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Question: DID YOU KNOW WOLE SOYINKA's Daughter works in the Presidency ? Since OBJs Tenure until NOW !

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Ejusdem Generis is Latin for "of the same kind," used to interpret loosely written statutes. Where a

law lists specific classes of persons or things and then refers to them in general, the general

statements only apply to the same kind of persons or things specifically listed. Example: if a law refers

to automobiles, trucks, tractors, motorcycles and other motor-powered vehicles, "vehicles" would not

include airplanes, since the list was of land-based transportation.

Our interpretation for Ejusdem Generis

if a law refers to Nigerian Leaders who have been Soldiers, Politicians, and other corruption-powered

People, "People" would not include writers (wole soyinka), since the list was of Presidential-based

leaders.



Lagos—political calculations and/or miscalculations could solidify certain sainthood, definitely, it is

possible, it could diminish it. Furthermore, alleged Sainthood could come crumpling, turn to dust,

albatross, because man is just ordinary mortal despite alleged provocation at lunacy of actionable

journalistic responsibilities.

It is definitely, colossally disparaging that “Our Dear” respectable enough Noble Laureate is struggling

today to get away from “his friend IBB”—it must be tough on him despite his “pretended ignorance” at

Remi Oyeyemi’s article, ignorance of RepublicReport’s publications, ignorance of other institutional

publications in print and electronically by Nigeria Media out-lets, who got frustrated by Soyinka’s

unending romance with “Evil Genius” Ibrahim B. Babangida. This dubious romance dated back to 80s &

90s,when IBB appointed Soyinka—Chairman Federal Road Safety Commission [FRSC], an appointment

that “triggered” massive recruitment of Sea-Dog secrete Cult-Members to become Road Marshals to

protect the citizenry by the eminent professor, reports say.

Obviously this is followed by numerous visits to Aso-Rock of any administration in power [military or

civilian].

Nobel Laureate Soyinka admitted visited former President Obasanjo administration Headquartered in

Abuja, [1999-2007] many times.

Reporters observed that it was unusual for Soyinka to visit a sitting President in Aso Rock:

In response, the Nobel Laureate disclosed that he used to visit former President, Olusegun Obasanjo

in the Presidential Villa until he became disappointed in the retired General.

“Well, you know, people tend to forget that presidents are human beings, first of all, and they have

relationships. I used to visit Obasanjo, at least when I thought there was something in him to benefit

the nation. When I found there is nothing, I stopped. So it is not unusual for me to visit presidents,”

he said.

Wole Soyinka’s daughter was appointed Special Assistant to the presidency by Obasanjo

administration. She still serves in that capacity today under the present presidency. Obasanjo later

impregnated her according to News of the People’s Magazine, “Obasanjo impregnates Wole Soyinka’s

daughter, Mrs. Onijala, married to Mr. John Olutola Onijala, a Nigerian diplomat; breaks the marriage,

and husband seeks divorce.” People Magazine, February 12, 2008.

Some reports accused Wole Soyinka of, “Following the Money” all the time.

“Wole Soyinka we knew and read about yesterday is not the same Wole Soyinka that we know and

read about today, something is definitely a-mix from my crystal ball” one commentator added.

Despite major national, regional and international difficulties and challenges that we face, we are

encumbered with ‘op-ed’ rejoinder by Soyinka sweating and defending the indefensible such as, “Edo-

Rally & Tea Summit with IBB” under the invitation of Governor Oshomole’s “One-Man One Vote”

political symphonies at Edo-State-house. Who could have believed any iota of Wole Soyinka’s partial

admittance of fundamental elements of truisms of IBB’s interview two-weeks ago published in

Nigerian-Compass, RepublicRpeort, and now Remi Oyeyemi at SR?

“However, Ibrahim Babangida, in the account offered by Oyeyemi, was absolutely correct in one

aspect. I have no personal problem with him or with any other individual to whom I openly identify as

a political adversary. Babangida does however have a huge problem of political deficit with me, and

with the nation, and that is the albatross that constitutes his problem. I affirm that, if the State

House stewards had offered me tea with IBB, I would have declined, but it would only have been to

request something a little stronger, since I am no tea drinker. I am happy to note that Oyeyemi’s

strictures do not extend to having a drink with anyone on the other side of a profound political divide”

Professor Soyinka. How come it took you over two-weeks to react to troubling allegations until friend

sent you the link?

“Whose truth is this? Obviously Oyeyemi’s, not that of anyone else who was present in Oshiomole’s

visitors’ lounge, the airport, the Ikeja arrival lounge, or listened to my brief statement with the media

at Ikeja. Since when did the Oyeyemi of the world appropriate the right to interpret events at which

they were not present, and assign a ‘truth’ to the state of mind of the characters involved. What are

the credentials of Oyeyemi as a mind-reader? Has he spoken to Oshiomole? To his staff who organized

the event? To the team which whisked me to the airport? To Akande, Tinubu, Fayemi etc etc to whom

I spoke while organising my exit from Oshiomole’s guest house? Is any of that melodrama of any real

interest to busy and serious-minded people? Who is this faceless individual to compose his own

spurious scenario in his feverish mind and attempt to foist it on your readership?” Soyinka

Take it easy eminent professor—it is really tough on you these days—we indeed live in an interesting

time. Our eminent Professor of literature is asking Remi Oyeyemi to explain “earthshaking details of

this tea session:” “Was it milk, cream, sugar, biscuits on the side?” were served by Edo State house

stewards.

“Did Babangida really say we had tea together? I am learning of this weird claim for the first time. So

what should I do? Sue him for defamation? Oyeyemi owes it to his readers to unravel the earth-

shaking details of this tea session. Was it with milk? Cream? Sugar? Biscuits on the side? After all,

Oshiomole’s visitors’ lounge was constantly filled, from the beginning to the end. Someone must have

noticed some sinister details. The stewards must remember whom they served tea, and in whose

company. Oyeyemi should do his homework. Obviously these are weighty matters on which the future

of the nation depends” Wole Soyinka.

This is too mundane a defeatist expletives coming from our eminent professor of literature.

Authoritative source said, “Some virtual-truisms are disturbingly and holistically missing in these

dialogues, definitely disappointing his colleagues’ sensibilities at current prevailing intellectual culture”

that is bedevilled by intellectual fraud, however.

“Please, spare yourself and us the likes of those who throw around words like ‘truth’ and ‘integrity’

until they have learnt to respect their adjunct – ‘responsibility’” Wole Soyinka.

Evidently someone is not telling the whole truth about these exchanges of “editorial responsibilities”

—but what one thing is clinically clear in this dialogueis:—Professor of literature Wole Soyinka is

struggling to-get-away from IBB, because of their past political and secrete-cult-affinities—obviously,

it’s TOUGH on Nobel Laureate, “Tea Break In Naija” Rejoinder, notwithstanding.

Read full Wole Soyinka Rejoinder communication to Remi Oyeyemi’s article below:

Tea Break In Naija, Written By Wole Soyinka

While this intervention has been triggered off by an ‘op-ed’ in your online journal by one Remi

Oyeyemi, I have to let you know that I have taken the trouble to respond more out of a concern for the

editorial responsibilities of your journal than anything else. This is not the first such abuse of

SAHARAREPORTERS and, curiously enough, a former occasion had to do with the same subject

I.B.Babangida. I shall begin by acknowledging the extreme generosity of your contributor in allowing

me one full week of grace to respond to an interview I had never seen, nor knew anything about. In

his article, the sanctimonious Oyeyemi has again graciously imposed a deadline, albeit unspecified. I

shudder to think what would have happened if a concerned reader had not sent me a link, wondering

what this was all about. Virtual decapitation?

Now, to some pertinent issues: I remain in ignorance also of how the Nigerian media reported the Edo

incident. Beyond my brief comment on return to Ikeja airport, I declined to give any interviews on the

incident. I left the airport before the AC delegation. By agreement en route from Benin, they would do

the talking. My only interest was to return to my US engagements without further loss of valuable

time.

There is a deplorable tone of pomposity, of dictatorial conceit in Oyeyemi’s article that sets one’s

teeth on edge. Here is an article premised on a profusion of ‘ifs’, ‘maybes’, ‘mightbes’, ‘it is possible

that’, ‘alleged’, ‘reportedly’, yet filled with conclusive judgmental expressions and smug

censoriousness. Setting up oneself as a judge of political moralities requires a more rigorous approach

to the marshaling, and presentation of suppositions and facts. You do not impute a ‘cover-up’ on such

feeble, convenient, purely speculative terms – and over such trivia!

A surprise encounter, totally unexpected that took place in the presence of, and involving at least

thirty others in the reception room of a state governor is not, by any stretch of imagination, an

encounter to be tendentiously described as taking place ‘behind closed doors’. This was in the ‘public

domain’, and it is presumptuous for anyone to require that I give an account, as a public duty, to what

was clear to everyone in that formal and open space as a fortuitous encounter, and one with all

conversation audible to all, including a swarm of reporters and photographers that accompanied

Babangida into that lounge.

However, Ibrahim Babangida, in the account offered by Oyeyemi, was absolutely correct in one aspect.

I have no personal problem with him or with any other individual to whom I openly identify as a

political adversary. Babangida does however have a huge problem of political deficit with me, and with

the nation, and that is the albatross that constitutes his problem. I affirm that, if the State House

stewards had offered me tea with IBB, I would have declined, but it would only have been to request

something a little stronger, since I am no tea drinker. I am happy to note that Oyeyemi’s strictures do

not extend to having a drink with anyone on the other side of a profound political divide.

The purists of political contact are welcome to their position, but they should learn to mind their

language. ’Behind closed doors’! Is there no longer any respect for truth?

As already stated, I indeed met and exchanged ‘pleasantries’ with Babangida. When I discovered what

had brought him into Oshiomole’s visitors’ lounge – in company of at least some twenty-odd other

guests, including Governor Sylvia of Bayelsa – when I found that he had been invited to the rally, and

that David Mark was also invited as Guest of Honour, I organized my leave-taking as fusslessly and

efficiently as I know how, with a fortuitous timing that enabled me to hitch a ride in the chartered

plane that brought AC leaders to Edo. I especially did not want to embarrass my host, Adam

Oshiomole, who – I still feel – had invited me with less than expected candour and error of judgment.

I find Oyeyemi’s article pretentious, pompous and irresponsibly misleading. SAHARA REPORTERS could

have punctured this soufflé by contacting me and drawing my attention to Babangida’s interview. They

know how to find me. Other media have taken similar action in the past, sometimes only to decide not

even to publish my response when they judged that the issue merited no more than transient curiosity

– in journalese, considered unnewsworthy.

“But he owes the rest of us the TRUTH (my emphasis) that this was what transpired, and that he

changed his mind after having tea with him (IBB) that he did not want to be seen in public with him.

Misleading (?) the public that he turned back from Benin airport when this was not what happened…”

writes Mr. Remi Oyeyemi.

Whose truth is this? Obviously Oyeyemi’s, not that of anyone else who was present in Oshiomole’s

visitors’ lounge, the airport, the Ikeja arrival lounge, or listened to my brief statement with the media

at Ikeja. Since when did the Oyeyemi of the world appropriate the right to interpret events at which

they were not present, and assign a ‘truth’ to the state of mind of the characters involved. What are

the credentials of Oyeyemi as a mind-reader? Has he spoken to Oshiomole? To his staff who organized

the event? To the team which whisked me to the airport? To Akande, Tinubu, Fayemi etc etc to whom

I spoke while organising my exit from Oshiomole’s guest house? Is any of that melodrama of any real

interest to busy and serious-minded people? Who is this faceless individual to compose his own

spurious scenario in his feverish mind and attempt to foist it on your readership?

