Thursday, 19 June 2014

Lagos Assembly Berates PDP Over Desperation To Regain Ekiti

Lagos-House


Lagos State House of Assembly has lambasted the PDP leadership over its desperation to regain Ekiti State by every possible means which includes rigging, violence and other ruthless means.
The position of the House was made known yesterday by the chairman, House Committee on Information, Strategy, Security and Publicity, representing Epe Constituency II, Hon Segun Olulade.
The House was reacting to the reported arrest made by the Department of State Security in Ekiti over illegal thumb-printing into ballot boxes by loyalists of PDP gubernatorial candidate, Ayo Fayose, ahead of the Saturday election.
“The attempt by PDP to forcefully regain Ekiti is a wishful thinking, not even a dream. The party is making every ruthless effort to choke Ekiti people into accepting a tyrant model being imported by Ayo Fayose from Abuja. We believe that Ekiti people are learned people and very wise. I have no doubt that the people will stand and defend their mandate of the choice of Governor Kayode Fayemi.
“All attempts being employed by PDP have failed. First was the attempt to use a PDP man in police uniform to discourage followers of Dr Fayemi by shooting at a peaceful rally, leaving an APC supporter dead; then the attempt to distribute expired rice and food items to woo the people; and now they have started thumb-printing illegally ahead of the election”, the House said.
The lawmakers who commended the inspector general of police for taking an honourable position in the shooting case also commended the men of the State Security Service for the arrest of the hoodlums who were thumb-printing into ballot boxes.
Leadership

Boko Haram Planning Massive Attacks In Abuja – FG


The federal government has revealed a plot by the Boko Haram insurgents to carry out a massive attack in different locations in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).
Coordinator of the National Information Centre and Director General of the National Orientation Agency (NOA), Mr Mike Omeri, made the revelation yesterday during a media briefing on the update of the fight against insurgency and effort to rescue the abducted Chibok schoolgirls.
According to Omeri, the insurgents plan to hijack fully loaded petro tankers from their drivers, plant explosives in them and move the vehicles to destinations where they are expected to cause monumental destruction of life and property.
“The Nigerian security services have received intelligence report to the effect that insurgents intend seizing petrol tankers and planting Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) in the tankers and driving them to crowed places in Abuja,” Omeri said.
The NOA boss urged members of Petrol Tankers’ Association to be on red alert and advised them to report any attempt or seizure of their vehicles to the security agencies. Citizens were also advised to report any broken down tanker in any part of the territory to security agencies.
“We are using this opportunity to appeal to the public to be on the alert particularly when they see any tanker driving dangerously,” he said.
The spokesman for the Department of State Services, Ms Marilyn Ogar reacted to the suspected insurgents arrested in Abia State, saying they were actually 491, including five infants and five women.
Omeri described the suspects as travellers, and said the arrest was not targeted at any group of persons or individuals.
He revealed that during interrogation of the suspects, a notorious insurgent who had been profiled by the DSS since 2007 and had been on the agency’s watch-list was identified.
“This led to further questioning of the large movement of persons travelling in a convoy of over 30 buses with none of them having up to N1,000 on them,” he said.

US Approves Fresh $18m To Fight Boko Haram
The United States government has approved a fresh $18 Million to fight Boko Haram and other terrorists groups in the entire Africa continent.
This was contained in a press statement which was obtained by our correspondent from the office of the United States Reward for Justice.
The statement made it known that the US has placed a $5 million bounty on Barnawi, a leader of the Nigeria-based terrorist group known as Ansaru, who is also a former senior member of the Boko Haram sect.
Apart from the $5 million bounty which was put on each of the two deadly Nigerien terrorists, Hamad el Khairy and Ahmed el Tilemsi, the United States Reward for Justice also declared a reward of $3 million for whoever gives useful information that can lead to the arrest of an Egyptian, Abu-Yusuf al-Muhajir, who specializes in making explosives for terrorists in Africa.

