Naija News

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Boko Haram: Fear of kidnap grips governors

boko-haram_usThe fear of being kidnapped by the fundamentalist Boko Haram sect has gripped governors in some of the states across the federation forcing them to beef up security in government houses and their homes.


One of the governors, Mr. Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State, had on April 26, raised the alarm that state executives were not immune from kidnapping.


While reacting to the invitation to attend the Nigerian Guild of Editors’ conference coming up in Asaba, Delta State, Aregbesola said he was wary of being kidnapped.


“They kidnapped the chairman of a local council area authority, which is not even up to a council and they demanded $1m. How much would they demand if they kidnap a governor, $1bn? You might just stroll to stretch your legs and off you go – you get kidnapped. Where will Osun get that kind of money?”Aregbesola asked.


While some of the governors have set up anti-kidnap squads, others have ensured that all their vehicles and those used by members of their families now have tracking devices.


Some of the state executives, our correspondents learnt, had also reduced the number of visitors they attend to. In some states, only one of several gates in government houses is used.


Apart from governors, top politicians have also relocated their relatives from the villages to the city where they could be easily protected from kidnappers.


Parents and guardians of very important personals had been the target of kidnappers in the past few weeks and they were only released after millions of naira were paid to their abductors.


The Joint Task Force in Borno State, Operation Restore Order, had on April 28 raised the alarm that Boko Haram had a new kidnapping squad whose objective was to kidnap and demand ransom to finance its terror operations.


JTF in a statement by its spokesman, Lt. Col. Sagir Musa, said the sect resorted to kidnapping when it realised it was losing its members to the superior fire power of security agencies.


Musa said, “Intelligence available to the task force has indicated that Boko Haram terrorists have resolved to concentrate more on kidnapping than robbery since kidnapping is more lucrative, less dangerous and requires short time to plan and execute.


“Similarly, a special kidnapping squad has been earmarked and tasked by Boko Haram sect to kidnap persons who could have wealthy relatives, politicians, businessmen/women, traditional rulers, senior civil servants and foreigners alike.”


The sect reportedly received the sum of N500m from France and Cameroon as ransom for seven French hostages.


The Chief Press Secretary to the Ondo State Governor, Mr. Eni Akinsola, said on Friday apart the governor, other citizens of the state had to be protected from kidnappers.


According to him, a new strategy involving relevant security agencies in the state and residents of the various local communities led to the arrest of some kidnappers recently.


Akinsola, who said the security arrangements put in place to check activities of criminals in the state was yielding results.


He said, “We have our plans but we won’t disclose that on the pages of newspapers but I can assure you that we have ensured that there is no hiding place for kidnappers and other criminals in the state.”


The Senior Special Adviser to Kwara State Governor on Media and Communication, Dr. Muyideen Akorede, also confirmed that  Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed had set up a Joint Task Force which conducts “stop and search” in the state’s entry and exit points.


Akorede said, “The governor has set up a Joint Task Force comprising the army, the police and civil defence who now conduct ‘stop and search’ at exit and entry points of the state capital, entry and exit points to all major towns in the state and entry and exit points from the state.


“All the borders are patrolled to stop people of questionable characters from entering the state and perpetuating crimes.”


Although security at the Ekiti State Government House was tight as usual on Friday, our correspondent in Ado-Ekiti observed that one lane of the dual carriage ways leading to the Governor’s Office was closed to motorists while the other one was manned by security agents.


Most vehicles with the pass issued by the government to allow them into the Governor’s Office were restricted to the car park before the office.


CROSS RIVER


It was learnt the state government has set up a special anti-kidnapping squad made up of the police, State Security Service, army, navy, air force and local operatives as a proactive measure to forestall kidnapping.


The State Security Adviser, Mr. Rekpene Bassey, was however, silent on extra measures adopted to protect the governor, his deputy or high ranking officials, but stressed that the state was already “planning to procure a tracking device that would make it easy to track down kidnappers whenever they struck.”


ANAMBRA


The Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Mr. Mike Udah, told our corresondent that the state governor was not taking “his personal security for granted”


He added, “We are aware of what has been happening in other parts of the country, including the kidnap of a local council area authority in Lagos State, and even the kidnap and killing of a former deputy governor of Anambra State. But that incident happened in Delta State, not here. We are concerned but the situation in Anambra State is not out of control.”


