Friday, October 30, 2015

Angry mob strips two women naked over N100,000 theft in Abuja

Some angry mob on Wednesday stripped two women naked for stealing N100,000 from a wine shop at Dutsen Alhaji market, Bwari Area Council of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT.

It was learnt that the women who pretended to be buying some items on Wednesday entered into the shop at the market and while one of the women approached the shop owner and negotiating the price of a bottle of wine, her accomplice dipped her hand into the drawer and removed N100,000.

According to an eyewitness, “She was about to walk away with the money when the shop owner who had seen her raised the alarm which attracted other traders,” the witness said.


The eyewitness further stated that traders, who noticed what had transpired, pounced on the two women and stripped them naked in the process.

The timely intervention of the police saved them from been lynched and the Police quickly whisked them away from the market.


Confirming the incident, the Dutse Divisional Police Officer, SP Hajiya Aisha Yusuf said the suspects have been charged to court.

DailyTrust


Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Buhari And The Syndrome Of Sameness By Okey Ndibe

 President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration may have fallen prey to the political syndrome of sameness. 
Five months into the Buhari Presidency, there is a sense, even among his most fervent fans, that the expected momentum had dwindled—with little or nothing to show for it. Nigerians and the world have witnessed the demystification of a president who was billed as the very scourge of the corrupt, whoever they may be, however high their status.

Nigeria's staunch belief in new president Muhammadu Buhari being sorely tested

Nigeria’s new president was always going to have his work cut out for him. Some voters placed him on a pedestal, hailing him as the man who would save Africa’s largest but languishing economy.
By his own admission, Muhammadu Buhari is something of a rock star. People cry when they see him, with thousands defying airport security to run on to the tarmac as he flew into Taraba state in March. An 80-year-old food seller from Kebbi state even donated her life savings to his campaign in January, reducing the lanky ex-general to tears. In northern Nigeria, his street name is Mai Gaskiya – one whose word is his bond.

FIFA confirms seven for presidential race

FIFA on Wednesday confirmed seven candidates for next February extraordinary congress which is expected to produce a successor to the embattled Sepp Blatter.

However, the football’s world governing body excluded former Trinidad and Tobago international, David Nakhid, from the race.

The Zurich-based organisation gave no reason for rejecting Nakhid’s bid for its top job.

The candidates are – the General Secretary of Europe soccer governing body, UEFA,  Gianni Infantino,  Bahraini Royal Family member, Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa and Liberian Football Association head, Musa Bility.

Others are – UEFA president, Michel Platini, Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan, South African businessman, Tokyo Sexwale and ex-FIFA official, Jerome Champagne.

The Nation

Why corps member allowance is delayed – NYSC

The Management of the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC Wednesday said challenges arising from failed bank transaction and the inability of the settlement centre to immediately reprocess for payment caused the delay in the payment of corps members’ allowance.

Corps members last week complained over the delay in the payment of  their September and October allowance as well as transport allowance by some of the recently discharged 2014 Batch ‘C’ Corps Members.

The NYSC in a statement issued Wednesday in Abuja said the Scheme forwarded the payment schedule at the right time.

They blamed the banking system for the delay in the crediting of the accounts of the affected corps member.

“While Management regrets any inconveniences caused by the delay in the ability of the affected Corps Members to access their allowances in their Banks, we wish to assure them that we are currently rectifying identified problems and the accounts of affected Corps members are being credited with the allowances accordingly,” the statement said.

The Nation

RADIO BIAFRA: A STITCH IN TIME...

By Ahmad Salkida and Johnson Chinedu Edwin


In two separate newspapers articles published in 2006 and 2009
in the New Sentinel and Sunday Trust, and credited to one of us, the manner Boko Haram’s total disregard for civil values was the point of discourse. The
report in question warned that government’s disregard of this rebellious inclination of the group would amount a calculated catastrophe to society. The authorities ignored this at society’s general peril. 

Last week, the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) of Nigeria urged
Nigerians to simply ignore radio Biafra, a broadcast platform that has committed time energy and resources to peddling resentful communication about Nigeria and her constituted authorities. The Management of NBC claimed that they were
aware of the pirate radio station that is “transmitting seditious and
divisive content contrary to the provisions of the Nigeria
Broadcasting Code and law” and they are “working with security
agencies to track the source of the broadcast.”

Nnamdi Kalu, the name behind the radio and who is fondly called director, is not going about his objective in a manner that should not agitate well meaning members of the public. As it seems, the radio is winning many admirers among Southerners in Nigeria on a daily basis. According to a random survey for the purpose of
this article, an increasing number of traders, men and women in
villages, schools and in commuter buses tune to 97.6 band
width. In Aba, Abia State the radio’s audience is growing steadily among young people. 


A public commentator known on tweeter as “Onye Nkuzi” (@cchukudebelu), recently dissected this phenomenon, lamenting on twitter that ‘the Nigerian State doesn't
have a narrative to challenge alienation - we've seen it in the North
East and Niger Delta. It pops up again.’ Radio Biafra, like the ongoing
insurgency in northeast Nigeria feeds on alienation to peddle a
culture of violence through retribution of real and perceived
injustice.

Meanwhile, it serves every society well to pay due attention to
signals and other sub-signals with the potentials to erupt into other
disturbing cauldrons of widespread violence. In Asaba,
Delta state, an Igbo man brought the consciousness of radio Biafra to
one of these writers one evening in the southeast with frightful
alacrity and implored everyone present there to tune to the station.
As soon as the right bandwidth was accessible, the voice of the
‘director’ Nnamdi Kanu was coming forcefully over the airwaves. It was
an arresting almost hypnotic voice to say the least, but it was not
the voice that was the problem but the substance of what he said and
how he said it that calls for concern.

Many unsuspecting listeners with a warped history of what led to the
Biafran civil war in 1967 and its concomitant effect of seeming
irreconcilable differences listened spellbound as the voice of
“director” resonated over the waves with ceaseless histrionics. He
seemed tireless, with his commentaries on a wide range of subjects all
geared towards the need for the burdened southern region to secede
from the north and “the hypocrite southwest” to quote the words of the
radio’s presenter.

Our investigations have observed most painfully that the director has
a growing influence on the minds of many from the other side of the
Niger. The danger in this is that people in that region are beginning
to accept whatever he says as the gospel truth, to the unreasoning
mind, the director, as he chooses to be addressed is framing the minds
of many of his listeners and predisposing them to dangerous
tendencies. Without going into specifics to underscore what one is
trying to say, but relevant authorities should know the danger of
collective mind-set propelled towards a particularly dangerous direction.

On a bus from Asaba to Onitsha, the bus conductor was busy regaling
passengers the resurgence of the Biafran agenda; Biafran
currency; Biafran flag; Biafran identity card and how personnel of the
Nigerian Police tactfully accord great recognition to Biafran I.D
cards and are liable to set one free of any offence the moment one
brandishes the I.D card. The bus conductor was very vociferous in his
claims and an attempt to draw passengers attention to the folly of
these claims, one suddenly realised that the commuters were more given
to emotion than reason and to avoid the rising belligerency of some of
the passengers including the driver one was
compelled to channel the discussion to safer grounds.

Late Muhammad Yusuf, the founder of what started as a band of
fundamentalists in Maiduguri that transformed into a dreaded global
Jihadi movement, did not have a radio of his own. He relied on
cassette recordings of his messages which was influenced by hardline Salafi teachers to woo youths to his flock. However, both
late Yusuf and now Kalu, have one thing in common, in as much as their
messages are in sharp contrast of one another, they both have the
undivided attention of teeming youths in their regions.


It is important to note here that ‘terrorism’ means different things
to different people. While a weighty number of people in the Muslim
world do not view groups like Al-Shabab, Taliban, Islamic State and
their affiliates as terrorists, majority consider them as full blooded
terrorists. The same with the Biafran movement, a growing number of
people consider the rebellion as an inalienable right that may offer
Igbos freedom from the superficial Hausa/Fulani hegemony.

Indeed, Radio Biafra is a ticking time bomb, while we must accept that
some of the claims made by late Yusuf over a decade ago, and now by
Kalu on the air waves have merits like that of the alienation of
people, a fact which is very obvious to any discerning mind but the
general thrust of radio Biafra’s mono cast is more emotive than
rational. Hopefully the new government of Muhammadu Buhari should get
set to combat some of these obvious imbalances and marginalization
which underpin the restiveness.

