Tuesday, 9 October 2012

What Manner Of President? By Chinedu Ekeke


Sometimes I wish I were a lunatic, so I would be operating from the realm of total freedom, that realm of extreme happiness and zero burden where the natural response to life’s complexities is a wry smile, a rippling soliloquy and, sometimes, a dance in Adamic state to spite curious glances. If I were mad, I would be free from the worries of what to eat, what to wear or where to sleep; I wouldn’t care who rules the world or who runs my state; I would give no hoot who owns a phone, who rows a boat or who drives a train. But most importantly, I would have taken a special interest in those the world calls sane, and know and mark their thought processes to detect when they reach for the world of the insane, my own world. If I were mad, I would raise the flag each time I observe a fellow the world takes seriously act more insane than my folks in the realm of freedom.
I would inform the sane world of their loss of a member when I see a bachelor announce to his community, with glee, that the Community Health Centre just informed him of his wife’s new born baby. Such oddity makes for insanity, and qualifies for what which would catch my fancy. It is similar to a man who never applied to Harvard calling a feast to announce the University authorities just informed him that he made the second best graduating student of the school. The only other silly scenario comparable to the above two is when a village laggard who doesn’t have even one farm announces to his family, with much fanfare, that the village king just congratulated him for having harvested the largest quantity of yam tubers in the village. In any of the three scenarios, I would alert the world of the insane, and cause them to prepare for the arrival of a new member.
I’ve never seen any of these scenarios happen amongst normal men, until it happened, last Monday, and in the oddest of places: Nigeria’s Presidency. President Goodluck Jonathan turned what was supposed to be our national day of honour to a day of falsehood. Reading his usual uninspiring statewide broadcast to Nigerians on Independence Day, the President boasted; “We are fighting corruption in all facets of our economy, and we are succeeding…We have exposed decades of scam in the management of pensions and fuel subsidy, and ensured that the culprits are being brought to book.
In its latest report, Transparency International (TI) noted that Nigeria is the second most improved country in the effort to curb corruption.
We will sustain the effort in this direction with an even stronger determination to strengthen the institutions that are statutorily entrusted with the task of ending this scourge.”
I am used to lies from the government Mr. Jonathan runs. He is known for making false claims without batting an eyelid. Even in this same speech, before he dropped Transparency International’s name in his web of lies, he had earlier boasted of creating ‘millions of jobs’ for the youths. But let’s let that be for now and, maybe, return to it if space permits.
My focus is on the President’s claim on curbing corruption. First, the claim was false. Premium Times, an investigative blog, stunned by the overnight positive rating of Nigeria by Transparency International as claimed by the president, immediately reached the global anti-corruption body and obtained from them a contrary, and, I must add, authentic report which stated clearly that, “Transparency International does not have a recent rating or report that places Nigeria as the second most improved country in the fight against corruption.”
Premium Times further reported: “The group said its most recent indexing of Nigeria’s corruption activities was in the 2011 Corruption Perceptions Index, which measured perceived level of public sector corruption in the country. In that index, Nigeria scored 2.4 on a scale where 0 means highly corrupt and 10 means very clean. It was ranked 143 out of 183 countries. That rating was actually a dip in performance for Nigeria as the country was rated 134 out of 183 countries the previous year, 2010.”
As a matter of fact, Jonathan’s efforts, in the last two years, to nurture the monster, reflected commensurately in Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index. We actually dipped in performance, a sad testimony to Jonathan’s romance with all that is corrupt. Then, suddenly, in one fell swoop, he conjured up lies, in collaboration with his numerous Aso Rock sycophants, and dished out to a nation long used to hearing lies from their rulers. Name-dropping is the art of many a master fraudster. They drop names to obtain credibility and hoodwink their victims into willful submission. That was what Mr. Jonathan did in that speech.
Most people think the blame should be heaped on the president’s many courtiers – often called aides. I do not think so. I think it was a deliberate attempt by the president himself to remain on track in his agenda of ensuring high-level criminals walk free under his watch. The president was aware that such an obviously false paragraph was included in the speech. He thought, as I think he has always done, that we still live in the ‘80s when it was easy for the rulers to mount the screen and reel out lies and false statistics to the nation. His major challenge is his sustained effort to wish away the new world order in which information gets delivered to the hands of its seeker just within seconds, at the mere click of a mouse. The president didn’t know somebody would want to verify his bogus claim. He thinks we still value the Business Days and This Days of this world.
