Sunday, 9 December 2012

Nigerian elected Head of Africa Labour Union body


Owei Lakemfa
Nigeria’s Owei Lakemfa, has been elected as the Secretary General of the Organisation of African Trade Union Unity, (OATUU), a coalition of trade unions in African countries.
He is taking over from another Nigerian Hassan Summonu, as head of the continental body with headquarters in Accra, Ghana.
Lakemfa, a former Acting General Secretary of the Nigeria Labour Congress, who played an active role in January’s anti-fuel subsidy protest, was elected on Friday in Algiers, Algeria.
The activist was once a Labour correspondent at The Guardian Newspapers, then Labour Editor at the Vanguard Newspapers.
He studied Dramatic Arts at Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile- Ife, Osun State and is regarded as a dogged union leader with wealth of experience.
DailyPost

True Confession: I wear his ring, now I carry another man’s child


I will take my time to describe vividly how it happened. My strategy is to at least get your sympathy and to let this story run on your very popular and unique site. I didn’t make my story up. The touch of dialogue in my story is only a narrative style I employed as a graduate of Theatre Arts, yes…from the Benue State University. I don’t think I can open up more than this. Thank you in anticipation.
I was in my room one very hot afternoon and in a very acidic mood. I didn’t know what had got me upset. My roommate was sitting right there, but we shared no conversation. We weren’t new to each other but we had just become roommates. She was already familiar with the terrain and the people around, but I had just moved in. I was up, trying to get the room arranged when we heard a knock, and before we could respond, he let himself in…what if we were naked?
“Ehhhhhh!!! Who has these biscuits on the table, can I have one please?” When he got no response, he turned facing me and my roommate, his eyes pleading. “It is mine” I finally said, “you can have some.” Thank you” he tottered as he threw a whole piece in his mouth. I don’t know what attracted me to him at that moment, although I didn’t even show any interest let alone smile at him…but deep down, I knew better. My groins tightened, not that he was so handsome but maybe for his reckless look. “You don’t smile, do you?” his voice brought me back to reality. I simply ignored the question with a wave of the hand. The rest of the time he chatted away with my roommate, picking from their conversation, I discovered he lived within the neighborhood.
Dropping by the apartment became often for him. The first time I was sure he came to see my roommate, but these other times; I just can’t tell who it was he comes to see. Then one fateful evening, he dropped by the house and my roommate had gone out. “She’s not around” I said to him on opening the door. “It is you I came to visit,” he simply said and strolled past me into the room. I was uncomfortable and breathing was hard. We sat on either side of the room and no one spoke, the silence was as thick as the walls of Jericho. He moved from his side of the room towards me where I sat on the bed and my heart froze. He quietly sat down on the bed beside me. He held me on my shoulders and gently turned me towards him so we could face each other. Am sure he knew what his presence does to me. “I like you,” he said as he starred deep into my eyes. I remember those words exactly like it was just this afternoon. “I ……….am engaged to someone,” I managed to reply. “It doesn’t matter dear,” he answered and before I could say anything, before I could understand what was going on, he covered my lips with his. I thought I tried to resist and push him away but no, I heard myself moaning at his touch, responding to his kiss, passionately. He touched me with so much passion, I couldn’t help it but let myself melt in his arms, I forgot everything around me and in my head, not even the fact that my wedding was few months away. I forgot everything. I submitted myself totally and even let him have me, completely. OMG!!!
It was until the show of shame was over that I regretted it, I wept, I felt guilty. How could I have betrayed a man that loved me so much? How could I have lost control without even realizing it? It was work that had moved me to another town from my fiancé and it hadn’t even been so long. After that day, my supposed neighbor and I never saw again, I had put an end to the ‘bastard’ act.
Weeks passed, then I started having strange feelings, and my body was changing. I dared not to think beyond the ordinary, “but I had not started my ovulation period then,” I consoled myself. “I can’t be pregnant,” I hoped and prayed it was something else. I can’t even bring myself to tell my roommate about it, so I took the first step. I went for a pregnancy test. “Congratulations,” the lab technician said as he handed me my test result and I gave him a stare that could send him to his grave, like it was his fault. “But God, it was just one day, one time, one stand,” my heart pleaded with God. Just one mistake and my future is so bleak.
I am in a state of dilemma, I’m pregnant, courtesy ‘the reckless guy’, that was what attracted me to him in the first place, wasn’t it. Now, I curse the day that I met him. I don’t know if I should tell him I’m carrying his baby. I can’t even dare to tell my fiancé that I’m pregnant for another man; he certainly would break up the wedding plans and I’m not ready to be a disgrace to my family. Moreover, God, I can’t even think of an abortion. I’m confused, I don’t know what to do, someone please help me out. I need your counseling.

