Tag: Uchenna Okafor

  • ‘We may be compelled to ban tricycles over nuisance’

    Anambra State Commissioner for Transport, Uchenna Okafor, has warned tricycle operators popularly known as keke riders in the state against use of tricycles for criminal activities.

    He said government would not hesitate to ban tricycle operation if they became nuisance to the society.

    Addressing tricycle operators at the weekend in Awka, Okafor cautioned them to avoid any act capable of bringing their names to ridicule.

    He further warned them to stop any manner of payment to anybody, insisting that the order that all payments be stopped immediately were still in force.

    Read Also: Tricycles banned in Asaba

    Responding, Chairman of the Caretaker committee of Keke Operators, Mr Ekene Ifediata, stressed the need for members to abide by the government directive, warning that offenders would be dealt with accordingly.

    He said, “We will set up a taskforce that will take care of road decongestion that will operate in line with the state government.

    “Our plea is that whenever the state government wants to issue authority to Keke operators on revenue generation let it be given to our members and not touts who not only increase the amount but also extort us.”

  • Okada ban: Over 1000 “thieves” to lose jobs in Anambra, says Commissioner

    No fewer than 1000 “thieves” would lose their jobs following the ban on the use of commercial motorcycles popularly called keke in Awka and Onitsha, Anambra State.

    The state commissioner for transport, Mr Uchenna Okafor, who disclosed this yesterday in a chat with newsmen, linked the increase in handbag snatching in the state to some of the motorcyclists who he referred to as criminals.

    “It is not in doubt that some of these Okada operators are criminals. They are the people snatching bags from women and students. With this ban, over 1000 thieves will leave the state because they have lost their jobs,” Okafor said.

    The commissioner, who described the ban as total, further revealed that the army and police officers in the state were barred them from riding motorcycles in the two affected states.

    He said the measure was to enable the government enforce the ban in those areas.

    Read Also: Teenage girl raped to death in Anambra

    “The ban on motorcycle operators is total. There will be no exceptions. We’ve met with the police and army authorities, and made it clear that their personnel won’t be allowed to ride motorcycles in the areas affected by the ban.

    “We are not exempting anybody. It’s total and comprehensive. By July 1, no Okada will be seen in any road in Awka and Onitsha areas.

    He said the governor had ordered over 1000 shuttle buses from Japan to cushion the effect of the ban on ” genuine motorcycle operators” in Awka and Onitsha.

  • Anambra lawmaker tasks ministry on provision of basic amenities

    Mr Uchenna Okafor, a lawmaker in the Anambra House of Assembly, has urged the state Ministry of Public Utilities and Water Resources to initiate projects to ensure provision of basic amenities.

    Okafor, who is the Chairman, House Committee on Public Utilities and Water Resources, made the call in an interview with the News men in Awka on Tuesday.

    He said that the committee would ensure the ministry discharged its functions through effective oversight functions.

    The All Peoples Grand Alliance (APGA) lawmaker, representing Ayahmelum Constituency, said that the ministry owed the people of the state a great deal of service and promised to ensure that its budget was implemented for their benefit.

    He said that the state government was committed to providing the people with electricity, water supply and effective fire service.

    Read Also: APGA forum: Obiano means well for Anambra

    Okafor said that the committee had been interfacing with the ministry to ensure that social amenities got to the remotest villages in the state.

    According to him, the Commissioner for Public Utilities and Water Resources, Mr Obi Nwankwo has pledged the ministry’s commitment to work with the committee to provide the people with the best service.

    Okafor urged the management and staff of the ministry to be alive to their responsibilities to achieve the desired aim of the state government.

    He reiterated his commitment in giving quality representation to his constituents and the state at large.

    NAN

  • Airport guard bolts with passengers’ N83m

    Airport guard bolts with passengers’ N83m

    A former security guard with the Nigerian Aviation Handling Company Plc (NAHCO), David Akinniran, who allegedly absconded after stealing $230,000 (about N83, 030,000) from two passengers at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos, was on Monday brought before a Lagos High Court in Igbosere.

    Akinniran, 40, was arraigned by the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) before Justice Agnes Nicole-Clay.

    He is standing trial on a four-count charge of conspiracy, stealing and receiving property suspected to have been stolen.

    Prosecuting counsel, Mr. Henry Obiazi, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), said Akinniran committed the alleged offences sometime in January 2016 at the company’s headquarters, NAHCO House, MMIA, Lagos.

    Obiazi alleged that the defendant and his accomplices, who are at large, stole the money in tranches of $160,000, $20,000 and $50,000 from the office of their boss, Mr. Rahman Adeshola.