Forget the excuse that they saw it in a newspaper. Our president is of a sound mind, I believe, that is why he would never allow Business Day, or any newspaper for that matter, tell him he has been fighting corruption when he knows he hasn’t even raised a finger in the purported fight. We all know, and agree, that a battle that is won must have first begun at one time. When did Mr. Jonathan begin the battle against corruption to have earned the reverence of Transparency International, so much so that his government would be ranked alongside serious countries like the United States in the efforts to curb the monster?
Of all the high profile thievery littered on our political landscape, and under Mr. Jonathan’s watch, how many cases have been pursued by the government? How many former governors have been jailed? How many known corrupt former government officials have been prosecuted under Jonathan? So when did he begin the corruption fight to have earned such an enviable place amongst nations committed to obliterating the existence of the monster in their polity? Was the battle fought in his dream? Should sane Nigerians be worried? At best, it is a delusion of grandeur for a PhD holder to see a paragraph allocating laurels to him for finishing tops in a race he never signed up for, and then went ahead to read it out to the world. But I think it is worse, I see it as a determined attempt at perjury which, in truth, should be taken very seriously by every Nigerian.
If the president wasn’t aware that such a paragraph was included in his Independence Day speech, then it beggars belief that a president doesn’t proofread his speeches before the days he delivers them to the nation. If that is the case, it then underscores the beliefs of folks like me, that this president is not fit for office. What manner of president will not make inputs in the preparation of the speech he delivers to his citizens? If this is the case, then nothing he ever says should be taken seriously, because he never said them anyway. He simply read what people wrote and asked him to read.
This must be basically why he reads them out without any facial communication with his viewers, just like a jittery student does facing his exam scripts in the exam hall.
You know a serious president with the importance he attaches to addressing his fellow citizens, a rare opportunity to talk directly to millions of people who long to hear his plans for the present and future. One of such presidents is Bill Clinton of the United States.
In his autobiography, My Life, President Clinton gives an insight into the premium he attaches to his speeches. Days before his inauguration, he had already started working on his speech. Narrating the very many activities that took place during the run up to the inauguration, he writes of January 17th, 1993: “By the time we got back to Blair House, the official guest residence just across the street from the White House, we were tired… but before falling asleep, I took some time to review the latest draft of my inaugural address.
I still wasn’t satisfied with it. Compared with my campaign speeches, it seemed stilted. I knew it had to be more dignified, but I didn’t want it to drag.”
Remember that the inauguration was to be 20th of January. Then, of 18th January, Clinton writes: “…After the concert, there was a late-night prayer service at the First Baptist Church, and it was after midnight when I got back to Blair House. Though it was getting better, I still wasn’t satisfied with the inaugural address. My speechwriters…must have been tearing their hair out, because as we practiced between one and four in the morning on inauguration day, I was still changing it… The terrific staff at Blair House…was ready with gallons of coffee to keep us awake and snacks to keep us in a reasonably good humor. By the time I went to bed for a couple of hours’ sleep, I was feeling better about the speech”
Please note the odd hours when he had to stay awake just for the sake of the speech: one am to four am. But that wasn’t all. Even on the inauguration day, Bill Clinton still got back to the speech before it was time for his swearing in. Read him: “We went back to Blair House to look at the speech for the last time. It had gotten a lot better since 4 a.m.”
Isn’t it odd that the president of America, an English speaking country, will have sleepless nights preparing for a speech he would deliver in the same English language, his native language, while a Nigerian president, who speaks English as a borrowed language, doesn’t care one bit about what is contained in his presidential speeches?
The difference is in what each respects most. Mr. Clinton respects the right of the average American citizen to know the truth, while Mr. Jonathan respects the corrupt Nigerian system of which he is a creation. That system is what he has been battling to preserve, even if it means lying before the entire world.
Saharareporters

