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Wakil: Emir of Gwoza Paid a Sacrifice to End Boko Haram

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By Michael Olugbode

As the Emir of Gwoza, Alhaji Idrissa Timta,  killed by suspected members of the outlawed Boko Haram in a highway ambush on Friday was buried amidst tears Saturday, the Minister of State for Power, Hon. Mohammed Wakil, said the monarch was a sacrifice that should propel the military to finding a solution to the Boko Haram menace.

He  condemned the brutal murder as disrespectful, “barbaric and utterly un-Islamic.”

The minister while expressing deep shock and sadness over the incident said it was reprehensible for the sect to attack revered Emirs of Askira, Alhaji Abdullahi Ibn Muhammed Askirama II, late Alhaji Idrissa Timta of Gwoza and Emir of Uba, Alhaji Ali Ibn Ismaila Mamza II.

Thisdays


Wike denies taking oath before Amaechi to be appointed Minister

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SUPERVISING Minister of Education, Mr Nyesom Wike, has denied  the allegation by Governor Chibuike Amaechi that he swore never to part ways with him politically if he (governor) nominated him for ministerial appointment.

Amaechi  alleged recently that the Supervising Minister broke an oath he took with the names of his children that he would not betray him ( governor) if he pushed for his appointment as Minister. The governor, who also said he ensured President Goodluck Jonathan appointed Wike in his cabinet, described the Minister as a  traitor.

Wike, who spoke in Obio Akpor local government area, at the weekend, said he never took any oath before  Amaechi, adding that  the govenor  spoke out of frustration.

Boko Haram kills 15 in Adamawa

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About 15 persons were reported killed by the outlawed  Boko Haram in a bomb blast at Kaban,in Mubi, local Government area of Adamawa State.  No fewer  than 25 victims of the blast  were hospitalised.
Eyewitness said the victims were watching a football match  at a beer parlour when they met their waterloo.   .
The Police Public Relations Officer,  Adamawa Police Command, DSP Abubakar Othman, who confirmed the incident said  the command  was alerted by the Mubi Area Command of the police.

Boko Haram: How the presidency bungled it — Shehu Sani

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SHehu Sani, an activist has in the past made efforts to mediate between the Federal Government and the Boko Haram Islamic sect.

Sani in this interview says he is still willing to take the negotiation further and outlines steps the Federal Government should urgently take to ensure the release of the over 200 girls seized by the sect from the Government Secondary School, Chibok and end the menace of insurgency in the northeast. Excerpts:

BY Soni Daniel, Regional Editor, North

Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh and President Jonathan

What do you make of the speech by President Jonathan to crush Boko Haram and also give them amnesty?
The speech of Mr. President is full of contradictions. On one hand he is saying that is has declared to total war against Boko Haram and on the other, he is saying the door for amnesty is still open for the insurgents.

How can the insurgents come out and enter the open door of the amnesty when there is a price tag on the head of the leader of the Boko Haram sect, Abubakar Shekau, by the United States, which was also supported by the Nigerian government? How can the insurgents enter the open door of the amnesty when already there is an anti-terrorism law that outlaws the group and criminalises any form of communication with its members?

How can the insurgents embrace the open door provided by the amnesty when there is a state of emergency in places that will go after any insurgent that rears his head up? How can the insurgents embrace the amnesty when Nigeria sponsored the resolution at the United Nations that blacklisted the group?

How can the insurgents avail themselves of amnesty when Nigeria invited the United States, Israel, France and Britain, whose drones are already hovering over their heads? I think what we have is a President that is confused and does not know how to handle the Boko Haram situation.

Why did your previous efforts to bring the Boko Haram members to the negotiation table fail?
There were two or three attempts to negotiate with the insurgents. They all collapsed because the government changed its mind at the end of every deal.

Negotiating with insurgents
When we travelled to Maiduguri with former President Olussegun Obasanjo, we came back with some suggestions and advice from the insurgents themselves on how to end the violence. But when we took the suggestions of the insurgents to the government, they threw it away.

At that time, it was the then National Security Adviser, Gen. Owoye Andrew Azazi, who felt that they were on top of the situation and that they were determined to crush the insurgency once and for all. As such, we were humiliated and disappointed by the action of the government.

The second attempt was the one that Dr. Ahmed Datti made in his capacity as the representative of the Boko Harm group. He too was frustrated and disappointed by the same government.

Now, the Federal Government also appointed me as a member of the Dialogue Committee and I declined to serve because at that time I made contacts with the insurgents to find out if they had the interest of dialoguing further for amnesty and they told me they were not interested because the outcomes of the previous two attempts were not honoured by the government.

After that, I had no other option than to pull out and I declined the offer to serve on the committee. A week after the Chibok girls were abducted, I reached out to the government and gave them the name of the person, whom I believe would be in a position to talk to the Boko Haram leadership to free the girls.

Surprisingly, the government never got back to me but went directly to the person and he mediated and negotiated with the insurgents. The girls would have been released about two weeks ago but the President cancelled the deal upon his return from France. This has always been the attitude of the government.

What were the conditions given by the Boko Haram sect for the release of the girls?
The conditions are not really different from what they stated in the video the sect released some weeks ago. They demanded the swapping of their members who are in detention for the freedom of the girls and I don’t really see anything wrong with that because to free the girls, you must either use force or negotiate.

To use force, you need to know where they are and to take cognisance of the fact that something can go wrong and that these girls can be killed. In negotiation, what you only need is a small team of mediators, who would guarantee both sides and ensure the honesty and sincerity of the negotiators. The team would ensure that the girls are released by their abductors and also the government should free all those who have been detained without trial.

Detention without trial
It is after that we can use any method to confront the insurgents- whether we want to use force, nuclear weapons or anything. But we should note that you cannot shoot at the insurgents without shooting at the girls. The girls are not just abducted people but they are hostages and they are there as human shields.

I believe that anyone who has a daughter among the girls will not see anything wrong with swapping these girls with the insurgents. We should not forget that the insurgents have been storming police and military cells and freeing their members. So the issue of saying not getting them out will embolden the terrorists does not arise. No.

Given your frustration in the hand of the government in the past, are you still willing to assist in spearheading further negotiation with the sect in order to end the violence in the Northeast?
Yes, I am prepared to assist in terms of working out the possibility of getting out the Chibok girls through negotiation. But I cannot do it alone. This is something that requires the collaboration of many others. What needs to be done for now is in two ways. The first one is for the government to tell the insurgents to send their team to sit down and negotiate with the government on how to free the girls.

They should also ensure that members of the families of the sect who are in detention are released. The second step is to invite Islamic clerics in northern Nigeria, who have been neutral and have not made their feelings about the insurgency known and still enjoy the respect by the insurgents. These clerics should serve as the team of negotiators.

The government only needs to recognise and empower them and encourage them to reach out to the insurgents to free the girls. Islamic clerics in northern Nigeria are very crucial in resolving the issue and I believe that with their intervention we can get the girls back.

Two to three people can free these Chibok girls once they have the right contacts with the insurgents. It is even more impacting than a million people protesting because the insurgents are not moved by protests. They even do not consider the Bringbackourgirls campaign as an issue that concerns them. They see it as an issue between the protesters and the government of Nigeria. All they know is that the protesters will not come to them and what they are saying does not involve them.

What do you think about the involvement of foreign troops in the bid to free the girls? Some say it may compromise our sovereignty and pride as a nation.
It is unfortunate and shameful that Nigeria, which has been undertaking peacekeeping missions around the globe is now resorting to assistance from other countries.

Nigerians have a misconceived opinion that the West is here for fight our war. The Western world does not fight any war unless it threatens its own national security or a direct attack on itself. The U.S for instance is not even prepared to go into Ukraine to drive away the Russians apart from imposing sanctions. They backed down in Syria. Even when they were fighting Gaddafi, they did not enter the city but shot from the sea and air.

I have heard the President raising some false sense of hope thinking that with their intervention they would help us. If you look at the kind of people the U.S sent to Nigeria, you will discover that they have only two set of people: intelligence experts and experts in hostage negotiations and some aircraft to do some surveillance around Yobe and Borno states. So, the presence of foreign military experts is not in the best interest of Nigeria. We have a role to play in Nigeria and other parts of the world.

We need to do is to fund them and equip them to be able to deliver on their mandate. The recent discord between the Ministry of Finance and the military over the money that was allocated for defence and security is very clear that we are having some problems somewhere and corruption is a contributory factor in sustaining insurgency in the north. We don’t need the US, France, Israel and Britain in combating terrorism and protect us.

We should be able to see this problem as part of our history and the challenge before us is that we should not allow it to be our albatross. What is needed now is national solidarity, unity, resilience and the need to stand up and fight the threat because it is very clear that it is threatening our freedom, democracy, national unity and is becoming a dark chapter in the annals of our country. We must be able to find the path through the light to move by ourselves.

Vanguard

Finally: World Cup squad: The 23 Chosen Ones!

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By Tony Ubani

Super Eagles head coach Stephen Keshi released his list of 23 players for the Brazil 2014 World Cup yesterday.

