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A 12-year-old schoolboy (name withheld), who was kidnapped two weeks ago, has aided the police to arrest his kidnappers.images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQfkqgeLTHWWnc64D78cPKjUJPU3y3Xzd_QO4AnBI-QHFwaNETyDrhBsA&width=124

The Police in Lagos have arrested two brothers over the kidnap of the boy in Ojokoro area of Lagos two weeks ago.

The suspects, Seun Akinyosoye, 19, and Akin Akiyosoye, 22, allegedly kidnapped the boy while on his way home from school.

The Junior Secondary School 2 pupil, reportedly took shelter in a shop around Centre Road, during a downpour on February 14.

PUNCH METRO gathered that the suspects also took shelter in the same shop and engaged the boy in a discussion.
During the discussion, the boy revealed that his father is a banker with one of the new generation banks and also gave out his mobile phone number to the suspects. The suspects thereafter, took him to their apartment around Jerry Street, Ojokoro, from where they made a call to his father and demanded N4m ransom.

His father was said to have pleaded with the suspects to accept N55,000 and the suspects instructed him to pay the money into an account. Three days after the ransom was paid, the suspects eventually released the schoolboy.



But unknown to the suspects, the boy played a fast one on them by picking Akin’s passport photograph while in the brothers’ apartment. 



“He saw the passport at the apartment where he was held hostage. After his release, he gave the passport to his father and identified Akin as one of his kidnappers,”the Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer, Mr. Samuel Jinadu, said on Monday.



The photograph was taken to policemen at Owutu Police Station and Akin was invited for questioning.



Jinadu said, “Akin had previously been arrested for street fighting. So, he did not think anything was amiss when his IPO called him to make an appearance at the police station.



“During investigation, he mentioned his brother, Seun, who was subsequently arrested. They confessed to have withdrawn the N55,000 with ATM card from the Ikorodu branch of the bank it was paid into.” 



He therefore warned others who had such a sinister motive that there was no hiding place for criminals in the state, adding that the state Commissioner of Police, Mr. Yakubu Alkali, had put necessary machinery in place to check crimes.

 

 

Comment:

 

In my view The police need kids like this in the 9gerian force ! 

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Oba denies banishing minister

27524_103568899676562_8466_n.jpgOBA of Benin, Omo'N oba Erediauwa, yesterday debunked media reports at the weekend that he has banished the Minister of State for Works, Chris Ogiemwonyi, from entering his palace until the Federal Government rehabilitated the Benin-Ore Road.
 photo: Rehabilitated minister

The palace described the reports as "misleading and untrue."
It was reported in some national dailies last Saturday that the monarch was angry with the minister when he and some leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) visited his palace where he said he would no longer welcome the minister into his palace until the road is fixed.
But in a statement yesterday signed by the Secretary to the Palace of the Oba of Benin, Oronsanye Guobadia, and made available to newsmen in Benin, the monarch said "it is generally not the tradition of the Oba's Palace to respond to every false and inaccurate news item, but we are constrained to do so, this time, because of the undeserved embarrassment and denigrating innuendos, our beloved and highly esteemed Minister of State for Works, Chris Ogiemwonyi, faced, arising from the mischievous and distasteful news reports of the Minister's visit to the  Palace on Friday February 25, 2011.
"In the said publications, it was variously reported that the Minister has been 'banished' from the Oba's Palace over the Benin-Ore Road. We view this report as a calculated attempt to provoke a controversy between a high achieving and deeply respected Benin leader and the Oba's Palace.
"At no time did the Omo N'Oba threaten to banish the Minister over the Benin-Ore road project, during the visit or issue any ultimatum to the Minister or contractors handling the road project.
"We view reports of such ultimatum and banishment as a serious and ill- motivated effort to portray the Oba's Palace in bad light. With the kindest consideration, the Oba's palace is pleased with the sterling performance of the minister since his assumption of office, despite the administrative budgetary constrains associated with the federal ministries. The Omo N'Oba expressed deep surprise on why Benin-Ore Road project is being delayed, while work has commenced on the Benin-Abraka Road, " he stated.

Other News:

 

FG to involve private sector in Benin-Ore-Lagos road project

 

By GABRIEL ENOGHOLASE
MINISTER of State for Works, Engr. Chris Ogiemwonyi, yesterday, in Benin, Edo State, disclosed that the Federal Government may consider the involvement of the private sector for the full reconstruction of the Benin-Ore-Lagos Road.

He also disclosed that the rehabilitation work currently on-going on the road will terminate at Ofosu, the boundary town between Edo and Ondo States and was expected to be completed by November, 2012.

Ogiemwonyi  made these disclosures during an interactive session with journalists in Benin.

He explained that the Federal Government decided to embark on the project in phases because of the high cost involved in the construction of the road, which is now over 30 years.

“What we are doing is a palliative measure,” he added.

The remedy for the Benin-Ofosu-Shagamu road is a full reconstruction because of the age of the road. It is an expensive project.

‘Government alone cannot do it which is why we are looking at Public Private Partnership in the reconstruction of the road.”

He said the participating private sectors on the road reconstruction would be allowed to operate toll gates to enable them recover cost expended on the road.

