Tag: violators

  • Benin monarch vows to deal with native laws’ violators

    The Oba of Benin, Oba Ewuare II, has vowed to deal with violators of native laws and customs in Benin City and its environs.

    A statement yesterday by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Desmond Agbama, said the monarch was determined to re-install native laws, rid the state of violence and guarantee peace.

    He said the warning was sequel to the submission of a report by the Benin Customary Alternate Dispute Resolution Committee.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the traditional ruler set up the committee on October 13 to handle and resolve communal matters, such as inheritance, land matters, family issues, among others.

    The committee Chairman, Justice Samson Uwaifo (retd), told the monarch respondents were not honouring the committee’s invitation.

    He said it was a development that had hampered dispensation of justice.

    The oba, receiving the report, said the palace would work out measures to deal with those who refused to honour the invitation.

    He hailed the performance  of Justice Uwaifo-led committee, urging members not to be deterred by challenges.

    The ruler assured the committee of his support.

  • Police plan crackdown on revenue collection violators

    Police plan crackdown on revenue collection violators

    •Emergency phone numbers released
    •State to introduce POS for revenue collection
    •Govt to employ first batch of 10,000 collectors

    The Edo State Government has released emergency phone lines to the public to report violators to the ban on the collection of revenue for immediate arrest.

    A statement yesterday by the Chief Press Secretary (Interim) to the Governor, Mr. John Mayaki, confirmed the development.

    The police special lines, the statement said, are: 08115808360, 08115808361, 08115808441,  08115808442.

    He said Police Commissioner Haliru Gwandu would enforce the implementation of the ban on collection of revenue by private individuals, following Governor Godwin Obaseki’s directive.

    Gwandu said: “I will send out 20 squads that will go round and ensure there is diligence and compliance of the ban.

    “You have heard the pronouncement and I am sure the people are happy. I can also assure you that the police will not rest on their oars.

    “Very soon, I will hold a meeting with my Divisional Police Officers (DPOs). I implore the people of Edo State to do the right thing and ensure that there is sanity. I will enforce the order to the letter.”

    Obaseki has perfected modality for the employment of the first set of 10,000 persons in fulfilment of his avowed electioneering promise to create 200,000 jobs.

    The governor, who spoke last Friday in Benin, the state capital, said his administration would introduce the Point of Service (POS) electronic platform for revenue collection via scratch cards for those who do not have ATM cards.

    Obaseki directed heads of local government administration to forward names of contractors initially collecting revenue to the Government House to jumpstart the job scheme.

    A government statement last Friday said the submission of the contractors’ names was part of the government’s avowed commitment to streamline tax  collection across the state.

    The statement said government’s decision followed Obaseki’s meeting with stakeholders at the Government House last Friday.

    Addressing reporters after the meeting, the Chairman of Edo State Internal Revenue Service, Chief Oseni Elamah, said the contractors were those previously selected to collect revenue on behalf of the local governments.

    Elemah said the contractors were also required to supply the names of their workers, phone numbers and passport photographs.

    He said: “This is with a view to capturing their details in our employment database.

    “In addition to this, the managing directors of those engaged as consultants or contractors have also been directed to supply the names of those people who were involved, the workers they used, their numbers and their photographs so that we can consider them for employment under the first 10,000 youths’ employment programme the government is working on.

    “They will undergo training before eventual recruitment will be made.”

    The chairman noted that: “under this, we are also working towards eliminating cash as a means of revenue collection”.

  • EU to impose 100m euro fine on data protection laws violators

    EU to impose 100m euro fine on data protection laws violators

    The European Parliament has voted to strengthen Europe’s data protection laws, including plans to impose fines of up to 100million euro on companies, such as Yahoo!, Facebook or Google if they break the rules.

    The vote in parliament’s civil liberties committee opens the way for further negotiations with EU countries and the European Commission on the plans, the first revision to Europe’s data laws since 1995.

    In the nearly two decades since then, vast changes have taken place in how data is generated, stored, shared and viewed, leaving lawmakers determined to get ahead of the game and draft rules that they say will better protect individuals.

    “The European Parliament has just given its full backing to a strong and uniform European data protection law that will cut costs for business and strengthen the protection of our citizens: one continent, one law,” said EU Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding.

    In its legislative proposal unveiled in early 2012, the Commission suggested sanctions of up to two per cent of global turnover on companies that violate the rules, and said consumers should have the “right to be forgotten” – that they should be able to remove their entire digital traces from the Internet.

    The parliament’s civil liberties committee has come up with nearly 4,000 amendments to the original plan, including increasing the fine to five per cent of yearly worldwide turnover or 100million euro, whichever is greater.

    The changes also mean the replacement of the “right to be forgotten” with “the right of erasure,” seen as a lesser obligation.