Defender Joseph Yobo will play in his third FIFA World Cup finals and have opportunity to become Nigeria’s first–ever century – international after he was named in the African champions’ final list of 23 for Brazil 2014.

Also going to their third World Cup are goalkeepers Vincent Enyeama and Austin Ejide, but midfield strongman John Mikel Obi will only be attending his first finals after Nigeria narrowly missed Germany 2006 and he was omitted from South Africa 2010 due to injury.

Former junior international defender Elderson Echiejile and Olympic silver medalist Osaze Odemwingie, who were also in South Africa four years ago, make the cut for the biggest showpiece in football.

Nigeria's striker Michael Uchebo celebrates scoring the equalising goal against Scotland. FIFA.COM

2013 Africa Cup of Nations top scorer Emmanuel Emenike is joined in the attack by England-based duo of Victor Moses and Shola Ameobi, and former junior international Uche Nwofor, but there is no place for Olympic silver medalist Obinna Nsofor and nimble –footed Nnamdi Oduamadi.

Home–based goalkeeper Daniel Akpeyi, dimunitive midfielder Joel Obi, South Africa 2013 hero Sunday Mba, former U-23 star Nosa Igiebor and 2014 CHAN most valuable player Ejike Uzoenyi also miss out on the trip to South America.

NIGERIA’S FINAL 23 FOR BRAZIL 2014

GOALKEEPERS: Vincent Enyeama, Austin Ejide, Chigozie Agbim

DEFENDERS: Joseph Yobo, Elderson Echiejile, Juwon Oshaniwa, Godfrey Oboabona, Azubuike Egwuekwe, Kenneth Omeruo, Efe Ambrose, Kunle Odunlami

MIDFIELDERS: John Mikel Obi, Ogenyi Onazi, Ramon Azeez, Michael Uchebo, Reuben Gabriel

FORWARDS: Osaze Odemwingie, Ahmed Musa, Shola Ameobi, Emmanuel Emenike, Babatunde Michael, Victor Moses, Uche Nwofor.

What is your reaction to Keshi’s list of 23 players for the World Cup?

- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/06/23-chosen-ones/#sthash.VVcfnIR3.dpuf

OIC renounces Boko Haram, says they are criminals

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The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) on Monday in Abuja described Boko Haram as a criminal group whose members were misusing Islamic religious doctrines to perpetrate violence.

The Secretary-General of OIC, Iyad Madani, said this while speaking with State House correspondents after a meeting with President Goodluck Jonathan at the Presidential Villa.

Madani, who met with President Jonathan behind closed doors, said OIC was concerned about the evil being perpetrated against the people of Nigeria by Boko Haram.

“We are here to express our solidarity with Nigeria in facing up to this terrorist organisation and to condemn the terrorist acts they have been committing and to show our condolences to the Nigerian people.

Iyad Madani

“The OIC has issued statements that were very clear that these people are outlaws.

“What they do is criminal acts that have nothing to do, absolutely nothing to do with Islam, Islamic teaching, the religion of Islam, the history of Islam, the culture and civilisation of Islam and we should identify them for what they are as a terrorist group,” he said.

Madani said that the body was particularly concerned because the activities of Boko Haram ran contrary to the principles of living together, history, and the culture of tolerance that Africans were known for.

“Africa, we keep saying, is a model of such tolerance. Its history is the history of tolerance, and of living together; we keep saying that the African tradition is something that needs to stay.

“This is where the principles or OIC position is. There are of course the economic and social aspects to that conflict and similar conflicts, elsewhere in the world.

Madani expressed the readiness of OIC to help alleviate the hardship being experienced by communities affected by the activities of the insurgents.

He said that though OIC was a political and not a religious organisation it is prepared to assist the country in convening inter-faith dialogue, based on the request of Nigeria.

He said that such inter-faith dialogue would help in promoting unity and religious tolerance among Nigerians.

According to him, the 57-member organisation of which Nigeria is a member, has already issued strong statements condemning the activities of Boko Haram and urged Muslims to shun them.

Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Aminu Wali, who accompanied the delegation from OIC, expressed Nigeria’s appreciation for the support, saying that it had shown that the organisation was always willing to come to the aid of member states.

“The fact that OIC has expressed its position of support and understanding in this area of our challenges, goes to show that it is playing its role to support any of its member states that has any problem – socially, economically, religiously, or otherwise.

The minister stated that Nigeria had requested assistance from OIC for the rehabilitation of displaced communities from the Boko Haram-ravaged areas.

“”As a member of the OIC, Nigeria will certainly look forward for support from the OIC for those that have been internally displaced,” he said.

Chibok girls: Consider swap deal with Boko Haram, Iloh urges FG

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By MADUABUCHI KALU

Former chairman of Nigerian Red Cross Society and the Nigerian Cycling Association, Rev. (Dr.) Moses Iloh, has urged the Federal Government to consider a prisoner swap deal with Boko Haram as a way of freeing over 200 Chibok schoolgirls abducted by the insurgents.

Boko Haram had indicated its willingness to release the girls if the Federal Government freed its  brethren being detained in various facilities across the country.

Rev. Iloh, who expressed worry over the plight of the innocent schoolgirls during a press briefing in Lagos, noted that swapping the girls with Boko Haram was not a sign  of weakness on the part of the government but a mark of value of lives of the girls.

“I strongly urge Mr. President, Dr Goodluck Jonathan, to give serious and urgent consideration to the idea of swapping our precious daughters–more than 200 of them and save them from defilement. Such action on the part of government is not defeatist. Rather, it will show that government is capable of differentiating between good and evil and willing to opt for good.”

On what should be done for the schoolgirls when they are eventually released, Rev. Iloh said: “The Federal Government should take them abroad for proper medical examination to know the state of their health.

“Thereafter, they should be put in school and fully taken care of by the government. Government ought to grant them scholarship once they are rescued alive.

“It might be a good idea for the government to also decide the appropriate compensation to pay their parents for the psychological trauma they have suffered all the while.”

The 84-year-old cleric traced the root of the country’s current travail to what he identified as falsehood, confusion and terror, which he said, had deep spiritual roots in the affairs of the nation.

His words: “Nigeria is currently subjected to a fierce, three-pronged attack, whose spikes are falsehood, confusion and terror. The situation is rather complex because they are products of spiritual defilement.”

He said that the identified evils had contributed so much to destroying the defenseless and oppressed people, urging that, “Nigerians must engage in fervent and unrelenting prayer,” to overcome them.

He also identified corruption as part of the biggest problems facing the country and urged government to seek to end it, warning that unless the hydra-headed monster was fought and conquered every effort geared towards developing the country would not yield the desired result.

To tackle corruption in Nigeria, he said the only way out was either a revolution in the mode what Jerry Rawlings did in Ghana or civil disobedience.

He urged political leaders not to balkanise the country but to work hard to ensure that equity and fairness were enthroned in the polity. He said every part of the country ought to experience Federal Government developmental strides because some states were rich while some others were poor.

Police IG launches campaign against terrorism, urges citizens to be vigilant

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The Nigeria Police on Monday in Abuja, began a counter-terrorism enlightenment campaign with the launch of a “fact sheet” to educate the citizens on their roles in the war against terrorism.

The Inspector-General of Police, Mr Mohammed Abubakar, represented by the force’s spokesman CSP Frank Mba, urged the people to be vigilant and key into the campaign.

He urged them to pay attention to the security and safety tips contained in the leaflet, produced in English and

five Nigerian languages including Hausa, Yoruba and Igbo.

Abubakar restated the commitment of the police and other security agencies in winning the war against terror and called on the public to frustrate every step of the terrorists by remaining vigilant all the time.

He thanked Nigerians for their patience and resilience in the present circumstance, adding that such challenge would strengthen the collective resolve to preserve the peace of the nation.

The I-G said tips contained in the facts sheet would help in protecting citizens from falling victim to crime, thereby

improving their overall sense of communal safety.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the leaflet contains the distress call numbers of the police, Department of State Services and the Office of the National Security Adviser. (NAN)


Northern Agenda: A backbone without coccyx?

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The South South region in this presentation reacts to the “Key issues before the Northern delegates to the 2014 National Conference”, articulated by the North at the conference

By Ayakeme Whisky

PREAMBLE: Part of the fundamental considerations for the convening of the on-going National Conference is to provide a platform for Nigerians across ethnic and geo-political divide to sit together to resolve all divisive issues that appear to have set our dear country in the recent past on the seeming state of conflagration.

No one discerning mind will contend the fact that our country has been besieged with polemics of interests over resource appropriation and management, resource ownership, right to perpetual rule, marginalization and all conceivable issues.

Therefore, for the sake of national interest, as clearly evinced in the President’s admonition at the inauguration of the National Conference on March 17, 2014 conferees and all other interest groups are expected to be broad minded, with a clear sense of accommodation in their articulations as we seek resolution of the several divisive tendencies for the sake of national unity, peace, stability and progress of our dear country.

