Friday, 5 October 2012

EFCC arraigns 13 new marketers over N4.6bn subsidy fraud


EFCC arraigns 13 new marketers over N4.6bn subsidy fraud
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on Friday arraigned 13 new oil marketers at a Lagos High Court, Ikeja for fuel subsidy fraud in the sum of N4.6 billion.
The EFCC alleged that they obtained the money by false pretence and using fake documents.
Ten of the oil marketers, made up of six persons and four companies, were arraigned before Justice Habeeb Abiru while the remaining three, made up of two individuals and one company, were arraigned before Justice Lateefa Okunnnu.
The six indicted oil marketers and their four companies were arraigned before Justice Habeeb Abiru on an eight- count charge.
The charges bordered on “conspiracy to obtain by false pretence, obtaining by false pretence, conspiracy to forge documents and uttering false documents.”
The EFCC alleged that the marketers and their companies had conspired to and also obtain huge sums of money from the Federal Government of Nigeria, purpoting the sums to be payments for subsidy under the Petrol Support Fund for the purported importation of premium motor spirit from Europe to Nigeria.
Those arraigned before Justice Abiru were Anosyke Group of Companies Ltd; Ifeanyi Anosike; Dell Energy Ltd; Emeka Chukwu; Ngozi Ekeoma; Downstream Energy Sources Ltd; Alhaji Adamu Aliyu Maula; Rocky Energy Ltd; George Ogbonna and one Emmanuel.
According to the charge sheets, Anosyke Group of Companies, Ifeanyi Anosike, Dell Energy Limited, Emeka Chukwu and Ngozi Ekeoma were arraigned on an eight count charge bordering on conspiracy to obtain by false pretence, forgery and uttering false documents to the tune of N1,537,278,880.82, being payments fraudulently received from the Petroleum Support Fund for purported supply of 15, 000 metric tonnes of premium motor spirit.
On the other hand, the commission arraigned Downstream Energy Sources Limited, Alhaji Adamu Aliyu Maula, Rocky Energy Limited, George Ogbonna and Emmanuel Morah on an eight count charge also bordering on conspiracy to obtain property by false pretence, conspiracy to forge documents, forgery and uttering false documents to the tune of N789,648,329.25, being payments fraudulently received from the Petroleum Support Fund for a purported supply of 14,273,0227 litres of premium motor spirit.
The EFCC claimed that all the defendants at various times forged different bills of laden for premium motor spirit not supplied all in a bid to claim the Federal Government’s subsidy on fuel.
The 10 accused persons pleaded not guilty to the charges and their counsel applied for a date for hearing of bail application for them.
They also prayed the court to order that the defendants be remanded in EFCC custody as against prison custody.
Justice Abiru granted the request of the defendants as he ordered that they be remanded in EFCC custody.
He thereafter adjourned the matter till October 19, 2012 for hearing of their bail applications.
Eight oil companies and marketers were initially billed to appear before justice Lateefa Okunnu on Friday but the EFCC was only able to arraign only three marketers.
The three marketers arraigned before Justice Okunnu were made up of a company, ASB Investment Limited, and two persons, Aro Samuel Bamidele and Abiodun Kayode Bankole.
The three defendants and others yet to face trial were arraigned on an 18-count charge bordering on uttering, obtaining and falsifying documents to the tune of N2,326,927,210.07.
The three defendants who took their pleas before Justice Okunnu pleaded not guilty and the court fixed bail hearing for October 9, 2012 with an order that the defendants be remanded in EFCC custody.
Among the five persons and companies that were absent in court on Friday were Abdulahi Alao, the son of Aare Musulumi of Yorubaland, Alhaji Arisekola Alao.
Abdullahi Alao and his company, Axenergy Nigeria Limited, will be appearing for the third time for offences bordering on fuel subsidy fraud since the fuel subsidy trials commenced.
In the current charge, Abdullahi was again alleged to have obtained under false pretence as well as forged bills of laden and other relevant importation documents to perpetrate fraud.
Trial in the matter involving Abdullahi Alao and four others will commence on November 22, 2012 before Justice Okunnu.