OYO


Armoured Personnel Carriers were stationed at the Oyo State Secretariat and other strategic locations in Ibadan while a detachment of heavily armed mobile police was stationed at the Government House, Agodi, Ibadan.


It was learnt that security of the state was reviewed recently and the state police command repaired some APCs and put them in strategic places in Ibadan.


The Special Adviser to Governor Abiola Ajimobi on Media, Dr. Festus Adedayo, said, “We are happy to say that there is peace in Oyo State since the advent of Governor Abiola Ajimobi administration. Government is not joking with the issue of security as it has continued to consolidate on the peace it bequeathed to the state.”


AKWA IBOM


At the Akwa Ibom State Government House, a single gate is now being used as entrance into the house. APCs are stationed at both the Government House as well as the state secretariat, Idongesit Nkanga Secretariat, Uyo, while the number of heavily armed security personnel has been increased.


Although none of the government official was willing to speak on the new security measures in place, a civil servant, Francis Ekong, said, “With the huge security details built around political office holders and their families in the state, I don’t think any kidnapper or armed robber can go near them.”


OSUN


Osun State Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr. Sunday Akere, said the government had procured 130 patrol vehicles and a helicopter for security purposes.


“Osun is secure. The Federal Government should take a leaf from the employment of 20,000 youths by the Aregbesola administration to stem the tide of unemployment. The devil finds jobs for idle hands,” Akere said.


BAYELSA


Politicians in Bayelsa State have taken measures to protect themselves and their family members from kidnapping.


Our correspondent gathered that political office holders had relocated their key family members especially their parents to Yenagoa, the state capital.


In a desperate measure to stop abduction in the state, the Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson, had approved death sentence for kidnappers in the state.


PLATEAU


The alarm raised by a member of the House of Representatives, Mr. Bitrus Kaze, might have necessitated a reappraisal of the security arrangements in the state.


Kaze had said there was a plot to either assassinate or kidnap him and some prominent citizens of the state.


Although the Police Commissioner, Mr. Chris Olakpe, had said the command had yet to receive any report on the alarm raised by the lawmaker, it was learnt that the police command had placed its anti-terrorism squad on the alert to protect the governor and other political office holders.


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Boko Haram: Fear of kidnap grips governors

Slain politician buried in Ekiti


A former member of the Action Congress of Nigeria in Ekiti state, Mr Ayo Jeje killed by suspected party thugs on March 30 has been buried.


The family of the deceased on Saturday called for the prosecution of those indicted by security agents in the murder.


Jeje, 38, was killed in Erinjiyan-Ekiti, while preparing to decamp with over 1,000 members of Action Congress of Nigeria to the PDP.


His death had attracted public outcry across the state.


The Chairman of ACN in the state and native of the community, Chief Jide Awe, had been arrested by the police in connection with the murder and taken to Abuja for interrogation.


Addressing journalists at the burial, Pastor Michael Oladunjoye, who spoke on behalf of the family, said that justice must be done in the case.


He described the death as painful and uncalled for, saying the family had no option than to bury the deceased after collecting the post mortem and death certificates at the Aramoko Ekiti General Hospital, where his body was deposited.


He called on government to give necessary support to Jeje’s widow, Ronke and four children, having lost their breadwinner in a controversial circumstance.


“This is a clear case of murder. The death is not natural and nobody will say justice should not be done. To us in this family, we have left the matter in the hands of God and government to do the needful in the matter by bringing the perpetrators to justice.”


Oladunjoye, who is an elder brother of Jeje, advised politicians against killing and maiming, saying it was baffling why people would resort to killing in the name of politics.


“People should desist from playing do-or-die politics. I wonder why people would have to kill because they want to get positions. This must stop for the nation to move forward.”


 


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Slain politician buried in Ekiti

Family of abducted ex-oil minister begs for his release



Kidnapped Monguno

Kidnapped Monguno



The Family of Dr Shettima Ali Monguno, the elder statesman kidnapped in Maiduguri on Friday, has appealed to his abductors to release him without delay.


Monguno, 87, was kidnapped by gunmen shortly after praying in his mosque in Mafoni, Maiduguri.


Malam Rahama Ali-Monguno, spokesman for the family, made the appeal while speaking with newsmen in Maiduguri on Saturday.