Compendium of myths

The people of Southern Nigeria were, therefore, astonished when a document titled “Key issues before the Northern delegates to the 2014 National Conference” was circulated to conferees in the course of the various committee works.

Quite sadly, rather than convey articles of progressive and centripetal blocks of nation building, it was a compendium of myths, fallacies and misrepresentation of facts. As a people desirous of sustaining truth we find it compelling to state the unblemished facts of history, not only to educate all discerning minds but also to, indeed, ensure that Nigeria as a country belongs to all of us and no one group of people or tribe can claim greater patrimony.

After taking a perfunctory look at that document one discovers the catacombs of historical falsity, chalice of myths, fallacies, misconception and misrepresentation of issues, facts and events in Nigeria’s march towards nationhood. We wish to note that these gamut of lies being peddled and canvassed as sterling new issues are, after all, not new at all to all students of political history.

Two statesmen and elders of Northen extraction,  Alhaji Auwalu Yadudu in 2005 and  Alhaji Tanko Yakassai, only a fortnight ago, attempted to resurrect these same moribund and infantile claims.

The more robust document under reference is thus an amplification of Yakassai’s memorandum to conferees. Whereas those hired to tilt the course of history could bemuse themselves for “a supposed” scholarly work, it is indecorous within the presumptive refinement of intellectualism to use such uncouth, unrefined and crude language and the unrestrained use of invectives and innuendo to vilify institutions, groups and regions in a document that should stand time. As part of our obligations as enlightened citizens we have taken the responsibility to respond to fight negative ideas because bad ideas stick if left unchallenged and evil thrives where good men keep quiet.

Unmasking the Hausa-Fulani hegemonic national development agenda: We note sadly that there is a strong retrogression of our embrace of cultural and highly cherished national values. From the high pedestal of urbane, disciplined, and respect for cultural values and ethos our precursors were renowned, the recourse to provocative use of language to convey a “plight” deserving of humane consideration smacks of arrogance and profanity.

A critical analysis of the “so called Northern agenda” that recommends a “fight to finish spirit” for all Northern delegates at the on-going National Conference clearly establishes a certain mindset and preconceived assumptions. Firstly, in a country where all citizens are equal stakeholders there appears to be an assumption of “complex” deriving from the well crafted colonially induced legacy of hegemony of the North over and above every other region.

Privileges and patronage

The authors, however, tried unsuccessfully to mask the Hausa-Fulani as the North who have always been providentially positioned to dispense privileges and patronage to the rest of Nigerians. The unholy claim of Northern Nigeria  being the Backbone and Strength of Nigeria, by merely ascribing 80 per cent land mass to the North as against 20 per cent for the entire South is as pejorative as ridiculous. It is of course laughable! We are learning for the first time that a barren unproductive land could confer strength on a country.

For example, Liechtenstein in Europe, with a landmass of about 160 square kilometres has the second highest GDP per capita of US$98,432 and ranked second in Europe in 2012. South Korea with a landmass of only 97,100 square kilometres has a GDP per capita of  US$32,500.16 in 2012.

Similarly, Switzerland with a landmass of only 40,000 square kilometres, with a per capita GDP of US$53,367 is ranked the fifth highest in Europe in 2012. Where thereof lies the “strength” in a barren unproductive landmass of 786,754 sq. km as claimed? At best the so called landmass has been an economic burden and drain on the national treasury funded exclusively with revenue from petroleum resources from the South-South geo-political zone.

We are little surprised at the deliberate recourse to bigotry because despite the economically induced marriage between the North and the South to off-load the liability of the North on the British tax payers to the South, their progenitor, Sir Ahmadu Bello exposed their hegemonic flanks thus”

Conquered territory

“The new nation called Nigeria should be an estate of our great grandfather, Uthman Dan Fodio. We must ruthelessly prevent a change of power. We shall use the minorities in the North as willing tools and the South as a conquered territory and never allow them to have control over their future.” (The Parrot, October 12, 1960)

This attitude of belligerence evinces a contradiction from a people who only seven years earlier in 1953 premised their opposition to Nigeria’s self government in 1956 on their lack of education and sophistication to manage an independent Northern Nigeria.

Perhaps it would be expedient to recall the words of Lord Harcourt, the then Colonial Secretary, in an attempt to justify the proposed unification of the Northern and Southern protectorates before the British Parliament: unification of Nigeria demanded both ‘method’ and ‘a man’.

The man was to be Lord Lugard and the method was to be the ‘marriage’ of the two entities. We have released Northern Nigeria from the leading strings of the Treasury.  The promising and well conducted youth is now on an allowance on his own and is about to effect an alliance with a Southern lady of means. I have issued the special licence and Sir Frederick Lugard will perform the ceremony. May the union be fruithful and the couple constant.

Without doubt the North since the amalgamation has been dependent on the fortunes of the South to service their recurring annual deficits. What, therefore, confers on the thinking of the authors of the Northern agenda a claim to being the “strength” of Nigeria?

Can there be strength without economic prowess? We wish to state unequivocally that the present level of impoverishment experienced by the South, especially the South-South states would have been different were it not for the burdens of the parasitic North these states have been magnanimously shouldering.

Indeed, with a total landmass of only 94,942sq. km. and about 31,000,000 people, the South-South states that generated about US$154,186,189,948 between 2010 and 2012 only would have had one of the highest GDP per capita in the world like Norway, Monaco, Luxemburg and Liechtenstein. The people of the South deserves a pat and not reprobation and insults from the Northern beneficiaries.

It may be instructive to place on record for the umpteenth time that unlike some other ethnic nationalities who were conquered and/or ceded their territorial right and sovereignty to the British powers, the people of South-South (and in particular the Ijaws), the city states and indigenous communities of the pre-colonial Oil Rivers Protectorate were not conquered. At the time of contact with the Europeans, the city states have grown their political administration, trade and foreign relations to equate with the standards of modern government.

Modern government

The Treaties of Friendship and Protection and the payment of Comey Subsidy (customs duty) to the sovereign kings of the pre-colonial city states attests to this independence. That through political manipulations aided by their British benefactors, who saw them as beautiful bride to be massaged, they assumed unearned vantage position to leadership and ascribe to themselves a clout of hegemony, does not confer a right of perpetual dictators on them to rule over others in this 21st century Nigeria.

Secondly, the entire agenda is bereft of any production and wealth creation model in our collective attempt at recreating a Nigeria where the creative energies and potentials of its people would be harnessed for our common good. Rather its central philosophy drums the parasitic eulogies of distributive-consumerism, to continually sap and milk the fortunes of others, particularly the oil producing South-South states.

We regret the lack of patriotic intellectualism in a supposed research work to support the present day clamour for federalism where enterprise and creativity would be promoted to reposition our dear country for our collective development and progress. What makes it sacrilegious for the authors to think of maximally exploring and exploiting the abundant natural, human and material resources that abound in each of the states of the federation for our collective benefit?

Thirdly, it is criminal and a travesty of justice for historical facts to be falsified and distorted to serve the narrow interest of the North, primarily to confuse and sway undiscerning minds. We wish to state that the recommendations of the Selborne Report were taken out of context and adopted carte blanche as the dictate and basis of our amalgamation and nationhood to satisfy the imagination of these hegemonists. The calculated denial and obscurity of the deliberations at the pre-1957 Legislative Councils and the constitutional conferences of the 1957 and 1958 is a fraudulent attempt to rewrite history.

The fallacies and misconceptions

Let us first deal with the contextual claims that are grossly fallacious but infused  with deafening spirit of truth to mislead. Engaging in intellectual sophistry and bandying convoluted statistics, the proponents stated: “The argument that creation of states should be on the basis of equality irrespective of the population and land mass is inconsistent with elementary concept of justice, since injustice is not only when equals are treated unequally but also when unequals are treated equally.”

The manufacturers of these misleading half-truths and their cohorts should be reminded that justice is not only when equals are treated equally but also must be based on sound moral and equitable principles. Equity is not where everybody is treated equally but when respect and honour are given to deserving people based on strength, resources, competences and capacity. Creating states on the basis of population and landmass without due regard to economic viability and sustenance is not justice. Therefore, the attempts to rest arguments on population census figures which have been subject of controversies from the beginning is fraudulent. Everybody knows that the population census figures have been openly deprecated by the authorities themselves.

For instance, only few months ago, the immediate past National Chairman of the National Population Commission, Eze Festus Odimegwu, stunned the nation when he said: “No census has been credible in Nigeria since 1863.

Credible census

“Even the one conducted   in 2006 is not credible. I have the records and evidence produced by scholars and professors of repute. This is not my report.”

Also, it would be recalled that Mr. R.K. Foyer, the British census officer for the Eastern Provinces between 1952 and 1953, reported that only Calabar, Bonny, Opobo, Degema and Brass were covered in the census of 1911 in the southern flank of the East. By implication the headcount was limited to the headquarters of these city states. The rural communities which were part of the provinces of these city states were left out in the exercise.