The Nation

2013 budget: Jonathan, lawmakers’ row deepens


2013 budget: Jonathan, lawmakers’ row deepens
The Federal Government and the two chambers of the National Assembly are spoiling for a long drawn battle over the yet-to-be unveiled 2013 budget.
The major points of disagreement are the benchmark for the budget which the House of Representatives unilaterally increased from $75 to $82, the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) for 2013-2015 and the Fiscal Strategy Paper (FSP).
President Goodluck Jonathan was scheduled to present the budget proposals to a joint session of the legislature last Thursday but had to shift it at the instance of the Reps who said they needed more time to study MTEF and the FSP with a view to understanding the projections and assumptions on which the budget was based.
The House Joint Committee on Finance, Legislative Budget and Research, National Planning and Economic Development and Loans, Aids and Debt, in a report obtained by The Nation, rubbished almost all the assumptions on the MTEF and FSP submitted to the House by the Presidency.
The House said it was acting in line with Section 11 of the Fiscal Responsibility Act, 2007 which requires the Federal Government to prepare and lay before the National Assembly for consideration and approval, a medium-term Expenditure framework for the next three years (2013 -2015 in this case).
The position of the House has not gone down well with the Presidency and officials of the Federal Ministry of Finance who are angry that all the efforts they put into preparing the MTEF, FSP and the budget proposals were rubbished by the Reps.
It was gathered yesterday that the Senate may align with the House of Representatives on the issues at stake.
The senators say believe that under the law, the National Assembly is empowered to approve the MTEF and FSP as parameters for formulating the budget,whereas the budget was prepared before the MTEF and FSP were sent to them and the Reps.
Central Bank Governor, Mallam Sanusi Lamido, appearing before the House of Representatives on Wednesday, described the decision of the Reps to increase the benchmark as wrong while officials of the Ministry of Finance say it is a negation of the principle of good planning.
Chairman of the House Joint Committee on Finance, Legislative Budget and Research, Alhaji Abdumumini Jibrin, faulted Sanusi’s submission.
He said: “Why do we have a problem with increasing the benchmark? This will reduce deficit and the money generated will be tied to the provision of services and projects that we are currently borrowing to address.”
The joint committee, in justifying the increase of the benchmark said it “will lead to an increase in oil and gas revenue from N7,250.516 billion to N7, 963.436 billion. The $7 increase in the benchmark will increase Federal Government’s share of revenue from N3,561.02 billion to N4,137.31 billion.
“The revenue target of the Nigeria Customs Service should be increased from N914.366 billion to N1,018.310 trillion, while the target for FIRS and Federal Government of Nigeria Independent Revenue (FGNIR) could be retained as proposed in the document. This increase will make total non-oil revenue to rise from N3,298.46 billion to N3,523.82 billion.
However, a high ranking official in the Ministry of Finance told The Nation that the benchmark adopted by the Reps is overly optimistic. “It’s just not good for the country,” he said, adding: “Under IBB, there was a period when the price of oil crashed to $8 per barrel. And for two years during the reign of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, the price of oil crashed below the projected benchmark and it was the savings during Obasanjo’s time that the Yar’Adua administration fell back on. The $85 benchmark is against the principle of good planning.”
Sources said yesterday that the Presidency would stick to its MTEF assumptions such as : oil production, 2.52 million barrels per day; crude oil benchmark, $75 per barrel and exchange rate, N160/$1.
Presidency officials are reading ulterior motive into the action of the federal legislators.
The senators and reps, a source alleged, appear to have a “hidden agenda to frustrate the presentation of the 2013 budget.”
While the two chambers of the National Assembly have tentatively agreed to host the President on Thursday next week for budget presentation, there are speculations that the Presidency is already considering delegating the Special Adviser on National Assembly Matters, Senator Joy Emodi to lay the budget before the National Assembly if the delay continues.
“The ball is now in the court of the National Assembly. Nobody will blame President Jonathan if the budget is not presented early enough for the consideration of the National Assembly,” said the source.
“The President has signalled his preparedness to present the budget but those who are to receive the document thought otherwise.
“Who knows what the lawmakers would come up with after looking at the MTEF?
“The MTEF may be tinkered in such a way that would make nonsense of the entire document.
“If that happens, it will mean the Ministry of Finance and other relevant agencies going back to the drawing table to rework the budget.”
The Presidency and the National Assembly have always had confrontation over attempts by the legislators to tamper with the benchmark adopted by the executive and the infusion of constituency related projects by the legislative arm.
The Reps are currently on a verification tour of capital projects across the country slated for execution under the 2012 budget.
The tour, according to them, will guide the House in prioritising budgetary allocation in the 2013 appropriation.
The Nation learnt that the Reps are generally disappointed at what they have seen of the projects. Their view is that the level of implementation is low.
For instance, the House committee on Airforce, headed by Hon. Kenneth Edet Archibong discovered that of the N5 billion appropriated for the Air Force in the 2012 budget, only N1.8 billion has so far been released and cash-backed as at the third quarter of the year.
The underfunding, he insists, is responsible for the low level of the implementation of the capital projects of the Airforce.
The House committee of Environment, headed by Hon. Uche Lillian Ekwunife, believes the current flooding in many parts of the country was caused partly by underfunding of the ministry.
A lawmaker, who does not want to be named revealed to The Nation that the situation is dire. “And now that we are in the last quarter, the general opinion is that not much can be achieved.”
The committee chairmen have been briefing Speaker Aminu Tambuwal on their findings.

