Tag: warns

  • Britain warns against travelling to North

    Britain yesterday advised its citizens not to travel to the North, following an increase in attacks blamed on Islamist militants.

    Gunmen killed a security guard and abducted a Briton, an Italian, a Greek and four Lebanese workers after storming a Lebanese construction firm Setraco, in Bauchi state on February 16.

    It was the worst case in the kidnap of foreigners in the North since insurgency by Islamist militants intensified two years ago.

    Britain advised against any travel to Bauchi state and Okene city in southern Kogi state where militants last month attacked Nigerian troops, who were bound for Mali to counter an Islamist insurgency.

    It also advised against “against all-but-essential travel” to Kaduna, Kano, Jigawa and Katsina states, a statement from the foreign office said.

    Attacks by Islamist groups in northern Nigeria have become the biggest threat to stability in Nigeria.

    Western governments are concerned that the militants may link up with groups elsewhere in the region, including al Qaeda’s North African wing AQIM, especially given the conflict in nearby Mali. France sent troops to Mali last month to help oust Islamist rebels.

    Islamist group Ansaru claimed responsibility for the Setraco raid in Bauchi and the Okene attack.

    The Setraco raid was “based on the transgression and atrocities done to the religion of Allah by the European countries in many places such as Afghanistan and Mali,” said the group, which has kidnapped other foreigners in Nigeria in the past.

  • Management warns students

    Management warns students

    The management of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) has warned students to move their personal effects out of the Halls of Residence in the university as they leave for their various homes. The institution ended its 2011/2012 session penultimate week.

    The warning was contained in a circular issued by the management on January 25 after the end of the semester. The memo was made available to the students at their various hostels and the supervisory porters of the respective halls. The reason may not be unconnected to the impending rehabilitation work that will be carried out in the halls during the break.

    Mr S.A Oderinwale, the warden of ETF Hall, warned the students to pack their belongings out of the hostel’s rooms as they were leaving last week. He said anything left in the room would be disposed as refuse. He finally pleaded to the students to comply with the directive.

     

  • Minister at EU talks, warns of ‘global threat’

    Minister at EU talks, warns of ‘global threat’

    MALIIAN Foreign Minister Tieman Coulibaly yesterday warned the presence of Islamists linked to al-Qaeda in the North of the conflict-torn West African nation constitutes a “global threat.”

    “Today, it’s a question of mobilising the international community in its entirety to come to our help in our country, but also to come to the aid of the whole region because what is happening in Mali represents a global threat,” Coulibaly told a press conference after joining emergency talks with European Union (EU) Foreign Ministers in Brussels, Belgium.

    With reference to an ongoing raid on a remote desert gas field in Algeria, where initial reports said dozens of hostages and kidnappers died, Coulibaly said “jihadists” operating in the region were part of an international “drug trafficking” organisation.

    Simply a “criminal enterprise,” he said, adding that their actions had “nothing to do with politics” and amounted to a “genuine threat to civilisation.

    After the meeting Coulibaly said it was necessary to mobilize “the entire international community” to help Mali and the region.

    “What is happening in Mali is a global threat,” Coulibaly told journalists at a press conference. “Remember what happened on Sept. 11,” he said, referring to the terrorist attacks in the United States (U.S.).

    “It is that terrorism can happen anywhere, at any moment, to anyone.”

    He pointed out that the hostage-taking in Algeria revealed to the world the true nature of the extremists.

  • Gaidam warns council chairmen against graft

    Yobe State Governor Ibrahim Gaidam yesterday warned local government caretaker committee chairmen to shun corruption and other “acts or behaviours” that could affect the discharge of their duties.

    The governor advised them to monitor and supervise water supply, health and education projects in their councils.

    Gaidam spoke in Damaturu, the state capital, when he swore in 17 caretaker committee chairmen at the Government House.

    The governor noted that the appointments of some of the chairmen were based on their previous performances, rankings, good character and hard work.

    “To further demonstrate government’s commitment to ensure transparency in the conduct of government business, we will monitor very closely the way you run the affairs of the councils.

    “Anyone found wanting in the discharge of his or her duties will be shown the way out and handed over to law enforcement agents for appropriate action,” Gaidam warned.

    The governor urged the local government chairmen to focus on people-oriented projects.

    He said: “You are to always execute development projects geared towards uplifting the living standards of your people.

