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FOR THE RECORDS : Read Full Text Of Presidential Declaration Speech By Uncle Sam Nda-Isaiah.

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To the Chairman of the APC, and all APC delegates all over the Federation of Nigeria, and all the good people of this great country, I am today declaring my candidacy for the presidency of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
I would like to begin by paying tribute to the star-studded slate of presidential aspirants of our great party: General Muhammadu Buhari, my role model and political boss with whom I have been in the trenches for over a decade since he joined politics; Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, who has lived a life of service; Dr Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, who has changed the face of Kano; and my friend, Rochas Okorocha, a true and proud Nigerian. Anyone of us who becomes President next year would be infinitely better than the one we currently have.
President Jonathan has been totally unable to perform the most basic responsibility of any leader, which is provision of security to the people of his country. Nigeria has been degraded to unimaginable levels. We are now the laughing stock of those countries we used to laugh at.
Nigerians who are old enough know that this is not how it used to be. As a country, we are much better than this. The Nigeria we knew, even though far from being the ideal, was good enough to provide security and the basic necessities of everyday living. And we even had enough to cater for other African nations. That was when we were a regional superpower. But not anymore.
I have seen Nigeria as a child growing up in a neighbourhood not far from where I stand now; as a school pupil in a government primary school in Kaduna where primary education was free; as a secondary school student in Kaduna where secondary education was free; as an undergraduate at the University of Ife, when my Niger State scholarship was more than sufficient for me. I have seen Nigeria as a northern youth corps member serving in Ilawe-Ekiti and Ikere-Ekiti in today’s Ekiti State where I was treated like a special one. And I have seen Nigeria as a young graduate when I landed a very good job within one month of completion of the NYSC. I have seen Nigeria when our country’s schools and universities were among the best in the world and foreigners from all over the world trooped into this country to acquire world-class education. I have lived in a Nigeria when our hospitals were among the best, at least in Africa, and all drugs and medicines and surgeries were offered free by government. And all these happened when our revenues as a nation were far less than what we have today. That was when Nigeria fought a civil war without taking a loan; even the post-war reconstruction was carried out without a loan.
But to prosecute the war against insurgents, the Nigerian President has just taken a loan of $1billion, even though oil sold for around $100 per barrel for as long as anyone could remember and the Customs and Excise Department rakes in an average of N1trillion annually.
It is difficult to know the exact point this downward slide started but the misfortune of this country obviously accelerated from the time the PDP came to power in 1999.
Many of us have seen Nigeria from different eras. We have seen our country gradually decay into one in which people are now afraid to carry on their lives as ordinary citizens. They are afraid of sending their wards to boarding schools in parts of the country because their kids could be burnt alive in their dormitories; they are afraid to send their daughters to school because hundreds of them could be kidnapped at the same time and turned into sex slaves. And there are many more who are afraid to go to church or mosque because they could be bombed out of existence. Yes, terrorism is globally a contemporary phenomenon but in no other normal country on earth would terrorists strike in the same place every other day like Nigeria and no arrests are made.
For the first time in the history of this country, Nigerian soldiers who are still among the best in the world have started fleeing from criminals. Many have had cause to flee to neighbouring countries where they were embarrassingly disarmed by those countries’ armed forces. And because the PDP government has incompetently made the military our first line of defence instead of the last, Nigerians are now in disarray, running helter-skelter and in a state of misery. For the first time, Nigerians who are normally happy, confident people have lost confidence in themselves.
Corruption under the PDP government has reached extreme levels, to the extent that the Federal Government is no longer able to pay state governments and other government units their due allocations. As a result, many state governments are now unable to pay salaries. Oil theft has reached such frightening scale that, sometimes, the oil thieves steal more than what is left for the Nigerian state.
Yet, not a single oil thief has been arrested by the government. Much of the balance that eventually gets to the government coffers is also promptly stolen. Not long ago, Federal Government officials were publicly arguing among themselves – rather scandalously and in full view of the world – whether it was $48 billion or $20 billion or $10 billion that was stolen from the NNPC. This was money meant to run the Nigerian state.
The North-East of the country may now be the base of insurgents but no part of this country is the safe place we would want to raise our children. Kidnappers, armed robbers and ritual killers all through the 36 states of the federation operate freely without any fear of any consequences.
Our education system has collapsed with public schools now counting for nothing because funds meant to sustain them have been stolen. Nigeria currently has 10.5 million children out of school, the highest in the world. And even those in schools here hardly pass their exams. This year, 70% of students who sat for the WASSCE failed.
Our hospitals are now where people go to die. Those who can afford it travel abroad for their healthcare needs.
Nigerians no longer talk about electric power supply because, after 15 years of the PDP government and more than $25 billion expropriated on power supply, the country is worse off. Our current power supply fluctuates between 2,000mw and 4,000mw. But $25 billion has provided more than 20,000mw for other countries with more serious governments. By common consent, the President and his party have failed. The PDP has also proved to be totally incapable of presenting its best people to Nigerians. The PDP wants us to meekly accept Jonathan’s incompetence and his failures as our destiny and then continue with him. It is only a party like the PDP that will place the ego of one man above the wellbeing of an entire nation.
Nigerians from everywhere yearn for change. They cry for a new direction because the country cannot continue on this path. That is why I want to be President. I have come to offer that change that will change Nigeria forever. I do not seek to be President simply because Jonathan is not a good President. I want to be that President that will change the course of Nigerian history forever. That is why I come to you waving the scroll of BIG IDEAS – big and bold ideas that will move our beleaguered country into the league of First World nations. All our programmes shall be powered by big ideas and, today, I will mention only a few.
The first thing our government will do is to unite the whole of Nigeria as quickly as possible. As I have said in several fora, Nigeria is currently too divided to be called a nation. No country ever makes progress with the kind of divisions we see in our country today. Confronting this challenge is the simplest thing a serious leader can do. There is no magic about it. All a leader needs to do is be sincere about it. I will need to unite the whole of Nigeria behind me as quickly as possible in order to be able to work the big ideas that will change this nation forever. Any President who governs his country with fairness, justice and charity to all will have no problem uniting his people, no matter how disparate they may be.
Under my presidency, all crimes will be punished, no matter how long it will take to apprehend the criminals. We shall send a clear message to criminals that whoever commits a crime will be apprehended and brought to justice according to the law – whoever they are, no matter where they come from and no matter how long it takes. I will not be that President who would say that people are killing themselves because they don’t like me. I will not only be in office, I will also be in power for the good of the majority of the people.
All murderers will face the full weight of the law.
Concurrently with the business of uniting the nation, we shall also quickly secure Nigeria and Nigerians. Security is the most elementary duty of any leader. I will do this by retooling the entire security and intelligence infrastructure of the country and by being that President who takes his duty as Commander-in-Chief seriously. Luckily for us, Nigeria still has some of the best soldiers, policemen and intelligence service personnel anywhere in the world. All they need is competent leadership, training and re-training as well as 21st century equipment to meet the challenges of the modern world. One of our major problems is that we are still using the 1990s and 1970s methods and equipment to fight today’s crimes.
We are also going to expand the various security services to match the challenges of our current size. We are going to modernise and increase our police strength from the current 370,000 to at least 1,000,000 immediately and then gradually grow it to at least 4,000,000. We shall do most of the recruiting from among the millions of graduates that roam the streets in search of jobs. A serious nation of 178 million people should not have just 370,000 policemen.
As President and Commander-in-Chief of Africa’s largest country and its biggest economy, I will rebuild Nigeria’s military to be the most formidable fighting force in Africa. I shall rebuild the military not only for Nigeria’s security but for Africa’s stability, as I believe that Nigeria has a responsibility to lead Africa. We have a national interest in ensuring stability in other African nations. We shall also build a strong military in order to defend our currency and protect our economy. The Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria (DICON) will also be upgraded to do much more than it is doing today to supply both our needs and export to other countries.
Under my presidency, the military will never be our first line of defence as it is today. We shall create special forces whose members would be drawn from the different services for the most difficult security challenges. The first line of defence for any country that has terrorism challenges should be its borders. Our nation’s borders are probably the most porous in the world: 1,497 illegal entry points into the country have already been identified and the government is doing nothing about it. That will never happen under our presidency.
Nigeria’s unemployment level is a bomb waiting to explode. By conservative estimates, there are 48 million unemployed Nigerians and a troubling 54% of the Nigerian youths are unemployed. Even though the economy has grown, poverty rates have increased, precisely because the sectors driving the growth are not the ones in which the majority of Nigerians are accommodated. We must, therefore, bring more youths into agriculture, online business, manufacturing and housing. Since 48 million jobs are not immediately available, they would have to be created. Only big ideas can solve a challenge this magnitude. Our government will create an army of entrepreneurs all over the country. We shall create five million small businesses in the first instance. A small business creates between two and five new jobs – that means potentially creating 25 million new jobs. That’s a heck of a big idea!
Another one. Our government shall construct one million new housing units yearly, for two reasons: one, to bridge the housing deficit and, two, to create jobs. It has been estimated that building one million housing units can create up to 30 million new jobs as several people including engineers, architects, plumbers, block makers, insurance companies, mortgage banks, estate agents, cement, tile and paint sellers, food vendors, furniture manufacturers, etc would be engaged. We will get the money for this huge project by borrowing from the pension fund which is now in excess of N4trillion; and, since the houses would be sold to the public through mortgage facilities, the borrowed funds would be paid back. We can also get the money from Quantitative Easing since a huge lot of economic activities, including manufacturing operations, will be created in the course of building the one million houses; so the risks usually associated with Quantitative Easing would be attenuated.
If we must remain the biggest economy in Africa, then, we must have the biggest seaports, the biggest banks, the biggest airports; and we must, by privilege and reason of location, be the aviation hub of Africa.
One of the very big ideas that we intend to work is the creation of a soccer economy. Nigeria has talent and Nigerians have passion for the game. There is no reason we should not profit from this as so many other countries do. We can organise ourselves to achieve this easily.
Also, we cannot be Africa’s biggest economy and the continent’s most populated nation (178 million people) and still be struggling with 4,000mw of electric power supply after squandering $25billion in the past 15 years. The world’s largest power station in a single location is the Three Gorges Dam in China which has an installed capacity of 22,500mw. It was constructed with $26 billion.
We cannot be Africa’s largest oil producer and still be importing fuel. That will stop under our government. And because oil will soon lose its critical global value due to improvements in fracking technology among the biggest consumers of oil, under our government, the country will invest heavily in non-oil sectors to diversify our economy. We shall do this as a matter of survival. It is no accident that God has endowed our country with so many resources. And we shall do it all over the country.
Our government will also aggressively encourage manufacturing, especially the small-scale manufacturing sub-sector. To do this, we will take bold and drastic steps to strengthen the naira. In the interim, we will strengthen the naira by paying the monthly allocations to all tiers of government in dollars since oil, our main revenue earner, is paid for in dollars. But instead of dishing out dollar cash which could encourage theft and capital flight, our government would issue dollar certificates to all the tiers of government. The different tiers of government would then have to convert these dollar certificates into naira in our local banks. If more dollars start chasing less naira, the value of the naira would improve at once. And when this happens, interest rates would also go down. Nigerian manufacturers would then be able to procure machinery and spare parts more easily, and, at single-digit interest rates, it would be possible for made-in-Nigeria products to compete with imported ones.
I have heard a few people say I have not had any experience in government and that, therefore, is a weakness. My answer to them remains this: Nations are today in a race for the future and nobody has the experience of the future. All experiences people claim to have are experiences of the past. And our uninspiring past cannot be a guide for our future, as we need a clean break from our past. Nigeria should be in a race to the First World and what is needed more than anything else is vision. I find my lack of experience in government a strength instead because I have not been part of the rot of the past.
In any case, I have the most important experience, which is being a serial entrepreneur. I have created institutions from Ground Zero. That is the most important experience anyone who wants to be President needs at the moment. In fact, a lack of entrepreneurial experience among those who lead us has been one of our problems so far.
And talking about experience, you cannot have more experience than President Jonathan. He has been a Deputy Governor, a Governor, a Vice President, and Acting President before becoming President, and see what this huge experience has done to our dear country. So much for experience.
Most of the greatest leaders the world has had had no government experience before assuming power. South Africa’s presidency was Nelson Mandela’s first job in government. The Prime Minister’s job was Lee Kuan Yew’s first job in government. And by the time Tony Blair became Prime Minister of Great Britain in 1997, he had never worked in government. Ditto for David Cameron.
Most importantly, we intend to change how government works. Governments even in the best of countries, but especially in our country, have a problem of inefficiency, bureaucracy and corruption directly impeding well-intended plans. To change our country, we must change the way government works first. Our government will achieve this by the appointment of CEO-style ministers and heads of government agencies with clear targets and commensurate salaries and bonuses.
There are people who would tell you that it is not possible to implement all I have said. Don’t believe them. Those who know me would tell you that I am always unimpressed by what others say is impossible. Those who say certain things are impossible are continually being interrupted by those actually achieving them. All these and many more are possible but none of them will be easy. Nonetheless, we have to make the hard choices. If I am elected, I will take my election as proof that Nigerians want to change their country forever and I will, accordingly, use all the powers at my command as President to bring this about. We have seen how leadership has transformed countries ranging from small countries like Singapore, Rwanda and South Korea to the big countries like Brazil, India and China. I believe that, with faith in God, you and I together can keep this appointment with destiny.
God bless you all and may God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

