Sunday, 9 December 2012

How Kidnappers Seized Nigeria Finance Minister Okonjo-Iweala’s Mother From The Palace


Ngozi okonjo-Iweala
By SaharaReporters, New York
The kidnap of Professor Kamene Okonjo, the 82-year old mother of Nigeria's finance minister Ngozi okonjo-Iweala was executed by a group of daredevil kidnappers who disguised as palace guards while her husband was traveling in Abuja.
A man in police custody who allegedly led the kidnappers to Mrs. Okonjo's compound a few minutes before the incident took place  was said to have informed the housemaid that he was in the palace to take the queen mother to somewhere in the town for a traditional event.
Other kidnappers numbering 10 were lurking around the palace until Mrs. Okonjo and her maid came down to offer refreshments to some men  working to fix the palace gate.
Eyewitness accounts said that as soon as the woman stepped out of the main building, heading towards the gate, the kidnappers moved in from the gate, and pushed her into a waiting  Volkswagen Golf car.
In a telephone chat, one of the palace chiefs, who requested anonymity, told our reporter that the abductors were armed to teeth, and that had taken hostage the workers at the gate who were fixing interlocking tiles in the palace, ordering them to lie face down.
“Immediately they saw our king’s wife, the Queen Mother who was coming towards the gate with her maid to serve the workers soft drinks, she was seized and thrown into a waiting Golf car while another car was parked outside”.
Another eyewitness further said: “One of kidnappers, bracing all odds, went upstairs to collect the Queen Mother’s handbag. Another maid who sighted the kidnapper upstairs hid herself in the kitchen.”
 Professor Okonjo is a retired profesor of sociology at the University of Nigeria (UNN) Nsukka.

Breaking news: Okonjo-Iweala’s mother kidnapped

BY AUSTIN OGWUDA & FESTUS AHON ASABA- Gunmen Sunday abducted Prof. Kamene Okonjo, 82, mother of the Minister of Finance, Prof Okonjo-Iweala in Ogwashi-Uku, Delta State.
Okonjo-Iweala’s mother,  the wife of His Majesty, Professor Chukwuka Aninshi Okonjo Agbogidi, the reigning Obi of Ogwashi-Uku kingdom was kidnapped Sunday at about 1:30 pm at the Obi’s palace at Ogbe-Ofu quarters in Ogwashi-Uku by eight gunmen who stormed the palace in two Audi cars.
It could not be immediately ascertained if security men were at the palace when she was kidnapped.
Delta State police public relations officer, PPRO, Mr. Charles Muka;  “Yes, we (police) have got the information on the kidnap and we have also got information that will lead to the arrest of the hoodlums”.
According to a dependable source, the woman who is a trained medical doctor and a professor was pushed into one of the Audi cars and driven to an unknown destination.
The source, who pleaded anonymity, said security agents have been drafted to the palace for fear of the unknown.
A senior police officer in the State who pleaded anonymity however said that massive manhunt has commenced to rescue the Queen of Ogwashi-Uku.
Vanguard

Lagos pastor arraigned for N2.5 million fraud


A pastor, Adeniyi Onitiri, 57, was on Friday arraigned before an Igbosere Magistrates’ Court, Lagos, for allegedly defrauding one Mr Tajudeen Lamitoye of N2.5 million.
Mr. Onitiri who is a pastor in one of the Pentecostal churches resides at No. 9, Adeshokan St., Alagbado Station, Lagos.
The accused is facing a two-count charge of fraud and obtaining money under false pretence.
He, however, pleaded not guilty to the charge.
The prosecutor, Cpl. Emmanuel Ajayi, told the court that in November 2009 the accused collected N2.5 million from one Mr Tajudeen Lamitoye as advance payment to purchase an uncompleted bungalow at N13B, Aderibigbe St., Onike, Yaba, Lagos.
Mr. Ajayi explained that the uncompleted bungalow owned by the accused cost N5 million.
He said that the accused refused to sell the property to the complainant after collecting the money.
Mr. Ajayi said that when all efforts by the complainant to get a refund or the property proved abortive, the accused was arrested on Dec. 5.
The prosecutor said the offences contravened Sections 312 (3) and 409 of the Criminal Code, Laws of Lagos State, 2011.
Magistrate O.I Oguntade granted the accusedbail in the sum of N250,000 with two sureties in like sum.
The case was adjourned till Jan. 22 for trail
 DailyPost

