... ... 08/15/19 | IYANDA'SBLOG

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08/15/19

Kayode Fayemi

The Ekiti State Government on Thursday shut at least five hospitals operating illegally in the city.

Making the announcement, Commissioner for Health and Human Services, Dr Mojisola Yaya-Kolade, warned residents against patronising quack doctors so as not to put their health in danger.

Yaya-Kolade said that the state government frowned at quackery and would do everything within its powers to provide quality healthcare to the people.

She said, “The intention of the state government is to stamp out quackery in Ekiti and to prevent the way innocent people are being killed by unqualified medical personnel and hospitals.”

The illegal hospitals shut include Omole Hospital, Adedamola Hospital and Divine Citadel Hospital all in Ado-Ekiti while two others in Ilawe-Ekiti – Divine Hospital and Maternity Home – were also affected.

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At least nine filling stations have been sealed in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State by the Department of Petroleum Resources due to expired licences and lack of basic operational equipment.

The facilities were sealed on Thursday by a team led by DPR’s Head of Operations in the state, Mr Ibinabo Jack.

The affected filling stations are Nun River Petroleum, Maccary Oil and Gas, Barbizon and an unnamed LPG station said to be operating illegally.

Others are NNPC retail outlet at Edepie, Otueyal Oil and Gas, Tony’s Green Field Petroleum, Mobil Oil and Gas and another NNPC retail outlet in the state capital.

Speaking during the exercise, Jack said, “The sealing of filling stations is not new and it’s not going to be a one-off thing.

“Rather, it will be a continuous exercise. We caught some of them dispensing to customers below the variation.

“For instance, a station that is selling at point 41CL of every 10 litres is short-changing the public. In other words, where they ought to get 10 litres, they are given maybe six or seven litres. This is not fair.

“Some did not even have sand buckets and these are things needed for their safety and that of their facilities as well as their customers.

“The penalties depend on their offences. When they report at DPR’s office, appropriate penalties will be spelt out to each of them.

“The DPR is a regulatory body and there are regulations biding the operations of retail outlets which need to be maintained by the operators.”

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The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation and China National Offshore Oil Corporation have restated their commitment to work together to improve the petroleum industry in both countries.

Group Managing Director of NNPC, Mele Kyari, disclosed this when the Executive Vice President of CNOOC, Mr Lu Yan Ji, paid him a visit in Abuja, on Thursday.

Spokesperson for the NNPC, Ndu Ughamadu, in a statement, quoted Kyari as saying that the partnership would also help Nigeria to achieve 3million barrels of oil per day target by 2023.

The statement while commending the CNOOC for its plan to expand its investment in Nigeria’s oil industry, added that there was need to improve the country’s revenue profile through new investments.

Kyari said, “To have investment of $16bn in Nigeria is clearly an indication of your confidence in us.

“We have a target to grow production to three million barrels per day by 2023, to do that, we need partners like you. You can count on us because we have common interest.”

Speaking during the visit, Lu said Nigeria was one of his company’s largest investment destination.

He called for NNPC’s support in securing the investments, adding that there was need for both national oil corporations to work closely.

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The Federal High Court Abuja will on Monday deliver its ruling in a suit seeking to stop President Muhammadu Buhari from inaugurating the 43 ministerial nominees over the exclusion of a Federal Capital Territory indigene from the list, the News Agency of Nigeria reports.

The applicant, Mr Musa Baba-panya, who was also the counsel in the case, had on Thursday approached the court with an ex-parte motion, asking it to stop President Buhari from going ahead with the inauguration.

Baba-panya, who is also an indigene of Karu in the FCT, said the President’s action was contrary to an Appeal Court judgment delivered on March 15, 2018.

President Buhari is the 1st defendant, while the Attorney General of the Federation is the 2nd defendant in the case.

The lawyer in his suit, said, “The 43 confirmed ministerial appointees now awaiting swearing-in or inauguration as the Federal Executive Council is incomplete, illegal, unconstitutional, null, void and of no effect whatsoever.

“The 1st defendant stands in contempt of law and court for his brazen refusal to comply with the tenor of the Abuja Division of Court of Appeal judgment of 15/1/2018 compelling him to the immediate and forthwith appointment off an indigene of FCT, Abuja, as minister of the federation. 

“Allowing the President to go on with his decision would mean that he is going to constitute an illegal cabinet.”

Justice Taiwo Taiwo ordered that the suit should commence during the vacation period of the court.