Ali-Monguno said that the elder statesman needed to be released so that he could have access to his daily medication.


“We are begging the abductors in the name of Allah to please release our father. They should consider his old age and his current state of health,’’ he said.


He also urged the abductors to consider the numerous philanthropic gestures of the elder statesman.


“Our father has been the life wire of many orphans, widows and vulnerable members of the society.


“He has helped to build Qur’anic and Western schools and sponsored many indigent children to school,” he said.


Ali-Monguno did not say if the abductors had made contact with the family or demanded ransom for his release.


Monguno, a member of the Borno Elders Forum, has been an advocate for dialogue with the Boko Haram sect for lasting peace in the state.


 


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Family of abducted ex-oil minister begs for his release

12 bomb disposal experts abducted in Senegal


bombSuspected separatist rebels have abducted 12 bomb disposal experts in southern Senegal, a security source said Saturday.


The source said the “armed band” was suspected of belonging to the Casamance Movement of Democratic Forces (MFDC), which has been fighting for independence of southern Senegal for some three decades.


A source close to the government’s mine-clearing agency said the 12 were abducted Friday in the village of Kailou, about 15 kilometres (nine miles) from the region’s main city Ziguinchor.


The hostages include women, the source said.


A source close to the Senegalese army confirmed the abduction.


The MFDC has been fighting for independence for Casamance, a region separated from northern Senegal by Gambia, since 1982 in west Africa’s longest-running conflict.


The fighting has claimed thousands of lives and displaced thousands more, but no precise toll is available.


Hundreds of the casualties have been caused by anti-personnel and anti-tank mines.


 


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12 bomb disposal experts abducted in Senegal

Awkward truth about Nigerian Churches

By Babasola Kuti


Fake-pastor cartoon logoSK’s Word on Sunday – Speechlessness: There comes a time in ones life where you are tired of talking or stunned into silence.


As I was wondering about today’s topic I realised we have already touched all the areas. Let me do a recap today just in case..if I miss anything then please feel free to add.


1. Churches in Nigeria are now: a place where pastors kill their members, other members say nothing and still continue attending the church and saying amazing things about the pastor.


2. A place where pastors preach against fornication, adultery, corruption but systematically fail to notice that those vices are prevalent in their churches.


3. RCCG for instance had a world record number of people who were indicted for fraud: Sola Adeoti, Cecilia Ibru, Erastus Akingbola etc etc


4. Our churches are a place of recognition for criminals and economic saboteurs. Name any corrupt govt official who has not had a front row seat in house on the rock, winners chapel, RCCG etc. In fact if you have not sat in a front row seat in these churches you’re likely to make heaven.


5. Churches are a place of prosperity for a few: the pastors. Anything is available to them…whether it is $10,000 silk suits, SUV’s with Security, dream homes, Private jets…all paid for by god especially as they have no source of income.


6. Our churches are now Magic Palaces…where people go to get degrees without studying, get married without courting, have children without sex, own homes without paying, become rich without a job.


7. A place where the poor contribute their small change to the development of the church but yet do not have access to the same facilities they paid for. Take Jesus House Nursery school as an example. Fees are N170,000 for the first term alone.


8. Poor people who attend these churches cannot even get help from fellow members. Not jobs, not business start up capital, not training, in fact not even a lift to the nearest bus stop…


9. Pastors now prey on minors and try to have sex with them.


10. Its a celebrity show down on Sundays with awards usually discussed amongst the congregation for best dressed male and female and best cars in church.


When I look through this list, I cannot for the life of me see what the benefits of this type of Christianity is…its deceitful and destructive at best. More people who go to church will end up in hell than those who don’t…that is confirmed.


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Awkward truth about Nigerian Churches

Like Okorocha like Ewherido


Governor Rochas Okorocha

Governor Rochas Okorocha



The scenario playing out in the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) over the resolve of a faction led by Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State to be part of the emerging All Progressives Congress (APC) is presently being replicated in the Democratic Peoples Party (DPP). A few days ago, some members of DPP with Senator Pius Ewherido as the arrowhead, held a convention in Abuja where they ratified its merger with other opposition political parties to form APC.


But other members, particularly from the senator’s home state, Delta are kicking against the merger plan. Sources revealed that the reason may not be unconnected with the politics of 2015, with reports claiming that a chieftain of the party, Great Ogboru, who is planning to re-contest the governorship election, is bent on stopping Ewherido, who is also said to be interested in taking over from Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan in 2015.