The Hutu power radio and the resultant Rwandan genocide that heralded
the 1994 Rwandan genocide should be a relevant example of what dire
propensities could result to if such hate rendition is left unchecked
not only by Kalu but championed by different groups across Nigeria. As
persons with background in media studies, we need not overemphasize
here the power of the media and its inherent capacities as willing
instruments to be commandeered to negative or positive ends. But
suffice it to say that the power of the media should never be
underestimated, at least not in this case. Every serious federating
unit should be mindful of the insidious influence of proponents of
divisive rhetoric within their midst and their potentials to nurture
and fan the embers of schismatic discords and prurient chasm in their
unit.

Salkida and Chinedu are both journalist from north and south Nigeria
respectively.

 

Images from the scene of a deadly quake in Afghanistan.

Images from the scene of a deadly quake in Afghanistan.


Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Nigerian Air Force Strikes Boko Haram Terrorist’s Vehicle Workshop, Fuel And Ammunition Dumps In Sambisa Forest

 This feat by the Nigerian Air Force came as a result of a painstaking Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) efforts by the NAF’s Unmanned Aerial vehicle (UAV) and ATR-42 platforms.

In a renewed drive to further degrade the Boko Haram Terrorist  (BHT) Assets, the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Alpha Jets have successfully carried out airstrikes and destroyed the Sect’s vehicle workshops, fuel and ammunition dumps all within the Sambisa forest.

This feat by the Nigerian Air Force came as a result of a painstaking Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) efforts by the NAF’s Unmanned Aerial vehicle (UAV) and ATR-42 platforms.

In view of the above, the Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar wishes to  assure  all  Nigerians  that  with  these  successful  strikes  on  the insurgents, their capabilities have been further degraded to pave the way for the final onslaught by the land forces to meet the Commander-in-Chief, President Mohammadu Buhari’s directives to bring insurgency in the North-East to an end.

You are please requested to disseminate  this  information through your mass medium for the awareness of the general public.

Thank you for your usual cooperation.

 

Air Commodore Dele Alonge
Director of Public Relations and Information
Nigerian Airforce


Emenike insists his int’l retirement has nothing to do with Oliseh

Al Ain of UAE striker Emmanuel Emenike has maintained his decision to quit international football had nothing to do with coach Sunday Oliseh.

Emenike has announced he will no longer be available for selection by Nigeria to join Lille goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama, who has also called time on his Eagles career.

Oliseh recalled the striker even after he had declared after taking over the team he would only call up players who are playing regularly in the top leagues in the world.

“I have absolutely nothing against the coach (Oliseh),” said the 28-year-old Emenike, who has gone more than two years without scoring a goal for Nigeria.

“As for me, I still remain loyal to coach Sunday Oliseh and I want to believe he understands my decision.

“My decision has nothing to do with the coach, who is a brave man, a technically sound person, my decision has nothing to go against his vision for the Super Eagles.

“Me out of the team will equally ease pressure on the coach and it will enable the younger players to fight harder for the team.”

The 2013 AFCON top scorer has equally thrown his weight behind the Eagles to qualify for both the 2017 AFCON and 2018 World Cup.

“Nigeria have produced lots of talented goal poacher like Julius Aghahowa, Victor Agali, Yakubu Aiyegbeni, Samuel Okwaraji, Obafemi Martins, Ike Uche, Rashidi Yekini just to mention a few. I believe with God on our side, the team will fly higher without Emenike,” he predicted.

“I will be glad to see them qualify for both the AFCON and World Cup in 2018.

“We have lots of good players in the team and more are still coming in to contribute, so I believe the team will get better and stronger as time goes on. The team will be great under Oliseh.”

Todayng


Rivers: Supreme Court dismisses Wike’s suit against tribunal

The Supreme Court on Tuesday dismissed the suit filed by Rivers State governor, Nyesom Wike, challenging the jurisdiction of the state governorship election petition tribunal to hear a petition filed against his election by the All Progressive Congress (APC) candidate in the April 11 gubernatorial poll, Dakuku Peterside.

The tribunal on Saturday nullified the election and ordered a fresh poll within 90 days.

Wike, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in the poll, had said in his petition that the tribunal which sat in Abuja had no jurisdiction over matters that transpired in Rivers State.

He insisted that the tribunal should have conducted its activities in Rivers and not in Abuja.

Daily Trust


INVESTIGATION: How MTN ships billions abroad, paying less tax in Nigeria

MTN has consistently prided itself as the foremost telephone company that is getting Nigerians talking the most. Now the South African company is about to set tongues wagging across networks with revelations that it has routinely been shipping billions of naira overseas to avoid paying its fair share of tax in Nigeria.

An 11-month-long  investigation by PREMIUM TIMES reveals that MTN has been running circles around Nigerian revenue authorities using a complex but noxious tax avoidance scheme called Transfer Pricing.

For any economy, it is a slow death.

The red flag was raised the moment our investigations showed that MTN Nigeria has been making payments to two overseas companies – MTN Dubai and MTN International in Mauritius – both located in tax havens.

It was discovered that in 2013 for example, MTN set aside N11.398 Billion from MTN Nigeria to pay to MTN Dubai. A similar transfer of N11.789 Billion was made by MTN Ghana to the same MTN Dubai, making it a total of N23.187 Billion that was shipped to the Dubai offshore account.

In a rare disclosure in 2013, MTN admitted it made unauthorized payments of N37.6 Billion to MTN Dubai between 2010 and 2013. The transfers were then “on-paid” to Mauritius, a shell company with zero number of staff and which physical presence in the capital Port Louis is nothing more than a post office letter box. The disclosure amounted to a confession given that MTN made the dodgy transfers without seeking approval from the National Office for Technology Acquisition and Promotion (NOTAP), the body mandated to oversight such transfers.

On the basis of an earlier management fees agreement that was technically quashed by NOTAP and on the basis of MTN’s reported revenues, it is estimated that N90.2 Billion could have been transferred out of Nigeria in management fees alone since the company was founded in 2002.

Transfer Pricing

For corporate organizations determined to escape the taxman but still cleverly staying on the right side of the law, Transfer Pricing is the new cellar door constructed by the most ingenious of accountants. It is a new global disease to which Third World economies are the most vulnerable.

Multinationals employ Transfer Pricing to move their profits offshore, leaving behind a shrinking tax base in their host countries and inexorable cuts to public services.

In Africa, tax avoidance has been named as one of the factors holding the continent back by starving governments of the revenues it needs for development.

A report jointly commissioned by the United Nations and the African Union and drafted by a high level panel led by former South African president Thabo Mbeki considered tax avoidance by multinationals to be an “illicit financial flow” and a significant drain on government resources across the continent.

In total illicit financial flows, which included corruption and the proceeds of crime, were determined to be costing the continent $50billion a year.

Just last year, South Africa’s deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa had harsh words for tax dodgers. He said: “Tax evasion is not only a crime against the state; it’s also a crime against the people of our country, ordinary people.”

Curiously, the same Cyril Rhamaposa was non-executive chairman of the board of MTN between 2001 and 2013 before he became South Africa’s No.2 man. In effect, the same tax practices which the deputy president strongly condemned in his country as financial crime is vigorously being promoted in Nigeria.

MTN is the largest cell phone company in Africa with 227.5 million subscribers. The company, which operates in more than 20 countries across Africa and the Middle East, has Nigeria as its biggest operation.

Until now, tax justice investigations had focused on computer giants, corporations in the extractive industry, food and beverages; in fact everywhere but the mobile phone sector despite the cell phone industry in Africa being one of the largest and most important industries for the continent.

Mobile phone has been a cheap and quick way of rolling out the vital communications infrastructure that has underpinned Africa’s growth story over the last decade. As a result the industry has seen explosive growth. With 685million mobile phone users in Africa, the success story means that cell phone companies are now the largest contributor to government revenues in many African countries. That is when they pay their fair share of taxes.

Artificial operating costs

To pay little or no tax, companies determined to cheat begin by seeking ways to create artificial operating costs in the country where they operate. For example, a company is in Nigeria but has a parent or subsidiary company in another country. It makes huge profit but decides to declare a much lower profit-before-tax. To achieve this, it pays the parent and/ or subsidiary company for services not rendered and ships cash to them. Where services are rendered, the costs are inflated. Such services may include royalty for the use of brand name, procurement services, technical services and management services.

Typically, the recipient company is located in an offshore territory under a different financial jurisdiction. MTN has a substantial network of subsidiaries in offshore tax havens, including the British Virgin Islands, Dubai and Mauritius.

Because of the growing concerns that multinationals are using intra-company trading to shift profits around the world by overcharging for services delivered or in more extreme cases by creating artificial transactions where no services was rendered at all, respective countries have a maximum percentage of profits it can allow companies to pay out as management fees.

For example, in Senegal, accounts from the company Sonatel show that the company has a ‘cooperation agreement’ with parent company France Telecom that is capped at 1.43% of revenue.