    Officials said the change in language was necessary as consultations with technology companies had made clear that it would impossible to entirely remove someone’s traces from the Internet. Individuals should not be promised something that could not be achieved, the officials said.

    The regulation on data in the 28 countries that make up the European Union will establish, when finalised, a single, pan-European law for data protection, replacing the current inconsistent patchwork of national laws. Companies will deal with one law, not 28.

    “The benefits are estimated at 2.3billion euro per year,” the Commission said in a statement.

    Parliament, in line with the Commission’s proposals, also wants to impose strict rules on how data is shared or transferred to non-EU countries. For example, if the United States wants access to information held by Google or Yahoo! about a European citizen based in Europe, the firm would have to seek authorisation from a European data authority first.

    That would establish an extra, EU-controlled gateway that might go some way to assuaging the profound concerns raised in Europe about US data spying activities revealed via the leaks from former US data analyst Edward Snowden.

    Facebook, Yahoo!, Google and other Internet-based firms, the vast majority of them American, have lobbied against the Commission’s proposal, concerned it will damage their business model by imposing an extra, costly burden on how they handle data, and limit their ability to target goods at consumers.

    U.S. authorities are also worried that if Europe establishes strict new data rules, countries in Latin America, the Middle East, Africa and Asia will tend towards the European model, setting a higher global data-protection threshold.

    That would leave the US either having to offer the same protections or lobbying to get countries to adopt its less rigid code of protection, creating an uneven playing field that could dent the competitiveness of US firms.

     

     

     

    “Tonight’s vote also sends a clear signal: as of today, data protection is made in Europe,” Reding said in a statement.

    Negotiations with EU member states and the European Commission on the law are to start later this year or early in 2014. EU leaders will discuss the issue at a summit in Brussels on October 24-25 and could give some indication then of how quickly they want to proceed.

    The aim is to have the legislation agreed before May, when the assembly breaks up and new European Parliament elections are held. However, EU officials are not convinced this is feasible.

  • ‘Prosecute Electoral Act violators in Ondo’

    The Vice-Chairman, Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), Okitipupa branch, Ondo State, Mr. Segun Lema, at the weekend urged the Inspector- General of Police (IGP) Mohammed Abubakar to ensure the prosecution of the Labour Party (LP) chieftains arrested over election malpractices in the governorship election.

    Lema, who spoke with reporters in Akure, decried the high level of injustice and malpractices, which characterised the poll.

    He enjoined the National Judicial Commission (NJC) to ensure that judges with credible judicial pedigree were appointed as members of the Ondo State Election Petition Tribunal to probe the petitions that might have arisen from aggrieved parties.

    Lema said the IGP should, as a matter of urgency, prevail on the commissioner of police to begin the prosecution of the suspected election riggers.

    The lawyer called for the probe of the former Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Chief Olu Falae and the LP chieftains arrested over alleged involvement in electoral manipulation.

    Although Falae has denied the allegation, describing it as baseless and a deliberate attempt by some politicians to dent his image, Lema alleged that it is unfortunate that Chief Falae, who is a respected person in the society, can allow such atrocities to be perpetrated on his premises.

    He advised the IGP and INEC Chairman Prof. Attahiru Jega to treat the alleged involvement of some personalities in election manipulation with concern.

    The NBA chief also urged the prosecution of security operatives and INEC officials allegedly involved in complicity during the poll.

    He said INEC and the police should conduct thorough investigations to unravel how electoral materials were smuggled out of INEC area offices in the state before the election day.

    It was alleged that some bigwigs of the LP, including two serving commissioners, a council chairman and a member of the House of Assembly representing a constituency in the coastal area were caught with thumb-printed ballot papers on the election day.

    Lema said Governor Olusegun Mimiko would be made to account for the state funds he allegedly spent on his electioneering campaign.

    He said: “I felt disappointed when I heard that some LP chieftains were caught in Chief Falae’s home with thumb-printed ballot papers on the election day. I believe Falae’s compound was not an accredited polling unit.

    “I wonder why he should allow such a fraudulent act to take place in his home. I know that Chief Falae would never participate in such an unpatriotic act.

    “But what I’m saying is that the police should investigate the circumstances that brought about the discovery of these illegal act and manipulation in Chief Falae’s home.

    “A thorough investigation should be conducted into this matter, and if he is found culpable, he should be arrested and prosecuted along with the other suspects.

    “As a Nigerian, I believe he is not above the law. The two commissioners and the council chairman arrested over a similar offence should also be prosecuted.”

    The NBA vice-chairman said it was unfortunate that Governor Mimiko, a product of the rule of law, could watch his commissioners and aides perpetrate electoral fraud against the wish of the electorate.