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FOR THE RECORDS : Jonathan’s Speech At The Inauguration of National Conference

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Remarks by
His Excellency, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, GCFR
At the
Inauguration of the National Conference
Monday, 17th March, 2014
PROTOCOLS
1.          I am delighted to welcome you all to the inauguration of this historic National Conference which promises to be another significant landmark in our efforts to strengthen national unity and consolidate democratic governance in our beloved country.
2.          I also believe that this National Conference is coming at a very appropriate time. Having just celebrated the first centenary of our country, the most compelling task before us, as we move ahead and contemplate what our nation will be at the end of its second century, is to lay a much stronger foundation for faster development.
3.          This we can achieve by building a more inclusive national consensus on the structure and guiding principles of state that will guarantee our emergence as a more united, progressive and prosperous nation.
4.          In our history as a political entity, we have experienced highs and lows but have always forged ahead. To my mind, the fact that we have weathered   all storms and continued with the mission of evolving a truly national identity signifies that we are going in the right direction.
5.          The strongest nations in the world today also went through their own formative stages; some for decades and others for centuries. We must learn from them that nationhood will not happen overnight, especially given the circumstances of our birth as a nation.
6.          History also teaches that nation-building is a journey of dedication, commitment, diligence, perseverance and patriotic vision. To be successful, nation-builders must continually strive to evolve better and more inclusive societies in which every citizen is a proud and committed stakeholder.
7.          It was with this objective in mind that we set up the Presidential Advisory Committee (PAC) on the National Conference in October last year and charged its members with the responsibility of designing the framework and modalities for a productive National Conference.
8.          The Committee which submitted its Report in December, 2013, was able to reach out to all Nigerians and various interest groups, socio-political groupings, regional and religious elements, professionals, civil society, the organised private sector, labour, youth, women and others to ascertain their views on the initiative.
9.          The Presidential Advisory Committee established that there was indeed, a national consensus for this Conference to be convened immediately, to meet the yearnings and aspirations of our people.
10.      The National Conference is therefore being convened to engage in intense introspection about the political and socio-economic challenges confronting our nation and to chart the best and most acceptable way for the resolution of such challenges in the collective interest of all the constituent parts of our fatherland.
11.      This coming together under one roof to confer and build a fresh national consensus for the amicable resolution of issues that still cause friction amongst our people must be seen as an essential part of the process of building a more united, stronger and progressive nation.
12.      We cannot continue to fold our arms and assume that things will straighten themselves out in due course, instead of taking practical steps to overcome impediments on our path to true nationhood, rapid development and national prosperity.
13.      For many years we have discussed and argued over various issues concerning our national existence and well-being. Much of this national discourse has been conducted through the mass media, both print and electronic. More recently, the advent of the age of ICT and social media has greatly enlarged the space for the discussion of our country’s future.
14.      Many more young and articulate  Nigerians who previously had little access to the traditional mass media have now joined the conversation, motivated by patriotic concern for good governance, peace, stability, justice, equity, fairness and the harmonious co-existence of the diverse groups that make up our great nation.
15.      Dear Compatriots, my administration is convening this National Conference today because we believe that we must assume responsibility for ensuring that the long-running national debate on the best way forward for our country is not in vain.
16.      It is our expectation that participants in this conference will patriotically articulate and synthesize our peoples’ thoughts, views and recommendations for a stronger, more united, peaceful and politically stable Nigeria, forge the broadest possible national consensus in support of those recommendations, and strive to ensure that they are given the legal and constitutional backing to shape the present and the future of our beloved fatherland.
17.      In inaugurating this national conference today, we are not unmindful of the argument of those who say that we do not need such a conference since we already have an elected Parliament and an elected Government in place.
18.      As cogent as that argument may sound, I have chosen to act on the sincere conviction that in the truly democratic nation we are striving to build, we must never ignore the loudly expressed views of the majority of ordinary Nigerians.
19.      I have heard that majority say, that we need to rebuild trust by involving them in the process of developing a guiding document of our national political relationships which is more acceptable to all sections of the country. I have heard our people say that we need to openly and frankly discuss our problems and seek acceptable solutions instead of allowing them to fester and remain sources of perennial conflict.
