Monday, 23 September 2013

‘BAMANGA LEADERSHIP IS A DISASTER TO PDP’

by Haruna Gimba Yaya, Kano

Alhaji Bamanga Tukur
Elders of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Kano State have described the national chairman Alhaji Bamanga Tukur’s leadership as a disaster that led to the crisis in the party.
The position was contained in a communiqué read by the new PDP elder’s committee chairman, Ambassador Kabiru Rabi’u after a meeting yesterday.
The elders flayed the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party under Bamanga Tukur for falling to uphold the rule of law.
“The present leadership of PDP is very unpopular and has being a disaster for the party as the national chairman pursues the policy of personal loyalty which splits our great party and divides the governor’s ranks,” the communiqué said.
The communiqué stated that: “We the elders of the party and the entire new PDP family in Kano State are saying no to the breach of constitution and to the politics of divide and rule.
“The actions of the national working committee under the leadership of Bamanga Tukur in recent past are undemocratic, autocratic, selfish and military-like. The constitution of the party was thrown to the dogs and actions are taken on the whims and caprices of his principal,” the communiqué added.
Also, the new PDP elders condemned a statement credited to the chairman of the board of trustees of the ‘old’ PDP, Tony Anenih, where he allegedly advocated for an automatic ticket to President Goodluck Jonathan and some governors in 2015.
“The PDP policy of consensus arrangement and adoption rather than transparent election to produce candidates for all elective offices including presidency is totally unacceptable to us, therefore we condemn the call for automatic ticket to anybody.”
The elders added that they cannot trust the leadership of the ‘old’ PDP to conduct a free and fair election in 2015 with the support the presidency and the party gave to Plateau State Governor Jonah Jang after he clearly lost the governors’ forum chairmanship election to his Rivers State counterpart Rotimi Amaechi.
“The national working committee of the party is reluctant to call Governor Jang to order after he lost the election that turned out to be a rancourous affair that split up the party right down the middle, is a clear indication that PDP cannot be trusted to conduct free and fair elections in 2015 where over 73 million Nigerians will participate.”
Rabiu said the new PDP in Kano State is in court to contest the caretaker committee appointed by the NWC to oversee the affairs of the party in the state.
DailyTrust

Kenya mall attack: Death toll now 68, 175 injured, 30 still held hostage •Ghanaian poet, Kofi Awoonor, killed