HARD QUESTIONS NEEDING QUICK ANSWERS : Big question: Should Nigeria’s chief of defence staff, Badeh, face a court martial for saying this? ... TheScoop

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Following the attack of Mubi, the hometown of the Nigerian chief of defence staff, Alex Badeh, last week, the question is: Should Badeh be court martialed and possibly indicted?
And no, this is not because his hometown has been taken over by terrorists, even though it is a source of worry that he allegedly evacuated his family from Mubi few days before the attack. The real reason why prosecuting the chief of defence staff is being mentioned is because he was the one who announced that a cease fire has been reached with Boko Haram terrorists. The video below is proof.
Badeh said at  meeting with defence chiefs from the West African sub-region that: “I wish to inform this audience that a cease fire agrement has been concluded between the federal government of Nigeria and Boko Haram.”
Badeh directed service chiefs to ensure “full compliance” of the cease fire.
Since then, despite continuous attacks by the terrorists, Badeh has been silent. The federal government has also been silent, giving no updates on the talk it allegedly had with the terrorists, why they are still on a killing and capturing spree and why the girls have still not been released.
Yet, we have been reading reports that some military commanders have been detained and will face prosecution for fleeing in the face of the invading terrorists. Why are they being arrested then? Has Badeh given a different directive to soldiers? Because if a soldier is supposed to obey his superiors, and the public directive given by the number one officer in the country is that all military formations should stand down, why then are they being prosecuted for doing just that?
So perhaps, is it Badeh who should now be prosecuted for false information? For conflicting directives?
Above is the video of the CDS giving directives to the military to stand down and respect the “cease fire” with Boko Haram.

ALL OF THIS IN JONATHAN AND ORITSEJAFOR'S TRANSFORMED NIGERIA? : Boko Haram Carries out Pogrom Against Christians in Mubi ... ThisDay

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Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor
• CAN decries killings, says officers are sabotaging the military
• Lafarge boss gives the all-clear after attack on Ashaka Cement
By Paul Obi in Abuja and Daji Sani in Yola with agency report
The security situation in Mubi, Adamawa State’s second largest city, keeps taking a turn for the worse as Boko Haram terrorists have resorted to destroying churches and killing and uprooting Christians from the predominantly Christian town in their bid to establish an Islamic caliphate and make Mubi its headquarters.
The terrorists had renamed the historic town “Madinatul Islam”, meaning the city of Islam and peace, on Tuesday.
Residents trapped in Mubi confirmed through phone calls that the insurgents had ordered Christians to leave the city or denounce their religion and accept Islam or get killed.
Reverend Stephen, who escaped from the hands of the insurgents by a whisker yesterday, said the terrorists were going around setting ablaze any church they come across in Mubi.
The cleric said he was trapped in Mubi while trying to locate the whereabouts of his wife and children, adding that he fled after tracing them on Monday.
“They warned us that whoever goes astray, will definitely meet him or her waterloo, so we had to abide by their rules for the fear of being killed. But immediately, my family and myself planned our exit out of the trouble town,” he revealed.
He said the killings in Mubi were being carried out selectively by the Boko Haram insurgents, alleging that most of the people killed were Christians who refused to accept their injunctions.
Another resident from Mubi, who also escaped yesterday, Mr. Joseph Namu, said the insurgents had been going round the city burning churches and killing anybody that resisted their dictates.
He confirmed to THISDAY that churches like the Lutheran Church of Christ in Nigeria (LCCN), Ekklisiyar’s Yanuwa a Nigeria (EYN no 1), a Catholic church situated at Ahmadu Bello Way and a Baptist Church located in Sabonline, as well as several other churches were torched by the insurgents.
“Christians are killed by the insurgents on discovery that they cannot recite a part of the Koran known as Kalimatu Shahada and are not ready to denounce the name of Jesus Christ and embrace Islam,” he said.
He added that the insurgents used fuel from petrol stations abandoned by their owners to burn the churches.
“Even I had to lie that I was a Muslim because I could recite Kalimatu Shahada, so the insurgents granted me passage without further interrogation,” he said.
In addition to destroying churches and carrying out a pogrom against Christians, the Boko Haram insurgents have commenced the enforcement of Sharia Law in Mubi.
Ten Muslims reportedly had their hands amputated by the insurgents for stealing wrappers.
Residents trapped in Mubi said the insurgents had established a full-fledged Sharia government in the area, promising to inculcate discipline in the people.
Also, the Bishop of the Catholic Diocese in Yola, Rt. Reverend Dami Stephen Mamza, yesterday said the killings in Mubi were selective.
He asserted that the recent pronouncement of a ceasefire agreement with the Boko Haram by the federal government through the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, had made the residents of Adamawa State more vulnerable to attacks.
The bishop made the statement shortly after distributing relief materials to 2,300 displaced families at St. Theresa’s Cathedral, Yola, the Adamawa State capital, and also condemned the growing insurgency in the state.
He lamented that hundreds of residents had been killed and thousands rendered homeless, charging the federal government to intensify efforts to immediately address the situation to avoid anarchy in the system.
He described the killing of innocent people and attacks on their homes without a just cause by the insurgents as heartless, unfortunate and passionately appealed to the federal and state governments to muster the political will to tackle the insurgency.
However, a security source said the military was planning to launch a massive counter-attack and recapture Mubi on Wednesday.
He added that Nigerian troops were advancing towards Mubi, revealing that thousands of riot policemen were also drafted to give the military back-up and were already stationed in the villages and towns close to Mubi.
In a related development, the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) yesterday expressed outrage over the infiltration of the military in the fight against the Boko Haram insurgency.
Angered by the recent killings of Christians and Muslims in the North-eastern part of the country and the daring attacks that have been launched recently by the terrorists, President of CAN, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, on Wednesday exploded, warning, “Enough is enough”.
Oritsejafor spoke in Abuja during the National Executive Council meeting of CAN, stating that areas that had been taken over and fallen under the control of Boko Haram are predominantly Christian territories.
The CAN president said Christians were no longer safe in those troubled parts of the country.
He maintained that Boko Haram was waging a religious war against Christians.
“What is happening in the North-east is unacceptable to us. Christians are the main victims. We are not saying that other people are not affected. But Christians are the ones affected the most.
“All the places where Boko Haram has foisted its flag are dominated by Christians. They have taken over Mubi in Adamawa State, which is dominated by Christians. Somebody will now tell me this is not religion. Who is fooling who? Nigerians should accept that we have a problem," Oritsejafor said.
While urging Nigerians to pray to God to bring to an end the mindless killings, Oritsejafor said he would not join other Nigerians who have become popular by constantly criticising the military.
He however called on the leadership of the military to fish out saboteurs in its midst if the war against terror must be won.
“All well-meaning Nigerians must pray and continue to pray. We must pray. I will not join those condemning our security agencies. They are Nigerians. Women are losing their husbands and children are losing their fathers. I want to challenge the military. They can do better. They must continue to fish out those sabotaging their efforts. Those people should be expelled. They are in all the security agencies.
“No matter the intention you have, if you have people working against you, you will not succeed. There are too many people in the system working against the system. Why should this kind of thing be happening?
“Innocent people are being killed. It’s too much. Enough is enough," Oritsejafor told the audience.
He urged the federal government and other critical stakeholders to adopt a more pragmatic approach in bringing to an end the activities of Boko Haram, contending that the use of force alone cannot stop the insurgency.
“Even though I have said the military must continue to work harder, guns and bullets alone will not solve this problem. Boko Haram is an ideology. Let us not run away from it. You do not defeat an ideology with guns and bullets. You defeat an ideology with a superior ideology. Boko Haram will not listen to me.
“I want to make an appeal to our Muslim clerics and Muslim political leaders to come together and see how they can help us solve this problem. They have the solution. There are some Muslim scholars Boko Haram members respect. To a large extent, that is the only way out.
“As members of CAN, we are ready to meet with them. I believe in progressive dialogue. This is my strong appeal. I want to appeal to those at the grassroots. This connects to the leaders. The leaders should talk to those at the grassroots. They should give reliable intelligence to our security agents. Please, do not harbour these people. They are not fighting for you. Expose them.
“I know we have some members of the press here. I hope they will pass the message. We want a better Nigeria, where everyone is equal and respects the constitution. In fact, we want one constitution where everyone will follow. Those saying Boko Haram is not religious are deceiving themselves.
“We want a Nigeria where everyone is safe. We want a Nigeria where a man is not judged by his religion. That is the Nigeria we all want. If we want one united Nigeria, we must all pay the price for it,” he charged.
He called on the international community to come to the aid of Nigeria and Nigerians, but still held the belief that the country would surmount its current challenges, ensuring that terrorism is defeated.
“I believe as bad as the situation is, with God, all things are possible. I know that there is God.
He will not forsake us. We have restrained our people so much and we will continue to restrain them. But I beg Nigerians not to let this continue. These are dangerous and serious times.
“I was reading a report from a priest in Borno of how churches have been destroyed. I wonder why the international community is not saying anything. Is this not human rights violation? We call on government, NEMA, NGOs, the international community. We need help. Our people are dying. Come and help us,” he pleaded.
On the forthcoming general election, Oritsejafor called on all Christians across the country to register and vote, stating that they must participate in who governs them.
Oritsejafor explained that CAN suspects a cover-up on the part of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) over the poor handling of the distribution of the permanent voters' cards.
He cautioned against any plan to disenfranchise Christians, stressing that such moves would be resisted.
“I want to say passionately to Nigerians. Go and get your voters’ cards. I want to appeal to INEC to double up. Our people must register and have their voters’ cards. I hope INEC is not doing something deliberate here in order to prevent Christians from voting. I hope Professor Attahiru Jega can hear me. We must all vote and vote wisely,” he said.
Meanwhile, the chief executive of French construction giant Lafarge, Bruno Lafont, yesterday gave the all-clear after Ashaka Cement factory, a subsidiary of the group in Gombe State, came under attack from suspected Boko Haram militants.
“The factory was the target of the intruders. There were no injuries. There was no damage to the factory,” Lafont told reporters.
“This morning (Wednesday) the situation is still calm and everything has returned to normal,” he said, adding that the intruders had left the factory.
Lafarge sources said the factory, which employs roughly 500 people, was “running as normal”.
At roughly 3.00pm (1400 GMT) on Tuesday, gunmen thought to be members of Boko Haram raided the Ashaka Cement plant in Nafada Local Government Area, Gombe State.
An employee told AFP that they looted dynamite and demanded to be taken to the room in the compound housing expatriates.
He said the plant was mostly empty, with staff running for safety when news spread that the gunmen were approaching.

