Monday, 19 November 2012

Police Inspector shot dead by unknown gunmen in Bauchi


It was a black sunday for the Bauchi State Police command, as one of the Inspectors attached to the Government House was killed by unknown gunmen yesterday morning.
It was learnt that the late police inspector simply identified as Babangida Danbaba was gunned down by his assailants who trailed him on his way from the mosque along Nasarawa Road in the state capital after early morning prayer.
Eyewitness said that they heard gunshots severally, but could not tell the exact place.
The Bauchi State Commissioner of Police, Mohammed Ladan who confirmed the incident said a police inspector attached to the Government House was shot by unknown gunmen.
The police boss said that no arrest had been made in connection with the killings, adding that investigation is still on.
DailyPost

Lagos Promises Improved Electricity


Lagos State government has promised to scale up electricity generation within the state to at least 3,000 megawatts within the next two years, the Commissioner for Energy and Mineral Resources, Mr.Taofiq Tijani has said.
Senator Gbenga Ashafa, representing, Lagos East Senatorial District has stressed the urgent need for private sector to buy into the energy sector as well as sponsor the training of quality manpower that will control the sector.
Tijani and Ashafa spoke at the weekend during a formal graduation ceremony in honour of first graduating set of 15 young electrical engineers under the Youth Energy Career Programme (YECP) run by the Lagos State Electricity Board, LSEB, and sponsored by Ashafa, with Siemens, a global player in the power sector as trainer partner.
Tijani, stated that the project is expected to be realised through continuing partnership with private sector investors in the state power sector.
InformationNigeria.org

Sunday, 18 November 2012

Bribery: Between INEC and political parties - NEWS ANALYSIS

 by Kunle Oderemi  THE claim, last week, in Abuja,  by the national chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Professor Attahiru Jega, that parties often set aside funds to compromise the commission’s officials elicited spontaneous comments from their leaders. The allegation hit them like a thunderbolt with virtually all the major parties throwing bricks at Jega, who spoke at a two-day seminar entitled, ‘Party politics in Nigeria and lobbying, the lobbyists and legislature.’
While the urbane don has remained taciturn after dropping the bombshell, the parties have stuck to their guns that they are not guilty as charged by the INEC boss. Rather, they have accused him of being economical with the truth.
As far as PDP is concerned, Jega goofed by not giving the names of parties that engaged in such unorthodox practice. PDP said, “We heard that INEC chairman said some political parties bribed INEC officials to help rig or influence elections. Our response is that he should be honourable enough to mention the names of the parties.”
On its part, the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) said Jega spoke with his tongue in his cheeks and could not have had  CPC as one of those parties involved in subverting the electoral process.  In fact, the party accused INEC of hugely compromising and shortchanging it in the 2011 poll. “Jega could not have been talking about CPC because we did not have the money to bribe them when they snatched 11 states from us in the 2011 elections. INEC, under him, has performed abysmally. With this statement, the question to ask is: How many of his officials have manipulated previous elections and Jega should tell the drastic steps he will take against such corrupt officials.”
Similarly, the All Nigeria People’s Party (ANPP) queried, “Where will the ANPP get the funds to bribe officials. We started with nine states and we are now with three. If it is true that we bribed officials, our fortunes would not have dwindled,” CPC stated.
Verbal missiles were also hurled at the commission by the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and other parties on the allegation. Those critical comments were not unexpected from the parties and other major players in the political arena, in view of the seriousness of the allegation. It (allegation) borders on the integrity and honour of all the implied or mentioned institutions, including INEC and security agencies that have something to do with events surrounding the conduct of elections in the country.
However, it will be foolhardy to assume that there is no iota truth in it against the background of similar allegations of compromise by judicial officials handling election petition matters. A number of judges have had their fingers soiled because of a pot of porridge and the bench has acknowledged the presence of such few bad eggs in the system.  Some parties have also been very vocal on what they called the sleaze among judges that handled election petitions from the state to the national level.
Then, which of the camps in the latest controversy is actually lying? The populace is aware of the various nebulous committees that institutions set up to serve real and imagined functions before and after elections. Some of these described as logistics and miscellaneous are a few of them.
The current issue constitutes a collective moral burden and riddle, which should not be left for Jega alone to unveil and resolve. Though belated as some perceive the allegation, it is one matter that underlines the issue of corruption in high places and institutions that ought to set good standards.
 While the jigsaw requires that Jega substantiate his allegation, the matter demands much more from members of the political class with clear conscience of providing pragmatic ways to guarantee a more decent conduct among all in subsequent elections.
It is likely now that Jega has blown the whistle, the few with a penchant for subverting the will of the people could  become more circumspect in their actions and inactions, as nothing good can ever come  from an irresponsible political class that indulges in cheating, cutting corners and nibbling the nation’s electoral fibre.
Lastly, the allegation is a direct indictment of stakeholders, the nation’s security network inclusive and INEC in particular if it fails to launch a sting operation over such curious matter.  The allegation also implies public inertia during brazen actions by institutions like parties at election time, as some prospective voters  prefer to be ‘settled’ instead of appreciating the potency of their votes. There is a need for all camps to be more alive to their responsibilities.
NigerianTribune