Tea is beginning to assume mythological proportions in Nigerian affairs – sadly and tragically, from

Tam David-West to Moshood Abiola. Perhaps this is responsible for the fictive ‘tea-party’ of Oyeyemi’s

imagination. If the fact that my arrival in Ikeja in an aircraft with AC leaders confused the press

awaiting the retreat, that element, that ‘weighty atom’ of tea leaves – even if it were real – is so

disproportionate to the main issue, which is that we all declined to participate in that rally, that I

cannot find the energy to pillory the media on its account. What remains is not even a storm, but

mere froth in a phantom teacup.

Did Babangida really say we had tea together? I am learning of this weird claim for the first time. So

what should I do? Sue him for defamation? Oyeyemi owes it to his readers to unravel the earth-

shaking details of this tea session. Was it with milk? Cream? Sugar? Biscuits on the side? After all,

Oshiomole’s visitors’ lounge was constantly filled, from the beginning to the end. Someone must have

noticed some sinister details. The stewards must remember whom they served tea, and in whose

company. Oyeyemi should do his homework. Obviously these are weighty matters on which the future

of the nation depends.

Please, spare yourself and us the likes of those who throw around words like ‘truth’ and ‘integrity’ until

they have learnt to respect their adjunct – ‘responsibility’.

Wole Soyinka

Wole Soyinka, Nigerian Media And The Edo Rally

To assume that our icon and respected professor of English Literature, Professor Wole Soyinka is

adjudged a “Saint” by many in Nigeria and the world would probably be a correct assumption. There is

nothing wrong in this because as we all know, the pantheon of saints is filled with men and women

who were once ordinary mortals. Given the length and substance of contributions of the revered

Professor to struggles for social and civil development in Nigeria and his constant quest for a fair

political system for the country, it is one’s candid opinion that he deserves his sainthood. When a

human being reaches the pedestal of sainthood, he is no longer a private property. He is like a comet.

He draws attention wherever he goes and wherever he shows up. He becomes the barometer with

which others are measured. He becomes the standard to which many aspire. He becomes the property

of all those who adore him and those who worship at his feet. He becomes a public figure whose all

acts and utterances would elicit more than ordinary interest and scrutiny. He is passionately admired

and reverently regarded. In the eyes of his devotees, he could hardly do any wrong. As a result of this,

much would always be conceded to him while much more would continue to be expected of him.

Responding to a “saint” who has many non-questioning admirers, is a difficult task because such a

venture is fraught with danger- yes, the danger of being misunderstood. But as Professor Soyinka

himself would testify as a proud son of Oodua, in Yorubaland we respect our elders very tremendously,

but we are never afraid to ask them questions and hold them accountable. Thus, in this follow up that

would be my final commentary on this issue regardless of what serves as its concomitants I would

maintain the respect I have for the revered Kongi in full.

I am sure that the Professor would be disappointed if I fail to respond having suggested in his “TEA

BREAK IN NAIJA,” that Remi Oyeyemi is “irresponsible.” He claimed that I, REMI OYEYEMI am “a

faceless individual.” WOW!! This is an incredible claim by a Professor known for his intellectual

prowess and diligence. After reading his piece, my first inkling was to let the matter rest. But it is

difficult to let the highly esteemed Professor get away with the less than classy act of calling this

writer “irresponsible” and a “faceless individual.”

It is amazing that this eminent Professor who accused me of not doing my “home work” is actually the

one who failed to do his home work. In his response to my initial piece, he implied that he has many

friends in the media who have decided against using some stories or articles about him (Soyinka) that

they deemed unworthy in the past. If he had bothered to ask around the same media circles that he

boasted about, at least one or two people would have told him that REMI OYEYEMI is not “faceless.”

Going beyond that he could have picked up his phone to speak to some of the political personalities

that he mentioned were on the plane with him on his escape from Benin to Lagos, and some of them

would have told him who REMI OYEYEMI is.

Professor Soyinka used the word “abuse” to describe the publication of my article by

SAHARAREPORTERS. In my book the use of this word is in itself an “abuse” by my dear Professor.

Needless to say that SAHARAREPORTERS is an unbiased medium that has often allowed the

publication of all sides of an issue. To use such words to describe the medium’s act of publishing my

article is a misuse of the word “abuse”. It is a serious challenge to have to say this about the

distinguished Egba Englishman famous for his seminal command of grammar and dexterous aptitude

for the use of diction.

The Professor suggested that SAHARAREPORTERS ought to have reached out to him and ask him about

the details of what was in my article, most of which have been in the public domain except the

questions that I raised. Wole Soyinka is advocating censorship? This is stranger than fiction! I am

flabbergasted about this because I know how the Professor has always condemned censorship in the

Nigerian society when some of our media houses were closed down especially during the era of the

deadly duo of Generals Mohammadu Buhari and Tunde Idiagbon. What could have changed in the years

gone by to get him to wantonly exhibit the same attitude that he called “dictatorial conceit” in

describing my article? Is this a case of “pot calling the kettle black” when Professor Soyinka accused

me of “deplorable tone of pomposity ……. that sets one’s teeth on edge.”
Before we move one, for purposes of clarity, it is important that the following “pertinent issues” as

Professor Soyinka called them in his response are noted by the readers:

a. Did Professor Wole Soyinka get to Oshiomole’s House in Benin or not?
b. If he did, why was the Media led to believe that he turned back at the Benin Airport?

c. Why was it not reported in the Media that he met with IBB in Oshiomole’s Home before deciding

not to attend the rally?

d. Why must Kongi wait until IBB’s controversial interview before telling the public that he actually

met with IBB whom he wishes the world to believe he is not supporting, in Benin as he admitted in his

response to Remi Oyeyemi?

e. Why did Kongi have to wait for Remi Oyeyemi’s article and about 54 days after the fact to now

suggest to the public (in Tea Break in Naija) that the Media reports of his visit to Edo State were not

very accurate?
Professor Soyinka wrote the following:

“…..I remain in ignorance also of how the Nigerian media reported the Edo incident. Beyond my brief

comment on return to Ikeja airport, I declined to give any interviews on the incident. I left the airport

before the AC delegation. By agreement en route from Benin, they would do the talking. My only

interest was to return to my US engagements without further loss of valuable time.”

The reports of what allegedly transpired in Edo State came out in all the national dailies on April 30,

2010. The Ibrahim Babangida’s interview came out 44 days after on June 13, 2010 in the COMPASS

Newspaper. My article which was a reaction to IBB’s interview was actually submitted within 30

minutes of its completion on June 20,2010. If the media had misreported what transpired in Edo State

in regard to Professor Soyinka as he implied in the quote above by claiming to be ignorant of “how the

Nigerian media reported the incident,” the esteemed Professor had 44 days to set the record straight,

before IBB had the chance to open the can of tea. But Professor Soyinka did not do so for reasons best

known to him.

Since he also admitted in the quote above that “By agreement en route from Benin, they (the AC

delegation) would do the talking,” where then is the fault of Remi Oyeyemi if Professor Soyinka’s

friends gave less than complete version of events to the Nigerian media? It is assumed that before the

Professor would agree that these friends of his (the AC delegation) should do the talking, he must

have had a modicum of trust in them and believed that they would do a good job of it. If Professor

Soyinka believed that the Nigerian Media did not do a good job reporting the events that occurred in

Edo State, where was he in the previous 44 days before the IBB interview? And what is wrong if Remi

Oyeyemi seeks clarification about the confusing reports?
Professor Soyinka was upset that my “article premised on a profusion of ‘ifs’, ‘maybes’, ‘might bes’, ‘it

is possible that’, ‘alleged’, ‘reportedly’.” It is surprising that my highly esteemed Kongi did not know

that the reason for that was because I, as a public commentator and admirer, was giving him benefit

of the doubt which I believe he richly deserved. I wanted him to come out and clear the air about the

insinuations that IBB was making in his interview. He has done that, but he was greatly mistaken by

trying to blame Remi Oyeyemi for omissions that are patently Wole Soyinka’s.

Then Professor Soyinka made the following confession:

“…..I indeed met and exchanged ‘pleasantries’ with Babangida. When I discovered what had brought

him into Oshiomole’s visitors’ lounge – in company of at least some twenty-odd other guests,

including Governor Sylvia of Bayelsa – when I found that he had been invited to the rally, and that

David Mark was also invited as Guest of Honour, I organized my leave-taking as fusslessly and

efficiently as I know how, with a fortuitous timing that enabled me to hitch a ride in the chartered

plane that brought AC leaders to Edo.”

Professor Soyinka needed to have gone beyond this mere confession to show Remi Oyeyemi’s

“irresponsibility.” Where in all the MEDIA REPORTS was it reported that the Professor “indeed met and

exchanged ‘pleasantries’ with Babangida?” It meant that if IBB, who probably have a different motive

for the revelation of that happenstance, did not reveal such in his COMPASS interview, the world would

have been made to believe that our revered Professor turned back from the Benin Airport? Doesn’t the

Professor know that it is better that the world be made aware of what happened as soon as it

happened rather than let it filter out? Does he not know that it would look “somehow” if this is heard

third hand? Does he not see the ramification for his credibility in this context? Does he think this

would be an issue if he had made the happenstance public before now rather than allow his friend IBB

do this?

With due respect, after Professor Soyinka made the above quoted confession that he actually met IBB

and exchanged pleasantries with him, it is highly preposterous, for the highly esteemed Professor to

contend that he finds “Oyeyemi’s article pretentious, pompous and irresponsibly misleading.” How is

Remi Oyeyemi’s article “misleading?” Have you not just confirmed and confessed to exchanging

“pleasantries” (whatever that means) with IBB? What is “pretentious” about Remi Oyeyemi’s article

when he (Oyeyemi) insisted that there was nothing wrong if you chose to drink tea with IBB and still

not support him, but just make that clear to the observing public so that your actions were not

misinterpreted? It is inaccurate to describe Oyeyemi’s article as “pompous” when all he was trying to

do is to get clarification to an obvious obfuscation, except that our esteemed Professor thinks he

ought not be questioned about his acts and utterances when such are unclear?

If this were to be the case it would be very unfortunate. Apart from the fact that it is against our

culture in Yorubaland to shut up a younger person who has a legitimate concern, Professor Soyinka has

put in about five decades of fight to creating a society where no one would be above the law and

everyone could be held accountable for their choices and actions. To try and suggest now that he has

to be an exception to this rule is rather baffling and confusing. Even the Great Obafemi Awolowo was

not immune from constructive criticism from both friends and detractors alike. So, why is Wole Soyinka

an exception?