The Nation

North, Jonathan should forget 2015 Presidency

North, Jonathan should forget 2015 Presidency


By CLEM AGUIYI

Truth is hate for those that hate the truth – Anonymous
Let me begin by admitting that both the North and President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan (GEJ), like the South East and South West, have the constitutional right to contest for the seat of presidency in 2015. The temptation to contest weigh more on the side of Jonathan, given the lure and pressure of his incumbency position and also on the North for her drum beats of war and unwavering insistence that 2003, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2015 were and is her turn, but then 2015 is neither for the North nor for Jonathan and it does not matter how much both want to be comforted with lies.
The North had consistently claimed that GEJ violated the PDP zoning arrangement in 2010 and 2011. But the truth is the North’s position in 2010 when former President Yar’Adua was incapacitated and after he died in office were all based on power mongering and political blackmail as whatever arrangement that was in place in PDP never took into consideration the death in office of a sitting president. If late President Umar Musa Yar’Adua were to be alive in 2010, he would have completed his four-year term and may have renegotiated himself back to power like former President Obasanjo did in 2003.
President Obasanjo’s second term in office was not predicated on any zoning arrangement. The like of Chief James Ibori and Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu told him point blank to accept the Nelson Mandela option. His deputy Atiku Abubakar who had majority of the governors on his side indicated interest to contest against him. He (Atiku) would have won if he had contested in 2003 but he made his judgment, which from hindsight was a wrong judgment. The popular story was that Obasanjo knelt down for Atiku and the recalcitrant governors to plead for a second term opportunity.
This scenario wouldn’t have happened if there were sacred and sacrosanct zoning agreements in place at that point.  Not very sure that the bargain with Atiku and the governors were real, Obasanjo played the ethnic card, which enabled him secure the support of the then South West governors of Alliance for Democracy (AD), who, under a blind arrangement, decided not to field a presidential candidate for the election but to vote for Obasanjo.
The rest is now history. Contrary to the northern position, President Jonathan did not violate the PDP zoning arrangement. In 2010, the constitution allowed him to succeed Yar’Adua and the will of the people propelled him to a massive victory in 2011, and nobody could have stopped him. Zoning was already dead. Obasanjo killed zoning in 2003 with the cooperation of Atiku and co. That was it. Now with three years in the kitty as vice president and five years of interrupted presidency I have every strong indication that President Jonathan will go by 2015.
He will not run for re-election, as anything to the contrary will amount to him stretching his good luck too far and at the expense of a peaceful Nigeria.  He should learn a lesson or two from Lyndon Baines Johnson, the 36th President of the United States of America.  Faced with similar circumstance in 1968, President Johnson, who took office after the assassination of President JF Kennedy on November 22 1963, took a patriotic and honorable decision not to run for a second term, so as to avoid a constitutional crisis of being sworn in as president for a third time and to help America find peace from the Vietnamese war.
Recall that Johnson as Vice President and then President served out approximately one year of Kennedy’s presidency, just like Jonathan as Vice President and then President served out the remaining of Yar’Adua’s one year. In 1964, Johnson won the presidency with 61 percent of the vote and had the widest popular margin in American history – more than 15, 000, 000 votes, just like Jonathan won in 2011 with the widest popular margin in Nigeria’s political history.
Jonathan is currently faced precisely with similar political and constitutional situation, like Lyndon Johnson and I will urge him to emulate Johnson and retire by 2015 and become a great statesman. His decision not to run will help Nigeria’s social recovery from violence that has characterised his administration. Like Johnson, he should, on retirement, devote his full effort unimpeded by politics to the quest for peace.
The North should also forget the presidency in 2015 because it had effectively held on to power for 40 or more years of Nigerian 52 years with no good account of it neither to its people nor to the rest of Nigeria and cannot, in good conscience, claim it has been cheated or politically marginalised in comparable to the South East. Nigeria is structured on six geopolitical zone of North West, North East, North Central, South East, South South and South West. All of the regions already took turns to produce the president, except for the South East.
In the face of the above, the North, in the interest of justice, must chew up her power greed and born to rule mentality and allow the South East to take a fair turn in producing a Nigerian president for a single term of four years. The North will lose nothing under this arrangement. A South easterner, as president, will, in the usual characteristic of the Igbo, cause good governance, spread prosperity and cause development across the country, which is what the far North, in particular, needs now, not power, at all cost.
For more than 40 years since after the civil war, in which the South easterners lost over one million people, many lies had been told against the Igbo in particular. They are branded as warmongers, secessionists and rebels, just to put them down and denied of their rights untrammeled. Despite being targeted with state sponsored hostilities and organised resentment the Igbo still believe in a prosperous indivisible Nigeria, where every man is as good as the other. Whatever is our fault, I believe individually and collectively Igbo people have paid their dues and have given enough of our blood for the unity of this country.
The North, in particular, have hunted, slaughtered and massacred the Igbo people, both in war and peacetime with ferocious lust. They have extracted enough of their pound of flesh and must not continue to assault her with injustice while the rest of Nigeria, particularly the South-West, pretend to remain neutral. Forty years is long enough time for the North to bring a closure to the civil war, a closure to the pains, killings, sufferings and unjustified resentment of South Easterners.
By holding down the Igbo race, stopping her growth, resisting her participation in political leadership due to unfounded fear and conspiracy the North is unwittingly impeding on her own survival and Nigeria’s progress for no nation achieves greatness when it refuses to reckon with the indomitable spirit, enterprise and resilience of one of her largest population. 2015 is therefore, neither for the North nor for Jonathan.
However, in the event that the North and Jonathan insists on running, due to some tall ego and unbridled ambition, the South West must rise up to intervene on the side of justice and to remind the North, in particular, that the rest of Nigeria is not a feudal colony. The South West holds the key to Igbo presidency and I expect her to un-luck it now to put an end to the reign of the oppressor. Finally, for the Igbo nation to gain the trust, confidence and support of the highly sophisticated South West political elite, it must brace up for the leadership challenge by producing a viable candidate that will command the confidence of the people, a leader with wisdom, sagacity, the time, energy and resources required to manage this delicate process.
Such a leader must be highly qualified and must have enough political experience and not just business experience. He must have the outside reach to the West, to the North to some extent and to the international communities. He must, by his own preparation, be qualified to accomplish desirable social objectives within a short time. He must be someone who understands the complexity of Nigeria and must be a leader who is prepared to work under pressure and in comparable produce good governance for the common good of all Nigerians. He must be someone prepared for leadership not a pretender.
The Sun