 

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At a church service on Sunday at the Fountain of Life Church, Ilupeju, Lagos, father of 10-month-old Enioluwa Odegbaike recounted how the family got him back from the kidnappers.

According to him, they had done everything asked by the kidnappers, yet the kidnappers refused to return the boy. He said that the kidnappers had contacted him severally on the phone promising to release the baby but would again call to postpone until he received a text message on February 26, around 6pm ordering him to get to Benin Republic before 7pm. On arriving at the designated point in Benin Republic, Mr Odegbaike said the kidnappers told him he got there too late and was subsequently diverted to another location. He was told to get to the new location via a commercial motorcycle by 2am in the morning.

He said that a woman also arrived at the same location on a motorcycle with Eniloluwa strapped behind her. She was guarded by around 10 men, none of who covered their faces. As Enilouwa was being handed over to Mr Odegbaike, one of kidnappers said to him, “I took care of your boy because you were nice to my staff.” Mr Odegbaike did not state categorically if a ransom was paid, but added that he did “everything they were asked to get Enioluwa back.”

History

On February 13, Enioluwa Odegbaike went missing from their Magodo home while in the custody of a nanny they hired two weeks before. The baby was believed to have been abducted by the nanny, whose name was given as Victoria. Meanwhile, police spokesperson, Samuel Jinadu, said information concerning the kidnap would soon be released to the public. “The public should not hesitate to give information to the police about criminals living within their immediate milieu so that the police will be able to work for them very well,” he said.

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12166286284?profile=originalWhoimages?q=tbn:ANd9GcS58wszDjDombUKKJiQNPmLJz_zBAhdpWzShBW9pdrkCUkU6ktoENYwGg would have thought that one single Tweet could cause such a riot?

But then we’re talking Kanye West here – global god of the cool block.

So it happened that just after midnight yesterday, at exactly 1.47, the man with over 2.5 million followers, but only 1397 Tweets since he started Tweeting in July 2010 ‘released’ one Tweet that concerned Nigeria, and all Twitter broke loose.

From @kanyewest: Yo @iamdbanj and @donjazzymohits get back to NY asap there is still work to be done.

Don Jazzy – a Twitter-holic if there was one but who hasn’t Tweeted in 13 days – was quick with his response. @DONJAZZYMOHITS: @kanyewest yes boss. See u soon.

And D’banj – who Tweets, er, about once every other three months – followed suit.  @iamdbanj: @kanyewest oooossssheee no worries boss. Coming soon.

Wow.

All so calmly, like this was just another Tweet all in a day’s job – no big deal. All so cool. All so… Don Jazzy.

Apparently, coming on the heels of the Snoop Dogg – Uncle Snoop, he was called in the video – collabo that is still shaking the African entertainment hemisphere, Don Jazzy and D’banj are set for a collaboration with the Hip-Hop living legend, Kanye West (already christened Uncle Kanyinsolaoluwa by @eaboyeji).

Said a source very close to the Mo-Hits management over a quick phone interview, who asked for anonymity as, according to him, Don Jazzy is trying to do this hush-hush, “Something big is popping. Watch this space – Don Jazzy is not playing games this year. But that Tweet was not a mistake o – Kanye is not a small boy. I no fit talk pass that one o.”

If, as the source said, this was a Marketing gimmick – and the fact that both music stars were awake just at the right time to respond to the post-midnight Tweet goes to confirm that it most certainly was – then it absolutely worked.

Nigerians – those still awake, of course – immediately began to Ping and to Tweet and to wake up their compatriots to the, er, good news. Facebook and Twitter went wild, as people Re-Tweeted and Re-Posted the message frantically.

‘Mo-Hits’ and ‘WhenKanyeTweetedatandDbanjandDonja’ almost immediately began to Trend in Lagos, and Nigerian Timelines could hardly miss at least a Tweet on the subject.

The excitement was palpable. Darey Art-Alade, who launched his new album yesterday, could not help sharing in the excitement: “Make una do quick!”, he tweeted.

His colleague, Sound Sultan, added his voice: “we gonna do it from home big sign for a lotta ppl,” he said.

Popular columnist, Tolu Ogunlesi, who shared at least 10 excited Tweets on the matter, chipped in with his trademark tongue-in-cheek: “GEJ may have “brought” FB to #NG, buh Mohits moved Kanye’s ‘Endowed’ fingers to tweet naija. They should get national awards.”

For good measure, he also threw this in: “Breaking: FG declares public holiday to celebrate @kanyewest tweet”!

@kennybayeroju had something to add: “and later south africa will start claiming that they are relevant in africa/ abegggggg abeggg its all about nigeria.”

And, on her part, @SomaKudi,  found the moment so historic that she had a word for those who dared to sleep at this rarefied moment! “People who are sleeping at this moment have lost out big time. Reminds me of the unprepared bridesmaids in the Bible #Deep,” she Tweeted.

Indeed as recent developments involving MI (who Trended globally following release of MI2), Omawumi (for whom Nigerians on Twitter went gaga when she released her latest single “If you ask me”) and other artistes have shown, Twitter is changing the way the game is played – both as a conversation driver and a Trend-setter (puns intended).