Similarly the 1921 census figures being given scientific adoration were all ‘estimates’ even in the words of Mr. Meek, the colonial officer who conducted the exercise thus: “Whilst it is not pretended that the counts made for the natives in the provinces was anything more than approximately accurate, the statistics nevertheless furnish a great amount of valuable information.”(Everybody’s Guide, 1990). Also the National Population Commission (NPC) in 1998 repudiated the scientific validity of the 1921 figures.

The questionable nature of all census figures is evidenced by the fact that they have been repeatedly rejected by successive governments. Indeed,  it is a matter of historic truth that the Supreme Court nullified the results of the 1963 census and this should have laid to rest any iota of claim to scientifically conducted census figures. As Richard Akinjide (2000) said, it is only in Nigeria that population dynamics work in favour of deserts and savannah belts contrary to global reality.

I would like to point out that, if you look at the map of West Africa, starting from Mauritania to Cameroun, and take the population of each country as you move from the Coast to the Savannah, the population decreases. Or conversely, as you come from the desert to the coast, right from Mauritania to the Cameroun, the population increases. The only exception throughout that zone is Nigeria. Nigeria is the only zone whereby you go from the coast to the North that one finds the population increasing while from the North to the coast, the population decreases.

Population decrease

Yet, at the slightest opportunity academics and intellectuals from the North have chosen this path of aberration to justify their pontifications as scientific. In order to finitely rest all arguments about the accuracy of our population census, Nigerians must wholeheartedly do one of and/or both of two things; we must seize the opportunities offered by  advancement of technology to conduct precision head-count through the capture of nature’s bio-metric attributes of every citizen of this country.

Vanguard

World Cup: Mark converts senators to prayer warriors

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Nass keshi repSenate President, David Mark’s passion for sports is no secret. A keen golfer, some senior colleagues who’ve seen him play wager that he could give the likes of Tiger Woods a run for their money!

In fact, an open secret here in the Senate is that after plenary, not always though, rather than head home, the Senate President would hit the golf course.

Senator Mark has been known to sponsor golf tournaments, both in Abuja and his native home of Otukpo, Benue State. But the Senate President has another sport he’s also passionate about: Football or soccer, as it’s known in the US.

Since 2007 when he became the Senate número uno, Mark has always called for prayers for the country’s national teams, whether the men or women’s teams. In statements issued by his media team or at plenary, Mark has always canvassed prayers for the beloved national teams. At every turn, as the nation’s football teams progress in any competition, the Senate President renews such calls for prayers.

This time around, the Senate President’s sight is firmly on the Super Eagles and their chances at the World Cup. And so, as the FIFA World Cup kicks off next week in Brazil, one thing is for sure: Their number one fan in the National Assembly is not leaving anything to chance. Mark has, once again, gathered some of his colleagues into prayer cells – all for the Super Eagles.

At Wednesday’s plenary, in his characteristic manner, Mark announced three prayer cells, specially constituted for the Super Eagles. “Distinguished Senators, we’ve 16 days to the World Cup. We already have Senators in three groups, praying for them. I want to urge your groups to intensify your prayers because we have to bring the World Cup to Nigeria this year.” With that said, Mark even conscripted two more Senators into the prayer groups.

If prayers do work in such cases like this, then, the Super Eagles can rely on Mark and his team to swing the pendulum in their favour. Oh, by the way, the Senate President will be there in Brazil. He told me, “that’s not negotiable.” Let’s just hope the Super Eagles do not disappoint their number one fan!

Lawmakers on Warpath over $500m Chinese Airport Loan

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  • Contractors threaten FG over N174bn debt

Dele Ogbodo
It was a tensed atmosphere yesterday at the Ministry of Aviation, when some members of the House of Representatives, disagreed over the appropriateness of the  $500 million Chinese loan secured last year by the federal government for the remodelling of the Port Harcourt, Abuja, Lagos and Kano airports to international standard.

They demanded the full terms of the agreement, the interest accrual and the timeline of the loan.
The supervising Minister for Aviation, Mr. Samuel Ortom, however promised to provide the details within five days, even though he noted that he was not in the ministry when the agreement was reached.

This is coming as Ortom is seeking a means of settling the N174 billion debt owed contractors since 2011. “Contractors whose certificates of completion of work are ready are on our neck and they are threatening to take government to court.

“I don’t think we can raise the money to settle these outstanding within a year. We are however strategising with the inter ministerial committee to find a way out,” he added.

While trying to calm frayed nerves, and advising its members not to derail from the purpose for which they were at the ministry, which was to conduct its oversight function, the Chairman, House Committee on Aviation, Mrs. Nkiruka Onyejeocha, said: “Colleagues, we are here on oversight. I know that we have a lot of concerns. Please my colleagues, I beg to disagree that we shouldn’t talk about remodelling our airports with that loan.

“The loan was sought to remodel the four airports, which were already decaying, however that is not to say that we don’t need equipment like the Instrument Landing System (ILS) and all the instruments that will help us land, but of course we the government have to remodel our airports because before now, the airports were in a mess, there were no seats and the toilets were in bad shape.”
However, an aviator who is a member of the Committee, Hon. Adun Jim Aiku, representing Egor/Ikpoba-Okha, Edo state, who was visibly angry over the procurement of the loan said: “I think the mistake has been made long ago, we want to see the agreement for the  $500 million Chinese loan.

“People tend to have misconception about airports, with all these issues of contracts pending right from the outset, you must think of what makes an aeroplane fly like the instrumentation of the airports. I’m an aviator, you come to an airport like that in Benin, there is no ILS in the Benin airport.

“That airport should be closed down. It is not beautifying the terminal buildings that make an airport; we pray that nothing bad happens. If you are there securing such a huge amount of money, you think first of how to provide instruments at the various airports. Look at the lightening systems in Lagos, up till now we are still in category 2.

According to him, it was a mistake to have channeled the money into remodelling, while neglecting safety. He said the mistake has been made and somebody must pay for it, because we are putting these monies into the drains. I want to make sure that things are done properly.”

Onyejeocha, while expressing anger over the ministry’s high debt profile said: “Aviation has been in the news, but suddenly nothing is being heard about aviation, the question is what has happened to all those projects. Some airports were said to have been completed but yet to be commissioned, what happened to those projects, why have they not been commissioned, what has gone wrong?

“And of course it is worrisome that you are presenting a debt profile of N174 billion. Where are you going to get the money to pay back? Why the huge debt? It is very worrisome, inasmuch as you have set up an inter-ministerial committee to look at those issues. I wish to state here that the committee is frowning at such debt profile because we know that monies have been appropriated for most of the things that you have been doing in aviation.”

She requested that due diligence be carried out on all completed, ongoing and yet-to-take-off projects, adding the  even the ones that have been paid should be looked at “because I don’t think it is right at all as it is scary to have a debt profile of N174 billion in the ministry, as I don’t know where you are going to get the money to pay back the debt.”

She said: “What it means is that aviation will keep paying debt till the next 20 years, looking at the appropriation that we have. This is a serious concern for this committee as I do not know how the aviation ministry will be mortgaged to the indebtedness of N174 billion, because we cannot be here for the next 20 years paying debt.”

When asked to shed more light on how all the $100 million Debt Management Office (DMO) loan, the $500 million Chinese loan and the huge debt of N174 billion which have accrued since 2011 till date came about, Ortom, who was not involved in the loan sourcing, since he assumed office three months ago, said some of the projects have been completed and only awaiting President Goodluck Jonathan’s approval for commissioning.

On the debt profile, he said: “I assumed office only few months ago, we have not awarded any new contract. They are the debts that were inherited and we are not embarking on any new project for now because of the high debt profile.

“On the DMO $100 million and $500 million Chinese loans, I was told that these loans were handled by the Ministry of Finance. The Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo Iweala,  told me that both the loan and the counterpart funding were captured in the budget and I will get the details from her as the loans were not handled by the aviation ministry. We have set up an inter-ministerial committee that would evolve a strategy for repayments.”

According to Ortom,  “part of the agreement was to allow the Chinese companies handle the construction of the four airports. He said: “The Chinese companies are handling the remodelling and that was part of the agreement that was entered into as I was told.”

Boko Haram: We must join hands to fight terrorism — Ben Obi

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SPecial Adviser to President Goodluck Jonathan on Inter-Party Affairs, Senator Ben Obi, spoke to some journalists in Ado-Ekiti, last Wednesday after organizing a sensitization workshop for stakeholders in the June 21 Ekiti State governorship election.

Among others, he said Ekiti will have rancour-free and credible polls; Nigeria will overcome Boko Haram insurgency with the Nigerian spirit; fears of military coup is a storm in a tea cup and that Nigeria will not break-up in spite of the US prediction. He said Nigeria would have been on top of the insurgency if his two bills on anti-terrorism and establishment of anti-terrorism agency were passed in 2005. Excerpts:

BY CLIFFORD NDUJIHE

jonathan-boko1His take on the Ekiti governorship election sensitization workshop
A good number of the candidates did not come. According to them, they were involved in one campaign or the other. There is one policy I attach to this workshop. I ensure that I personally speak to all the candidates. I spoke to each of the 18 governorship candidates, from the present governor to the former governor. I got their confirmation that they would attend, that the date was okay. My conscience is clear.