Sixty-eight dead. At least 175 injured. About 30 hostages still inside, as well as perhaps a dozen gunmen.
Those are the grim numbers, a day after attackers stormed an upscale Nairobi mall, spraying bullets and holding shoppers captive.
This was followed by a  large explosion which rocked the Kenyan mall where Islamic extremists are holding hostages.
Associated Press journalists at the Westgate mall said the Sunday afternoon explosion was by far the largest in the 30-hour siege. There was silence after the big blast.
An estimated 10 to 15 militant attackers are in the shopping mall holding an unknown number of captives. The Kenyan military has gone into the four-story mall and there have been sporadic gun battles.
Some Kenyan military were seen carrying in at least two rocket propelled grenades. Earlier military helicopters hovered over the mall.
Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta told reporters on Sunday afternoon the tragedy was personal; one of his nephews and his fiancee were among the 59 people killed.
“We will punish the masterminds (of the attack) swiftly, and indeed very painfully,” Kenyatta said.
Kenyan government and Western diplomatic sources said Al-Shabaab militants were holding about 30 hostages inside the shopping centre.
By noon Sunday, as grim-faced Kenyan soldiers warily searched the five-story building and as Al-Shabaab maintained its defiant stance,  the siege was no closer to a resolution.
Officials believe 10 to 15 gunmen are involved, State House spokesman Manoah Esipisu said on Sunday.
“We know that they were across the building,” Esipisu told CNN’s Zain Verjee. “We know that they are now isolated somewhere within the building.”
More than 175 were injured in the attack, Kenyatta said.
It was the deadliest terror attack in the nation since al Qaeda blew up the U.S. Embassy in 1998, killing more than 200 people.
The attack on Saturday targeted a popular weekend meeting spot.
Most of the casualties are Kenyans, authorities said. But the mall is popular with expatriates and foreign nationals, who were among those killed and injured.
Those killed include three British citizens, two French nationals and two Canadians, including a diplomat, their governments said.
Several American citizens were among the wounded, including Elaine Dang, a University of California, Berkeley, graduate.
Kenyans and expatriates gather at the luxurious Westgate mall on weekends to drink lattes, catch a movie or browse through the more than 80 stores.
As the sun rose on Sunday, the standoff between Kenyan forces and the attackers continued.
Soldiers kept vigil outside the mall, guns dangling from their shoulders.
“We want to do everything possible, and the security people are doing everything possible to make sure we lose no more lives,” Esipisu said.
Three injured security forces were taken out of the besieged mall, but the severity of their injuries was unclear.
By midday Sunday, at least 1,000 people had been freed from the mall, Esipisu said. “Our priority is now those that remain inside.”
An apparent hostage left the building Sunday, and said she had been hiding in the basement of the mall, CNN affiliate KTN reported.
Al-Shabaab has vowed not to negotiate with Kenyan authorities. Israeli special forces are at the scene and are working with their Kenyan counterparts in the hostage crisis, Kenyan government sources tell CNN.
Esipisu said there were reports of a white woman among the hostage takers. Kenyan intelligence officials were investigating the claims, he said.
Esipisu was asked if the reported woman was thought to be the infamous Al-Shabaab-affiliated “White Widow,” Samantha Lewthwaite. “Nothing is being ruled out,” he said.
But CNN terrrorism analyst, Peter Bergen said it was unlikely.
“It would be very unusual for a woman to be involved in one of these operations,” he said. “Typically these groups are misogynist. Their view is the woman should be in a home and shrouded in a body veil.”
Lewthwaite’s husband, Germaine Lindsey, was one of the suicide bombers killed in the 2005 attack on London’s transportation system. His Buckinghamshire-born widow is wanted by Kenyan authorities for her alleged role as an Al-Shabaab and al Qaeda-linked financier.
The calm was shattered around noon local time on Saturday. Gunshots erupted as shoppers picked up groceries, savored lunch and browsed through the racks at stores. Before long, pools of blood smeared pristine hallways. Bodies lay strewn across the floor.
Uche Kaigwa-Okoye was sipping coffee when he heard what first sounded like a fallen table, then the continuing rat-a-tat of gunfire. As the gunshots became louder, screaming crowds headed for the exits.
Sara Head, a Washington resident, experienced similar horror in the mall’s parking garage. As her car pulled up, she heard gunfire. She crawled underneath and hid behind cars before getting into a stairwell.
Eventually, the stairwell lights came back on and the door to a nearby supermarket opened. She dashed through, passed a nearby loading dock and fled to safety.
“There was blood throughout the supermarket,” Head said. “It wasn’t clear if it was OK to exit.”
The national disaster agency reported early Sunday morning that five “visibly shaken” hostages had been released. It said “major operations underway.” What that meant was a mystery.
As people texted family and friends outside the mall, word spread that nobody could be trusted. And even if the good guys could be sorted from the bad guys, the intermittent barrages of gunfire made any escape attempt seem futile.
Foreigners among casualties
Dang worked as the general manager for Eat Out Kenya, which confirmed her injuries on its Twitter and Facebook pages.
The State Department said Saturday there were several Americans among the injured, but none among the dead. Secretary of State John Kerry didn’t offer details.