At this moment, it has underlined a reality many of us already knew – the guys at Mo-Hits are certainly at the top of their game.

Glory Edozien, Features Editor of BellaNaija.com capped its significance quite succintly: “Moral of the story: see a man diligent in his ways, he will not stand before mere men! What ever u do, do it well…put ur backbone into it!”

As another Nigerian, @Lowla360, remarked following the Tweet that changed the music game: ‘Twitter its bout time our boys got their accounts verified yo!!! Bawo lo shey check e??”

And let the people say ‘Amen’.

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jessicatatat2.png?width=303Ms. Jessica Rene Tata, 22, operator of a home day care facility called Jackie's Child Care; located on 2810 Crest Park, West Houston, is alleged to have fled to Nigeria in her bid to avoid prosecution.


 

At her arraignment on Monday, Jessica Rene Tata who has a warrant for her arrest, and a bail bond set at $500,000, was a no show. According to Harrison County District Court Document obtained by huhuonline.com, the charge against her reads: “JESSICA TATA hereafter styled the Defendant, heretofore on or about February 24th,2011, did then and there unlawfully recklessly cause serious bodily injury to SHOMARI DICKERSON,herafter styled the complainant, a child younger than fifteen years of age, by leaving the leaving the complainant without adult supervision in a building with an engaged heat source”.

 

It’s not clear if Jessica Rene Tata, will face additional charges.

 

Huhuonline.com understands that last Thursday, Jessica Tata left seven infants unattended, unsupervised and went to a grocery store in her neighborhood, when the fire broke. Fire fighters rescued the children from the burning building, but three of them have since died at the hospital, while four other children are still receiving treatment.

 

Our checks reveal that Under US laws, it is generally considered unsafe to leave children under the age of eleven home alone.

 

In the word of eyewitnesses (John Chestnut and Geoffrey Deshano), “they saw Jessica Tata pull into the driveway at 2810 Crest Park on February 24th, 2011 and go to the front door. The witnesses stated that within seconds of her arrival at the day care, Jessica was heard screaming and they saw smoke coming from inside the building. John Chesnut Called 911, while Geoffrey Deshano tried to assist Jessica Tata.

jessicatata.png?width=306

According to the court affidavit, “Both witnesses stated that it only took them a few seconds to arrive at the fire scene, and they both stated that they saw no adults or employees of the daycare either inside the building or running out of the building other than Jessica Tata (Defendant). It appeared to them that the defendant was the only adult at the daycare”.

 

However, authorities in Houston have asked the U.S. Marshal’s Office to intervene to have Jessica Tata extradited back to Houston.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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“Naira is overvalued”! Says IMF!

“The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Thursday that the naira was overvalued and that more exchange rate flexibility would be needed to prevent the Central Bank of Nigeria from running down the foreign currency reserves to fix the rate. The Fund said in Washington DC, USA that the CBN might need to increase benchmark interest rates further and weaken its currency to curb inflation, following the increase in public spending”.

 

The above is an excerpt from a news report titled “Naira is Overvalued, IMF Tells CBN” on page 19 of the Punch Newspaper of Friday, 18/2/2011. My reaction to above report was a spontaneous exclamation that “we are done for!”, as it was clear that rising and increasing consumer prices and higher interest rates consequent upon adoption of IMF’s recommendation will further deepen poverty in Nigeria!There is no doubt about the considerable influence of IMF support and supervision agencies on the operations of our economy, particularly our monetary framework and policies! Indeed, the Fund showed the extent of its commitment to pressing adoption of its prescriptions, when the emoluments of one of its officials, on secondment as our Finance Minister were underwritten in dollars in the recent past.

 

The result of that enterprise, of course, was our gleeful separation from about $20bn of our reserves, in what was affectionately termed as ‘debt forgiveness’! Meanwhile, rising unemployment, unbridled inflation and reduced industrial capacity with lending rates above 20% prevailed against the realistic expectation of Nigerians, for the goodwill of having our economy managed by IMF technocrats! We were obviously oblivious to the age-old reference to loyalty of the piper to his benefactor when we accepted the ‘imposition’!Nigerians will recall that the main cause of our economic downturn and increasing abject poverty of the masses can be traced to IMF-sponsored Structural Adjustment Program (SAP), to which then President Babangida acceded.

 

The major thrust of SAP was the devaluation of the naira. IMF held that naira was grossly overvalued, in spite of bourgeoning industrial landscape, increasing job opportunities, and wages and salaries commanding significant purchasing power. The resultant grossly devalued naira quickly induced brain drain, as experienced lecturers, professors, doctors, nurses, engineers and scientists fled to greener pastures, where, in spite of the regret of social dislocation, they were assured of incomes that could maintain their dignity and self-worth. Soon after the exodus, the quality of education at all levels dropped remarkably; today, we are still nowhere near recovery. Rapid naira devaluation sounded the death knell for otherwise prospering commercial and industrial conurbations in the country, as production costs skyrocketed, and cash flow challenges could not be favourably resolved with lending rates above 20%!The unanticipated spiraling cost of critical imports of parts and equipment also dealt injurious blows on the state of social infrastructure as hospitals, power stations, steel complexes and diverse consumer industries were destabilized.