In his “Tea Break in Naija,” Professor Wole Soyinka jabbed adroitly like Joe Frazier, pummelled nimbly

like George Foreman and deftly danced around like Mohammad Ali as he employed his arsenal of

diction to challenge the credibility and pertinence of my article. But dexterity at the usage of grammar

and adept application of Lexis and Structure to convey an abstract idea in a mechanically accurate way

does not necessarily equate unassailable facts. Some of the facts are as follows:

a. That it is true that Professor Wole Soyinka met IBB in Oshiomole’s house in Benin;

b. That Professor Wole Soyinka did not turn back from Benin Airport to return to Lagos as claimed in

the media;

c. That Professor Wole Soyinka contracted the Press Briefings on the Benin Saga to his political

friends some of whom I also happen to know;

d. That Professor Soyinka has a duty to check the media reports of the Benin Saga and ensure that

he was not misrepresented, but he chose not to do so;

e. That the ignorance claimed by Professor Soyinka about “how the Nigerian media reported the Edo

incident,” seemed a second thought and appeared to be a ploy to absolve himself of responsibility

about the inaccurate media reports (as he now suggests) on the Edo incident;

f. That Professor Wole Soyinka did not shun the Benin rally because of Babangida as the media and

the rest of us were made to believe but because of David Mark and he (Soyinka) confirmed this in his

article responding to Remi Oyeyemi;

g. That Remi Oyeyemi is not “irresponsible” as claimed by Professor Wole Soyinka in his article “TEA

BREAK IN NAIJA” for asking the germane questions that clarified these issues.
Professor Soyinka wrote inter alia:

“However, Ibrahim Babangida, in the account offered by Oyeyemi, was absolutely correct in one

aspect. I have no personal problem with him or with any other individual to whom I openly identify as

a political adversary. “ (emphasis mine)

This is very incorrect. Presently, I am not a reporter, just an op-ed contributor or public commentator. I

was not reporting from Edo State. The account referred to is not my account. It is IBB’s account of

events as reported in the interview granted to COMPASS Newspaper. It is amazing that Professor

Soyinka would falsely attribute this to me to make a case of “irresponsibility” when it was clear that

this was quoted as coming from COMPASS in my previous article. However, Professor Soyinka does not

have to be defensive about his relationship with IBB, more so they have worked together before. All of

us have the right to change our views or opinions about events and personalities.

Thus when Professor Soyinka added, “Babangida does however have a huge problem of political deficit

with me, and with the nation, and that is the albatross that constitutes his problem,” he was just

addressing the heart of the matter. This is the reason why dalliance with IBB should not be shrouded

in a cocoon of secrecy so that others might not misinterpret and have unnecessary suspicions. It is

also begging the question that Professor Soyinka would suggest that it was wrong for his choices and

actions to be scrutinized by members of the public like Remi Oyeyemi when in fact he is not just a

public figure he is also a celebrity adored by many and taken seriously by not just a few.

My highly esteemed Kongi also wrote as follows:

“Did Babangida really say we had tea together? I am learning of this weird claim for the first time. So

what should I do? Sue him for defamation? Oyeyemi owes it to his readers to unravel the earth-

shaking details of this tea session. Was it with milk? Cream? Sugar? Biscuits on the side?”

Sincerely speaking, I did not expect Professor Soyinka to be unduly ridiculous as he manifested in the

above quote. With due respects to the esteemed Professor, the questions in the above quote sound a

little languid as far as the issues at stake here are concerned. All Professor Soyinka had to do was to

call for a copy of the COMPASS Newspaper interview that I referenced in my article to confirm what

Babangida said or did not say. Remi Oyeyemi did not make anything up. The basis of my article was

the IBB interview which portrayed the Professor in a less than candid manner. All that was needed was

that the revered Professor should clear the air. Babangida has made his own revelation for whatever

reasons known to him, it is now up to Professor Soyinka to tell the world any yet unknown aspects of

the happenstance that IBB might have mischievously withheld and to sue IBB if he so desires. As to

“the earth-shaking details of the tea session,” it is one’s hope that the Professor would not wait until

another revealing interview comes out before he scrambles to scribble another tenuous defence of his

acts of omissions and or commissions.

Between Remi Oyeyemi and Wole Soyinka, only one person has worked for Babangida in the past and

that person is NOT Remi Oyeyemi. Thus for those readers who are quick to conclude that this criticism

of Uncle Kongi is as a result of my fondness of Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida I am recommending the

following past articles by Remi Oyeyemi to them – QUESTIONS IBB MUST ANSWER published on July

12, 2002; A TALE OF TWO TRAITORS published on December 27, 2002 and FALAE’S IBB GAMBIT

published on August 25, 2003 all of them on www.nigeriaworld.com. I have been involved in the media

either directly or indirectly for about 25 years now. I do not need any publicity stunt. And this is not

one either.

Hopefully by now, the highly esteemed Professor would have discovered that I, REMI OYEYEMI, am not

“faceless.” This he would have found out if he did a better home work in the media and political circles

that he was quick to flagrantly flaunt before rushing his rejoinder for publication. It is hoped the

esteemed Professor would cease throwing around words like “home work” until he is able to lead by a

personal example and spare the rest of us sanctimonious preachments. Regardless, I still maintain

that everyone has the right to drink tea, “something stronger” or whatever with whomever he so

chooses and can politically support whoever catches his or her fancy. But there is no reason to be

defensive and camouflage actualities from those who expect candour and openness from us. Simplicita.
And this is my final word on this issue.


Read more…
Even with its 500 million users and omnipresence in society, Facebook is not discounting the threat posed by Google's supposed plans to launch a social network, according to a new report. Instead, the company's gone into a sort of "lockdown" in response.

Do you think the lockdown's a sign that Facebook thinks it's in trouble? Or just a way of accomplishing some extra work? Have your say in the comments section.

Anthony Ha reported, "[W]e've heard from a source close to Facebook's plans that the social network is working hard to fend off Google. Specifically, chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has declared that the company is on 'lockdown' for the next 60 days, with the office open on weekends as the company tries to revamp Photos, Groups, and Events in advance of the Google launch."

Then Ha added, "We hear Zuckerberg even has a neon sign saying 'Lockdown' on his office door."

That last detail makes it sound like Zuckerberg isn't exactly sweating bullets; most people wouldn't order neon signs under those circumstances...

Still, if what Ha heard is true, it could be a signal that Zuckerberg at least feels a reworking of his site is in order if Facebook is to stay dominant. And if an earlier report that Facebook has Google's social product plans in its possession is accurate, that may mean Google has something very interesting on the way.

Of course, Google still hasn't shared any details with the public about what it's planning.

How do you think Google's social product will fare compared to Facebook? Let us know
Read more…

1.MY ADVICE TURN OFF INTERNET BANKING ON YOUR ACCOUNT !

2.ATM Withdrawals Have one account for only Daily transactions of minimal amounts


Customers have expressed dissatisfaction in the manner in which some banks have been handling reported fraud cases on internet banking and Automated Teller Machines (ATM).

Tochukwu Onyiuke, a lawyer at Punuka Attorneys & Solicitors, said of the over 1,000 internet banking fraud and ATM scam cases his firm is handling, “none of the banks involved has shown genuine interest in rendering assistance to the victims.”

Mr. Onyiuke said many of these victims are customers of Intercontinental Bank, Bank PHB, and Union Bank.

Moses Adeogun, a postgraduate student in a university in the United Kingdom and an Intercontinental customer, recently narrated how he lost all his savings of N429, 000 in the bank to online fraud.

“On Tuesday, 27 July, I just discovered that all my savings at Intercontinental Bank to the tune of N429, 000 had been stolen through internet banking,” said Mr. Adeogun.

“I have two accounts at the bank, one is current and the other is savings. I have been using these two accounts since 2008. I activated internet banking on both of them so that I can have access to my accounts while I am away for studies,” Mr. Adeogun said.

He said, “It happened that I was trying to log into my account on 27 June; a Sunday night, but I couldn’t. So I kept on trying until the account was locked. I then sent a mail to the internet banking office that my access has been locked.. The following day, I got a message from the office that my account has been unlocked. That was on Monday, 28th of June.”

However, he said that on 4 July, somebody transferred N100, 000 from his account to another person’s account named Olufunmi Olusanya. Two days later, another N100, 000 was removed. It went on until the last N29, 000 was removed on the July 14.

Mr. Adeogun said while all these was happening, he didn’t receive any alert from the bank as he usually do on any transaction. He said he didn’t touch his account after it was unlocked until July 27 when he tried to confirm his statement of account after transferring money into it that he discovered all his money had gone. “I have mailed the bank severally since it happened but all I get from them is we are investigating. I was hoping that the matter would be resolved on time so that I can use my money. But as it stands, the bank is only dragging the issue,” he said.

Pushing blames

Experts say the perpetrator must have had access to Mr. Adeogun’s username, password and transaction code -the three details needed in internet banking -before money could be successfully transferred from his account.

Meanwhile, the victim said he never disclosed any of those information to anyone as “all these details are only known by me and the internet banking office.”

Findings revealed that the Olufunmi Olusanya’s account belongs to a female youth corps member. A transaction was made from Mr. Adeogun’s account to hers and she later withdrew the money through an ATM.

However, Mr. Onyiuke said how fraudsters managed to get into people’s accounts through internet banking is a question banks should answer since the position of law says “banks have a mandatory duty to protect customer’s fund.”

The legal practitioner said banks are to protect their customers’ money by ensuring that there is no manipulation on customers’ account or unauthorised withdrawal. “In the event that customer losses money, or occasions that the bank fails to protect the fund, the customer can bring a legal action of a breach of contract against the bank,” he said.

“Banks in Nigeria are fond of pushing blames to the customers even before investigating. Banks always claim that the customers compromised their passwords. But most times, we have discovered through investigations, that the claims were false,” said Mr. Onyiuke

Contacted over Mr Adeogun’s allegation, after several phone calls and electronic mails to the Intercontinental Bank went unreturned, Bridget Chinasa, a receptionist at the bank front office who tried to cover her name tag, said a reporter cannot speak to any official in the bank’s Corporate Communication office since no appointment was made. “Just keep trying the office number to book an appointment,” Ms. Chinasa said.

Suspicious move

Meanwhile, Mr. Adeogun said he suspects insider abuse. “I really believe that she (Ms. Olusanya) colluded with someone at the Internet banking office to get into my account for the reasons being that the person who unlocked my access on the 28th of June failed to attach his or her name,” he said, adding that “most times when I receive messages from the bank, there is usually the name of the sender attached to the message. But the message I got after unlocking my access just read: Good day, your account has been unlocked now. Thanks. Internet Banking Unit, Web Services/I-Mobile Dept., Intercontinental Bank Plc... Happy Customer Happy Bank.”

Another suspicious act, according to Mr. Adeogun, was that the perpetrator disabled the alert on his transaction so that he won’t get any message while the theft was going on. “All these can only be done by an insider with priority access,” he said.

Last October, at a consumer advocacy forum, Akeem Awe, a business man and a customer of Zenith Bank, also shared his experience on how he lost his savings of v1. 06 million to an ATM fraudster in less than 20 minutes, and how the bank failed to fully investigate the matter.

Read more…
In the Christian faith, nothing is more powerful than
weakness. It provides the background for the release of all of
the power of God. Every advance that is made in the kingdom of
God derives its efficacy from this.
Christianity is full of apparent contradictions. Many of
those who are first shall be last, and the last first. We live
by dying; we gain by losing. It is also the case that we derive
power from weakness.

This is fully evident in the life of Christ. After Judas
betrayed Him and He was arrested, how did Jesus handle the
situation? Did he call fire down from heaven? Did He call in
legions of angels? No. He simply let them take Him away. Why?
Why would the very incarnation of omnipotence simply allow
Himself to be taken away? It was because He understood the power
of weakness.