The U.S. Embassy is asking personnel to stay in place Sunday and avoid the Westgate Mall area and any large gatherings. All U.S. citizens in Kenya are urged to register online so the embassy can provide them with updated information on travel and security — and can contact them in case of emergency.
Israel’s Foreign Ministry said one national was slightly wounded and three escaped. A cafe at the mall is owned by an Israeli, but the ministry does not believe the mall was targeted because of that.
The Ghana president’s office said literary figure Kofi Awoonor was among those killed in the attack.
“Such a sad twist of fate to place Prof at the wrong place at the wrong time,” President John Mahama said in a statement.
A plea for blood
Several Kenyan agencies made a plea for blood donations.
“Hospitals are appealing for more blood, the response is incredible but more is needed,” tweeted Francis Kimemia, secretary to the Cabinet.
And as the nation grappled with the aftermath, Kenyatta blasted “the despicable perpetrators of this cowardly act,” and said they will be brought to justice.
‘We shall hunt down the perpetrators’
Kenya is no stranger to terrorism.
A 1998 bombing at the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi left 213 dead. Al Qaeda claimed responsibility for the attack.
Since Kenya launched attacks against Al-Shabaab in Somalia in 2011, the group has hurled grenades at Kenyan churches, bus stops and other public places.
In a televised speech late Saturday, Kenyatta said his nation has “overcome” attacks before, refusing to budge from its values or relinquish its security. And it will do so again, he promised.
“We shall hunt down the perpetrators wherever they run to,” the president said. “We shall get them, and we shall punish them for this heinous crime.”
But first, authorities will have to get to all the assailants and hostages still inside the mall.
Kofi Awoonor, Ghanaian poet, killed in mall attack
Professor Kofi Awoonor, one of the speakers at Storymoja Hay Festival, has died after sustaining injuries during the attack at Westgate shopping centre.
Ghanaian poet and diplomat, Kofi Awoonor is among the 68 killed during the attack on Westgate Mall. He died on Saturday, aged 78, from injuries sustained in the attack on Westgate Mall, Nairobi.
According to The Telegraph, the Ghanaian government confirmed Awoonor’s death early Sunday morning. Awoonor’s son had been shot in the shoulder during the attack, for which Somali militant group Al-Shabab has claimed responsibility, and was treated and discharged from hospital late on Saturday. Awoonor was in Nairobi to speak at the Storymoja Hay Festival, a four-day celebration of writing, thinking and storytelling. Along with Ghanaian poets Nii Parkes and Kwame Dawes, he was due to perform on Saturday evening as part of a showcase of award-winning poetry from both sides of Africa.
He said during the festival that the event had “the best representation of Ghanaian authors that we have ever had” and commended the fellow authors and writers there: “Together we are discussing the birthing pains of countries.”
During a poetry masterclass that Awoonor held at the festival he discussed mortality and said he was unafraid of death. Julie Muriuki, a writer who attended, posted on a blog afterwards: “I’ve been looking for my writing voice and Awoonor has shown me where to find it. I’m eternally grateful.”
Awoonor was born in 1935 and became known for his poetry, early collections of which were heavily inspired by the dirge singing and oral poetry of his native Ewe tribe. He published his first collection, Rediscovery and Other Poems, in 1964.
Awoonor gained a masters degree in literature at University College, London in 1970. His second collection, Night of My Blood, was released in 1971 and was a series of poems that explore Awoonor’s roots and the impact of colonialism and foreign rule in Africa.
Awoonor was a diplomat as well as a poet. He served as Ghana’s Ambassador to the United Nations between 1990 and 1994, where he was the head of the committee against Apartheid. In 1975 Awoonor was imprisoned without trial for several months.
He was later brought to court on charges of helping ‘political criminal,’ ex-Brigadier Kattah, flee the country. Awoonor denied aiding Kattah’s escape, but admitted to hosting him. His imprisonment was met with protest from International PEN, Amnesty International and writers including beat poet Allen Ginsberg. His third collection, The House By the Sea, was inspired by his incarceration and was published in 1978.
Tributes to Awoonor have been posted on social media since news of his death broke early on Sunday morning. Dawes, who spoke on Saturday without Awoonor, wrote on Twitter: “Kofi Awoonor’s death is a sad sad moment here in Nairobi. We have lost one of the greatest African poets and diplomats. I’ve lost my uncle. I woke hoping that the news I got late in the night was false.”
Teju Cole, a Nigerian author who had spoken at this year’s festival, was one of the many people who quoted lines from Awoonor’s poetry in celebration of his life and work.
Foreigners are not safe in Kenya —Al-Shabaab -Claims responsibility for mall attack
Al-Shabaab, the militant group which has claimed responsibility for the Nairobi shopping mall attack, tells Channel 4 News “if Kenyans don’t leave our land, we will wage a real war.”
Al-Shabaab, al Qaeda’s proxy in Somalia, claiming responsibility, said it was not backing down. In a message on its Twitter feed, the group said “all Muslims” were escorted from the mall before the attack.
“When justice is denied, it must be enforced,” it said in a tweet on Sunday. “Kenyans were relatively safe in their cities before they invaded us & killed Muslims Westgate.”