Chinua Achebe And The Burden Of Old Age By Jonah Ayodele Obajeun

It is one thing to tell the history of our continued existence, it is another thing to listen to the history, and it is a different thing to believe the history itself. In all, if history is not told, history will tell its history itself. This is a fundamental nuptial arrangement that nature has lured us to eternally say 'I do' to. But when history appears to be distorted through a wanton display of philosophy, especially when such perceived logic of distortion is coming from a revered great grand father of African storytellers, then there is bound to be a reprisal attack in an equal logic of distortion. There are decades when nothing happens, there are weeks when decades happen. It is a revolutionary dictum that has thrown up cerebral 'bullies', fancifully speaking from their Olympian heights to nudge sleep away from the eyes of our lowly brained leaders. Chinua Achebe is a product of this dictum.
My love for literature was informed by Chinua Achebe's "Anthills of the Savannah" when I read it in SS2. Having read the book five times now, I got an excellent grip of the role of critique in nation building. Then over time, Achebe became my favourite over Wole Soyinka. After reading Soyinka's "Ake" for the second time in my first year in the University, I ended up describing Soyinka as the grand father of African obscurants, too obscure for poor me to understand. So Achebe became my toast. In terms of logic, I have always been on the same page with Achebe, especially when it comes to good governance advocacy. Pa Achebe has won my heart on a number of times, he is not a typical Nigerian in search of a glamorous end of life. Achebe is a writer I can invest my life to read. He had seen the worst of Nigeria.
"There Was A Country: A Personal History Of Biafra", an account put together by Professor Chinua Achebe, has come with a big blow in what can be described as a product that can put to rubbles the decades of strife of the revered professor. In our cultural structure, when you accuse the dead to lend credence to your claims, you are perceived as a liar. Unfortunately, the same cultural elements of our existence postulate that elders don't lie. The former can flow with logic but the latter places elders in the status of gods, meaning the voice of the elders is the voice of gods. In simple flow, the gods can also be liars. Achebe rose from his comfortable chair in America and sentenced Awolowo to his second death in his new book. He accused Awolowo of killing two million igbos during the civil war using starvation.
I am not here to contend with Achebe's sense of historical judgment. To think that Achebe was born in 1930, when I was born about 54 years later is enough for me to eternally stay mute rather than muscle-flex with his thought-processes. Achebe witnessed the civil war, has documented evidence and watched the theatre of bloodshed that killed his kinsmen. Achebe is a historical god, but he is currently being hunted by the burden of his old age. Achebe has reversed the history of civil war in his nonfictional account, casting aspersions on Awolowo, the political god of Western Nigeria. For the first time, I am on a different page. I hate to be a judge in this case, but can the dead defend itself?
Achebe is wrong to have assumed that Biafra existed. The choice of the book title suggests that Biafra once existed. There was never a country called Biafra but there was an attempt to pull out the Eastern Nigeria and call it Biafra. There was never a constituted President, nothing like a system of government, nothing close to being a sovereign state. It was never on any map, no references on any Atlas except for the partial Nigerian writers, especially the ones inclined to thwarting the civil war stories to rake in treasures for themselves. When one considers what old age does to one's sense of interpretation, one will never want to grow old. Old age is tellingly catching up with Achebe.
Truth be told, Awolowo was a prostitute in terms of being rabid when it comes to seeking political powers. Awolowo was a financial wizard who used economic tools to fight his own war. From Awo's calculation, there was no way to differentiate between the civilians, Nigerian soldiers and the Biafran warlords and as such any food supply to the warfront might not get to the intended beneficiaries. Awo then raked in the food to feed his own people in the West rather than wasting it on soldiers. For Achebe to have accused Awo of hoarding food to starve Easterners to death, it is a clear case of someone who has lost touch with historical realities.
On the flipside, let us assume that Awo is guilty of the accusation. I have never read it anywhere that there was a warlord who was feeding his enemies on the warfront. Awo was human, in a clash of worldview, a principled man must take a stand. That Awo took a stand against Biafra was never a mistake and he never regretted it as Biafra never existed in his life time. Feeding your enemies on the battlefield is like giving your gun to your enemies to shoot you. Achebe should perish the thought of telling the assumed untold story and come to terms with historical realities.
The variegated events in human communities and societies have thus far formed the very raw materials with which writers convene the banquets at which their own imaginative mind blend seamlessly with the remarkable occurrences in human existence and eventuated by oodles of tragic, moving, perturbing and ennobling actions of human creatures. Achebe wanted to meaningfully expose the rotten underbelly of the saints of civil wars, but ended up fictionalizing a nonfiction account. I hate to think that it is a case of verbal hallucination, Achebe is of sound mind.
Saharareportes