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DailyPost

“It is stupid to de-register PRP” – Balarabe Musa blasts INEC


Alhaji Balarabe Musa
A former Governor of Kaduna State and national leader of the Conference of Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP), Alhaji Balarabe Musa has condemned the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) over the deregistration of the Peoples Redemption Party (PRP), saying that it is unacceptable.
The former presidential flag bearer of the party in the last presidential election maintained that the party would drag the electoral body to court over their action.
Musa told newsmen on Friday that the de-registration of 28 political parties by the INEC is not what the country need at the moment.
He said” “This is the latest attempt to deregister our party and it signifies the beginning of fascist dictatorship in Nigeria. But it will be resisted as it was done in the past. Remember we had to go up to the Supreme Court to be registered as a political party. So, we are going to do the same thing about this, relying particularly on Section 40 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
“I know we don’t have the equivalence of the late Gani Fawehinmi. So, this will be difficult, but we will try to fight for our rights.
“It is stupid. PRP has its registered office in Abuja. INEC is aware of it. This is a fundamental condition for registering a political party. We have contested all the elections where we know we can win including the latest local government election in Kaduna State on December 1.” He said
Speaking further, the political stalwart said: “We have a national executive committee operating in many states. So, there is no reason for deregistering PRP other than a conspiracy to get rid of the PRP, a fundamental political opponent.
“This government is the worst type of government you can think of in a democratic country and we have made this quite clear.
“PRP stands for social reconstruction of Nigeria”.
DailyPost