Armed militants from al-Shabaab, the Somali-based, al-Qaeda-linked group, are still inside the Westgate shopping centre in Kenya’s capital Nairobi. Reporter Jamal Osman interviewed a spokesman for the group to find out the reasons for the attack, and what message they have for the West.

Jamal Osman: “Why did you do the attack?”
Al-Shabaab spokesman: “The reason we attacked is to defend our people our country, because Kenya attacked us, they are still controlling parts of our land.
“We have been peaceful neighbours, but they are the ones who attacked us and we are defending ourselves. Whether you are Muslim or Christian, the law says you have to defend yourself from those who attack you.

JO: “You have killed lots of different nationalities, including Britons; don’t you fear powerful countries will come after you?”
AS: “We have told the Kenyans and those who come to Kenya that we will not tolerate what Kenya is doing to us. We told them we would defend ourselves and we warned them about travelling to Kenya.
“Kenyans have blood on their hands. Anyone who is prepared to come to Kenya must be prepared to face the reality, and we don’t fear Europeans and Americans because we are not weak.
“And we are saying to the Europeans and the Americans who have been supporting those who have been attacking us, you should tell the Kenyans to stop their aggression if you want to be safe.”

JO: “Why did you target Westgate mall?”
AS: The reason why we have targeted the Westgate mall is because the Kenyans and their government have taken up arms against us, they are our enemies.
“They have sent their men into Somalia; they have supported their government to invade our country.
“For us anywhere in Kenya is the same, we will hit them wherever we can. The reason we targeted Westgate is that we know it’s a place where they feel the most pain.
“It’s because it brings in a lot of money and is in the centre of the city. It’s where they will feel pain and because we wanted to send a message and we didn’t want to waste our message.
“We wanted our message to reach every Kenyan.”
JO: “Are your fighters inside the mall still fighting?”
AS: “It’s been more than 27 hours; they are still inside and still in control.”
JO: “I am hearing there is a female fighter in there too?”
AS: “We don’t send our women onto the battlefield. I am saying to you we do not use women on the battlefield.”
JO: “What are you expecting to happen now, what will be the outcome of this?”
AS: “God willing, we are expecting the Kenyans to get the message that if you spill blood, your blood too will be spilt. For them to know that they cannot be in control of Kismayu, Dhobley and Afmadow and expect to live peacefully in Nairobi. That’s the message we want to send to them.
JO: “In some of your messages on Twitter you say this is just the beginning and you will keep going, or have you achieved your aims?”
AS: “We are saying to the Kenyans, leave our country. That’s the first message. And if they refuse to leave our country then we will wage real war.”
JO: “So your condition to the Kenyans, is leave your country if they want peace?”
AS: “If Kenyans want peace, they have to leave our country.”
JO: “Why are you targeting innocent people?”
AS: “The foreigners have to leave the country because we (the Kenyans and al-Shabaab) are in conflict with each other and we are telling everyone not to be mistaken - Kenya is a war zone.”
JO: “Since you say foreigners and British people have huge interest in Kenya, what’s your message to them?”
AS: “We are saying to the British, since we believe they are helping the Kenyans, and Kenyans are their slaves, they (the British) should tell the Kenyans, they should order back the Kenyan army out of Somalia.”
“And the English know Somalis will not give up the fight. We denied the British before, who are much stronger than the Kenyans.”
Ban Ki-moon condemns attack -Obama, Cameron offer support
United Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon has slammed the deadly terrorist attack at a shopping mall in Nairobi, Kenya, calling the act totally reprehensible.
Ban spoke with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta by phone and extended his condolences to the families of the deceased and the wounded.
“This premeditated act, targeting defenceless civilians, is totally reprehensible,” Ban said, adding that “he trusts that those responsible for this attack will be brought to justice.
In a press statement, UN Security Council members condemned the terrorist attack “in the strongest possible terms” and reiterated their determination to combat all forms of terrorism.
Also, the United States has offered its full support to the Kenyan government to bring to justice those responsible for “this heinous act,” according to a statement released by the White House.
“We will continue to stand with the Kenyan people in their efforts to confront terrorism in all its forms, including the threat posed by Al-Shabaab,” National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said, according to the statement.
“This cowardly act against innocent civilians will not shake our resolve.”
The Obama administration also extended its condolences to the families of those killed and injured, including a number of U.S. citizens hurt in the attack, the statement said.
Likewise, British Prime Minister, David Cameron has spoken with Kenya’s president, who briefed him on “the current situation and explained that Kenyan security forces were bringing the situation under control,” according to a statement released by 10 Downing Street.
Cameron “passed on his sincere condolences and assured President Kenyatta that our thoughts were with him and all the people of Kenya at this difficult time,” it said.
“The prime minister said we were ready to provide any assistance we could.”
NigerianTribune