“I did it because I needed ‘to network’ in the conference” – Doctor who refused Lawyer in Court


A medical doctor, Bissong Peter, 46, of phase 1, Gwagwalada, on Tuesday refused a female lawyer to enter appearance for him in forgery case at an Abuja Chief Magistrates’ Court.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the female lawyer was from Legal Aid Council and was in court for another case when Peter’s case was mentioned.
She stood up to announce her appearance when the Peter signalled to her that he did not need a lawyer.
Prosecutor John Ijoga told the court that the convict was arrested on Oct. 4, by the security guard at the International Conference Centre, Abuja.
Ijoga said that the accused impersonated a staff of the Nigeria Institute of Management (NIM) by forging NIM’s identity card.
The prosecutor said that the offence contravened Sections 364 and 179 of the Penal Code.
Peter pleaded guilty to the offence, saying: “it was my first time and I did it because I needed “to network’’ in the conference.
“Kneeling down in the court room, the convict pleaded to court to tamper justice with mercy.
“I have spent 15 years as a medical doctor and a one-time national award winner for my medical team.
“I am married man, a father of two, my dad is late and my old mother is sick in the village,’’ he claimed.
The Chief Magistrate, Mr Azubike Okeagwu, said that the court in the plea of the convict observed that Peter appeared remorseful.
Okeagwu said that because the accused did not waste the court’s time before pleading guilty, he would tamper justice with mercy.
He, therefore, sentenced the medical doctor to 24 months imprisonment on the two count charges with an option of N10, 000 fines.
The court said the convict would serve 12 months for forgery and another 12 months for impersonation or N5,000 fines on each of the count.
Okeagwu, however, warned the convict to desist from such disgraceful and criminal acts and work hard on his profession as he would not be forgiven next time.
 DailyPost

Police arrest Ifeanyi Uba, Capital Oil chief over fuel subsidy scam


The Police Special Fraud Unit, Ikoyi has arrested oil magnet, Mr Ifeanyi Uba, the Managing Director of Capital Oil & Gas Industries Ltd over the involvement of his companies in the fuel subsidy scam.
Uba was taken into custody at exactly 2.20pm this afternoon with his team of lawyers and is being currently interrogated.
His company was indicted by Mr Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede’s led 15-man Presidential Panel constituted by President Goodluck Jonathan to re-investigate the findings of the report of an earlier investigation panel set up by the Ministry of Finance on Fuel Subsidy payments valued at over N2 trillion.
 BusinessNews

Not again! Edo state govt official lynched by mob of traders at Oba Market dies

by Isi Esene
An operative of the Edo State Environmental Protection and Regulatory Unit, Henry Isibor, has died from injuries he sustained after he was mobbed by traders at the Oba Market, Benin.
It was learnt that Isibor was attacked on September 6 when he tried to effect state environmental laws, which prohibits trading on walkways.
Some of the traders, it was learnt, were arrested and charged to court. Isibor, according to sources, died on October 4.
A source, who pleaded anonymity, said the late Isibor’s right hand was badly injured by the mob. The source added that Isibor, in company with some staff of the agency had gone to the market to enforce a no-trading along the roads and walkways, but was resisted by the traders.
The traders, according to the source, attacked the deceased from behind with iron rods.
Isibor will be buried on Saturday, in his village, Okhoro, in Ovia North East Local Government Area.
“He will be buried on Saturday; the agency has been of assistance too,” his brother, Onaiwu, told our correspondent on Monday.
Confirming the incident, Executive Director of the agency, Maj. Lawrence Loye (retd.), said some of the culprits had been apprehended.
Loye said the incident might make the agency to adopt new strategies for dealing with traders.
He said, “This thing happened because I told my operatives not to be hostile to anybody; but now our operational pattern might have to change. Our officials now have the right to defend themselves.
“That is the information we have passed round, so that they will not allow themselves to be hacked down by those who have no respect for the state.”
When contacted, the Police Public Relations Officer, Mr. Anthony Airhuoyo, said he had yet to be briefed on the incident.
“I will call you as soon as I get report on it,” he added.
YNaija.com