Until 2010 MTN Nigeria had an agreement with MTN Dubai to pay 1.75% of revenues to the company for management, and royalties for the use of the MTN trademark. Nigeria requires that management fees paid by multinationals are approved by the National Office for Technology Acquisition and Promotion (NOTAP). The fee payments had been reversed following a failure to come to a new agreement on management fees with Nigerian regulators.

MTN’s previous agreement with NOTAP expired in 2010.

Notwithstanding, MTN has continued to make payments overseas. When we sent questions to MTN over these unauthorized payments, the company told us that this was because they expected NOTAP to approve a new deal and backdate it to the date of the expiry of the previous deal.

MTN’s financial activities are now being questioned by more than one tax authorizes in Africa.

In Ghana the MTN subsidiary, Scancom, has been paying vast management fees to companies located offshore. Our investigations reveal that Scancom paid 758m GHS in management and technical fees to MTN Dubai between 2008 and 2013. This was 9.64% of the company’s revenue. Normally the maximum fee level allowed in Ghana is 6%.

We can reveal that the high levels of fees attracted the attention of Ghana’s intelligence services, which launched an investigation into “economic fraud” between 2012 and 2013.

MTN’s management fees need approval from the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC). The Ghanaian “National Security Taskforce” has called for a “review of all technology transfer and management service agreements currently held by GIPC to remove sections which are inapplicable and wrongly provided for” and upgrading and training of state systems and staff.

In response to this, MTN in Ghana told us: “The technical and management services agreements between Scancom and Investcom were duly approved by the GIPC.”

The current head of the GIPC is Mrs. Mawuena Trebarh, who between 2007 and 2012 was responsible for government relations at MTN Ghana. This reporting team asked Mrs Trebarh to comment on whether her previous role could be perceived a conflict of interest. She did not respond to our requests.

In response to our enquiries MTN confirmed that the company paid 12 billion West African Francs in 2012 and 14 billion West African Francs in 2013 in management fees to MTN International. The figure for 2013 is equivalent to 5% of the revenue made by MTN in Cote d’Ivoire.

Dubai paradox

Dubai is one of the places MTN ships huge profits to. Meanwhile, MTN does not operate any mobile phones in Dubai, yet it has significant operations in the small city state.

MTN told us that it employs around 115 people in Dubai who provides services to the MTN group such as group procurement, group finance, legal services, human resources and other corporate functions.

One tool that campaigners have said will be helpful is to look at company reporting on a country by country basis. If a company is making huge revenues in a country where it has few employees but there is a low tax rate, which would suggest that there may be some profit shifting taking place.

In Uganda, a dispute between the Uganda Revenue Authority and MTN has revealed that the company is paying 3% of its turnover in management fees to MTN International.

The fees have been challenged by the Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) who issued MTN with a “notice of assessment” in 2011. This was for a number of tax issues between 2003 and 2009, but a large portion was to do with a dispute over management fees, most of which had been paid to Mauritius.

Correspondence between the URA and MTN seen by us show that the URA questioned the legitimacy of these fees, and pointed out that MTNI, the company providing “management services” to MTN Uganda had not spent any money in the years they had looked into. The URA said this could only mean two things: that management services provided to MTN Uganda had either already been paid for by MTN Uganda (and so MTN was in effect charging twice for the same thing) or they were never provided at all.

The Ugandan authority told the company: “We have repeatedly asked for evidence of specific work performed by MTN Group for MTN Uganda for each of the tax years 2003 to 2009. We have only been provided with very little information relating to 2009 and the latter years. This information is very far from justifying a payment of 3 per cent of MTN Uganda’s turnover as management fees.”

NOTAP keeps mum

Asked to confirm the amount of fees paid out to MTN Dubai and Mauritius based on the company’s reported revenue between 2002 and today, MTN told PREMIUM TIMES: “There is no disclosure obligation for this information in South Africa or Nigeria.”

Asked to explain the possible justification for MTN Nigeria to pay fees for management and technical services to a company with no employees, MTN said: “It is the contracting party’s prerogative as to how it elects to discharge its contractual obligations.”

Meaning is that MTN Mauritius can perform its task without a single staff member.

PREMIUM TIMES made sustained efforts to get NOTAP and the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) to comment on the MTN practices in Nigeria.

The Director in charge of Technology Transfer and Agreement, Ephraim Okejiri, initially pleaded that he was in a meeting, and that the reporter should wait.

But after over four hours of waiting, he sent a secretary to say he would not be able to give any information on MTN.

Similarly at Nigeria’s tax agency, the Federal Inland Revenue Service, the Director of Public Communications, Emmanuel Obeta, who had earlier promised on three occasion to make information available on the matter suddenly had a change of mind.

He said relevant officials who should provide him with the information sought were all not available.

Additional report ‎by Bassey Udo and Nicholas Ibekwe.

Source: Premium times

Ballot papers disappeared inTanzania Presidential Election

Tanzania election: Just as CCM the ruling Party faces strong challenge from Ukawa, most of the ballot papers disappeared in Tanzania Presidential Elections, and the most of the polling official appeared to have been drunk very incoherents in their explanations to the public.

Turnout has been high in Tanzania’s most competitive general elections, officials say, as a new opposition coalition tries to end the governing party’s 54-year grip on power.In some areas, voting was extended to allow those still in queues to cast their ballots, officials added.

Opinion polls have put the governing Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party ahead, but the result is expected to be close.
Four opposition groups are backing one candidate, a former prime minister.
The BBC’s Tulanana Bohela reports from the main city Dar es Salaam that usually busy streets and markets are deserted, and large queues have formed at polling stations as people wait patiently to cast their ballots.
President Jakaya Kikwete, who is standing down after two terms, has called for peace ahead of the election, adding that “anyone who tries to cause trouble will be dealt with”.

CCM was formed in 1977 from a merger of two post-colonial parties and has effectively been in power since independence in 1961.
It has fielded Works Minister John Magufuli, 55, as its presidential candidate.
He is being challenged by Edward Lowassa, 62, who quit CCM after he failed to win its presidential nomination.
He is contesting the poll under the banner of the Ukawa coalition.
Analysis: Tulanana Bohela, BBC Africa, Dar es Salaam
The unusually high turnout across the country suggests that Tanzanians believe the future is in their hands.
This is in contrast to previous elections when CCM was certain of victory because of a weak and divided opposition.
But politics has been shaken up by the formation of the Ukawa coalition, which believes it has a real chance of winning.
The CCM is equally confident, setting the stage for the most competitive election since independence from British rule.
The first results are due to come in on Monday, and the final result by Thursday, when Tanzanians should know the name of their new president.
Both main presidential candidates have already cast their ballots.
“I’ve carried out my duty as a citizen by voting. My appeal to those Tanzanians who have not voted is to ensure they do so to elect the people they want,” Mr Magufuli said.
Mr Lowassa said he was confident of victory, and urged people to vote peacefully.
Last week, he told the BBC Swahili service that he will “go back to his village to rear his cattle” if he loses.The semi-autonomous island archipelago of Zanzibar is also voting for a president and local leaders.
It has been hit by violence in previous elections, unlike the mainland where elections tend to be peaceful.
The BBC’s Sammy Awami in Zanzibar says that so far, there have been no reports of violence on the islands, with the voting process proceeding smoothly.

Source: newszent.com

Pictures: President Buhari Leaves For India

We wish him a safe trip!








Tribunal sacks 20 Rivers lawmakers

The Rivers State legislative election petition tribunals yesterday nullified the election of 20 out of the 32 members of the state House of Assembly.

The four tribunals, in separate judgments yesterday, upheld the petitions by candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the election.

They ordered rerun in the affected constituencies.

The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) members of the House, who are affected by the tribunals’ verdicts, include the Speaker Owaji Ibani from Andoni constituency.

The state’s governorship election petition tribunal last Saturday, voided the election of Governor Nyesom Wike and ordered a rerun.

Yesterday, the tribunals upheld the petitioners’ evidence, particularly in relation to allegations of irregularities and violence among other electoral malpractices.

The tribunals were of the view that the petitioners were, by the evidence led, able to prove their case.

By yesterday’s development, the PDP is now left with just 11 seats in the House. There was only one member of the APC in the House.

The affected lawmakers are, under the Electoral Act, entitled, within 21 days, to challenge the nullification of the elections at the appellate court.

The affected constituencies are GOKANA, ELEME, OBIO AKPOR 1 and 2, Etche 2, Opobo/Nkoro and AKUKUTORU 2,

Others are ASARI TORU 1 and 2, BONNY, Tai, ONELGA 1, DEGEMA, AHOADA East -1,  KHANA-1 and 2 ,Ikwerre, PHALGA-2, ANDONI.