 

The net product became a ghostly industrial landscape, and hundreds of thousands of Nigerians lost their jobs. The continuous, officially sanctioned naira devaluation to its present rate of N152=$1 has finally reduced incomes of over 50% of Nigerians to below United Nation’s poverty benchmark of $2 per day; a grim reality, which has led thousands of young desperate Nigerians to traverse inhospitable deserts and stormy seas in search of a better life. Some critics have likened the migration to the slave trade era, but the difference this time is that, the slaves willingly find their ways to the ‘camps’ either by hook or crook! The above gives a fair picture of the socially destructive impact of SAP with naira devaluation as its arrowhead. My concern, therefore, at the present IMF call for further naira devaluation, is the sad recognition of the prospect of aggravated poverty, which will inevitably be its product in the light of our historical antecedent.

 

 

However, some observers may consider such perspective as alarmist and note that the IMF recommendation is without binding force! Even if there is no overt imposition, the reality is that, IMF has generally had its way in ‘third world’ countries, and our national experiences confirm same. Other analysts may conclude that the IMF report is actually notice of a ‘done deal’ and sooner than later, naira will be devalued by more than 10%; in other words, naira may exchange for dollar at over N175=$1! Curiously, one of the reasons for IMF’s recommendation for naira devaluation was to halt capital flight or forestall ‘one-way bets in foreign exchange market’ according to IMF parlance! But regrettably, this overt recommendation for a devalued naira will only spur the already buoyant market for dollar and consequently precipitate the Fund’s prediction of capital flight, which may then make naira devaluation subsequently inevitable! This may appear to some as a case of working to the answer, but unfortunately, such circuitous exchange rate masterminding will work against our economic recovery and do much damage to the demand base of our economy as all income values, particularly those of the poor, whittle under the plague of rising prices! A lower valued naira will make it very difficult if not impossible to remove fuel subsidy and instead earn revenue from a fuel sales tax as in other countries, like the US and UK with crude oil endowments. In place of revenue from a sales tax, we will continue to pay more than the current value of over N500bn as fuel subsidies every year.

 

Yes, the bloated quantum naira sums consequent on devaluation will, no doubt, nominally increase monthly revenue allocations to the three tiers of government, but these bigger naira allocations will command less purchasing value and still present insurmountable challenges for best practice monetary policy management as CBN’s albatross of ever-present scourge of ‘too much cash or excess liquidity’ will become exacerbated and require increasing public borrowings to remove such excess cash from the market to dampen inflationary spiral. The adoption of such a liquidity control strategy accounts for a large chunk of over N500bn currently paid as interest and service charges for moneys borrowed by CBN in its failed efforts to bring about single digit inflationary rate over the years! To be fair, IMF also recognizes the inflationary threat caused by what it describes as the “…pro-cyclical fiscal stance and an accommodative monetary policy” of the government and thus quickly recommended an antidote of ‘monetary tightening’ policies; in lay man’s language, this means that current lending rates of 20 – 22% should be induced to rise way above these already investment prohibitive rates, so as to halt the prospect of further inflation! The reality, of course, is that much higher cost of funds coupled with higher industrial replacement costs as a result of naira devaluation will certainly restrain any progress to industrial consolidation or expansion and worsen an already depressed labour market!It should become obvious from the above that there is no window of victory in any sector of Nigeria’s economic and social endeavour that IMF’s recommendations for a lower valued naira and higher cost of borrowing can possibly deliver! It is curious that in spite of its intimidating credentials as the custodian of best Central Banking practices, the IMF fails to see the huge disconnect in the structure of our money market, where, in spite of a CBN benchmark rate of about 6%, deposits attract less than 4% concurrently with lending rates of over 20%! I am baffled that the Fund’s experts do not see anything wrong in the present monetary framework where CBN pays huge naira allocations into the bank accounts of the three tiers of government one day only to return within a few days to borrow much of these moneys back at an average cost of about 10%.Meanwhile, the IMF recognizes that such high interest charges for sovereign debts are inappropriate and yet it makes no recommendations to remedy this anomaly, which saps hundreds of billions of naira every year from government revenue with adverse impact on the amount available for infrastructural enhancement! This is a very high cost to pay for the joy of removing presumed ‘excess cash’ from the system for warehousing in CBN vaults and accounting records in failed attempts to subdue the rage of inflation!The paradox, of course, is that this liquidity mop up and monetary tightening occurs side by side with CBN’s acknowledgement that banks are cash-strapped and have to be pampered with ample cash injections to heal their wounds, before they can perform their role as the strong backbone of a resilient and prosperous economy. We have doggedly and faithfully followed this cycle in spite of glaring evidence of its failure to jumpstart the economy and the obvious deepening poverty over the years.

 

 

 

Whether or not the IMF can be excused for not recognising these glaring contradictions in the operation of Nigeria’s monetary policy is another matter, but the Fund’s comment in the Bloomberg report under reference that “Nigeria has weathered the global economic recession and its own domestic banking crisis reasonably well” may suggest either mischief or innocent ignorance of the Nigerian economy.Objective analysts will insist that Nigeria’s economy has remained in the doldrums since the mid 1980s, during which period, unemployment has continued to soar unabated, such that unemployment rates always significantly exceeded the rate in those countries, which were victims and villains of the global recession! The same can be said for the rate of inflation and the level of interest rates!