Bakassi Appeal: Top govt officials move to defy Jonathan

By Soni Daniel, Assistant Editor & Ikechukwu Nnochiri, Abuja
The spontaneous excitement that trailed the announcement of the formation of a team by President Goodluck Jonathan to work towards the review of the International Court of Justice  ruling on the Bakassi peninsula is being cut short following alleged frantic attempt by a top government functionary to stall the work of the committee.
Saturday Vanguard gathered that since the formation of the committee to review the ICJ’s ruling some top government functionaries opposed the  review have refused to attend any meeting where moves to ask the ICJ to review the ruling would be concretised
Meantime, Bakassi indigenes opposed to Green Tree Agreement have launched a court process to outlaw the agreement.
Bakassi protesters Photo by Johnbosco Agbakwuru
President Jonathan had raised the eight-man committee after a marathon meeting with stakeholders at the Presidential Villa on Wednesday night  and asked  it  to work assiduously towards filing a case for the review of the ICJ ruling, which ceded oil-rich Bakassi to Cameroon ten years ago.
The committee comprised eight members drawn from the National Assembly and relevant Ministries, Departments and Agencies, MDAs, whose heads were also at the meeting where the decision to form the committee was reached.
Saturday Vanguard learnt that based on the directive of the President, members of the team quickly retired to their respective offices to work out modalities for the maiden meeting of the team, headed by a top government official, which was slated for 9pm on Thursday.
The members, it was gathered, were however rudely shocked when they arrived the minister’s office for the proposed meeting only to be told that the meeting would no longer hold as planned.
They smelt a rat but could not do anything.
Some  of the members who made spirited efforts to reach the minister to get an explanation on why the meeting was surreptitiously put off, could not reach him. They returned home frustrated at the end of the day.
The implication of the disappointment is that with only four days to the end of the deadline for Nigeria to file a review of the judgment, nothing has been done to that effect.
Furious and deeply upset by the minister’s action, the frustrated members retired to their respective destinations, wondering what would become   the fate of Bakassi indigenes after next Tuesday, October 9, 2012.
The top government functionary is said to have argued that as far as he was concerned Nigeria would not review the ICJ ruling so as not to incur the sanctions of the United Nations.
The minister is said to be working in concert with a former justice minister, who played an active role when Nigeria lost the Bakassi case to Cameroon, to ensure that Nigeria does not file any appeal as ordered by the President.
It was gathered that the two men were unhappy with the position adopted by those who argued in favour of the appeal of the judgment.
The influential cabinet member is said to have castigated the protagonists of appeal, saying that they confused Jonathan with sentiments rather than bring up concrete evidence to warrant appeal at the ICJ.
Contrary to the clear directive by the President that the team should work towards the review of the judgment before the October 9 deadline, the minister is reported to have turned round to claim that Nigeria would only be compiling the evidence of human rights abuses committed by Cameroon against Bakassi natives.
He reportedly declared that as far as he was concerned Bakassi had been ceded to Cameroon and that the country could only ask the ICJ to compel the latter to respect the tenets of the world court by protecting Nigerians living in the peninsula.
According to him, Nigerian was not bound by any deadline to file action against human right abuses by Cameroon, since the ICJ did not specify any timeline to do so.
It was learnt last night that the minister had taken the position not to allow Nigeria to seek a review of the case because he wanted to appease the United Nations so as to be given a juicy appointment at The Hague after leaving Jonathan’s cabinet.
But the matter is said to have shocked Presidential officials, who are worried over the attempt by the minister to change the directive of the President for unknown reasons.
Senate Leader, Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba, told Saturday Vanguard he was shocked over the latest development over the Bakassi issue.
Ndoma-Egba, who was present when the Presidential directive was given on Thursday, said: “My understanding is that Mr. President ordered for a review.”
“Why will there not be a review after the resolution of the National Assembly and the directive of Mr. President at a meeting with major stakeholders last Thursday?” he asked angrily.
Senate President David Mark for instance, is said to have defiantly argued that  it was mandatory for the Federal Government to call for the review of the ICJ ruling since the National Assembly had already passed a resolution asking the government to do so.
Mark said that the issue at stake was not whether Nigeria would win the case but taking the first step to ask for  a review of the judgment based on new evidence and in accordance with the resolution of the National Assembly.
The Senate President pointed out that Nigeria could decide to   ask for review irrespective of the outcome or be prepared for the consequence of not doing anything