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Like Okorocha like Ewherido

I am not a spare tyre—Katsina State deputy governor

Alhaji Abdulahi Faskari,the Deputy Governor of Katsina State, in this interview with Adetutu Audu, says deputy governors are not spare tyres. He also spoke on other issues. Excerpts


 


You headed the education ministry for two years, how different was it from the justice ministry which you also headed before becoming deputy governor?


Alhaji-Abdulahi-faskari-Dep.-gov-KatsinaPart of the challenges we had when I was appointed there was on the issue of recruitment of teachers and of course the governor gave approval for more than 3000 teachers for the secondary schools. It was during my time that the governor, in collaboration with the local government areas, built additional secondary schools, about 100 of such, in order to reduce congestion in our secondary schools. The foreign scholarship programme, which is now popular in and out of the country, had just started at that time. A number of people thought it was not going to be sustained, perhaps because of the enormity of the resources involved. We started with only one programme when we started. About 111 students of Katsina State origin were recruited and gotten admission into universities in Sudan. Sudan has some kind of peculiarities with Katsina State, particularly with reference to the girl- child education. A number of parents here will not allow their daughters to go for the western education.


How was your tenure at the justice ministry?


In justice ministry, it is basically service delivery, you don’t normally see tangibly what is being done; most of what is being done is rooted in service.


How would you describe your relationship with the governor?


I think if there is a word better than cordial, I will use it because that is what it is. I don’t have any problem with my principal probably because of a number of reasons. The governor himself is a straight forward person. And once you understand his own approach to issues or things, it will be easier to go along with him. The governor is a professional colleague. He is a lawyer of international repute. Don’t forget that I was Attorney – General in the second administration of the late Musa Yar’Ádua. The governor was privileged to be the first Attorney- General to the late president; he served from 1999 to 2003 and I took over from him. And I was reappointed by the governor in 2007 still as Attorney- General. And he later redeployed me to education because of my background in education. So, all these steps have given one enough time to understudy him on what he likes and doesn’t and how one can key into his vision for the state.


How true is the assertion that deputy governors are mere spare tyres?


I don’t think that phrase is applicable to me because I know of my own peculiar circumstance and system. If others have problems with their principals, it should not extend to me because this can be attested by everybody in the state that the number of work I have here is enormous.


Beyond the fact that one is the deputy governor, I also supervise the local government affairs.


As an agrarian state, to what extent is the government assisting farmers in agriculture?


There are a number of programmes directly affecting agriculture and production in the state. The governor distributed 340 tractors to farmers at subsidised rate, not only at subsidised rate but the payment method is five years. So, in a way, you can say the tractors are free. The issues of fertilizer which of course is very crucial to agricultural production, the governor took it upon himself to provide fertilizer equally at subsidised rate, both for dry and raining season farming. There is also loan to the farmers, free of interest. There is also a scheme going in the state now in partnership with the Shanghai, also initiated by the governor.


What brought about the idea of building a new government house, what happens to the present one?


If you look at Katsina, I don’t know how conversant you are with the state. The Katsina of 10, 5 years ago is different from the Katsina of today. Things have dramatically changed in terms of infrastructure. You find people who, for sometime had not been to the state, asking people before they can locate their way. Things have really changed. If you see the ring road, you see that things are changing because it is connecting major townships in the state. The essence of the new government house is not because the present one is not good but not in consonance with the new trend of what is happening in the state.


Having been in government for more than 10 years, are you fulfilled?


Why not? You know I have been in government for more than 10 years now. And you know that there are a lot of people who are equally and even more qualified than I am but they didn’t have the opportunity to serve. I can even say I have taken more than my share in the state in relation to the number of citizens of the state. If you are to distribute this among those eligible, you will understand that I have taken more than my share and that is why I am grateful to God.


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I am not a spare tyre—Katsina State deputy governor

Current moves ahead of next Delta State governorship race.


Gov Emmanuel Uduaghan

Gov Emmanuel Uduaghan



One issue that has dominated public discourse since 2011 when Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan began his second and final term in office as the governor of Delta State is the issue of which senatorial district should produce his successor in 2015.