2015: Jonathan can run-Atiku


As national leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, seek for resolution of the crisis rocking the party, the leader of the parallel ‘New PDP’ and former vice president, Atiku Abubakar has declared that President Goodluck Jonathan is at liberty to contest the 2015 election if he so desires.
The politics of 2015 is central to the rift in PDP as some of the rebel G7 governors are kicking against President Jonathan going into the race. But the chairman of the PDP Governors Forum, Dr. Godswill Akpabio said after the last peace meeting at the presidential villa that the aggrieved governors agreed at the meeting that the ambition of every member of the party is an individual thing.
In an interview published in an on-line media, Atiku disagreed with those who are of the view that Jonathan should not contest 2015 election for whatever reason, and stressed that apart from a court of competent jurisdiction no group of persons on their own could stop Jonathan from participating in the electoral process in 2015.
electionResponding to questions on the report that that was one of the conditions given by the G7 governors for peace to reign again in PDP Atiku said, “That is not correct. No person has a right to stop the other from pursuing his rights as guaranteed by the law. If President Jonathan doesn’t have the rights to contest the 2015 presidential election, only the court can make such pronouncement, not an individual or a group of individuals. It is entirely up to Dr. Jonathan to say he will run or not. My view is that with zoning in the PDP now dead, anyone qualified under the constitution is free to run.”
The former vice president and one of the founders of PDP traced the problem in the ruling party to the era of former President Olusegun Obasanjo administration and emphasised that the rot in PDP was as a result of deviation from the dream of the founding fathers of the party.
“It was commonly agreed upon among the founding fathers of the party that the PDP was going to be a political party that will operate and function by the rules; and that decision-making in the party would comply with democratic norms.
“But along the line, and not too long after the party won the presidential election in 1999 and also won the majority of seats in the National Assembly, the PDP began to change in character and in content.
“The change in character had to do with the fact that some elements in the leadership of the party began to wield an iron fist; and the change in content began when the PDP started to change its own laws to gratify the desires of a few powerful individuals in the party”.
NigerianPilot