A member of the House of Representatives from Cross River State, who was at the meeting with President Jonathan, Amb Nkoyo Toyo, in a statement to Saturday Vanguard last night, expressed utter disappointment with the sudden volta face by a certain minister over a clear directive issued by the President on the matter.
Toyo noted, “After a meeting  Mr. President had  with the leadership of the National Assembly, a committee was set up for the purpose of reviewing the ICJ judgement. It could not have been otherwise.
“Today, we read conflicting stories about the Committee’s Terms of Reference. This is worrisome as it either means that the entire leadership of the country is in confusion or someone is playing games or the entire consultation was a grand strategy to mislead the country.
“The summary of the outing as was captured by the Senate president is instructive. We do nothing, we prepare for war (I imagine if nothing is done and people decide to seek self determination) or we do something and that something is to seek review on the basis of resolutions reached by both houses of the National Assembly.
“Failure to register our interest to review will leave the country exposed, the multiple issues of insecurity, threat and frustration by the militants now moving in the direction of Bakassi will only grow. The growing criminality and need to police the area will cost the country even more than an action at The Hague.
“The neglect and human right abuses are going on as though we are dealing with a people who belong to nowhere. This is a crime against humanity and those responsible cannot pretend that they do not know the consequences of their action against its citizens.
“We cannot afford to do nothing as  if that is our    new foreign policy strategy. Mr. President must clarify his position on the matter as too many aspects of the Bakassi story remain unaddressed,” she stated.
Other aggrieved members of the National Assembly from Cross River State, who got to know of the minister’s antic yesterday, said they were meeting to come up with a common position against those trying to truncate the federal government’s move to get the Bakassi matter reviewed in the interest of Nigerians and posterity.
Another lawmaker from the state told Saturday Vanguard that it was wrong for the government functionary to stand on the way of the people for reasons yet to be made known.
“We are going back to see Mr. President on the matter because time is not on our side and we really want him to call this minister to order because he may set the country ablaze because of his unbecoming actions.
“What this man is trying to do is not only very provocative but is also a serious setback to this country and its people,” the lawmaker said.
The politician called on President Jonathan to take action against the said functionary if the order to review the judgment was not carried out successfully.
Green Tree Agreement: Bakassi indigenes drag FG to court
 Embattled indigenes of Bakassi in Cross River State,  on their part  yesterday  dragged the Federal Government before a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja with a view to securing an order quashing the Green Tree Agreement that Nigeria entered with Cameroon in 2006.The suit was endorsed by nine executives of Free Bakassi Association, Prince Imoh Ukpa Imoh, Mr Godwin Ukpong, Mr Chritian A. Umoh, Mr Anthony Achibong Ukong, Mr Kingsley Edu, Mr Etim Ekpeyong Ndong, Mr Offiong Anying Ekpeyong, Bassey Okon Osua and Bassey Ikoedem Antiga.
In a motion ex-parte that was moved in court yesterday by their counsel, Mr Festus A. Ogwuche, the applicants, sought leave for an order of mandamus that would compel the Federal Government to by any means available to it, repossess, occupy and take full legal and administrative control of the Bakassi Peninsula.
The motion was filed
pursuant to section 1 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights(Enforcement and Ratification Act Cap 10, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 1990, as well as Order 34 Rules 1(a), 3(1) and (2) of the Federal High Court Civil Procedure Rules, 2007.
Contending that the controversial judgment of the International Court of Justice, ICJ, which in 2002, ceded the oil- territory to the Republic of Cameroon, amounted to a nullity being contrary to the fundamental principle upon which the court was established, the applicants, adduced 95-legal grounds why Nigeria should forthwith appeal the verdict.
Besides, they sought leave for an order of mandamus, compelling the Federal Government, President Goodluck Jonathan and the Attorney General of the Federation, who were all joined as respondents in the suit, to “unilaterally resile from, withdraw, rescind, repudiate and/or revoke Nigeria’s obligations under the Green Tree Agreement entered into between Nigeria and Cameroon in Green Tree, New York, USA on the 12th day of June, 2006, for its being invalid and in breach of Articles 1, 2, 20, 21, 22 and 24 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights, Article 1 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Article 1(2) of the UN Charter, and the UN Declaration on the Rights of indigenous peoples, and being inconsistent with sections 1-3, 2(1) and (6), 13, 14(1) and (2)(b), 17(1), (2)(b), (c ) and (d), sections 19(a) and 9d0, 21(a) of the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended).”