The trbunals upheld elections in 11 constituencies won by the PDP. They are Oyigbo, Etche 1, Omuma, Ogu-Bolo, PHALGA 1 and 3,ONELG 2, ABUA-Odual, AHOADA West, Ahoada East 2 and EMUOHA.

The petition challenging the election in Okrika constituency, where the former First Lady, Patience Jonathan hails from, was earlier dismissed.

The Nation

Monday, October 26, 2015

TASKING THE BASIS OF BOKO HARAM'S ISLAMIC FAITH

The fear of Boko Haram by nearly everyone has led to an unprecedented lack of public debate amongst politicians, traditional and religious leaders, especially in Northern Nigeria and in the National Assembly, despite the great danger the phenomenon poses to Nigeria’s fragile unity.

This deepening silence by leaders in the ‘Muslim North’ and commentators has created a wrong assumption by many in the South and Christians all over the country that the inability of the ‘Muslim North’ to out-rightly denounce the activities of the sect is proof positive that the region wants to undermine the Jonathan Administration because he is a Southerner and an intolerable infidel.

Apparently there is the political Boko Haram that uses the name of the group to carry out the assassinations of some of their political opponents in the North- East. And again, there are some politicians and security contractors both in the North and South that have grown tall on the crest of the Boko Haram catastrophe to develop their personal estates.

This article is not about the North or South or about Christians or Muslims, it is merely an attempt, on account of my un-shaking belief in the obligations that a journalist owe society, to break the silence.

At the risk of sounding immodest, I can claim to have distinguished myself as the most credible source of news about the sect. However, this ‘feat’ has not come without the misconception by many within government that I am the Boko Haram with a pen as a weapon.

Suicide bombings and armed robberies in the name of religion in Nigeria was started by the Jama’atu Ahl-Sunnati Lil Da’awati wal Jihad otherwise known as Boko Haram in the early hours of June 16, 2011. Since then there have been several instances of suicide bombings in Nigeria this year, and several instances of targeted bombings of public places such as churches, beer parlours, banks and police stations, which have so far led to the death of hundreds of persons including women and children.

The impact and depth of their killings and destruction to the institutions of government and public psychology is unparallel.

The platform of all these violence by Boko Haram remains religion, specifically the Islamic faith, from which sect leaders and followers push for suicide bombing on assumption that it offers perpetrators’ martyr status as well as instant access to paradise.

I have discussed the suicide bombings and armed robberies (Fai’u in Arabic and Ganima in Hausa) in the name of Jihad with several Islamic scholars. The first question I put to these clerics is; what is the concept and criteria for waging Jihad. They’ve all said Jihad literally means putting in all effort in carrying out tasks. Technically, it carries different meanings based from the Quran and Hadith perspectives. Some scholars interpret this to mean waging war against the unbelievers; e.g. Allah says in the Holy Quran Chapter 25. V.52 ‘So do not follow the unbelievers, and strive against them a mighty striving with it’.

Others, however, think that ‘with it’ here means not waging war, but instead using the words of Allah to argue, debate and ultimately prove to them the truth. He further states in Surah Tahrim of the Holy Quran 66: 9 ‘O Prophet strive against the disbelievers and the hypocrites, and be stern with them’. Here too, Allah urged the Prophet to handle unbelievers and hypocrites sternly. In the case of the former, waging of war was acceptable but in the case of the latter i.e. hypocrites, the Prophet did not wage war on them.

A case of Abdallah Bin Ubay bin Sullul and his likes are replete in Islamic History. Also, in Surah Al Qassas of the HQ 28:6 Allah says ‘whosoever striveth, only for himself for Lo! Allah is altogether independent of His creatures’. Similar instances abound a lot in the Quran but do not strictly means waging of war (Jihad). And in many situations the Holy Prophet used the concept Jihad but did not explicitly refer to waging of war.

From Bukhari & Muslim, two popular sources for Hadith, performance of pilgrimage and the lesser pilgrimage were referred to as Jihad. The Prophet also referred to jihad as feeding of the needy, the less privilege and taking care of the orphans.

According to many accounts in the course of writing this article, the following criteria must be met before executing one form of jihad, which is waging of war. The attainment of a ruler (Amir) full-fledged, an Islamic State (independence) strong and capacity for self defence, well trained and highly educated followers, the existence of disbelievers and enemies as neighbours and their refusal to accept the Islamic faith.

According to these scholars, apparently, Boko Haram did not meet all these criteria. But, clearly, the sect’s lawful religious activity came under constant stalking and assault by security agencies in Maiduguri and at Bauchi, and according to these scholars, Boko Haram have a right to defend themselves in these circumstances.

However, the big question today is, does the suicide attacks on UN House or recently in Damaturu and several places that led to the deaths of over 150 persons including women and children amount to a self defence?

The Holy Quran teaches us in Chapter 5, Verse 33 that "Whosoever killed a person - unless it be for killing a person or for creating disorder in the land - it shall be as if he had killed all mankind." One scholar further explained here that, "a person who kills another person unfairly or who kills someone who had neither rebelled nor became a source of violating peace amongst the people nor created disorder in the land, it is as if he has killed the whole of mankind. In other words, to kill a person without any cause is, according to God Almighty, like the murder of the entire human race.”

In another Hadith narrated by all narrators except Bukhari, it is said that “the prophet used to advise the commanders separately and the whole group together to fear Allah and adhere to the rules of engagement specified by Allah and further enjoined on them to fight in the name of Allah for the purpose of proclaiming the words of the Creator; fight those who reject oneness of Allah; do not be unfaithful, do not deceive; do not renegade on any agreement reached; do not mutilate the corpses; do not kill children, women, elderly; and do not kill those engage in worship except if they fight you.”

The application of the concept of jihad is incumbent on all Muslims, but the one that has to do with waging of war is incumbent only on meeting the following criteria: When the unbelievers ambush Muslim settlement, it is incumbent on all to defend it. Apparently, Boko Haram were armed bushed and shot-at with life bullets during a funeral procession in 2009 by Security Agents in Maiduguri for their refusal to abide by traffic laws, and this according to them, is a ground for them to wage ‘Jihad’.

When the ruler assigns the task of waging war, once in the war front, it is forbidden to abandon it. Boko Haram believe that in response to the 2009 attacks against them, their ruler, late Mohammed Yusuf waged ‘Jihad’ and therefore they can never abandon it until every single one of them is death.

Whether or not the current Jihad being waged by Boko Haram meets the Islamic standard can best be imagined here and must to be a subject of public debate by the ‘Muslim North’ if only we can damn the bombs and AK47 of Boko Haram because everyone of us must die sooner or later.

What is the popular position of suicide bombing in Islam? There is no suicide bombing in Islam. Allah had said in Chapter 2: 195 “Spend your wealth for the cause of Allah and be not cast by your own hands to ruin and do good, Lo! Allah loves the doers of good.”

But indeed there is the concept of martyrdom in Islam which is always misconstrued as suicide bombing. A member of Boko Haram before embarking on a suicide bombing quoted a verse in the HQ "Allah hath purchased of the believers their persons and their goods; for theirs (in return) is the garden (of Paradise): they fight in His cause, and slay and are slain: a promise binding on Him in truth, through the Law, the Gospel, and the Qur'an: and who is more faithful to his covenant than Allah? Then rejoice in the bargain which ye have concluded: that is the achievement supreme."

And the dark-eyed virgins which Mohammed Mangga, the person that bombed the Police Force Headquarters in Abuja believed await him after blowing up himself at the Louis Edet House, are mentioned in several verses in the HQ verses 44:54 and 52:20. For those who swing the other way, there are "perpetual youth" verse 6:17, otherwise known as "boys" verses 52:24 and 76:19. However, virtually all the scholars I have spoken with say this is a misconception of the Qur’an.

The question here is did Boko Haram meet the criteria of Jihad and are they waging it under strict Islamic standards? If yes, then they can claim martyrdom. But suicide is forbidden in the Qur’an. "O ye who believe!... [do not] kill yourselves, for truly Allah has been to you Most Merciful. If any do that in rancour and injustice, soon shall We cast him into the Fire..." (Qur'an 4:29-30).

The taking of life is allowed only by way of justice (i.e. the death penalty for murder), but even then, forgiveness is better. "Nor take life - which Allah has made sacred - except for just cause..." (17:33). It is important to note that the predominant theme in the Qur'an is forgiveness and peace. Allah is Merciful and Forgiving, and seeks that of His followers.

In the fight against terrorism of all forms, it is important to understand who is a terrorist, what is the motivation for such terror acts. We can only fight against this horror if we understand its causes and motivations. What motivates Boko Haram to lash out in this violent, inhumane way?