The Audacity Of A Rogue Regime – By Chinedu Ekeke





On the highway to infamy, shame and conscience are two bumps you do not expect to see. Actually, there are no bumps at all. It’s usually a smooth ride propelled by impunity and an imperial feeling of invincibility. It was from the centre of that highway that Diezani Allison-Madueke, Nigeria’s petroleum minister, chided citizens, last week, for their lack of understanding. She wondered why it was difficult for people to simply comprehend how corruption makes service delivery easy and frictionless.
Descending from the chambers of their Federal Executive Council (FEC) – by the way the FEC has since last two years assumed the position of Nigeria’s highest corruption appropriation and shielding body, only awarding contracts for majorly frivolous projects that hardly ever get completed – meeting on Wednesday, Madueke sauntered into the presidential villa’s press corner and thundered to awaiting journalists; “We cannot eat our cakes and have it [sic]. We cannot keep calling out for transparency and accountability and pointing at corruption if we are not prepared to bear some of the hardship that will obviously come when you are trying to clean up a sector.”
But for my decision to not make this piece a long one, I would have been interested in knowing where Mrs Diezani schooled. I would have loved to know who taught her the rule of concord in English language, so as to understand the elegance of referring to ‘cakes’ as ‘it’. But she already earned my pardon even before the howler. She doesn’t have a PhD. And we know that it is tough for even those with PhDs (even if from the academia) to make coordinated and grammatically correct sentences in this regime. Dullness could be infectious. I’ve heard that from experts.
Back to her admonition. Those words aren’t difficult to understand. She said we ate our cakes the day we dared call for fiscal responsibility and transparency in the management of our oil, and so should not be that stupid to expect to have the same cakes back since they are trying to become fiscally responsible and transparent in the oil sector. Diezani implied that we should have known that lack of corruption and service delivery are mutually exclusive. Two things are mutually exclusive if they cannot happen at the same time. Diezani explained to Nigerians that there cannot be fuel if we do not allow corruption to remain. It is corruption that makes fuel available, and now that we have forced their hands into tightening the noose on oil racketeers, it is irresponsible of us to expect that there’ll be availability of fuel. So, if you want fuel, advocate for corruption. Full stop.
Now that is a minister in Nigeria; actually, a high ranking one. Why was she that bold to spew those lines of insult to a nation that has daily been insulted by her rulers? It is because she appreciates the premium the current administration she serves places on corrupt officers: they are protected like a hen protects its eggs. She understands that she is not supposed to remain a minister by now, in saner climes, that is. She should have long been explaining to the jury how a budgetary provision of N240b for fuel subsidy metamorphosed into trillions of naira under her watch. Since January this year, a consensus had long coalesced on the decency of sacking Diezani and prosecuting her for her role in the fleecing of Nigerians as the petroleum minister. On a daily basis, the call for her sack had intensified. But the man who appointed her, Nigeria’s cheerleader of the corrupt, has feigned ignorance of the need for Diezani’s sack and prosecution. She has remained, and her continuous stay has emboldened her to ridicule us even further.
Consider how she constituted the Nuhu Ribadu-led Task Force and then secretly compromised two leading members of the committee few weeks later with appointments into the board of the NNPC without giving a hoot about what conflict of interest means. As you would expect, the two men punctured the committee’s report, right in front of the president, and declared that the recommendations of the Task Force were plain ‘unimplementable’ simply because the processes that led to the recommendations – not the recommendations themselves – weren’t satisfactory to them. It did not even matter that Mr Steve Orosanye, the leader of the team to rubbish the report, was not attending committee sittings. The melodrama worked out as planned, and a credible report which, by the way, indicted Diezani herself, was pooh-poohed by an administration that believes in the almighty power of corruption in hitch-free service delivery. But even before Ribadu’s report, Diezani and the industry players under her watch had been indicted by every probe panel, or audit firm, that looked at the oil industry books, for sleaze, sharp practices and opaqueness in operations. That she is still a minister today justifies her belief in the wonders of corruption and its ability to get things done – faster – in 2012 Nigeria.
It is therefore understandable why the federal government dismissed the recent rating of Nigeria by Transparency International (TI) as the 35th most corrupt nation as untrue. They discussed and agreed in their FEC meeting – where protection for corruption and the corrupt must be topping their weekly agenda – that the rating by TI was not a ‘true reflection’ of their regime’s ‘efforts’ at fighting corruption.