    “The council is expected to give attention to activities on Fadama farms, provision of water pumps, seedlings and animal extraction as well as the purchase of tricycles and sewing machines for distribution to the people at subsidised rates. These activities and measures are to create more jobs, poverty alleviation and empowering youths towards self-reliance.”

    The governor added that their tenure is for five or six months, as elections by the Yobe State Independent Electoral Commission (YOSIEC) into the 17 councils will hold in May/June.

    Gaidam hoped there would be improved security across the state.

    He said: “This state had been under siege by the Islamists group between November, 2011 and November, 2012 where people were prevented from their business and school activities and even prayers by the Muslim communities that constitute 95 per cent of the population of the state.”

  • Ambassador warns Nigeria Football Supporters Club

    Ambassador warns Nigeria Football Supporters Club

    Ambassador. Sonni Yusuf, the Nigerian High Commissioner to South Africa has told members of the Nigeria Football Supporters Club in Mbombela, who accompanied him on the inspection of facilities to be good ambassadors of the country.

    “ I want to express the pleasure of the mission at the enthusiasm your group has been displaying towards our national team. But I must say that this is not a do or die situation; football and sports as a whole is to foster good relationships between people, in this case the purpose is to promote unity among African nations.

    “So I must appeal to you all to be good ambassadors of Nigeria; there must not be any act of violence in and outside the stadium during any of our matches,’’ Yusuf added.

    He appealed to the Supporters’ Club members and other fans to stay away from the team’s hotel, so as not to distract them.

    The spokesman of the supporters club, Adeboboye Adekunle, said that their support for the Super Eagles was a display of their loyalty to the country.

    “We want to assure your Excellency on behalf of over 300 members of the club in Mbombela that we will be of good behaviour and give our national team full support during the tournament,’’ Adekunle said.

    Yusuf was accompanied on the visit by the Consul-General, Okey Emuchay and Dr Bolaji Ojo-Oba, Director of Elite Athletes at the National Sports Commission. He promised to provide Nigerian flags to fans during the Super Eagles’ matches.

    NAN reports that the Super Eagles will be staying at the Ingwenyama Conference and Sports Resort, Mbombela.

     

  • Fashola warns against environmental pollution

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola said he is satisfied with the progress of projects in Amuwo-Odofin.

    He praised the contractors handling the light rail project, saying with the rate of work so far, the government would deliver on the first phase of the project this year.

    He said: “With the rate of work so far, I must say we are on course and that the first phase of the project will be completed on schedule around June/July this year.”

    Fashola, who praised the contractors handling the project for their commitment, lamented that some residents and traders had turned the walkway of the light rail into a refuse dump.

    He said the blue print of his administration on the environment would not be achieved if the people refuse to obey environmental laws.

    According to him, dumping of refuse indiscriminately around streets and in drain channels does more damage to the environment and it is a precursor of disasters, especially flood. He said a stakeholders meeting would soon be convened to address the environmental issues in order to carry residents along in the drive against indiscriminate refuse dump.

    Amuwo-Odofin Local Government Chairman Comrade Ayodele Adewale told the governor that the porosity of the Federal Housing Authority (FHA) and Mile 2 Estates needed urgent government attention. The governor promised to address the matter soonest.

    He however, advised residents to take care of their immediate surroundings.

    Among those who received Fashola were former Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon Abayomi Kinyomi, Hon. Sultan Adeniji-Adele, representing Amuwo Odofin Constituency I, Hon. Ramota Akinola-Hassan, representing Amuwo-Odofin Constituency II and Mr Fola Owolabi, General Manager FHA, Southwest.

  • Kukah warns politicians against self enrichment

    The Catholic Bishop of Sokoto, Rev Matthew Kukah, yesterday warned politicians against self enrichment.

    He said material prosperity is never a measure of a country’s greatness.

    Rev Kukah spoke at the Ibom Hall grounds in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State capital, during the annual interdenominational thanksgiving service with the theme “The Lord is our strength”, organised by the Akwa Ibom State Government.

    The cleric said: “I would like to call on you not to see politics as being about self enrichment, but purely as an instrument in the hands of God for good Christians to deliver the services and trust that God has given to them.

    “I think from what I see and what I have heard people say, many of you have reasons of being great but the material prosperity is never the measure of the greatness of a nation.

    “The essence of government and governance is to ensure that the resources that God has given to us are used to give us a good life.”

    Rev Kukah argued that the country cannot achieve the unity of the component parts in the face of the current agitation for the creation of more states.