Governor Peter Obi: The “Saint” Who Sinned By Churchill Okonkwo

By Churchill Okonkwo
In the beginning, he claimed not to be a politician but a saint and successful businessman that volunteered to serve and build a new Anambra. Less than 2 years to the end of his tenure, Ndi Anambara are beginning to see the true color of Governor Peter Obi. Like Apostle Simon Peter, “Saint” Peter Obi had enough faith in Jesus to start his political career by challenging the rigging of Anambra State Governorship election by Andy Ubah, just like Apostle Simon Peter started walking boldly on the water. But like Apostle Peter who began to drown when he saw the wind and waves, Peter Obi started drowning when he saw the massive flow of cash and powers of the governor on assuming office.
Jesus called Apostle Simon Peter "Mr. Little Faith" because he doubted Jesus and his word. I call Peter Obi the saint who sinned not just because he slept while he should be watching but because has deceived Ndi Anambra more than three times even while communing with the bishops just like Apostle Peter denied Jesus three times. Here, I will expose the hypocrisy, lies, deceit, foolishness, and arrogance of the governor who sinned.
Peter Obi is a man of many contradictions. It is an open secret that Peter Obi has heavily bribed and chained the State House of Assembly into a state of comma. Now all the house members do is gallivant around town and wait for “bills” or any form of executive action that requires their approval and then demand that it be “dressed up” before the house will give it due consideration. For a bill to be “dressed up,” it means that Peter Obi has to spend millions bribing the House members to have his way. That was why Governor Obi boasted in 2011 that, “I have known the rules of impeachment. Nobody can impeach me again. If they try it again, I will scatter them.” It is a sin for Peter Obi to continue to “scatter” the State House with ego Ndi Anambra.
Peter Obi’s other sins include metamorphosis from a defender of democracy to active rigger when he colluded with the likes of Dora Akunyili and Uche Ekumife to massively rig the Anambra Central Senatorial election in Aniocha LGA. His recent romance with Chuma Nzeribe; a celebrated evil with criminal mind further points to a man whose actions on a Sunday mass does not reflect his corrupt actions in the other 167 hours of the week. Perhaps, we should forgive him because as an English poet and novelist Aphra Behn said, “there is no sinner like a young saint”.
But Peter Obi is not young. He has been the governor for more than six years. Six years that the locust ate in Anambra State. Six years of performance that revealed hypocrisies in spades and yet he still claims to be sanctified. Peter Obi has been living in two worlds; half-sinner and half-saint or should I say 100% sinner and 100% saint? After months of offering  “financial inducement to senior editors as well as placing advertising supplements in various newspapers in exchange for flattering reports and columns about his administration” as reported by Sahara Reporters, the governor recently compensated the reporters for a job well done by offering them the positions of caretaker committee chairmen in various local governments in the state. The reporters are one Tony Okafor, Emeka Odegwu, Chuks Ilozue and Jude Atupuluazi. The book of proverbs told us that it is better to be a sinner than a hypocrite. Governor Peter Obi has however chosen both.
It has been augured that Governor Peter Obi has succeeded in ‘chasing’ away looters and corrupt politicians out of the state. But in the process, he has made himself the “Alpha and Omega” of corruption in Anambra State. Awarding contract to cronies and friends without due process and open bidding; using his influence and the name of Anambra State to acquire shares for himself and children at SABMiller while the rest of us continues to wallow in poverty; appointing commissioners who are figureheads that cannot execute projects worth even fifty thousand Naira without the his “exclusive” approval.
Theodore Roosevelt once said “The best executive is the one who has sense enough to pick good men to do what he wants done, and self-restraint to keep from meddling with them while they do it.” In Peter Obi however, Ndi Anambra has a Governor that is equivalent to tortoise in the animal kingdom. Governor Obi is the only ‘wise man’ in Anambra State, the king that deceives his subjects, and ultimately a one-man administration that has no regards to democratic principles and ethics.
Following the devastating flood that affected parts of the state, the government just opened several accounts named “ Anambra State Flood Disaster Emergency Fund.” I feel the pains and suffering of those affected by the flood and encourage all that can help to do so. However, it is worth noting that the LGAs recently affected by flooding in Anambra State officially gets about 400 million Naira monthly federal allocation. Where is this money? For the governor’s media assistant, Valentine Obienyem (a big beneficiary of the corrupt practices of the governor) to be telling Ndi Anambra not to politicize the devastating flood is absurd. The question for Obienyem is: how much of this money that rightfully belong to these LGAs is being deployed to help the homeless and the stranded?
Mr. Governor, I commend you for leading the rescue effort, but having yourself pictured on a lonely boat is like “killing a snake and carrying it in our hands when we have a bag for putting things in." I believe that those affected will love it more if their money from the federal government is deployed for their resettlement and rehabilitation. Mr. Governor you sinned by appointing commissioners and LG caretaker chairpersons that do not even have the resources to hire a boat and tour the areas affected by the flood not to talk of resources needed to relocate and resettle the affected population.  It is OK for Peter Obi (an acclaimed miser) to be selfish enough to deny his butts faeces. But is a sin to refuse to use the fund allocated to these LGs in this current rescue and rehabilitation operation.
Finally, I leave Governor Peter Obi with the words of Chinua Achebe from ‘Things Fall Apart’: "Travellers with closed minds can tell us little except about themselves." We have seen you Governor and we have also seen the deceit, corruption, the lies and worst still the arrogance. Your story in the past six years has been that of clouded and distorted vision. My Anambra State can and should be doing better.
Saharareporters