20.      I have also heard them say that, as the elected representatives of our people, we must never arrogate to ourselves all knowledge and wisdom regarding the development of our country.
21.      And I am in full agreement with our people. The power we hold is, without question, in trust for the people. Sovereignty belongs to the people. Their voices must be heard and factored into every decision we take on their behalf.
22.      This National Conference is a very important avenue for the voices of our people to be heard. Our people have yearnings and desires that need to be discussed. Their representatives at this conference are neither usurping the role of the National Assembly nor the Executive. They are complementing us in our march towards a greater and stronger union.
23.      Over the years, well-meaning Nigerians have drawn attention to inadequacies in our current constitution. Some have described it as a military-inspired document which does not take into full consideration the genuine desires and wishes of the people.
24.      The phrase in the preamble that says “we, the people,” has been variously criticised as being misleading because, according to the critics, the constitution was not written by the people.  There are also those who believe that the constitution is not our problem but the political will to faithfully implement it for the peace and progress of Nigeria.
25.      While opinions on the matter can be as diverse as rain showers, I believe that irrespective of our personal views on the issue, no one can deny the fact that every constitution is a living document that needs to be revised and improved upon from time to time. The United States, which is the model democracy in the eyes of many, has amended its constitution 27 times since it was first adopted in 1787.
26.      Some of our compatriots also believe that because we have held several conferences in the past, we do not need to hold another one. I do not share that view at all.
27.      A deeper look will reveal that the challenges we faced before each of the preceding national conferences were different. The challenges of 1956 are certainly not the challenges of 2014, and definitely not the challenges that the nation will face in years to come. It makes sense, therefore, that as the challenges before us evolve, we must be constant and proactive in our search for fresh solutions. We cannot continue to proffer yesterday’s solutions for today’s problems.
28.      This conference is open for us to table our thoughts and positions on issues, and make recommendations that will advance our togetherness. The issues range from form of government, structures of government, devolution of powers, revenue sharing, resource control, state and local government creation, boundary adjustment, state police and fiscal federalism, to local government elections, indigeneship, gender equality and children’s rights, amongst others.
29.      We must not approach these issues with suspicion and antagonism. Rather, we should be open-minded and work to achieve what is best for Nigeria. Even though you come to the Conference as nominees and representatives of different interest groups, I urge you all to make a more united, stronger, indivisible and prosperous Nigeria your preoccupation and reference point at this national gathering.  Whatever the pressures on you may be, I call upon you to put the best interest of Nigeria before all other sectional or group interests.
30.      Indeed, I am quite worried when I hear people say that some participants in this National Conversation are coming here to defend and promote ethnic or clannish agenda. It is very regrettable that there are persons who believe that we cannot undertake any collective task in our country without the hindrance of ethnic rivalry even after 100 years of nationhood.
31.      This conference gives us an opportunity to prove such persons wrong and I believe it will. As we start a new century of nationhood, we have an obligation to reshape and redirect our country for the benefit of our children. There should be no room for divisive cleavages and ethnic jingoism. There should be no room for selfish considerations that defeat the purpose of national progress. There should be room only for the national interest.
32.      In the 60s, our country was ranked along with some developing countries including India, Malaysia and South Korea. Today, those countries have moved far ahead of us in several areas. My expectation is that the outcome of this Conference will be a positive turning point for our country’s development. We must seize this opportunity to cement the cleavages and fault lines that tend to separate us.   We must re-launch our country.
33.      I know the task before you is onerous; but there must be only one winner, and there can only be one winner if we do everything right, and that winner must be Nigeria. I urge you therefore to focus strictly on the Nigerian Agenda.
34.      I expect that, as persons of integrity and honour, you will do nothing in this Conference that will undermine our efforts and desire to build a truly great nation.  I also expect that your discussions will be informed only by the noblest of instincts and persuasions.
35.      Our sole motivation for convening this conference is the patriotic desire for a better and greater nation. We are determined that things must be done in a way and manner that will positively advance that objective.