And as the date for the next gubernatorial election gradually draws nearer, the discussions on the matter also get more intense. Rumours that some politicians who are not from Delta North Senatorial District are gearing up to throw their hats into the ring of the contest for the governorship seat are also heating up the polity.


Besides, the silence of the leadership of the party on the much-argued existence of a zoning arrangement that ceded the 2015 governorship to Delta North has continued to fan the embers of political agitation within the state.


For instance, the Anioma Agenda, a political pressure group that seeks the emergence of the governor of Delta State in 2015 from the northern Senatorial zone of the state, recently cautioned the Urhobo Progressive Union (UPU), against denying Delta North the chance to produce Uduaghan’s successor.


The group, in a press statement, jointly signed by its Chairman, Alex Nnamdi Onwudiamu and Secretary Godwin Ossai, said it was aware of what it called desperate moves by an Urhobo group to deny Anioma people their turn to be governor.


“This call became necessary due to current political manoeuvres with reference to a recent parley between Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) and Urhobo Progressive Union (UPU), which we see as having the capability of creating disaffection among the different federating units in Nigeria with predictable consequences on the polity, peace and unity currently pervading the landscape in Delta State,” the statement read in part.


While urging UPU to exercise restraint in the interest of the Delta State, Anioma Agenda explained that the Anioma people’s strategy to clinch the governorship position of Delta State in 2015, is that of “appeal and persuasion to the conscience of all, hinging primarily on the altar of equity and fairness and backed strongly by the political history of Delta State since its creation in 1991.”


The group added that the “Anioma people will obviously not accept to remain in a state where we do not have equal access to political power, neither are we going to say that in pursuance of our quest for power, that we are willing to engage all and sundry in a needless desperation for power at all costs.


“We are seeking, soliciting and pleading for the support of the Urhobos, Ijaws, Isokos and the Itsekiris, knowing full well that an alliance within Delta State shall achieve for us the desired good and we advise other ethnic nationalities to follow this worthy example which is hinged on equity, justice and fairness. Indeed, we believe equity breeds unity,” Anioma Agenda said.


Similarly, Ndokwa Unite, a political pressure group based in Delta North, also rose from an enlarged meeting and said in a communique signed by Dr. Boniface Opia, Greg Ikoko and Mr. Mathew Emeni, that since the Delta Central and South districts had ruled the state for eight years respectively, any attempt to prevent the emergence of a governor from Delta North will heat up the polity.


The group further stated that it was important that other senatorial districts support the quest of Delta North for the 2015 gubernatorial race, disclosing specifically that the gubernatorial seat should go to Ndokwa ethnic nationality.


But if feelers emanating from various political camps in the state are to be considered strong enough, then the people of Delta North will have to brace up for serious politicking if their dream of producing the next governor is to come to fruition.


This is because numerous politicians from the two other senatorial districts appear to be opposed to the zoning arrangement being canvassed by Delta North. The critics of the arrangement say the contest should be thrown open in order for the best candidate to emerge as governor in the interest of the state.


The National Chairman of Urhobo Political Movement (UPM), who is also Commissioner representing Ughelli North and Ethiope East Local Government Areas on the board of DESOPADEC, Emaye Obiewevre, recently declared that there will be no zoning in Delta State come 2015.


While emphasising that only a credible candidate should be allowed to occupy Government House in 2015, Obiewevre urged Deltans to be wary of politicians with hidden agenda who come to them under the guise of zoning.


“We don’t want somebody who will come to Government House to implement an ethnic agenda. Those aspiring to the governorship under the banner of one ethnic group or the other should be resisted by the people.


“So we must all resolve that in 2015 we will not select our candidate based on tribal line, rather our yardstick for selection of candidate for Government House will be credibility, purposeful leadership and the interest of Deltans,” he said.


Toeing a similar path, the Chairman of the Democratic Peoples Party (DPP) in the state, Tony Ezeagwu, said zoning does not exist in his political party currently ently and that he was not a party to any arrangement about rotation of political offices within the PDP fold.


“As far I am concerned, if an Anioma man comes to my party to take the governorship form, I will not deny him. And if an Urhobo man comes to take form, I will not deny him either. This is because in my party, there is no zoning arrangement for now. Our party is open for all Deltans.”


