Sunday, 3 February 2013

Insecurity: Some people in government are benefiting – Northern Leaders


riotSome opinion leaders in the North have pointed out that lack of sincerity on the part of the Federal Government as well as opposition by certain elements within the security services are the factors frustrating genuine attempts to dialogue with the extremist Boko Haram sect.
According to the Punch, which reported the news, in separate telephone interviews which they conducted, the Executive Director of the Civil Rights Congress, Mr. Shehu Sani, and the Convener of the Coalition of Concerned Northern Politicians, Academics, Professionals and Businessmen, Dr. Junaid Mohammed, said the above mentioned factors were obstacles to peace.
Specifically, Mohammed said, “The only obstacle now is that some elements within the Federal Government’s security services are making money out of the crisis and they are not interested in settlement… It is just a matter of people protecting their financial interests… If there is an obstacle, it is the financial interest of those who are milking the country and making money from the present insurgency.”
On his own part, Sani noted that the choice of mediators had been a major challenge between government and members of the sect. He said, “You have situations where people trusted by the sect are not accepted by the government or people who enjoy government’s support are not respected (or accepted) by members of the sect.”
InformationNigeria

Our country is crying for a moral, ethical crusade – Rev. Akinde

By

Most Reverend Adebayo Akinde
Respected cleric and the Archbishop of Lagos Ecclesiastic Province, Most Reverend Adebayo Akinde, Friday, said Nigeria needs political regeneration for it to be among the developed nations of the world.
He also advised the Yoruba nation to have a rethink in order to turn things around for the region.
The cleric gave this declaration at the St Thomas’ Anglican Church, Akure, while delivering a sermon at the burial of the former Secretary to the State Government (SSG) in Ondo State, Chief Wumi Adegbonmire.
According to him, there was the need for the country to undergo series of reforms with Christians playing vital role.
The cleric said, “We are in need of political regeneration in Nigeria and Christians who are involved in governance should take their faith to the political arena.
“Our country is crying for a moral and ethical crusade, we need to restore true federalism, transparency and accountability. Christians should be involved in the move to restore era of good things in the country.”
Speaking during the sermon entitled: “Final Destination”, Akinde described Adegbonmire as a faithful member of the Anglican church and a committed, unrepentant Awoist.”
He added that the deceased was a crusader of good governance, a friend of the masses and one that could not be bought with money.
He urged the people to always think of their final destination, and likewise advised politicians to always have the love of the masses who voted them into power in their heart.
He said, “All our leaders will be judged, those that elected you into power did not do so for you to enrich yourselves, only those that serve God will reign with Him in heaven.”
Also in attendance were the Ondo State Governor, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko; his wife, Kemi; Ekiti State governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, Ogun State Deputy Governor, Mr. Segun Adesegun; former governor of Ekiti State, Chief Niyi Adebayo.
Others include Chief Bola Tinubu, Chief Bisi Akande, Chief Segun Osoba, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, General Alani Akinrinade; Senators Ayo Fasanmi, Titus Olupitan, Mojisoluwa Akinfenwa, Ajayi Boroffice, Gbega Ashafa, Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, Chief Bayo Akinnola, among others.
DailyPost

Woman pays native doctor N250,000 for love charm, husband becomes impotent

By

Police detectives in Asaba, Delta State have arrested a housewife, Mrs Ebere and a native doctor following charms administered by the woman to divert the attention of her husband from young ladies whom she believes are making her husband not to satisfy her anymore.
Unfortunately, the love charm was too powerful [and probably fake] hence it has left the man, a practicing medical doctor, impotent.
Police spokesman in the state, Mr. Famous Ajieh, confirmed that the suspects, who are cooling off their heels at present at the state Criminal Investigation Department (CID), were alleged to have connived to render the victim (the woman’s husband) impotent with love charms.
He said that the suspects – Mrs Ebere and the native doctor, identified as Ojokwu – upon interrogation had confessed to their acts, adding that the victim, a well known medical practitioner, had been having problems with his wife.
According to him, the woman had sought help from the native doctor around Ugbolu community near Asaba when the bubble burst.
She was said to have in a desperate mood consulted a friend who introduced her to the native doctor who charged her N250,000 and she made an advance payment of N150, 000.
What was supposed to be love charms to turn off the husband from other women, eventually backfired when the man’s attempt to make love with the wife failed. He tried severally but to no avail.
DailyPost