The conveyor of the message, Labaran Maku, who mistakes the Information ministry he heads for the lying arm of a joke of a government, said the TI rating, as well as a recent poll by Gallup that placed Mr Jonathan’s regime as the world’s second most corrupt, were products of interactions with Nigerians and synopsis of ‘negative media reports’.
It is difficult to understand, as much as the members of FEC do, the pivotal role corruption plays in the prompt availability of goods and services in a society and not frown at whoever condemns it. This present administration has hands-on experience in the goodness of corruption, that’s why they don’t even think it should be demonized as much as detractors and opposition do.
But in a bid to create the impression of a people on the same page with the rest of the world, they have joined in pretending that corruption is equally evil, but not until they argue out how corrupt the world sees them to be. For the FEC, Nigeria should have been declared to be corruption-free, going by the ‘efforts’ they are making in the ‘fight’ against the monster. Remember that the president had openly lied to us during a statewide broadcast that TI had ranked Nigeria immediately after the United States amongst the countries that demonstrate indubitable resolve in the fight against corruption. Such are the kind of stories the regime wants to hear: concocted lies and half-truths. They seek flattering statistics, but daily fertilize corruption which is alien to impressive human development index anywhere in the world.
I never knew that it could be possible for a meeting of over 50 men and women to not have even one soul who still has conscience. Yes, I understand the power of free mega money – the type that comes with just being a Nigerian government official, but I never imagined it could so freeze up people’s humanity to the height of denying every verifiable fact around them.
Here’s a government that budgeted N240b for one year for fuel subsidy (based on prevailing trend of subsidy spending in the previous years), and then expended over a trillion naira on the same item before nine months without blinking an eyelid. When they sensed the inevitability of bankruptcy at such stupid spending rates, they did not bother to probe the subsidy regime or question the relevant agencies. They simply understood what happened, and then chose to push their irresponsibility to the already impoverished masses through fuel tax. Nigerians refused vehemently and showed visible willingness to bring down their rogue regime. It was at that point that the House of Representatives quickly commenced a probe of the subsidy regime. Yet as that was going on, the government used the president’s closest oil dealer, Femi Otedola, to rubbish whatever would be the report of that probe. Otedola set up and bribed Farouk Lawan, the Chairman of the House Committee handling the probe. As we talk, Otedola is seen everywhere around the president. He hasn’t been prosecuted for bribery. He hasn’t been prosecuted for economic sabotage. But Jonathan’s government’s claim to fighting corruption is the prosecution of subsidy fraudsters. So the question is: when did this government begin their prosecution of the subsidy scammers? After we botched their plans to cover up the fraud through fuel tax? Why didn’t they prosecute them before our anti-subsidy removal protests?
And when you hear prosecution, you almost want to believe it is the first time the government is trying to prosecute people. We know their second strategy of growing their pet-monster. My bet is that this government will bungle the fuel subsidy cases to create room for judges to quash them on technicalities. We’ve seen all that before.
It is laughable to hear the government, through Mr Maku, blame the media for the TI ratings. This is a government that has presided over the highest cases of treasury looting since the birth of this country. Punch Newspaper helped us out with a clear summation of how much has been stolen under the watch of Mr Jonathan’s government: N5 trillion naira. That is a whole annual budget! To be clear, I think the Transparency International rating for Nigeria was too fair. I can’t imagine any other country in the world with more criminally-wired public servants. That country must be hell, the abode of Lucifer himself.
But I do perfectly understand why it is possible that a government could be this bad. Their destination, infamy, especially in African rulership, has a reward in excess money that unborn generations cannot exhaust. This reward, like a magnet, sits at the end of the highway, waiting patiently. From there, it pulls their vehicle, already racing at high speed, to that realm where petro-dollars matter more than the millions of Nigerians who die before 50 because no life-sustaining social welfare is in place and functional.
It is such realization, that fame isn’t worth as much as the dollars of infamy, that fuels the arrogance of members this government. And it is that financial reward that we must target if we are serious about putting a halt to the sustained and determined effort by a few men and women of dead conscience to convert Nigeria’s public wealth to private cash.
ekekeee