    He explained that a situation where people living together in the same state or local government area are asking for another state or council to be carved out for them showed that there is division among them and they cannot be said to be united.

    Rev Kukah, who also decried the inequality in the sharing of resources, said if the available resources were shared equally as the need arises, people would not be wallowing in abject poverty.

    He said: “Although God is our father, the resources, he has placed at our disposal is not being equitably shared the way we want, otherwise we won’t be wallowing in poverty.”

    The cleric hailed Governor Godswill Akpabio for the judicious use of resources of the state, noting that there must be correlation between the spirit of fairness, justice and peace as lack of peace will lead to lack of justice in the midst of increasing inequality.

  • Uduaghan warns kidnappers, robbers

    Delta State Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan yesterday warned that kidnappers, robbers and other criminals would no longer be treated with kid’s gloves in the state.

    He said the state and security operatives are prepared to take drastic steps to tackle crime.

    The governor warned that individuals and communities implicated in such crimes would face dire consequences.

    He spoke at the annual Iwere Kingdom thanksgiving service of the Itsekiri nation at the palace of the Olu of Warri, Ogiame Atuwatse II yesterday.

    “This is a warning to everyone involved in one criminal activity or the other; enough is enough.

    “You are giving the state a bad image and we cannot take it any longer.

    “It is our responsibility to protect life and property and we are going to do that. We may hurt some persons and some communities, but we will do whatever we have to do to protect life and property,” he stated.

    The governor’s riot act came against the backdrop of several high-profile kidnap in the state, particularly the abduction of Prof. Kamena Okonjo, mother of the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

    Although the police in the state claimed that the victim, who is the wife of a traditional ruler in the state, was released without the payment of ransom, there were reports that close to N100 million was paid for her freedom.

    His words: “You know I took an oath to protect lives and properties and I would not sit back and watch other people terrorise other members of the society.

    “All those engaged in one form of criminality or the other, such as armed robbery and kidnapping in Delta State, should stop their nefarious acts and retrace their steps.

    “In the coming year, we are going to take security more seriously and anyone caught would be made to face the law.”

    According to him, communities have been known to harbor such criminal elements giving them a playing field to perfect their nefarious acts.

    Speaking on other issues, Dr. Uduaghan said his administration was focusing on improving educational infrastructure, training and motivation of teachers so that Delta State would maintain an enviable position in Nigeria’s education sector.

    He noted that the scholarship award to first class students of Delta State origin was designed to prepare the ground for a crop of academics who would move Delta State forward.

    Uduaghan hailed the Itsekiri Education Trust Fund initiated by the Olu of Warri and promised to support the vision.

  • CPC warns Mimiko against loan

    The Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) at the weekend warned the Ondo State Government against taking any loan.

    It urged the Governor Olusegun Mimiko administration to account for the state’s allocation from the Federation Account since it assumed office.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Mr. Olu Falarungbon, CPC said: “It is unfortunate that a state endowed with natural and human resources is begging for loans that would end up in private pockets. If the government cannot generate internal revenue, courtesy demands the judicious use of Federal Allocations. So far, over N600 billion has accrued to the state as revenue in almost four years, without commensurate projects to show for it.

    “Schools are in shambles, hospitals are dilapidated, roads are bad and there are no jobs, yet, the government is spending millions of dollars on water fountains and mega schools.

    “The people deserve to know how state funds are being spent. Accountability and transparency are the hallmarks of democracy and good governance all over the world.

    “The Labour Party (LP) government needs to learn from performing states, especially Ekiti, which has enacted the Freedom of Information (FoI) Law to fight corruption.

    “It is retrogressive for a state known for excellence in public policy, vibrant legislature and pious judiciary in the past to be enmeshed in generational debt and poverty. Our Legislature has no voice and the Judiciary takes orders from the Executive. Governance has become a party-family affair.

    “The Ondo State Oil-Producing Areas Development Commission (OSOPADEC), an intervention agency for the welfare of the oil-producing communities, is swimming in corruption.

    “The government is not courageous enough to suspend or sack the commission’s chairman, who is standing trial at the Federal High Court, Akure, for the alleged embezzlement of billions of naira.

    “Those that are supposed to advise the governor seem to have been compromised. We urge religious and traditional leaders, senior citizens, professional bodies and well meaning people to be alive to their civil obligation and rescue the state from financial recklessness.”

  • Jonathan warns elders at Yakowa’s funeral

    Jonathan warns elders at Yakowa’s funeral

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan yesterday took exception to what he called the divisive statements of the nation’s leaders, urging them to mind what they say.