 

If truth must be told, global recession was not the primary causative factor for the economic wilderness which Nigeria finds itself!We have ceaselessly argued in this column that the real poison in the matrix of fiscal and monetary policy management in Nigeria is CBN’s substitution of bloated naira sums for dollar component of monthly distributable revenue! It is inexplicable that IMF does not recognize this pungent reality, and the Fund’s recommendation for an even “greater exchange rate flexibility to forestall the depletion of our foreign reserves” is even more perplexing! How much more liberal can you get after the unforced error of CBN’s monthly allocations of billions of otherwise scarce dollar reserves directly to Bureau de Change for onward sales to looters of the treasury, sponsors of capital flight and smugglers of contraband goods? It is baffling that the IMF fails to see anything wrong in this practice, or indeed, to identify such dollar allocations as a major contributor to depletion of our foreign reserves.

 

Questions can be raised on whether or not IMF’s unsolicited advices are truly altruistic or are discrete and convoluted strategies to separate us from our wealth with the same inconsequential rewards of a poorly negotiated partnership agreement similar to the slave trade era. SAVE THE NAIRA, SAVE NIGERIANS!By Les Leba

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jpeg&STREAMOID=hj99enwpO4CftELviVFC4i6SYeqqxXXqBcOgKOfTXxQLVHoBCd132Xa3OJylwzMVnW_PgxgftuECOcfJwS6Jtlp$r8Fy$6AAZ9zyPuHJ25T7a9GKDSxsGxtpmxP0VAUyHL6IDcZHtmM2t7xO$FHdJG95dFi6y2Uma3vSsvPpVyo-&width=345Following last week’s passage of the Freedom of Information bill (FOI) in the House of Representatives, the senate may soon begin consideration of the bill for passage before the expiration of their term in May.

Ayogu Eze, Senate spokesman and chairman of senate committee on communication on whose desk the senate version of the bill is currently sleeping confirmed to NEXT on Monday that the senate will pass the bill like their counterparts in the lower house “soon”.

Mr Eze however, did not say when the senate intends to start the consideration of the bill which has passed second reading on its floor.

The FOI bill which was introduced in both chambers in 2007 was passed by members of the House of Representatives last week and renamed, the Right of Information Bill 2011. It was initially passed by the past Assembly but former President Olusegun Obasanjo refused to sign it into law before leaving office.

The bill primarily seeks to make public records and information more freely available and accessible. It provides a right of access to public information or record kept by governments or public institutions or private bodies carrying out public functions for Nigerians and non Nigerians in whatever form an applicant wants it, as long as it does not affect the preservation or presentation of the information.

The bill protects both the public records and information, and public officers who disclose information under the law. It compels public offices to keep accurate and up-to-date records of the activities and provides absolute access to public documents to applicants who do not need to demonstrate any specific interest in the information being applied for.

Following the passage of the bill at the House of Representatives, attention and pressure have been shifted to the Senate whose committee on information seems to be laid back on the bill. The House bill needs to be harmonised with the Senate’s version before it can be signed into law as a single document...

According Demeji Bankole, Speaker of the House of Representatives, the House, will send its version of the bill to the Senate, probably this week, for concurrence and harmonisation before it is forwarded to the president for assent.

If passed into law, the bill will establish a (new) right of any person to request information, “whether or not contained in any written form which is in the custody or possession of any public official, agency or institution.” Personal information and some classified information that might undermine the international integrity, security and (or) economic interest of Nigeria, and investigations by law enforcement agencies are exempted by the Act as passed by the House of Representatives.

Professionally privileged information such as legal practitioner-client, health worker-client, journalism confidentiality privileges and course or research materials are also exempted by the act.

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12166236084?profile=originalAlhaji Abdulahi Adamu Usman is a pillar in the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), being one of the financiers of the party. He used to be a close associate and die-hard supporter of the presidential candidate of the party, General Mohammadu Buhari (retd). That was then. Today, with the outcome of the primary elections of the party some which ended in controversies, Usman popularly called Dan China said the former Head of State was not the Mr. Integrity that Nigerians had known.

After winning the Bauchi State governorship primary election of the CPC, and his victory given to the person who came third, Dan China concluded that Nigerians have all along been overrating Buhari because “a man of integrity will not substitute a winner with a loser.” He spoke with Daily Sun in Abuja. Excerpts: ...

CPC primaries in Bauchi State.
I don’t know what went wrong. What I was thinking was that the leadership of CPC is a guaranteed leadership of General Muhammadu Buhari, which makes me to feel that there should be no cheating in CPC but I have found myself as a victim.

Results of the primaries
The results? I have them, they are very clear and they were publicised all over. Up till today, nobody has told me anything about it and I just keep quiet. I was thinking that Buhari as a truthful person can do something about it. From the stories I am hearing and from what I have been reading on the pages of newspapers, the victory of the primaries has been given to the person in the third position instead of me. This is against democracy, it is against the law. How do we achieve a free and fair election in this country with this kind of development? INEC also forbids this. The people’s choice must prevail and not just for some cabal either in CPC or anywhere else to pick anybody. It is the same party (CPC) that does not want me even after I have been declared winner of the primaries. The reasons for this I do not know. I went through the screening committee in Bauchi before the primaries without any problem.