The main thrust of the workshop is the pursuit of free, fair and transparent election—one man, one vote; one woman, one vote; one youth, one vote; and one governor, one vote, which is the cardinal principle of my principal, President Goodluck Jonathan.

That is why the President encourages this workshop and approves of it, saying ‘go and make sure that you create an atmosphere that will be devoid of rancour and violence.’  To that extent, I have done what I know I should do.

On whether the absence of 14 governorship candidates including Governor Kayode Fayemi would not undermine the goal of the workshop
The CSO (Chief Security Officer) of the governor and the protocol men came and said the governor was on his way. Being a state chief executive, anything could have cropped up that would have warranted his not being present.

But the important thing is that officials that conduct elections—INEC, security agencies, diplomatic corps and the diplomatic community and other bodies that assist in election were present. It is all about making sure that the election comes out well. The operatives are the ones that really count in as much as you expect that the candidates will cooperate.

Because of the poor turnout of the candidates and the way the PDP Candidate (Ayo Fayose) spoke, I pleaded with the Chairman, General David Jemibewon (rtd) that the Commissioner of Police (Felix Uyanna) should be allowed to react. At past workshops we did not allow the commissioners of police to speak even though they attended. But because of Fayose’s direct attack, we allowed the commissioner of police to speak, he spoke and we now know exactly where we stand on all of these.

Approaching elections
We have done our bit, the temperature will come down. I keep saying it, when elections are fast approaching, the temperature rises but as soon as you move closer and closer to the election date, it drops because by that time you would have reduced the shortlist to one or two, three maximum. You know where the flashpoints and likely outburst are and it becomes easy to monitor and check them. As we move closer to June 21, the atmosphere will be convivial for the election. That is my reading of it.

His take on recurring electoral violence in spite of the workshops at a time other countries like Ghana are having violence-free polls
All politics, they say is local. We have our style of doing things and Nigeria’s style has been like that. Before 2011, can you beat your chest and say I know of any election apart from the June 12, 1993 election that you can refer to as an election? Can you hit your chest also and say this is an election that international and local observers say this is it?

We are hearing such now. We are hearing international and local observers saying, ‘yes, you are getting there.’ We are not there yet, there is still a lot of room for improvement.
We have to understand that we are a country where a lot of people want to express them selves in their own way or manner. And if you say, ‘this is wrong.’ They say, ‘how dare you tell me this is wrong?’ They feel they have control of the situation. We must exercise a lot of caution on how we talk to our people.

I try in my own way as Inter-Party adviser to communicate with the opposition parties knowing that I belong to the PDP and also knowing that the success of my job depends on how I can interact with the opposition.
So, I try to do things in a way that will give them some sense of confidence. Whatever I say to them is nothing but the truth. If I betray that trust, I won’t be talking about the workshop.

I won’t be saying that I called Governor Fayemi, for instance. I spoke to him and he gave me his word. I gave him the date and he said it was perfect. The text messages are there. I spoke to the other parties and Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC). If I don’t establish that kind of trust, there is no way we can make headway.

We are talking about the All-politicians’ summit now. I spoke to the leaders of all the parties: ‘This thing is in everybody’s interest. It is not a question of cheap popularity for the PDP, me or anybody.’ When you talk to them in a language they will understand and they understand that what you are saying is real, they will agree with you.
When you are doing things like this, you must also put them into consideration. The luck is that when you talk to the President of the country, if it is a good idea, he will say, ‘go ahead.’

On Boko Haram insurgency and threat to 2015 polls
I am a practical and realistic politician. The fact is this security challenge is a major problem before us. We have to face the reality that what we have is naked terrorism. The only way out of it is that all hands must be on deck. It is not a question of saying it is the responsibility of President Jonathan.

Everybody must hold himself or herself responsible for making sure we end it. We have also agreed that we need the intervention of the international community and they have joined forces with us but mark you; terrorism is new to this country.

The earliest reference that you can make is 9/11. When the 9/11 happened, it took many years before the United States of America could nail Osama.

I keep reminding people that when I went into the Senate in 2005 as against 2003 because of legal battles, two months after I was sworn-in, I put in two bills, one, anti-terrorism bill and two, establishment of anti-terrorism agency. The reason was clear; I was trapped at the pentagon on the day of 9/11 and for me that witnessed that, it was clear to me that we needed to prepare for that rainy day.

Preparing for rainy day
Maybe if we had gone through those bills and established an anti terrorism agency, by now, we would have been on top of the situation. It is a long story regarding what happened, how President Obasanjo got the Attorney General and Minister for Justice to bring in another bill, word-for-word what I proposed.

Here we are. Our security agencies are just going through first training to be able to acquaint themselves with the act of terrorism. That is why I said we need to hold ourselves together, be united and committed to fight the battle because the enemy will not let go. I have never dreamt in my life that things could get to a stage where I will see a Nigerian carrying explosive tied round his waist and get it detonated to be able to wipe off other Nigerians.

I believe that we will overcome this. Nigerians have a way of overcoming this kind of problem, they have a way of coming together and making sure that Nigeria remain a great country.
And that which is the Nigerian spirit will help us to overcome the present challenge that we are facing and I see us going through the 2015 general election in a most successful manner.

His take on 15 years of democracy
So far, so good; that we are experiencing handover from civilian to civilian is a major achievement because one shift of ground will take us many miles down the road and I don’t think that is what we want to experience. Our democracy is growing by the day, we have not got there yet, we still have room for improvement.

Vanguard

My rift with Obasanjo over – Atiku

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Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has said the rift between himself and former President, Olusegun Obasanjo is all over, re-iterating that he harbours “no hatred or enmity” against his former boss.

Atiku spoke on Tuesday in Abuja when he granted audience to the leaders of the Northern Youth Leaders Forum, a group that recently embarked on a mission to heal the rift between the former President and his deputy.

Led by Comrade Eliot Afiyo, the group had weeks ago met former President Obasanjo in Ota, at which event he announced that he had forgiven his former vice president.

“I don’t harbor any grudge against my former boss. Yes, we had disagreements in office. These were mere disagreements. I harbor no hatred or enmity against him or anybody. I never had anything against him and I will never have,” Atiku said while responding to the group.

He explained that in politics, he has opponents, but no enemies. “Politics is not war,” he emphasized.
Atiku thanked the group for successfully brokering peace between him and President Obasanjo, adding that this single effort had marked the leaders of the youth organisation as serious-minded people who are fully prepared to take over the leadership of the country from their seniors.

Speaking on the current security situation in the country, Atiku appealed to the Federal Government to take the challenge more seriously. “If we can go to other countries to rid them of these kinds of problems, it shows that we have the capacity to put this one down immediately so that the suffering of the people can be reduced.”

In an earlier speech, chairman of the group, Comrade Afiyo described Atiku as an “honest and forthright leader, a courageous and dogged democrat, a loving and compassionate guardian, an accommodating and caring shepherd and a role model.”

He expressed happiness and satisfaction with the joint decision by both Obasanjo and Atiku to accede to their request to bury the hatchet, adding that this is a development that will go a long way in healing the rift in the country.

Vanguard

Camerounian Students Now Live in Fear of Boko Haram

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Zacheaus Somorin with agency report

Indications have emerged that many Camerounian students now live in permanent fear of Boko Haram attack.

In a report released by AFP yesterday, stray bullets regularly penetrate through the courtyard of the Fotokol High School in the northern Cameroun, a terrifying reminder of the Boko Haram gunmen carrying out deadly raids just across the border with Nigeria.

According to the report, the students are usually cramped in fear, expectant of attack by the sect members, as they constantly look through the windows during class, thus unable to concentrate on their class works.
“We have a phobia, and the danger is always there,” Boris Bouba, a 20-year-old student at the school said, adding: “When we are in class, we always keep watch through the windows. We can never fully concentrate because we are afraid.”

The report added that the pupils, at an occasion, gathered in the tree-lined courtyard, appeared visibly impatient to get their reports and leave as soon as possible.

“We are always on the alert,” the school Headmaster, Jean Felix Nyioto, said while sitting behind his desk in a cramped office.
He said: “From time to time here in Fotokol, gunfire crackles on the other side.”
The Fotokol High School is just 300 metres (nearly 1,000 feet) away from Gamboru, separated by only a small river, where the extremists opened fire in an attack which local sources said left at least 300 people dead.
The report also revealed that there was no fence or security for the nearly 600 students who file into their classrooms every day.

Nyioto described how bullets shot from Gamboru regularly seep through the high school, with mortar shells nearby.

However, according to the report, the headmaster is currently more anxious about flyers that recently appeared on the streets of Fotokol, threatening direct attacks on the school and its teachers.

“Boko Haram members have threatened to bomb down the school, customs and government buildings. We are so scared of being targeted,” another student, Ali Abba said.
Cameroun, which shares 2,000 kilometres (1,250 miles) border with Nigeria, is increasingly targeted by Boko Haram members.