Uncertainty surrounds Reps’ report on Lawan, Otedola

 by John Ameh

Mr. Femi Otedola, and a  lawmaker, Farouk Lawan
Six months into the investigations by the House of Representatives on the controversial $620, 000 bribery allegation, the report is still not ready, The PUNCH has gathered.
As at Sunday (yesterday), when The PUNCH checked with the House Committee on Rules and Business, the committee had neither been briefed on the report of the probe nor had any document been submitted to it.
 “There is uncertainty over the fate of this report.
“It is seven months running since the House started this investigation, but we no longer know what is happening,” a senior lawmaker confided in  in Abuja on Sunday.
The bribery transaction involved a four-time legislator (1999 to date), Mr. Farouk Lawan, and oil businessman, Mr. Femi Otedola.
Otedola claimed to have given Lawan the bribe in the wake of the April fuel subsidy probe by the House to remove the names of Otedola’s two firms from the list of indicted companies by the committee.
Lawan headed the ad-hoc committee mandated to conduct the probe.
The panel uncovered how fraudulent marketers colluded with government officials to rob the nation of over N1.07tn in subsidy scams.
The House had mandated its Committee on Ethics and Privileges in June to investigate the allegation and submit a report within 21 days.
Findings, however, indicated that despite several assurances by the House that the report would be produced, there was none as at Sunday.
Three weeks ago, a member of the Committee on Ethics and Privileges, Mr. Victor Ogene, announced that the panel would lay the report as “soon as the House resumes from the Sallah break”, but nothing happened.
The House resumed from the Sallah break on November 6.
Ogene, who in response to inquiries by our correspondent, said the report was ready, added that the committee was merely awaiting “scheduling” by the House.
When our correspondent contacted the Chairman of the panel, Mr. Gambo Musa, he declined to speak on how far he had gone with the investigation.
“I don’t want to say anything. This is not the right time; you get me?
“There is nothing to say,” Musa told The PUNCH on the telephone.
When asked about the right time he would speak, he remained silent.
The PUNCH checked with the Committee on Rules and Business, which had the responsibility of scheduling committee reports and other legislative activities for the floor.
The chairman, Mr. Albert Sam-Sokwa, told our correspondent that so far, there had been no contact between his committee and Musa’s over the progress of the $620,000 probe.
He said, “The committee has not brought it (report) to me.
“It is still with the committee. If they bring it, mine is to cause it to be laid for consideration by honourable members.
“For now, my committee has nothing to do with it because no report has come to us from the Committee on Ethics and Privileges.
“Maybe, they are putting final touches to the report.”
Punch