Many belief it is the deep rooted corruption and injustices that have become strong pillars of bad governance in Nigeria. Many expert accounts conclude that religion neither causes nor explains suicide bombings. The true motivation of such attacks is something that all of us must understand and address squarely.

Another contentious issue is, is it lawful for Boko Haram to engage in arm robberies? They called their actions fai’u. Fai’u means to return or give-back. Technically, fai’u is a process whereby ownership of wealth of the (unbelievers) enemies comes to the Muslims without waging war. In Chapter 59:6; Allah says ‘and that which Allah gave as spoil fai’u unto His messenger from them, ye urge not any horse or riding camel for the sake thereof, but Allah giveth His messenger lordship over whom He will’.

In the history of Islam, there came a time when the people of Bani Nadhir abandoned their abode and everything within it for fear of Muslims conquest. What they left behind was known as fai’u and was used for weapon procurement. But it is important here not to mix up the term fai’u and robbery because there is a sharp contrast between what occurred in Bani Nadhir and what obtains today, said the scholars.

However, it may be confusing to non-students of Islamic history that the people of Mecca had severally forcefully collected the wealth of the Muslims before migration; and at a point the Muslims tried to collect back what belonged to them, an act that sparked off the main battle of Badr. In contrast, when peoples’ wealth, even those of the unbelievers who did not fight you, is forcefully collected is viewed as robbery and in this case the punishment of robbery is to chop off the limbs diagonally, or hang to death or imprisonment if the robbery involved murder.

What is the position of wasting human life like the killings of Islamic clerics by Boko Harm? Killing of human being, especially that of the believer is not only heinous but one of the gravest sins said all the scholars. The Holy Qur’an 4: 93 says ‘whosoever slayeth a believer of set purpose, his reward is hell forever. Allah’s wrath against him and He hath cursed him and preferred for him an awful doom.

In a Hadith narrated by Tirmidhi and Nasai reported by Ibn Umar ‘the prophet said Allah may forgive any kind of sins, except one who dies as Mushrik or intentionally killing a believer’. In the narration of Nasai he said, it is easier for Allah to see the earth disappeared than a believer killed’. If the whole humanity come together and killed a believer, Allah will not mind sending them all to hell fire.

According to Boko Haram the clerics and other Muslims they killed are either working or sympathetic to the government of the day and they promote or support democracy in some ways. Therefore, since democracy is Kufr they are unbelievers especially when most of them pinpointed or kept mum during arrests and executions of their members over the years.

Scholars said, once a man proclaims oneness of Allah, his wealth, life and dignity are secured. Or if he agrees to live with Muslims without troubling them, even in war times, he is also secured. Osama bin Zayd reported by Muslim and Abu Daud that ‘while we were at war, when we reached the enemies they fled away and a man appeared to us and proclaimed the Shahada, but I did not spare him and when we reached the Prophet, he angrily inquired of me thrice ‘after he said the Shahada! , what will you tell Allah?’ I responded saying he proclaimed it out of fear of me! The prophet responded again thrice saying ‘did you open his heart and see it whether he was sincere or not?’

Did Boko Haram open the hearts of several clerics and many Muslims to know whether they are true believers or not before they killed them? Miqdat bin Aswad said in a Hadith narrated by Muslim, Abu Daud and Tirmidhi ‘I inquired O, prophet of Allah, assuming we are in a war and an unbeliever chopped off one of my hands and as I intend to strike him he proclaimed the Shahada, do I kill him or let go?

The prophet answered, “Let him go.”
“But he chopped off my hand!”
“Let him go! For if you kill him, your positions would have switched,” the Prophet said.

The scholars concluded that the members of Boko Haram have switched places with those they have killed, adding that “We urge Boko Haram to please take the path of reconciliation and forgiveness.”

Ahmad Salkida is a freelance journalist based in Abuja and can be reached atsalkida@gmail.com.


Donald Trump says Africans are lazy and only good at lovemaking and violence

AMERICA'S Republican Party presidential candidate Donald Trump has lashed out at Africans describing them as lazy fools who are only good at lovemaking and violence amid a promise that he would deport millions of them.   Billionaire business magnate Mr Trump, who is seeking to become the Republican Party's flag bearer in next year's presidential elections, expressed his deep disgust for Africans over the weekend by referring to them as lazy fools only good at eating, lovemaking and thuggery. Speaking in Indianapolis, he reiterated his promise to deport Africans especially those of Kenyan origin including their son Barrack Obama if he becomes president.   Mr Trump said: “African-Americans are very lazy. The best they can do is gallivanting around ghettoes, lamenting how they are discriminated and these are the people America doesn’t need.   "They are the enemies of progress. Look at African countries like Kenya for instance, those people are stealing from their own government and go to invest the money in foreign countries."   He added that Americans cannot trust those who have ran away to hide in the US and he does not care if they abuse him. According to Mr Trump, even the internet they are using belongs to the US and America can decide to switch it off from this side.   "These are people who import everything including matchsticks and in my opinion, most of these African countries ought to be recolonised again for another 100 years because they know nothing about leadership and self governance. I promise to make America great again by restoring our dignity that we have since lost through Obama.   "The more reason why I still believe that he and his Kenyan brothers and sisters should be deported back to Kenya to make America safe. From the government to the opposition, they only qualify to be used as a case study whenever bad examples are required," Mr Trump added.   His rant did not augur well with the fellow Republican candidate Carson Camp and his campaign team has since distanced itself from Mr Trump words. Mr Camp is aiming to become the first African-American Republican Party presidential candidate.

- See more at: www.nigeriawatch.com

Subsidy removal call: Emir Sanusi under fire

Emir of Kano Muhammad Sanusi II yesterday came under fire for calling for the devaluation of the naira and removal of petrol subsidy.

Labour, a senator and others advised President Muhammadu Buhari to ignore the emir, describing his demand as not good for the poor.

Heeding the call will take the economy back, rather than ginger it as suggested by the Emir.

The emir, who is the immediate past governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), spoke last week in Lagos, after receiving a Life Time Achievement Award at the All Africa Business Leaders Award West Africa.

He said: “Does it make sense at this time for the government to continue paying petroleum subsidies? It does not! When you are not earning because oil prices are down, you have to shut down those expense lines that had been known historically to be the site of rent-seeking.

“Fuel subsidy has to go, our tax base has to expand, value added tax (VAT) has to go up. We can’t continue having an economy in which we collect tax from oil, collect tax from telecoms companies, and then 60-70 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) does not pay taxes. This is something that has to be looked at.”

Sanusi added: “I know that the government has announced its position on exchange rate… It is wrong to continue to pretend that you can keep the naira at a certain level, when the price of oil is falling, without depleting your reserves. You have to make a choice.”

Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Group Managing Director Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, told the Senate during his ministerial screening that the president is not inclined to subsidy removal as things stand now.

CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele has also said the governent would not devalue the naira, which is exchanged for N197 to the dollar at the official market.

Yesterday, Senator Shehu Sani (Kaduna central) on his facebook page said: “I stand opposed to the devaluation of our national currency and; I stand opposed to removal of subsidy. Devaluing the naira and removing subsidy will worsen inflation, aggravate poverty and ignite a national uprising.

“Decades of adoption of such capitalist economic strategies by many countries in the developing world especially Africa led those nations to economic quagmire and paralyses.

“The poor must not continue to pay the price for the corruption and mismanagement perpetrated by past governments.”

An economic analyst, Mr. Henry Boyo, said: “I think we should ask what should be the implications of doing either or both of those recommendations. If you devalue the naira, there are a numbers of things that will happen. You will find that the cost of production in Nigeria will go up. You will also find that this will have an intimidating effect on the rate of inflation. You will find also that if Nigerian industries remain uncompetitive, they will reduce capacity and lay off workers. That will mean an additional burden on the level of unemployment in the country.

“You must recognise that the issue of devaluation of the naira is very closely tied to the issue of subsidy. On the other hand, instead of devaluing the naira, you follow a process that will actually make naira exchange rate to appreciate.”

Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC) President Comrade Boboi Kaigama, said labour would not accept any further devaluation of the naira or subsidy removal on petroleum products.

“We see them as his personal views and we want to make it clear to him and anybody who wants to listen to his advice that it is not palatable to labour. We will never accept any further devaluation of the naira and we will not be part of the removal of oil subsidy.

“The government should wait for the consequence of listening to this call because by removing oil subsidy, you are further impoverishing Nigerians.

“We want a situation where those behind the subsidy scam are punished, then put our refineries in place, come back and discuss with organised labour and let us see whether it is feasible.

“Otherwise, without putting refineries in place and putting palliatives in place to check increase in prices of goods and transportation and  you are calling for the removal of oil subsidy, I think you are very naive when it comes to looking at the consequence of the issue of removal of oil subsidy”

Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President Ayuba Wabba described the call for the subsidy removal as anti-masses which will further impoverish Nigerians.