What do you want the party to do now?
The party should understand that the person who is aspiring for the presidential position that is, Buhari, is killing the party. What is happening is that the people who are serious in supporting the party and supporting activities that will move the party and nation forward are being witch hunted by Buhari, and he is the chairman of the Board of Trustees (BOT). He supposed not to have allowed this to happen. If some members of a cabal in the party are given him wrong advice, he should not yield to it. He is supposed to be a man of his words and not to be allowed by some people in the party to manipulate him. I have the papers which he (Buhari) signed approving the election results but later confusion came into the issue which as a leader he should be up to the task. I am disappointed in him and I am still in shock.

What are the steps you are taking to claim your right?
I am still looking at what Buhari will do since he is claiming that he is a straight forward person. As someone who has been tested and trusted before, if now he is changing that calls for concern. May be his age is telling on him or he has brought some people into CPC that are bent on destroying the party. I do not know what is happening. Definitely they will go on destroying his character and credibility. I have seen nowhere he can go to and campaign now, almost in all the states he has popularity has been destroyed by him. You cannot blame the people that committed all these you blame the leader. How can I be substituted by another person who was at the third position meanwhile I won the primaries? It is fraud and it is uncalled for. I will not allow it.

Implication for CPC
You can see what is happening in Kano, Bauchi, Kastina and Kebbi states. Those are the strong states the party should not toy with but the reverse is the case. These areas are the major roots that have been destroyed now. CPC is losing credibility and urgent steps must be taken.

Legal option
I did not join politics on my own. I was called to join politics by my classmates, friends, well wishers and the people of Bauchi State. I cannot determine what to do because they are attacking me left and right, up and down everyday. I do not what decision they may come up with.

Do you sense any conspiracy?
I doubt much because I am a very known person not only in my state but in Nigeria. If anybody is deceiving himself thinking that Abudulahi Adamu is of only Bauchi State he is deceiving himself. I am known in the South, West, Meddle Belt and in the North, nobody can contest that because I have made it. I am a qualified mining engineer. In fact, in West Africa I can say for now nobody has the qualities, the potentials that I have. We are only five in West Africa when I graduated. I only watch and laugh those thinking that I am not educated. I do not care about them. I am a managing director of about five successful companies. I have never taken loan from anybody personally. I have never taken credit from any bank in Nigeria.

I have never borrowed money internationally, I do not owe anybody now. I did not collect any money from anybody. I started these companies personally through hard work. So, how can you explain or say that such a successful person who deals with labourers, expatriates cannot rule Nigeria let alone a small state like Bauchi? What is wrong with our people? I have worked in the Igbo land without any problem, and I am very popular there. I have worked in South West without problems, many can attest to that. I have maintained relative peace with people over there with my popularity. I have worked with the ex-militants in the Niger Delta region without any problem and somebody is saying that I cannot manage a small state like Bauchi. Why don’t they think that I can even rule Nigeria with my potentials? This is a slap and an embarrassment to my person.

CPC’s fortunes and Buhari’s presidential ambition
The truth of it is whether he likes it or not there is a saying that a Good Friday would have been determined by Wednesday. When the Wednesday is not good how do you think that the Friday will be good? Buhari was in the presidential race in 2003 and 2007, all those periods he was going to the tribunal after each election, why was he going to court then? Is it not to challenge the authenticity of the election that there was fraud perpetrated by some people? Now he is in charge in CPC and he is allowing people to be duped in many states where primaries were held, why? My election was free and fair. The CPC gubernatorial primaries were conducted on January 12, 2011 in Bauchi State.

Out of the three contestants, I, Abdullahi Adamu Usman emerged winner with over 336, 924 votes. The person following me, Nuhu Gidado had 109, 987, while the third person, Yusuf Tuggar had 93, 980 votes. After announcing the result it was signed by all the necessary authorities that were involved to affirm that the results were authentic. Few days later when the names were submitted to INEC the person who came third was the one whose name was submitted to the commission thereby denying me as the authentic winner of the primary. I have the papers with me for confirmation. This is fraud. Nobody assisted me with any money when I decided to join politics. If anybody claims that he or she assisted me financially the person should please come out publicly and confront me. Somebody who failed in the primaries, how will he win in the major election? He is the third person not even the second. He was just smuggled in and this I will not allow to happen.

Imposition of candidates
What they are saying is wrong. They have betrayed their rules and regulations because they are not following the constitution of CPC. The primaries were monitored by INEC and the results clearly written out.
 I started politics independently without a party. Later, I went to the CPC to ask if they can take me as a candidate and the party leadership told me to look for support. I was never told that they will hand pick candidates. INEC, State Security Service (SSS), Commissioner of Police, Nigerian Security and Civil Defence, (NSCDC) supervised this election and they have copies of the results. It was a hitch free and fair election. If the party leadership had informed me that they would pick candidates by themselves, I would have stood as independent candidate. Initially, when my posters were printed, it was without party logo. I would have stood as an independent candidate because INEC gave right to anybody who has the power to pay for independent ticket. If I had done that I would not be arguing with people now.