    He said the stolen money was the property of two Nigerian businessmen, Uchenna Okafor and Okwudili Onwuka, who kept it in Adeshola’s custody for safekeeping.

    The alleged theft was discovered when Okafor and Onwuka arrived at the MMIA to catch a flight to China and requested for the money, which they intended to use for their import business.

    According to Obiazi, the offences contravened sections 280(1)(a)(b), 328(1),(2)(a) and 411 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015 and punishable under same.

    Akinniran pleaded not guilty to the charges.

    Defence counsel, Grace Adenubi, prayed the court to grant the accused bail. She assured the judge that Akinniran would be available for trial.

    But Obiazi opposed her application for bail on liberal terms.

    He prayed the court to either remand the defendant in prison pending trial, or impose strict terms that would ensure his appearance for trial.

     

  • ‘How we paid Evans N100m to secure my brother’s release’

    ‘How we paid Evans N100m to secure my brother’s release’

    An Ikeja high court heard on Friday that notorious and billionaire kidnapper, Chukwudumeme Onwuamadike, alias Evans, collected N100million as ransom from the family of his victim, Donatus Duru.

    The elder brother of Donatus, Anslem Duru disclosed this at the opening of the trial of  Evans and five others before Justice Hakeem Oshodi.

    Apart from Evans, other defendants are Uche Amadi, Ogechi Uchechukwu, Chilaka Ifeanyi Okwuchukwu Nwachukwu and Victor Aduba.

    They are facing a two count charge bordering on conspiracy and kidnapping before Justice Oshodi.

    They pleaded not guilty

    Mr Anselem Dunu, who is the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Maydon Pharmaceutical Limited, said the N100m was changed to €223,000, which was the currency that the kidnappers demanded.

    Donatus Dunu, who was kidnapped sometime in February this year at Ilupeju, Lagos.

    Anselem who is the prosecution lead witness mounted the witness box at about 3:55 pm told the court that his brother was not released until the family had paid the N100m ransom demanded by Evans.

    Earlier when the trial opened, the  State Director of Public Prosecutions, (DPP), Titilayo Shitta-Bay, who led the state prosecution team, asked Anselem if he recognised the defendants in the dock.

    The witness said he recognised the fourth defendant,  Nwachukwu, whom he had always known, and Evans, who he said he met later in the course of the investigation by the police.

    Before trial commenced, Evans, Amadi and Ifeanyi attempted to stall trial by raising objections and questioning the competence of the charges. But Justice Oshodi,  in three separate rulings, dismissed their applications.

    He described the defendants’ objections as misconceived and dismissed them.

    Led by Shitta-Bey, Anselm in his testimony, gave an account of the harrowing experience that the family went through when Donatus was kidnapped and how they struggled to raise N100m to secure his release.

    He said after the kidnapping, the hoodlums stopped contacting the family till about two weeks after, when he got a call, from a hidden number on his mobile phone.

    ” When I picked the call, it was Donatus agitated voice that I heard. He was pleading that the family should immediately go and withdraw all the funds in his bank account and deliver same to the kidnappers to prevent them from taking his life.

    “Donatus told me the kidnappers insisted on a ransom of €1m, but the family could only raise N100million which was converted to €223,000 and delivered to them”.

    According to him, one  Uchenna Okafor, took the money already packed in cellophane bags in a Honda car and headed towards Oshodi at about 7:45 pm on the agreed date and as instructed by the kidnappers.

    Anselem said Okafor did not return until about 11 pm on the said date, adding that it was not until about two weeks after then that he got the news of Donatus’ release.

    He said when Donatus was released, “he looked terribly emaciated. He had not shaved for a long time and he looked just like the early man.”

    Justice Oshodi adjourned till November 17 for Anselem’s cross-examination by the defence.

    Meanwhile, the court considered an application, seeking the release of the third defendant on bail on health grounds and adjourned till November 17 for the ruling.

    Earlier, Evans’ lawyer, Olukoya Ogungbeje, told the court that he had also filed an application for Evans to be released on bail.

    Ogungbeje also told the court that his other application seek to quash the charges against his client.

    But the DPP opposed it,  describing  Evans’s application for bail and quashing of charges as “conflicting, confusing and an abuse of court processes.”‎

    Justice Oshodi declined to hear the applications.

    Earlier, the DPP had described Evans’s application for bail and accelerated hearing, filed along with an application to quash the charges as “conflicting, confusing and an abuse of court processes.”‎