The call, he said, reflected the fact that the former CBN chief has lost touch with realities.

He said labour would continue to fight any policy or calls that will bring hardship to the masses.

The former CBN governor, he said, was speaking the minds of the capitalists, marketers and those who want to milk the country dry.

“We are not in support of that call. There is no doubt that the former CBN governor is no more connected with the people. This is the language of the capitalists, the marketers and those who want to milk the country dry.

“But, we are happy that President Buhari is a former Petroleum Minister and he knows all the rot in the system. We urge him not to look back and we will continue to support him,” Wabba said.

General Secretary of the National Union of Textile and Garment Workers of Nigeria (NUTGWN), Mr Isa Aremu, said the former CBN governor was right to have advised the in-coming ministers against “flattery’’ of the President.

Buhari must also be wary of policy dictatorship that will further undermine growth and development as well as worsen poverty in the country, he added.

“There is no choice for the President between policy sycophancy and policy dictatorship/policy ambush.

“Emir Sanusi must rethink outside the box of neo-liberal IMF’s unhelpful policies of devaluation (which he commendably rejected as CBN governor).

“Nigeria needs a new paradigm of bold policy choices and new star-words in place of boring ideological mantra of devaluation and subsidy removal.

“The naira in recent times lost its value drastically to the existing devalued rate of N197 to a dollar.”


Adeyeye Ogunwusi is the new Ooni of Ife

The Governor of the State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Adesoji Aregbesola has approved the appointment of a new Ooni of Ife.

He is Prince Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi of Girsi Ruling House of Ile-Ife, State of Osun.

The Secreatary to Osun state government, Alhaji Moshood Adeoti said the choice of Ogunwusi as the Ooni follows the completion of the due process by the kingmakers and the communication of their decision to Government.

Until his appointment on Monday, Ogunwusi was non-executive director at Imperial Homes Mortgage Bank Limited (a subsidiary of GTBank).

He is a graduate of Accountancy and a certified member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria and of the Institute of Management.

Adeyeye is currently the Managing Director of Howard Roark Gardens Limited which is undertaking multi-million naira Jacob Mews Estate project in Yaba and the Lakeview real estate development in Lekki.

He has been involved in engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contracts locally and abroad for over 11 years. He was involved in the development of the Northern Foreshore Estate, Cityscape International Limited’s Buena Vista project in Lekki, Primewaterview Limited’s projects, Westcom Limited’s projects, and the Ajaokuta Steel’s and Delta Steel’s resuscitation projects

The Guardian News


13 & 15 Yrs Old, Nigerian Brothers Built Mobile Web Browsering Alternative To Google Chrome

They say necessity is the mother of invention and this is sure the case when it comes to 13 and 15 year old, Nigerian brothers Anesi and Osine Ikhianosime. Their necessity is their need for a faster mobile web browsing experience…because who wants to wait a few extra seconds for Google Chrome to load when you can build a better browser?

The dynamic coding duo are your ordinary African teenagers. They attend school in Greensprings school, Anthony Campus, Lagos. They love their friends, soccer, to have fun and coding, obviously.

The young problem solvers got tired of waiting for Google Chrome to load on their mobile phones, so decided to do something about it instead of complain. They decided to build a better mobile browser last year and called it Crocodile Browser Lite. It is currently live and ready for your download in the Google Play store right now.

Raised by parents who believe education and technology is very important to the lives of all, they were raised with high aspirations in mind. Their mother says they were able to use the computer before they know how to read and have always been fascinated with technology, creating, building and solving problems.

By the age of 7 & 9, the duo knew they wanted to start their own technology company. Inspired by Microsoft Windows platform,

By the age of 7 & 9, the duo knew they wanted to start their own technology company. Inspired by Microsoft Windows platform, they decided to name their company “Doors”. However, later they discovered that the name was taken, so they changed it to Blu Doors”, which is still the current name of the company.

At the ages of 12 and 14, they decided to take on the task of learning how to code. They taught themselves, but had much encouragement, inspiration and access to computers from their school. They did take advantage of free resources. “I learnt to code by myself. I startede in 2013, I used sites  like Code Academy, Code Avenger and books like ‘Android for Game Development’ and ‘Games for Dummies,” said Anesi.

The plan to create a better browser for low end featured phones is one that is needed for the developing world. While Chrome and other browsers work great on high end smart phones, the majority of the world are not using this technology and need a low-end option that still provides quick browers response, so this is what the young men did. They built a better mouse trap for the phones they were using.

Crocodile Browser Lite 3.0 will be available this year in the Google Play store and something you should check out to give the young people support. They currently have over 500 downloads of their browser, but hoping to see it grow in the near future.

Their future plans are to attend MIT in the United States because they feel the educational opportunities, resources and access to technology are exactly what they need to positively impact the future as then intend.

Hats off to these young men and their family!

 
Urbanintellectual

Sunday, October 25, 2015

NNAMDI KANU AND THE CRY FOR BIAFRA

I am not a Biafran and neither am I Igbo. I do however believe that it is the inalienable right of any human being or ethnic nationality to aspire to be free and to be able to determine their own destiny. The right of self-determination is enshrined in international law and it is guaranteed by every moral stricture known to man.



It is a right that has been exercised successfully over and over again in world history and it has led to the creation of new nations which were carved out of older ones. The denial of that right and the suppression and persecution of those who attempt to exercise it leads to nothing but defiance, dissent and resistance and, if not properly managed, it eventually spills over into war and carnage.





This has been the primary cause of most of history's most brutal civil wars, including the American, Russian, French, English, Indian, Sri Lankan, Sudanese, Nigerian, Angolan, Congolese, Zimbabwean, Yugoslavian, Ukrainian, Nicaraguan, Cuban, Irish, Syrian, Libyan, Indonesian, Korean, Vietnamese, Spanish, Iraqi, Italian, Lebanese ones and countless others. I do not believe in violent change and neither do I believe in war, revolution, terror or the use of arms in the pursuance of even the most noble causes.




I do however believe in the power of ideas and the right of any man, woman or people to yearn to be free from bondage and to peacefully and freely express that yearning. It is in this context that I situate my belief in and support for those that view the Nigerian Federation as an oppressive entity which has effectively enslaved its people in an attempt to create what is essentially an artificial and unworkable state.





Those that believe in Nigeria have every right to continue to do so and to voice their resolve to keep Nigeria one. What they do not have the right to do is to refuse to offer the same degree of freedom of expression to those that do not believe in a united Nigeria and who instead believe in the peaceful dissolution of our nation to speak their minds and voice their views. What is good for the goose is surely good for the gander. You cannot grant one side of the divide freedom of expression whilst you deny it to the other.





This is all the more so because freedom of expression is the lifeblood of any democracy. It must be accorded in equal measure to those that believe in Nigeria and to those that do not. It is in this light that we must consider the plight of Mr. Nnamdi Kanu, the director of Radio Biafra and the man that has been described by the Igbo World Assembly as ''Buhari's first political prisoner''.






We may not like his style, we may not like his radio station, we may not share his views or approve of his methods but one thing that we cannot take from Mr. Kanu is his right to hold such views and to express them in a peaceful and lawful manner no matter how distasteful those views may be to some. To deny him this most basic human right is not only an act of intellectual terrorism but it is also the most grave and barbaric manifestation of what is essentially an evolving police state where different or contrary views cannot be accommodated by those in power.





When Mr. Alex Salmon and his Scottish Nationalist Party began the agitation for the dissolution of the United Kingdom and for the establishment of Scottish independence many years ago they were not charged to court, locked up indefinitely or murdered by the British authorities but instead they were eventually given the opportunity to participate in a referendum and test their ideas. The same thing happened in the Catalan region of Spain where the agitation for the establishment of a new nation is compelling and very popular.

The same thing happened a number of years ago in the Quebec region of Canada. It also happened in a region called East Timor which opted to leave Indonesia and in Singapore which opted to leave Malaysia. The same process was adopted when Georgia, the Ukraine and all the other former Soviet states opted to leave Russia and when the Czech Republic opted to break off from Slovakia.

The utility and importance of conducting a referendum on such matters in order to determine the true will of the people and to honor the findings of that referendum cannot be underestimated and it remains the only path for peace.






Sadly President Buhari who, like most in his generation, are still stuck in the mindset of a civil war general, has refused to learn from this. The biggest mistake and miscalculation of his administration so far is not the ruthless implementation of its patently and monstrously unapologetic northern and Islamic agenda but rather its absurd resolve to lock up Mr. Kanu indefinitely and to effectively throw the key away simply because he dared to call for the establishment of Biafra.