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The Federal High Court Abuja will on Monday deliver its ruling in a suit seeking to stop President Muhammadu Buhari from inaugurating the 43 ministerial nominees over the exclusion of a Federal Capital Territory indigene from the list, the News Agency of Nigeria reports.

The applicant, Mr Musa Baba-panya, who was also the counsel in the case, had on Thursday approached the court with an ex-parte motion, asking it to stop President Buhari from going ahead with the inauguration.

Baba-panya, who is also an indigene of Karu in the FCT, said the President’s action was contrary to an Appeal Court judgment delivered on March 15, 2018.

President Buhari is the 1st defendant, while the Attorney General of the Federation is the 2nd defendant in the case.

The lawyer in his suit, said, “The 43 confirmed ministerial appointees now awaiting swearing-in or inauguration as the Federal Executive Council is incomplete, illegal, unconstitutional, null, void and of no effect whatsoever.

“The 1st defendant stands in contempt of law and court for his brazen refusal to comply with the tenor of the Abuja Division of Court of Appeal judgment of 15/1/2018 compelling him to the immediate and forthwith appointment off an indigene of FCT, Abuja, as minister of the federation. 

“Allowing the President to go on with his decision would mean that he is going to constitute an illegal cabinet.”

Justice Taiwo Taiwo ordered that the suit should commence during the vacation period of the court.

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A Federal High Court in Abuja has given the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission a 40-day leave to freeze two accounts owned by Damilare Olayemi, a Nigerian student in the Diaspora, over suspicious transactions observed by the Nigeria Financial Intelligence Unit. 

The value of the transactions in question are $133,955 and $40,000 – both of which amount to N66.22m. 

According to the News Agency of Nigeria, the transactions were made between May and June 2018.

Counsel to the EFCC, Richard Dauda, had asked Justice Taiwo for an order to freeze the account for six months to be able to repatriate Lucy Atubo, the alleged person, who made the deposits.

He said, “The investigation revealed that the suspect in the case under investigation is a student who was involved in suspicious transactions between May 11, 2018, and June 6, 2018, amounting to $133,955 and ‎£40,000.

“The suspect still had substantial amount of funds in his Access Bank account and the Guaranty Trust Bank account which have not been touched.”

In his ruling, the judge said a six month leave was too long and the EFCC had the option of extending the order if it needed more time to continue its investigation. 

He asked EFCC to give the suspect a 14-day freezing notice through his bank.

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A Federal High Court in Abuja has given the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission a 40-day leave to freeze two accounts owned by Damilare Olayemi, a Nigerian student in the Diaspora, over suspicious transactions observed by the Nigeria Financial Intelligence Unit. 

The value of the transactions in question are $133,955 and $40,000 – both of which amount to N66.22m. 

According to the News Agency of Nigeria, the transactions were made between May and June 2018.

Counsel to the EFCC, Richard Dauda, had asked Justice Taiwo for an order to freeze the account for six months to be able to repatriate Lucy Atubo, the alleged person, who made the deposits.

He said, “The investigation revealed that the suspect in the case under investigation is a student who was involved in suspicious transactions between May 11, 2018, and June 6, 2018, amounting to $133,955 and ‎£40,000.

“The suspect still had substantial amount of funds in his Access Bank account and the Guaranty Trust Bank account which have not been touched.”

In his ruling, the judge said a six month leave was too long and the EFCC had the option of extending the order if it needed more time to continue its investigation. 

He asked EFCC to give the suspect a 14-day freezing notice through his bank.

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Secretary of the Academic Forum of Islamic Movement in Nigeria, Abdullahi Musa, on Thursday confirmed to SaharaReporters that Sheik Ibraheem El-Zakzaky is currently on his way back to Nigeria. 

He said that the Nigerian Government denied their leader access to his personal doctor in India, thereby making it difficult for him to get the required medical treatment.

El-Zakzaky had lamented the deplorable condition he had faced at the hands of the security operatives that escorted him.  See Also Human Rights El-Zakzaky Might Return To Nigeria After Refusing Treatment From Unknown Indian Doctors –IHRC Source

He vowed not to subject himself to the strange doctors offered to treat him, accusing the Nigerian and Indian governments of frustrating his treatment.

El-Zakzaky was on Monday flown to India aboard an Emirates aircraft after a court in Kaduna ordered his release from detention for him to seek urgent medical treatment abroad.