36.      While we recognise that groups and communities are the building blocks of our nation, we must also emphasise that we need one another to build the solid and prosperous country of our dreams.
37.      We cannot join hands together to build with a collective vision if we continue to harbour negative biases and prejudices against ourselves.
38.      Yesterday’s prejudices should die with yesterday. Today is a new day. This is the dawn of a new era. This is an opportunity to think anew. We must jettison the poisonous mind-sets of the past, which were built on unhealthy competition among our diverse groups and peoples.
39.      We need a new mind and a new spirit of oneness and national unity. The time has come to stop seeing Nigeria as a country of many groups and regions. We have been divinely brought together under one roof. We must begin to see ourselves as one community. We are joined together by similar hopes and dreams as well as similar problems and challenges. What affects one part of the community affects the other.
40.      An average Nigerian sees every part of the country as home. Let us seize the opportunity of this Conference to do more to further turn our diversity and plurality into unique national resources for strength and greatness.
41.      I have always affirmed that our ability to stay together despite our acknowledged differences, when other countries are finding it difficult to meet that challenge, is a powerful statement by Nigeria to the world on the virtues of tolerance and unity.
42.      It is a strong and compelling statement in a world much afflicted by strife and violence.  We must sustain it. We must not allow the antagonists of unity and togetherness to prevail. We must work ceaselessly to remain one nation bound in freedom, peace and unity, as our National Anthem says.
43.      Honourable Chairman and distinguished delegates, I urge you not to be under any illusions as you begin your assignment. The task that lies ahead of you is formidable. Over the coming weeks, you will be confronted with complex and emotive issues; strong views will be expressed by opposing sides and some disagreements will, in all likelihood, be intense.
44.      I sincerely believe, however, that we can overcome all obstacles to true national unity if we dig deep into the recesses of our national character and look up to God Almighty for wisdom, guidance and the generosity of spirit we need to ensure the success of this conference.
45.      Once again, I wish to express my appreciation to the Nigerian people who have, without hesitation, accepted dialogue as a means of resolving all differences and tensions that may exist in the country, and therefore, given their unequivocal support for this National Conference.
46.      Let me at this point thank the National Assembly for introducing the provision for a referendum in the proposed amendment of the Constitution. This should be relevant for this Conference if at the end of the deliberations, the need for a referendum arises. I therefore urge the National Assembly and the State Houses of Assembly to speed up the Constitutional amendment process especially with regard to the subject of referendum.
47.      I thank the Chairman, Senator Femi Okurounmu and members of the Presidential Advisory Committee for the arduous work they undertook to prepare for the Conference.  I also thank the Chairman of this National Conference, Justice Idris Legbo Kutigi, the principal officers and all the distinguished patriots and representatives of our people who have taken time off their busy personal schedules to serve the cause of national unity and progress at this conference.
48.      I am confident that we are embarking on a landmark journey that will make us stronger as a nation if we undertake it with all sense of purpose and sincerity. Let us do that which is selfless, purposeful and patriotic so that history will remember us for having served our nation well.
49.      In conclusion, I urge all officials and participants in the national conference to work extra hard to ensure that their deliberations are completed on schedule, well ahead of the schedule of events for the next general elections already announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).
50.      Let me again repeat what I have been saying that Goodluck Jonathan has no personal agenda in convening this national conference.
51.      Ladies and Gentlemen, I now have the honour and privilege of declaring the National Conference open, for the good of our Nation and to the glory of God Almighty who has brought us together.
52.      I thank you all.


TRAGEDY : Fire guts Christ Embassy ... VanguardNews

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Property worth millions of naira were, Tuesday, destroyed when fire consumed the main auditorium of Christ Embassy Church, located on Billings Way, Ikeja, Lagos.
When Vanguard visited the scene, it was gathered that the fire started at 6.30pm from an apartment which housed about 14 power generating sets.
It was further learnt that the fire started as a result of power surge from one of the generating sets.
Sources said that immediately the church members noticed the fire, they tried putting it off with their in-house extinguishers.
*Scene of the fire
*Scene of the fire
However, the fire escalated and spread to the church main auditorium. The church management declined speaking on the incident.
