental truth that…development depends on good governance”.

    Unfortunately, there has persisted in the West’s message of democracy a very serious flaw. Even many of the best voices from the western world seem often to say that democracy comprises not more (or perhaps not much more) than elections and elected governments. Often, elections are treated as proof of democracy. But, in many cases in Sub-Saharan Africa, elections are designed merely to address the concerns of the international community. And what that commonly results in is that, while pundits in the western world may go on applauding a country for holding elections, the country’s rulers may actually go on actively preserving and practicing seriously undemocratic governance – including bluntly refusing (in a country of many different peoples) to yield to the desire of the component peoples for some measure of local autonomy that would enable them to manage some of their unique affairs, systemized rigging of elections,concentration of all power and resource control in a central government.

    No other African country practices this split-personality governance more than Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country and home of one-fourth of all Africans. In 1999, the series of Nigeria’s military dictatorships which started in 1966 came to an end, and since then Nigeria has been ruled by elected governments. Even so, successive elected governments have upheld in this unfortunate country, a determinedly undemocratic and crooked system of governance, controlled by a political party which can only be described as fascist. Founded in 1998-9, the PDP declared that its mission was to rule Nigeria forever. In regions of Nigeria where the people have human-rights, religious tolerance, and democratic, traditions (especially the homeland of the 50 million Yoruba people of the Nigerian South-west), PDP chieftains declared that the people must be “conquered”. And the process of conquest has continued relentlessly since then.

    Especially over the Yoruba, who are regarded as unbreakably stubborn in defence of their traditional values, the process of conquest by the PDP has been unbelievably brutal. The PDP-controlled Federal Government makes no secret of its belief in its right to rig federal and state elections, and to impose its cronies over state and local governments throughout Nigeria. In the 1999 elections, the Yoruba rejected the PDP massively and gave the control of their six states to another party. In response, when elections came in 2003 and 2007, the PDP Federal Government went wild, declared that the elections were a “do-or die battle”, and massively cooked up the outcomes. The rigging of the 2007 elections at federal and state levels was so blatant that international observers who saw it published a report which stated that the elections, “in the view of Nigerians and the many international observers alike, were the most poorly organized and massively rigged in the country’s history. In a bitterly contentious environment, outgoing President Obasanjo and his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) acted with unbridled desperation to ensure sweeping, winner-take-all victories, not only in the presidency and federal legislature but also in state governorships and assemblies. Characterized as a “do-or-die” battle by Obasanjo, the campaigns and elections also witnessed extensive violence, including over 200 people killed”.

    The brazenly falsified results gave the PDP presidential candidate 70% of the votes – a victory “bitterly disputed by many Nigerians, including broad-based, religious and civil society groups”. “It has pushed the country further towards a one- party state and diminished citizen confidence in electoral institutions and processes…undermined Nigeria’s capacity to manage its internal conflicts…badly damaged the country’s international image…thus diminishing (Nigeria’s) credibility to serve as leading force for peace and democracy throughout West Africa’. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), “vigorously manipulated by the presidency, virtually abdicated its responsibility as impartial umpire. Inefficient and non-transparent in its operations, it became an accessory to active rigging. Similarly, the massively deployed police and other security services helped curb violence but largely turned blind eyes to, and in some cases helped in, the brazen falsification of results”.

    That is Nigeria’s brand of democracy – as concocted by the PDP. Behind it at its foundation was a phalanx of retired military officers (all billionaires from stolen public money), and a major part of the northern Nigerian Islamic leadership who are bent on using the power of the Federal Government to impose a jihadist brand of Islam, as well as the dominance of their essentially small Muslim nationality, on all of Nigeria. PDP’s mode of recruiting members in all parts of Nigeria has, from the beginning, been to enrich members of the elite in all regions with public money, and to assure them of electoral victories through election rigging.

    It therefore does not matter what region, or what nationality, a PDP president comes from; he will rule as a PDP corruption manager, and as a staunch defender of the excessive powers of the so-called Federal Government over all of Nigeria and over all of Nigeria’s resources. He will revel in his power to treat the state governments as clients of the Federal Government, to brutalize any nationality that he chooses to despise, and to unduly and unfairly empower and enrich his own nationality among the nationalities of Nigeria. The current president, Goodluck Jonathan, proves all this mess most profoundly. Even though he comes from the South-south region whose citizens have always led the opposition to federal excesses, he refuses to touch any effort to curb those excesses, but revels in them. Though he no longer enjoys the support of most of the founders of the PDP, he nevertheless keeps the PDP corruption heritage going strongly. For him, the Yoruba nation has been the nation to despise and marginalize.