Soldier filmed colleagues killing captives in Maiduguri – Report


JTF spokesman, Lieutenant Colonel Sagir Musa
international news agency, REUTERS,  on Sunday reported  that it was in possession of an amateur video showing Nigerian soldiers shooting unarmed captives in broad daylight in Maiduguri,  Borno State.
It said the video was sent to it by a soldier,  who claimed to have witnessed the shooting. Reuters quoted the unnamed soldiers as saying that he was present when the soldiers shot the captives about two weeks ago.
Maiduguri is the seat of the violent Islamic sect, Boko Haram, and there have been many clashes between military operatives and the sect members.
The report said, “In the grainy footage, a man sits down next to three or four corpses piled together on the roadside. He pleads for his life while soldiers shout at him and a crowd looks on a few metres away. “Please don’t fire,” the man says in Pidgin English.
“He tries to stand up and get onto the back of a pickup truck to the left. A Nigerian soldier shouts “come out”, and drags him off it, shoving him on the ground.
“One of them kicks him in the head. Then he and another soldier aim assault rifles at him. Four gunshots are heard and the man lies still next to the others.”
According to Reuters, another video from the same source, which he said was taken after the executions, shows soldiers piling up about 24 bodies in two heaps on the ground from the back of a military truck.
Nigerian army spokesman, Colonel Mohammed Yerima, told Reuters that he had not seen the video but that the events must have been staged.
“How can they do that? It is not possible. This is the Boko Haram tactics. They will do the killing, say it’s the military and then Amnesty International and so on will blame us. It’s not possible for Nigerian troops to act in this way,” Yerima was quoted as saying.
There have been several allegations of improper conduct against the Nigerian soldiers in the Joint Task Force in charge of maintaining peace in the North-East where Boko Haram members have staged many attacks.
But the military has always denied complicity in the crisis in the zone.
The Guardian of London on November 2, 2012 reported a similar case of soldiers shooting dead many during raids in Maiduguri, quoting witnesses and hospital staff.
According to the reports, three witnesses said soldiers from the JTF raided several neighbourhoods in Maiduguri late on November 1 and arrested or shot dead dozens of young men.
“More than 30 bodies were brought in by the JTF and most of them were young men,”  The Guradian quoted one nurse at a hospital in the town,  Yagana Bukar, as saying.
Amnesty International said in a report released on Nov. 1 that the JTF had committed human rights abuses in its fight against Boko Haram.
The report said the JTF had carried out executions in the streets and tortured people without charges ever being brought.
Punch