President Jonathan spent N3.3 billion on 20 trips abroad in 2012


Billions of naira of taxpayers’ money have been expended on the foreign trips of President Goodluck Jonathan despite his January promise to cut down on such trips.
This newspaper’s findings show that the President and his entourage have spent not less than N3.354bn on foreign trips since 2010.
Our correspondent learnt that in the first 11 months of 2012, the President had travelled out of the country at least 20 times, including his trip to Sierra Leone in October and the D8 Summit he attended in Pakistan in November.
In September alone, Jonathan travelled out of the country four times. He travelled to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia for a two-day visit on September 1 for the burial of late Prime Minister Meles Zenawi.
Nine days later, he went to Malawi and Botswana in a cumulative three-day visit for enhancement of bilateral relationships. The President ended the month of September with another trip to New York, United States for the United Nations General Assembly
From February, 2010 when he became the Acting President to December 2010, Jonathan spent N970.891m on foreign travels.
Although the 2011 budget was silent on the expenses for the President foreign travels, investigations showed that about N1.7bn was spent on foreign trips.
According to the 2011 budget, N1.145bn was budgeted for Vice-President Namadi Sambo’s foreign trips.
In 2012, N N684.74m was budgeted for Jonathan’s foreign travels and he had travelled out of the country 19 times.
Although the 2013 budget recently submitted to the National Assembly by Jonathan suggested that N2.6bn would be spent on his foreign trips next year, investigations have shown that much more than the quoted figure will be spent and is being spent judging by the expenses the country incurs during such trips.
The expenses incur include and are not limited to airfares for members of the President’s delegation who will travel on commercial flights, cost of procuring travel visas for them, estacodes for members of the delegation, fuelling of the presidential jets as well as other logistics.
Only the President and his very top aides fly on the presidential jets.
Industry source told one of our correspondents that airfare to and fro any European countries in the Economy category could vary from N110,000 to N150,000 per person depending on the timing and the destinations.
She added that for the Business class, the fare ranged from N600, 000 to N700,000 per person depending on the category of the Business Class (there are three categories), the timing and destination.
Prevailing exchange rate at the time of purchase is also said to be a factor.
The source added that corporate purchase like Aso Rock would do, could also attract discounts.
The President was said to have jetted out to different destinations in Africa, Europe, Asia, North America and South America during his Presidency.
Jonathan, in 2011 alone, visited several countries including United States, France, Uganda, Australia, Ghana, Chad, Equatorial Guinea and Ethiopia among others.
The size of his entourage varies depending on the country he is visiting and the purpose of such visit.
While top aides and officials of the Presidential Villa are regular faces on such trips, ministries relevant to the purpose of his overseas trips also send delegations.
Lately, the President had also resolved to always go on foreign trips with two members of the National Assembly (one from each chamber) who serve on the committee related to his purpose of visit.
State governors are also on the entourage.
For example, an online news site, Saharareporters, had in June reported that Jonathan travelled to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil for the United Nations’ Earth Summit with 116 government officials.
Although the Presidency faulted the number, it did not offer the exact number despite a request made by the news site.
The breakdown of the delegation was given as 25 personal aides, 18 aides of Mrs. Patience Jonathan, two members of the National Assembly, five ministers, two state governors, and 63 officials from the Ministries of Environment, Foreign Affairs, National Planning and Petroleum Resources.
When the President visited Brussels for the World Customs Conference in the same month, the same medium reported that he went with about 57 people, including 26 aides, three ministers, eight members of the National Assembly, and 20 other government officials.
The same month, Patience Jonathan was in Maryland, United States, to attend a UNESCO First Lady’s “Youth Infusion” Summit and was reportedly accompanied by 36 people: 18 aides, four wives of state governors, and 14 friends and associates.
Investigation showed that in September 2012, Jonathan jetted out of the country four times. He visited Ethiopia Malawi, Botswana and New York, United States for the UN General Assembly.
He had reportedly visited Trinidad and Tobago earlier with a 70-member delegation.
Jonathan had said in a national broadcast in January, “I have directed that overseas travels by all political office-holders, including the President, should be reduced to the barest minimum. The size of delegations on foreign trips will also be drastically reduced; only trips that are absolutely necessary will be approved.”
 DailyPost

Pastor, others arrested for drugs trafficking in Osun State


The law has finally caught up with a pastor and a 27 year-old man for the patronage of Indian hemp. The two men were arrested by National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) in Osun State for the possession of 181 bags of cannabis sativa popularly known as Indian hemp.
Anthonia Edeh, the sector commander of the Agency, told newsmen in Oshogbo about the unfortunate arrest.
According to her, the 45-year-old pastor, and his accomplice were arrested at Ikire in Irewole Local Government Area of the state on Dec. 5, with the illicit weed weighing 1,838.4 kilogramme.
Men of the command swooped into action based on the information received from patriotic Nigerians and arrested the two suspects in a three bedroom apartment, where the bags of Indian hemp were stocked,” she said.
Edeh also revealed that although three other suspects including a woman escaped arrest, the agency were able to seize the bags filled with cannabis seeds, which they had wanted to keep for the next planting season.
Efforts are ongoing to nab the fleeing culprits, though the pastor is claiming being innocent of the crime, saying that he was only a co-tenant of the other suspect.
The agency has no constitutional power to exonerate him, only the court has the power and the two men will be arraigned soon,” she said.
Meanwhile, another 68.8 kilogramme of Indian hemp, was recovered by Edeh and her men. The contraband goods were stocked inside a Volkswagen Vento car marked AW 652 AKR, on Dec. 2, along Ilobu Road in Osogbo.
Narrating how it was discovered, Edeh said the owner of the car was on the road side waiting for his suspected buyer, but took to his heels when he saw the men of NDLEA approaching him.
While reassuring the commitment of the agency to put a stop to the rampant cultivation, trafficking and peddling of hard drugs across the state, Edeh urged the public to be conscious of their environment and report any activities of drug peddlers or traffickers to the security operatives.
She also cautioned commercial drivers to be at alert and know the kind of goods they carry,“now that we are at the peak of harvesting period”, she advised.
DailyPost