Stop Indiscriminate Arrest Of Northerners – ACF
Apparently disturbed by the arrest of 486 northerners in Abia State, the northern apex socio-cultural organisation, Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), has warned of the dangers of indiscriminate arrest of northerners in some parts of the country under disguise of looking for Boko Haram members.
According to the ACF, it is unlawful to arrest 486 northerners who were in pursuit of their legitimate means of livelihood in the South on the allegation that they are members of the outlawed Boko Haram sect because of their faith, origin and appearance.
ACF in a statement signed by its spokesman, Muhammad Ibrahim, said, “This indiscriminate act of arrest based on faith and origin negates the spirit of one Nigeria and equally violates their freedom of movement and association as guaranteed in the Nigerian Constitution.”
“ACF therefore calls on the relevant authorities and in particular the Abia State Government to exercise caution on the alleged arrest of Jigawa indigenes on suspicion of being Boko Haram members, lest such an action make some people of a particular faith and origin become foreigners in their fatherland.

Russia Backs Nigeria’s War Against Terror
Abuja, June 13, 2014 Russia has expressed its support and solidarity with the Federal Government in its fight against insurgency and associated security challenges.
The Russian Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr Nikolay Udovichenko, said this in his address on the National Day of the Russian Federation, Thursday.
“We know, from our own experience, how important it is to stand together in the fight against terrorism. Our country is ready as it has always been, to lend a hand to Nigeria in this struggle,’’ he said.
Leadership

NO MORE COUP IN NIGERIA – DEFENCE CHIEF

Alex Badeh


The Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, yesterday dismissed a story originated from African Confidential speculating the possibility of a coup d’etat in the country, saying the military would defend democracy whatever it takes.
The London-based online medium, in its 13 June, 2014 edition, came out with a story that there was a plan in the offing to replace the Jonathan administration with an interim national government to be headed by Senate president David Mark because of his military background, but Badeh dismissed the story with a wave of the hand.
The CDS made the declaration while receiving the director-general of National Orientation Agency (NOA), Mike Omeri at the Defence Headquarters, in Abuja, for the formal presentation of the Nigerian Centenary Flag to the military, which the CDS ordered its hoisting in all military formations nationwide.
According to him, the military as a professional group “has no option but to love Nigeria” and do those things that would ensure security and protection of lives within the nation.
Air Chief Marshal Badeh, who did not hide his surprise at the rumours of coup, said democracy had come to stay in the country and that the military had no intention of truncating it.
“Why should anyone be thinking in negative fashion? Tell them we will not do it. Those rumouring coups must be living elsewhere and not in Nigeria. The Armed Forces are defenders of democracy. We are an arm of democracy, so how can an arm of democracy work against the democracy that we are part of?”, the CDS asked.
Leadership

SECURITY AGENCIES NOT DOING ENOUGH TO RESCUE OUR GIRLS – CHIBOK CHAIRMAN

Nigerian Soldiers


The chairman of the Chibok Community Association in Abuja, Mr Tsambido Hosea-Abana has expressed fear over the inability of the Nigerian security agencies to rescue the over 200 girls abducted at Chibok, Borno State, even as he noted that there is the possibility that some of these girls may not return alive.
The chairman, who was speaking at the Unity Fountain during the sit out of the Bring Back Our Girls group yesterday, lamented that despite daily media reports on the efforts of the security agencies, the truth still remains that after 66 days, the girls are still in captivity of the deadly Boko Haram sect.
“I am calling on the president to put in more efforts, even if it involves negotiation and inviting former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo to assist in ensuring that our girls are returned safely,” Hosea-Abana said.
He also wondered why the security agencies have not been able to make any notable attack on the Sambisa forest, and noted that it is a cause for alarm, while suggesting the use of local hunters in the rescue mission.
Members of the #BringBackOurGirls group who expressed concern over the failure of the security agencies to rescue the Chibok girls up till now, also warned that if the government fails in the rescue mission, they would not hesitate to push for a motion to impeach the president.
Leadership

A Mighty Girl's photo.