As far as I am aware Mr. Kanu has not used or advocated the use of violence whilst expressing himself and neither have any of his supporters. One therefore wonders what has panicked the Federal Government to such a point that they not only have to lock him up but that they also have to violate the law of the land by not allowing him to see his lawyer and by not presenting him before a court of law and charging him within the constitutionally-prescribed three days.





State-sponsored violence and intimidation, the violation of human rights, illegal incarceration, the murder of innocents and the vicious suppression of legitimate ideas leads to nothing but hardened hearts, greater defiance and the spread of anger and dissent. The principle is simple and clear: the more you fan the flame of tyranny and repression the more the passion and fire of liberty spreads.





It follows that the biggest favor that President Buhari's security agencies could have done for the Biafran cause was to lock up Mr. Kanu and thereby transform him from being a little-known secessionist into the living symbol of the Biafran struggle, a respected freedom fighter, a champion of the Igbo people and an internationally-acclaimed political prisoner.





It is no wonder that leading politicians from all over the world, including the former Home Secretary and former Leader of the Labor Party in the United Kingdom, Mrs. Harriet Harman QC, have called for his release. The Russian and Israeli governments have also expressed concern and done the same.



Their call was the right and proper thing to do and I add my voice to that call. I have never met or spoken to Mr. Kanu but I am moved by his passion and courage. I am also persuaded by the logic and force of his public assertions. He has made a compelling case for the establishment of Biafra and millions of young Igbos from all over the world have bought into it.




It is left for those that do not agree with him to make a better case and to stem the Biafran tide. That is the monumental challenge that those that do not agree with Mr. Kanu's views or his methods have. I have not always been on the same page with our Igbo brothers yet despite that one thing is clear: only the callous would deny the fact that they have suffered immeasurably in the Nigerian Federation over the last 50 years.



Only the uninformed would deny the fact that they have been butchered, murdered, persecuted, broken, humiliated, insulted, cheated and treated with contempt and disdain more than any other ethnic group in the country since July 1966.





What the Nigerian state is confronted with in the new generation of Igbos who refuse to be cowed is a time-bomb. Unlike their fathers they cannot be appeased or intimidated. They are not fearful of the prospect of a second civil war. They are not prepared to settle for crumbs and neither do they fear death, conflict, defeat, incarceration, butchery or persecution.





They are imbued with a spirit that cannot be suppressed and the more they cry ''Biafra'', the more the spirits of the millions that were slaughtered on the Biafran side during the civil war are invoked. The more they cry ''Biafra'', the more the souls of the hundreds of thousands of their people that were butchered during the barbaric pogroms in the north in the mid-60's and thereafter are remembered.

The more they cry ''Biafra'', the more they remember how their fathers were stripped of everything after the civil war and how they have been denied the opportunity to rise to the highest office in the land. The more they cry ''Biafra'', the more they acknowledge and recognise the bitter fact that the Buhari administration regard their kith and kin as nothing more than third class citizens and pitiable prisoners of war. The worst thing that the Nigerian authorities can do is to treat them with levity or contempt.




They are angry, they are fed up, they refuse to be enslaved, they want a brighter future and they have come to realise that they have nothing to lose. The most inappropriate thing that President Buhari can do is to continue to underestimate the power of their resolve or the clarity of their intent. The worst thing that they can do is to begin to jail them, to shed their blood and to take their lives.





The more you lock up the Biafrans, the more they will rise up. The more you mock them, the more they will shout. The more you kill them, the more their anger will be kindled. The more you deny them, the more they will wax stronger. The more you treat them with disdain, the more they will defy you. The more you treat them like slaves the more they will aspire to break off and take their destiny into their own hands. You cannot resist an idea whose time has come.




This is a fact that we must all accept and it is with this in mind that I urge President Buhari and the Federal Government to not only release Mr. Nnamdi Kanu but also to tread with the utmost restraint and caution when dealing with those that are agitating for Biafra.

By Femi Fani - Kayode

Saturday, October 24, 2015

A portal to nowhere

WHEN Marissa Mayer was young, she wanted to become a neurosurgeon. Instead she went into the technology business and was called to perform a different sort of life-saving operation, when she was hired to revive Yahoo, an ailing internet firm, in 2012. Her role as Yahoo’s boss has come with plentiful pay and plenty of setbacks, the latest of which occurred on October 20th when the firm reported quarterly profits below analyst expectations.

Ms Mayer’s three-year-long effort to save Yahoo has not resulted in the recovery many had been hoping for. When she was first hired away from Google, where she had been an engineer and early employee, she enjoyed cooing press reports. To welcome their new leader Yahoo employees reportedly made “Hope” posters like those from Barack Obama’s race for the American presidency, bearing Ms Mayer’s face instead. Yahoo was once a huge internet company, but lost out to more innovative rivals, and churned through four chief executives in the three years preceding Ms Mayer’s arrival, demoralising employees and investors. Perhaps expectations were too high for the young, ambitious, media-hungry new boss.
Yahoo’s share price has more than doubled since she took over, but that has mostly to do with the firm’s stake in the Chinese internet company Alibaba, which it bought for a mere $1 billion in 2005. Investors have seen Yahoo as a way to gain exposure to Alibaba, which only went public last year. Yahoo sold part of its stake in 2014 and is spinning off the rest into a separate company. Ms Mayer is hoping to avoid taxes on the transaction, but recently America’s tax authority has cast doubt on that possibility. Whatever the outcome, Yahoo will soon be a shell of its current self. Today it has a market capitalisation of $31 billion, but its core business is worth only about a tenth of that. Most of its market value stems from its stakes in Alibaba and Yahoo Japan, a separate company.

Since Ms Mayer took the helm at Yahoo, revenues and profits have fallen. This year the company will probably make $928m in pre-tax earnings, down 45% since 2012 and the lowest figure in a decade, according to Mark Mahaney of RBC Capital, an investment bank. Ms Mayer has focused on making Yahoo’s products snazzier and expanded into areas where it had been weak, like social networks and mobile advertising. She has spent around $2.2 billion on deals, buying Tumblr, a blogging platform, and BrightRoll, a video-advertising firm. But Yahoo’s share of online advertising spending has declined, while that of rivals like Google and Facebook has risen.

As the third-largest web platform in America after Google and Facebook, Yahoo has plenty of scale, but it does not offer the same level of specific audience targeting that competitors do. In a recent survey by Ad Age and RBC that asked advertisers to rank online properties according to their return on investment, Yahoo came in sixth after Google, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and LinkedIn. Some onlookers say it was a mistake to hire someone with no experience leading a company and without expertise in or appreciation for the advertising business. Recently the firm has experienced a high degree of turnover among top management and employees.

Yahoo’s dim outlook is all the more striking when contrasted with that of AOL, which was sold to Verizon for a hefty $4.4 billion in June. Like Ms Mayer, Tim Armstrong, AOL’s boss, once worked at Google, and both were intent on turning around former internet behemoths that had fallen on difficult times. But Mr Armstrong was bolder in investing in growth areas, mainly distinctive content, video and technology that enables targeted advertising, says Brian Wieser of Pivotal Research.

When Yahoo stands on its own, without the cushion of a savvy Chinese investment made by a predecessor, it could become a target for larger companies. Private-equity firms, attracted to Yahoo’s $5.7 billion of cash, could be suitors, as might telecoms or media businesses. Ms Mayer might welcome the opportunity for a graceful exit. In business, unlike surgery, you can leave before you are finished.

Source : The Economist

Escaping suicide bomber arrested, reveals over 8,000 fighters are in Damasak

The suicide bomber, who escaped after her collaborators detonated bombs, Saturday morning along Damboa Road in Maiduguri, has been reportedly arrested by the military.

A source, who hinted on the arrest, said the suspect revealed that 8,000 Boko Haram fighters were preparing to take over Maiduguri and free some of their militants in custody.

A member of the civilian JTF told DAILY POST that the female suicide bomber was arrested about three hours after the explosion at the military checkpoint.

He added that she ran to Dala Alemderi ward, where some of her accomplices also detonated explosives killing yet another five people.

“Her own bombs refused to detonate and she remove it from her body. She realized she did not want to die again and was begging us not to kill her. She said she was the lady with the other female bombers, who attacked the military checkpoint this morning.

“She also revealed that they came all the way from Damasak where they were working along with some member of the Boko Haram fighters numbering 8,000, who were planing on how to make inroad to Maiduguri to free their men in military custody,” Sani said.

Source: Dailytrust

BREAKING: Tribunal sacks Wike as Rivers Governor, orders rerun

The Rivers State Election Petition Tribunal has sacked Nyesom Wike as the Governor of Rivers State.

The tribunal, which delivered its ruling in Abuja on Saturday, also ordered that a fresh governorship election be conducted in the state.