    The system of public corruption controlled by the PDP is impossible for any Nigerian opposition to do anything about. It has destroyed the moral life of Nigerians, and turned Nigeria into a country in which even the best and brightest citizens must turn away from real enterprises and wait on crumbs from public corruption. It has destroyed any trace of professionalism and integrity in all public agencies – the electoral commission, the police, the secret services, even the armed forces, and the courts.

    There is no question that the PDP will rig the presidential and other elections due in 2015. The big question is how different Nigerian peoples will respond this time.

  • Trouble with educational sector

    SIR: Nigeria’s educational sector needs urgent attention to halt further deterioration. Our educational sector is nothing to write home about. Nigeria’s educational sector is deteriorating so badly because of negligence by the government.

    Schools are dilapidated; infrastructures in our schools are inadequate. Teachers are forced to teach due to lack of motivation. Students on their part are not well-equipped for learning. They lack textbooks, notebooks and some other learning materials with classes in some schools held in uncompleted buildings. Learning is crippled and students tend to even run away from school due to these factors. If the learning environment is friendly, the student will also find learning friendly.

    Government needs to motivate teachers for adequate teaching to take place.  Teachers in Nigeria are the suffering civil servants, especially those that are working in public schools. It is crucial and important to satisfy the teachers for them to be able to teach very well and be ready to teach not forced to teach. If teachers are motivated to teach, adequate teaching and learning will take place and the nation will be better for it. When you ask students what they want to be in future, they will never mention to be a teacher, not because it is not a good profession but because it is not encouraged by the government. This is a clarion call on the government to help encourage teaching /teachers.

    The incessant attacks by insurgents in our schools in the North show the terrible state of security.  We need to beef up security in our schools because if there is no assurance of security, students will find it difficult to go to school not to talk of staying there to learn.

    As must be obvious to everyone, education is the bedrock of development; so it will be a disaster for any government to shun education when building its economy. It is supposed to be the foundation for the economy. The Nigerian government should increase the budget for education so that education can receive a boost.

    Emmanuel Oye,

    Ilorin, Kwara State

  • Allianz raises payout, confirms target amid Pimco trouble

    Allianz raises payout, confirms target amid Pimco trouble

    Allianz SE has pledged to pay a higher share of profit to shareholders and confirmed its full-year profit target as the Pimco asset management unit struggles to contain outflows following the departure of Bill Gross.

    “Starting with the financial year 2014, the intention is to propose an increased regular payout to Allianz shareholders of 50 percent of net income,” the Munich-based company said in a statement. That compares with a pay-out ratio of 40 per cent at Europe’s biggest insurer in the past.

    Investors have pulled billions of dollars from Pacific Investment Management Company’s funds since the September 26 announcement that Gross, who was chief investment officer and co-founded Pimco more than four decades ago, was joining Denver-based Janus Capital Group Inc.

    Pimco, based in Newport Beach, California, suffered 49.2 billion euros ($60.9 billion) in client redemptions in the third quarter, Allianz said. Most of the outflows occurred in the last week of September.

    The asset manager said clients pulled $27.5 billion in October from its biggest mutual fund. “Net outflow development after the resignation of Bill Gross is within our expectation,” Chief Financial Officer Dieter Wemmer said in the statement. “Our unchanged outlook for the full year 2014 and the newly established multi-year dividend policy are visible demonstration of management confidence about the future of Allianz.”

    Allianz’s net income climbed 11 per cent to 1.61 billion euros in the third quarter. That compared with an average estimate of 1.57 billion euros in a Bloomberg survey of 13 analysts. Operating profit at the asset-management unit, which includes Pimco and Allianz Global Investors, fell five per cent to 694 million euros.

    The insurer had been expected to pay 6.20 euros a share for this year, according to the Bloomberg Dividend Forecast. Allianz has promised investors to update them on payouts before year-end. It paid 5.30 euros a share as dividend for 2013, or 40 percent of profit.