WHY INDIANS DE ALWAYS GET MAGIC INSIDE THEIR MATTER? : 4,400 rats killed in Indian hospital ... PremiumTimes

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Rats
A pest control firm exterminated 4,400 rats over two days at a state-run hospital in India with thousands still on the premises, its chief executive said on Thursday.
Sanjay Karmakar, head of Laxmi Fumigation and Pest Control Service Ltd., said that Maharaja Yeshwantrao in Indore, south of Delhi, was still home to over 10,000 rodents.
However, the complex consists of seven buildings across about 10 acres.
“We have only tackled a part of the grounds so far they are riddled with rodent burrows, at least 1,000 of them.
“Each would have four to eight rodents, we have not started on the buildings yet, the pest control firm is baiting the rodents with different food each day.
“One day, it is peanuts and clarified butter, another day its roasted chickpeas, potato cakes and so on.
“If one of a family dies after eating something, the other rats will not touch the same food, so we have to keep changing the menu,” Mr. Karmakar said.
Operation Kayakalp (transformation) began on October 28 and is scheduled to run until December 4.
Mr. Karmakar’s company ran a similar operation at the hospital in 1994 soon after an outbreak of pneumonic plague in the neighbouring state of Gujarat.
“We cremated 12,000 rodents at the local electric crematorium in the presence of government officials after Kayakalp I in 1994,” Mr. Karmakar said.
However, there was no follow up by the hospital authorities and the rodents multiplied again.
Report says the 950-bed hospital is one of the biggest government-run healthcare facilities in Madhya Pradesh state.
It includes a medical college and is visited by over 1,100 outpatients daily.
Officials said that poor refuse disposal was the main reason for the rat infestation.

RANTINGS OF A CHARLATAN : Enough Is Enough, CAN Warns Boko Haram ... LeadershipNews

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The President of Christians Association of Nigeria (CAN), Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, angered by the continuous killing of Christians in North-eastern part of the country and the daring-devil attacks by Boko Haram, has exploded, warning that enough is enough.
Oritsejafor, who spoke extensively on Wednesday in Abuja during the National Executive Council (NEC) meeting of CAN, said “territories that have fallen under the control of Boko Haram are predominantly populated by Christians, a sign that Christians are no longer safe in those parts of the country.
The CAN President re-echoed his earlier stance that Boko Haram is waging a religious war against Christians, saying that the carnage in the North-east is unacceptable.
Oritsejafor said, “What is happening there is unacceptable to us. Christians are the main victims. We are not saying that other people are not affected. But Christians are the ones affected more. All the places where Boko Haram has foisted their flags are dominated by Christians.
“They have taken over Mubi in Adamawa state which is dominated by Christians. Somebody will now tell me this is not religion. Who is fooling who? Nigerians should accept that we have a problem.”
Calling on Nigerians to pray to God to put an end to the mindless killings, Oritsejafor said he will not join other Nigerians who have created names for themselves, by constantly criticising the military, however called on the leadership of the military to fish out saboteurs in their midst, if the war against terrorism must be won.
He said, “All well meaning Nigerians must pray and continue to pray. We must pray. I will not join those condemning our security agencies. They are Nigerians. Women are losing their husbands and children are losing their fathers. I want to challenge the military. They can do better. They must continue to fish out those sabotaging their efforts. Those people should be expelled. They are in all the security agencies.
“No matter the intention you have, if you have people working against you, you will not succeed. There are too many people in the system working against the system. Why should these kind of things be happening? Innocent people are being killed. It is too much. Enough is enough!
Advising the federal government, stakeholders and other critical stakeholders to adopt another approach in bringing an end to activities of Boko Haram, Oritsejafor warned that the use of force alone would not end the insurgency.
Oritsejafor said,” Even though I have said the military must continue to work harder, guns and bullets alone will not save this problem. Boko Haram is an ideology. Let us not run away from it. You do not defeat an ideology with guns and bullets. You defeat an ideology with a superior ideology. Boko Haram will not listen to me.
“I want to make an appeal to our Muslim clerics and Muslim political leaders to come together and see how they can help us solve this problem. They have the solution. There are some muslim scholars Boko Haram members respect. To a large extent, that is the only way out.
“As members of CAN, we are ready to meet with them. I believe in progressive dialogue. This is my strong appeal. I want to appeal to those at the grass root. This connects to the leaders. The leaders should talk to those at the grass roots. They should give reliable intelligence to our security agents. Please, do not harbour these people. They are not fighting for you. Expose them.
“I know we have some members of the press here. I hope they will pass the message. We want a better Nigeria, where everyone is equal and respects the constitution. In fact, we want one constitution where everyone will follow. Those saying Boko Haram is not religious are deceiving themselves.
“We want a Nigeria where everyone is safe. We want a Nigerian where a man is not judged by his religion. That is the Nigeria we all want. If we want one united Nigeria, we must all pay the price for it.”
Calling on the international community to come to the aid of Nigeria and Nigerians, Oritsejafor said he still believes the country will surmount its current challenges and come out stronger.
“I believe as bad as the situation is, with God, all things are possible. I know that there is God. He will not forsake us. We have restrained our people so much and we will continue to restrain them. But I beg Nigerians to not let this continue. These are dangerous and serious times.
“I was reading a report from a priest in Borno of how churches have been destroyed. I wonder why the international community is not saying anything. Is this not human rights violation? We call on government, NEMA, NGOs, the international community. We need help. Our people are dying. Come and help us,” he pleaded.
Speaking on the forthcoming general elections, Oritsejafor appealed to Christians across the country to register and vote, adding that they must participate in who govern them.
Oritsejafor who said he suspects a cover up on the part of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) over the poor handling of the distribution of the permanent voters’ cards, warned that any plans to disenfranchise Christians will be resisted.
“I want to say passionately to Nigerians. ‎Go and get your voters’ cards. I want to appeal to INEC to double up. Our people must register and have their voters’ cards. I hope INEC is not doing something deliberate here in order to prevent Christians from voting. I hope Professor Attahiru Jega can hear me. We must all vote and vote wisely.”

MAKING NIGERIA PROUD : From Spare Parts Trader to Motor Giant: The story of Innoson ... VanguardNews