Did He put up a fuss? Did he struggle? He didn't need to.
He could afford to be kind. He healed the ear of one of his
captors after one of the disciples lopped it off. Why? Why
didn't He put up a fight? Jesus was an innocent man, yet,
throughout His trial, He did not attempt to answer His accusers.

When he was scourged, whipped, beaten, and crucified, He did not
complain. He didn't tell the perpetrators of these injustices
that he was innocent, or that he was being treated unfairly. Why
is this? There is no spiritual force greater than weakness,
particularly when it is taken on voluntarily, with the knowledge
that God is sovereign over all that we suffer and that He will
rectify all wrongs.

God shows Himself strong on behalf of those who do not take
upon themselves the responsibility of defending themselves.
Because He is our defender, we can afford to treat our enemies
kindly. We have absolutely nothing to fear from anything or
anybody, because we know that the One who defends us is all-
powerful.
David understood something of this truth in his struggles
with Saul. On several occasions, David could have killed Saul,
and all of his troubles would have been over. But he knew that
he could afford to allow his enemy to live. He knew that the
Lord was his protector, vindicator and defender, and that, in His
sovereignty, God would take care of his enemies.

David knew that
if he were to trust the Lord and obey Him, that God, in turn, would move mightily on his behalf. In fact, this very principle is the theme of many of the Psalms, a number of which were written during the heat of the conflict that was raging between Saul and David. This is why Jesus told us to love our enemies. There is
tremendous power in this principle--so much so, that Paul in his epistles likened it to heaping burning coals upon a person's head. The way to utterly defeat an enemy is to treat him with absolute kindness, and to do so, not out of malice, but with kindness in one's heart. What can be more baffling, or
disconcerting, to any enemy, when this happens? What can be more disarming? If we do nothing to defend ourselves, our enemy has no way of justifying his attitudes and actions. The burden to his conscience therefore becomes unbearable. If he does not desist, his suffering is intensified.

David understood this principle well. Even as king, David's philosophy was that if somebody had something bad to say about him, he should not be silenced. Either his enemy was right, or, if not, then it was God's responsibility to bring conviction and judgment.

Throughout the ages, it has often been said that "the blood of the Martyrs is the seed of the Church." This comment, which originated with Tertullian in the late second century, is simply
an observation of the truth of the principle of the tremendous spiritual power of weakness. When people are martyred for their faith in Christ, making no attempt to defend themselves, nothing has greater power as an inspiration to others, who then become Christians themselves, disregarding all of the possible
consequences.

There is a tremendous illustration of this principle in some of the incidents recorded in the book of Acts. When Stephen was stoned because of His faith in Christ, he didn't put up a fight. Contrary to all of the expectations of those who opposed him, he asked that God forgive them. One of the people standing by
during this incident was Saul of Tarsus, who, at the time, was in agreement with those who were stoning Stephen.

One of the most effective ways of releasing the power of God is through the forgiveness of one's enemies. This is what Stephen did when he was stoned, and eventually, Saul of Tarsus became Paul, one of the greatest apostles known to the Christian faith, and the author of many of the most important parts of the
New Testament. It is quite probable that Saul's conversion was made possible through the spiritual power released through Stephen's forgiveness of those who stoned him.

Weakness is one of the most powerful weapons of our warfare
as Christians, and most of the other spiritual weapons are
derived from it. As we have just seen, forgiveness is one of
them. Another is humility, also a form of weakness. If we
humble ourselves in the sight of the Lord, then, we are told, He
will raise us up in due time. This is an infallible principle
for those who engage in it with proper motivations.

Do you want to be a strong Christian warrior? Then become
weak. Forgive your enemies. Humble yourself. Let everyone else
have preeminence. Don't seek to be well liked or well respected.
Don't maneuver your way into an enviable position. Let God do
it. Don't seek power or wealth. When we are weak, then, it
turns out, we are strong. Then when God moves on our behalf, it
becomes clear that it is God who has raised us up, and that we
could not possibly have done it ourselves.
To fight the good fight effectively, we must not boast. Wemust not do anything to make ourselves look good. We must, inmodesty, remain silent unless there is a clear mandate from Godor us to speak. If we are weak, then God can show Himself to be strong on our behalf.
The effective Christian warrior is not the one who looks good because he or she has taken care to make himself look good outwardly. Rather, it is the one who is concerned with whether he or she is truly good inwardly. This, also, is weakness, and from it, tremendous spiritual power is derived.

We must not promote ourselves, either as individuals or as a group. To do so would be to short circuit the power of God in our individual and corporate lives. We must depend upon God to
raise us up, should He see fit to do so, always remembering that He may never see fit to do so, but remaining content nevertheless. We cannot afford to do it any other way. If we aspire to be God's representatives upon the earth, then we must aspire to fulfill this responsibility according to His
principles.

If we truly want the power of God to be operative in our
lives, then we have no choice but to renounce all desire for such
power. This is a paradox, but it is true nevertheless. It is
only through the lack of power, and the lack of any desire for
it, that we can obtain power in the faith.

Weakness, or lack of power, is the weapon that completely
disarms all of the hosts of the enemy. Intercession is helpful,
but apart from this background of weakness it is a puny weapon
indeed. If we intercede thinking that we are great intercessors,
then, to a large degree, we have circumvented any real
effectiveness we might have had. If we share our faith with
others, confident that we are evangelists par excellence, then
our efforts will largely be wasted. Whatever we do, if we do it
thinking highly of ourselves for it, then these works will be as
nothing.

Weakness is closely related to absolute reliance upon God
for everything. Such reliance does not constitute passivity, but
trust in the power of God, and recognition that, in and of
ourselves, we are as nothing, but that if we are living and
working in obedience to God, He will bring to pass all that
concerns us.
God is the one who raises people up and who brings them
down. He is the one who grants us favor and who humbles us. If
we wish to be lifted up, then we must humble ourselves. This,
also, is a paradox, because, by definition, humility entails the
lack of desire for any prominence.

We have no choice but obedience. Those who are disobedient
to God are following after wealth, or prominence, or pleasure, or
comfort, or security. But to pursue these things will ultimately
cause us to lose them. All of them. And this is true for
everyone. We have no choice but to stop pursuing them, because
the only chance we will ever have of obtaining them is if they
really no longer matter to us any more.


Our only recourse is weakness. God will eventually bring every one of us to the point of weakness one way or another.Either we will voluntarily come to this place, or He will eventually force us to this point, and we will suffer for it perpetually. He will make examples out of every last one of us. We can choose whether we want to be a good examples or poor ones,
but we will all be examples.

Let us pray, then, that God would enable us to be good examples, and that He help us to be willing to be vessels of weakness. Let the cry of our hearts be that we act according to these principles, and that we be given the grace to love our enemies, to humble ourselves, and to seek nothing except to
please the one who created us and who wants what's best for us, even more than we want it for ourselves. In Jesus' name we ask these things. Amen.


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Comfort And Her Baby.

click to expand imageIf Baby Monday is not Kirikiri

Minimum Prison‘s youngest inmate, he will certainly be one of the youngest. Her mother is being detained in the prison and was delivered of him only 13 days ago.

For obvious reasons, Monday’s arrival could not be marked with any fanfare. There were no visits from friends and relations and there were no shouts of congratulations or offer of gifts.

Baby Monday was born at the Lagos Island Maternity, where officials of the prison had taken Comfort, his mother, as soon as she went into labour on August 1, 2010. Comfort is awaiting trial for allegedly stealing the sum of N200,000 belonging to her boss, but she insists she is innocent of her alleged crime.

Spokesman of the Nigerian Prisons Service, Mr. Ope Fatinikun said the prison was well equipped to take care of nursing inmates and their babies. ‘‘There are so many inmates who come in here pregnant, although they might not know it. As a matter of fact, we do conduct pregnancy tests for them immediately they are brought here and the results are shown to them. So, we are equipped to take care of them and their babies. There is a clinic attached to the prison and in case of any emergency, we do refer them to the General hospital,‘‘ Fatinikun said.

But he added that the baby could only be kept in the prison for 18 months. ‘‘The law states that it is not in the best interests of the child for him or her to discover that they were born in the prison. So when the child is 18 months old and no relative has come to take them away, the prison is empowered by law to take them to the SOS children‘s village where they might be put up for adoption,‘‘ he said

Comfort‘s journey to Kirikiri began when she met her former boss, Nwitua Nadum, at Elele Alimini, Rivers State sometime last year. ‘‘I knew him as my landlord‘s friend,‘‘ she said, adding that she was then selling sachet water otherwise called pure water, having had to halt her education at Primary Four because of financial constraints.

She said, ‘‘I am the fourth of seven children. We have always struggled to survive. But things became particularly bad after my paternal grandmother died. My elder siblings didn‘t have much of education either, so they are not better off. My eldest brother pushes a wheel barrow in the market for a living while my father is a farmer. I was fetching water one day when Nadum came around. He asked what I was doing at home and I said I had to stop school because there was no money. He then said it was a pity that a pretty girl like me was suffering when someone could have helped me to live a better life. Later, my father told me that I would go to Lagos with Nadum to be his house help, and in return, he (Nadum) would send me to school.‘‘

Nadum lived alone at his 2 Owode Street, Abule Egba, Lagos residence, while his wife and children lived abroad. Comfort said apart from household chores, she also assisted with the sale of compressors and air conditioners at Nadum’s shop. She said that contrary to what her father had told her, she only attended school for a month after which Nadum ordered her to withdraw. ‘‘My boss pulled me out of school when he started molesting me,‘‘ she alleged. ‘‘I called my father and told him that he should come here and take me away, but he told me that he had no money to travel down to Lagos.‘‘

When our correspondent called Comfort‘s father on the phone and told him that his daughter was being incarcerated in Kirikiri Medium Prison and that she had been delivered of a baby boy, the man went hysterical. ‘‘I don‘t know why Nadum would do that to my child. I can never do such a thing to somebody else‘s child. I leave everything in the hands of God. He did all this to me and yet I didn‘t get a penny from him,‘‘ he said.

Asked if he intended to claim his grandchild, Comfort‘s father replied, ‘‘I don‘t have any money to come to Lagos.‘‘

Comfort claimed she had cried to her boss‘s wife for help when the lady came to Nigeria. ‘‘I told her what I had been passing through in the hands of her husband. To my surprise, she felt unconcerned. She just told me it wasn‘t her business.‘‘ She said that Mrs. Nadum concluded her business in Nigeria and travelled out again without addressing her husband‘s alleged offences. ‘‘When I discovered that I was pregnant a few months later, I was scared. I confided in a neighbour who everyone called Mama. She told me to abort the baby, that I was too young to bear the responsibility of bringing up a child.‘‘

Comfort said although she was terrified by the pregnancy she feared abortion. ‘‘I asked her what would happen if after aborting the baby I discovered later in life that I couldn‘t have children anymore,‘‘ she said.

She also said that when she told Nadum about the pregnancy, she denied it. ‘‘I told my boss I was pregnant and he told me it was none of his business,‘‘ she said, adding that she had to bear the shame of a growing tummy and curious stares of neighbours.