    Allianz said it will “evaluate and pay out the unused budget earmarked for external growth every three years.” The first such evaluation will take place at the end of 2016. Payouts won’t be allowed to push the insurer’s Solvency II ratio, a measure of financial stability, below 160 per cent, Allianz said.

    Allianz shares have declined 2.8 percent this year, valuing the company at about 58 billion euros. The Bloomberg Europe 500 Insurance Index has risen 4.3 percent during the same period.

  • Ogun PDP to returnees: don’t  foment trouble

    Ogun PDP to returnees: don’t foment trouble

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ogun State has warned its members against “re-planting the seed of crisis and division in the party for the purpose of hijacking its structure”.

    In a statement yesterday by its Publicity Secretary, Waliu Oladipupo, the party said it was a “veteran of many political battles” in the state and has remained vigilant.

    The statement said: “The state executive committee has not been dissolved. Members are advised to ignore contrary information.

    “Any attempt to tinker with the party structures will not just be an invitation to avoidable lawlessness but also illegal, ultra vires and a direct affront on the judiciary.

    “It is hoped that those who are angling to sow the seeds of discord know the implications of their contrived plot.

    “If they think that they can ride on the back of one powerful man at the national headquarters to trample on the rule of law, we wish to serve them notice that we are ready for them.

    “The Ogun State PDP is a veteran of many political battles. We are not resting on our oars. For us, eternal vigilance is truly the price of freedom.

    “The Adebayo Dayo-led state exco is intact. As we have said severally, the Ogun State PDP exco is peculiar. The executives, from the ward to local government and state levels were not just elected at validly conducted congresses; they were refined through the crucibles of the party constitution and the laws of the land and endorsed by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    “They were not just elected but validated by several judicial interventions and pronouncements from the High Court to the Appeal Court.

    “Therefore, given the peculiar circumstances of their emergence, any attempt to tinker with the party structures will not just be an invitation to avoidable lawlessness but also illegal, ultra vires and a direct affront on the judiciary.

    “Various courts, from Ilaro to Lagos and Abuja, and even INEC have since recognised the party structure in the state under the leadership of Adebayo Dayo.”

  • Trouble with our educational system

    SIR: The hullabaloo that attended the poor scores recorded in the recently concluded West African School Certificate (WASC) examinations has been so deafening that stakeholders have more or less resorted to the blame game. Parents blame teachers (their eternal whipping boys) and teachers, in turn, blame en bloc, government, students and their parents. And government silently absorbs the knocks apparently because it knows that it holds the ace, the panacea to the continuous slide in the educational fortunes of this country.

    Honestly speaking, is it only government that is to be held responsible for the dismal results posted in this year’s WASC examinations? Hardly.

    The first stakeholders to blame in students’ poor and uninspiring performance at examinations are their teachers who also take the glory when they perform well. The blame for the teacher in the current academic mess derives from his non-committal approach to the job of teaching. This ugly development came into the system when government interfered in education through forceful takeover of schools immediately after the Civil War.

    The takeover was one of the greatest tragedies which the military inflicted on this nation.

    Educationists, the world over, stress inspection and supervision as very essential components of the system. Employers supervise and inspect to maintain standards in schools. Since it ceased in the system, irresponsible and undisciplined teachers have continued to cheat rather than teach the children entrusted to their care.

    The failure of teachers to apply themselves diligently to their jobs and their undue desire to post good results in public examinations prod them to lead in the corrupt option of exam malpractices. And because many of them at all levels of the education process, university inclusive, are products of examination malpractice, they deploy their energies more faithfully to examination paper leakages than to the job they were employed to do. This, simply, is the reason it might take long to kill exam malpractice in this country, the planned extinction of pencil-to-paper examination by WAEC notwithstanding.

    Parents also share in the blame. Parents who take up arms against teachers for punishing their erring children unwittingly plant seeds of indiscipline in such wards. When the seeds begin maturing into plants, they produce sour fruits. Parents who have scant time to inspect their children’s school work at home thereby failing to complement the teacher’s work contribute in no small measure to the poor results in WAEC examinations.

    Many of today’s students are only so, in name. These days one hardly sees pupils and students studying at home. Nobody burns the midnight oil anymore, the practice by which hardworking and serious students were known. Is it not saddening that a student goes through six years of secondary school and four or five of university education without reading a single novel except those prescribed for his school work? Any wonder that they vomit an admixture of tenses and mess up with prepositions in their everyday English language usage, spoken or written.