The New York Times: A Nigerian Spring Is Long Overdue




Naija
I was a visiting professor in Paris last fall and it was the first day of class. I was making copies for my 10:30 class at the faculty lounge where two female professors were kibitzing by the coffee machine.
“Oh, yeah,” one said. “Soon as I learned he’s Nigerian, I discounted everything he’d said as fraud.”
“Smart move,” agreed the other, nodding, “nothing good’s ever come out of that country. …”
I cringed, held my breath and skedaddled on to my classroom, where my students wanted to know my nationality. I’m American. “Bot Professa,” an African student’s hand flew up, “ware you from originally? I hear the voice of Africa.”
I inhaled deeply, chuckled but ignored that question.
When I left Nigeria for the United States in 1980, the plan was to earn an M.B.A., a doctorate in economics, and then return. It was my moral obligation to help develop my country, whose oil wealth financed my education. An M.B.A., a Ph.D. and 32 years later, I’m still here, abroad. In 1992, when I applied for a position at my alma mater, the University of Ibadan, the dean replied, “Why on earth would you want to return when everybody’s trying to escape?” No one’s been paid for over three months, he explained, and universities are on strike half the time.
Twenty years later, Nigeria can still bring the crazy.
In 1980, the naira had a very favorable exchange rate against the dollar. En route to the United States, I stopped over in London. All along King’s Road, the shopkeepers beckoned: “Nigerian? Welcome. Come inside.” I was proud to be from Nigeria and was offended when the country was confused with Niger. But, today, if I can pass for someone from Niger — sadly, I would be glad.
Is there a person on the planet who remains unfamiliar with the Nigerian e-mail scam? As a Nigerian living abroad, I’ve become embarrassed — indeed scared — after learning that in February 2003 a Czech victim of an Internet fraud murdered an innocent Nigerian in Prague.
That isn’t the scariest narrative — not by a long shot. In recent years, Nigerians abroad have been warned: “Don’t come home. Just send money.” But if one must, say, attend a wedding, a funeral or take a chieftaincy title, it is necessary to hire prearranged police protection from the moment you land at the airport until the moment you depart.
Last summer, my ailing 87-year-old mother, worried that her days are numbered, called a family reunion for Christmas. My three U.S.-based siblings and I made plans to return home with all our kids. At the last minute, my brother sent an e-mail canceling the reunion. “What?” my daughter said, her glass of iced tea slipping out of her hands and shattering on the tile floor. Uncle Tony can’t guarantee our safety in Nigeria, I explained.
“What about hired armed security like the last time?” she inquired. I showed her the link to the news report my brother had sent headlined, “Gunmen Kill U.S. Returnee in Enugu,” his hometown in Nigeria.
Ogbo Edoga had returned from the United States to attend the meeting of an organization of Nigerian professionals in the United States to raise funds for an ultramodern medical diagnostic center in his ancestral village. On his way, he was robbed and shot and killed with an AK-47. He had hired police protection, as had many Nigerians who visited our motherland only to be robbed and murdered. The lucky ones got kidnapped and released after their families paid a huge ransom. And now, Mom’s joined the choir: “Don’t come home.”
Here’s what is shameful: This is the Nigeria that has been one of the world’s top 10 oil exporters for decades; the presumed “Giant of Africa” when I was leaving in 1980. But three decades later, despite a half-century of billions of petrodollar inflow, in March 2011, at a World Bank-O.E.C.D. conference in Paris, I found myself sliding down my chair to hide my face behind my laptop as a fellow economist explained why Nigeria was excluded in a comparative study thusly: Since Nigeria (with South Africa) dominates the Sub-Saharan African economy and since Nigeria does so poorly at wealth creation, if included, it would render Sub-Saharan Africa’s genuine savings dwarfish vis-à-vis East Asia and Latin America.
Here’s the thing: One doesn’t need a Ph.D. in economics to understand the correlation between poverty and today’s high crime rate in Nigeria. When corrupt politicians persistently embezzle public funds rather than produce proper policies, the result is a stagnant economy and its attendant human misery — high unemployment and massive poverty. Marginalized youths resort to Internet scams, kidnapping, or join Boko Haram. When the police go unpaid for months, the citizens become the logical prey.
That’s where Nigeria is today. It will not change until we, the people, join in a mass outrage against corruption, demand transparent accounting of our oil revenues and economic justice. Only then will an honest leadership emerge to invest a fair share of the oil revenues in capital in such a way as to permanently raise the consumption level of the masses. Otherwise we Nigerian expatriates — the most educated immigrant group in the United States — will remain in exile, and Nigeria will remain a breeding ground for terrorism.
Is there an Honest Ernest among Nigerians who is able to galvanize us? Can something that good come out of Nigeria? That’s a palm reader’s guess.
Editor’s note: This piece was first published in the OP-ED page of ‘The New York Times’
The writer, May Akabogu-Collins, is a visiting professor of economics at the American Business School in Paris. 
ekekeee.com