The applicants, argued that the ICJ gave its judgment on the protracted dispute over ownership of the oil rich Bakassi Peninsula, based “on archaic and anachronistic colonial declarations, and communications between colonial officers.”
Meanwhile, presiding Justice Gabriel Kolawole  adjourned ruling on the application till October 9, saying he needed time to carefully peruse the court processes in view of “weighty national issues raised therein.”
Specifically, it is the contention of the Bakassi indigenes that the ICJ, “in reaching its decision, relied on: (a) Henderson-Flerichau Exchange of Notes of 1931, (b) The Anglo-German Agreement of 11th March and 12th April, 1913 and (c) The British Order-in-Council of 2 August, 1946.
“The ICJ gave the decision as though the territory is occupied by wild animals without any rights under municipal or international law, and treated the colonial declaration and communication as conferring absolute proprietary rights and obligations to the territory to persons or entities outside the people who for centuries lived and existed therein and of which the territory is their homeland.
“The treaty, signed years before Nigeria came into existence as a sovereign entity was a “Treaty of protection” conferring limited “protectionist” rights on Britain and cannot by any shade of imagination translate to sovereignty or absolute power of transfer of title, sufficient to extinguish the rights of the kings and chiefs to the traditional over lordship of the territory and/or give Britain an absolute right to alienate their rights and interests unilaterally without the free prior consent and authority of the chiefs and kings.
“The respondents are hereby given notice to produce the said treaty of 10th September 1884 which the applicants put in their possession upon the proceedings in the ICJ.”
More so, the applicants said they were neither consulted nor was their consent sought before former President Olusegun Obasanjo endorsed the Green Tree Agreement, saying they were totally kept out of the picture of things prior, during and even after the execution of the Agreement.
“The applicants only got notice of the Agreement via media reports and grapevine, and upon contact with their representatives in the state and National Assemblies, were told that nobody was either consulted nor was aware of such agreement.
“ Before the applicants could realize what is happening, they were told that for them to remain as Nigerians, they are required to vacate their ancestral home and move into settlements to be built, constructed and maintained by the respondents, or else, if they opt to remain in their fatherland, they should be prepared to remain as Cameroonians.
“The applicants are scattered in different parts of the country, as in Delta State, Bayelsa, Rivers State, Akwa Ibom, etc, living under the basest form of human degradation embodying all the pains and sufferings that could be experienced by man, existing in makeshift pre-civilization abodes having only trees as cover against rain and shine, and other vagaries of the weather, which are most times inclement.
“The members of the applicant community are dying in their numbers everyday from afflictions of disease, poverty, malnutrition, squalor, etc, and there is no end to their suffering, humiliation, degradation of their human essence and homelessness.
“The Cameroonians changed the names of their communities and altered every existing tradition structure or monument which they could not destroy to suit their whims and purposes and destroyed and obliterated the very essence of their origins.
“The applicants do not have direct access to the ICJ , as by virtue of the statute of the ICJ, only states are recognizable parties before it, and have employed all existing measures to prevail upon the respondents to go back to the ICJ and undo the havoc they have caused in their lives, all to no avail.
“The applicants’ dehumanization is worse than animals, more humiliating than slavery, and degrading to the basest form of inhumanity, and is unpalatable and unacceptable in a 21st century world.
“The applicants are under the direct traditional authority and suzerainty of the Obong of Calabar and are forever subjects to the Royal Office and paraphernalia of the Obong’s stool, which is also their cultural and spiritual guardian and guidance; the applicants cannot in any way be extricated from their historical cultural roots which are tied inextricably to their kiths and kin in Cross Rivers State, Nigeria.
“Furthermore, the applicants cannot have their land in one country and be citizens of another country, and the respondents cannot impose their nationality on them as their right to a nationality is guaranteed under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
“By the failure of the ICJ judgment to conform to this basic principle of justice, renders it null and void, and thus, the ceding of the applicants homeland to Cameroon is anchored on nothing and is bound for the ground.
“Under international law, the 1st -3rd respondents do not have any obligation to obey the ICJ judgment, and is not bound by the Green Tree Agreement to take the territory belonging to the applicants to the Republic of Cameroon without their free, prior and informed consent, hence the need for the 1st -3rd applicants to quickly return to the Hague to untie what they have intricably and unlawfully knotted,” they added.
 Vanguard