    The advent of the television, mobile telephone, the computer and allied facilities has claimed their toll on Nigeria’s student population. Regrettably, today’s students and pupils have made the television their number one curriculum. They ironically desert the television when an educational programme is introduced.

    Nigeria’s education system calls for declaration of a state of emergency because the worm that is eating into the system if not stemmed is bound to bring it down. The present situation worries all who passed through the old order because what obtains is a near fairy tale in true education.

     

    • Vincent Ekwurumadu

    Owerri

  • 13 Customs officers in trouble over seized N600m vehicles

    13 Customs officers in trouble over seized N600m vehicles

    The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Federal Operation  Unit (FOU) Zone ‘A’, Ikeja, Lagos has made a huge catch, seizing N600 million worth of exotic vehicles.

    It made the seizure following the bursting of a smuggling ring that specialises in importing vehicles through the seaports without paying duty, The Nation learnt.

    Sources said most of the vehicles, including new 2013 and 2014 models, passed through the Lagos ports without payment of the 35 per cent duty. They added that the importers and clearing agents declared the cargoes as used cars purportedly manufactured in 2006 and 2007 to deceive the Customs and short-change the Federal Government.

    The vehicles include eight 2014 custom-built Rolls Royce, 2013 Mercedes Benz 700, Lexus GX 460, Toyota Land Cruiser Prado TX.L, BKA bus, Toyota 4Runner, Toyota Highlander, Toyota Camry, Infinity QX56, Pajero Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV) and other expensive brands.

    The market value of the Rolls Royce, security sources said, is about N50 million each and the importer was expected to pay N15 million duty on each vehicle. The importer, it was alleged, paid N1 million to get the vehicles out of the port.

    Some of the vehicles, sources said, had no Customs paper.

    More than 13 officers of the Customs responsible for the release of the vehicles, it was gathered, may be sacked after the probe ordered by Customs Comptroller-General Alhaji Dikko Abdullahi on the matter.

    Some of the vehicles, a source said, were released from the port at night to beat security checks.

    It was learnt that some of the importers used the new number plates on some of the vehicles to beat Customs’ checks on the road. But, unknown to them, Customs officials from the FOU Zone ‘A’ had been monitoring their movement in Lagos for days before swooping on them.

    Some officers of the zone, the source said, used the Customs camouflage, while others were deployed by the Acting Controller, Turaki Usman Adamu, in mufti to trace and track the smuggled vehicles.

    Sources revealed that the command made 336 seizures valued at N107 million in the first 25 days of Turaki’s assumption.

    Turaki confirmed that custom- built vehicles were intercepted by his officers and men, but refused to mention the number and the value. The Customs headquarters had been briefed, he said.

    The Customs chief, however, said following a tip-off, his Lagos Roving Patrol Team (LRPT) also intercepted seven trucks of smuggled textile materials from a warehouse around Oshodi, whose value was yet to be determined.

    “On Thursday, August 14, following a tip-off, the Lagos Roving Patrol Team, intercepted seven trucks of Jumbo bales of suspected textile materials from a warehouse around Oshodi.

    “The trucks have been deposited in the government warehouse for further investigation and to determine the value.

    “I am pleased to inform you that the Unit also recorded  a total of 336 different seizures of assorted offending goods valued at N107,513,308 with a duty of N42,937,110 and 19 suspects were arrested in connection with the seizure.

    “Between January and August 14, the total amount of revenue as a result of our intervention from ports and border stations stood at N89,337,981.00. It is good to add that between first and 14th of this month, we generated N28,128,140. The amount is higher than that one generated in August last year.

    “Therefore, I am advising smugglers in the Southwest to relocate or else they would face the full wrath of the law.

    “We have spread our dragnets to all the nooks and crannies of our areas of jurisdiction and will not stop at dealing with the menace,” Turaki said.

    Turaki, who said the unit was complementing the efforts of other Customs Commands in ensuring that there was total compliance with the fiscal policies of the Federal Government on trade, however, assured that genuine and compliant importers and their representatives of  support, stressing that the unit is committed to boosting legitimate trade in line with global best practice.

     

  • I’m married to trouble, man tells court

    A traditional medical practitioner, Olatunde Salia, is seeking to divorce his  wife, Ganiyat, because of alleged attempted murder, rudeness and constant fighting.