They have used me and dumped me. If I had known that it would turn out this way I have paid as independent candidate for the election. The party has cheated me. I have been creating job opportunities all over Nigeria. I do not discriminate when I want to help anybody.

Have you met Buhari one on one to find a solution to this problem?

I have met Buhari and the party. I have asked him. He did not give me a reasonable answer. What I want now is that I want to be independent if INEC will give me that opportunity. I want to pay that N100 million and run as an independent candidate. I will like to petition INEC and plead to disassociate myself from the cabal in the party. I am no more interested in any other party. Since Buhari has failed me, I have no more confidence in him and in any other person. Buhari was only person who ruled and I have confidence in. But he (Buhari) has betrayed that confidence and is unfortunate.

Have you been overrating Buhari?

I do not know what is wrong with Buhari, Is it old age? Or what? How can someone with a personality like him allow himself to be pushed around by some cabals in the party? People that have credibility in Nigeria and don’t think I would forget about being governor of Bauchi State. I have made a great mistake by not contesting with Buhari. If I knew this is what would happen, I would have challenged him as a presidential aspirant. I thought I should run for the governorship of Bauchi State to correct the failure of Governor Isa Yuguda.

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12166296876?profile=originalStrong indications emerged yesterday that former vice president Atiku Abubakar may be heading for the law court following the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)’s alleged indifference to his petition to challenge the outcome of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential primary.

Atiku lost the PDP presidential ticket on January 13 to President Goodluck Jonathan. He ruled out heading to court to challenge the outcome of the primaries. Instead he wrote a petition dated January 28, 2011 to INEC, which became a subject of controversy as the electoral body belatedly acknowledged the petition last Monday.
   
It was however gathered that following INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega’s charge to Atiku to go take his case to court, the former vice president may have given the go ahead to his legal team to begin court action on the matter.
Atiku’s bid to return to court received impetus from two recent court decisions by Justices Lawal Gumi and Ishaq Usman Bello, both of the Abuja High Court, who, in separate decisions upheld the sanctity of zoning and ruled that it was justiciable.

In the particular decision by Justice Bello, his opinion was that the suit challenging the President, Goodluck Jonathan’s right to run was premature since, at that time, the Peoples Democratic Party had not yet given him its ticket.
He added that a candidate in the primaries had a right to challenge Jonathan and the Party in court in the event of any such breach of the PDP zoning policy.

Sources said yesterday that the legal team led by a very senior advocate (SAN) of the Nigerian bar may file proceedings in court against President Goodluck Jonathan’s candidature in the coming days. They are of the view that Atiku will have a good day in court.  

It was gathered that the former vice president had up to this point warded off pressures to take legal action over the outcome of the PDP convention, but INEC’S “lack of interest and partisanship” in the handling of the petition he submitted to them, may have pushed the former vice president to the wall.
“How can Jega’s INEC claim to be enforcing internal democracy in Kano CPC on account of its monitoring of the primaries and then turn around to refer to Atiku’s complaints as internal party affairs,” a source close to Atiku’s lawyer queried.

The source said INEC’s dismissal of the Atiku’s petition after weeks of being in denial of the existence of the petition entitled “petition against illegalities of the conduct of the PDP presidential primary election on 13th january, 2011” amounts to double standard...

 

 

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Kennis Music Signs Tuface Look-alike

12166301893?profile=originalNo one is sure what the management of Kennis Music intends to achieve, but their decision to sign and promote Joe El has caused a big ripple. Fans of Tuface are by no means enthused.

According to reports this is because Joe Everlasting, whose stage name is Joe El, is a split image of Tuface Idibia.

Apart from their striking physical similarities, Joe El’s music has the unmistakable rhythm of Tuface’s music.

His current single entitled ‘I No Mind’, and his promotional video have left several fans of Tuface believing they had listened to the MTV Base and MAMA awards winner.

While some simply saw this as a ploy by Joe El and his crew to help launch Joe El’s career on the back of Tuface’s fame, some are not convinced it would last though...
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...how govt. agents swindle many of millions by the day.

There is a massive fraud scheme currently going on within the Lagos state government.
And investigations  revealed that the practice rakes in millions of naira by the day for the perpetrators.
The main victims of the scheme are Drivers.
The agents of extortion are identified as enforcers operating under the emblem of Vehicle Inspection Unit – VIO.
The agency is an arm of the Lagos State Ministry of Transportation..
It is a traffic offence monitoring unit.
Strangely, when supposed defaulters are caught, the ‘officers’ in charge appends fines way beyond stipulations on their charge sheets.
Ironically the excessive fines are appended on the same charge sheets that bear the normal fixtures.
The highest fine for any offender apprehended by the V.I.O is pegged at Five Thousand Naira.
The minimum stipulation made on offenders by V.I.O officers is Ten thousand Naira.
The same offence does not attract equal fines- the stipulation is left at the whim of the issuing officer.12166301860?profile=original

 

most times the high rate is as result of need to meet ‘specified’ target by the officers involved.

Informants divulged the units earn commission on the volume of ‘earnings’ they make for the agency with their work.