The Nazis called them 'Night Witches' because the whooshing noise their plywood and canvas airplanes made reminded the Germans of the sound of a witch’s broomstick. The Russian women who piloted those planes, onetime crop dusters, took it as a compliment. In 30,000 missions over four years, they dumped 23,000 tons of bombs on the German invaders, ultimately helping to chase them back to Berlin. Any German pilot who downed a 'witch' was awarded an Iron Cross.
These young heroines, all volunteers and most in their teens and early 20s, became legends of World War II but are now largely forgotten. Flying only in the dark, they had no parachutes, guns, radios or radar, only maps and compasses. If hit by tracer bullets, their planes would burn like sheets of paper."
So begins a NY Times tribute to one of the most famous "Night Witches," Nadezhda Popova, pictured here. Popova, who flew 852 missions during the war, passed away this past year at the age of 91. To read more about her incredible story, visithttp://nyti.ms/JbnOMC
While there aren't any books available for young readers about these courageous women, there are several books for older readers about the role of Russian women combat pilots during WWII including "Flying for Her Country: The American and Soviet Women Military Pilots of World War II" (http://amzn.to/1mTMad9), "Wings, Women, and War: Soviet Airwomen in World War II Combat" (http://amzn.to/1fyPOs8), "A Dance with Death: Soviet Airwomen in World War II" (http://amzn.to/1jJb79N), "Red Sky, Black Death: A Soviet Woman Pilot's Memoir of the Eastern Front" (http://amzn.to/NhxvM4).
For an excellent documentary for ages 10 and up about the WASPs, the American women flyers of WWII, check out "Fly Girls," at http://www.amightygirl.com/american-experience-fly-girls
For more true stories of courageous women heroes of WWII, check out the inspiring book for ages 13 and up "Women Heroes of World War II: 26 Stories of Espionage, Sabotage, Resistance, and Rescue" at http://www.amightygirl.com/women-heroes-of-world-war-ii
For two highly recommended novels, both for ages 13 and up, about women resistance fighters of WWII, check out "Code Name Verity" (http://www.amightygirl.com/code-name-verity) and "Rose Under Fire" (http://www.amightygirl.com/rose-under-fire).
For stories for all ages about girls and women living through the WWII period, visit our "WWII / Holocaust" section at http://www.amightygirl.com/books/history-biography/history-world?cat=186
And, to introduce your kids to more famous female flyers like Amelia Earhart, Bessie Coleman, and Harriet Quimby, visit A Mighty Girl's "Planes" section athttp://www.amightygirl.com/books/general-interest/transportation?cat=129

Ekiti Governorship Election: Soldiers Bar Governors Amaechi, Oshiomhole and Kwankwaso From Ado-Ekiti


Soldiers surround Amaechi's convoy
By Saharareporters, New York
Nigerian soldiers stationed between Akure, the capital of Ondo State, and Ado-Ekiti, the capital of Ekiti State, today prevented Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State from reaching a political rally for Governor Kayode Fayemi, the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in next Saturday’s governorship election in Ekiti State.
In a related development, other soldiers also prevented a chopper that was scheduled to take Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State from taking off from the airport in Benin City, the capital of Edo State. Mr. Oshiomhole was also scheduled to attend the rally for Mr. Fayemi. Also another aircraft bring Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso from Kano was denied landing rights at the Akure airport.
The soldiers reportedly told both governors that they have no clearance to attend the series of rallies for Mr. Fayemi.
Two aides of Governor Amaechi told SaharaReporters that a group of soldiers stopped their convoy at Ikerre-Ekiti and told the governor that President Goodluck Jonathan needed to approve his trip to Ekiti. According to both sources, Mr. Amaechi argued with the soldiers, insisting that, like every Nigerian, he should be free to move freely within his country, but the soldiers cordoned off the road and made the governor wait for more than 30 minutes while others were given free passage. In the end, Mr. Amaechi turned back, but noticed that the soldiers followed his convoy in a bus and Hilux pickup van. When he got to Odudu in Ondo State, he asked his convoy to stop and then asked the soldiers why he was being followed. “The soldiers got angry and threatened to shoot if he didn’t keep moving,” said one source, adding that Governor Amaechi refused to move. “The soldiers then surrounded his convoy threatening to kill him and his aides if they refused to move back to Rivers State.”
A group of soldiers also told Governor Oshiomhole that his chopper was not allowed to fly due to orders from above. After a few exchanges with the soldiers, the governor then returned to his offices in Benin.
In an interview earlier today, Senator Babafemi Ojudu accused the Jonathan administration of fully militarizing Ekiti State. Mr. Ojudu stated that the federal government had closed down Akure Airport and that soldiers were preventing people from all over Ekiti State from attending a grand rally organized for Governor Fayemi today.
Yesterday, the Presidency also gave orders to stop Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa State from flying out of the Yola airport to attend the inauguration of the APC executive council in Abuja. Shortly after Mr. Nyako made a decision to leave the state by road, members of the state assembly began impeachment proceedings against him.
Earlier today, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission froze the Adamawa state accounts.