But Delta State House of Assembly Speaker, Rt. Hon. Victor Ochei, during a consultation visit to him at his residence by leaders of the Anioma Agenda, while reiterating his earlier commitment to peaceful co-existence in the state, applauded the overall developmental programme put in place by Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan, adding that the existing tripod that led to the emergence of a Delta Central and South indigenes occupying the number one seat of the state should be symbol for promising equity, fairness and justice.


The speaker said there are enough bases for the Aniomas to have a shot at the governorship in 2015. He, however, advised the group to maintain absolute decorum while persuading other senatorial districts who are yet to key into this laudable programme to do so without over heating the polity for the general good of the entire state.


In the opinion of Chief John Ehikwe, former secretary of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) in the old Bendel State and the national coordinator, Anioma Awareness Initiative, a group of leading politicians championing the quest for a governor from Delta north, the district is ready to govern the state.


“I want to tell you that Delta North Senatorial District is the most united district in the state. For instance, since we started this question on who is to occupy the Government House come 2015, there has not been anybody who has come to say we do not want to produce the governor. All the groups that came out have been saying that it is our turn,” he said.


But the question remains how far the people of Delta North can go in their quest to be allowed to produce the next governor of a state as multi-ethnic and diverse as Delta? Only time can provide an answer to this question.


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Current moves ahead of next Delta State governorship race.

Niger 2015: Waiting for Muhammed Babangida


Mohammed Babangida

Mohammed Babangida



A waiting game is ongoing in Niger State as we speak. The wait, reliable sources claim, is not about anything or anybody other than Alhaji Muhammed Babangida, son of former military President, General Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida. The rumour mill has been agog for a while now that the young Babangida is interested in vying for the governorship seat of the state. The seat it was gathered has been zoned by the ruling Peoples Democratic Party to the northern senatorial district where the Babangidas hail from.


Perhaps to send out early signals of his seriousness, souvenirs and posters of Muhammed recently flooded various parts of the state. With this, it became more obvious that the Babangidas are not joking after all.


That started the waiting game. There are indications that two groups of waiters are involved. While there are those waiting for Muhammed to publicly declare his intention for them to jump in the wagon of support and solidarity for him, there are also those waiting to tell him to his face that he is not fit to govern the north central state.


The two groups sure have their reasons but these reasons may not be known to all until Babangida opens up.


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Niger 2015: Waiting for Muhammed Babangida

Jonathan’s single-term proposal

Goodluck-JonathanAt this point, I think it appropriate to ask: What exactly does President Good luck Jonathan want? His cheerleaders and godfathers have been campaigning for s return ticket for more than one year now. They did not wait to see their man perform and sell himself to Nigerians before seeking to seize the public domain to canvass a second term. For them, it does not matter that only one good term should deserve another. Or, could it be that they took a cue from Igbinedion’s Edo where the father said his son deserved a second term precisely because he had failed to perform at the first opportunity?


It could also be that proponents of the Return Jonathan Project felt he had demonstrated sufficient capacity during the preview of his first tenure offered by the death of President Umaru Yar’Adua in 2010. Jonathan had nearly two years to show that he understood the problem with Nigeria and had the capacity to fix it. His men could have taken the verdict returned at the poll in 2011 as a validation of the theory that Nigerians were satisfied with his performance. He, too, in turn, could have been served the vodka of power, believing, like Louis the XIV, that he has all it takes to force his decision on the people, not minding the difference in epochs, systems and personalities.


Thus far, it would appear that President Jonathan has been misled into believing the superiority and invincibility of his opinion. He has now come up with the campaign for a single term of six years. It is not an altogether new proposition. In the Abacha Constitutional Conference, it came up alongside such strange suggestions as collegiate presidency and multiple vice presidency. It is not the first time President Jonathan would be backing such a proposal. He had earlier surreptitiously passed the corrosive view to the federal lawmakers and sought, in a nation-wide televised debate, to justify the plan. He said it would save cost of electioneering, win more time for a government to work, perform and win the hearts of the people. He also feigned concern for the health of the polity, arguing that, with elections in the third world taking the form of battles, it would be unfair to subject the country to such consistent tension that grips it at election periods.


What our dear president failed to tell us is what he, as a loving leader, has done to douse tension and concentrate on governance. By the end of this tenure, he would have been in office for about six years, why is he finding it difficult to shut up his paid agents hopping about spreading the gospel that he has a right to another term and would exercise the right? Isn’t it obvious to our president that it is not every right that you exercise? If Jonathan so loves this country, he would make a categorical pronouncement immediately that he has no interest in 2015 and much of the needless fog on the scene would clear.