And with all their offences bearing added directive of ‘impound vehicle’,  the officers have veritable premise to carry out their illegal acts.

According to a source ‘this development provides good platform for the agency to make good money everyday, many people do not want their car impounded for too long, so they most times prefer to quickly pay the fine than fight the system...’

Among the offences that attract the highest fines on their  duty list are Driving with a forged Drivers License, Driving without a Drivers License, Driving Commercial Vehicle without a certificate of road worthiness, Driving with forged vehicle particulars, Driving a motorcycle without a riders card and others. They all attract five thousand naira.

Unlike that of related law enforcement agency, Federal Road Safety Corp, offenders pay V.I.O fines at only one bank- Fidelity.

And according to informed sources the bank appears far from capable of judiciously executing this task.

Payees are mostly told servers are down-  and refer to other branches where they are mostly told to come back for ‘testament’ of payment the next day.

Most payees end up parading the bank complexes for two to three days before getting the document.

This development adds up another fee for the offender- the car which is immediately seized till the fine is paid is adjudged accruing demurrage the next morning of the incident. The charge sheet originally bears twenty four hours of grace.

The fee for the demurrage which ranges, based on the type of vehicle, is paid directly to individuals’ in charge.

This development was confirmed by an undercover reporter.

Investigations further revealed that the bulk of their victims are ‘arrested’ on the premise of forged Drivers License.

This development was confirmed by one of the V.I.O operatives based on a curious background ‘we know the Drivers License that didn’t come through us and one of the factors to look for it whether it was issued in Lagos or not!’12166301688?profile=original

Aside the alleged tell tale sign of outside of Lagos State issuance, operatives spoken to could not make categorical claim on other factors that help to determine a fake Driver’s license.

The offence which eight out of every ten motorist flag down commits – based on V.I.O statistics- is determined by operatives by merely looking at the License!

On the issue of issuing fines beyond stipulated fee, the operatives all claimed that it is the norms!

Sources claimed that the special attention on Drivers License and issuance outside Lagos State is the fall out of the successful squashing of Lagos State Government’s move to produce Driver’s license by FRSC.

‘During the period of the brouhaha, most of the states agents moved to other states to manufacture their licenses- and some claimed the tagging of Licenses from outside Lagos by the state V.I.O as forged is a coercive measure to get agents to come patronize it’ a source analyzed.

 whether there is a direct link between the Office of the Governor and issuing of target to V.I.O officers on the field we are yet to ascertain 

 

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12166300878?profile=originalAs the saying goes, all’s well that ends well but it really is not when there is so much silence about what did go on.

Exactly two weeks ago, his nanny took ten-month old baby Enioluwa Odegbaike, from his home in Magodo area of Lagos State. The little boy had been left in the care of the nanny, simply identified as Victoria, who apparently absconded with the baby while his mother was in the bathroom.

This last weekend the baby was found in Badagry, a border town in Lagos State. He was immediately united with his parents. The ordeal Mr. and Mrs Odegbaike must have endured in the last two weeks is better imagined than described.

Nanny Victoria’s action raises all kinds of questions. Was the motive kidnapping? Was there a syndicate behind her? Was she stealing the infant for herself? How was the baby recovered? What role did the police play? What has happened to the nanny? Why do we know nothing more about her than her first name? Why in the face of the happy news that Enioluwa has been found are the parents keeping mum?

Kidnapping in Nigeria has assumed the potency of a terrorist threat. The history of this crime that began as a weapon wielded first by Niger Delta militants and grew to become a source of easy money for your common garden criminal has been too often documented to need repetition here. In Baby Enioluwa’s case, there were no reports of any demand for ransom. The most significant aspect of the story was the use of social networks, Facebook, Twitter and Blackberry messaging to alert the populace and circulate the face of this lovely child and Nanny Victoria.

Shortly after the baby went missing, the parents made his picture and that of the nanny available through Facebook and other social media. Before long the news began to circulate among Nigerians both at home and abroad. In fact, the face of baby Enioluwa became so popular that many used his picture as their logo on their Facebook accounts. This helped in no small measure to assist in raising awareness about the poor baby and his parent’s plight. The news about his disappearance, which went viral, was good; it shows the power of communication. But that is about all that can be said about the matter at this point.

It is clear that the information the Odegbaike family had on Victoria, was scanty. Throughout the period of their son’s disappearance they were unable to give the nanny’s family name or it seems provide any background information or documentation on her.

More baffling, or perhaps it is all perfectly understandable given our realities, is the complete absence of any input from the police on this matter. Instead we have social networks and messaging channels filling in the gap and gratitude to God and providence for bringing this child back alive.

Not to put too fine a point on it this is an untenable method of crime detection and law enforcement. If Nigerians avoid the police because they have no faith in the ability of the men and women charged with the duty of protecting them to do the job effectively then we really have some far more basic issues to consider than the current all important one of protecting the sanctity of our vote.

Where are we if we cannot protect our children?

For every Baby Enioluwa there are thousands more, susceptible to the same crime and raising our hands to the sky is not the answer. A well trained professional and functioning police force that has the trust and confidence of the public, the protection of the community and the enforcement of the law as its primary goals is.

Can someone make this a campaign issue, please?

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