An eyewitness, Mr. Oladele Akintayo, said: “Before the arrival of the emergency teams, several property had been destroyed by the raging inferno.”
General Manager of Lagos State Emergency Agency, LASEMA, Dr. Femi Oke Osanyintolu and Director of Fire Service, Mr. Rasaq Fadipe, said that the fire raged for about three hours before it was finally put out by the combined team of the emergency agencies at the scene.
Oke Osanyintolu said: “There is no casualty, but one of the fire service men sustained injury. The church lost a number of power generating sets and other property.”
According to Fadipe, “it was a very serious fire outbreak. The fire involved the generator house. A lot of armoured cables were also affected by the inferno. They have about 14 big generators that were affected and the church’s stationary diesel and petrol tanks.
“However, with the effort of the fire service officials, we didn’t allow the tanks to burst. And we also prevented the fire from spreading to the air conditioner house.”
He blamed the church for the extent of damage, saying “when my men arrived the scene, they were restricted by the church members who wanted to take over the affairs of putting off the fire.
“I had four fire trucks on ground from Ilupeju, Isolo, Ikeja and Alausa with 10,000 tones of water each and 18 factory-fitted generating sets to combat the inferno.
“The fire involved the power house and the warehouse, where compressors were stocked. We faced serious interference from the church members.”

AN OILY MESS IN THE MAKING ... WE DON'T GIVE A DAMN : Fuel subsidy must go, Alison-Madueke says ... NAN

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“The subsidy policy cannot be sustained any longer,” the minister said.
About a week after she told federal lawmakers that the federal government had no plans to remove subsidy on petrol, the Minister of Petroleum, Diezani Alison-Madueke, said on Tuesday that payment of subsidy on petrol ‘cannot be sustained any longer.’
Mrs. Alison-Madueke stated this at the ongoing Nigeria Oil and Gas Conference in Abuja.
“The continued regulation of the downstream sector has its positive and negative impact on the economy, but the negative effect is more than the positive,” the minister said.
“The subsidy policy cannot be sustained any longer.Fuel queu
“This is because the subsidy payment did not benefit the poor it was targeting, but rather it is benefiting the rich,” she added.
Mrs. Alison-Madueke said there was the need to deregulate the downstream oil sector to attract investors.
She said that in considering the deregulation of the downstream sector, government must strike a balance in implementing some of its policies to meet the needs of Nigerians.
“Now that reforms in power sector are underway, the next focus should be reforms in the downstream sub-sector.
“The industry needs to move to next level by increasing revenue and curb oil theft and pipeline vandalism,” she said.
 Laments petrol scarcity
The minister admitted that Nigerians had been faced with petrol scarcity in the last two months and there seemed to be no end sight in spite of assurances by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, which she supervises
She blamed the current scarcity on sabotage, diversion, hoarding, panic buying and rumours of imminent pump price increase.
The current petrol scarcity in the country, and the minister’s statement on the urgent need to remove petrol subsidy, appears to buttress claims by Nigeria’s largest opposition party, the APC, that the federal government planned to use the scarcity as an excuse to remove petrol subsidy and thus increase the nationwide pump price of petrol.
Currently, the official pump price of petrol is N97 although filling stations in many states in Nigeria, where petrol is available, sell the product above the pump price; as high as N150 per litre.Fuel q 1
Should the subsidy be removed, the pump price of petrol would increase to as high as N140 at filling stations.
Mrs. Madueke, while defending her ministry’s budget before lawmakers had denied plans to remove subsidy on petrol.
The petrol subsidy regime has been characterised by fraud and mismanagement in recent times, particularly under Mrs. Alison-Madueke’s supervision of the petroleum ministry.
Several government and parliament reports had shown that the 2011 petrol subsidy scheme was characterised by so much fraud that hundreds of billions of naira was schemed off the federal government by dubious petrol marketers, many of whom connived with petroleum ministry officials. Some of the culpable petrol marketers are currently being prosecuted. Calls for the removal of Ms. Alison- Madueke have been ignored by the president.