We Had Nothing To Do With Mubi Killings- Boko Haram leader




boko haram leader


October 9th, 2012
The group says it did not carry out the execution of about 40 students in Mubi Adamawa.
The insurgent group, Jamaatu ahlis Sunnah lil daawati wal jihad, also known as Boko Haram, has denied carrying out the attack that claimed the lives of over forty persons, most of them students of tertiary institutions in Mubi, Adamawa State last week.
A man who claimed to be a senior member of the group, who spoke exclusively with PREMIUM TIMES on Tuesday, said his group had nothing to do with the killing of students in Mubi.
“We have no business with students or student politics. If students are our target we would have killed them randomly on sight and in their school and not sneak on them in the creeping darkness in an area occupied by both students and residents,” he said.
The man, whom independent checks revealed to be a member of the group, said if the sect wanted to attack educational facilities; it would have gone for structures not students.
“What would have been our target as far as I am concerned would have been the building and properties of the institution, since it is owned by the Government. At least, by now other students elsewhere would have been attacked if students are our concern,” he added.
He said the mode of attack is not characteristic of the sect’s numerous attacks.
“Several press releases by our spokesman and Imam in the past have made it clear who our enemies are, I don’t have to repeat it here. I don’t think anybody amongst us has the time to draw up a list or read it out before executing the students.”
The group’s denial throws another controversy into the likely perpetrators of the dastardly act, which saw over 40 people, mostly students of the Federal polytechnic Mubi, killed on October 1 by armed men. Some were shot while others were slaughtered. Security agencies are already investigating the criminal act.

We lost members, but so did JTF
The insurgent leader also admitted that the Joint Task Force, JTF, in various Northern States had killed many of its members; but claimed that some of those killed were innocent people with no links to the group.
He accused the JTF of hiding the casualty figure suffered by the force in various confrontations with the sect.
“We have killed a lot of security personnel in the north especially in Yobe and Borno state, far more than the lies the JTF sell to you, media,” he said; adding that “a significant number of our brothers were killed but most of the people the JTF have killed have nothing to do with us. They are just youths in the wrong place at the wrong time.”
He said his sect was “not like the JTF that hide their casualties.”
“Yes, we suffered some casualties but I want to assure you that our structure, specialists and arm power are intact, and these crises will continue till we die,” he said.

Qaqa alive, may have been captured 
The Boko Haram member said the sect’s official spokesperson, Abu Qaqa is still alive.  He however refused to confirm if Mr. Qaqa is alive with the group or is being detained by security agents.
A successful search operation in Kano, in September, by members of the JTF had led to the killing of some of the sect’s members and arrest of others. One of the arrested persons is believed to be Mr. Qaqa, according to top security sources. The Boko Haram leader in his talk, like the evasive statement of its overall leader, Abubakar Shekau, would however not confirm whether Mr. Qaqa had been captured or not.
“Our Imam has made it clear in his last video that Qaqa is alive, but I cannot answer your queries whether Qaqa is alive with us or with the security agencies,” he said.
He said his group was looking at “how best to communicate with the public.”
“Very soon our position will be clear on all these issues, Qaqa and other sundry issues. We are studying the situation, we are strategizing our operations.
“I can assure you that we will not suffer any more defeat like we did in the past Insha Allah,” he added.
NewsRescue