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The Centre for Anti-Corruption and Open Leadership has called on the government, the National Assembly and those in charge of Police Trust Fund to do something about the dilapidated state of police barracks across the country.

In a statement by the organisation’s Media Officer, Toyin Odofin, on behalf of the Executive Chairman, Debo Adeniran, CACOL said, “Police barracks across the country are gradually trudging towards danger. 

“Some policemen live in poorly equipped and dilapidated barracks, while majority live among the civilians in low level rented apartment without basic amenities. 

“In most cases, the barracks have been converted to offices as a result of inadequate office space. 

“This situation tends to affect the general morale of the police and also the performance level.

“However, the level of unabashed neglect is disheartening and disgusting, ranging from dilapidated buildings, stinking gutters, shabby electric wiring, broken staircases, broken doors and shattered windows, torn roofs, and rusty balconies etc. 

“The barracks could pass for rat holes and slums and yet officers reside in them.  

“Meanwhile, it is unfortunate that the people at the helm of affairs have been siphoning the money meant for the project for their own personal use.

“We aver that government should adhere to the call of the Nigerian Police Force on the state of their dilapidated barracks. 

“Also, efforts should be made to build more barracks and provide accommodation for policemen which will enhance their productivity.”

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“This work was strictly voluntary, but any animal who absented himself from it would have his rations reduced by half”- George Orwell (Animal Farm).

National security means a lot to Nigeria but you wonder why when Nigeria has not been involved directly in any international Conflict situation. The glaring reason why Nigeria continues to spend so much on the defence budget and security votes is simply because Nigeria breathes heavily under its own internal torment. The domestic crisis has cost so much that could have contributed in other ways to governance and economic development in other regards.

Nigeria’s security concerns which cost her so much financially and uses up a lot of her resources are mainly the challenges of criminal law enforcement, separatist agitation, Boko Haram terrorism, banditry, kidnapping and also to include the new-found obsession of the government which is to clamp down on dissent. 

What constitutes a threat to national security can be so diverse and multiple in meaning that this very article can come under the scope of it. A threat to national security can be ambiguous in a way that a clearly unarmed protester could constitute enough concern for the deployment of military force.

The fright in this country today is if our national security is what is really still the concern of government or bare-faced tyranny the sort of which the military years stamped in our memories is what has begun reoccurring.

It seems the government or rather her favourite security apparatus for such affairs, the Department of State Services, has gone beyond the call of national security in her recent arrests to become a specialised agency that skims through content to identify that which it does not like publicised.

How unarmed protesters and activist constitute a security threat in a country which is already fighting insurgency, daily kidnap reports, armed violence and other such remains a mystery. 

The method used to quell the Monday, August 5, 2019 protest nationwide raises another concern for the Nigerian who cherishes liberty. In a country where our police have learnt to use such violence on protesters without public outrage, the culture of repression would stick and continue to spread. 

As at when the protest started, asides being named RevolutionNow, nothing else about the protest suggested from the appearance and conduct that they could be violent. They were dressed in uniform and carried placards. Not so mighty a number, but all the same were visited by police brutality.

Whilst the type of “revolution” intended is being watered down from the narratives of the “revolutionaries” to mean a peaceful protest to solicit national changes, on the day of the protest, even if they intended to carry out a revolution, the whole world saw that they were a tiny group that had only placards. Why the descent to the deployment of brutish force?

Adams Oshiomole, Chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress, has drawn the similarity between this protest and the actions of the French Government on the yellow-vests protesters. He, like others, failed to show how a group of not more than 100 people, who carried only placards could possibly threaten national security to the extent of being beaten and battered. 

The process of dehumanisation in Nigeria will soon be complete with public acceptance of such deployment of force. At worst, the dispersal of the protesting crowd was sufficient but the security apparatus insisted on arrests and use of brute force like pictures showed.

This is in contravention of established principles of human rights especially those of dignity of the human person protected by the constitution and international treaties to which Nigeria is signatory.

A classic scene of overkill, perhaps due to fear that the idea could catch on and the government is haunted by the burden of the possibility that it would be confronted by the rage reflected in the statistics of the national condition governed by world-class poverty and widespread dissatisfaction with the present leadership.

The continued trial of Ibrahim El-Zakzaky, leader of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria, a group that practises Shi’a Islam as opposed to mainstream Sunni Islam, is another low this regime. El-Zakzaky and his followers have been assaulted in grand scale, making one wonder what is really happening. 

