Tuesday, 9 October 2012

Self-Identified Nigerian Politician Questions Government Anti-Terror Strategy

Men believed to be members of Islamist sect Boko Haram are suspected of being involved in a series of bomb attacks, wait for the start of a court session at the Wuse magistrate court in Nigeria's capital Abuja, September 13, 2011.
TEXT SIZE
James Butty
A man, who identified himself as a Nigerian politician, an activist and opinion leader from northern Kano state, said the hunt for Boko Haram militants should not strictly be a military or security issue.

Instead, he said the government must involve Christian and Muslim leaders in the process.

He agreed to be interviewed by VOA on condition of anonymity because he fears Boko Haram and government security forces might harm him or his family.

The self-identified politician said northern religious leaders and politicians are not Boko Haram sympathizers.

“First of all, government officials and security agencies’ diagnosis of the reasons why Boko Haram arose was basically wrong. That prevented a lot of elites and elders from dabbling into it because the ones who attempted to do that were all shouted down.  They were labeled as sympathizers, sponsors and supporters,” he said.

The man said regular northerners were also isolated by the harsh modus operandi (methods) of the Joint Task Force [JTF’s].

“There was gross violation of human rights; there was no accountability, no oversight from anybody. They could just [go] into your house, pick you up without anybody holding to an account.  So, from this brief analysis, you can see that, from the top of the ladder to the lower end of the ladder, everybody was picked up for one reason or another.  If the government had involved the people in the community, I can guarantee you it would never have [been] raised to the level that it did,” he said.
He said northern politicians, religious and civil society leaders have been trying on the family level to end the Boko Haram menace.

“You cannot get involved because, even if you come up publicly to engage other members of the society, we don’t know who Boko Haram is.  They don’t wear its hat; they don’t wear a T-shirt that proclaims they are Boko Haram.  So, all you do is to talk to the younger elements in your family to be aware of these people. They should not join any group; they should watch their movement; just moral persuasion,” he said.

He said, contrary to reports and suspicion by government security forces, northern religious and political leaders are not supporters of Boko Haram.

“It is beyond question that I abhor, I detest, and I condemn Boko Haram in its totality, and I’m not the only one.  Ninety-nine-point-nine percent of all northerners are not in support of Boko Haram,” he said.

The anonymous caller’s comments came as witnesses from the northern city of Maiduguri Monday accused security forces of killing 30 people.

Residents said the violence took place Monday after a bomb exploded on an army patrol, wounding two soldiers.
              
Maiduguri is at the center of operations for Boko Haram, which is blamed for killing more than 1,400 people in recent years. 
VOA

Islamic cleric, bank driver arrested for robbing banks


The Lagos State Police Command has arrested eight persons for allegedly robbing Sterling Bank plc and Ecobank plc at different times. Among the suspects are two drivers attached to each of the banks, as well as an Islamic cleric.
The Ecobank driver, Rasheed Anifowose, however alleged that he was hypnotised by the Islamic cleric, Mufutau Eleduwe, to commit the crime.
Anifowose said he informed the gang to come at about 5.30pm, after the policemen attached to the bank must have closed for the day.
He said, “I had gone to his place for spiritual help for my mother’s health and other family problems. But along the line, he asked where I was working and when I told him, he said he would get me people who would rob the bank and at the end of the day he would give me money. I refused the offer.
“But he later told me to bring my picture for him to continue with the spiritual work and that was the end. The next time he called me, he told me to give some people details of how to get to the bank.”
Narrating how the suspects were arrested, the Commissioner of Police for the state command, Mr. Umar Manko, said the banks’ drivers were arrested by policemen from the Area D Command, Mushin on September 26, 2012, at Sterling Bank, Matori, during a shoot-out with members of one of the gangs which attempted to rob the bank.
He said, “They made confessional statements which led to the arrest of eight others and the recovery of one locally-made pistol with one live cartridge and the case was subsequently transferred to the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, Ikeja, for further investigation on October 2.
“The suspects were interrogated and they further confessed that their armourer and gang leader, Adedokun Yusuf and Ahmed Adelakun, were in Aiyetoro. Consequently, they led SARS operatives to Aiyetoro in Ogun State where the duo was arrested and two locally-made pistols with four live cartridges recovered.
“The suspects, who normally operate with the collaboration of insiders, confessed that they robbed Sterling Bank, Matori branch, Mushin, Lagos, on May 25, 2012, and carted away N8m and Ecobank, Isolo, on August 29, 2012. Investigation is still on.”
The Sterling Bank’s driver, Aremu Taiwo, admitted to have given the robber that stormed his bank information on how to get in.
He said, “I told them to come on that Friday at about 5pm. I told them to come in through the back door which would be opened by then. I had also gone home when they struck.
“That was to avoid any suspicion. But I warned them not to kill anybody. At the end f the day, they gave me N300, 000.”
The cleric, Muftau, however said he only prayed for the success of both drivers, adding that at the end of the operation at Sterling Bank, he was given N307,000.
 DailyPost

PRESS RELEASE UNIPORT STUDENTS KILLING: UNTRAMMELLED BARBARISM!


The Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) condemns, without any
reservation, the gruesome killing of four University of Port-Harcourt
(UNIPORT) students in Aluu community of Rivers State. This, coming so
soon after another brutal cutting down of scores of students in Mubi,
Adamawa state, is one killing too many!
Unconfirmed preliminary reports had it that the students- Ugonna,
IIyod, Tekana, Chidiaka- were embroiled in an argument with a man from
the community over money owed. Rather than settling amicably, the man
in question called a local vigilante group that came instantly. The
students, first stripped naked, were beaten into pulp before being
burnt to death. The footage of this act of untrammeled barbarism
reveals a sad commentary that in the current Nigerian state: death is
cheap and ubiquitous! It also reveals that studentship in Nigeria is
fraught with inherent danger because of the near absence of governance
in the Country.
The question is: where was the Nigeria Police while this fire of
primitive justice raged? Indeed, the Police was nowhere! The defective
organizational, crime-fighting thrust of the Nigeria Police is seen in
its reactivity rather than pro-activity. Globally, Policing is first
and foremost about maintenance of law and order. The Prevention of
crime comes to the fore in the discharge of this responsibility by the
Police. This is why the New-York Police Department (NYPD) officers are
seen patrolling the streets in all the five boroughs of the City of
New-York. In that way, crime is detected and prevented so that
societal equilibrium is not unduly discomfited. But the Nigeria Police
is hamstrung to do this efficiently because a considerable number of
its insufficient personnel is devoted for the protection of the
chieftains of the ruling PDP. Truly, arrests have been made in
connection with this heinous crime, we insist that there should be a
paradigm shift in the organizational strategy of the Nigeria Police to
Crime prevention.
The emergence and growing number of vigilante groups in the Nigerian
communities is an attestation to the waning public confidence in the
service delivery of the Nigeria Police. First, the spontaneity of the
response to distress calls is still a sore point in the performance of
the Police. Second, the delay or absence of prosecution and conviction
makes for eroded public confidence in the Police. There was the case
of a Man, arrested by the Police with evidential trappings of an Armed
robber that later found his way to as an elected senator of the
Federal republic of Nigeria, having escaped prosecution and
conviction. This may partly explain, but not justifiable reason, why
communities now mete out jungle justice to criminals or perceived
criminals. As a Party, we believe that all these institutional foibles
of the Nigeria Police are not enough for communities to resort to
self-help. In this vein, the operation of vigilante groups should
henceforth be structured to work in tandem with the Nigeria Police.
The kernel of the operation should be to effect arrest of accused
criminals and turn over to the Police!
As a Party, we commiserate with the Parents, siblings, family members
and friends of the deceased. Indeed, the gory pictures of the gruesome
killings evoke feelings of anguish. The murderous violence on these
young Nigerians should therefore elicit a collective desire in us as
Nigerians for a safer, tranquil and better-governed polity.
God bless Nigeria.

Rotimi Fashakin (Engr.)
National Publicity Secretary, CPC.
(Tuesday, October 09, 2012).
via Nasir El'Rufai

Agonised mother of #Aluu4 – “When we got there, one of them was still breathing”

 by


by Hauwa Gambo
Nigerians will not get over this terrible set of events anytime soon.
Jane Toku, the mother of Lloyd, one of the four undergraduates of the University of Port Harcourt that were lynched at Aluu in Rivers, told the Punch that her son’s death will always haunt her – even as she can’t get over the shock that no one in the crowd did anything.
“When we got there, one of them was still breathing,” she said, in tears.” He was gasping for breath, but the crowd…they were all there watching while my baby (Lloyd) was butchered. Come to my area and ask questions about my child; the child I trained.
“Penultimate Sunday, we went to church, Salvation Ministry; that is where he worshipped. We all went together for the second service. He stayed back for the remaining service. When he came back, he started preparing to go to school. I can still see him as I talk to you.
“He brought out a book; ‘How Faith Works’ by David Ibiyomie and he said ‘Mummy, read this book and you will know what faith is all about. By the time I come back on Friday, you will tell me what faith is all about.’
“Ever since, I have been moving around with that book, so that I could read and not get him angry when he comes back from school and ask me about what I learnt from the book.
“Thursday was his daddy’s birthday. He (Lloyd) called him and wished him happy birthday. When his daddy asked him if he would be coming home to celebrate the birthday with the family, he (Lloyd) promised to be back on Friday after lectures.”
Just terrible. Just terrible.
YNaija.com