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“A reputation for good judgement, for fair dealing, for truth and for rectitude is, itself fortune” – HARRY WARD BEECHER, quoted by Archbishop JV Obinna in honour of ex-Governor Peter Obi and befitting for Chief Innocent Chukwuma
 Innocent Chukwuma
Innocent Chukwuma
You will never know the extent of the Innoson enigma until you come closer. By the time you have (as we did) toured the Innoson manufacturing plants, you will realise that right here in Nigeria, is a re-incarnation of a Henry Ford and his types in America, Japan and elsewhere; people who did not obtain fanciful or high-sounding university degrees and yet went on to perform technological feats that changed their immediate environments – and the wider world arena – for good.
When our editorial team was about to depart from the premises of the Innoson Vehicle Manufacturing (IVM) factory in Nnewi, the industrial city of Anambra State, his manager of 25 years standing, Mr Nnamdi Onusogu, warned us not to expect a “giant filling the whole room” when entering into the presence of Chairman of Innoson Group, Chief Innocent Ifediaso Chukwuma (OFR) the Okpu Uzu Ndi Igbo N’Ine, a Nigerian Centenary Award winner and winner of the Vanguard Newspapers MOST INNOVATIVE INDUSTRIALIST OF THE YEAR 2013, among 35 other awards, honours and recognitions.
When we walked into the rather spartan corporate suite lodged in the second floor of the three story head office building in Abakaliki Road, Emene, Enugu we found a rather youngish, rough-hewn man sitting behind a modest, cluttered bureau and staring at us with a blank expression as we came through the doorway. He welcomed us and bid us sit down.
Innocent is a weather-beaten, dark complexioned man with a big mark on his right cheek: a man straight from the streets. Nothing about him gives a hint of his billions and chains of manufacturing businesses. Rather, he looks like a typical factory grunt worker; at best a unit foreman.
The furnishing and the airs around his office illustrate the surroundings of a typical Igbo trader, and these are people who are not much into the glitzy shenanigans of corporate “big boys” of Lagos and Abuja.
When he needs to get into his elements, he brings out his snuff box, puts a tincture in his palm and feeds his nose. He is that kind of “local man”. But when he speaks he has a surprisingly mild, unpretentious voice.
In an interview he granted THISDAY on March 1, 2014, Chukwuma explained why he does not have a “big-town” carriage: “I am from Uru village, Nnewi. I have lived all my life at Nnewi. I do my business at Nnewi.
I have not left Nnewi for any other place. Up till now, Nnewi is still the headquarters of my chains of businesses. I started my business at Nnewi. I grew my business to what it is today at Nnewi. I came to Enugu because of the factory that I sited here. Nnewi remains my main base”.
He had on a pair of well-worn blue shorts and a white polo shirt. When he realised we were going to take photos of him, he excused himself, went into the bathroom and emerged a couple of minutes later, dressed in casual trousers and another dull grey t-shirt.
He sat down and told us he was ready. No long protocols or elaborate niceties, but straight to business.
Innocent started as trader but has exited that area and moved into big-time manufacturing. His Group consists of: Innoson Nigeria Ltd, makers of motorcycles and spare parts; Innoson Tech and Industries Ltd, plastics and household items makers; Innoson Vehicle Manufacturing (IVM), auto makers and General Tyres and Tubes Co. Ltd, Enugu, which is being run by his 26 year-old son, Nonso.
The plastic factory is the largest of its type in Africa, and produces not less than 150 different items, from motor and machinery parts to office and household necessities. It took us two whole hours to complete the tour of the factory, which is sited at the headquarters in Enugu.
It is a major achievement that such a mega-factory is thriving in a country where foreign multinational companies have been shutting down and escaping to neighbouring countries like Ghana due to unfriendly environment in a country that rates among the lowest in the world in doing business.
Innocent was born in 1961 into a humble family. His father, Mr Godwin Chukwuma, was a junior civil servant, while his mother, Mrs Martina Chukwuma, was a housewife. He is the last of six children: four males and two females.
Incidentally, Innocent has as an elder brother who is another ebullient grass-to-grace Nnewi-born-and-made multibillionaire, Chief Gabriel Chukwuma, alias Gabros, the proprietor of Gabros International FC of Nnewi. Gabros, who started as a patent medicine dealer, has also abandoned trading to emerge as one of the big-time players in the hotel and real estate business in the country. He was the third child of their parents.
In the beginning…
It all started in 1978 when Innocent completed his secondary school education. He was certainly not the top-of-the class type.
He was interested in reading engineering at the university. While he waited for his result he decided to report to the medicine store of his elder brother, Gabriel to occupy his time. He immediately discovered that he had a natural talent for trading. When his result came out he was unable to make the grade required for him to go for further education. By then, he had made up his mind to be a businessman, anyway.
His elder brother wanted him to learn how to trade on motorcycle parts. He was given to Chief Romanus Eze Onwuka, who became his Master. Eze Onwuka is otherwise and more popularly known as Rojenny, the founder of the first private sports stadium in Nigeria. Rojenny Stadium is located at Oba, near Onitsha.
Incidentally, it was there that Gabros International FC owned by Innocent’s elder brother has been playing its home matches, thus leading many to think that Rojenny is owned by Gabros International. The truth is that Gabros, Rojenny and Innoson form an Nnewi multibillionaire triangle that germinated and grew on the fertile soil of traditional Igbo entrepreneurship practices fertilised by honesty, trust and mutual reinforcement of the trio.
In 1978 Rojenny, Innocent’s master, was the biggest dealer on motorcycle spare-parts in the Nnewi Market. Innocent was to spend six months with his master, but at the expiry of the tenure, Rojenny came to Gabros and asked him to allow teenager to spend two years with him, offering to set him up in business with his own resources rather than the family looking for the money to do so. Gabros, who knew the value of his younger brother, turned down the offer, assuring Rojenny that the family was quite capable of funding Innocent’s start-up.
In 1979, Innocent returned to his brother, who promptly registered Gabros International to trade on motorcycle spare-parts. Innocent was given the sum of N3,000 to start, and he was allowed free hand to run it.
It was from this money that he rented a shop and bought his first merchandise. By the end of the year 1980, the company took stock and discovered that Gabros International Ltd under Innocent’s able hands was making more than ten times income than the medicine store. Gabros closed the medicine store and together with Innocent, paid full attention to the spare-parts business.
Apart from having a natural talent for trading, Innocent started early in his career to adopt the strategy of buying in bulk and selling with minimal profit. He also went along with the old saying: ‘Honesty is the Best Policy”. This enabled him to win the trust and support of his suppliers on the one hand and amass a large number of customers on the other.
Unlike other traders, especially the hungry youth in the market, Innocent refused to cut corners. Rojenny became so fascinated by Innocent’s sense of integrity that he told a gathering of young traders in Nnewi market way back in 1980: “This boy, innocent, will be richer than all of you here one day soon!”
When our team told Innoson we would like to interview Rojenny, he immediately switched on his old and inexpensive Nokia phone and Rojenny was on the line. Innoson spoke in Igbo, the phone on speaker.
 “Heei!” Rojenny hailed from Nnewi, ““Okpu uzu gburuburu!” (Igbo term for technology giant). Innocent announced: 
A group of journalists are interviewing me. I am granting them a big interview that will go out to the whole world. When I told them about you they said they want to interview you”.
“Very good”, said Rojenny.
“You can now speak with them sir. The speaker is on”.
Interview was conducted in Igbo. “Chief, ndewo (greetings). We are from Vanguard Newspapers. We gave Chief Innoson an award …”
“I will tell you everything. I will tell you the secret behind his success. He is the most honest person I have ever met in my life. And he is going with my blessing o! I am the one that nominated him as Okpu uzu Ndi Igbo”
You know there is already Okpu uzu of Abiriba, Chief Onwuka Kalu.
“No, this one is Okpu Uzu Ndi Igbo N’ine. All Igbos worldwide. He has already been installed as Okpu Uzu Ndi Igbo N’ine. I first knew Innocent through his honesty and intelligence. Among the hundreds of other young boys who were into trading, I was like their godfather.
I was the one that copied Japanese technology through Taiwan manufacturers and brought it into the country. And I was the highest importer. When he comes to me he will tell me the honest prices of the spare-parts.
When I ask other people the prices they were selling to retailers they will undercut the price and tell me lies to maximise profit while I will sell at a loss. But innocent will tell me the true price. I used to be shocked at his honesty. He was the only one telling me the truth, and the truth was shocking me to my marrow. And even at that he will buy about 25 to 30 per cent of my entire stock.
And he will be selling almost at the price of an importer. The other people will undercut the price, buy low and sell at cutthroat prices to the final consumers. And I told not only him but the others also that this boy will be the richest among them. I am happy that my prediction has come true in my lifetime.
And even today, the wealth has only started, yet he is still very humble, very honest. The volume of money he has made has not entered his head like other Igbo men. He is humble like me, his Master, the Ogilisi Igbo. Ogilisi is a tree that is respected and valued in Igboland. The boy is too much. He is too much.”
That was in 1981. When his brother, Gabriel, decided to get married a decision was made that Innocent should start his own business and become independent. Gabros gave him N20,000 to start. Being the mainstay of Gabros International, was this amount okay with him?
“I was quite okay with money”, Innocent said. “Even if he gave me less than that. I had made my own money and I knew the business very well.
I could have coped very well with anything. I then registered Innoson Nigeria Ltd. I believe even now, in putting a small profit margin and selling in large quantities. That is why I always have many customers. People know me as someone who uses little profit to sell; so many customers want to buy from me”.
At every juncture that Innoson broke new grounds, he was always led to it by necessity. The old sayings that necessity is the mother of invention, and that in every crisis there is opportunity fit his circumstances like a glove.
For instance, in 1984 when the military intervened and introduced an economic regime that led to scarcity of all categories of goods, many companies closed down. Leventis and other companies were no longer able to supply goods and Innocent had to look for greener pasture in Asia.
He went to Taiwan and applied the same business principles he had used to win over Rojenny in Nigeria: honesty as the best policy. His Taiwan partners started giving him credit sales. The banks in Nigeria started scrambling to loan him money because he never defaulted and his business was booming.
But the prices of motorcycles, just like cars, kept climbing as a result of the deteriorating value of the Naira and other unfavourable economic policies of successive military governments. Businesses were suffering. Innocent started looking for ways of bringing down the cost of motorcycles to increase sales.
The next decision he took ultimately led to the establishment of two mega-companies that shot him to limelight: the Innoson Vehicle Manufacturing (IVM) Nnewi and Innoson Tech and Industries, Enugu, the largest plastic manufacturing plant in Africa. He tells the story himself:
“As time went on, most machines that were brought in from Japan became very expensive. I was looking for ways of bringing down the prices of motorcycles and their spare parts. So I went to China and found out that it was cheaper for me.
I found out that the motorcycles from Leventis were expensive because they were only able to pack forty units into a 40-foot container. Because of the experience I had in motorcycle spare parts, I went there and asked them to strip it down to pieces.
That way I was able to pack over 200 units of motorcycles into the same 40-foot container, while others were packing 30, forty pieces. I will bring the spare parts down here and couple them manually. Because of my experience in motorcycles I found it very easy.
All I had to do was hire some boys and mechanics and I taught them how to couple them back. That time (around 1987) they were selling a single unit of motorcycles for N150,000. I was the first person that brought Jingcheng in NigeriaJingcheng is Suzuki equivalent from China Jiachi is Yamaha equivalent, nothing different.
“Later I decided to brand my motorcycles Innoson. I coupled them manually and sold them for N70,000 to N80,000. THE FIRST ONE I BROUGHT TOOK ME ABOUT THREE MONTHS TO SELL BECAUSE PEOPLE WERE NOT SURE OF THE QUALITY OF MY BRANDS.
When I brought my second order from China I sold the five containers consisting of over a thousand units of motorcycles within one month. I went back, bought ten containers. Before they arrived people had paid in advance and everything was sold even before the containers arrived. People waited for their machines to be coupled to take them away.
There was a time I sold 200 containers of motorcycles in one month that is over 40,000 units. Before people discovered what I was doing and started doing the same thing, I had enjoyed the business for three years. At that time, old tokunbo was about N90,000. I brought brand new and sold for N70,000. And the ones they were selling at Boulos was well over N100,000.
Forcing tokunbo motorcycles out of Nigeria
To make my own cost to come down more, I moved. I looked at a motorcycle and realised that there is a lot of plastic on the body of a motorcycle. I set up a plastic factory. I decided to produce all the plastic components in my factories so that more units of the spare parts can go into a container. With the plastic components, we were packing about 210 units of motorcycles into a container.
But when the plastics were removed they were packing about 240, 250 units. It made the prices of my brand to come down more, so I was still in control of the market. The unit price of motorcycles came down to N60,000. Once we brought the price of a brand new motorcycle to N60,000, tokunbo motorcycle goes from Nigeria”. That was in 2002.
At this point, adversity started setting in. Everybody, including the Indians in Nigeria, seemed to be involved in the motorcycle business. Worst of all, state governments started banning commercial motorcycles as a means of urban transit due to the involvement of okada riders in heinous crimes and high fatalities. The future of the business became bleak.
“That was when I decided to go into motor manufacturing”, said Innoson. “I did not go into motors overnight. It took me at least seven years before I moved into it. I looked at motor and I decided that they can ban motorcycles but no one will ban motor. I travelled overseas more than six times to study and come up about how to produce motor here in Nigeria. I visited motor factories in America, Japan, Taiwan and China. I am a very amiable customer, and so, I was allowed to visit these factories and I was asking questions though they did not know what I had in my mind.
They showed me what they wanted to show me and that was enough for me to know how to start. I decided we can do it in Nigeria, unlike before when I thought it cannot be done here. I found that that most of the things they do there which makes the whole thing look difficult or impossible can be done here if you adopt a different strategy.
For example, in America after finishing the production of the body you put it on a trolley and push it to another section for another stage of work. But in America and Japan they will just press a button and it will go on its own to the next section. That is the difference between my factories and anywhere in the world”.
While we toured the IVM plant in Nnewi, we were a little dismayed by the fact that many of the vehicle manufacturing processes were still rather manual. The impression created of vehicle manufacturing is that of a highly automated and mechanised process. Asked if he is hoping to get to that level of automation one day, Innoson waxed philosophical and socialist.
“I don’t think we need to do automatic (automation) here because people need to work. Any work that a person can do well should be given to a human being, not a machine. A human being has family to feed and clothe but a machine has no family, no problem to solve except to do its work. All we will do as we go on is to employ more people when we get bigger.
That does not mean that we will sacrifice efficiency in any way. We will give work to the people wherever we can. I am advising people in Nigeria not to do too much automatic. If they do too much automatic they will not employ people.
The major need of this country is to give people something doing. It gives me joy when I see some people that don’t have job and I give them the opportunity to have work. I know that a businessman always wants to reduce cost. Reducing cost is good. But there are some costs I don’t want to reduce. There are certain things we must give a human being to do. People are looking for work. They are begging you for work.
“You have work but you decide to give to a machine. I don’t want to do that. The land where I built the motor factory in Nnewi was given to me free by the community just to make sure that I employ people.
Now if I decide to use automatic where will the people work? In fact, some of our employees when they come here they learn from working in our factory and go out to start doing something of their own. Somebody who was working in my factory before is now supplying me with certain items. He is supplying me boot for bigger buses. Instead of me to be doing it in this factory he produces and supplies based on our specification.
It gives me joy to see such a thing. He learned it from me and went out to fabricate it and supply me. So you have to consider the bottom-line and the people. You cannot sacrifice the people on the altar of bottom-line, but you must also operate efficiently and profitably, giving the society value. My manager in Nnewi, Nnamdi Onusogu, has worked with me for 24 years…”
But we saw that he was using a Peugeot car rather than Innoson product?
“He has been using it and the car is still good. When it becomes old he will pick up an Innoson car. He doesn’t have to throw away the car now.
The car is older than the factory. When the car is old enough we will give him Innoson. Some of our workers are using Innoson. My managers in Abuja and Lagos and here are using Innoson. I am using two Innoson; a pick-up and one SUV”.
But you shouldn’t be riding any other car?
“Why? Am I in a prison? I use any car I like because I have the money. I can afford to buy any car. But I have an Innoson SUV to prove that it is one of the best in the world. I know what people want in SUV and I added a few extras to give Innoson SUV an advantage. I commissioned a German engineer to design it. It is powered by Mitsubishi engine”.
At the Nnewi plant we saw all types of automobiles but no sedans or cars. When we pointed this out, he said cars would start rolling out of the plant from next month (April 2014).
“I am working to have a brand new car sold in Nigeria for about one million or a bit more. It will be a little more than one million when we start but as time goes on it will come down. A car of about the calibre of Toyota Corolla should be less than two million when we start, and the quality will not be anything less”.
His dream is that as soon as the cars start tumbling out of the factory, he will push towards making second hand vehicles (popularly called tokunbo cars) unviable in Nigeria. “You see how tokunbo motorcycle go? Is anybody talking about it anymore?
The only thing it will take for tokunbo car to go from Nigeria is price. Make it cheap and affordable; make the spare-parts available, and tokunbo WILL GO. Who will like to buy an old car when he or she can spend less and by brand new? I must make new one to be cheap so that tokunbo will go in the nearest future. As from April I will flood the market with Innoson cars at cheaper price”.
Luck is on his side because the Federal Government has become very interested in getting vehicles made locally in Nigeria. In fact, President Goodluck Jonathan commissioned the Nnewi motor plant and proceeded to roll out a new national Automotive Policy.
Governments at the federal and state levels are the greatest customers of Innoson Motors, and Chief Innocent is delighted. He would never forget former Governor Peter Obi’s support, which has also drawn patronage from other states such as Delta, Ekiti, Imo and Enugu.
Innocent Chukwuma cannot understand why any young person should sit at home and complain about unemployment.
“Young people should never waste their youth. I never wasted my own. There is work everywhere in Nigeria. The only problem is that most young people don’t like to do “dirty work” yet it is dirty work that gives money. Most of the graduates are not employable. Majority of them have the wrong mentality.
They want to work in banks, oil companies or to become politicians and get rich overnight. There is a lot of job opportunities in farming, but how many young people want to become farmers? The best way to become rich is to go and become a farmer.
“All quick money politicians are making will not last. Young people must use their time as youth to work and build their future”.

WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH MEN THESE DAYS? : Man dies in fight with neighbour over wife ... VanguardNews

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A 50-year-old man, Sunday Orochendo, has been arrested by the police in Lagos State for allegedly killing his neighbour, Rafel Ngbobile, 60, during a fight.
Vanguard gathered that the incident which occurred on Saturday, November 1, at their 30, Magbesa Street residence in Kirikiri Town, Lagos, started when the deceased had a quarrel with the suspect’s wife over a yet-to-be ascertained reason.
Sources disclosed that the wife of the suspect, who is currently on the run, had contacted her husband, who was not at home at the time of the quarrel, on phone and reported the matter to him.
It was gathered that the husband, on his return, confronted the deceased and an argument ensued between both men.
An eyewitness further disclosed that the argument soon degenerated into a fight and Orochendo was alleged to have pushed Ngbobile, who slumped and died.
The eyewitness added that the suspect‘s wife reportedly fled with her children, when she learned of Ngbobile’s death.
Lagos State Police Command spokesman, Ken Nwosu, while confirming the report, said policemen from Kirikiri Police Division had apprehended Orochendo, while Ngbobile was taken to a private hospital, where he was confirmed dead.
Nwosu added that the case had been transferred to the Homicide section at the State Criminal Investigations Department, SCID, Panti, Yaba, Lagos, for further investigations.

IN THE FACE OF RECENT TRAGIC REVERSALS IN OUR WAR AGAINST TERROR : Badeh’s reaction ... VanguardNews

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On Tuesday, the Chief of Defence Staff, CDS, Air   Marshal Alex Badeh, announced that he accepted full responsibility for the Nigerian Army’s failure to effectively deal with Boko Haram insurgents in the North East.
Speaking to State House correspondents in Abuja, Badeh – whose Adamawa State hometown has been overrun by rampaging thugs – calmly informed his audience that he feels equally pained by all military setbacks and terrorist outrages, whether they take place on his native turf or on other peoples’.
I used to be part of the crowd that regards the CDS as utterly useless for allowing his ancestral terrain to be hijacked. But his humble and laudable willingness to take full responsibility for every defeat has really impressed me.
Nigerian dignitaries are happy to take credit for successes and enjoy the perks of their powerful jobs. But most flatly refuse to admit that the buck stops on their desks when things go horribly wrong; and it is refreshing to encounter an officer and gentleman who has the guts to stand up and say “OK, blame me.”
Capture of hometown
And I have, on reflection, concluded that Badeh is right to take the view that the capture of his hometown, though no doubt immensely painful on a personal level, is NOT more significant than the capture of anyone else’s hometown.
Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air Marshal Alex Badeh
Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air Marshal Alex Badeh
In this country, we expect Big Men and Big Women to regard the protection and promotion of their backyards as a crucial priority. And if they don’t display a strong commitment to such aggressive favouritism, we mock or insult them.
Badeh deserves to be hailed for his civilized, courageous and mature objectivity, which is very rare within a Naija context. BUT his fighters are not fulfilling their potential and he still has a lot of awkward questions to answer.
Even in the relatively sophisticated Western World, governments find it extremely difficult to destroy guerrilla movements.
Americans have been battling with Al Quaeda and its similarly toxic global offshoots for ages. The British and Spanish took forever to quell the deadly Irish Republicans, IRA, and dangerous Basque Separatists, ETA; and it really annoys me when Jonathan administration critics breezily carry on as if totally trouncing Boko Haram is an easy-peasy task that can be achieved overnight.
However, Jonathan, Badeh and their subordinates really need to up their games and tackle this tough challenge more dynamically.
I don’t believe cynical conspiracy theorists who keep insisting that Boko Haram is being secretly sponsored by the authorities for murky reasons that are linked to the 2015 election. My view of Boko Haram is that it is a criminal enterprise that has a life of its own and cannot be controlled by anyone and must be ruthlessly crushed at the earliest opportunity.
However, the sad fact still remains that too many negative stories about the Army and its political backers are doing the rounds at the moment.
The other day, I was watching an international TV news channel. The government had recently announced that it had come to a ceasefire agreement with Boko Haram and would soon return the missing Chibok girls to their parents; but the alleged ceasefire had embarrassingly collapsed within hours and the foreign report described Jonathan as “naïve at best”.
Chai!  Time to get more serious and claw back some credibility on this front.
Views from my Ogoni brethren
Here are some reactions to some of my recent comments. They were sent to me from an online discussion forum for Ogonis in Nigeria and the Diaspora.
Dear all, there has been in the last 16 years a vast, almost unbridgeable governance deficit and I do not think after six years of President Goodluck Jonathan’ stewardship that he possesses the attributes required to bridge this gap or run a diverse and complex nation like Nigeria.
He lacks the moral sagacity, the ability to aggregate our aspirations and evolve a visionary goal that would inspire us all as a people to join him in lifting this country to a position of international respectability just as the Chinese, Indians, Singaporeans and even the South Africans have done.
On the other hand Buhari has shown by reason of his personal discipline and his refusal to acquiesce to the general propensity for those in leadership positions to loot our common wealth,  we could entrust or more appropriately employ him with our votes to provide the solutions to the myriad of problems we deal with daily. I do not think that he necessarily needs to outline full ideas on how he will deal the corruption monstrosity.
He only needs to assure us that both EFCC and ICPC would function without let or hindrance. The EFCC law is amongst the most forward looking globally. These institutions are comatose right now because their heads are constantly studying the body language of the president before deciding whether to act or not.
In essence what is required going forward are strong institutions that are allowed to perform their tasks without having to look over their shoulders. These institutions should be underpinned by persons of impeccable character.
If they fail to live up to expectations, they fail to proffer solutions or the solutions they put forward do not achieved our goals we should be at liberty to sack them with our votes when the time comes. Until we get into the rhythm of holding those who beg to apply as leaders to find workable solutions to our national malaise, we will keep being punished with the dregs of society as leaders. Cheers
Between President Jonathan and Gen Buhari
Corruption is really one of the greatest problems of this country, and anyone who can be courageous to minimise it to a bearable level would get our support. The greatest challenge President Jonathan faces is that he is sandwiched by patently corrupt folks, though he is caught in the web too.
Buhari like the President is also sandwiched by mindless treasury looters too, though comparatively, he is  better than President Jonathan in terms of corruption complicity. If Buhari emerges as president of Nigeria, is he going to do the  selective anti-corruption war  like what Jonathan  is doing ?
Buhari needs to outline his anti-corruption strategies rather than sloganeering anti-corruption as a party campaign tactics.  We need to think around this.
No to former heads of stateDear all,
It is my personal opinion that no former Military Headof State should rule Nigeria again, no matter where they come from, South or North.
If a former Military Head of State could not transform Nigeria when he had an absolute power of dictatorship, where will the magic come from in a civilian government with a National Assembly in place?
I did not expect anything  different from “OBJ” when he first indicated interest for the office of the president. After two terms Obasanjo proved to skeptics like me that  former Heads of State have nothing new to offer.
Anyone agitating for a former Military Head of State to come back and be president of Nigeria is a blind follower or in the words of Fela,  a “zombie.” It is not the birth right of former military Heads of State of Nigeria to come back and rule the country one after another.

A BEAUTY TO BEHOLD ... KUDOS TO THE GOVT AND PEOPLE OF AKWA IBOM STATE : President Jonathan commissions Ak/Ibom Int’l Stadium ... VanguardNews

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There is a big buzz in the South –South region of Nigeria as three Heads of Governments from across the West African sub –continent gather for the elaborate commissioning of one of the most magnificent sporting infrastructure in Africa.
President Goodluck Jonathan, GCFR will lead Ghanaian leader, Dr. John Dramani Mahama and Ivorian Head of State, Dr. Alassane Ouattara to the stately Akwa Ibom International Stadium, Uyo this evening, with Governor Godswill Obot Akpabio, CON, as Chief Host.
MAGNIFICIENT: The 30,000 capacity Akwa Ibom International Stadium ready for commissioning today.
MAGNIFICIENT: The 30,000 capacity Akwa Ibom International Stadium ready for commissioning today.
Akpabio is showcasing the majestic facility, which has already been approved by the Confederation of African Football for the crucial 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier between Nigeria and South Africa on November 19, as one of the key points of his uncommon transformation of the oil –rich State.
Apart from Presidents Jonathan, Mahama and Ouattara, a number of Governors from across Nigeria are expected, while President of Nigeria Football Federation, Mr. Amaju Melvin Pinnick and some Executive Committee members and Management staff arrived in Uyo on Thursday evening.
The 30,000 – capacity venue, with a bullet –proof State Box that has 70 seats, has has been described by the Vice President of Ghana Football Association, Mr. Fred Crentsil (who was sent by CAF to inspect the venue) as being “among the best you can find anywhere in the world.”
The high point of the commissioning is an international friendly match between the Home –based Senior National Team of Nigeria, Super Eagles B, and the U-23 National Team of Ghana, nicknamed Black Meteors.
Friday’s match, and the atmosphere, will provide the perfect tenor for the 2015 Cup of Nations qualifier between the Super Eagles and the Bafana Bafana in less than a fortnight.
Facilities have been stretched thin in the dainty city of Uyo but the party must go on, and on Thursday, FIFA and CAF Match Commissioner, Etubom Paul Bassey, who is coordinating various aspects of the programme, assured that all arrangements have been concluded for a hitch –free event.

INSIDE FASHOLA'S LAGOS STATE? : Lagos secondary school where students sit on floor, windows to receive lectures ... VanguardNews

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IN 2009, when Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos State obtained a whooping $90 million (N13.5 billion) World Bank Education Loan, to fund teaching and learning infrastructure under the State‘s Eko Secondary Education Project, many a Lagosians thought the era where pupils and students across the public schools in the state sit on bare floor, tyres, broken furniture or even windows is now a thing of the past.
But this is not yet so, own to gory experiences currently being witnessed especially by the JSS1 and JSS2 students at the Ajeromi Ifelodun Secondary School, AIJSS (alias Sinclair), in the popular ghetto city, Ajegunle.
At the school, sited in the heart of the Ajeromi/Ifelodun Local Government Area of the state, investigations by South West Voice reveals that despite the over 52, 532 furniture, said to be procured by the state government between 2009 and 2013, several schools in the state, including AIJSS, annually, compel parents whose children get admitted into JSS1, to pay N2, 000 for the provision of furniture (chairs and desks).
Provision of furniture
Parents who failed to pay the said amount have their children sit on bare floor, tyres, broken furniture, classroom windows, or even stand during lessons.
Recall that in December 2013, the Socio Economic Rights and Accountability Project, SERAP had sought the order of the Federal High Court, Lagos to direct the state government to release information on its spending of the loan.
*Over-crowded class in the school
*Over-crowded class in the school
SERAP also asked the court to demand details of the projects executed with the loan in the 667 schools across the state in line with the Freedom of Information Act.
52, 532 furniture in 4 years
Fashola, had on June 23, 2014, while launching a book entitled “Eko Project: A Legacy of Excellence,”in Lagos, explained that there was nothing to hide as the funds had been deployed judiciously.
He affirmed that the loan, which was obtained to fund teaching and learning infrastructure under the State‘s Eko Secondary Education Project, was achieving its purpose as it had significantly improved students’ performance.
In the same vein, Ms. Ronke Azeez, Special Adviser to the Governor on Eko Project, in her own explanation, said the $90 million loan provided direct funding to schools between 2009 and 2013.
Among other things, Azeez who said that the government spent some of the funds on 7,786 white boards, 20,592 mathematical sets, 4,668 teaching modules and procurement of 52, 532 furniture, boasted that the World Bank had given the state a pass mark on the funds utilisation and rated the Eko project as highly satisfactory.
However, despite the state government’s defences, when South West Voice visited the Ajeromi Ifelodun Secondary School, Monday, students in JSS1 and JSS2 were seen sitting on bare floor, tyres, broken furniture and classroom windows receiving lessons, even as others were seen standing during lessons.
Parents, students lament
Lamenting the situation, a parent who pleaded not to be mentioned, whose daughter just got admitted into JSS1 said “All of us whose children just got admitted into JSS1 were asked to pay N2, 000 each for the procurement of furniture for our children to sit. I am hesitant in paying the money to the school management, because of my past experience last year.
Procurement of chairs and desks
*Students sitting on the school’s window
*Students sitting on the school’s window
“Last year, when my eldest child, got admitted into Awodi-Ora Secondary School, parents were asked to pay the same N2, 000 for procurement of chairs and desks. After months of payment, my son and other students didn’t get the furniture on time. It took several months before they got them.
“You had to see my son, each time he returns after school hours, his uniforms were always very dirty, because they were sitting on the bare floor. It’s so horrible,” she said.
Another parent, Mr. Okafor, whose son just got admitted into JSS1 expressed displeasure that the state government’s claims to operate free-education, but fails to provide chairs and desks for students to sit.
His words: “I thought the Lagos state government operates free-education, but when I came here to register my son, we were asked to pay N2, 000 each for the procurement of chairs and desks. I was skeptical of the immediate procurement of this furniture, so I had to look for two other parents that contributed N2, 000 each, and we found a carpenter that made a chair and desk for our three wards.
“Now, they have a seat to sit during lessons. But I am unhappy that when you visit their classroom, there are a lot of other students who don’t have chairs and desks to sit, but resort to sitting on the floor, tyres and even the windows. It is worrisome and I hope the state government can urgently address this situation.
According to John, one of the students in JSS1, “Governor Babatunde Fashola should please come to our aid. It is very difficult for us to see the blackboard during lessons, because we sit on broken furniture placed on tyres at the back.”
Confidence, a JSS1 student caught sitting on the window while lessons were on said: “We were asked to pay N2, 000 for the procurement of chairs and desks on resumption. But because my parents cannot afford the levy, that is why I am sitting on the window.”
Luckily for Ifeoluwa, the parents were able to join two other parents to procure a chair and desk for she and her friends. She told South West Voice that “I feel uncomfortable with the overcrowded situation of my classroom. Most times, we are five students on a sit instead of the usual three, because other students whose parents can’t afford to procure chairs and desks for them join us. I and my friends who are the original owners of the chair and desk, can’t send them away, because it is not their fault, but that of government.”
Overcrowding
*Students sitting on tyres
*Students sitting on tyres
*Students sitting on tyres
*Students sitting on tyres
The Principal of the Junior School (name withheld), who was said to be ill and could not speak to the press, directed our correspondent to another senior male teacher, who attested that the parents were asked to pay N2, 000 in order to complement the efforts of the state government in the provision of chairs for the student.
The teacher who pleaded anonymity said: “It has not been easy for us the teachers in our day-to-day routine of teaching these massive number of students. Own to the fact that the state government operates a free education, we have discovered that so many parents are now withdrawing their children from private schools and they are now swarming the public schools. This has brought about overcrowding in public schools, including our school.
“So, because of this overcrowding situation, the available furniture is no longer enough for the students, that is why you see some of them sitting on the floor, broken furniture, tyres and even on the windows.
“Government earlier this year, sent chairs and desks to our school, but they are still not enough. I don’t see anything wrong in parents complementing government’s efforts because government cannot do everything,” he affirmed.
Complementing government’s efforts
Also reacting, the Education Secretary, Ajeromi/Ifelodun LGA, Adewale Adeogun said: “We are aware of the inadequate furniture in the school, because of the high number of students flocking the school, as well as other public primary and secondary schools in the state, own to the state government’s free education policy. However, as for the N2, 000 payment by parents, it may not be untrue, as the Parents Forum (PTA) of the school, may have decided that every parents with new intake should pay the levy, in order to complement government’s efforts in the procurement of chairs and desks to easy learning.”
Meanwhile, efforts to speak to the Lagos State Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Olayinka Oladunjoye, as at the time of filing this report proved abortive, as calls to her phone was not connecting.