I will always be sexy! – Omotola

by Akan Ido
Actress, Omotola Jalade Ekeinde doesn’t cease to grab the headlines and turn heads with her impeccable acting talent and drop-dead gorgeous figure.
The sexy actress and singer has managed to stay on top of her game since she started out acting in what seemed like ages ago.
In this interview with the Punch Newspaper, Omosexy reveals more about her life, career, and her upcoming reality show.
Read:
“I am scared about the reality show but it is a risk I have to take, life is all about risks,” she says.
Omosexy, as she is fondly called, cannot forget her background in a hurry. She wanted to be a model but fate had other things in store for her.
She says, “I did not always aspire to be an actress, I started out as a model. It was tough then, modelling like every other part of entertainment was not developed and one had to wait forever to get a job.  Plus, there were too many girls who wanted the same job. It was just a hobby for me.
“I thought if I wanted to do something for a career, it would be music because I sang in the choir and one could see the direction music was heading at the time.   But I went into acting when I accompanied my friend who was a model to the casting of a movie. She did not get the part but she told me to try, I did and I got my very first movie role.”
As a young girl, Ekeinde would tell you she was a mischievous little lady who enjoyed making trouble when no one was watching.
She says, “I was troublesome! Nothing too crazy though because my mum was extremely strict and I could not go all out to make trouble. But I would be the one to pinch or probably tear somebody’s dress somewhere. Then I had this sweet face so when they catch me I would deny, look very innocent and everybody would be petting me instead of punishing me.”
The saddest day of her life came when she lost her father at a young age.
She recalls, “It was the worst moment of my life till date. Even though I have lost my mum and my mum’s death too was very painful but I think, my dad’s death was more painful because I was very close to him. For a very long time I did not get along with my mum because of her disciplinary nature but I was very close to my dad because I was the only girl and the only child for a very long time. My dad was the manager of Lagos Country Club and I used to go to school at Chrisland Nursery School, Opebi. Then we moved from Ikoyi to Iyana-Ipaja and since my house was far from the school, I would naturally go to Lagos Country Club to stay with my dad after school.  When he died, it was like life left me, my younger brothers are quite younger than me so when my dad left me I did not have anybody. I was alone emotionally; I closed up. I did not mourn and I did not grieve. I was in shock for a very long time, I did not know what to do or where to go but when I saw the trauma my mum was going through, I just figured out I had to be the man.
“My mum was a petty trader then, she had a store where she sold drinks and pepper soup, but after my dad died, she started doing other things and I had to step up and help because she was going through a lot. ”