Petroleum minister is insensitive to workers plight –union

The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), has accused Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, as insensitive to plights of workers in the oil and gas industry.
Speaking during the opening ceremony of the 3rd Triennial Delegates Conference of PENGASSAN branch in the Pipelines and Products Marketing Company Limited (PPMC) in Abeokuta, Ogun State Wednesday, the association President, Comrade Babatunde Ogun, said the minister does not care about workers in the sector.
He stated that PENGASSAN will support the PPMC branch’s decision to withdraw the services of members if government fails to find killers of some of its members at Arepo, Ogun state.
Ogun said, “The minister that has the oversight over the oil and gas industry does not care about the workers. Since the minister assumed duties, she has never met with the workers. Every entreaties and efforts to meet with the minister and tell her our challenges and problems failed because the minister is not ready to listen.
Daily Trust

I’m on revenge mission, says suspect who drugs, robs women

By IFEANYI  OKOLI

Whereas, the thick cloud generated  by  the gruesome murder in a  Lagos hotel of one Miss Cythia Osokogwu by her BB friends is yet to settle, a man who suffered  similar fate in the hands of a female friend but didn’t die is on revenge mission.
He even recruited a friend and together, they have been all over town drugging and robbing ladies  who falls into their snare  in retaliation.  But like what happened to Cynthia’s killers, the Police in Lagos have arrested the suspects and are  telling the story of their lives.
The suspect, Samson Igwe
Police sources disclosed to Crime Guard that the suspects were trailed by crack detectives to a popular hotel in Oregun.  The sources hinted that the syndicate operated in  Lagos, Port Harcourt, and Abuja before they were finally rounded up. It was said that several innocent women had fallen victims to the suspects who confessed to have robbed them of  expensive jewelries, handsets and cash running into millions of Naira.
In an interview with Crime Guard, one of the suspects who  gave his name as Igwe, said  he had no apology for what he was doing, adding that a lady he picked in Lagos in 2010 when he came back from South Africa rubbed him after he sucked her boobs and slept off.
He claimed to have stayed in South Africa for 10 years during which he made so much money; but lamented that  he got to Nigeria only to be duped by a lady. It was after that horrible experience that Igwe vowed  to take his pound of flesh from women.
According to him,  he would go out at night and  pretend to be a rich man who has plenty  of money to spend, look for  well dressed  women, who have  expensive jewelries on, phones and then asked them out.  At the hotels,   he would drug their drinks, raped them and robbed them afterwords.
This he said has been on for the past two years until they were recently arrested. He further stated that they have been shuttling Lagos, Port Harcourt and Abuja.   In one of their trips to Port Harcourt, he claimed that  they made so much money from the girls they caught, but was defrauded by his own boys,adding that he managed to come back to Lagos.
When Crime Guard spoke with the suspects, Igwe the Orlu, Imo State born business man  blamed his action on his ordeal in the hands of the first girl he met when he returned to the country.
According to him,  “I am a native of Orlu in Imo State, but I traveled to South Africa in  year  2000, and I lived for 10  years before I returned home. I came back with $30,000 and I lodged at the Airport Hotel in Ikeja. On the night,  I went to Metro Park Night club and picked a woman. I took her to my hotel room and when  we got there I had a friend who came to pay me a visit in my room and while we  were discussing,  the woman discovered that I just returned from South Africa and I had some money.
“When the friend left and we were about to make love,  I asked her to take her bath  but she refused and said we will do  that after sex but while I was romancing her, I  sucked her breasts before I went into her.  But shortly afterwords, I started feeling very dizzy and immediately fell asleep;  I did not wake up until 6.00am. When I woke up,  I  discovered  that she was gone; quickly,  I  checked my bag to see if my properties were still intact but  I  was shocked  that the $30,000  I  brought back home and all my Jewelries were gone.
“I immediately ran to the security guard to inquire if they saw her and they admitted  seeing her  on short, and  when they asked where she was going, she told them that she was going to get toothpaste and soap.   I rushed back to my room and I check    the wardrobe   where  she kept her cloth and I discovered that her bag and a pair of  trouser were still there.
“After waiting for a long time and she didn’t return; I realised that I had been robbed by a prostitute.  There and then,  I decided to take my pound of flesh from women.  I can not count the numerous   women I had done  this to.  But now,  I  have realized that what I was doing was a transferred aggression; which is not good.”
Vanguard

The National Pledge… Should it be re-written?