“The students were living in a lion’s den all along” – Youth Ambassador reacts to Aluu killings


A United Nations Youth Ambassador, and former Chairman of Nelson Mandela’s Hall in University of Portharcourt, Amb. David James Egwu has issued a statement of concern and worry over the recent murder of
the students of the University of Port Harcourt.
While condemning in totality the action of the community, David had called on the authorities to bring the perpetrators of the act to book in no distant time, to serve as deterrent to anyone or group who may
want to consider taking the laws into their hands in the future.
The statements read in parts:
“It is with a heavy heart that I write to express my deep sympathy for the families of the four students of the University of Port Harcourt who were brutality murdered by men of the vigilante of the Aluu community. I also would wish to express my deep and sincere concern for the students of the University of Port Harcourt who have been living ignorantly in a Lion’s den. My overwhelming concern stems from
the fact that I am an alumnus of the Institution and wonder how an environment of learning has suddenly turned a scene of despair and untold agony for students who are struggling with the hectic challenge
of learning in a school like Uniport ‘if you understand what I mean’.
The brutality meted on the four promising young lads of my former University is one that should NEVER be allowed to repeat itself again any where at all that our institutions of learning are situated across
the country.
This gruesome act pushed me and some of my colleagues into asking some mind bulging questions in relation to the sudden disappearance of sanity from around the University we all went to, and the sudden cloudy weather that has taken over the Aluu community that is best known as the students’ village.
This cruelty and conservative anti student move is a serious issue, which we must all condemn in its entirety. At a challenging and horrifying moment like this, it behooves on all Nigerians to team up
against those monsters who did not only take the laws into their hands, but have turned the Aluu community into a dreadful land, with the blood of the innocent still flowing along the streets. “
“Even as I condemn all kinds of pilfering, I will not compromise my position as a man who is ruled and governed by justice. It is imperative to note that injustice anywhere is an injustice to ALL.
This is why the Aluu community should not get tired of our questions as they come.
From where did they acquire the rights to take another’s lives? Why will robbers suddenly confront their victims with some exchange of blows? Why will a group of people just condemn their fellow human
beings without the simple consideration that the police stations and the army barracks are not in some far away pit? Why did the community elders allow the youth of the land who would have been cautioned against such distasteful act and murdered with impunity the laws as well as their fellow human beings?
Where was the chief of the area? This to me like a set up against the students of the University of port harcourt and thus manifested their wickedness at the slightest opportunity by murdering the four
students in the most unthinkable manner defilling every sense of reason. I can state for sure that since the incident happened days ago, most students of the institution have gone through some psychological trauma in relation to their fate as students, and their continuous stay in the area. Who knows who the hook and lines will catch next?”
“My submission is simple and straight; aside the arrest and the possible punishment of the murderers, the Government of Rivers state, the police, and the school authority MUST extract an undertaken from the chiefs and leaders of Aluu Community to ensure that the abuse of civil rights and authority as can be seen in this case cannot be tolerated in a Country Governed by the RULE of LAW!
“The chief who stylistically ordered for the execution of these guys is considered as the king of the jungle, as there seems to be no other jungle as terrible as the Aluu community. It is sad to say this, but
to have a University in such area should be considered the greatest undoing of the Federal government. “
“ Even as I call for justice to take its full course, I cannot hesitate to commend the Rivers State Commissioner for youth as well as the Commissioner of Police who have acted in the most swift manner by
ensuring that the perpetrators of this evil act are brought to book speedily, and for their effort so far I say a great SALUTE. I want to commend my dear friend and a fellow youth enthusiast, Comrade Ohimai
Amaize for his selfless effort in this case even as I urge him to continue to exhibit his boldness towards fighting for justice in a society where the supposed sane men have gone insane and lawlessness looms around the corners. “
“I urge all students of the University of Port Harcourt to remain calm and must not be tempted to take laws into their hands. More, than ever before, you must all remain resolute and vigilant even as we ensure
that the culprits of this evil act are brought to book.
I want to assure all uniport students, that despite our inputs externally, we are committed to the progress of our prestigious Unique UniPort; brothers and sisters! We are right behind you! We will do all
within our reach to ensure your safety”
Aluta Continua…victoria Acerta!
DailyPost