But her story hasn’t been a sad one all through, meeting her husband, Matthew Ekeinde, who was 26 then, is one of her happy memories.
She enthuses, “I was 16 and really big for my age, I actually looked 20, I have always been very mature anyway, maybe because of the death of my father, I had to grow up quickly.  So when he met me he actually thought I was older and when he got to know I was 16 he said ‘ah ha, what would I do with 16?’  So we became just   friends but when I turned 18, he said ‘oh you are an adult now, will you marry me?’  I was like oh, hell no!
“He was a pilot then; he had been flying since the age of 17. It was not what attracted me to him.  Actually that was a turn off for me. Before I met him, I wanted to be a pilot too at some point.  Besides, I knew the lifestyle some of them lived; pilots had a reputation for having wives in each of the cities their planes landed!  I told him I was not ready to be a caricature, I asked him- am I going to be your Lagos wife now?
“But I got to know him and his soul; everybody fell in love with him, because that is one way to gauge a guy, from what everybody says about him. Everybody, including my mum loved him.”
The couple has been together for 15 years and at a time when most celebrity marriages are crashing, Ekeinde attributes this feat to God.
Hear her: “We both have our foundation and that foundation is Christ. I am not too sexy to admit that. I will always be sexy.  If it was just love it would have crashed a long time ago, there are times when you would not be in love.  The fear of God as a higher power keeps everyone in check.
“When we fight, we don’t go for counseling because we don’t like discussing ourselves with other people. And we do fight, oh yes.   Our fights are not even funny.  I am a very vicious person, when I fight, I fight. But he is mature and he hardly gets angry, when he is angry, my madness has to give way. I don’t get angry when he is angry because it is not going to be pretty.”
So which of the children wants to be like her?
“All of them,” she says, referring to her two boys and two girls.
“They are all very independent minded. In my family we are all very strong minded people, we don’t treat them like they are kids, we talk to them like adults.  The boys naturally want to be pilots. My second daughter is actually a fashionista. My first daughter is into church and prayers; she wants to be a journalist actually.”
Remind her that she still has the same youthful appearance she had when she was 18, she agrees,
“I don’t stress myself. I don’t wear makeup when I am not working. Nothing stresses me! I don’t get embarrassed, I have no shame. If I fall down here I will get up and tell everybody, ‘I don fall o! How we go come do am now?” She jokes.
What’s her favourite meal?
She says, “I just found out that fried plantain is not good. I skip meals, not because I am dieting but because I work all the time. Naturally, when you are doing this sort of job, you start to become very conscious.  When they yab you and say ‘see your turkey hand,’ It will start to get to you. Then you will be forced to do some research to find out what your problems are and if you find out that dodo is part of your problems, you start working on it.”
YNaija.com

Ojukwu’s Secret Daughter Traced She lives in Kaduna

The secret daughter ex-Biafran leader left behind was brought up by a prominent Muslim family in Kaduna. She lives among the Northern elite and detests any suggestion that links her with the former warlord. This is the extraordinary story of Ojukwu’s mystery daughter.
Even in death Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, Nigeria’s best known rebel leader, seems to have retained his ability to shock. The revelation that he had a secret daughter — to whom he allocated, in his will, one of his landed properties — shocked even the other members of his family. But perhaps more shocking is the discovery — through Sunday Trust investigation — that the daughter was actually brought up by a prominent Northern Muslim as his own “child”.
Tenny Hamman, as Ojukwu called her, was raised in Kaduna by former Deputy Inspector General of Police Hamman Maiduguri as his own “daughter”. Although she was formally named Aisha (the name she used in school), she is also called Tani (or Aunty Tani by younger relatives). Tani is a traditional Hausa name given to a female born on Monday. Apparently the name Tenny (or Tenni) that Ojukwu called her is the corrupted version of Tani.
Late Hamman Maiduguri was a top police officer who spent a significant part of his life in Kaduna. He hailed from the north-eastern city of Maiduguri, Borno State capital. He was appointed Northern Region’s commissioner of police after the death of the region’s Premier Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto. He later became the Deputy Inspector General of Police (DIG) during the regime of General Yakubu Gowon, the man who led the crushing of Ojukwu’s Republic of Biafra.
Mystery child
The story of how Hamman Maiduguri became “the father” of Ojukwu’s daughter appears to be as mysterious to even a section of his own family as it is to the other members of Ojukwu’s family.
Much of it is still shrouded in deep secrecy but Sunday Trust investigation reveals that the late police officer did raise Tenny as his own daughter.
There are conflicting versions of how she came to be late Hamman’s daughter. Some sources told Sunday Trust that she was the daughter of his wife, Mary Theresa (a Christian who later converted to Islam and is now called Inna or simply Hajia); others said Tenny was a daughter of Mary Theresa’s sister and that the family adopted her as their own.
One of the sources said Tenny’s mother gave birth to her before she married Hamman. “He accepted her with her baby and since then she has been bearing the name Tenny Hamman,” he said.
Whichever version is accurate, most sources said she was indeed brought up like a biological daughter of Hamman. Many residents of the area still believe that she is Hamman’s biological daughter. One source said she was among the people who inherited what he left behind when he died.
“It will be very difficult for you to unravel her true story because many knew her as Hamman’s biological daughter,” said the source. “She inherited part of his properties. This story you are trying to open is seen by some as mere tale because they grew up and know her as one of Hamman’s children,” he added.