“I pledge to Nigeria my country,
To be faithful, loyal and honest…”
The above lines constitute the most important part of the pledge which we recite regularly to remind ourselves the enormous duties we owe to our fatherland. In fact, it forms the fulcrum on which the entire contents revolve.

I would  have loved to stand aloof, watching in isolation the unfolding  and perhaps unending absurd National developments which are threatening the survival and stability  of our cherished nascent democracy, but the more I try, the more I am caught up in a  whirling vortex of emotion to scribble down a few lines in other to draw the attention of my compatriots to the words of the national pledge yearning and yelling for implementation.
I remember in nostalgia a song that ushers us into the classrooms from the assembly ground during the primary and secondary school days “On my honour as a scholar, I will do my best” and the chorus says “Do your best now” The time is always right to do right because the foundation of a better tomorrow is laid today just as the foundations of corruption was laid many years ago in this country.

I remember in nostalgia a song that ushers us into the classrooms from the assembly ground during the primary and secondary school days “On my honour as a scholar, I will do my best” and the chorus says “Do your best now” The time is always right to do right because the foundation of a better tomorrow is laid today just as the foundations of corruption was laid many years ago in this country.

I am not writing to condemn anybody but for  those that make up the government at all levels irrespective of position and those that make up the populace irrespective of status to know and understand that the recitation of the national pledge should not be restricted within the confines of ceremonial functions but ought to be stretched to a practicable application in all ramifications so that we can collectively stem the tide of corruption prevalent in all the sectors of the economy.

Therefore, permit me to state unequivocally without mincing words but with absolute humility and allegiance to my fatherland that the national pledge be re-written to suit the prevailing mood of the Nation or be accorded the requisite respect as a National identity by working in absolute conformity with it’s dictations and principles.

I implore you to pause for a while, recite the national pledge from beginning to the end, analyze and bring out the salient words, then look around and see if the activities of the leaders and the led are portrayed in those words. Your guess will be as good as mine because conscience is an open wound which only the truth can heal.

To say that this country has an effective and  efficient economic system with reference to her comparative advantage over the neighboring countries in the west African sub-region is an over statement.

Over the years,  there has been steady growth in  population rate, a situation which ought to be taken care of by the provision of adequate lucrative means that will ensure even distribution of wealth, instead  the implementation of harsh policies which deter economic development becomes the order of the day extending the margin between the bourgeoisie and the proletariats.

The wound inflicted in the hearts of Nigerians as a result of the January 1, 2012 fuel subsidy removal by the federal government is still gushing out blood but instead of ensuring healing, it has been reopened with the introduction of  5,000 naira note into the nation’s money market which will obviously cause inflation as well as erode the value of naira before the international money markets.

Nigeria is by far the most populated of Africa’s countries, with more than one-seventh of the continent’s population, blessed with both human and natural resources but inefficiency in it’s management as well as administrative instability have been her greatest  undoing since independence and yet we recite the national pledge, oblivious of it’s  demands from us.

It behooves the entire citizenry irrespective of class to subject fully to  the dictates of these lines in review. There are three words assuring us of a stable, comfortable and reliable nation state if fully incorporated in  the scheme of things. “faithfulness, loyalty, honesty”. These words can transform Nigeria into a country where the  state controlled socialism and bridled capitalism will be a thing of the past, where the needs of the poor take priority over the desires of the rich, the right of the workers  over the maximization of profits, the preservation of the environment over uncontrolled industrial expansion.

, and production to meet social needs takes precedence over production for frivolities, where the principles of constitutionalism, rule of law, checks and balances, respect for fundamental human rights and civil liberties are in place, where ethnicity and tribalism do not determine who gets what, where, how, when and why, where there is even allocation of seats irrespective of religious affiliations, where justice, equity and fair play become the by-products of every government’s policy and programme.

It is indeed distressing to find  out that the distribution of income and wealth in Nigeria is so inequitable that it violates the minimum standard of distributive justice.

Therefore government at all levels as the sole custodian of national honour and glory should strive to maintain faithfulness in governance, uphold public opinion as a way of demonstrating loyalty to the electorates from whom they received mandate and support, enshrine honesty as not only paramount in individual characters but integral in the performance of governmental functions.

It is only when these are achieved that the relevance of the national pledge when recited will be significantly revealed before the glaring eyes of all and sundry.
National Daily