Recalling the circumstances in which she landed in prison, she said, “I think it was around January 10 when my boss called me on the phone to attend to a customer who had come to buy compressors. He had travelled out of Lagos. I went to the shop and met with the person. We negotiated a price but the customer didn‘t have the whole amount. I called my boss and told him, and he told me to collect what the man had and give it to the gateman. I counted the money, it was 95,000 naira, and I gave it to the gateman.‘‘

The next day, Nadum returned home but the gateman did not report for duty. ‘‘I went to a phone booth and tried the gateman‘s phone number several times but it was switched off. When I told my boss about it, he was very angry. The next day, policemen from Oko Oba Police station, Abule Egba came to the house and arrested me.‘‘

At the police station, another drama played out. ‘‘My boss told the policemen that he had lost N200,000 to me. He told them that it was because I had stolen the money from him that I started saying he was responsible for my pregnancy.‘‘ Comfort said she was three months pregnant at the time she was arrested.

The 17-year-old was arraigned at the Abule Egba Magistrate Court on January 26, 2010. Unfortunately, she had no one to pay for her bail in the sum of N50,000. Copies of the charge sheet made available to our correspondent revealed that the initial age filled for comfort was 17 years before it was cancelled and replaced with 18. But Comfort herself insists she is 17. The only person who can come forward with proof of the girl‘s age is her father in Rivers State who claims he is cash strapped and unable to make the trip to Lagos.

Efforts made by our correspondent to get Nadum’s reaction yielded no result as the voice that answered the calls our correspondent made to his phone repeatedly claimed it was wrong number. He also did not respond to text messages sent to his phone, forcing our correspondent to visit his residence at Plot 2 Owode Street, Abule Egba, Lagos. While the place looked deserted, two children who opened the gate after persistent knocks and and claimed to be Nadum’s niece and nephew, told our correspondent, after asking what her mission was, that Nadum was not at home.

Further effort made to get him on his MTN and Zain lines also yielded no result. “I am not Nadum,” a voice said on the phone and hung up.

Read more…

Nigeria Installs Full Body Scanners at Airports

Nigeria Installs Full Body Scanners at Airports

•As US marshals accompany flights
By Paul Ohia and Zacheaus Somorin, 08.12.2010

The training of local staff has commenced to handle full body scanners acquired following the Christmas day bomb attempt by Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab even as Air Marshals from the United States now guard flights coming in and out of Nigeria.

“Full-body scanners have been installed at Nigeria 's four international airports and are being used selectively,” the Director-General of Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Mr. Harold Demuren, said at a joint press briefing with the United States ambassador to Nigeria, Dr. Robin Renée Sanders in Lagos yesterday.


Demuren said training is ongoing for officers with the goal of having the scanners which have been installed at Murtala Mohammed International Airport in Lagos and Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja operating 24 hours a day.

For the time being, the machines have not been installed at similar airports in Kano and Port Harcourt .


“We want to make our airports extremely unfriendly to terrorists…explosive detection equipment are already being used and full body pat-downs for international passengers will not allow such to happens again." Demuren said.

He disclosed that ten of such scanners which create a 3-D images of passengers’ shape have been acquired by the government
Ambassador Sanders said that Nigeria should be commended for the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority’s successful completion of Federal Aviation Administration [FAA] assistance program in preparation for the Aviation Safety Assessment [IASA] audit.
She posited also that although there is still more job to be done in the sector, it is important to celebrate the tremendous progress and success of the government in making the nation’s air travel the safest it has ever been.

Sanders who would be leaving Nigeria soon congratulated the NCCA for its historical issuance of Air Operator Certification [AOC] to Arik Air Limited on July 12, this year. She however said that Nigerian aviation sector has not been able to obtain Category 1 status the way other developed countries have.

Responding to her comment, Demuren said ‘’security challenge is a global one. It is not only an American issue, it is not the Netherland issue, and not Nigerian issue but a global one. So, the war on terror must be total’’. Demuren promised that the December 20th December 2009 bomb incident, with security measures being put in place by the NCAA, will never happen again, saying that body scanners have been made available in all he major airports in the country with the provision of ten scanners by the Federal Government.

While recounting on Abdulmutallab’s bomb case, which resulted in Nigeria in being included in the global terror list by the United States, Demuren said that on the fateful day, the equipment available at the Lagos Airports are those that could only detect metals, but that now all the international airport in the country have automatic detecting systems at different four stages before boarding flight to another country.

Read more…

CHAIRMAN of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission, EFCC, Mrs. Farida Waziri expressed optimism that the detained former Delta State Governor, Chief James Onanefe Ibori will soon be extradited to United Kingdom, UK, where he is expected to face charges of corruption and money laundering being preferred against him.
Mrs. Waziri who disclosed this while receiving the Central Planning Committee of Nigeria at 50 (Women and Children Special Event) who paid her a working visit in her office, said the London Metropolitan Police has commenced filing necessary papers that would enable the extradition of the former governor to the United Kingdom.

The anti-graft agency boss however, raised alarm that some faceless Nigerians who were not comfortable with the current activities of the Commission are threatening to terminate her.

Chief James Onanefe Ibori

According to her, “Ibori was in hospital in Dubai and they were talking with our counterparts. The Metro police are trying to file papers. The process is long but they are working on it and we are in cooperation.

“We are exchanging information and some metro police are planning to even come down here to Nigeria as a result of that, but it is confirmed they want to start extradition process to the United Kingdom for him to stand trial”.

Mrs. Waziri who also assured Nigerians of the preparedness of the agency to prosecute those indicted in the Siemens bribery scandal, noted, “we are almost through. I can assure you I am not under any pressure as I told you. My God is greater. You know the investigation is not easy but we are going to do some prosecution. Nothing will be swept under the carpet.

“We do what is called discreet investigations. We don’t want to embarrass anybody before we really get to the main thing”.

“Barely one week of my assumption of duty, then hell was let loose, since then both the corrupt and the wicked have found a common enemy in me, who must be dragged down at all costs, using both spiritual and other diabolical means to smear me and distract the commission”

The obsession to get rid of “that women” by all means is now the preoccupation of a bunch of faceless, devilish and narrow minded cowards for obvious reasons one of which, to disorganise the commission ahead of the 2011 elections. But I will tell them, I will never lose focused or made to compromise even if I have to pay the ultimate prize” she added.

“One thing should be clear to all, that there is a supreme being who alone can do and undo. God alone gives power and takes power, gives position and takes positions and so, my destiny lies in the hands of the Almighty God”.

We will continue to fight the scourge of corruption, that is why today in just two years in the saddle, we have a record of over 100 convictions, over $3.5 billion recovered fund and over 60 high profile cases in addition to over 1,200 other cases already instituted in various courts across the country”.

In her remark, The chairperson, Central Planning Committee for Nigeria at 50 (Women and Children Special Events) Mrs. Ramatu Usman stated the need for women to demand for their right.

According to her, we must not be left out on the Nigeria at 50 we must be carried along, this is strictly a gender focused mission, award will also be given to children and when I say children I mean children from the poorest of the poor we will not compromise this, no rich man child is going to benefit from the award.

“It is an incontrovertible fact that over the years, you have selflessly and patriotically dedicated your entire life to the service of this great nation, you have brought a new lease of life and soaring of life to this institution, since you assume the mantle of its leadership”.

She maintained that “It is precisely these reasons and towards celebrating your meritorious services to humanity that the Central Planning Committee (CPC) at 50 (women and children special events) unanimously endorsed you as the winner of the First ever Nigerian Golden Amazons Award”.

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Apart from the agitators, there seems to be an unanimity in opposition to the creation of more states in the country among some eminent Nigerians.

Senate President David Mark, Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu and House of Representatives Speaker, Dimeji Bankole, had on various occasions assured that the Sixth National Assembly would create more states before its tenure ends on May 29, 2011.

However, citing high cost of governance, rising graft, insolvency of states, non-viability of the proposed states and worsening economic fortunes of the citizenry among others, some eminent citizenry, have asked the National Assembly to put a lid on the requests for new states.

If anything, some of them asked for pruning down of the current 36 states to a manageable size and scrapping of the local council structure. There are demands for additional 35 states, which if approved, will leave the country with 71 states.

Among those who spoke on the issue are former Transport Minister, Chief Ebenezer Babatope; Second Republic Goverrnor of Lagos State, Alhaji Lateef Jakande; Second Republic politician and one of the founders of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Chief Guy Ikokwu; and former National Chairmanship Candidate of the PDP, Chief Sonny Iroche.

Iroche said: “I think we should reduce the number of states. The problem in Nigeria now is not state creation but failure of leadership through massive corruption. The states are too many.

Creating more states means governments will become too large, more governors, ministers, senators, etc and more money spent on them to the detriment of the desired development.

The government is too large. Money budgeted go into pockets of government officials. Nigeria is bleeding from all offices of all tiers of government. Look at the salaries of our Federal Lawmakers, and they want to add more.”

However, the PDP chieftain said his suggestion was not unmindful of the injustice done to the South East geo-political zone, which has been short-changed on the issue.

“Every other zone has seven or six states except the South East that has five. What should be done is to collapse the states in other zones to five, to ensure equity,” he added.

On his part, Babatope urged Nigerians to be wary of the warning of the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, that states might become glorified local councils, if care was not taken.

“Since we have started creating states, you cannot stop people from agitating for more states. The way we are going, we may end up with Pa Awolowo warning that we may reduce states in Nigeia to glorified local government councils. Now, most of the states have no money to operate.

Most states can’t pay salaries. If they have money to operate, no problem but we have to be careful not to turn the states into glorified local councils,” he said.

Jakande said the demands for 35 additional states were unwieldy. He urged the National Assembly to scrutinise the demands painstakingly and handle each case by merit. “The number is too much. I think we should take each case on its merit,” he said.

For Ikokwu, demands for new states were rife because of mis-governance and marginalisation. “People agitate for self_determination or against marginalisation because they are not contented with the status quo. If the country is properly governed with the rule of law, equity and justice, many people will not even mind who governs and where he comes from.

There will be more dedication and patriotism. When you have the absence of justice and patriotism, everyone will want to rule oneself or one’s family.”

He contended that agitation for state, territorially, would continue until “every local government becomes a state; every town within a local government becomes a state; and individuals become states unto themselves.”

The lawyer-cum-politician, canvassed jettisoning of the presidential system of government for a parliamentary system, which he argued, was more accountable and less expensive because “the governor or prime minister is in the legislature, so he can be called to account at anytime. He does not have the immunity, which you have embedded in the presidential constitution.”

Ikokwu contended that new states would make sense if the local councils were scrapped. “Creation of state is expensive. We have 774 local governments. If you scrap the local government system totally, then you can create more states.

These states will become divisions and we adopt a parliamentary system. If it is the parliamentary system, you can have 60 states or divisions in the country. The important thing is that you have their functions and what revenue they have to generate to carry out those functions,” he espoused.

Commenting on the issue recently at a lecture at the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Nsukka, former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, Prof. Chukwuma Soludo, called for scrapping of the states because “the military, which led the nation into creation of states made a huge mistake.”

Soludo said the present cost of running the 36 states, the 774 local government areas, the large bicameral federal legislature and the federal government were clearly not suitable and urged Nigerians to rally for a change that would abolish the states and embrace the creation of six regions on the basis of their fiscal viability.

Most states unsustainable
Vanguard checks show that more than two-thirds of the 36 states out of which 35 new states may be created are not economically sustainable.