An indication of the government’s stance on the subsidy was also shown last week when state commissioners of finance met in Abuja. The commissioners, majority of who are members of Nigeria’s ruling Peoples Democratic Party, demanded the removal of the petrol subsidy. They also resolved to convince their governors and President Goodluck Jonathan to remove the subsidy. The APC, which controls 16 of Nigeria’s states, condemned the commissioner’s stance.Fuel q 2
Mrs. Alison-Madueke also spoke about the Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB, at Tuesday’s conference.
PIB needed in oil industry
The minister outlined challenges confronting the government to include perennial oil theft, pipeline vandalism and non passage of the PIB.
“The PIB is still with the National Assembly and we hope that it will be passed very soon,” she said.
“However, we have been confronted with the menace of pipeline vandalism for decades and it has become much more prevalent in the last few years.
“In 2013 alone, all the major crude oil pipelines were severely damaged and vandalised at different points in time, the Bonny–Escravos line from the refinery was not spared either.
“Needless to say pipeline vandalism and sabotage created significant losses for the country; this includes direct and indirect costs for the provision of security, crude oil and petroleum products losses.
“Also production and environmental degradation and associated remediation cost to that and resulting escalation of project implementation cost that go along with it,” she said.
She said that in spite of these challenges, the country still maintained a stable 2.3 million barrels per day production of crude oil achieved in 2013.
The minister said that the country had the capacity to boost production to three million barrels per day.
She said that gas production had also increased from 6.3 trillion standard cubic feet per day to 8.1 trillion standard cubic feet per day in 2013.
(NAN)

A NATIONAL CONFAB OPENING WITH COMEDY ... THE NIGERIAN STORY : Delegates admit they are Nigeria’s Problem as National Conference holds first dramatic session ... PremiumTimes

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Delegates Ita- Giwa and Nuhu Sanusi say many of the problems Nigeria is facing were caused by some of the delegates to the National Conference.
Two delegates to the ongoing National Conference, the Emir of Dutse, Nuhu Sanusi and former Senator, Florence Ita-Giwa, have blamed Nigeria’s intractable problems on the country’s prominent leaders and citizens, including delegates to the confab.
Mr. Sanusi and Ms Ita-Giwa spoke in Abuja Tuesday at the first plenary of the conference, which turned out to be a dramatic session.
The duo, who expressed that opinion while contributing to debate on the general principle of the conference, also noted that they (those who created the country’s problems in the first place) were in a position to resolve the nation’s difficulties.
Mr. Sanusi, who reacted to comments by some delegates which he believed could stoke conflict, pleaded with his colleagues to eschew bitterness in order to address the problems facing the country.
He said, “We are responsible for what Nigeria is facing today and we are also the answer to the problem of this country. There is corruption from the local government to the highest level.”
The monarch also reminded delegates of the needless deaths of jobseekers across the country during the Nigeria Immigration recruitment interview on Saturday.
He said there was urgent need for jobs to be created for millions of jobless youths to forestall a similar tragedy in the future; adding that instead of bickering, delegates should consider ways of creating jobs for Nigerians and curbing corruption.
2014 CONFAB-
The Emir drew applause from his colleagues when he pointedly said, “We are not in this Conference to fight.”
On her part, Ms. Ita-Giwa said many of the problems Nigeria is facing were caused by some of those appointed delegates to the Conference.
“Some of the problems facing this country today were caused by some of us who are in this Conference,” Mrs. Ita-Giwa said.
She also appealed to the leadership of the Conference to allow each delegation make presentation, adding that every delegation has a position on critical national issues.
On a dramatic note, the former lawmaker called for a flower vest that was kept in front of Kutigi to be removed so that he would have direct eye contact with delegates on the floor.
Some delegates demanded explanations on why accommodation was not reserved for them
Others queried why the Conference Secretariat failed to pay their aides, including security, drivers and personal assistants.
Fiery Lagos pastor, Tunde Bakare had drawn attention to the Islamic prayer offered by Conference Chairman, Idris Kutigi before calling the Conference to session and called for a uniformed prayer.