No one would be taken in by the suggestion that he might not offer himself for another tenure that would push his rule (or reign) to an unprecedented ten unbroken years. I am of the view, as most Nigerians, I suppose, that the Jonathan years have been an unmitigated disaster. The administration is a study in cluelessness and ineptitude that only the Shagari years could rival. How would anyone justify the expenditure of public fund in celebrating 100 years of a colonial contraption? And, that, over a period of one year! How would anyone explain the actions taken in recent times by a government that claims to be fighting corruption but is, at the same time, rewarding sleaze? In the Jonathan government are people who were being investigated for corrupt practices at the point of appointment.


Under his administration, corruption has been given a boost. The pardon of former Bayelsa State governor, Dr. DSP Alamieyeseigha is the latest in the series of activities marking the leadership as one that worships in the temple of corruption. There is the job scam, the pension fund scam, the fuel subsidy fraud and the rot in the judiciary, among others. The most charitable analyst can only describe the federal government as confused.


If corruption were limited to the financial, it probably would not be as dangerous as the situation has assumed now. All institutions and processes have been compromised and most public officials believe that they can literally get away with murder. The worst is process leading to recruitment of political leaders (or dealers). Party officials are turned at such points to auctioneers at bazaars. Consequently, nothing is working.


The president is not alone in this promotion of corruption; the tin gods and mini-despots at the state level -governors- are as guilty. Officials have turned Nigeria into a private estate in which elected officials and their cohorts are the only beneficiaries. God save our country and the people.


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Jonathan’s single-term proposal

Abia Police rescue nine pregnant teenagers, three babies meant for sale

IGP-camouflage policeThe Abia State Police Command has arrested two women allegedly involved in the sale of new-born babies at Osisioma and Obingwa local government areas of the state.


Nine teenage girls at various stages of pregnancy were also rescued during the raid.


Speaking with newsmen in Umuahia, the Abia State Commissioner of Police, Usman Tilli Abubakar, said his men followed a tip off and raided a home operated by one Ebere Nkemdirim on Adaelu Road in Osisioma area of the state where Adaeze, his wife, was arrested, while Nkemdirim is now at large.


Abubakar gave the names of other suspects arrested with Adaeze as Eberechi Achi, Onyedikachi Okere and Gift Ohuonu, all females who Adaeze claimed were her housemaids and had been delivered of their babies and sold by Nkemdirim.


The Abia CP explained that during the search and attempt to recover a baby already sold by Adaeze and her husband, “my team raided one Daughter of Zion rehabilitation/motherless babies and care centre at Amaoji Ukwu in Obingwa council area and rescued nine teenage pregnant girls.”


He gave the names of the rescued pregnant girls as Blessing Amadi, Amarachi Onwukwe, Amarachi Udoka, Chidinma Onukafor, Favour Dike, Precious Emmanuel, Eziuche Michael, Chinasa Chukwuka, Chidera Ogbonna and Chinyere Agbakuru, adding that three babies kept there for sale were also rescued.


Abubakar said his command had intensified efforts to recover all the babies already sold by Adaeze, her husband and Ngozi Ukonu the owner of Daughter of Zion Motherless Babies’ Home.


The CP said Adaeze was also involved in another case of buying and selling a six-month-old baby born by an imbecile, Adaku Okpechi, and bought by Adaeze for N350,000. The suspects who sold the baby to her were said to have confessed to the crime.


Abubakar gave the names of the suspects as Ugochukwu Nwosu (21), Emmanuel Anyanwu (21), Nwamaka Okorie (31), Florence Ukandu (31) and Rhoda Nwokocha (21), adding that they will be charged to court very soon.


Speaking with The Nation, one of the suspects, Gift Ohuonu, described herself as a maid to Adaeze, saying she had been living with her and had a baby some time ago. “But Aunty Adaeze took my baby away and I have not seen the baby since then,” Ohuonu said.


Adaeze, however, denied the allegation that she was involved in child trafficking, saying she had been in the habit of assisting helpless girls for years. However, one of the teenage girls, Eberechi Achi, said that Adaeze sold their babies for N400,000 each.