Every year, these states reel out budgetary figures running into billions that are funded from statutory allocation from the Federation Account. Over 80 per cent of the Federation Account comes from crude oil exploited from nine states – Akwa Ibom, Delta, Rivers, Bayelsa, Imo, Ondo, Abia, Edo and Cross River.

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Dr Erastus Akingbola, Former Managing Director of Intercontinental Bank, stepping out of EFCC's car at the Federal High Court Ikoyi, Lagos, On Friday.


Former Group Chief Executive Officer of Intercontinental Bank Plc, Dr Erastus Akingbola, was yesterday ordered remanded in the custody of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, after he was arraigned before a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos, on a 22-count charge fraud, granting reckless credit facility, abuse of office and mismanagement of depositors’ funds.

He will be in detention till August 30, 2010 when the court will hear his bail application filed by his counsel.
Hearing of bail applications was yesterday fixed for August 23 by a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos following the arraignment of Akingbola.

Justice Mohammed Idris announced the date after the prosecution had read its charges bordering on alleged financial malpractice while the defence led by Chief Felix Fagbohungbe (SAN) asked for bail. Justice Idris said since the bail application was filed on Thursday, there was need for proper argument from both sides before a ruling was made.

The arraignment took place about 9 a.m. at Federal High Court, Ikoyi. Akingbola was flown into Lagos from Abuja on Thursday morning ahead of yesterday’s arraignment originally planned for Thursday.

Trial judge in the matter isJustice Mohammed Idris. Akingbola, was brought to court around 9: am in a Toyota Avensis with the registration number DA 487 ABJ, dressed in a black suit. He pleaded not guilty to all the counts of the charge preferred against him by the EFCC, after they were read to him count after count.

Efforts by his counsel to argue his application for bail was strongly opposed by the EFCC, which insisted that it should be given time to filed a reply to the application. The commission had argued that it was still investigating the accused person, since he had just returned to the country a few days ago, and from interrogations so far, new facts had been uncovered which may lead to the filing of more charges against him.

EFCC said it would be opposing the bail application and asked the court to it time to file response, as the commission was only served the bail application on Thursday.

The court in a short ruling, adjourned hearing on the bail application to August 23, adding that the matter will be given accelerated hearing.

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NO WAIVER FOR ATIKU YET, DECLARES PDP

AHEAD of his formal declaration for the 2011 presidential election on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, the leadership of the PDP said yesterday that former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has not been granted a waiver to contest the polls.
According to the party, there was no way the National Working Committee, NWC would recommend to the National Executive Committee, NEC of the party when Atiku’s home state, Adamawa has not formally applied for a waiver .

Answering questions from Journalists yesterday in Abuja during the Press briefing on the outcome of the 52nd National Executive Committee, NEC meeting of the party, the National Publicity Secretary, Professor Rufai Ahmed Alkali said, “You will recall that the former vice president came in to this secretariat and formally told the leadership of the party that he was returning to the party with all his supporters nationwide.

Atiku Abubakar has not been granted a waiver to contest the polls

“He indeed brought a document showing the names of the people who came along with him and signed the document and said they are returning unconditionally. Am sure you also recall that when he left, we invited you to come and see the former national chairman so that he could tell you why Alhaji Atiku Abubakar came into his office, and the chairman, I recalled informed you that the former vice president came into the secretariat to say that he has returned to the party formally with all his supporters.

“But the Chairman asked him to go back to his ward and register because that is the elementary thing, and then the process can start from there. Because as he said the party cannot reject any person coming back to the party. No party worth its salt can do that. But what the former national chairman said, and that is the position of the party is that we do not have card here to give to members.

“So he was asked to go back, which means what was said in effect was Atiku Abubakar will go back and continue with the process of healing and reconciliation, a kind of mend fences with him and all the stakeholders in Adamawa State, and since that time there have been formal consultations and discussions between him and stakeholders in Adamawa state, and the Adamawa people too came to the secretariat and the rest of it.

“This is the usual thing in politics, there’s nothing unusual. And so by the time they sort this out Atiku will also be treated like any other person who has come back to the party; he will be given the waiver to be qualified as bonafide member of the party.

So I think the issues are very clear. No matter what we have done here, all these cases that you see of who has been cleared, those at the relevant level will have to clear them before they get to the national secretariat, and that is the situation.

“There are other levels that are usually waived or are given waivers at their own relevant level not necessarily at the national level. But at the level of governors, Senators, President and Vice president, the waiver always come from the Secretariat, but it has to come on the advice from the state chapter. This is the situation on the ground and I cannot see why there should be controversy.”

It would be recalled that according to the PDP’s 2009 amended constitution, “Persons who desire to rejoin the Party after leaving it shall, unless exempted by the National Working Committee, be placed on probation for a period of time not less than a year”.

Speaking further on the resolutions of PDP NEC, Alkali who noted that NEC considered proposals to hold a Special Convention to amend sections of the party’s constitution, stressed that areas to be amended which the National Working Committee, NWC recommended for deleting are Article 12.17, Article 12.e40 and Articles 12.84 which confer status of automatic delegates on Ministers, Chairmen of Boards, Commissioners, Special Advisers and Special Assistants to Party Congresses and National Conventions.

Ekwueme’s report granted me waiver — Atiku

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The last few weeks have been a nightmare for President Obama, in a summer of discontent in the United States which has deeply unsettled the ruling liberal elites, so much so that even the Left has begun to turn against the White House. While the anti-establishment Tea Party movement has gained significant ground and is now a rising and powerful political force to be reckoned with, many of the president’s own supporters as well as independents are rapidly losing faith in Barack Obama, with open warfare breaking out between the White House and the left-wing of the Democratic Party. While conservatism in America grows stronger by the day, the forces of liberalism are growing increasingly weaker and divided.

Against this backdrop, the president’s approval ratings have been sliding dramatically all summer, with the latest Rasmussen Daily Presidential Tracking Poll of US voters dropping to minus 22 points, the lowest point so far for Barack Obama since taking office. While just 24 per cent of American voters strongly approve of the president’s job performance, almost twice that number, 46 per cent, strongly disapprove. According to Rasmussen, 65 per cent of voters believe the United States is going down the wrong track, including 70 per cent of independents.

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The RealClearPolitics average of polls now has President Obama at over 50 per cent disapproval, a remarkably high figure for a president just 18 months into his first term. Strikingly, the latest USA Today/Gallup survey has the President on just 41 per cent approval, with 53 per cent disapproving.

Related link: The Obama presidency increasingly resembles a modern-day Ancien Régime

There are an array of reasons behind the stunning decline and political fall of President Obama, chief among them fears over the current state of the US economy, with widespread concern over high levels of unemployment, the unstable housing market, and above all the towering budget deficit. Americans are increasingly rejecting President Obama’s big government solutions to America’s economic woes, which many fear will lead to the United States sharing the same fate as Greece.

Growing disillusionment with the Obama administration’s handling of the economy as well as health care and immigration has gone hand in hand with mounting unhappiness with the President’s aloof and imperial style of leadership, and a growing perception that he is out of touch with ordinary Americans, especially at a time of significant economic pain. Barack Obama’s striking absence of natural leadership ability (and blatant lack of experience) has played a big part in undermining his credibility with the US public, with his lacklustre handling of the Gulf oil spill coming under particularly intense fire.

On the national security and foreign policy front, President Obama has not fared any better. His leadership on the war in Afghanistan has been confused and at times lacking in conviction, and seemingly dictated by domestic political priorities rather than military and strategic goals. His overall foreign policy has been an appalling mess, with his flawed strategy of engagement of hostile regimes spectacularly backfiring. And as for the War on Terror, his administration has not even acknowledged it is fighting one.

Can it get any worse for President Obama? Undoubtedly yes. Here are 10 key reasons why the Obama presidency is in serious trouble, and why its prospects are unlikely to improve between now and the November mid-terms.

1. The Obama presidency is out of touch with the American people

In a previous post I noted how the Obama presidency increasingly resembles a modern-day Ancien Régime, extravagant, decaying and out of touch with ordinary Americans. The First Lady’s ill-conceived trip to Spain at a time of widespread economic hardship was symbolic of a White House that barely gives a second thought to public opinion on many issues, and frequently projects a distinctly elitist image. The “let them eat cake” approach didn’t play well over two centuries ago, and it won’t succeed today.

2. Most Americans don’t have confidence in the president’s leadership

This deficit of trust in Obama’s leadership is central to his decline. According to a recent Washington Post/ABC News poll, “nearly six in ten voters say they lack faith in the president to make the right decisions for the country”, and two thirds “say they are disillusioned with or angry about the way the federal government is working.” The poll showed that a staggering 58 per cent of Americans say they do not have confidence in the president’s decision-making, with just 42 per cent saying they do.

3. Obama fails to inspire

In contrast to the soaring rhetoric of his 2004 Convention speech in Boston which succeeded in impressing millions of television viewers at the time, America is no longer inspired by Barack Obama’s flat, monotonous and often dull presidential speeches and statements delivered via teleprompter. From his extraordinarily uninspiring Afghanistan speech at West Point to his flat State of the Union address, President Obama has failed to touch the heart of America. Even Jimmy Carter was more moving.

4. The United States is drowning in debt

The Congressional Budget Office Long-Term Budget Outlook offers a frightening picture of the scale of America’s national debt. Under its alternative fiscal scenario, the CBO projects that US debt could rise to 87 percent of GDP by 2020, 109 percent by 2025, and 185 percent in 2035. While much of Europe, led by Britain and Germany, are aggressively cutting their deficits, the Obama administration is actively growing America’s debt, and has no plan in place to avert a looming Greek-style financial crisis.

5. Obama’s Big Government message is falling flat

The relentless emphasis on bailouts and stimulus spending has done little to spur economic growth or create jobs, but has greatly advanced the power of the federal government in America. This is not an approach that is proving popular with the American public, and even most European governments have long ditched this tax and spend approach to saving their own economies.

6. Obama’s support for socialised health care is a huge political mistake

In an extraordinary act of political Harakiri, President Obama leant his full support to the hugely controversial, unpopular and divisive health care reform bill, with a monstrous price tag of $940 billion, whose repeal is now supported by 55 per cent of likely US voters. As I wrote at the time of its passing, the legislation is “a great leap forward by the United States towards a European-style vision of universal health care, which will only lead to soaring costs, higher taxes, and a surge in red tape for small businesses. This reckless legislation dramatically expands the power of the state over the lives of individuals, and could not be further from the vision of America’s founding fathers.”

7. Obama’s handling of the Gulf oil spill has been weak-kneed and indecisive

While much of the spilled oil in the Gulf has now been thankfully cleared up, the political damage for the White House will be long-lasting. Instead of showing real leadership on the matter by acing decisively and drawing upon offers of international support, the Obama administration settled on a more convenient strategy of relentlessly bashing an Anglo-American company while largely sitting on its hands. Significantly, a poll of Louisiana voters gave George W. Bush higher marks for his handling of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, with 62 percent disapproving of Obama’s performance on the Gulf oil spill.