Condescension As Instrument of State Policy By Sonala Olumhense


Columnist: 
It is not strange, to me, that there is a loud argument over the report of the Petroleum Revenue Task Force chaired by Malam Nuhu Ribadu.
What is new, to me, is that the government is angry.  Actually, anger is hardly the emotion: the government seems to be outraged that there would be Nigerians, anywhere, who fail to see its good nature and achievements.
The government is so disappointed that the presidential spokesman Reuben Abati employed rather uncouth language last week in an article, Jonathan and the Ribadu Report.  I will not repeat his choice of metaphor.
Of the main issue, Abati explained: “The committees in question and the probe into the Petroleum sector were initiated by President Goodluck Jonathan to ensure transparency and accountability in the extractive industry; the goal was to transform the sector and raise levels of integrity accordingly. Every step that has been taken by this administration in this regard has been in fulfillment of this well-stated principle. This includes the decision to completely deregulate the downstream sector, which has now resulted in the exposure of oily deals in that sector, with consequences for the indicted persons.”
The spokesman then went off to reaffirm his worship of Jonathan, listing a batch of praises that include political will; mature response; clear directives; and leadership.
Evidently, Abati has grown in the mischief industry.  Otherwise, it was a conscious choice to chase the smoke rather than the fire.
In the real world, outside the magnificent gates of Aso Rock, none of the current rancor and clamor and rabble-rousing is really about the Ribadu Committee report.  It is not about oil or the committee or the petroleum sector.
That part is the smoke.  The fire is much deeper.  It is about character and leadership.  When Nigerians doubt Jonathan’s motives and question his methods, it is because they know he wants them to accept a reality other than what they are witnessing with their eyes.   It is because they know he wants them to accept the portrait of his praise-singers and sundry assault dogs hired for the purpose.
Thus, when a government official says, repeats or regurgitates such drivel as “President Goodluck Jonathan [wants to] to ensure transparency and accountability,” it sharply contradicts what Nigerians know.
What do Nigerians know?  To begin with, that their President, in his own words, does not give a damn.
Before the whole world—and with the immediacy, pungency and urgency of the Internet and the social media networks—Mr. Jonathan declared that he does not give a damn about declaration of assets; that is: about leading the way, in practice, on transparency and accountability.
In case anyone has forgotten, Mr. Jonathan went further to explain that when he declared his assets in 2007, it was because President Umaru Yar’Adua compelled him to do so.  In his magnanimity, he stated that he does not want to declare his assets and impose on federal officials the obligation to do so.
“The Federal Government has not done anything to stop or discourage the prosecution of indicted persons,” Abati wrote.  “We have made the point, again and again, that in this on-going fight against corruption, there will be no “cover ups”; and no “sacred cows,” and that President Jonathan’s only interest is the people’s interest.”
It is not true that there is an “on-going fight against corruption.”  Nor is it true that there are no cover ups (in quotation marks), and no sacred cows (wink-wink).
Let me cite just five examples, in addition to Mr. Jonathan’s refusal to declare his assets, to debunk this propaganda.
First: the corruption-related reports that include two Halliburton reports and of several presidential commissions which have remained unimplemented.  You cannot have better examples of cover-ups or sacred cows.
Second: the several Ministers in Mr. Jonathan’s cabinet that have been accused of corruption and excessive spending, including the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Allison-Madueke.  It is one of the mysteries of official hypocrisy that the same Minister is the one that set up the committee the report of which is setting the country on fire.  Mrs. Allison-Madueke may well be innocent, but from where does she obtain her credibility?  Certainly not from the people of Nigeria, who are wondering whether they are supposed to laugh when someone says the same Minister is rooting out corruption and deepening reforms. 
Third: federal officials are quick to point to the oil subsidy scam as “proof” that Mr. Jonathan’s government is combating corruption.  It is not true.  The oil subsidy revelations were forced by the people through last January’s protests when the government found itself on the verge of being unseated.   Even then, everyone has seen how the prosecution of the scammers has been hampered by the government’s lack of interest in putting them in jail.  Only last week, the EFCC was reported to be negotiating a plea deal with some of them, including the son of the chairman of the ruling party, Bamanga Tukur.  Surely, that decision was not the EFCC’s to make, unless the commission also carries a PDP card.
Fourth: Let us remember that long before the oil subsidy protests of January 2012 and their aftermath, there was the KPMG audit report of the NNPC which exposed widespread financial and managerial malfeasance in the NNPC.  And let us not forget that for over one year, until demanded by a Senate subcommittee, this “transparency and accountability” government had kept it hidden.
Fifth: Transparency and accountability?  First Lady Patience Jonathan, a Bayelsa State civil servant by choice, this year disappeared abroad for nearly two months at public expense.  The President did not say one word to the nation about her disappearance, although there were credible reports of hospitalization.  That is exploitation, not only of public expenditure, but also of the democratic process.  That is not how to spell accountability.
But there is another critical level at which the propaganda about the character of the current government must be calibrated: the quality of Jonathan’s word.
Last year, one week before Mr. Jonathan took office, I detailed hundreds of his electoral promises.  Today, nearly two years later, only one of those pledges has been redeemed: ONE.  Mr. Jonathan does not even refer to them any longer.
Similarly, while he describes his government as a government of transformation, I have repeatedly observed that he has not published his transformation plan.  That leaves the transformation talk in the precincts of propaganda.
Let us also remember Jonathan’s many promises on jobs, which I have also detailed in this column, as well as his many vows to the public, one of them being to defeat Boko Haram last June.   None of these promises has been redeemed, and the geography of Nigeria continues to shrink around Abuja, while the quality of life plummets.
Regrettably, the government cites Jonathan’s committeeing practice as demonstration of his goodwill and evidence of his success, State House officials condescendingly trying to force-feed the propaganda to the public.
It is clear that the people are not buying it.  Committees may be good for Mr. Jonathan’s ego, but their effect has always been to Delay, Defer, Discourage and then Discontinue.
The condescension emerging from Aso Rock, which recently found new sharpness in connection with the Ribadu report, is a sad turn.  It is this government which has dug for itself the credibility canyon in which it lives, and it is only the government—through courageous decision-making and dogged implementation—which can redeem itself.
To be clear, Jonathan cannot achieve such an objective by claiming the ethical mountain-top his aides are pointing at.  He cannot achieve it by placing in charge of the storehouse Nigerians of dubious or doubtful records.  
What Nigerians are asking is someone who will inspire them through character and consistency.  Unfortunately, they continue to have thrown at them champions of compromise and accomplices to the crime.
That road is guaranteed to lead back, to January 2012, not the future.
•    sonala.olumhense@gmail.com
Saharareporters