“I will call the police”
Indeed, due to the cloud of secrecy surrounding the whole issue, details are hard to come by. When a hint of the story began to emerge following the announcement of Ojukwu’s will, the family mounted a formidable firewall to block any leakage from any possible source. Sunday Trust’s investigation was blocked from many angles and some of its staffers were even threatened with arrest and litigation.
When the leak first came that the woman Ojukwu spoke of as his daughter was a lady living in Kaduna, Sunday Trust search team spent considerable time trying to locate her.
Our correspondents who eventually located her at the house of late Hamman in Kaduna said Tenny is a woman approaching the age of 50. She is living with her aged mother, they said. One of them noted that she is Ojukwu’s “carbon copy”.
Apparently, she got a premonition that journalists, having heard of the will, might be looking for her. So when one of our correspondents knocked on the door to the house to seek an audience with her, she was ready for him.
As soon as he entered the house, she chased him away. “Who are you and why are you here?” she shouted. When he tried to introduce himself, she refused to listen to him.
“Leave here before I call the police,” she said angrily.
Many other family relations approached responded with hostility too. One of them threatened litigation. “If you mention anything about us, we’ll sue,” he warned.
Sources told Sunday Trust that Ojukwu met Tenny’s mother when he was a military officer in the North. He was in charge of 5th Battalion of the Nigerian Army in Kano, where he was also friends with the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero, before he was appointed the Governor of the Eastern Region following the first military coup in 1966.
Apparently, throughout the crisis surrounding the coup and counter-coup of July 1966 and the subsequent civil war that followed them as a result of Ojukwu’s declaration of Biafran independence, Ojukwu and his ex-lover kept the issue of their love child secret.
But as little Tenny grew up, there appeared to be some people who had suspected a link between her mother and Ojukwu.
Sources told Sunday Trust that there was a time when Tenny’s school mates at Queen’s Amina College, Kaduna, spread “gossips” that she was Ojukwu’s daughter. At the college, Tenny was said to be a tough girl and a bully. But when one slim girl called her Ojukwu’s daughter, she broke down in tears.
“Her mates were surprised that she could also be very weak,” the source said.
One of her classmates also told Sunday Trust that Tenny — known in the college as Aisha Hamman — was always uncomfortable with claims that she was Ojukwu’s daughter.
Another said, although she could be nice, she doesn’t tolerate nonsense. “We once fought in the school,” she told Sunday Trust in confidence. “Since then I have not been close to her. She didn’t even attend my marriage”.
They were 30 in their Queen’s Amina College class and they finished in 1978. It is unclear what other academic attainments Tenny got, but her college classmates said she at one time lived in the United States.
Another source also said she had worked at the presidency during General Sani Abacha’s regime.
“She got married and has a daughter, who should be in her 20s by now,” another source said. “But she has since parted ways with the husband”.

The will that outs Tenny
The revelation of Tenny as Ojukwu’s daughter came from the former Biafra leader’s will which was read at the Enugu State High Court penultimate Friday. It was presented to a section of the family by the chief registrar of the court Mr Dennis Ekoh.
The will listed Ojukwu’s children as follows: Tenny Hamman (daughter), Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu Jnr (son), Mmegha (Mimi) (daughter), Okigbo (son), Ebele (daughter), Chineme (daughter), Afam (son) and Nwachukwu (son).
Ojukwu’s widow, former beauty pageant Bianca Onoh but now Nigeria’s Ambassador to Spain, was there, ostensibly to represent both herself and the three children she had with Ojukwu: Chineme, Afam and Nwachukwu.
She reportedly expressed shock over the appearance of Tenny’s name in the will. She said her husband had never told her about Tenny when he was alive.
Apart from Bianca, Ojukwu’s first cousin, Mr Val Nwosu, and another relative, Mr Mike Ejemba, were at the court to witness the presentation. But Ojukwu’s other children were not there nor were they represented by anyone.
Based on the will, Bianca emerged as the biggest beneficiary of Ojukwu’s wealth. She is allocated his Casablanca Lodge located at No 7, Forest Crescent, GRA, Enugu; two of his properties at Jabi and Kuje in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja; and all his money and personal effects.
She is also to replace him as the trustee in the family company, Ojukwu Transport Limited. She was also given two plots of land in Nnewi. But Ojukwu put a strong caveat that Bianca should forfeit the land if she remarries.
His eldest son, Emeka Jnr., got the family house at Nnewi.
Tenny, who is apparently his eldest daughter, got Jubilee Hotel, located in Zaria, Kaduna State. Other children too have their own shares.