8. US foreign policy is an embarrassing mess under the Obama administration

It is hard to think of a single foreign policy success for the Obama administration, but there have been plenty of missteps which have weakened American global power as well as the standing of the United States. The surrender to Moscow on Third Site missile defence, the failure to aggressively stand up to Iran’s nuclear programme, the decision to side with ousted Marxists in Honduras, the slap in the face for Great Britain over the Falklands, have all contributed to the image of a US administration completely out of its depth in international affairs. The Obama administration’s high risk strategy of appeasing America’s enemies while kicking traditional US allies has only succeeded in weakening the United States while strengthening her adversaries.

9. President Obama is muddled and confused on national security

From the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq to the War on Terror, President Obama’s leadership has often been muddled and confused. On Afghanistan he rightly sent tens of thousands of additional troops to the battlefield. At the same time however he bizarrely announced a timetable for the withdrawal of US forces beginning in July 2011, handing the initiative to the Taliban. On Iraq he has announced an end to combat operations and the withdrawal of all but 50,000 troops despite a recent upsurge in terrorist violence and political instability, and without the Iraqi military and police ready to take over. In addition he has ditched the concept of a War on Terror, replacing it with an Overseas Contingency Operation, hardly the right message to send in the midst of a long-war against Al-Qaeda...

10. Obama doesn’t believe in American greatness

Barack Obama has made it clear that he doesn’t believe in American exceptionalism, and has made apologising for his country into an art form. In a speech to the United Nations last September he stated that “no one nation can or should try to dominate another nation. No world order that elevates one nation or group of people over another will succeed. No balance of power among nations will hold.” It is difficult to see how a US president who holds these views and does not even accept America’s greatness in history can actually lead the world’s only superpower with force and conviction.

There is a distinctly Titanic-like feel to the Obama presidency and it’s not hard to see why. The most left-wing president in modern American history has tried to force a highly interventionist, government-driven agenda that runs counter to the principles of free enterprise, individual freedom, and limited government that have made the United States the greatest power in the world, and the freest nation on earth.

This, combined with weak leadership both at home and abroad against the backdrop of tremendous economic uncertainty in an increasingly dangerous world, has contributed to a spectacular political collapse for a president once thought to be invincible. America at its core remains a deeply conservative nation, which cherishes its traditions and founding principles. President Obama is increasingly out of step with the American people, by advancing policies that undermine the United States as a global power, while undercutting America’s deep-seated love for freedom.

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"CELL PHONE MAY CAUSE LOW SPERM COUNT"

Caution! Cell phone may cause low sperm count

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If the findings from this research are true then men who are still in the business of baby making are in trouble. Scientists say that men who keep cell phones in trouser pocket in the talk mode while using a Bluetooth device may have problem in fathering a child.

Since the gadget became part of the everyday life of a majority of people in the world, a lot of studies had been carried out on the effects of the gadget on health. For instance, there had been research findings linking the radiation from it to brain cancer.

Though most of the researches were inconclusive, findings suggest that danger may be lurking around and as such we should be cautious in the way we use some of these modern gadgets.

”We found increased oxidative stress and a decrease in sperm motility,” said investigator, Dr. Ashok Agarwal, Director of Reproductive Research at Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, United States.

But the President, National Association of Telecoms Subscribers, Mr. Deolu Ogubanjo said there is no cause for alarm since the World Health Organisation had maintained that cell phone radiation had not been found injurious.

Agarwal and his colleagues conducted a prospective, controlled trial looking at the effects of Bluetooth technology on male fertility. Presenting the findings at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine annual meeting late 2009, Agarwal said keeping a cell phone in a trouser pocket while talking on a Bluetooth device may expose the human testes to high-power radiofrequency electromagnetic waves.

According to a report in Renal & Urology News, the researchers found an increased production of free radicals or reactive oxygen species in semen after exposing semen to RF-EMW emitted by a cell phone. The team realised, however, that it was difficult to estimate the accurate amount of radiofrequency electromagnetic waves exposure to human testes because testes are separated by scrotal layers from the cell phone.

They used a computer biomodeling program to calculate the distance in an in vitro experiment. The experiment was designed to mimic the RF-EMW exposure while a cell phone was kept in the trouser pocket (in the talk mode).

For their new investigation, the researchers examined the effect of RF-EMW exposure on sperm parameters at a specific distance and identified the type of free radicals produced by human sperm.

After investigation, the researchers found RF-EMW exposed semen samples showed significantly lower sperm motility and viability. The exposed samples also showed an 18 per cent increased production of extracellular seminal, RSOS, compared with the non-exposed semen samples. The investigators concluded that the significant decline in sperm quality in specimens exposed to RF-EMW may be mediated by increased ROS production.

They hypothesised that when a man talks on a Bluetooth and the cell phone is on talk mode in the pocket or attached to a belt, it might be dangerous and could cause infertility. Agarwal told Renal & Urology News, that ”we do feel further studies are needed. At this time I would say excessive use should be avoided. However, there is a need for new studies to prove our in vitro findings in an in vivo condition.”

The Cleveland Clinic had in the past four years done studies that showed the harmful effects of cell phone-generated electromagnetic radiation on semen quality. In recent years more than a dozen studies have been published by other groups supporting Cleveland Clinic‘s findings.

In a study published in the January 2008 issue of the Fertility and Sterility journal, Agarwal and his team discovered that sperm counts were inversely proportional to cell phone usage - that is men who used the phone for a few minutes a day had higher counts than men who used cell phones for hours.

Agarwal had done an earlier study in 2006, with 364 men, where he found sperm counts decreased from 86 million per milliliter to 66 million per multimeter for men who didn‘t use a cell phone to men who used phones more than four hours a day.

However, Ogubanjo said that since the World Health Organisation had maintained that cell phone radiation had not been found injurious, people should not panic.

He said, ”Until WHO says that cell phone radiation has adverse effect, people should not panic unnecessarily. These are researches that have not been approved by WHO, which is the recognised authority on health matters in the world.

”Besides, cell phone radiation is non-ionising and is not very dangerous. There are more dangerous ones like the radiation from the Power Holding Company of Nigeria masts which is ionising. These researchers are just crying foul over nothing as who has not approved their findings.

He, however, acknowledged that there was need for moderation in the use of cell phone. ”Of course, everything that is not moderated can have adverse effect. So, there is need for moderation. It is better we prevent the hazards from not just cell phone radiation, but every form of moderation,” he said.

All, indeed, does not seem to be well. So caution is the word. To prevent some of these hazards, Dr. Reeja Tharu, writing on www.medindia.com, recommends that we should avoid keeping cell phones in our trouser pockets. He says, ”The hip produces 80 per cent of the body‘s red blood cells and is especially vulnerable to EMR damage. Close proximity may also affect fertility.”

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Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) and Samson Siasia meeting ended in a stalemate Wednesday night as they could not finalize what the take home pay of the new manager the Super Eagles will be.

Daily Sunsport can report exclusively that after they agreed to offer Siasia a four-year deal that would culminate in his taking the Super Eagles to the Africa Nations Cup and World Cup, talks broke down when the national Under-23 team’s former coach tabled his financial demands to the executive committee of the NFF.

An impeccable source close to the NFF disclosed that Siasia asked to be paid N15 million monthly and One million USD as sign on fees aside an official quarters and an official car.
The NFF told him that his demand was too much and far out of what they could afford, explaining to him that the foreign coaches who were employed in the last three years were paid by GLO and PTF.

“We told him that that he had to reduce his demands drastically if he really wanted to coach the Super Eagles as the NFF cannot afford such huge amount. He refused to shift ground and we had to excuse him to leave since he was travelling with Heartland FC of Owerri for an African Champions league match in Egypt..

“In principle, we have agreed to give him the job but we shall continue the negotiation on his salary and sign on fee when he comes back from Egypt. I must also tell you that he impressed us at the discussion and we believe he would deliver, if he agrees to tour terms” our source said.

NFF Vice President, Obinna Ogba, told an Abuja radio station after the meeting last Wednesday that a three-man committee had been set up to meet with Siasia to finalize the negotiation with him when he returns and gets back to the board.
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The third batch of ex-militants will commence their training at the ex-militants camp in Obubra, Cross River State, Monday.

Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Co-ordinator of the Amnesty Committee, Mr. Timi Alaibe disclosed this at the campMonday at the passing out parade of the 2nd batch of ex-militants.

He also said the first and second batches would commence their skill acquisition training on August 20 at their the designated centres.

According to him, “in the next batch, 1,000 exmilitants would be admitted into camp for the orientation and rehabilitation course.”

He also disclosed that the militants who were not registered for this programme and who did not meet the Federal Government’s deadlineon the renunciation of militantcy would have to wait, adding, however,that they were being documented and undergoing verification.

Oil firms to invest $500m on N-Delta youths

In line with the Federal Government local content policy, the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, NCDMB, yesterdaysaid operators of the oil and gas industry are to spend over $500million annually in the next five years for the training of youths inengineering design projects.

The Board also disclosed that the industry was expected to spend another $800bn annually on fabrication and integration as well asempowerment of the youths with a view to curbing crime rates in thecountry particularly in the Niger Delta, the hub of the nation oil andgas sector.

General Manager, Capacity Building, NCDMB, Engr. Taiwo Elegba stated this in Yenagoa during a workshop for media practitioners to mark thefirst 100 days of the Board.

According to him, the board and the stakeholders in the oil and gas sectors are expected to start reaping high dividends of the NigerianContent Act recently passed into law by the Federal Government.

Engr. Elegba who reiterated the determination of the board to improve oil and gas activities in the country so as to attractinvestors to the sector added that it was the aspiration of NCDMB toincrease the country’s reserve to 40 billion.

In his remarks, the Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), Engr. Ernest Nwapa laudedPresident Goodluck Jonathan for signing the Nigerian Content Actshortly after its passage by the National Assembly, describing it as ademonstration of the commitment of the administration to squarelyaddress the longstanding issues of lack of local capacity and the nearabsence of meaningful indigenous participation in the oil and gasindustry.

“The issue of Nigerian content is no longer news because we have sufficient domain knowledge to guide us through a successfulimplementation of the law which was developed with high level ofindustry participation in the legislative process.

“This law is an opportunity to resurge our national economic development, create employment, develop local industrial andtechnological capacity growth, douse the tensions in the Niger Delta byintegrating the inhabitants of the oil producing communities into themainstream of industry activities,” he said.

Engr.Nwapa said most expatriates working in Nigeria would be disposed to comply with provisions of the law because their homecountries require them to do so and had done such in other jurisdictionthey operate in,” adding, “a major gap is the continued absence ofcommitment and resolve on the part of Nigerians in key positions ofauthority within the industry to insist that we collectively andconsistently abide by the provisions of this law and make it count inthe way other nationals drive their local content laws.”

He, however added, “if we don’t insist the foreigners won’t help us with compliance.”

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AS the killing spree continues between the two factions of the National Union of Road Transport Workers Union, NURTW, Oyo State Chapter, a loyalist of the reinstated Chairman of the union, Alhaji Lateef Akinsola, aka Tokyo, has allegedly been felled by police bullets when he could not give details of the whereabouts of the incumbent Chairman.

According to information gathered, Olasunkanmi was still full of life until he was allegedly accosted by one of the policemen on the entourage of the dismissed chairman, Alhaji Lateef Salako, to give information that would lead them to the chairman of the union.

But, when he was trying to be reluctant in providing answers to the questions put to him, the policeman was said to had got angry and shot him at close range yesterday.

His death triggered protest by some members loyal to the Chairman, Alhaji Akinsola, as they reportedly carried the remains of the deceased to their headquarters, Olomi, Ibadan.