In her own interaction with The Nation Ukaonu said she was running a motherless babies’ home duly registered with the state’s Ministry of Women Affairs. But the police said she had been using the place for a purpose that was different from what it was registered for.


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Abia Police rescue nine pregnant teenagers, three babies meant for sale

Baga: US to send envoy to Nigeria

Baga-killingsThe United States of America (USA) is dispatching Deputy Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights and Labour to Nigeria next week for discussion with the Federal Government on the recent incident in Baga.


State Department acting deputy spokesman Patrick Ventrell said yesterday that the US envoy would also discuss broader human rights issues with Nigerian officials while here.


Local and international rights organisations, the USA and opposition parties have deplored the Baga incident in which as many as 228 people were feared killed in an alleged military operation.


The federal authorities and the military say not more than 36 people died in the incident.


The US Ambassador in Nigeria, Terrence P. McCulley, met with human rights activists in Abuja on Thursdy on the issue and was reported to have hinted that Washington DC might suspend military assistance to Nigeria, “if there is sufficient evidence of human rights violations by the armed forces in Baga and other flashpoints.”


However, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Amb. Gbenga Ashiru, yesterday denied any such plan.


Ashiru said he was in talks with the US Ambassador.


The State Department acting deputy spokesman unfolded plans by the US to send an envoy to Nigeria at the daily briefing in Washington DC.


Ventrell, in an online statement last night, said: “We will have a Deputy Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights and Labour who is going to travel to Abuja to discuss the incident in Baga and broader human rights issues with senior Nigerian officials next week. So we’re going to continue our dialogue with the Nigerian authorities on this.


“Well, we have seen the Human Rights report, and as I said before, the U.S. strongly condemns the loss of life and mass destruction of dwellings in Baga, Borno State over the weekend of April 15 which is evidenced in that Human Rights Watch report. So we extend our condolences to the families and loved ones of the victims.


“And we understand that President Jonathan has called for an investigation, including ascertaining that security forces, namely the Joint Border Control Forces in the area, had adhered to the rules of engagement.


“So we urge a full investigation into these attacks, and that those responsible, both military and others, be held to account.”


Asked which version of Baga reports will the US accept, Ventrell said: “Again, we have the Human Rights Watch study – the Human Rights Watch report. We’re studying it. We’re looking at it very closely.”


On the likely suspension of military aid to Nigeria , he admitted that the US Ambassador met with some human rights stakeholders, but he said the American government will only ensure that “our assistance doesn’t go to units or officers that are involved in human rights abuses.”


Ventrell added: “I mean, again, we have a Deputy Assistant Secretary for DRL who’s going to go out there, continue to have this dialogue with the Nigerian Government.


“No, I’m saying we continue with our assistance, but we do so in a way that is very careful to make sure we’re doing our Leahy vetting requirements.


“Well, the assistance, in terms of Leahy is – in terms of specific vetting of individual units. That’s the main requirement. And so we continue to do that vetting to make sure that our assistance doesn’t go to units or officers that are involved in human rights abuses.


He debunked reports that there would be outright suspension of military aid to Nigeria


The spokesman said: “No, it’s not correct. There’s been some incorrect reporting out there. My understanding is a misreporting. I am aware and was told very clearly that from our folks on the ground that the reporting of this was mischaracterized.


“The United States works with the Nigerian military and law enforcement to improve communications, mobility and emergency response through assistance and training.


“We take our Leahy vetting obligations very seriously, and so we’ve taken strong measures to ensure compliance. But Nigeria remains an ACOTA partner that contributes significant numbers of troops to several UN peacekeeping missions in Africa, including in Mali. And so we vet all units from African countries that receive U.S. bilateral assistance.”


On his part, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Amb. Olugbenga Ashiru, who spoke with our correspondent from the US, said: “Story about US stopping military assistance to Nigeria is false. I have just concluded visit to US and met with Senator John Kerry, US Secretary of State, on April 25. He stressed that Nigeria remains a strategic partner to US.


“He vowed that US – Nigeria relations will be further strengthened in all areas of political, security, defence and economic cooperation under our Bi-National Commission. Exactly the same message was repeated at a meeting with Canadian Foreign Minister, Mr. John Baird, on May 2 in Ottawa.”


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Baga: US to send envoy to Nigeria

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