The Islamist militants have already kidnapped several foreigners there.
In mid-May, suspected gunmen from the group took 10 Chinese road workers captive in an attack which left a Camerounian soldier dead.

The girls at Fotokol High School are particularly afraid of what plan Boko Haram may have for them. “I am so scared Boko Haram will come to our school and kidnap us one day,” Sidonie Dimissigue, 15, a Christian said.
A student, Alice Kouvou, who said she has been wracked with anxiety and unable to concentrate in class since she heard of the Chibok attack, said: “We are afraid of being kidnapped.

“Thoughts are racing through my head. I speak to my daddy about them to try and calm down.”

Kouvou, 20, said she decided to stay in school despite efforts by her parents to get her to leave Fotokol, adding that she is afraid the kidnapping of the Nigerian schoolgirls will “radicalise Muslim parents who already don’t like sending their children to school, especially the girls.”

On a visit to the school by AFP reporters, Ali Abba, one of the students, pulls out his mobile phone to show them a series of gruesome images. In one, about 20 bodies are heaped on top of each other, in another you see burnt cars.

“These are pictures of the Gamboru massacre,” Abba, who stated that he was in the town two days after the attack said.
He said the raid on Gamboru took place as students were sitting for their final examinations.

“When the explosions started, all the students abandoned their work. They jumped out of the windows to escape while some were later found 15 kilometres away.

“Some were crying, others completely lost their minds,” the headmaster explained, adding he was concerned about the students’ sanity. The students are not the only ones suffering.”
Five teachers hastily left town before the end of the school year as the danger mounted, and the school has only 10 teachers left. “The establishment risks being left empty. Everyone says they are going to leave,” the headmaster who has vowed to stay put stated.

Camerounian soldiers, which arrived in Fotokol a few days ago as part of an effort to beef up security in the region, are seen as the school’s only hope. About 300 soldiers and paramilitary officers have been deployed in the town to provide security for residents and allow children attend lectures in the school safely.

Insurgency: Borno Govt. seeks intensive prayers

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The Borno Government on Tuesday appealed to residents of the state to intensify prayers for a divine intervention in the prevailing Boko Haram insurgency in the area.

Alhaji Mustapha Zannah, the Deputy Governor, made the call while inaugurating the newly elected local government officials of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Maiduguri.

Zannah said the residents must be persistent in prayers for God’s intervention in the problem.

“We have been praying to seek divine intervention in the Boko Haram insurgency.

“We want to appeal to residents to keep prayer vigil across the state to further seek God’s intervention for the return of peace in the state,” he said.

Zannah also urged residents to pray for the safe return of the abducted 230 students of the Government Girls Secondary School (GGSS), Chibok.

He urged the elected party officials to fear God in carrying out their duties.

Borno APC Chairman, Alhaji Ali Dalori, advised the new officials to ensure fairness in running the affairs of the party.


UPDATE: #BringBackOurGirls protesters demand N200 million damages as Nigeria Police reverses ban

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women missing girls bring back ourThe #BringBackOurGirls protesters had filed a suit demanding N200 million as damages from the police commissioner.

Less than 24 hours after the Abuja Commissioner of Police, Joseph Mbu, announced a ban on all rallies relating to the kidnapped Chibok girls, and a few minutes after protesters filed a N200 million suit against him, the Nigeria Police reversed the ban.

Mr. Mbu had while addressing a press conference on Monday said “Protests on the Chibok girls are hereby banned with immediate effect.”

However, a statement on Tuesday by the Force Public Relations Officer, Frank Mba, faulted Mr. Mbu’s statement.
“The Police High Command wishes to inform the general public that the Force has not issued any order banning peaceful assemblies/protests anywhere in Nigeria,” Mr. Mba said.

Mr. Mbu had on Monday said the ban was placed to deter dangerous persons from infiltrating the peaceful #BringBackOurGirls protest that has been going on daily in the Nigerian capital for about a month.

“Information reaching us is that too soon, dangerous elements will join groups under the guise of protest and detonate explosives aimed at embarrassing the government,’’ he had said. “As the FCT police boss, I cannot fold my hands and watch this lawlessness.”

Mr. Mba, however, said what the police issued was only an advisory.

“It (the police hierarchy) notes however that against the backdrop of current security challenges in the country, coupled with a recent intelligence report of a likely infiltration and hijack of otherwise innocuous and peaceful protests by some criminal elements having links with insurgents, the Police only issued advisory notice, enjoining citizens to apply caution in the said rallies, particularly in the Federal Capital Territory and its environs,” he said.

A few hours before the police hierarchy distanced itself from the Abuja police chief, the #BringBackOurGirls protesters had challenged Mr. Mbu’s directive in court.

The protesters filed a suit in the Federal High Court, Maitama, Abuja, against the Nigeria Police seeking N200 million in damages for banning protests in the Nigerian capital.

The protest co-coordinator, Hadiza Bala-Usman, filed the suit on behalf of the protesters, who were represented by their counsel, Femi Falana.
The group asked the court to declare the ban as illegal and unlawful.

Ms. Usman said that the Nigerian police violated the Nigerian Constitution by banning the protest and demanded that the “court restrains the Nigerian Police force from implementing this illegal ban.”

“We have drawn the attention of the fact that section 38, 39 and 40 are been violated by this ban our activities ,we are hoping to get an injunction against the police force from implementing this illegal act,” she said.

She said the protesters would not be intimidated and will continue protesting since there is a law protecting their rights to do so.
“We know our rights and we shall not be intimidated by anyone we are mindful of the fact that this is contained in our constitution we shall continue with our protest while at the same time we have filled our suit in the FCT high court,” she said.

Another protester and the Secretary General of the Women’s Right Advancement and Protection Alternative, WRAPA, Saudatu Mahdi, told journalists that what they asking for is the upholding of their “fundamental Human Rights, freedom of consciences, freedom of expression and freedom of assembly as well as right to associate as guaranteed by section 38 39 and 40 of the constitution of the Federal republic of Nigeria”.

“We are also asking for declaration that the decision to ban protest and rallies relating to the Chibok girls is illegal unconstitutional and violates the fundamental rights in our constitution.”

The protesters asked the court to declare that Mr. Mbu is not competent to ban protests or rallies in city.

“We are asking for an order of perceptual injunction restraining him or his agents from further preventing us aggrieved Nigerians from taking part in any protest in exercise as the freedom of conscience extraction assembly. We are also asking for an order directing the respondent to pay to us the sum of N200 million as damages for the said act of violation,” Ms. Mahdi said.

Dogged protesters

After the protesters filled their suit, they proceeded from the Federal High Court to the National Human Rights Commission, NHRC, carrying placards with inscriptions ‘bring back our girls’. They also chanted solidarity songs with the same message.

Dino Melaye, a former Nigerian legislator, led the march.

At the NHRC, the Director of Human Rights Institute, Oti Ovrawah, addressed the protesters and assured them of redress.

“We also heard about the ban, there is no doubt that there is a right to peaceful protest as guaranteed by the constitution,” he said. “We have heard your protest and we also want our girls to come back alive, there is no doubt we are going to take this up definitely because the constitution is the bedrock of Nigeria, so go about your protest peacefully.”

It was while the protesters were at the NHRC, that Mr. Mba released his statement.

Mr. Mba said the police only issued an advisory notice asking citizens to apply caution in the protests especially in Abuja because they had information they had intelligence report of a possible infiltration by criminal elements.

Ms. Usman, reacting to the Mr. Mba’s statement, told PREMIUM TIMES that it is ironic and ridiculous that in Nigeria, the Inspector General of Police says a different thing and the Commissioner of Police says another.

“It is important for us to note that these are within the Nigerian Police Force. We have the Inspector General of Police saying a different thing and the Commissioner of Police saying another thing. We appreciate that the IG office has realized that we are protected under the Nigerian Constitution section 38, 39 and 40 which allows us to engage in peaceful processions.”

Mr. Falana, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, SAN, and counsel to the #BringBackOurGirls protesters, condemned the ban as announced by Mr. Mbu and called on the government to prosecute him for violating the constitution.

“I have made it clear to the police authority that because they have allowed Mr. Joseph Mbu to get away with a lot of illegalities in Rivers; he has now come to Abuja believing that he can continue with it.

“What Mbu did yesterday is not only illegal but contemptuous and therefore a criminal offence. We are also laying a complaint towards the Attorney General of the Federation to have Mbu prosecuted for violating the order from the Court of Appeal,” Mr. Falana said.

Edwin Clark seeks revocation of Tompolo, Asari Dokubo’s security contracts

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A delegate at the National Conference, Edwin Clark, has called on the Government of Nigeria to revoke pipeline security contracts awarded to ex-militant leaders, including Government Ekpemukpolo, alias Tompolo, and Asari Dokubo.

Mr. Clark, who was commenting on the report of the National Conference Committee on Public Finance and Revenue, also indicted top military personnel for oil theft in the Niger Delta region.