Macdonald Nwajagu: ACN campaign in Ondo: Matters Arising


The Nigeria political theatre is one filled with drama’s ranging from funny to pure absurd.
Last week as Nigerians tuned to watch a new episode of the soap opera called elections in Nigeria, a funny scene unfolded. I must say this episode was characterised with questions rather than answers.
The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) staged a grand rally last week in a bid to sell their candidate Akeredolu Rotimi Aketi (SAN) to the people of Ondo State. I waited & watched as different speakers harped on the exploits of Akeredolu while also canvassing for the votes of the people. Pleading & cajoling them that their candidate should take the day come 20th October,2012.
When the National Leader and grand puppeteer of the ACN, Sen. Bola Ahmed Tinubu took the stage he told the ONDOLITES that it is imperative to change the State leadership and that of the ruling party (Labour Party). He said unequivocally that ACN is the ticket to the Promised Land for Ondo people. Through out his tirade the major and underlying reason he posited which necessitated a change in leadership is not poor performance by the sitting Governor but rather; “Mimiko is a traitor”. He betrayed me. I sponsored his bid to reclaim his mandate with assurances he would cross carpet but he later reneged on his promise.
As entertaining and emotional as his allegations sounds, it brings to fore some questions:
1. Where did Tinubu get the money he lavished on Mimiko to reclaim his mandate?
2. Since when did betrayal of just one man become a reason to unsit a governor if he is performing?
3. Mimiko and LP where voted in sync, why ask him to dump to the party?
4. ACN says the PDP wants to turn Nigeria into a one party state yet ACN wants to make the yoruba Nation a one party region.
I want to say that in respect to the Ondo election the ACN has not made a valid case on why the party should be saddled with the mantle of leadership. Elections should be about the people not massaging a man’s ego or scoring a cheap political point.
DailyPost

‘God forbid bad thing’? Lufthansa, Air France reject FG offer to be national carrier

 by

The Federal Government is in desperate search for investors among foreign airlines to partner with it to establish a new national carrier for the country; findings by our correspondent have shown.
This is after Lufthansa German Airlines and AirFrance reportedly turned down an approach by the government to be its partners in the proposed national carrier.
However, barely three months to the December 2012 deadline set by the Minister of Aviation, Ms Stella Oduah, for the take off of the new carrier, hopes of its emergence look dim, according to investigations by our correspondent.
The minister had last December said the Federal Government would establish a new national carrier this year, eight years after the liquidation of the Nigeria Airways.
Oduah had made the announcement during an open chat with her followers on the social networking medium, Twitter.
Responding to questions from our correspondent then, she said the Federal Government was working on a new model for the proposed carrier.
According to her, the funding and ownership for the new airline will not be like that of the defunct Nigeria Airways, which was wholly owned by the government.
Nigeria Airways was liquidated in May 2003 by the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
However, there have been calls for a new national carrier to boost the nation’s image internationally and to realise the dream of making Nigeria an air transport hub.
The minister said, “We are working on a national carrier that will be publicly owned with limited financial contribution by the government. Government will act as a regulator and provide an enabling environment for this objective to be realised.
“We recently reviewed the models of national carriers in other countries and we are working on the best solution for Nigeria. We are working to deliver the national carrier by next year (2012).”
However, top industry sources told our correspondent on Monday that the government had separately approached Lufthansa German Airlines and AirFrance for partnership over the proposed national airline.
The two separate discussions, it was learnt, did not yield any positive result because the airlines said they could only offer technical and management assistance.
According to sources close to the discussions, the airlines were not ready to take up stakes in the proposed national carrier, an arrangement the Federal government was not willing to embrace.
“The government has approached Lufthansa and AirFrance for partnerships, but they both declined. They said they could only offer some technical assistance and also help to manage the airline. But as per investing in the proposed national carrier, they were not ready,” one of the sources close to the situation said.
Investigations by our correspondent revealed that the airlines were concerned about the inconsistency in government policies in the aviation sector, noting that another minister might come and cancel the arrangement they might have had with the current minister if they should go ahead to take up stakes in the proposed national airline.
YNaija.com