SO THIS IS THE BEST BADEH AND JONATHAN CAN COME UP WITH IN TIMES LIKE THIS? : Riot Police Lead Nigerian Troops To Liberate Badeh’s Hometown ... LeadershipNews

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Following the failure of Nigerian troops to reclaim territories captured by Boko Haram insurgents, a mobile police unit, known as Operation Guerrilla, has been drafted to lead Nigerian troops to liberate Mubi, the hometown of the Chief of Defence Staff Alex Bade, from the hands of the insurgents.

LEADERSHIP FRIDAY learnt that the Police Mobile Force (PMF) special anti-terrorist unit, which was deployed to rout the insurgents since Wednesday, had commenced action and had reached Marraba Mubi Junction, about 18 kilometres from Mubi town.

However, the Nigerian troops who are backing the police unit led by a colonel, according to reports, are now at Pella Junction, about 80 kilometres away from Mubi.

Residents of the area have expressed happiness with the development as they said it may lead to the end of their trauma occasioned by the dismal performance of Nigerian Troops who always flee whenever insurgents struck leading to the fall of many towns and villages.

Two residents of Marraba Mubi, Mr Yohanna Gambo and Mallam Sanda Zira, said they saw a detachment of policemen keeping vigil at the junction leading to Mubi and Michika local governments.

“We were surprised to see a handful of mobile policemen because since the fall of Mubi, we never saw a security man,” they said.

Efforts to contact the public relations officer of the Adamawa Police Command, DSP Othman Abubakar, were unsuccessful at the time of filing this reports as calls directed to his mobile phone were unanswered.

But a reliable source at the police command confirmed that the special mobile police unit had been drafted to the area.

Nigeria army releases 42 Boko Haram suspects

Some 42 suspected members of the Boko Haram sect arrested at various periods in the last three years within Borno State were yesterday freed after investigations cleared them of involvement in the activities of the insurgent group.

Among those released were three foreign nationals from Chad, Cameroon and Burkina Faso.

According to the deputy director, defence information, Col Sani Usman, the 42 persons were arrested alongside other members of Boko Haram terrorists during various military raids and were later absolved of all complicity with the terrorists after ‘thorough investigations’.

“Over time, in the course of Nigeria army’s fight against terrorism, some suspected Boko Haram terrorists were arrested and investigated and some of them have been duly cleared of all complicity with the terrorists,” said Col Usman.

16 Civilians, Dozens of Boko Haram Members Killed in Borno Shootout

At least 16 civilians were confirmed dead in Malumfatori town of Borno State yesterday when soldiers and Boko Haram terrorists engaged in fierce battle to keep control of the town which last week fell into the hands of the insurgents, security sources and witnesses said.

According to eyewitnesses, “The fight started around 5pm with the sound of machine guns and the exchange lasted till around 6am today (Wednesday)”.

Modu Bukar, a trader in Malumfatori, told journalists: “Personally, I counted 16 dead bodies of our people but the number of the terrorists killed is countless. Dozens of them were killed by both ground troops and by air raids.”

Boko Haram May Have International Affiliation – Atiku

Former vice president and presidential aspirant under the All Progressives Congress (APC), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, has called on the federal government to seek international intervention to end the Boko Haram insurgency

Abubakar who spoke to journalists, yesterday, urged President Jonathan not to cede any part of Nigeria to Boko Haram insurgents, saying it had never happened in the country’s history.

“The issue is not about insults or attacking people; the issue is that you are the first in the history of Nigeria to lose territories. Nigeria is shrinking; it’s becoming smaller. Go and redeem your record. Are you a competent government? Are you safeguarding the territorial integrity of the country? Boko Haram might have international affiliations; why don’t we allow the world to come and help us?” Abubakar asked.

JTF kills 19 in Yobe

Meanwhile, following the Potiskum Bomb Blast attack that killed 30 people mostly women and children during the annual Ashura of the Islamic Movement, the military Joint Task Force (JTF) in Yobe state have killed 19 people who they suspected to be Boko Haram sect members in Potiskum Local Government Area of the state.

A source from the residents of Damboa ward, Layin Masco in Potiskum, confirm to Friday Leadership that the troops of the Joint Special Operation with the Department of State Security Service (DSSS) had cordoned the area and searched houses from where about 30 suspects were whisked off.

However, even though some of the arrested suspects were released, Malam Bukar Abubakar, a resident said that the military just killed innocent people without making a proper investigation. According to him “this is a very sad story, let me tell you the truth, the Nigerian military are just killing people anyhow, these people are not Boko Haram, we have been living with them for years without any problem”.

When contacted, the Yobe state Police Commissioner, Marcus Danladi said that he would not say anything but only confirm the incident. Pressed further, he said, “I am in an emergency meeting but I will get back to you when I am through”.

WHERE IS MANKIND HEADED? : STRANGE!! Mother Plans TO Marry Her Son After Getting Pregnant For HIM ... NgEntertainment

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The world is coming to an end.... A 40 year old mother is ready to marry her 23 year old son,Farai Mbereko. It is alleged that she is already six months pregnant and thinks it is best she is married to her son instead of getting married to her late husband’s brother.

She has been charged to a village court, where it was revealed that this incest began three years back, she said

“Look, I strove alone to send my son to school and no one helped me. Now you see that my son is working and you accuse me of doing something wrong. Let me enjoy the products of my sweat.”

Farai said:

“I know my father died before he finished paying the bride price and I am prepared to pay it off. It is better to publicise what is happening because people should know that I am the one who made my mother pregnant.Otherwise they will accuse her of promiscuity.”

They were told to stop the affair but the two of them have escaped to an unknown destination.

SCOAN TRAGEDY ... A NIGERIAN WONDER UNRAVELLING : Synagogue Building Collapse: Police Suggest Sabotage ... InformationNigeria

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The Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Ikotun Police Station, CSP Haruna Alaba has told the Coroner’s Inquest set up to investigate the circumstances surrounding the collapse of a guest house at the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN), on September 12 that there is possibility of sabotage.
“One of the things being looked into is the possibility of sabotage, structure defect and security concern, we are considering every issue raised,” said Alaba, who stated that investigation into the collapsed building is still on at the State CID, Yaba area of Lagos.
“The police is investigating the possibility of the aircraft having anything to do with the collapsed building. I never at any time requested for the plan of the building.
“My investigation has not gotten to stage of getting name and contact of the contractor, so I never at any time requested for it. I did not request for the original CCTV footage of the incident either. Nobody complained to us about the aircraft hovering. Nobody is a complainant and nobody was arrested,” CSP Alaba said.
Further in his testimony, the DPO told the Inquest that policemen were at the collapse site to provide an enabling environment for rescuers.
“On getting to the scene of the collapsed building some minutes after the incident, I met rescue operations already on while policemen on duty around the area cordoned off the area to ward off suspected hoodlums from hijacking the situation.
“Most of the things said by the emergency rescuers were not true. I know that the enabling environment was provided for LASEMA and NEMA. What they are saying is not true. I allowed them to work freely at the site. The people we allowed in were officials of government agencies. NEMA and LASEMA and they never complained to the police that members of the church and the crowd prevented them from carrying out rescue operation.
“I will be surprised to hear that they (NEMA and LASEMA) were prevented from working on the first day. The church members started the operation but I cannot say the extent at which NEMA or LASEMA took charge. Church members crawled under rubble to bring out people trapped,“ the witness said.
The Coroner’s Inquest was adjourned till November 19 for continuation of police evidence while Prophet T.B. Joshua is expected to appear on November 20.