PDP, CPC, CAN trade words over merger plan


Pastor-Ayo-OritsejaforThe Peoples Democratic Party, Congress for Progressive Change and the Christian Association of Nigeria on Sunday traded words on which party was violent and the private jet gift to Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor.
The PDP dismissed the CPC and the Action Congress of Nigeria’s merger plan, insisting that it (PDP) would be the party to beat in 2015.
It also described the merger plan as double jeopardy as each of them was a one-man party.
The CPC said because of its violent nature, the PDP had earned for itself, an appellation, “nest of killers.”
In a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Rotimi Fashakin, the CPC faulted the PDP’s claim that it believed in violence.
He listed activities, which had portrayed the PDP and its government, as being violent.
The CPC’s spokesman said the PDP government in 1999 ordered the invasion of Odi, a predominantly Ijaw community in Bayelsa State.
Fashakin noted that the community was not in any secessionist plot against the Nigerian state.
He recalled that in 2001, some communities, including Zaki-Biam, in Benue State were invaded, leading to the death of 300 people.
The national publicity secretary said, “In the eight-year rule of the same administration (1999-2007), the Nigerian polity virtually became a sanguinary with the unresolved assassinations that characterised everyday living.”
But the PDP, in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh, said no amount of attacks on the President or the PDP would shift the focus of the Federal Government.
Metuh said, “2015 will not be decided by personal insults on those in elected offices nor won on the pages of newspapers.
“It lies in the province of the Nigerian people. No matter their Shenanigans, the PDP remains the party to beat.”
He asked the CPC to address its “consistent trajectory of violence.”
According to him, the ACN is a one-man party, adding that the PDP is not losing sleep over merger plans of the two opposition parties.
He said, “While the PDP is not losing sleep over the merger of the two opposition political parties since it is an exercise in democracy and since both cannot defeat the PDP at elections, it is however not out of place for us to point out the major defects of the merger and why Nigerians will continue to reject it as an alternative to our great party.”
According to him, the ACN is entirely owned by Bola Tinubu and brooks no opposition to his dictates.
Fashakin also criticised President Goodluck Jonathan’s presence, when the President of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, was presented with jet.
CAN, in its reaction denied that Jonathan bought a plane for Oritsejafor.
The association also stated that contrary to insinuations, the CAN President did not ‘anoint’ Jonathan for the 2011 general elections.
The Public Relations Officer of the 19 Northern States of CAN and Abuja, Mr. Sunny Oibe, made the clarification while reacting to the allegation by the CPC.
Oibe said, “First of all, the allegation is baseless, mischievous and orchestrated by the evil minds to tarnish the soaring and good image of the President of CAN in the person of Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor. The reason for all these attacks on Ayo is not because of the plane but because Ayo has been against Boko Haram and had suggested that Muhammadu Buhari should be arrested.
“That is why the CPC is attacking Pastor Ayo who was the only one who said Buhari should be arrested and in an ideal society Buhari should be locked behind bars.”
OsunDefender