The hotel Ojukwu gave Tenny
Sunday Trust investigation traced the hotel Ojukwu allocated to his daughter to a lively area in Zaria. The investigation revealed that late warlord does indeed own a house and a hotel located on Hospital Road in Sabon Gari, Zaria.
The hotel used to be a very popular inn where people visited mainly to have drinks.
It is a one-storey building where the top floor is left open with burglars surrounding it perhaps for the safety of the customers.
However, when Sunday Trust’s correspondent visited the place, he observed that it is no longer functioning as a hotel: it has been turned into a warehouse.
A 65-year-old resident of the area confided to Sunday Trust that recently a son of Ojukwu, who resides in Germany, had visited the place and probably ordered for the change.
“It was after the visit of Ojukwu’s son to the area that the status of the hotel changed to a warehouse. What we learnt was that the place has been sold but I don’t know the details of the transaction.
“Of course, the hotel belonged to Ojukwu before he died. I can authoritatively confirm this to you because I know virtually all the owners of the properties in most areas of Sabon Gari,” he added.
“The place was very popular before the recent change of status. But as you can see, the place has now turned to a warehouse where provision items are stored,” he said.
Hospital Road, where Ojukwu’s house and the former hotel are located in Zaria, is predominantly occupied by people from southern part of Nigeria.
The hotel was located at the heart of the street while Hospital Road is one of the famous streets in Sabon Gari area. The hotel’s location, observers said, added to its popularity.
Apart from that, according to those interviewed by Sunday Trust, Sabon Gari houses most of the hotels that exist in Zaria.
Despite the popularity of Jubilee Hotel, though, some residents told Sunday Trust that they were not aware that it belonged to Ojukwu.
“Honestly, I heard it recently that Ojukwu owned the hotel. Of course, I know Jubilee Hotel for quite some time now but I never knew that it belonged to Ojukwu.
“When pub activities stopped taking place at the hotel, somebody told me that the place belonged to Ojukwu and his children have decided to change the status of the place.
“I learnt that before the demise of Ojukwu, the hotel was run by his brother but after his death, according to what I learnt, Ojukwu’s children took over,” another resident, Idris Tijjani, told Sunday Trust.

The controversy over the will
It is unclear whether Tenny will claim the hotel Ojukwu allocated to her. If she plans to do so, she may not face much trouble, despite the controversy that trails the presentation of the will.
Although the will itself has deepened the conflict among other members of Ojukwu’s family, the contending sides appeared to have accepted the allocation of the hotel to Tenny.
Bianca did not reject it and the first son, Emeka Jnr, too, said his father did have a will that mentions Tenny as his daughter and has awarded her landed property.
Emeka Jnr had rejected the will presented at the Enugu State High Court and claimed that the genuine will of his father has not yet been presented. But he admitted that in the genuine will, Tenny has her share.
The other controversy about the will is the omission of Ojukwu’s look-a-like son, Debechukwu Odumegwu-Ojukwu.
Debe has persistently claimed to be Ojukwu’s eldest child and is currently engaged in legal battle with other members of the family.
But his name did not feature in the will.
Ojukwu’s lawyer said that the former Biafran leader did not include Dede because the latter failed to prove that he was indeed his son.