“Mr. Chairman,” he began, “yesterday you said something at the inauguration of the Conference and I did not understand. Today again, you said it. I think you should pray in the way all of us understand because if I stand up and say, ‘Praise the Lord somebody,’ we will turn this place into a church service.”
Another delegate complained about a situation where members who arrived early were asked to vacate their seats for elder statesmen and monarchs, who came late.
He insisted that since delegates represented people and groups, equality of membership should be maintained.
Former Governor of Ogun State, Segun Osoba vehemently disagreed with the member, saying that the seating arrangement should be in alphabetical order while consideration should be given to delegates from age 80 and the physically challenged.
The Chairman of Stanbic IBTC Bank, Atedo Peterside, supported Mr. Osoba’s position on the seating arrangement but also called for the gallery to be fitted with wireless internet connection.
The Conference, which commenced sitting almost an hour behind schedule, was called to session by Mr. Kutigi at about 10.48 am.
Justice Kutigi, however, apologised to delegates for the delay and blamed it on the inability of the secretariat to complete the registration of delegates.
He thereafter introduced the Conference Secretary, Valerie-Janette Azinge, who also introduced the other members of the secretariat including Deputy Chair, Bolaji Akinyemi and Assistant Secretary, Conference Proceedings, Sani Indabawa.
Others were Assistant Secretary, Finance and Administration, Mahmood Yakubu and Assistant Secretary, Media and Communications, James Akpandem.
Mrs. Azinge, who responded to most of the questions raised by delegates, said plenary could not commence in earnest due to the non-availability of Conference Standing Rules and Procedure.
She announced that the Rules and Procedure as well as the 1999 Constitution would be distributed to delegates on Thursday and would be discussed and adopted the same day.
Mrs. Azinge said the Conference would adopt the alphabetical seating arrangement proposed by Mr. Osoba but urged delegates to avail themselves of the services and facilities at the National Judicial Institute.
She maintained that the secretariat had searched for an alternative convenient location to host the Conference to no avail, stressing that the NJI was the best option available.
For the registration processes to be completed and proper arrangements made for delegates, Mrs. Azinge pleaded with members to provide the secretariat with their account details and medical information.
Mr. Akpandem had informed delegates that the Conference was already on the internet and gave the web address as www.nigerianationalconference2014.org
After a prolonged session of comments and suggestions, Mr. Kutigi called for motions and the Conference was adjourned till Monday.

IN A RACE TO OUTDO ONE ANOTHER IN THIEFRY : Alleged N600 million fraud: How Lagos Speaker, Ikuforiji, spent funds on foreign trips, wife, others – EFCC ... PremiumTimes

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Adeyemi Ikuforiji, Lagos State Assembly Speaker. [Photo: spyghana.com]
On August 1, 2011, N4.4 million was paid to the Speaker as “cost of allowance”; his personal assistant and orderly pocketed N1.2 million and N1.1 million respectively.
The trial of Adeyemi Ikuforiji, the Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, continued Tuesday with the prosecution witness detailing how the defendants allegedly laundered millions of Naira.
Adebayo Adeniyi, the EFCC witness, told the court how the defendants collected N13.5 million for honorarium, N4.5 million for renovation of the Speaker’s residence, and N1.5 million for the Speaker’s Guest House every month for six consecutive months.
Mr. Ikuforiji and Oyebode Atoyebi, his aide, are facing a 54-count amended charge of money laundering amounting to over N600 million.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, accused the Speaker and his aide of receiving the money from the Lagos State House of Assembly without passing through a financial institution.
The trial was adjourned last January for the prosecution to provide a summarized version of the monies collected by Mr. Ikuforiji and his aide.
But on Tuesday, Godwin Obla, counsel to the EFCC, said that he would rather continue with his previous method to avoid any grounds for appeal.
It was a painstaking effort that required Mr. Obla to go through each of the transactions with the witness. The judge admitted that, but overruled the defence’s plea that the prosecution tabulate the relevant sections of the transactions.
“We’ve lost time. We vacated three days for that exercise to be done,” said Ibrahim Buba, the trial judge.
“What I understand the prosecution to be doing is trying to go through the records viz a viz each count of the allegation. They are entitled to do so.