2015: Jonathan, kinsmen’s crisis deepens


By Donald Ojogo Politics Editor, Abuja
The crisis of confidence between President Goodluck Jonathan and his kinsmen, the Ijaw ethnic nationality, appears to have taken a new dimension as the leadership of the umbrella body of the president’s kinsmen, the Ijaw National Congress (INC), said it is boycotting a mediation parley initiated by a presidential aide.
The meeting, which is scheduled to hold today in Lagos, is coming on the heels of the outburst of some prominent Ijaw leaders who have expressed disappointment over the dismal performance of the Jonathan administration as regards the welfare and developmental challenges of the region.
Curiously, the INC leadership as well as other prominent Ijaw leaders have claimed ignorance of the meeting and have decided to stay away from it on the ground that the proposed meeting, supposedly brokered by the presidential aide, was “self-serving.”
But the Presidency has described the proposed Lagos meeting as a good one, saying the right to meet is not reserved in the INC.
All the same, the presidential aide (names withheld) had reportedly met with one of his colleagues in the Presidency to explore means of dousing the storm that had gathered against the president from his kinsmen over alleged non-performance and complacence to the plight of the Niger Delta region.
As a prelude to today’s Lagos meeting, the presidential aide had reportedly met with the leadership of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) on Wednesday in Abuja, but a similar one fixed for Thursday with the leadership of the INC was shunned by the body, which alleged that President Jonathan’s attitude to the Ijaw ethnic nationality “shows hatred and disdain.”
President of the IYC, Mieabiye Kuromiema, confirmed the Wednesday meeting with the presidential aide in Abuja.
INC President, Chief Joshua Benaimesia, also confirmed being invited to the Thursday meeting with the presidential aide but declined, saying the issues at stake were too vital and important for anyone apart from Jonathan to address.
Benaimesia had, penultimate week, slammed Jonathan for not doing enough for the Niger Delta, even as he warned the president not to toy with the idea of re-contesting the 2015 presidential election.
He said: “I have no regrets whatsoever for the position I have held on the matter at stake. It is not an individual affair as such; no one should think he loves the president more than those of us who have decided to come to the open to correct him.
“As president of the INC, the entire Ijaw ethnic nationality is watching me and the leadership of the INC; whatever we say today means a lot tomorrow, and whatever we refuse to say that will hunt us tomorrow we must try to say.
“I was invited to a meeting in Abuja on Thursday but I told the convener of the meeting that the issues for which he was calling me to the meeting were too big for him to handle, so I refused to go to Abuja for the meeting; although I learnt he held a similar one with the IYC.
“The truth is that all actions and inactions of the president show he hates the Ijaw people; I will say this everywhere until he changes his mien and attitude towards the Ijaws, whose blood and sweat made him what he is today.
“Today, what we witness is people saying the Ijaws are in power, they are in government; I make bold to say that those in power and government are not Ijaw people, they are Ogbia people because they have shown, including the president, that they do not like the Ijaws at all.
“How does one explain to the world that, apart from the two states of Torube and Oil Rivers we are pursuing for the Ijaws in Niger Delta, Bayelsa is also pursuing another agenda of two additional states? Who is deceiving who? It is the proverb of the hand of the voice of Jacob and the hand of Esau.