Ojukwu’s randy past
The emergence of Tenny in Ojukwu’s will has once again brought to the fore his playboy lifestyle.
Although his admirers tend to play down such aspect, it keeps reverberating. At an event held last year ahead of his burial, majority of the speakers focused mainly on Ojukwu’s heroic deeds and boldness as a soldier.
But Nollywood actor and ace broadcaster, Chief Pete Edochie, surprised the huge audience when he talked about Ojukwu’s randy past.
“Ojukwu was a human being; Ojukwu loved women. As a matter of fact, I would describe him as H. G. Wells described Mr. Paully.
“H.G Wells said that Mr Paully was congenitally disposed to the worship of women. Well, those words may sound harsh but I will describe Ojukwu like that. Ojukwu loved women with a passion,” Edochie told the gathering.
When Sunday Trust contacted Edochie over Ojukwu’s revelation of Tenny as his love child and the property he reserved for her, he said he had no doubt about it.
“Ojukwu knows the number of children he had when he lived. If he had written such thing in his will, there is no point questioning the wish of the dead,” he said.
InformationNigeria.org

YNaija Editorial: The disturbing arrogance of Diezani Alison-Madueke


Hail to the top performer!

A question ought to be asked, and it is one that urgently needs answering – what is it that Diezani Alison-Madueke says or does that makes the government of Goodluck Jonathan unable to call her to order?

Since her unfortunate entrance into public office, corruption, of various hues, has trailed her. A June 2008 Senate probe revealed that she paid a severely questionable N30.9 billion to contractors within 5 days in 2007, and a 2009 recommendation by the Senate was for her to be prosecuted for the transfer of N1.2 billion into private accounts. These might yet be unproven in a court of law, but there is clearly something about Alison-Madueke that attracts questions of corruption.
There are accusations of certificate fraud from Howard University, fraudulent assignment of prospective rights in lucrative oil blocs, extortion from marketers, fraudulent dealings with jewelers as minister of mines and steel development, fraudulent dealings in the oil sector that was unveiled by a 2010 KPMG report she refused to co-operate with, the fraud surrounding the handling of N155 billion around Malabu Oil, and the unsurprising revelations of disgusting corruption under her watch by Nuhu Ribadu’s Petroleum Revenue Special Task Force.
Indeed, she might be an attractive woman with not a little poise, but the Christian Bible speaks of whitened sepulchers.The odium that she attracts on a sustained basis has reached fever pitch this year. But if she is even a little bit moved by just how much soil lies atop her name, or even that her name is of any importance to her as she oversees Nigeria’s oil wealth, there is no indication. Last week, the media reported her Nigerian Economic Summit imperially awarding herself a pass mark for doing “a fairly equitable job” and arrogantly declining to answer tough questions from oil industry stakeholders.
The lethal mix of questionable character and spectacular tone-deadness was on shocking display on Wednesday – and, frankly, this board is yet to recover from it.
The nation’s minister of petroleum resources, by way of explaining the hardship of fuel scarcity that has bedeviled Nigerians over at least two months now (and, which, of itself speaks of unacceptable incompetence), said to Nigerians, “We cannot eat our cakes and have it” and then declared “We cannot keep pointing to corruption, if we are not prepared to bear some of the hardship.”
Like we said, we are beyond shocked.  As someone who stepped into government from Corporate Nigeria, Alison-Madueke is aware that executives should take responsibility for corruption under their watch. This woman has not been seen to take public responsibility for anything.
So, we ask again: what is it that she says or does that makes the government of Goodluck Jonathan unable to get rid of her, or call her to order?
In more self-respecting societies, she would at the very least be the recipient of overwhelming institutional odium.
Seminars and conferences would treat her like a plague, elite members of society protective of their names would politely decline her invitations, no awards worth its salt would even mention her name (she has appropriately been named by the National Honours Committee as a CON), and most certainly, no government desirous of credibility would have absolutely anything to do with her.
Unfortunately, this is Nigeria. So, without fear of repercussion, she not only pursues policy that is clearly destructive, she has now proceeded to make a tradition of ill-advised statements and a  bejeweled finger at the expense, as it were, of the population she oppresses.
Because we are yet lost for words, we shall only say this: Her continued presence in this administration is a collective injury on our psyche. And Nigerians must continue to respond to this arrogance with urgent scorn – not just for her, but also for our peculiar brand of successive leaders over the years who blame Nigerians for their own incompetence, and have treated us serially with disrespect.
We should end this by demanding that she be sanctioned by her employers, but we will not waste our time. We are not convinced that there is anyone with the moral authority in this administration to do the right thing – Alison-Madueke is in fine company.
YNaija.com