RIGHTS COMMISSION PROBES APO KILLINGS

by Atika Balal, Ronald Mutum & Musa Abdullahi Krishi

Prof Chidi Odinkalu
.Interim report ready today, NHRC says
.We’re not killers – SSS
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) yesterday said it has opened an investigation into Friday’s killing of seven squatters in an uncompleted building behind legislators’ quarters in Apo, Abuja.
Circumstances of the deaths remained hazy, as while security agencies say those killed were Boko Haram members, survivors of the incident insist they were homeless artisans squatting in the building.
The quasi-autonomous NHRC yesterday said it has already began a probe to determine what exactly happened.
Spokesman for the commission, Muhammad Nasir Ladan, told Daily Trust in Abuja that investigators would submit a preliminary report today.
When asked if the report would be made public, Ladan said the interim report would be studied internally first and the public would later on be informed of the commission’s findings.
Seven people were killed and many others injured when a joint SSS-Army team raided the uncompleted building at Apo Zone E area early on Friday.
The State Security Service (SSS) said the incident was a shootout with members of the Boko Haram sect, but those injured said it was an attack on squatters following an eviction warning by the building owner.
SSS authorities said operatives were searching for weapons in the building when they came under fire, resulting in a shoot out. The agency said the search was launched following a tip off by Boko Haram elements in detention.
But the injured survivors yesterday called on the government to ensure justice was done by investigating the matter and punishing the attackers.
Speaking to Daily Trust in their hospital beds in Abuja, they insisted they were innocent and were not Boko Haram members.
Sani Abdulrahman from Safana in Katsina State, who was shot in the leg, related his experience thus: “The truth of the matter is that we were many that were sleeping in that house. What happened was that on Wednesday, we learnt that some scavengers went to the house in the afternoon when we were away and stole some cables.
“They were caught by the security man in the house who said he couldn’t handle the matter by himself and decided to call the owner. When the man came, he said they (scavengers) should be allowed to go, but he said all of us should leave the house by next Wednesday. He threatened that if we don’t leave by next week, he would bring not police or SSS men but soldiers to chase us away.”
When asked to give the name of the house owner, Abdulrahman said he did not know but added that: “He (house owner) wore suit when he came and was speaking Hausa, though not fluently. We learnt he is a retired soldier from Kaduna State, but we are not sure. He must be the one who sent the soldiers.”
Abdulrahman said barely 24 hours later, soldiers stormed the house at about 11.30pm and started shooting sporadically as a result of which many of them ran out for their lives only to be shot by the soldiers.
“We want government to do justice to us by ensuring that they investigate and punish those that attacked us and killed our brothers. If you’re a poor man in this country or if somebody doesn’t like you, he can do anything to you, but they know that we’re innocent,” he added.
Abubakar Auwal, who hails from Bichi local government of Kano State, said most of the squatters were wheel-barrow pushers, auto-rickshaw drivers, labourers and traders who sleep in the house and leave as early as 6am for their various callings.
“Government must do something about this. Look at how we become as a result of this. We were just going about looking for our legitimate means of livelihood, but they came and attacked us. We’re about 200 that sleep in the house and there is nobody like Boko Haram among us,” he said.
“In fact, it’s because we cannot afford the expensive rent that we went there. Everybody pays the security man N200 every Saturday, and the owner of the house is aware of it.”
For his part, Yusuf Abubakar from Moriki in Zamfara State, said: “It’s only Allah that will judge them because we know that we are innocent. But the government must stand up to its responsibility of protecting the lives of the citizens. If nothing is done, tomorrow they will go and do worst.”
Bashir Usman, who escaped unhurt from the house, said there were shootings in the area about two months ago but it was suspected to be carried out by armed robbers.
“This isn’t the first time. Some people came about two months ago and started shooting at night. But we later learnt it was armed robbers who came to attack a neighbouring house,” he said.
“In this our case, after the shootings and killings, some people were arrested. It was the police that came and brought both the injured and the dead out from the bush. We don’t even know where some of us ran to as we’re yet to see them.”
When our reporters visited the area yesterday at Apo Zone E, the street was deserted, but five vans and two buses loaded with soldiers and men of the SSS were seen close to the house where the shooting happened.
A taxi driver, Muhammad Lawal also from Kano, who resides in a neighbouring house, told Daily Trust that the incident scared people in the area.
“Many of us did not sleep that day. It was as if everything was happening in our house. We’re many that sleep in the house, which is not far to the one where the killings took place. Most of us are taxi drivers there and we’re more than 100,” said Lawal.
He said they had now been given a 2-day quit notice.
A sugar cane seller who was seen close to a mosque in the area said the street has been quiet since the day the incident took place, adding that people were still afraid to be seen around for fear of being arrested.
The SSS yesterday declined to answer any specific questions from our reporter on the issues being raised regarding the shooting incident.
When contacted, spokeswoman Marylin Ogar said operatives of the service were not killers but were paid to secure the lives and property of Nigerians irrespective of their status.
She noted that criticism of the service over the Apo incident were unfounded because the operation was carried out based on information from Boko Haram elements and was aimed at securing the public, failure of which would have drawn harsh criticisms.
Ogar refused to respond to questions raised by the public over the failure to show any weapons recovered from the operation. She had said in a statement on Friday that the service had information that the building was being used to stock weapons, but there has been no public display yet of any arms recovered during the operation.
Yesterday, she told Daily Trust she stood by what was in that statement.
In the statement on Friday, she said, “The operation was sequel to information obtained from two (2) Boko Haram elements Kamal Abdullahi and Mohammed Adamu, who had earlier been arrested for terrorist activities. They led the security team to uncompleted buildings where arms were purported to have been buried underground.
“No sooner had the team commenced digging for the arms, than they came under heavy gunfire attack by other Boko Haram elements within the area, which prompted immediate response from the security team.”
DailyTrust