“Until the president addresses the situation of the Niger Delta and correct certain things, we will not give our support to him because he has failed us as a people; and I can tell you that so many Ijaw leaders, former ministers and former lawmakers both at the federal and state levels have called to inquire about the meeting; and their view is that, as long as the INC leadership is not involved, they will stay away.”
Benaimesia said he would not attend the Lagos meeting summoned by the presidential aide because he was not invited.
“I won’t attend because I was not invited, and that shows the kind of leadership we are breeding in Ijawland. As far as INC is concerned, we are not aware of any such meeting,” he said further added.
A former senator from Bayelsa State, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, rather described the Lagos meeting as “one called for personal aggrandizement by those behind it because the issues are beyond those calling those meetings. Why can’t the president meet one on one with his kinsmen? he queried.
Nonetheless, Political Adviser to the President, Alhaji Ahmed Ali Gulak, said today’s Lagos meeting is in good direction.
“I think some people are missing the point; the president has not told anybody he wants to run as president again in 2015. So for people to hang on that and think they can ambush him is out of it. If the INC says otherwise about their son, there are several other bodies and prominent sons and daughters of Ijawland that can also say what they want.
“Even though the Presidency has no hand in the said meeting, I think it is in good direction and coming at a time we need to understand that Mr. President is not an Ijaw president but that of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” Gulak told Sunday Independent on telephone.
Former leader and founder of the Niger Delta Volunteer Force (NDVF), ex-militant leaders, Ebikabowei Victor-Ben (Boyloaf), Ateke Tom, as well as Pastor Reuben have all at various times, in the last five weeks, attacked the administration of President Jonathan over the plight of the people of the Niger Delta.
Similarly, a prominent Niger Delta activist and former president of the Ijaw National Congress (INC), Professor Kimse Okoko, has said that nothing has changed for the Niger Delta people in the two years of the Goodluck Jonathan administration.
This was the verdict of the former Professor of Political Science from the University of Port Harcourt, while speaking with Sunday Independent in an interview.
When asked if the government of President Goodluck Jonathan who is an Ijaw from the South South region had brought succour to the people, Okoko retorted: “Nothing has changed in the Niger Delta. People are still suffering. Pollution is still there. We are drinking water that is contaminated. Whether it is Jonathan or not is not the issue. The fact of the matter is that the living condition of the Niger Delta people still remains the same.”
President of the INC (Worldwide), Joshua Benaimesia, said: “Judging by his actions and inactions, we are seeing an unprepared president; as such, he should rather forget about the idea being touted by proxies over the 2015 Presidency because he has rubbished the goodwill of all Nigerians who voted for him overwhelmingly in 2011.”
Also, a militant group under the aegis of the Joint Revolutionary Council (JRC) has asked President Jonathan to conduct the forthcoming poll and quit the scene, while a coalition of socio-cultural organisations in the South South geo-political zone has thrown its weight behind agitation by some notable northern leaders to retain the controversial zoning arrangement of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
President-General of the forum, Frederick Ekasa, expressed fears over Jonathan’s ability to successfully govern the nation without rocking the boat.
Ekasa said the NDYLF has passed a vote of no confidence on the Jonathan Presidency and will only change its position if he takes urgent and drastic steps towards solving some key problems in the Niger Delta.
DailyIndependent