2015: Presidency Has Secret Campaign Structure – S’West PDP Officials

| OLAOLU OLADIPO
Members of the South West caucus of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) are grumbling over their alleged marginalisation by the Federal Government.
They have also alleged that President Goodluck Jonathan operates an alternative campaign structure to actualise his purported 2015 re-election bid.
Officials of the party in the zone, who spoke to LEADERSHIP Sunday in Lagos on condition of anonymity, lamented that the federal government had not done enough to mitigate the sense of loss of the party in the area to the rival Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).
Party sources in the South west claimed that Jonathan had gone ahead to erect new campaign structures in the zone as a way of securing victory for him, should former President OlusegunObasanjo make real his decision to dump him ahead of the 2015 election.
Some leaders of the PDP in Lagos State said the Presidency through its proxies had been funding an amorphous caucus within the party to achieve the aim. They could not immediately confirm if such structure also exists in other states in the zone.
The caucus composed mainly of party members, who though based in Lagos, are from the South South and the South East geo-political zones of the country.  The members are expected to form the nucleus of his campaign in 2015.
“We are aware of the existence of a South South caucus within the PDP but what I can say is that they are party members who have been given the right and privilege of assemblage by the constitution,” a party official said.
Leadership

Why Tukur Can’t Give PDP Internal Democracy – Richards

STANLEY NKWOCHA
Reputed for his candour in public issues discourse and analysis, Daniel Richards, a social reforms advocate, politician and businessman discusses a wide range of issues with STANLEY NKWOCHA in this interview. He frowns at the nation’s stunted democracy and concludes that it is time the nation began a national dialogue.
You have chosen to operate politically without any platform. Why?
I have taken it upon myself to practice a personal idea-based politics, because I have not seen any political party in Nigeria that is driven by ideas or formed by people of courage. What I do is try to find out people with potentials to take us to the next level and support them. Politics in Nigeria is like a personal or communal enterprise; if you join one party today and it doesn’t favour you, then you keep moving from one political party to another.
I have a friend who is currently in his ninth party since 1999; from the APGA, ANPP, CPC and the rest. If this kind of person is elected into an executive office, where will his loyalty be? How can he make an impact on society? He started in the morning in PDP and by afternoon, he was in the ANPP, in the evening he was already in the DPP. If you support this fellow in the morning, how do you form a partnership with him, if by evening he is already in another party?
Therefore for me, Nigeria is at a crossroads; that is why I do things on my own. For instance, two weeks ago, I came from my village in Gombi Local Government Area of Adamawa state where I took it upon myself to feed a secondary school. Government schools don’t have meals anymore and students hardly stay in school so I used my money to feed them.
Unfortunately, in Adamawa state where I come from, government has refused to pay WAEC fees; so, all the investment I have made have gone to the students who came to me and complained that they have finished WAEC but can’t get their results. The problem is that the nominal fees that government usually pays, our own state government has not paid.
As for the WAEC fees, it is paid by the government; WAEC only issues the candidates their number and certificates. In my state, this money has not been paid, but they will write the exams, alright. The only thing is that WAEC will withhold the results, until the money has been paid.
The parents are running helter-skelter, trying to see if they can pay it themselves. In the case of the school I told you, I have gotten their names and will pay the fees for them. That done, I can go to WAEC and request the release of their results.
When you say dividends of democracy, it has nothing to do with roads, electricity and all that – it is about the full participation of people like me and you. If participation is impossible, forget roads, electricity and the rest.
Like I was saying Nigeria is becoming really dysfunctional and unless we take up arms in protest, we are not likely to make it. If you see what is happening in the country today, I don’t think it can happen anywhere else.
By saying that unless we take up arms in protest, are you advocating for a violent revolution?
A disabled person is not a useless person; it is just that God wants him so to learn some lessons in life. Our disability as a nation is based on how this country was founded; this disability should have helped us like the case of the Paralympics games to London.
You are aware that it was people with physical disabilities that brought medals. What I am saying in essence is that, we can use our disability as our source of strength; if we come out of our disability, it will help us as to where we can go.  But we need to talk.
Now that the process of reviewing the constitution has gone as far as the Zonal levels, what areas would you want to be addressed?
What I don’t even understand is why  they should even take it to the zones? This is a Nigerian issue, why must it be zoned; why can’t we have a general idea of sitting together? How do we trust the people in the South-South zone now that their man is in power?
How can I trust someone in Kogi or someone up there in the north, who thinks his interests supersede any other person’s? Why don’t we have a national discourse where we can sit and agree on something? Why should an important issue like Constitution review be zoned again? Why don’t we agree in Abuja, Lagos or wherever so that we have a Constitution that is nationally addressed?
By sending these parliamentarians to the zones, seriously, what are we expecting? Most of them got there without the votes of the electorate, so whose interest are they going to serve?