    Salia, who said he remarried to kill loneliness, told the Customary Court in Alagbado, a Lagos suburb: “I thought I had passed the stage of child nursing. I never knew I was wrong. I wanted peace but I found trouble.”

    Salia, who said the 12-year-old union was contracted under Native and Customary Law, added: “My wife knows the nature of my job, but she complains bitterly whenever I attend to female clients. She is very temperamental. The last time I tried to avoid her trouble, she ate rat killer. Out of fear, I hurriedly took her to a nearby hospital at night.

    “My wife and I wash separately to the extent of fighting over clothesline. She lacks respect and embarrasses me publicly. We have children but from different spouses. We married to support each other in times of distress. What else do I want from a woman who doesn’t listen to me? I can’t bear the pain anymore; I don’t mind dissolution.”

    Ganiyat, however, told the court: “How can another woman buy foodstuffs into our home when I am still alive? He told me to leave his house if I was tired of him. I slightly pushed him because of the provocative statement. My husband swathed his leg and told his friends that I intentionally wanted to destroy his leg. He is quick to anger. He punched my eyes because I accused him of selling on credit; I have been in pains for over two weeks now.”

    “ I lied to have taken a rat poison because my presence in the house wasn’t noticed. I don’t regret my actions. My stubborn attitude has brought me this long in the marriage. I am sorry for the trouble I have caused him. At this level, death should be the only thing separating us.”

    The Court President, Mr Olubode Sekoni, advised them to cease fighting and maintain peace since they still live together. The case was adjourned till Thursday for judgment.

  • Ahmed: don’t use youths to foment trouble

    Ahmed: don’t use youths to foment trouble

    Kwara State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed has urged politicians not to use youths to foment trouble in actualising their ambitions.

    The governor spoke at the weekend in Ilorin, the state capital, at the maiden security summit, organised by Ilorin Emirate Descendants Union (IEDPU).

    He said youths needed jobs and not guns. “Our youths need jobs and a secure future. What they do not need are guns and machetes, whose only outcome is to blight their lives and abridge their future.

    ‘Security agencies should form a greater synergy and avoid needless rivalry. Only through working together can we surmount the security threats confronting our state. It does not matter who offers the best protection and security. What counts is that our lives are safe,” the governor said.

    Ahmed urged Nigerians to be vigilant and report suspicious activities to security agencies.

    National President of IEDPU Alhaji AbdulHamid Adi said the summit was designed to create a roadmap to check crime and criminalities in Ilorin.

  • Woman in trouble over ‘fake’ business proposal

    Four years after, Hajara Egbra, has been held over a N25million deal, a business proposal, which went awry.

    She was arrested by the Special Fraud Unit (SFU), Ikoyi, Lagos, following June 5 petition, which was sent to the Commissioner of Police, Mr Tunde Ogunsakin.

    The petitioner, a business woman alleged that in 2009, she purchased a land measuring 2,500 square metres within Asokoro Extension in Abuja from the suspect for N25million and the payment was made in three instalments.

    She alleged that the suspect issued a receipt with Invoice No. 0073 dated September 29, 2009 and Invoice No. 0201 dated October 6, 2009 for two N10 million instalmental payments, adding that the third payment of N5million was made with First Bank cheque No. 01795293 dated December 19, 2012.

    The petitioner stated that it was while she was trying to process the building plan and other related documents that she discovered that she had been duped.

    Ogunsakin said: “The suspect actually sold to her a land that already has an owner. Also, the suspect gave her another plot which she had already fenced with the sum of N450,000.00 and was later told by the suspect that the plot is equally not vacant”.

    Egbra (45), a Technical Officer with the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) and a business woman with a shop at Garki Modern Market, Abuja, hails from Okene in Kogi State. She was paraded after her arrest.

    One Mohammed Sadiq was also arrested in connection with the fraud, but reportedly jumped bail. Operatives are making frantic efforts to re-arrest him.

    Egbra told reporters that she gave N18.5million to Sadiq, a developer, while the balance was for her services.

    Police said that Sadiq, while still in its custo-dy, confessed that he collected the N18.5million from Egbra.

    SFU’s spokesperson, Ngozi Isintume-Agu, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP), said the suspect would be charged to court soon.