Odigie-Oyegun’s APC cross

In the days of the fierce SDP/NRC battle for the Edo governorship race, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, had this running advert on television that was both hilarious and didactic. A man with a bald pate and grey goatee would, after greeting the viewers, remove his cap and point at his goatee, enjoining  the people to vote for wisdom and experience, which, he claimed, baldness and greyness sym­bolised.
His opponent then was the youthful, bil­lionaire’s son, Lucky Nosakhare Igbinedion. While Odigie-Oyegun was 52, Igbinedion was in his early 30s. So, in a sense, the bat­tle was made to look like that of old versus young;  experience versus inexperience.  The Edo people chose to vote for Odigie-Oyegun, the man who they thought had more experi­ence than Igbinedion, having hit the pinnacle of his civil service career, as a federal perma­nent secretary at 36!
But Odigie-Oyegun’s tenure was short-lived.  After 18 months or thereabout in of­fice,   General  Sani Abacha’s  coup sacked the civilian government of Chief Ernest Shonekan and the state governors,  amongst whom was Odigie-Oyegun.  So, the Edo people couldn’t see the full bloom of his ad­ministration, even as his admirers claimed he had begun to put in place the roadmap to a purposeful government while his critics maintained he had no clear direction and en­gaged mainly in rhetoric and sophistry!
Odigie-Oyegun subsequently teamed up with other progressives to found the Na­tional Democratic Coalition, NADECO, which gave the military a hell of a time in its pursuit of Abiola’s stolen mandate and res­toration of democracy in Nigeria.  It didn’t achieve the first objective.   However, it is to the eternal credit of NADECO and peo­ple like Odigie-Oyegun, who fought in the trenches, as members of NADECO abroad, that the military got harassed and harangued out of power.  His role as a vocal member of NADECO was what put Odigie-Oyegun in the spotlight of national politics, rather than his brief stint, as first civilian governor of Edo State.  He subsequently moved to the opposition ANPP,  ran as vice-presidential candidate to Mallam Ibrahim Shekarau.  Last Saturday, he emerged the first national chairman of the All Progressives Congress, APC,  Nigeria’s main opposition party. With his new position, Odigie-Oyegun becomes a gold fish with no hiding place.   He also car­ries the enormous burden of leading his party to victory (or loss) in the 2015 presidential election, against the ruling party, Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.  Can he?  What are the challenges he must surmount to success­fully lead his party to victory? What are the forces that would militate against his perfor­mance in office?
Before seeking to provide answers to the above posers, let me digress to my personal encounter with him.  He was governor when I first met him in 1993. I had gone to his office to interview him for a column in the then Week­end Concord, ME AND MY MUM, where celebrities paid tribute to their mothers. From 9am to 6pm, I waited  patiently to have a chat with the governor.  But the stream of visitors was endless. Every 30 minutes or thereabout, Odigie-Oyegun would pop out of his office to assure me he would soon be with me. ‘My friend from Lagos, I will soon see you.’ I was struck by his humility.  But he didn’t see me till 6pm, when he asked me to ride with him to his residence inside the Government House.   We got home and met another set of visitors and political associates. He was again full of apologies, for the visitors, who interrupted our chat every now and then. Just when we were about to begin the interview proper, after we managed to get a sitting space tucked some­where in the expansive residence, in walked Chief Tony Anenih, the then national chairman of the defunct Social Democratic Party, SDP.
“Now,  this is it,”  Odigie-Oyegun said, throwing his hands up. “My leader is here.  We have to go for a meeting.” The chat was rescheduled for the next day in the office. Be­fore 8am, I was there and the interview held by 10am.  The interview turned out to be quite interesting and revealing.  He told me the story of how his mother sold dry fish to train him in school;  how he hawked all kinds of wares round the ancient city of Benin to survive and to assist his poor mother, who singlehandedly brought him up, after he lost his father.  It was a moving story, which made up for the stress of pinning him down.
The last time I met Odigie-Oyegun again was at the late Alhaji Abubakar Rimi’s residence in Kano,  where the progressive governors had a meeting in 1993 or thereabout,  shortly after Abiola’s aborted mandate.  Since then, I don’t believe I have seen or chatted  with him, even though I have tried to follow him in the media, through his interviews.