JISOS! JISOS!! JISOS!!! THINGS ARE HAPPENING O: PHOTOS OF DEAD MERMAID WASHED UP ASHORE ... Signs of the Times,

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A dead Mermaid has been washed ashore in Benin Republic. The dead Mermaid was spotted by people having fun in the beach during a sunny afternoon.
Below are some photos of the dead Mermaid. For those who still find it hard to believe in the existence of creatures like this, you can take a good look at the images for yourself.
Na wa o. See Mammy Water o

Photos of dead Mermaid

Dead Mermaid washed up in Beach ashore in Benin Republic
Dead Mermaid washed up in Beach ashore in Benin Republic
photo of Mermaid
Dead Mermaid washed up in Beach ashore in Benin Republic

IN JONATHAN'S NIGERIA : Azare Bank Attack: Female Suicide Bomber Queued With Us – Victims ... LeadershipNews

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Survivors of yesterday’s bomb blast at a branch of a first generation bank in Azare town, Bauchi State have revealed that a female suicide bomber, dressed in long flowing garments, who had queued up with them while they were waiting to make cash withdrawals from the bank, allegedly detonated the bomb which killed about 20 people and injured over 37 people, mainly civil servants.
The bank building where the bomb explosion occurred had all its glass windows shattered just as all banks in the town suspended operations and hurriedly closed following the incident.
According to witnesses and survivors, the bomb explosion occurred at about 10am yesterday, while they were in the bank premises. Two women were said to be among those who died.
A resident of Azare town who craved anonymity, said most of the victims were civil servants from within Azare and others from Shira and Giade, who were in the bank to withdraw their salaries.
A staff of the bank who spoke to LEADERSHIP Weekend on condition of anonymity, said the female suicide bomber joined other unsuspecting customers on the queue and it was while she was in their midst that the bomb exploded. He said he counted 20 dead bodies, including that of the bomber; whose body he said was divided into two.
According to him, the suicide bomber’s head was found across the road, near a suya spot.
He also disclosed that among those who died was a student of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, who was in the bank to make withdrawals.
Speaking to LEADERSHIP Weekend from his bed at the Federal Medical Centre, Azare, a student of the College of Education Azare, Sunday Samaila, said he was at the bank to withdraw money from the bank’s ATM when the explosion occurred.
“I was in the bank to make withdrawals when the blast occurred. We were on the queue waiting to withdraw money from the ATM, when the attack occurred. I just heard a loud sound of an explosion but did not know precisely what happened. I had not even made the withdrawal,” he said.
A driver from Dambam, Abdullahi Suleiman, 25, also told LEADERSHIP Weekend that he had gone to the bank to withdraw cash from the ATM when the explosion occurred.
“I came to the bank to withdraw money and then joined the queue with others standing by the ATM in front of the bank. Minutes after I joined the queue, I heard a loud explosion and there was commotion and confusion everywhere. I was flung by the force of the blast and landed heavily against a wall. I saw blood all over my body; I was confused and did not know what to do until help came and we were evacuated to the hospital here,” he narrated.
He lamented that despite the hardship Nigerians especially those in the northern part of the country were going through as a result of insecurity, there appeared to be no end in sight as the government seemed to be overwhelmed.
“I went to the bank in company of my cousin to withdraw money and when we got there, there was a long queue of customers waiting to carryout transactions. I was given number 200 and as we were waiting, the explosion suddenly occurred,” another survivor, Kabiru Aminu, told LEADERSHIP Weekend.
Meanwhile, the chief medical director of the hospital, Dr. Abdullahi Ibrahim, told LEADERSHIP Weekend at the hospital that 14 dead bodies and 37 injured persons were brought to the hospital, including a little girl of about two-years-old who was also injured.
He said 16 of the victims were still on admission while others with more severe injuries had been referred to Malam Aminu Kano University Teaching Hospital.
Confirming the incident yesterday, spokesman of the state police command, DSP Haruna Mohammed, however said only seven persons died while another 10 were injured in the attack.
He further stated that four suspects had been arrested in connection with the incident and they were assisting the police with useful information that could aid arrest.
According to Mohammed, “on 7/11/2014 at about 10:05hrs,there was a bomb explosion suspected to be carried out by a female suicide bomber at First Bank premises in Azare Town, Bauchi State.
“So far, seven persons have been confirmed dead while 10 others who sustained various degrees of injury have been taken to Federal Medical Center, Azare, for medical attention, out of which five were treated and discharged.”
Mohammed added that the entire surrounding areas had been cordoned off and swept by the police explosive ordinance disposal unit.
Meanwhile, residents of the bubbly town were in a sober mood yesterday, just as commercial activities were at low ebb when our correspondent visited some popular business spots in the town.
Three Generals escaped death in Hong attack
Three Generals in the Nigerian Army escaped death by the whiskers yesterday when gunmen who reportedly invaded Gashala village in Hong local government, Adamawa State, and specifically sought to kill them failed to meet them in their respective homes.
Gashala village is the home town of Air vice Marshal Steven Yaduma (Rtd), Major General Zakariya Yaduma and General Samuel Dzarma.
A resident of the village said when the gunmen entered the village, they demanded from residents, the residents of the three Generals in the village but sensing danger, the residents declined knowledge of the generals’ residents, claiming that they were also visitors in the village.
“Four gunmen came to the village on two motorcycles on Thursday and immediately demanded to know the residents of the three generals in the town but sensing danger, the residents declined, saying they were strangers,” the source said.
Having failed in their mission, the gunmen reportedly went on rampage and set the residence of the EYN Church pastor of the village ablaze and shot dead a retired engineer forcing residents to flee into nearby bushes.
“Out of fear for our dear lives, we slept in the bush and are
constantly in trepidation as we fear that the insurgents may yet launch another attack on us as they said they would stage a comeback,” another resident disclosed.
The residents said the gunmen warned that anyone who is not ready to accept Islam should leave the village as the area is under their jurisdiction.
Strategies Against Insurgency Not Working- Tuggar
Meanwhile, an All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship aspirant in Bauchi State, Yusuf MaitamaTuggar has implored the federal government and security agencies in the country to overhaul the security strategy they have been using in battling the Boko Haram sect, saying they strategies are not working.
In a statement he issued condoling the families of those who lost their lives in yesterday’s bomb attack in Azare town, Bauchi State by the insurgents, Tuggar prayed God for the recovery of those injured in what he described as a “senseless attack”.
Calling for an overhaul the country’s security apparatus, the governorship aspirant said, “I call on the authorities to come to the assistance of the good citizens of Azare and others contending with insecurity and threat to lives and property in North Eastern Nigeria.
“There is a need to re-examine the strategies being employed to fight this ongoing insurgency as they are clearly not working. We must not be forgotten or abandoned”.
Condemning the bombings in Bauchi, he said, “It is with a heavy heart and deep sorrow, that I learnt of the setting off of yet another incendiary device, this time in Azare town, Bauchi State. From all indications, this heinous act was meant to cause maximum casualty, as the explosion took place in front of First Bank Plc., a day after salaries had been paid and at a time when hundreds of people were queuing up in front of an ATM to withdraw funds.
“The people of Azare are courageous people, as they demonstrated in December 2012 when citizens of the town worked with security agencies and drove out armed bandits menacing communities in the area. I am confident their spirit shall never be broken and they will continue to stand up for what is right” he said.
Iwuayanwu sends SOS to retired Igbo security personnel on Insurgency
Former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Board Of Trustees chairman, Chief Emmanuel Iwuayanwu has urged the apex socio-cultural organisation in the south east, Ohaneze Ndigbo to summon their retired senior security personnel to a crucial meeting to avert the creeping of insurgency to the zone.
Iwuayanwu who addressed journalists yesterday in Owerri, the Imo State capital, said his fear stemmed from the fact that the Boko Haram sect daily claimed some towns and villages in the northern part of the country, stressing that if adequate measures are not taken, the sect may delve into other zones.
“The way I see this thing, I don’t think they will stop at one zone, they may gradually creep into other zones. The south east should be wary so that they would not be taken unawares,” Iwuayanwu said.
The PDP chieftain who expressed his fears that the country may disintegrate if the political tension brewing as the general election closes in is not controlled, appealed to other zones in the country to allow the south south complete their eight years tenure in the presidency while the north, he added, should take their turn after the south south.
“I appeal to other zones in the country to allow the south south complete their eight years in the presidency after which the north should follow. I will join in the campaign for the presidency to go to the north, Ndigbo would take their turn after the north,” Iwuayanwu stated.

IN JONATHAN'S NIGERIA. : Boko Haram Renames Another Town in Borno ... Gwoza town renamed Darul Hikma, 21 Killed in Clash with Military ... ThisDayLive

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Boko Haram fighters
Boko Haram has renamed Gwoza town in Borno State which it captured, as part of a campaign to establish a caliphate in the North-eastern region, residents who have fled in recent days told AFP on Thursday.
The Islamists seized the town of Mubi in Adamawa State last week and now insist it be called Madinatul Islam, or “City of Islam” in Arabic.
Gwoza in neighbouring Borno State which was captured in July is now being called Darul Hikma or “House of Wisdom,” multiple residents said.
Boko Haram’s leader, Abubakar Shekau, in a video released in August declared that he had made Gwoza part of a caliphate — an announcement that recalled a similar move by the Islamic State militant group which has taken over parts of Iraq and Syria.
The extremists are believed to control more than two dozen towns and villages in the North-east and there are signs that they are trying to advance south towards Adamawa’s capital Yola.
“They have given new names to Gwoza and Mubi, which they say are now part of their Islamic State,” said Ahmad Maishanu, who fled Mubi with his mother on Wednesday to Yola.
Tijjani Kalifa, who left Mubi on Monday and has contacts in Gwoza, also reported that Boko Haram was forcing people in both towns to use the new names.
Both witnesses said all the churches in Mubi had been burnt down and that Islamists were patrolling the streets regularly, with no sign of resistance from the security services.
The renaming of Gwoza is coming as Senator Maina Maaji Lawan on Thursday said 21 persons were killed after the insugents clashed with soldiers in Malam Fatori, Borno State, Wednesday.
Malam Fatori is a commercial hub known for fishing and farming in the remote part of the state, near the border with Niger Republic.
“Boko Haram tried to attack Malam Fatori... but they met stiff resistance from the Multi-National Joint Task Force who initially repelled the attack after prolonged fighting,” said Lawan.
“They pushed back the insurgents and people in the town and the soldiers thought it was over but the insurgents mobilised more men and weapons including an armoured personnel carrier (APC) and launched a renewed attack.
“They overpowered the soldiers who were forced to flee.
The insurgents went into the town shooting indiscriminately. They killed 21 people.”
According to AFP, local residents put the civilian death toll at 16 and claimed that dozens of militants were killed in the initial military response on the ground and from the air.
Aminu Ahmad, who lives in the Abadam Local Government Area, of which Malam Fatori is the biggest town, estimated that “hundreds” of heavily armed Boko Haram fighters arrived in a convoy of pick-up trucks.
“Honestly, it was a bad outing for the insurgents because dozens of them were killed,” he said.
The troops involved were from Nigeria, Chad and Niger and were stationed nearby.
The multi-national force was set up in the late 1990s to fight cross-border crime and arms trafficking but its responsiblity was expanded to include Boko Haram, when the insurgency started in 2009.
The fighting forced thousands of people to flee the area across the border, said residents and Lawan, who represents northern Borno in the upper house of parliament.
“The town was deserted as a result of the attack and thousands of people crossed into Niger and are now camped in Bosso town which is only five kilometres (three miles) away,” he said.
“Malam Fatori is a big commercial centre in the region with a reputation of farming and fishing centre. The displacement of the people will have adverse effect on the town.

PASTOR AYO ORITS MUST READ THIS : Life is cheaper than salt: a Nigerian bishop facing Boko Haram ... Catholic News Agency

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Displaced persons in Maiduguri, who are being cared for by the local Church, in Sept. 2014. Credit: Aid to the Church in Need.
Displaced persons in Maiduguri, who are being cared for by the local Church, in Sept. 2014. Credit: Aid to the Church in Need.

.- Bishop Oliver Doeme, who heads the Nigerian diocese which has suffered the most from Boko Haram, has lamented his government's failure to effectively counter the militants, saying human life is being devalued.

“We use to think that salt is the cheapest commodity in the market, well, life is cheaper now especially in the Northeastern part of Nigeria,” Bishop Doeme of Maiduguri wrote in a report delivered recently to his fellow bishops and to Aid to the Church in Need, which is helping him to rebuild Church infrastructure and to care for the thousands of displaced persons in his diocese.

Maiduguri is the capital of Borno State, which is the center of activity for the radical Islamist group whose name means “Western education is sinful.” It launched an uprising in 2009, the same year Bishop Doeme was transferred to Maiduguri.

Bishop Doeme's diocese covers much of the territory of Borno State, as well as the states of Adamawa and Yobe. In May 2013, Nigeria's president declared a state of emergency in those three states because of Boko Haram's violence.

“The last one month has seen the intensification and aggressive devastation of the Boko Haram activities in Northern, Central and Southern part of the Catholic Diocese of Maiduguri,” Bishop Doeme wrote, noting their “brutality and callousness.”

“Many of our people are being forced out of their ancestral homes, villages and towns. Right now, thousands are living in caves on the mountains, some in the forest; the few who were able to escape are being absorbed by friends and relatives in Maiduguri, Mubi and Yola. Thousands have managed to escape into the Cameroons and are living under very difficult conditions of lack of food, shelter and medication.”

Boko Haram has declared its animosity for Christianity and the Church; eucational institutions; the Nigerian government; and moderate Muslims, attacking all of these alike.

Bishop Doeme commented that “while I refused to believe a single narration of this reality … there is still a religious under-tone to this whole mess. We might shy away from it, we may be silent and unable to speak up or speak out now against the plan to Islamize the Northeast and eventually Nigeria.”