“It is indeed difficult, if not laborious,” Mr. Buba added.
2011 TRANSACTIONS
Mr. Adeniyi continued his testimony by stating how the Lagos House of Assembly paid millions of naira to Mr. Ikuforiji; his wife, Mayowa; his orderly; his personal assistant; as well as the state’s Deputy Speaker.
All the monies were collected by Mr. Atoyebi and paid for in cash, the witness said.
On July 14, 2011, N5.4 million was paid to Mr. Ikuforiji for a trip to San Diego, California; his personal assistant and orderly collected N1.3 million and N1.2 million respectively, according to Mr. Adeniyi.
On August 1, 2011, N4.4 million was paid to the Speaker as “cost of allowance”; his personal assistant and orderly pocketed N1.2 million and N1.1 million respectively. Two days later, N10 million was paid to the Speaker for Ramadan, the witness said.
On August, 2011, N6.4 million was paid to Mayowa Ikuforiji, the Speaker’s wife; and N1.3 million to the wife’s orderly, the witness said.
Between January and June 2011, N13.5 million was paid as honorarium, every month, to the Speaker, Mr. Adeniyi added.
He said N4 million and N1 million were also paid monthly, within the stated period, for the renovation of the Speaker’s official residence and guest house respectively.
Asked why there were columns with Cheque Numbers in the cash register, Mr. Adeniyi responded that: “What they do is that a cheque is raised in most cases in the name of the Permanent Secretary and cashed from the bank.
“It is this cash that is eventually paid and registered in this document, the details of payments.”
2010 TRANSACTIONS
“Basically, these cash payments are supposed to be made through a financial institution, paid to the beneficiaries, not through cash payments. Cash payments stall the tracing of the monies.
“We discovered that some of it was paid into the account of the first accused person. Some of it was used for his credit card and other personal matters,” he added.
During cross examination by Wole Olanipekun, counsel to Mr. Ikuforiji, Mr. Adeniyi said that he was not aware what the Speaker used the monies for.
“Our investigation is not focused on knowing whether he spent the money on his personal house.
“From our investigation, we did not go in depth into who approved the disbursements, we were particular about the cash disbursement which was above the threshold of transactions by a Permanent Secretary.
“Any payment must be made through e-payment, most especially when it is above the threshold,” Mr. Adeniyi said.
When shown one of the cash registers by the defence lawyer, Mr. Adeniyi said that he could not “remember seeing it.”
Mr. Obla objected to that line of questioning, insisting that the defence must tender the cash register as an exhibit before it court be used for cross examination.
The judge, however, said that the defence was at liberty to use any document that had been brought before the court.
“You cannot file a document and your witness said he cannot remember seeing it. If it was filed by the defence, it is a different ball game altogether,” the judge told Mr. Obla.
“Once you have provided this document, it is for them (the defence) to use it at their own time during the trial, not at your own time,” the judge added.
The trial was adjourned till April 28 for continuation of trial.

THAT ABBA MORO AND HIS CO-CONSPIRATORS MAY FACE PROSECUTION : Prosecute [not just Sack] Abba Moro For Recruitment Tragedy, By Jiti Ogunye ... PremiumTimes

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On Saturday, 15th of March, 2014, the ides of March, the Ministry of Internal Affairs ( Interior),  Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS), and the public officers responsible for the Ministry and NIS, principally Abba Moro, the Interior Minister  and David Parradang, the Comptroller General of Immigrations jointly and severally killed, at least  twenty (20) people, across the country during a job recruitment exercise conducted  by the Nigeria Immigration Service in stadia across the Country.
The facts and circumstances of the tragic incident, and the fact that it was not unprecedented make these public officers and the Federal Government of Nigeria not only liable for the civil wrong that had been done to the deceased and their bereaved families but also culpable in criminal law for the unlawful killing of the deceased. Apart from, and in addition to being sacked, these public officers, ” and others at large” must be prosecuted.
Minister Abba Moro and his Ministry and Comptroller-General of Immigrations David Parrradang and the Department of Immigrations invited these Nigerians who died and the traumatized others, who are living, to apply for employment. We have been told that over 520,000 applicants applied for the under 4,556 job vacancies.