The petition challenging the election of Mr. Wike as Rivers State Governor was filed by Dakuku Peterside, the candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC, in the election.

The Rivers governorship election, which was criticised by local and international observers, witnessed the largest amount of violence both in its build-up and after the elections.

More details later

Premium Times


Friday, October 23, 2015

Anglican Bishop rejects Gov. Rochas Okorocha's donation

Anglican Bishop of Owerri, Bishop Cyril C. Okorocha rejected Governor Rochas Okorocha donation of N200,000 to the church at the diocesan synod of the Anglican Communion which held at St John’s Anglican Church, New Owerri.

Bishop Cyril Okorocha went on to lambast Governor Okorocha for inflicting sufferings on the people of Imo State through non-payment of their salaries and his “inhuman policies”.

Governor Okorocha, who was represented at the Synod by one Obinna Aharanwa gave a donation of N200,000 Naira to support the church’s development but the Bishop rejected the Governor’s donation on the ground that he would not want the church to share in the blame for the non-payment of salaries and other financial troubles facing the State.

The Bishop said: “Please take your money and return it to the government. If l take this money, lmo people will say that l have collected their pension money and worker’s salary. Go and pay pensioners and workers. I won’t touch this money.

“We want Governor Rochas Okorocha to publish his stewardship and show us what he is doing with lmo money. We need explanations”, Bishop Okorocha concluded.

Embarrassed, the governor’s representative, Mr Obinna, stormed out of the venue enraged by the Bishop’s comment.

Pointblank News

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Breaking! #BokoHaram Kills 7 In #Cameroon, Kidnaps Scores Of Women, Kills Ruling Party Chief While Campaigning

Boko Haram terrorists gunned down at least seven people in Cameroon’s far north region on Thursday and kidnapped scores of women, a day after killing Ali Souleiman, a chieftain of the ruling CPDM. He was killed while campaigning for reelection, said local newspaper, L’Oeil du Sahel. 

The latest attack took place in Kerawa, not very far from Doulo, where on Wednesday more than ten people were killed, including Souleiman.

That same day, Boko Haram militants attacked the army in Cameroon’s far north region and injured at least seven soldiers at Achigachia locality.

The Wednesday attack came only a day after a Boko Haram rocket hit and destroyed a security vehicle belonging to the military along Zigue-Dabanga axis on Tuesday.

The confrontations that followed left two Boko Haram members dead. Their corpses were found early yesterday.

Boko Haram has stepped up its attacks in Cameroon and Nigeria in recent months.

President Barack Obama deployed 90 troops to Cameroon last week Monday as an advance team of 300 as America wages into a war that seems to escalate by the day.

Since President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria was sworn into office in May promising to crush the “mindless, godless”militants, Boko Haram has killed about 2,000 people in the Lake Chad Basin and almost 4,000 this year alone.

A multi-national joint task force with headquarters in Ndjamena, Chad, is yet to fully take off as the various governments wr angle over who should get what.

On Tuesday, Buhari met in Abuja with the service chiefs but details of that meeting were not made public. It was the first time no statement was issued by the presidency after such a meeting.

In Cameroon, President Paul Biya met with David Rodriguez, the Commander of United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) on Friday, a day after meeting with members of his newly formed government, and vowed that the terrorists will be defeated.

But with 500 Cameroonians killed by Boko Haram between November last year and now, many are beginning to lose hopes in the assurances of the long serving 82 year old President.

Simonateba.com


REMARKS BY RT.HON.CHIBUIKE ROTIMI AMAECHI BEFORE HIS SCREENING TODAY IN THE SENATE:

Your Excellency, the President of Senate,
Your Excellency, the Deputy President of Senate
Your Excellency, the leader of Senate,
Your Excellency the minority leader of Senate and former Governor of Akwa Ibom State,
Distinguished leaders of the Senate
Very distinguished Senators,

Good morning.

It is a rare pleasure to stand before you distinguished Senators in this hallowed chambers. I am deeply humbled and honoured to have been nominated by President Muhammadu Buhari to serve in the office of a Minister in the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

My name is Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, and I am the immediate past governor of Rivers State. Before then, I had served as the Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly for two terms of eight years and as Chairman, Conference of Speakers, for two tenures.

I am perhaps the first Nigerian to have served as Speaker of a State House of Assembly, for eight years.

I served as Governor of Rivers State for two terms during which period, I had the honour and privilege to serve my colleagues as Chairman of the Nigeria Governors Forum, for two terms.

Taken together, whether as Governor or as Speaker, these two career paths tell a story of public service. During my tenure as Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly, we achieved a lot. Some key bills were passed like the Anti Kidnapping Law and the Rivers States Schools Rights (Parent, Children and Teachers) Law. However, my most fulfilling moment as Speaker was the passage of the Rivers State Schools Rights (Parent, Children and Teachers) law, No. 2 of 2005.

This bill clearly enunciated and defined the responsibilities of parents, teachers and children to guarantee our children access to qualitative education.

As Governor, we inherited a state that was comatose and in the throes of insecurity. Rivers State bore the fault lines of the Niger Delta militancy. Our immediate task was therefore to restore security and improve the social and economic well being of our people. Ours was a two-pronged approach of fiscal and physical security. Whilst we confronted criminality with aggressive law enforcement measures, we embarked on massive social and infrastructural development.

We declared an emergency in the education sector that guaranteed free and compulsory education up to secondary school level. During my tenure as Governor, we awarded the construction of some 500 primary schools. 314 of these were 100 percent completed while others were virtually completed by the time we left office in May 2015. We undertook the training and recertification of teachers already in the service of the state and employed over 13,000 new teachers. Our efforts and investments in the education sector did not go unnoticed as Port Harcourt won the UNESCO World Book Capital city for 2014, beating cities like Moscow and Oxford.

In the area of healthcare delivery, we built over 140 primary healthcare centres, three secondary healthcare facilities, employed 400 doctors and 200 nurses to improve the manpower in the healthcare sector.

Anyone who visited Port Harcourt while we served, will testify to the fact that we worked to bring back the old glory of Port Harcourt as the garden and city as the third leg in the economic tripod of Nigeria. We built a dualised network of 1500 Kilometres of roads, 23 bridges, 2 major fly-overs and 2 interchanges.

In the area of power, of the 350 Megawatts (MW) total capacity generation assets invested by the government before ours, only 70MW (equivalent to about 20 per cent) was available. With enthusiasm, we ramped up the efficiency to 77 per cent availability including injecting another 360MW Green Field Generation Project at Afam. That massive investment is partly the reason why today, residents in Port Harcourt enjoy almost 24 hours of electricity supply.

On the whole, Mr. President of Senate, I say with pride that during our stewardship of eight years we consistently maintained our pledge to our people to render “transparent and accountable stewardship.” To guarantee that we did not deviate from that pledge, we were the first state to pass a Fiscal Responsibility law and the Rivers State Bureau of Public Procurement law. Both laws stemmed from executive bills, and we are pleased that we maintained our stance of surrendering the power of the governor to award contracts until the end of our tenure.

Mr. President of Senate, Distinguished Senators, it is therefore fair to say that under my leadership as governor of Rivers State we redefined governance and repositioned Rivers State as a destination choice to live, work and do business.

Accordingly Mr. President of Senate, Distinguished Senators, I give you my word that if I am confirmed as minister by this distinguished Senate, I will bring to bear my vast experience as a Legislator, Speaker and Governor in the execution of my duties


Senate finally screens Buhari's ministers




After stalling the screening of former Rivers State governor, Rotimi Amaechi, three times, the Senate on Thursday screened the former governor for ministerial position.

As expected, Mr. Amaechi’s screening was not without drama and controversy.

The Minority Leader, Godswill Akpabio, first told the Senate that the PDP caucus would not ask him any question since the report of the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions had not been debated by the Senate.

But the Majority Leader, Ali Ndume, suggested that Mr. Amaechi should take a bow and go, saying one of his duties as Senate leader was to market the ministerial nominees.

However, the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, ensured he was asked questions, leaving the moment for All Progressives Congress, APC, senators alone.

While fielding questions from the senators, Mr. Amaechi said he disliked corruption, adding that he was not indicted in the whole report of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry of Rivers State.

“There is nowhere in the report of the Judicial committee, not (even) the white paper by the governor, that I am indicted for corruption,” he said.

Speaking on the APC victory in the last presidential election, he said the party was able to sell to Nigerians that there was massive corruption in the previous government.

“So we let Nigerians know that the only solution was to change government. And then, we presented a signpost candidate who is incorruptible.”

On Niger Delta problems, he assured that the East West Road would be his top priority if he is appointed minister for the region.


 Source