The Shiite sect does not deserve the force with which government quells their agitation including the use of live arms and ammunitions, which has been outlawed by both past judicial authorities and international charter.

If Nigerian forces are deploying so much to keep national security, one must look at the victims of our quest to safeguard security and wonder who the government is really trying to secure because those who are meant to be secured are those we are not securing.

The concern of Nigerians should be heightened as in recent times, national security seems to be asking us for too much. Anyone who as much as holds a view can be behind bars in no time. 

Events that have occurred time and again under the Buhari administration have led to debates on their constitutionality ahead of anything else. Again and again, the alarm sounds that we are being led tyrannically.

The number of those, who have become casualties in a bid to protect national security is high. Are the actions of the Nigerian Government still predicated on the need to ensure national security or we have descended into an era of barefaced executive tyranny?

Koye-Ladele Mofehintoluwa is an activist and freelance journalist, who can be reached on koyetolu@gmail.com.

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The police in Plateau State have been arrested 11 persons for attacking the state-owned polytechnic staff quarters and kidnapping residents.

Among those kidnapped by the gang is the younger sister of the institution’s Assistant Registrar, Abigail Amos, and the 12-year-old son of the institution’s Chaplain, Kim Dido.

The two regained their freedom after an unspecified amount of ransom was paid to their abductors.

Commissioner of Police in the state, Isaac Akinmoyede, while parading the suspects at the command’s headquarters in Jos, the capital, on Thursday, gave their names as Bashiru Mohammed, Umar Adamu, Yusuf Adamu, Mustapha Mohammed and Shaibu Ado.

Others were Dantani Umar, Samaila Saranu Shitu, Adamu Mohammed, Hashimu Ya’u, Jibiro Damuna and  Abubakar Hassan.

Akinmoyede said, “The command, after a painstaking analysis of the intelligence at its disposal, carried out a well-coordinated and sweeping raid of the hideouts of some kidnap suspects and that resulted in the arrest of 11 of them.

“During interrogation, Bashiru Mohammed and Umar Adamu confessed to have kidnapped a lot of persons and both mentioned Yusuf Adamu, Hashimu Ya’u, Mustapha Mohammed and Shaibu Ado as members of their syndicate responsible for the kidnap at Plateau State Polytechnic Staff Quarters on 21/02/2019.”

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Nigeria’s women basketball team, D’Tigress, on Thursday in Dakar, Senegal, defeated the Democratic Republic of Congo by 79 to 46 points to advance to the semi-finals of the ongoing Afrobasket Championship.

D’Tigress, who are the defending champions of the tournament, will meet one of Mali or Ivory Coast in the next match on Friday.

Captain of the team, Adaora Elonu, said, “We worked hard today and just need to keep improving every day. 

“We are in the semi-finals and this is an opportunity for us to try and defend our title. 

“We just have to take one game at a time.”

The Nigerian ladies have crushed all opponents, defeating first victims Tunisia by 76 to 25 points before mauling the lionesses of Cameroon by 106 to 39.

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Nigeria’s women basketball team, D’Tigress, on Thursday in Dakar, Senegal, defeated the Democratic Republic of Congo by 79 to 46 points to advance to the semi-finals of the ongoing Afrobasket Championship.

D’Tigress, who are the defending champions of the tournament, will meet one of Mali or Ivory Coast in the next match on Friday.

Captain of the team, Adaora Elonu, said, “We worked hard today and just need to keep improving every day. 

“We are in the semi-finals and this is an opportunity for us to try and defend our title. 

“We just have to take one game at a time.”

The Nigerian ladies have crushed all opponents, defeating first victims Tunisia by 76 to 25 points before mauling the lionesses of Cameroon by 106 to 39.

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Before he was given the heave-ho, Okoi Obono-Obla, ex-chairman of the Special Presidential Investigation Panel for the recovery of Public Property (SPIP), bagged notoriety as a ''serial power abuser'' and a ''carefree violator'' of due process.

Obono-Obla’s success is, perhaps, more in the aspect of motoring controversy and bringing attention to the public property recovery panel than in fighting corruption.

In March 2018, before his latest knotty involvements with the Petroleum Equalisation Fund (PEF), a London-based private 'investigator', Victor Uwajeh claimed he was hired by the panel to trace the hidden assets of public officers abroad. But in May that year, he was fired.