He did acknowledge Boko Haram's targeting of all who oppose their radical Islamist agenda, noting that “both Christians and Muslims are being affected, both Christians and Muslims have been killed; both Christians and Muslims have been driven out of their ancestral homes, villages and towns, Christians and Muslims have been Internally Displaced and are refuge(e)s in their own home state.”

“But what we are witnessing in Northern Adamawa is a clear confirmation and the unfolding of this agenda,” he added. “I am speaking as a leader and shepherd of the Catholic Diocese of Maiduguri and how much destruction and devastation we have seen and are still going through.”

He lamented that his people are dying daily, their homes looted, and “they have become slaves and prisoners in their fatherland … life has become so cheap that it can be wasted any moment.”

Violence continues unabated, Bishop Doeme commented. “In the last one month more Parishes have been closed down and the people and the Priests are on the run.”

He narrated eight attacks on ecclesial institutions in the past month.

First in Pulka, St. Peter parish was burnt down, the rectory looted, and more than 20 “outstation Churches closed and burnt down.” A diocesan hospital was subject to arson. Many people fled to nearby Cameroon, and many youths were captured. “Women who could not escape were forced to convert to Islam and married out to the terrorists; some of the elderly who cannot escape are being killed, some are left to die from hunger and starvation.”

The bishop continued, showing the path of destruction levied by Boko Haram as it advanced along a national highway, the A13. Parishes and rectories have been burnt or requisitioned as operational bases, women enslaved, men conscripted, and some killed. He presented a list of towns and villages under Boko Haram's control: 10 in Borno, 10 in Yobe, and five in Adamawa.

Bishop Doeme noted that nearly 20 priests of his diocese have taken refuge in Yola, the capital of Adamawa.

“Thank God for our brother, Bishop Stephen Dami Mamza who has been kind to accept them and assigned them to parishes within Yola where they can at least eat and sleep.”

He said that his own cathedral city is threatened by Boko Haram, saying it “is sitting on a keg of gun powder … the number of civilians that have migrated into Maiduguri on foot from Bama, Kawuri and Kunduga is suggestive that the terrorists have an upper hand in the fight.”

“We are faced with a huge humanitarian crisis; people are sleeping on the streets in Maiduguri, despite the Seven or more camps within the city for the Internally Displaced Persons.”

The bishop told Aid to the Church in Need Oct. 25 that the Diocese of Maiduguri “has given some relief materials to over 1,500 IDPs and it has joined hands with the Yola Diocese to assist those who have taken refuge there.”

He added that “we are in dire need of external assistance to help alleviate the difficult situation of the refugees, especially of the children who, out of school and vulnerable to diseases, face an uncertain future.”

In his situation report, Bishop Doeme also discussed the Nigerian government's and military's inability to cope with Boko Haram: “What is very worrying and discouraging in the whole scenario, is the attitude of the military whom we mortgage and depend on for security. In the face of these attacks they flee and ask civilians to do the same.”

He said Boko Haram are able to overrun towns “almost unchallenged,” saying their “mastery and tact … is unequalled” by the Nigerian military. The government “cannot safe guard the lives of its citizens,” he charged, adding that “the bottom line is that the government and our political leaders have failed us and we have lost total trust and confidence in our government and our leaders.”

His comments echoed those made previously by such leaders as Archbishop Ignatius Kaigama of Jos, who has said that “our government has not been able to smoke them out” and “I don't believe that our government is making this a top priority.”

Bishop Doeme continued: “The almost inaction of the government, the lukewarm attitude and the silence of the government is very disturbing. There is a total disconnection between what our so called leaders in Abuja report in the media and the reality on ground.”

On Oct. 17, the Nigerian government announced a ceasefire with Boko Haram, saying that they had agreed to the release of more than 200 girls abducted in April. Boko Haram never confirmed the ceasefire, and by Oct. 23 there were reports that they had abducted dozens of women and girls from two villages in Adamawa.

A presidential spokesman said Oct. 28 that the government is holding talks with Boko Haram, adding he is optimistic there will be a “concrete and positive” outcome.

Since 2009, Boko Haram's attacks have killed thousands; including at least 4,000 in 2014 alone, according to Human Rights Watch. The UN estimates that the attacks have led to more than 470,000 internally displaced persons, and some 57,000 refugees.

Bishop Doeme urged that in light of Boko Haram, Nigerians “come together … forgetting our religious, ethnic, regional, cultural and ideological differences to face this menace,” and urged international assistance: “We are sinking fast in the quick sand, let us swallow our empty pride as Nigerians and ask for International assistance in tackling this problem. After all, if we have been assisting other countries and nations restore peace and Order why do we feel that it is humiliating to ask for help now that our house is on fire.”

He concluded saying that “we will ever remain grateful and thankful to all of you for your prayers, support and closeness in this moment of great trials and tribulations.”

“I as the chief shepherd of the Diocese of Maiduguri the Priests and the lay faithful feel the warmth of your prayers and solidarity. We are committed to witness to the Gospel and pay the price when the time comes.”

OMINOUS SIGNS, SO THIS IS THE GAME PLAN? : No president resigns during war, Jonathan tells APC ... PunchNews

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President Goodluck Jonathan
The Presidency has said there is no part of the world where the President resigns during an ongoing war.
It therefore challenged the leadership of the All Progressives Congress to tell Nigerians where such presidents had resigned during war time.
The Presidency was reacting to the demand by the leadership of the APC, including its National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, that President Goodluck Jonathan should resign because of the on-going war against the country by the members of the Boko Haram sect.
Reacting on behalf of the President, his Senior Special Assistant on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe, in a statement in Abuja on Thursday, asked Nigerians to ignore such calls.
He said, “The suggestion by one of the leaders of the All Progressives Congress, Senator Bola Tinubu, that President Goodluck Jonathan should resign from office as a result of the activities of insurgents in the north-eastern part of the country, has once again shown beyond doubt that the former Lagos State governor and his colleagues in the opposition are a bunch of political anarchists and charlatans blinded by an unbridled appetite for power.
“The assertion by Tinubu at a political rally in Ilorin, Kwara State on Wednesday that in ‘civilised’ societies, the President should have resigned is unfounded and lacking in historical precedence.
“We challenge him to tell Nigerians which part of his ‘civilised’ world has there been a call on a President to resign during an on-going war.
“When terrorists attacked the United States of America in September 2001, the leaders of the Democratic Party did not demand a resignation of President George Bush but rather they rose in defence of the American nation to support the various measures taken by the President to defeat the al Qaeda terrorists.”
He said it was necessary to remind the APC leader that it was leading members of his party who vehemently opposed and openly criticised the proscription of the Boko Haram sect by the Federal Government in 2013 with some of them even going as far as describing it as a move against the North while others tried to incite the civil society to condemn this anti-terrorists’ action.
Okupe said that it was therefore unfortunate that the APC, in its desperation for power and eagerness to make selfish political gains from insecurity, had shown a total lack of the spirit of nationalism and statesmanship in its public comments on the challenges of insurgency in the North-East.
He added that it was particularly sad that the leaders of the APC would mount every available podium to pour invectives on the President and ridicule members of the Armed Forces of Nigeria who were in the battlefield against terror.
“Telling the President to resign because of an ongoing insurgency is the height of insensitive, indecorous and bad politics which ought to be roundly condemned by every patriotic Nigerian,” he added.
He said that by the provisions of the Nigerian constitution, the only recognised means of changing a government was through the electoral process.

PHYSICIAN, HEAL THYSELF : Nigeria Set To Fight To Save Mali From Terrorists ... InformationNigeria

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Nigeria has agreed with seven other African countries contributing troops to the United Nations Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) on setting up a rapid intervention force to fight terrorist groups in Mali and other cross-border criminal organisations.
The countries joining Nigeria include Mali, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Niger, Senegal, Chad and Togo. The countries are also expected to strengthen the current capacity of the MINUSMA so that it can attain the authorised contingents provided for in 2100 and 2164 resolutions of the United Nations Security Council early enough, to allow MINUSMA fulfill its mandate.
In a statement by Nigeria’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Amb. Aminu Wali on Friday, he noted that the decision was reached at the recent ministerial meeting of countries contributing to MINUSMA in Niamey, capital of Niger Republic.
Wali who led Nigeria’s delegation to the meeting, also disclosed that it was resolved to strengthen Malian Defence and Security Forces (MSDS) to enable them defend the territorial integrity of Mali, reports Thisday.
While Nigeria’s troops linking up with their counterparts in the continent for special missions may not be strange, what many will find strange is the fact that Nigerian troops will be fighting to preserve the territorial integrity of another country when its own territorial integrity is being threatened by Islamist sect Boko Haram, a terror group that has taken over several towns in the north east.
Wali however said the meeting also discussed how countries in the sahel-Saharan region can strengthen regional cooperation to fight terrorism and organised crimes.
Present at the meeting convened at the instance of the Niger Republic, are international organisations, including the African Union, European Union, Economic Community of West African State (ECOWAS) and Organisation of Islamic Countries (OIC). Observer countries that include Algeria, China, Mauritania, France and United States of America were also present.

ON THAT LAME CLAIM THAT NO PRESIDENT RESIGNS DURING WAR : You need a refresher course in history, APC tells Presidency ... PremiumTimes

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Lai mohammed
The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said the presidency needs a refresher course in history if it is not aware that a leader has had cause to resign in the course of a war being fought by his country in order to change the course of the war.
In a statement on Friday by its National Publicity Secretary, Lai Mohammed, the party reminded the presidency that Neville Chamberlain resigned as British Prime Minister on May 10, 1940 after Adolf Hitler forced the allies to retreat from Norway.
”According to available information, Chamberlain led Britain through the first eight months of World War II but had to resign after the Allies were forced to retreat from Norway, because of his belief that a government supported by all parties was essential for the unity needed to defeat Adolf Hitler. The resignation paved the way for Winston Churchill who later became the hero of the War,” it said.
The APC was reacting to a statement on Thursday by the Presidency in which it claimed there was no part of the world where a president resigned during an ongoing war.
While responding to the demand by an APC leader, Bola Tinubu, that President Goodluck Jonathan should resign for failing to arrest the nation’s security challenges, the Senior Special Assistant on Public Affairs, Doyin Okupe, in a statement, challenged the party to tell Nigerians where a president resigned during war time.
The opposition party said the call by Mr. Tinubu on Mr. Jonathan to resign in view of the widespread insecurity in the land and the fact that some parts of Nigeria were now under occupation by terrorists was neither extraordinary nor unprecedented.
It said, ”The call by one of our leaders is about taking responsibility. President Jonathan is the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. If under his watch Nigerian territories are being annexed progressively by insurgents, and all that he has demonstrated so far is sheer cluelessness and incompetence, it is time for him to take responsibility and quit in the national interest, to pave the way for a leader who can lead the country to victory.”
The APC said all the blame game and name calling by the presidency, targeted at the opposition, constitute a mere distraction.
It stated that the presidency was right to say that when terrorists attacked the US in September 2001, the leaders of the Democratic Party did not demand a resignation of President George Bush but rather rose in defence of the American nation to support the various measures taken by the president to defeat the Al-Qaeda terrorists.
The party said what the presidency forgot to say, however, was that Americans would not have rallied behind then Mr. Bush if he had been photographed snuggling with any sponsor of Al-Qaeda as Mr. Jonathan did with one of the alleged sponsors of Boko Haram in Chad.
It said Americans would not have rallied behind Mr. Bush if 9-11 had occurred not just once but twice or thrice, because it would have shown that the president is simply incompetent to lead.
The APC said, ”President Jonathan watched helplessly as Boko Haram moved from Sambisa Forest to take over a large chunk of territory in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states and proclaim a Caliphate. President Jonathan watched helplessly as Boko Haram abducted and took away almost 300 girls,holding most of them for over 200 days….still counting. His Administration is even mocking and harassing those who are campaigning for the release of the girls. No people in the world will give such a leader unconditional support.
”Therefore, even if no leader in history has ever resigned during war (even though we have now proved that is not correct), nothing prevents President Jonathan from becoming the first leader to do so. After all, never in the history of any nation has incompetence and cluelessness been exhibited by any leader, as President Jonathan has done, when the country is at war.”
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