Vanguard gathered that a supporter of the ex-chairman, 10 policemen, and others were in an unmarked jeep and two other buses when the attack happened.

Though, they immediately fled the scene when the man was killed, a source disclosed that another patrol vehicle of Police accosted the fleeing members of the union to get the gist of what transpired. They were reportedly arrested and moved to a police station at Idi-Aro.

The reinstated chairman told newsmen that the attack was meant to trigger another bloodshed but he would not allow any of his supporters to be involved in any reprisal attack.

He then appealed to well-meaning Nigerians to call the Oyo State Government to order to hands-off from the affairs of the union, adding that he would ensure that his own side maintained law and order.
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Ahead of the 2011 elections, Internal Affairs Minister, Capt. EmmanuelIhenacho (rtd) has said kidnapping and hostage taking, may become thepreferred tactic of those he described as political terroristism.

He said “hostage taking and political kidnapping, a tool used by fundamentalist groups, has degenerated into means of currying financialincentives and achieving political ambitions.”

Ihenacho gave the warning just as Police Affairs Minister, Adamu Maina Waziri tried to absolve politicians from the menace calledkidnapping, insisting that the code of conduct of politicians did notencourage kidnapping as a tool to achieving power, adding thatkidnapping is criminality ‘simplicita’.

Inspector-General of Police, Ogbonna Onovo, on his part, said there was need for more stiffer penalty for kidnappers, explaining that the10-year imprisonment punishment stipulated for such offenders ascontained in Section 315 of the Criminal Code was not enough deterrent.

Both ministers and the Inspector General of Police, spoke at a one-day workshop on ‘Kidnapping as a threat to national security’organised by the Alumni Association of the National Institute of Policyand Strategic Studies, Kuru, Jos, in Abuja.

Said Ihenacho: “In Nigeria, kidnapping started as a major political weapon of militias in the Niger Delta region. However, in recent years,this phenomenon has also spread to other parts of the nation, asunemployed youths and young university graduates have adopted thismethod for improving their financial status. Kidnapper now carryheavier weapons than the security agencies, which amplifies that it hasbecome a very formidable force that government must contend with.”

Biometric security technology

The minister stated, however that “due to the increase in kidnapping in recent times, the Federal Government and other stakeholders havebegun to embrace biometric security technology. It will check the waveof abduction in the country, a development which has furtherexacerbated the already precarious security situation in the country.”

National interests are being threatened

To Adamu Waziri, “It is in our national interest to deliberate on the problem of kidnapping because our national interests are beingthreatened by kidnapping. For many months, banks in Aba were closedbecause the economy was hijacked. If this is allowed to continue, ourmarch to democracy will be stalled.

“We also have to collectively identify, isolate and eliminate the underlying causes of kidnapping. We need to assure our citizenry thatif we cannot completely eliminate, we can reduce it.”

10-yr imprisonment inadequate

Emphasizing on the offence of kidnapping and why it is prevalent,Onovo said, while 10 years imprisonment was inadequate, there was needfor an enhanced judiciary process like the setting up of special courtsto fast track the process of getting kidnappers tried and punished.
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I think He should get choose one of Jonathans rides emmm i mean Airplanes the President has 3 new ones !

The House of Representatives today decried the embarrassment meted out to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Honourable Dimeji Bankole by the British Airways at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos saying it amounts to a national security risk.

It has also called on President Goodluck Jonathan to order relevant security agencies in the country to investigate the matter as it was a breach on the sovereignty of Nigeria since the Speaker is exempted from security search.

It will be recalled that last Friday night after all security checks on the Speaker Bankole’s aide that accompanied him, the BA’s local officials had demanded that the hand luggage of the Speaker must be searched against the rules of British Government and British Aviation Authority (BAA). As a result, Bankole disembarked from the flight and decided to cancel the trip.

Chairman of the House committee on media and public affairs, Hon. Eseme Eyiboh who made the position of the House on the matter yesterday decried the manner the Speaker who is number four in the nation’s political power perking order was humiliated by private security operatives of the British Airways.

"The security, demanded, sought and insisted on searching the Speaker against the privilege the Speaker and select list of Very Important Personalities (VIP’s) enjoyed whenever they are travelling to the United Kingdom," he said.

He said that Schedule 6 of the British Home Office which lists Persons Exempted from Search among Commonwealth Countries listed Speakers of member countries as number 10.

"The privileged and the security of the Speaker has been breached, undermined and injured, not as a person, but as the institution of the Nigerian House of Representatives.

We are calling on the President to investigate this incident, as a way of preserving our national sovereignty and security. A private security hired by a foreign Airways has not right and powers to subject the institution of the House of Representatives to such disrespect", he said.

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In what appears to be a clear endorsement of the yet to be declared intention of Goodluck Jonathan to contest next year’s election, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) yesterday said the contest for the party’s 2011 presidential nomination is open to all aspirants.

The chairman of the party, Okwesilieze Nwodo, who disclosed the party’s position after its National Executive Committee meeting on Thursday, however, cautioned that the party has not completely abandoned its zoning arrangement.

Asked if the party had done away with zoning, he said, “When former President Olusegun Obasanjo emerged, he chose a Northern Muslim, Atiku Abubakar, as his

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vice president. When the (former party) chairman resigned, he was replaced by another chairman from the South Eastern zone. Our Senate President, Speaker, Deputy Senate President and Deputy Speaker are from different zones of the country. How then can PDP be said to have abandoned zoning or rotation?” Mr Nwodo pointed out that the party had not always adhered to the arrangement in the past. He said it was only rigid about rotating power to the southern part of the country in 1998 because of the annulment of the June 12, 1993, presidential election.

But in 2003 and 2007, the contest was thrown open to all aspirants, irrespective of their zone.

“If our late president were alive today, we wouldn’t be contesting his right to run for a second term under our national constitution. It was his entitlement,” he said. “This will, of course, not exclude any other aspirant from any part of the country from contesting the presidential primary, as it has become the custom of our party.”

Later, Solomon Lar, the founding chairman of the party, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that Mr Jonathan will be serving out the terms of the Yar’Adua/Jonathan joint mandate.

According to reports, a proposal on the zoning arrangement was presented by Mr Nwodo and it was unanimously adopted. The chairman had proposed that Mr Jonathan, currently serving out the joint mandate of the Yar’Adua/Jonathan ticket, had the right to run for a second term under the party’s national constitution.

“In the zoning formula, we did not envisage that a serving president will die in office. Today, Jonathan, by the dictates of the party constitution, is serving out the term of the mandate given by the people of our dear country. That being the case, the party believes rightly that Jonathan, who is part and parcel of the mandate, has a right to contest the remainder of their joint ticket in 2011,” he said. Ibrahim Shema, the governor of Katsina State, had moved a motion for the adoption of the continuity of the mandate and was seconded by a member of the PDP Board of Trustee, Tony Anenih.

A source, who asked to remain anonymous, told NAN that the motion did not receive any opposition, adding that the party granted a waiver to people from Bauchi, Borno, Yobe, Abia and Niger States, who intend to return to its fold.

Dangerous primaries ahead

In a reference to supporters of the zoning arrangement, Mr Nwodo noted that “reforms are sometimes hard to accept, especially when we are called upon to abandon old ways of doing things. In preaching these reforms, we may have hurt the sensibility of some of our members. We, thereby, present our unreserved apology. But we, however, continue to appeal that these reforms be accepted by all our party members.” In his address, Mr Jonathan pleaded with members of the party to exercise decorum in the months ahead, as the party prepares to conduct its primaries.

“Wherever two people stay, they must disagree. Husband and wife must disagree. Siblings belonging to the same parents must disagree, and as a party, we must disagree, but what makes us strong is that we have the ability to resolve our differences.” He also appealed to members to hold dialogues instead of switching parties.

“When you have crisis, the faction that is disgruntled will first of all give their votes to another person. Even though they will regret later, but in anger they will dash their votes out. But by God’s grace, we will be resolving our crisis internally. We will not argue it in the public.”

Other party matters

Mr Nwodo announced that sections of the party constitution, especially those that affect delegates in the party’s primaries and convention, will be amended in line with the provisions of the recently-passed 2010 electoral Act.

Though the resolutions of the NEC meeting will be made public today, sources at the meeting said the online registration of members was suspended in the interim.

The source, who declined to be named, also said that the council accepted the return of the Abia State governor, Theodore Orji, to the party. However, he only narrowly got its waiver to contest in 2011 under the party platform.

Most of the party’s governors spoke vehemently against the waiver, demanding that he goes back to his ward and register, as stipulated by the party’s constitution. It took the intervention of President Jonathan to sway the council.


Roll call at PDP NEC Meeting

President Goodluck Jonathan

Vice President Mohammed Namadi Sambo

Senate President David Mark

Speaker Dimeji Bankole

Dr. Alex Ekwueme

Alhaji Ibrahim Mantu

Chief Barnabas Gemade

Dr. Ahmadu Ali,

Prince Vincent Eze Ogbulafor

Dr. Samuel Ogbemudia

Chief Tony Anenih.

Chief Ebenezer Babatope

Professor Jerry Gana

Adamu Hassan,

Senator Walid Jibrin,

Senator Stella Omu,

MajGen Mohammadu Magoro (Rtd),

Sen. Abubakar Sodangi

Shuaibu Oyedokun,

Nana Aisha Kadiri

Yekini Adeojo

Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu,

Kassim Ibrahim Imam

Gov Emmanuel Uduaghan

Gov Babangida Aliyu,

GovChristopher Alao-Akala,

Gov Isa Yuguda

Gov Godswill Akpabio,

Gov Rotimi Amaechi,

Gov Liyel Imoke,

Gov Sullivan Chime.

Gov Bukola Saraki

Gov Saidu Dakingari

Gov Ibrahim Shema

Gov Danjuma Goje

Gov Segun Oni,

Gov Timipre Sylva,

Gov Olagunsoye Oyinlola,

Gov Aliyu Shinkafi,

Gov Gbenga Daniel,

Gov Martin Elechi.

Gov Sule Lamido,

Gov Akwe Doma,

Gov Murtala Nyako,

Dep Gov Ramallan Yero

Dep Gov Paullen Tallen

Hajia Hauwa Kida

Mrs Christy Silas,

Hajia Rabi Murktar Mohammed

Senator Nicholas Ugbane,

Senator Osita Izunaso,

Senator Lee Maeba,

Garba Matazu,

Farouk Lawal,

Ataii Idoko


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Asa’s new BMW Z4!

With a BMW Z4 at her beck and call, Asa’s car is making heads turn wherever she goes too.

The Z4, is a rear-wheel drive sports car produced by BMW to replace the Z3.

The soul singer’s Z4 coupe is a sleek, powerful gadget running with two inline-6 engines (with twin turbochargers, high-precision injection and aluminium crankcase, 6-speed manual gearbox, and optional navigation system).

Sources say Asa favours BMW, insisting they have spotted her in an X3 a number of times. .
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Children of Generation Y..... Learn the genesis

The Silent Generation are people born before 1946.

The Baby Boomers are people born between 1946 and 1959.

Generation X are people born between 1960 and 1989.

Generation Y are people born between 1990 and now.

Why do we call the last one generation Y?
I did not know, but a cartoonist explains it eloquently
below...Learned something new today










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