N25bn fraud: EFCC closes case against Igbinedion today


THE Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, will today close its case in the ongo­ing trial of Michael Igbinedion, the younger brother of former Edo State governor, Lucky N. Ig­binedion.
Igbinedion, Patrick Eboigbo­din and four companies — Gava Corporation Limited, Romrig Nigeria Limited, PML Securities Company Limited and PML Ni­geria Limited — are facing trial at a Federal High Court sitting in Benin, Edo State, over a N25 bil­lion scam.
In a statement issued earlier by the head of Media and Publicity of the anti-graft commission, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, said three wit­nesses had testified for the com­mission.
The statement said: “At the re­sumed hearing on Friday, June 21, 2013, EFCC called three wit­nesses. The first witness, Mr. Ajoyo Sowale, an accounts of­ficer with Guaranty Trust Bank, identified various account state­ments and account opening documents of the accused and confirmed the lodgements made into the various accounts. He also told the court that he print­ed the various account state­ments and got them certified.
“The EFCC counsel, Mr. Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), further led the second witness, Mr. Eriyo Ama­diayagbon David, who was a per­sonal assistant to Micheal Igbin­edion, in evidence.
David told the court how the second accused, Michael Igbin­edion, instructed him on several occasions to make lodgements
knowl­
efccinto his GTB accounts and those of Romrig Nigeria Limited and Gava Corporation.
“According to David, he usually received cash from the account­ant at the Government House and paid into the account of the second accused ‘and after paying the gov­ernment entourage, the remaining cash is usually given to the ADC (Aide-De-Camp) to the Governor’.
“The witness further identified his name on the printed account statement of Michael Igbinedion, which is part of the exhibits before the court.
“During cross-examination, counsel to the first accused, Mike Ozekhome (SAN), asked the wit­ness if he ever stole government money with the first accused, Mr. Patrick Eboigbodin, and the wit­ness told the court that he never did.”
Justice Liman adjourned the mat­ter till September 23 and 24, 2013.
NigerianPilot

Oshiomhole’s divide and rule politics exposed! Concentrates on own constituency devt •Converts ecological funds to road construction


 oshimole STAKEHOLDERS in Governor Adams Oshiomhole primary constituency in Etsako west local government area of Edo state have accused his government of giving preferential treatment in terms of infrastructural development projects to his section in the locality.
The All Peoples’ Congress, APC, member representing the constituency at the state assembly, Hon Abdulrazak Momoh who disclosed this in a