The investigator, though being a man with a controversial past himself, made a perturbing claim on why he was sacked. He alleged that the Obono-Obla-led panel was targeting certain personalities, and that he was given a charge to only investigate these select ‘’individuals’’.

He reeled out a list of politically-exposed persons that the panel had pencilled down for ruffling.

His words: “After meeting in London on 18th April, 2018 with some officials during the CHOGM, it was evident that I will not bulge in my position not to go against the ethics of my profession by investigating only the opposition. It was the procedure of the panel to courier documents to me from Nigeria for dispatch to various agencies in the United Kingdom and worldwide.

“Soon after, I realised that the panel has a mindset towards certain individuals and groups by the documents it sent to me.’’

Although the claim could have been an unavailing rant of a dismissed employee, but the names the investigator mentioned became sports of SPIP’s circus of shaming soon after.

In a relentless pursuit of notability, Obono-Obla took giant leaps out of the bounds of his brief. The panel he led wrote letters compelling public officers to declare their assets before it, even after they had done so before the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB).

The question then was ‘’does the SPIP have the power to demand that public officers declare their assets before it? And is declaration of assets not done every four years at CCB?’’ The panel trudged further into illegality by threatening to seal off and sealing off the property of those who refused to comply with its directive.

But Obono-Obla’s fate was sealed when his men raided the residence of Aisha Usman, general manager at PEF, and allegedly concealed $30,000 recovered from the hunt.  Ms Usman is said to be the elder sister of the chief of defence intelligence and also with a strong circle of influence. 

Clearly, Obono-Obla bit off more than he could chew on this one. The presidency, which had been stoic, could not condone his crusades any longer. Though several petitions against him had been ignored by his employers, including that of the Human Rights Writers Association bordering on allegations of forgery of WAEC result, which he claimed he used in gaining admission to study law at the University of Jos,  the comatose allegations regained consciousness.

A WAEC official had testified at the house of representatives that Obono-Obla did not sit for Literature in English, a prerequisite subject to study law but the presidency did not take any action thereafter, despite pressure from federal lawmakers.

However, a climactic end came on Tuesday when the SPIP office in Asokoro was sealed off; police security attached to the panel withdrawn and its honcho given the boot, and asked to surrender himself to the ICPC for investigation over allegations of forgery and financial impropriety.

Is this a case of an anti-corruption ‘crusader’ becoming a victim of the ‘crusade’? I believe, Obono-Obla may have his shortcomings, but he was hitting a home-run with the uncovering of N3 billion in the bank accounts of some officials of PEF. His exit should not signal the end of this case; that will be a death-blow to the war on corruption. 

Who will speak for Obono-Obla?

 

@FredrickNwabufo

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Staff of the Lagos State Emergency Management Response Unit have threatened to embark on a strike action over five months unpaid salary, according to a report by PUNCH.

The workers are said to be planning a protest for Friday at the LASEMA office in Alausa, from where the will storm the Lagos State House of Assembly to further register their grievances.

One worker who spoke, said, “We are being owed five months’ salaries and nobody is saying anything. The Avantegarde is not communicating. 

“As a matter of fact, I learnt as of yesterday that top management staff of the firm have resigned and cleared their offices. 

“We don’t know who will pay us our money. For five months, no salaries. Yet, we have families to feed. We are staging a peaceful protest tomorrow in front of the Assembly. They must answer us.”

Avantegarde Management Services was contracted by former governor of Lagos, Akinwunmi Ambode, under a public-private-partnership agreement, to run the state’s emergency services.

Over 80,000 emergency calls are said to be received daily at the agency’s Command and Control Centre at Alausa, in the state capital Ikeja.

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Vice President, Yemi Osibanjo, on Thursday said that there was a need for the government to change strategy on how electricity is supplied to homes and businesses across the country.

The VP made the call during the launch of a 2x60MVA, 132/33kV substation and associated 132kV transmission lines at Abeokuta, Ogun State, according to a report by PUNCH.

He said, “A substantial change of strategy is necessary. There is clearly a need for a change of strategy. 

“What we have done in the past has taken us to a point where there is clearly a need for change of strategy.

“The distribution capacity in the 11 Discos are significantly low, hovering at around 4,000 megawatts on average with a peak at about 5,400MW. 

“So, despite all the availability of about 8,000MW of generation and 7,000MW of transmission capacity, the lack of Disco infrastructure to absorb and deliver grid power to end-users has largely restricted generation to an average of about 4,000MW, and sometimes even falling below 4,000MW.”

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