Tompolo is a former commander of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, MEND, while Mr. Dokubo is the leader of the Niger Delta Vigilante Force, NDVF, all disbanded militants groups from the oil-rich Niger Delta region.

According the Wall Street Journal report, the Federal Government of Nigeria is said to be making an annual payment of over N3.6 billion to Tompolo, N1.44 billion to Mr. Dokubo, N560 million to Tom Ateke, and N560 million to Victor Ben alias Boyloaf.

In 2011, the government had awarded a pipeline surveillance contract worth $103 million (N15 billion) to Tompolo’s Global West Vessel Specialists Limited in a deal that shocked many Nigerians.

But Mr. Clark suggested that contracts for the protection of oil installations should rather be awarded to youth and communities where such installations are located.

He noted that oil theft astronomically increased since oil pipeline and maritime protection contracts were awarded to the former militant leaders.

“We are talking about oil theft and I have always said there will be no more illegal bunkering if the youth are involved in the protection of oil installations.

“While oil companies employ contractors to guard pipelines, community leaders insist the job be given to local contractors. I went and said to the President, why not give this job to youths or the communities.

“Every community that fails to do its job will be sanctioned. Nothing was done until recently. I don’t know why it was given to Tompolo and Asari Dokubo. Youth can protect our pipelines.

“If you get to a community where there are pipelines, gather the youth in that place and give them to job to protect the facility. You would have given jobs to the youth of that community and you would have stopped oil theft.

“Today Tompolo and Asari Dokubo are having the contracts. They are not the ones doing the jobs. Their principals are there. What has stopped us from refining our petrol is corruption, corruption and corruption.”

Mr. Clark also shocked his fellow delegates when he openly accused top military brass of involvement in illegal oil bunkering, adding that the trend started in early 70s during the oil boom.

He said, “The military officers in Niger Delta are involved in oil theft. I made this point to President Obasanjo and he asked Danjuma, who was Minister of Defense, to look through and he went and found that it was true. Some top military officers, both serving and retired are involved in illegal oil bunkering.

“I have suggested that the troops in the Niger Delta should be changed from time to time. In doing so, you will find that the stealing of oil will be reduced.”

As Commissioner of Finance in the defunct Mid-Western State in 1972, Mr. Clark said he travelled with Shehu Shagari, who was then Federal Commissioner of Finance; to Forcados Terminal, where Nigeria crude oil was being exported.

While there, he said the team discovered that government officials were only interested in what comes to them, rather than protecting the interest of Nigeria.
Mr. Clark insisted that the government does not know the quantity of oil taken out of the country on a daily basis.

He continued, “One hardly knew how much oil was being taken away from our shores. It was published in the newspaper, till today; I do believe that if you go to Forcados Terminal the same story will be told.

“We are talking about oil theft, I have always said that our young men at home do bucket bunkering. They have no facility, they lack the technology, but those who steal our oil are people who come from abroad. Have we forgotten the case where three admirals were fully involved? They were court marshaled.”

UPDATE: Jonathan knows Shekau’s informants

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By Rotimi Fasan

THE Chief of Defence Staff, Alex Badeh, only days ago told the world, including the insurgents that have made life impossible for his Commander-in-Chief, Goodluck Jonathan, that the military now knows where the school girls abducted from Chibok about 50 days ago are being held.

And I say in response to that, that President Jonathan now knows the informants of Abubakar Shekau and his infernal armies. At least he can no longer claim to be totally in the dark about the real identity of these individuals or groups without looking foolishly casual about the safety of Nigerians. It is indeed up to him if he chooses to pass up the opportunity to act for once as far as this issue of insurgency is concerned in the manner appropriate for a responsible Commander-in-Chief.

*Shekau and Jonathan

In closing my piece here last week, I had asked what President Jonathan was doing about the enemies in his own government and others who through overt and covert activities have been working to ensure the insurgent beasts in the Northern part of this country keep at least one step ahead of the security agents and the military on their trail.

It didn’t look like the security agencies, much less the President, were doing anything about them. But any right thinking person could see from the increased activities of the insurgents; tell from the precision of their attacks for which the government has no meaningful answer that the killer groups have many people working for them. Who these people are is the simple mystery the Jonathan government is yet to solve. In light of Badeh’s astounding remark my exact words from last week deserve to be quoted at some length:

‘’President Jonathan may be averse to going to Chibok, he may be wary of coming face to face with poorly resourced, mutinous soldiers that take arm at their commander- he may not see any reason in his going to Sambisa forest.

But what has he done with those directly under his nose in Abuja or in Borno and environs? Has he taken his eyes off these people believing they are not capable of the mischief they’ve been linked with? With bombs going off in built-up areas under curfew and emergency rule, is it not reasonable to imagine that the insurgents or their supporters are right in our midst, living in our neighbourhoods, worshipping in the same places and going to the same markets as the rest of us?

Are we to accept that those who killed hundreds of Nigerians, now turned mere statistics, in the market in Jos came straight from Sambisa forest; that the killers that operated in Sabon-Gari, Kano, rode on a bike from Chad or Cameroon? What is Jonathan doing about these people right in our midst? Or is he waiting for his foreign supporters to look for them or leave before he starts asking these questions, in case he remembers at all?

While our military complain of inadequate resources, their commanders draw up a list of unattended grievances, the insurgents increase in strength. What is Jonathan doing about the enemies within?’’

There you have it. The President had once claimed in helpless resignation that his government had been infiltrated by sympathisers of the insurgents fighting his administration. It didn’t look then like he had any concrete idea of who these moles might be or if he did, what his own response should be. The President should now be experiencing his own satori for in a clear case of Freudian slip or, even, chutzpah people are of their own will saying things to show on whose side they are in the fight against mindless terror. They might be daring the President to act if he can. But will he?

Or should we be charitable and put Badeh’s statement as were others in similar vein by highly placed persons in government down to inexperience in security matters? Are we to conclude that the topmost military man in the government of President Jonathan has no idea of what should or should not be said on security issues?

Before him Kashim Shettima, governor of the insurgent-ravaged Borno State had made exactly the same claim as Badeh about knowing where the school girls are being held. The question then to ask is: What are these individuals doing about the knowledge or the intelligence in their possession; why have they not gone to claim the foolishly irresponsible multimillion naira prize the Nigeria Police promised anyone with information on the insurgents?

If the insurgents have many informants, who are those gathering intelligence for government? What’s their role in this fight? If Shettima’s blather could be excused on ground of inexperience on military or security issues (a clear failing for a so-called chief security officer of a state as our governors are proclaimed here!), should we also ascribe Badeh’s comment to inexperience? What about Chris Olukolade’s repeat and support of Badeh’s claim?

When Jonathan goes weak at the knees on the idea of visiting Chibok and we put it down to his inexperience in military matters as if he was being called upon to join our ground troops in their operations, what should one make of his attempt to be compared to Barack Obama as government adverts try to do? Obama made his fourth trip to see US troops in Afghanistan days ago. Was that because he trained as a soldier?

It has never ceased to astound me how highly placed government officials and their spokespersons would go on air providing blow by blow accounts of sensitive military or police operations in an obvious bid to impress ordinary Nigerians. They provide forensic evidence on media, including details of phone logs from telecom companies in explaining how criminal gangs or kidnappers were busted! Is it any surprise that some of these companies have been soft targets of these outlaw elements? Does a professional military or constabulary behave like this?

Just hours before he retired into the secret location where he with others monitored American seals’ operation that killed Osama Bin Ladin, Barack Obama was at a dinner with the press. He didn’t give the slightest hint of the operation in the offing. The world only knew of it but after Bin Ladin had been killed and buried at an undisclosed location at sea. To this day and in spite of claims and counter-claims by one or two persons claiming to have fired the shot that took out Osama, there has not been a single official statement by Pentagon or any state official on the controversy beyond Obama’s initial broadcast to the world. Some reports even have it that Obama himself does not know who fired the killer shot. That was how secret the operation was.

Vanguard

Australia offers Special Forces to help rescue Chibok Schoolgirls

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The Australian Government said, Tuesday, it was offering to deploy its Special Forces to help Nigeria rescue more than 200 school girls abducted more than a month ago by extremist Boko Haram.

Australia said the Special Air Service, SAS, regiment are on standby to deploy for the rescue if the Nigerian government accepts the offer.

Foreign Minister, Julie Bishop, told Sky News Tuesday that Nigeria is yet to respond.

“Australian troops, the SAS are always on standby for contingencies,” Ms. Bishop said.

“We have made an offer to the Nigerian government to provide whatever support they need to release the girls. We’ve made a specific offer to our UK and US allies … that we are ready to assist in whatever way we can.

“We have not had a response from the Nigerian government.

“They’ve thanked us for our willingness to be involved in trying to rescue the girls but we haven’t had any specific acceptance of the offers that we’ve made.”

The schoolgirls were seized by the insurgent group, Boko Haram, April 14.