    Speaking at the funeral of former Kaduna State Governor Patrick Yakowa in Fadan Kagoma, the President implored the elders to emphasise those things that unite rather than divide the country.

    He said: “Utterances and words of elders are just like winds and waves that move, gather momentum and cause destructive effects which end results cannot be predicted. Responses of our young men and women are reflections of what the elders talk in public and even in private”.

    It was unclear those the president was referring to since he did not mention names.

    A few months ago, Jonathan and former President Olusegun Obasanjo fired brickbats at each other.

    Obasanjo fired the first salvo when he blasted Jonathan for being weak in handling the Boko Haram menace.

    The president fired back during the last Presidential Media Chat, describing the army’s 1999 invasion of Odi in Bayelsa State on Obasanjo’s order “as a disaster”.

    “Old men, women and children and not militants were killed in the invasion,” Jonathan said.

    Fadan Kagoma, the home town of the late Yakowa, was a beehive yesterday as the president led members of his cabinet, governors and other eminent Nigerians to the funeral.

    At the funeral service which took place at the St Paul Catholic Church, Fadan Kagoma, Jonathan described Yakowa as a “bridge builder” who loved his people irrespective of their religion and tribe.

    Yakowa, former National Security Adviser Gen. Andrew Azazi, Dauda Tsoho, Warrant Officer Mohammed Kamal, Commander Muritala Daba and Lt. Adeyemi Sowole were killed in an helicopter crash last Saturday on their way to Port Harcourt, Rivers State from Bayelsa State.

    Yakowa’s widow, Amina said yesterday she had come to terms with her husband’s death.

    Mrs. Yakowa urged the people to immortalise her husband by being committed to his ideals of peace, unity and development.

    “May the death of my husband bring unity to the people of Kaduna”, she said.

    Describing December 15 is a “dark Saturday”, Jonathan said: “Yakowa was a nationalist who played his roles very well as a civil servant of the old brigade and not as the civil servants of today when a director has more houses than Dangote”.

    The president said there was no ethnic or religious divide in the late Yakowa’s blood, pledging the government’s continued support for his immediate family.

    Kaduna State Governor Mukthar Ramalan Yero named the new carriageway and fourth bridge, in the metropolis, after the late Yakowa. He listed the achievements of the late Yakowa to include the fourth bridge and the access road, which the government named after him.

    Yero recalled the late Yakowa’s words during his inauguration in April 2010, that he would not be governor for Christians alone but for all, adding: “This singular declaration endeared him to all citizens of the state and even beyond.

    “His declaration in this respect manifested in his subsequent policies and programmes, thereby, earning him the acronym: Yakowa Nakowa. His vision was anchored on three cardinal thrusts, namely the task of security, unity and developing the state.

    “He pursued these broad objectives with single-minded determination. The fruits of his labour had started manifesting before the cold hands of death took his life in the most tragic manner, the reality of which I am yet to come to terms with.

    “My late boss, Governor Patrick Ibrahim Yakowa, exhibited uncommon leadership qualities. He was an embodiment of patience, simplicity, patriotism, peace, commitment to duty, thoroughness, honesty, nationalism, team player, experience in public service and a host of other sterling qualities that time and space will not permit me to mention”.

    Yero promised to follow the foot steps of the late Yakowa by being governor for all, irrespective of religion, ethnicity or geo-political consideration, saying: “My constituency will be Kaduna State in its entirety.

    “Nobody will be discriminated against on the basis of his faith or tribe. On the contrary, each and every citizen will be treated on his or her own merit. Let me in particular; assure the Christian community in the state that my government will do everything possible to protect their rights and privileges as guaranteed by the Constitution.

    “The wisdom I tapped from my predecessor with regards to his sense of fairness, justice and equity will be fully utilised in the conduct of my official and even private businesses. My doors will be open for constructive criticism and initiatives on how to move the state forward in all spheres of life.

    “I have also given my full commitment to the family of our departed governor, that as long as I remain the governor of Kaduna State, I will do everything possible to enhance their personal welfare.

    “Painful as the demise of my boss is, I am consoled by the fact that we had opportunity to reconcile our differences on a number of issues, some of which are personal, before he passed on”.

     

     

     

     

     

    Preaching at the funeral service, the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese, Rev Fr. Matthew Hassan Kukah, said no one could question God, pointing out that people should not feel despondent over Yakowa’s death.