But the National Assembly is composed of the peoples’ representatives, is it not so?
First and foremost, let us understand one thing. If you refer to the National Assembly as representatives of the people, we must understand one thing namely that 94 percent of all of them got their mandates through the courts; either at the Tribunals, Appeal Court or Supreme Court. Who are they then representing? If any member got his mandate either from the Tribunal, Appeal Court or Supreme Court, is he representing me? How can we come together when some want more states; are we then going to give everybody what they want?
The way this country has been designed, we will never break up; a country where you write free cheques, Jonathan will collect his own and share to others, the governors will also collect theirs and share. So, this fear of break up will not happen because nobody will collect free cheque and go. Therefore the idea that we will split doesn’t even exist because nobody will want to leave this free cheque; if this were possible, it would have been long ago.
We went through the civil war and several other crises but the only thing keeping us together is this monthly cheque. So, we can use this opportunity to agree and discuss this matter. From 1999 till date all the four presidential elections were decided by the Supreme Court. We have seven voters in the Supreme Court who decide presidential elections in Nigeria.
Are there lessons we could learn from the recently held US elections?
I don’t think we can learn any lessons from the US election because we are running a completely different system. This idea of America has been doing it for over 200 years does not count. If you are going on a journey, there must be a starting point. In this country, we don’t even have a starting point. If you look at the PDP, for instance, you can’t call it a political party because of the way it was formed. Even where we are now, you know that the PDP has been saying they will rule Nigeria for sixty years.
So, it is predetermined elections that we have been having which means the PDP will continue to win elections time and time again. If you want to make comparisms, there is no way the Democratic Party in the US can claim to rule America for two or three terms because they know they will get their mandate from the people. But PDP knows that their mandate will come from the Supreme Court; that is why they can continue to rule for the next sixty years.
You are known to be linked to candidates of different political parties. Why is this so?
Like I said earlier I identify with people that have ideas; people that can deliver in the midst of this confusion-whether in CPC, APGA or ACN. For instance, I supported ACN now in Adamawa State and already they have told me that I am doing Yoruba politics. The fact of the matter is that the PDP as a ruling party says they will continue to rule for sixty years and they know exactly what they are talking about.
You have been following trends within the ruling PDP; the current National chairman, Bamanga Tukur, has initiated a process of reconciliation and promised to entrench internal democracy. Is this feasible?
But you know the way Bamanga emerged. A situation whereby people were already discounted; when they said the PDP had zoned the National Chairmanship to the North East zone; what happened? All of us stupidly went to Bauchi, our zonal capital; conducted an election and Bamanga got two votes.
What manner of democracy are we talking about; the same Bamanga is now preaching internal democracy-the process that he did not follow?
Leadership