They have remained in captivity despite a throng of support from the United States, United Kingdom, France and Israel- all providing surveillance and intelligence support, and specialist teams.

The Nigerian military recently said it knows the location of the girls but would not use force to free them so as not to jeopardise their safety.

Until now, no country offered to send troops into Nigeria for the rescue operations.

The closest was the deployment of 80 troops to Chad by the U.S., which said the personnel will support the operation of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft for missions over northern Nigeria and the surrounding area.

But support for Nigeria have come with a price, with the government taking a humiliating blow over its handling of the Boko Haram crisis. The Nigerian military has also been ridiculed for its shrinking capacity.

A senior U.S. official said the once powerful Nigerian force had become so ineffective it is now “afraid to engage” Boko Haram.

Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni also spoke of his preference for suicide, to the foreign military help Nigeria received.

It is not clear if Nigeria’s reluctance at the Australian offer is informed by such backlash.

Australia was first mentioned in the Chibok abduction saga when it emerged last week that a key negotiator commissioned by the Nigerian government to reach out to Boko Haram, is the Australian cleric, Stephen Davis.

Mr. Davis was secretly hired to negotiate the release of the girls, and he came close to a deal two weeks ago before the Nigerian government backed off, according to the UK’s Daily Mail.

The cleric has warned that some of the kidnapped girls are now ill and in need of urgent medical attention.

It also remains unclear what role his apparent knowledge of the girls’ conditions and location, now plays with his country’s offer to help free the girls.

Back home, the Australian government also faces call for caution.

The country’s Green Party, which holds minority seats in the parliament, said the government must come clean with details of the Nigeria operation before getting involved.

“The Greens want to see the schoolgirls in Nigeria rescued,” the party’s leader, Christine Milne, was quoted by ABC Australia as saying.

“It is shocking to think all those young women have been dragged away and we don’t know the circumstances in which they find themselves but I think the PM needs to inform Australia fully as to what Australia would be getting into if we sent troops into Africa.”

The party said it was concerned at Australia again joining a coalition to take on another terrorist war in sub-Saharan Africa, as it did in Afghanistan.

Nigeria: The chicken has come home to roost, By Lai Mohammed

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When Nigerians spoke up about insecurity in the North, they were labelled detractors; when the opposition party and concerned leaders spoke up, they characterized them as power hungry, Islamists fundamentalists and exponents of janjaweed ideology. When the international media did, they were termed APC opposition collaborators, apologists or even pawns. When Hilary Clinton did, she was ridiculed as incompetent, and in fact the cause of the problem and the reason why the girls were abducted; when the American Government did, they were called busy bodies who have their own unresolved problems; when former PDP governors and other politicians did, they were immediately described as disgruntled.

Whatever the case maybe, those who complain, object, criticize, observe or even perceive that PDP or Jonathan administration should have, could have, should be, or could be doing more are wrong. They are ‘sick”, they are senseless conspirators and saboteurs, and they are described in many unprintable words that should never be used in the kind of discourse that is the subject of the matter. The kind of language that must never be bequeathed to any coming generation, language that is uniformly condemned and rejected all over the world, yet used freely and repeatedly by key operatives of Nigerian government, and Nigeria’s ruling party, PDP.

But now, a past president, leader of PDP, and former chair of PDP BOT, and more importantly, a benefactor of the current President, one to whom the President has in the past owed his allegiance, and repeatedly credited as the instrument of God in his meteoric rise in politics and leadership, and one who is the catalyst of his name and luck, Goodluck, has spoken. He said the President did not believe the Chibok girls were missing initially. According to him, Jonathan considered it a political gimmick, and chose not to err on the side of caution when the lives of some of the most vulnerable Nigerians were at stake.

The former president from his military and presidential experience expressed the thought that this unfortunate approach adopted by the President wasted the most vital window of opportunity in rescuing the girls, and taking them out of harm’s way, the vital initial twelve hours. In the words of former President Obasanjo, President Jonathan finally, slowly and reluctantly answered the call to act only when the international community put pressure on him and the matter overshadowed the World Economic Forum being hosted in the nation’s capital.

The former president described the current president as slow, and failing to meet Nigerians expectations! This is historic and unprecedented! There is no record of a former democratically elected president describing a successor in this manner. The only time such indictment of the position by a predecessor occurs, is in the context of a forceful takeover, and mostly, in an attempt to justify the forceful takeover.

Over the weekend, on account of the wondrous technology of communication, broadcast and cable television, we were treated to the “American Wonder” of the value of citizens, and to what lengths nations should go to secure them. The news as monitored demonstrated the real role of the President of a nation with the deployment of the best of America’s special forces to secure a non-contentious release of a soldier who though in captivity for 5 years, remained unforgotten by his country.

America, of the “AmericaWillKnow# fame, swapped five dangerous terrorists just to secure the life of one non-commissioned officer, a Sergeant. The president got personally involved and spoke directly to the King of Qatar who took custody of five dangerous prisoners from Guantanamo Bay, who America gave for just one of its own.
What was most touching and telling was that Mr. Obama personally took charge of securing the release of “just” one low level American soldier. One whose existence in many ways didn’t mean much to him, one whose capture and detention did not stop him from winning elections. He called the parents, brought them to the White House and shared his podium and moment of glory with them. They hugged, backslapped, and walked away together holding each other fondly, endearingly and so ordinarily, perhaps to eat brunch together in the White House.

Days before this happened, no security report of danger to his life could stop President Barrack Obama from flying across the world to celebrate Memorial Day in the heart of the war, and where he was most likely to be in harms way. He chose the epicenter over the attention-center. He chose Bagram, Afghanistan, over the White House in Washington DC.

Nothing could stop him.

Contrast this with what is happening at home. When recently we had Children’s day, our own President Jonathan didn’t go to visit the children who are in despair, children who have been unable to attend school on account of the Boko Haram insurgency, children whose lives have been changed forever by fear, tragedy and loss, children who have lost parents or siblings, some of whom want to be like him in the future. Our only connection with them is the technological wonder of cable TV, with CNN meeting with them, touring their school, meeting their teachers, listening to them and transmitting their pain, their hopes, their aspirations to the world. CNN could go, but our own President could not.

How can a people be so trampled upon, so disdained, so unloved, so abused, so oppressed, so deceived, so cheated, so raped, so robbed by an elected leader and his small cabal, and yet live in peace. Not just Adamawa, Borno and Yobe, the reality is that our whole nation is a Trauma Center. Citizens across the country have all been traumatized beyond belief by a small group who by our error of judgment and history are ruling today.

We are a people traumatized more by our leaders than our attackers. Our attackers have banked on the failure of our leaders to traumatize us even more. We are a people in despair, in pain and sorrow, not just for the lost souls or missing girls, but for the soul of our nation and the missing leadership. Traumatized by terrorists, traumatized by an incompetent government, traumatized by poor infrastructure, traumatized by darkness, traumatized by impunity, traumatized by our helplessness when those who steal go unpunished, traumatized when children are missing and the president is dancing, traumatized when he, and the leadership of his party deny the obvious, when they belittle the lives of our children by disputing their abduction, when they insult the pain of parents, the fear and grief of communities, traumatized when we realize we can’t depend on our government to protect us, or come to our aid.

Traumatized when the government spokesperson labels us, victims of this government, as opposition controlled states, traumatized when to them, those who are concerned enough about the safety and destiny of our girls, are reduced to mere “campaigners” who are 90% opposition. Traumatized to discover that our president only sees electoral capital, not human capital, not Nigerian capital, not citizens of Nigeria, traumatized at the reality of our exclusion by the president and PDP.

At a point, trauma leads to delusion and irrational behaviour. How much more trauma can we take? How much more can we bear? As a nation, we are unraveling, things are falling apart, the center is not holding, anarchy is upon the land, but the reason is simple. There is a failure at the center.

There is rot, incompetence, callousness, clannishness, ineptitude, a scale of corruption and stealing, a level of impunity that is emanating from the center. The stench is so bad, you can smell it far north, far east, far south, and far west. That is why things are falling apart, that is why the center isn’t holding, that is why anarchy is upon the land, that, I submit is the reason for, and our greatest trauma.

Nigerians, your silence is at its loudest decibels. Things get worse because you fail to speak. You have a voice! It’s your vote! The time is now! You must arise, you must save, you must rescue, you must redeem, you must rehabilitate, you must rejuvenate, you must restore your lives, your families, your people, your land, your country.

There was a country, there must be a country again. It is urgent, it is upon us, it will break if we don’t make it, we have no choice, we have a choice to make. It is time to reject this mediocrity. Why? Our compassion should be a virtue, not a curse.

How can this president, the first lady, and all who speak with, and for them be our stars? Why should our individuals in the professions, sports, and all bring us fame and our leaders bring us shame? Something is wrong! If PhD is the qualification, how did this dubious one from Otuoke emerge? If being shoeless is the qualification, there are far brighter shoeless patriots. How did cluelessness and insensitivity emerge? How did non-existent moral fabric become the blanket in Aso Rock?

We can’t go on like this. We just cannot.

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