From my interaction with him and reading him, Odigie-Oyegun comes across as a strong-willed man, who can’t be labelled, as greedy in the mould of the average Nigerian politician. He is not a saint but I don’t believe he is ac­quisitive by nature.  His frugality and simplic­ity are qualities many who know him attest to. He is largely principled and like a true Bini man, would not shy from calling a spade by its name;  a man  who would not be anyone’s stooge.  That is the picture of the Odigie-Oye­gun I have always carried in my head.
But is it the same Odigie-Oyegun that be­came the national chairman of the APC early Saturday morning? I don’t know. I honestly can’t say.  The reason is simple: The man­ner of his emergence.  The ‘cult-like’ way he was foisted on his party’s leadership. The ambush of other candidates and the way they were asked to bury their ambitions for Odi­gie-Oyegun to emerge. In other words, what Odigie-Oyegun had was a ‘coronation’, not an election.  The same thing we had always com­plained about  and kicked the PDP for, reared its ugly head in APC!  Why?  Why did they force other candidates to step down for Odigie-Oyegun?  Why did they not allow a contest for the best among them:  Sylva, Ikimi and Jaja, to emerge?
Whose interest is Odigie-Oyegun expected to serve, by clearing all the hurdles on the way for him? And why should Odigie-Oyegun, a man of principle, equity and fairness, allow such unfairness in a democratic race? He could still have won, who knows. He had enviable democratic credentials. He is untainted.  But they didn’t want to take chances, so they muzzled others out, a la PDP.   What happened on Saturday was no democracy but a charade and a mockery of democracy.  APC, a party with many progressive politicians, could have done better because we expect it to behave bet­ter, since it claims to be different. But it let us down at its first convention.
Odigie-Oyegun surely has his hands full with this untidy development in his party. His first task, as he has already pledged, is to mend broken fences with aggrieved party members, who are sorely angry over the way they were shunted out for him.  The second task would be to assure party faithful and other Nigerians that there would be no further imposition of can­didates in any of its elective offices now or in the future.  Democracy is about free choice and free expression of it. This, I believe. That’s the reason I am not hiding my anger.   Regular readers of this column can attest to the fact that I am anti-imposition, whether in PDP, APC, LP or wherever.  I also believe in the application of the same yardstick for all par­ties and persons.  If we abuse PDP for do­ing the wrong things, we must also not shy from  upbraiding the APC when we see it doing the wrong thing.
I   restate my views for the benefit of the new APC chairman, in case he missed out on it, on what the APC must do differently to convince us it is truly different. I wrote then under the headline: CAN THIS APC CURE OUR HEADACHE?
“First, the party must begin from the well-founded assumption that many Nigerians really do not see much difference between the operators of the two major parties in the country (PDP and APC).  So, they have to work hard to sell their programmes to us, the electorate.  How, for example, they hope to tackle corruption, unemployment and elec­tricity problems?  For now, not many are convinced that there are no corrupt elements in APC, like in PDP. Not many believe that APC governors are the saints while PDP governors are the devils incarnate.  If they truly want to capture the minds of Nige­rians, let APC elected officials, especially governors on its platform, begin to live like the people they desire to serve.  Frugality, modesty and compassion are the key words. As at today, it is difficult to differentiate the lifestyle of the APC governor from his PDP counterpart. The change must start from within. Example, as the saying goes, is bet­ter than precept.
“Next is the culture of imposition. In its days of absolute control of the political space,  PDP godfathers handpicked whoever they liked for positions.  That bred resent­ment and then, rebellion. Rebellion led to people, migrating to other parties.   Today, the party is still battling to entrench internal democracy.  If the APC continues in the tra­dition of the defunct  ACN,  imposing can­didates or swallowing everything that comes out of the mouth of the ‘ Lion of Bourdil­lion’,   Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, as we hear hap­pens,  or takes every word from the lips of Mai Gaskiya,   Gen. Muhammadu Buhari,   that will prove disastrous for the party.”
Mr. Chairman,  some food for thought, no doubt. You can make the difference if you will be your own man and not anyone’s lackey.  If you will be defender of the power­less in your party; if you will uphold justice and fairness; if you will not be a tool in pow­erful hands.  Best of luck, sir. You will need tonnes of it.