SGF linked to delay in power sector reform


By Efe Ebelo Snr. Correspondent, Abuja
It has been revealed that the delay by Manitoba Hydro of Canada, the company that won the management contract for Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), in taking off is attributed to the non-issuance of appointment letters to members of the Governing Board of TCN by the office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Ayim Pius Ayim.
Indeed, the management contract is yet to be activated following government’s reluctance to hand a schedule of delegated authority to Manitoba to enable it take over full control of TCN.
The management of the TCN was contracted to Manitoba Hydro at the sum of $23 million for a period of three years, and was supposed to have commenced on September 1, 2012.
But Sunday Independent gathered from a reliable source that the inability of the company to commence full operation was not due to any problems with the Bureau for Public Enterprise (BPE), but due to bottlenecks from the Office of the SGF.
“A Board has been put in place by the Federal Government, but since the names were not announced, no one knows the people that would constitute the board until they are given letters by the Office of the SGF, which has not been done up till this moment.
“Everyone knows the contract has been approved but Manitoba has not fully commenced work. There were issues with Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) staff, but all that has been resolved now. The only issue now is the formal constitution of the board that would oversee the execution of the contract,” the source said.
However, a source in the Office of the SGF said Ayim was in a meeting and that he (Ayim) is the most appropriate person to speak on Manitoba.
The Manitoba contract was signed in July 2012 and, out of the entire contract sum of $23 million, $2.5 million was paid to Manitoba for which they provided an advance payment cover guarantee and the contract is to run for three years in the first instance.
Key objectives of the management contract is sensitisation of the grid, to reduce electricity losses during transmission, provide for the achievement of certain predetermined targets hat would improve grid security and general performance, culture change and staff orientation and instituting reward and penalty clauses as incentives for success.
Other objectives, she said, are to provide efficient management of government investments, to ensure adequate and equitable generation dispatch according to a fair merit order based on sound regulatory principles, to ensure fair market settlements between electricity traders and provide for skills and expertise transfer to Nigerian counterparts who will serve in deputy and other positions to the management staff of the management contractor.
With the signing of the agreement, the management contractor was expected to mobilise and resume on Monday July 26, 2012 with all the eight key personnel and the associated support staff.
But that did not happen, as the Federal Government late last year cancelled the contract, citing breach of procurement rules, and restoring it again.
Only recently, Manitoba had been stripped of its power to control human resource and finance at the company, contrary to the provisions of the management contract, following strong opposition by the workers of the TCN and the PHCN.
The Chief Executive Officer sent to TCN by Manitoba, Mr. Don Priestman, had confirmed that the Federal Government was yet to issue the Canadian firm the Delegated Authority it required to work.
DailyIndependent

Youth Leader of Living Faith Church Leads Robbery Gang



Nemesis has caught up with a youth leader of the Living Faith Church in Okene, Kogi State, who professed to be a born-again Christian, but in reality was the leader of a 10-man robbery gang. The suspect (name withheld), who was described as 'very popular' in the area, allegedly led his gang to break into the office of the pastor of the church in the night and carted away over N315,000 belonging to the church.
Ironically, he was one of the early callers to the church the next morning, and joined in raining curses on the perpetrators of the crime. Parading the suspects yesterday, at the police headquarters in Lokoja, the state Commissioner of Police, Mohammed Musa Katsina, described the arrested suspects as a sledgehammer robbery gang. He said that the youth leader, "who led the robbery operation was seen the following morning, raining curses on the robbers and even invoking Holy Ghost fire on them, and now, the Holy Ghost fire has caught up with him."
He said that the gang made up of bricklayers and block moulders specialize in breaking into shops and private residences, carting away goods and money. The Commissioner stated that the suspects were armed with guns and other dangerous weapons during their operations He said that they normally disguise as casual labourers going around residences and shops in search of potential victims. The police boss said the mother of the gang leader is a chorister in the same church. Answering reporters’ questions, the arrested youth leader confessed that he played the born-again youth leader in the day, and armed robber at night.
He confessed that he has led 27 robberies within Okene and Lokoja as well as Adavi local government areas. The Assistant Pastor of the church, Pastor Aloysius Momoh, who expressed surprise at the youth leader’s involvement in the crime, said that the church went into seven-day prayer and fasting shortly after the church was robbed, and God warned those behind the dastardly act to repent between May and December, last year, or be disgraced One of the victims, Paul Ikunagus, said over N2 million cash was stolen from his shop while one of them said he lost N5.8 million to the robbers who invaded his shop last December.
All the victims commended the police in the state under the leadership of Musa Katsina for bringing the elusive gang members to book. Items recovered from the suspects included one locally made gun, a jerk knife, two big hammers, handsets and clothes.
Naij