governor has since assuming office in 2008, systematically and cleverly supervised the diversion of funds meant for developing his constituency without any explanation.
“Etsako west is one local government with two constituencies, I and II. Auchi which is Constituency I is the headquarters of the local government; the headquarters of the Etsako federal constituency and the headquarters of Edo North senatorial district. There is a deliberate attempt to relegate constituency one to the background with marginalisation and oppression in terms of infrastructural development.”
He said Auchi community or Etsako West I state constituency in Edo North Senatorial district, twice in 2009 and 2011, got the sum of N2.9billion and N1.5billion respectively in the state budget to deal with the menace of ecological disaster; but the governor who has gained commendation for his infrastructural strides diverted the funds to road construction in Uzairue; the governor’s immediate constituency.
Momoh added that this development is disturbing as Auchi is worst hit in terms of ecological disasters in Edo, and whereas the state government says erosion is an ecological disaster and is the burden of the Federal Government, it went to the capital market, took a loan and has spent the sum of N20billion on erosion control in Benin City, the state capital.
Informed that the state government claims to have focused on roads as it is the major problem of the locality, the lawmaker who lampooned such an explanation said, “Auchi did not benefit from the roads,” because the funds were expended on roads in constituency II.
He said in fiscal 2013, out of the seven roads in constituency I, for which N1.3billion was budgeted, the government only agreed to complete
the N700million Iyeke-Ayuele road while the 12 roads in Uzairue for which N2.1billion was budgeted, the same government has completed all.
The affected roads abandoned in constituency I, Momoh said are old Ewu-Agbede road (N50million), Jagbe- Agbede-Awain road (N200million), Etsako West roads (N50million), Iyereku-Emana-Eko-Ubiane-Aghiere- Ughiole roads (N20million), Auchi- Warrake road(N700million) and the Warrake-Egono road (N50million).
For constituency II, he listed completed roads as Atte-Iyuku (N300million), Ayogwiri-Okpella (N800million), Jattu-Ayogwiri (50million), Jattu-Ayuara (N100million), Jattu- Ogieneni (N50million), Ijio-Jattu-Auchi (N800million), Iyanmho-Iyora (N500million), Ogbido-Ayoghena (N100million), Apana – Iraokho (N50million) Ikholor –Ogbido (N100million) and Afowa- Elele (N10million).
“You can see the kind of oppression Auchi is facing. Even the dualisation of the 6km N800million Ijio-Jattu- Auchi Polytechnic road has 5km in Uzairue and 1km Auchi, while the 5km Auchi-Ugheole-Ayuele road has 1.5km in Auchi and 3.5km in Uzairue”.
He said repeated pilgrimages by traditional rulers from constituency I to the governor’s office in Benin City and his country palace at Iyamho has been in vain adding that it is worrisome since the governor promised during the last gubernatorial campaigns, as he could not access many communities by road used helicopters and promised to reverse the trend.
However, reacting to the lawmaker’s submission, a media aide to the governor, Mr. Kassim Afegbua said, the “governor did not select or discriminate against any local government or constituency in the provision of social amenities,” adding that, “the governor takes all parts of the state as his own constituency.”
NigerianPilot

LAGOSIANS SPEND N36BN YEARLY ON PARTYING – FASHOLA

by Femi Akinola, Lagos

Governor Babatunde Fashola said this at the weekend at the 4th edition of the Lagos Ignite Enterprise and Employability Project, a joint youth empowerment programme between the government and the After School Graduate Development Centre (AGDC).
He said: “A study of nightlife carried out by the government in five local governments (areas) Agege, Mushin, Ifako-Ijaiye, Ikorodu and Ikeja, showed that about N3 billion was spent on 1, 555 parties held within the period.”
He said the figure was collated after a study of the cultural side of Lagos party life, putting the monthly estimate at N3 billion. According to this estimate, in 12 months, about N36 billion is expended on partying in the state.
The governor called on the youth to tap into the investment opportunities provided by such occasions.
The study was done between October and November last year of 2012. Thursday, Friday and Saturday were taken as study samples for four weeks, the governor said.
He said: “In 12 nights, 1,555 parties were held in those local governments. In terms of drinks, food and all other engagements during such parties, about N1.2 billion was spent and when we disaggregated them, we saw how much went to DJ, MC, food and drinks.”
Fashola also revealed that clothing materials worn during such parties popularly called aso-ebi gulps at least N1.2 billion monthly, saying the market is huge with much yet to be tapped from the market.
He urged the youth to look beyond white collar jobs just as he also cited the revolution and huge money spinning opportunities in refuse collection and provision of rest rooms during events started by individuals.
DailyTrust