    “This is not the time to feel despondent, because the time has come for you to stop sleeping and wake up, because our salvation is nearer now come than when we first believe. The night is nearly over, daylight is on its way, so let us throw away everything that has got to do with darkness and embrace light (Romans 13, 11-12).

    “Mr Yakowa ascended the exalted position of Kaduna State with a climax that is at best, the most fascination and exceptional career. He stood out as an exceptional child in the whole of Kaduna and especially the whole of Southern part of the state where he comes from.

    “It is even tempting to assert that very few people can beat the track record he has set. He was the first person in Southern Kaduna to become a federal Minister, also the first person to become a Permanent Secretary, and the first to become the Secretary to the Government of Kaduna State. Mr Yakowa holds the record of being the only Nigerian that has served two governors as deputy and later attained the position of a governor without break at all.

    “It was historic at his swearing in as the governor of Kaduna State at an event that was quite spectacular. From the creation of the state in 1987, the northern ruling class, by a policy seems to have applied an invisible sign that reads, ‘no vacancy, Christians need not apply in what later came to be known as Sir Ibrahim Kashim House’ to represent the state at the highest level.

    “Despite that fact that all states were open to Christian military officers, it was only Kaduna and perhaps Sokoto that were never governed by non-Muslims. This policy of non-inclusion against non-Muslims, turn Kaduna into a political Mecca and laid the foundation for unnecessary and sad religious tension that has continued to bog the state.

    “Yakowa’s death has robbed this state of one human being who brought respectability and nobility to politics. A man who demonstrated that faith can influence politics. A man who demonstrated that politics can be played by the rules. He showed that politics can serve as a means of building bridges, and he built bridges across the country.

    “He made Muslims respect and appreciate the Christian faith, and he showed the kind of human life that few in public service have demonstrated. Where he died and why he died was a true reflection of who the man was.

    “Some are even asking, ‘why did the Governor not send a representative to the burial of the father of Mr Oronto Douglas, a young man who was of no immediate political benefit to Mr Yakowa’. Those of us, who know Yakowa very well, will testify and can testify that this is exactly what the man was.

    “He was selfless; he took friendship rather too seriously. He never counted the cost of sacrifice he made to his friends. By befriending Oronto Douglas, he saw a chance to place a building block somewhere in the creeks of Niger Delta so that one day someone may walk across that bridge.

    “He was a man whose life was marked by simplicity, honesty, rectitude, character, integrity, probity, dedication to duty, sacrifice and almost an absolute faith and dedication to friendship…to my dear brothers and sisters of Southern Kaduna, despite the cloud of fear, doubts and uncertainty, we must not surrender to self doubt and prejudices.

    “We have lost a dear son, but we have not lost our future.

    “Those who project Islam as the basis for power, have now created crisis that has threatened the foundation of our society, especially in Northern Nigeria. Those who use religion, have used the North, and left it poorer than they met it, more divided than when they started.

    “But Mr Yakowa has managed to build bridge to a unite a people who have started to believe in one another as brothers and sisters despite the difficulties. He was relentless in the pursuit of peace. The result is that, he has rather, successfully, blunted the sharp cutting edge of religion in our public lives…”

    He said the Sultan of Sokoto Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar (II), Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, presidential candidate of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and a wide array of leading Muslims “deeply mourned” Yakowa.

    He said he saw ordinary Muslims, young and old mourn Yakowa.

    “But It was reported that some people had rejoiced at the death of Yakowa. These people do not represent the average Muslims”, he said

    “These scoundrels are the toxic waste of our humanity who will dance and rejoice at the nakedness of fathers and mothers in the market place. They should not distract us Christians and Muslims as we hold hands together across the country”, he said.

    Cardinal John Onaiyekan conducted the Requiem and the Eucharist Mass.

    Among those in the attendance were former Head of State, Gen. Abdusalami Abubakar, Senate President, David Mark, Speaker Aminu Tambuwal, Chairman of Governors’ Forum, Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State and his wife, Judith, Governors Babangida Aliyu (Niger), Gabriel Suswam (Benue) and Olusegun Mimiko (Ondo). Others are Deputy Governors James Ngilari (Adamawa), Peter Kishira (Kwara), Abubakar Aliyu (Yobe), Umar Mustapha (Borno) and Damishi Lucas (Nasarawa). Peoples Democratice Party National Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, his predecessors, Chief Solomon Lar, Chief Audu Ogbe and Alhaji Amadu Ali as well as Prof Jerry Gana, were also there.