When the number of applicants hit 4,000, 40,000 or 100,000, the Ministry and Immigrations Department did not turn back subsequent applicants. They kept taking applications from job seekers who were made to pay for seeking jobs that were not available. Why? The Ministry and Immigrations were engaged in another illicit act  of raking in ” internally generated revenue”, to be stolen as the “recruitment exercise administrative  costs “. Corruption was, thus, the motivation and driver of this recruitment fraud.
Remember, the police recruitment scratch card, online application recruitment scam of the past. Recall the Imo State Governor, Ohiakim  similar employment scam of the past. The Joint Admission Matriculation Board  (JAMB) is also on board of this illicit  public fleece, dubiously selling online forms to candidates or victims, if you will, to apply for admission into tertiary institutions, far in excess of admission capacity of the tertiary institutions. The money realized  is called internally generated revenue, which these institutions, that are fed and sustained by “external” statutory votes and budgetary allocations, have wide latitude to steal.
These innocent Nigerians were scammed (and now some of them have been murdered) to apply for jobs that were  not available. Not only because the number of applicants far outstripped advertised vacancies, but also because the publicly advertised vacancies would have been  privately filled, anyway, before the public charade,  by vested interests, who have turned public service into a fiefdoms of unbridled nepotism and mediocrity.
When these murderers got over 520,000 applicants in their hands for  less than 4,556 available jobs, they had ample time to embark on arbitrary screening; for example, prune down the number of ” successful applicants to be shortlisted for interview” to say a manageable level of 40,000 applicants, in order to ensure that the applicants did not mass up at the stadia. They did not do so. Why? Simulations and pretences are the hallmark of fraudsters. They wanted to give the fraudulent impression that the exercise was open, transparent and credible.
When they invited these applicants, these murderers knew the number of those expected to congregate at each of these venues of tragedy. Did they prepare for them? Were paramedics there on standby? Did they prepare for crowd control? No. And to think that these are the institutions in charge of our borders in Nigeria. Porous thinking, negligent reasoning equals porous borders. Our borders, we can now see, are not porous because of the vast  land. They are porous because of vacuous and arid mind.
Two years ago, an avoidable disaster like this one almost occurred. And the Ministry of Interior and Immigrations who are now the undertakers who have interred these unemployment victims and forced them to embark on an irreversible emigrations out of country and out of life, were very much in the system, then. So, calamity like this had almost occurred before. Did Abba Moro and his co-agents of death do everything, or even anything, in their power to avert this disaster? No.
And so, we declare that the Minister and the Comptroller General of Immigrations, with others now at large, co-conspirators, accessory to, and accessory after the fact ofobtaining property under false pretences; and murder ( or manslaughter )/ culpable homicide ( or involuntary homicide are culpable. They are criminally liable, and must be brought to justice.
Section 419 of the Criminal Code Act, Cap C38, Vol. 4 LFN, 2004.) defines the offence of obtaining goods by false pretences. Section 419 A defines the offence of obtaining credit by false pretences or other fraud. It provides that ” (1) any person who by any false pretence or by any means of any other fraud obtains credit for himself or any other person (a) in  incurring any debt or liability: or by  means of an entry in  a debtor and creditor account between the person giving and the person receiving credit, is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for three years; (2) the offender cannot be arrested without  warrant unless found committing the offence”.
 Is it not glaring that we have a 419 Case here? When a Minister, Ministry and their Department of Immigrations extorted application  fees from over 500,000 unemployed Nigerians, when only about 4,000 jobs were “available”, ( and not actually available, for, as argued above, these vacancies would have been secretly filled), can we not see another variant of Advance Fee Fraud here?
Also, under our criminal laws, criminal negligence can be prosecuted. “It is the duty of every person who has in his charge or under his control anything whether living or inanimate, and whether moving or stationary, of such a nature that, if the absence of care or precaution in its use or management, the life, safety or health of any person may be endangered, to use reasonable care and take reasonable precautions to avoid such danger; and he is held to have caused any consequences which result to the life or health of any person by reason of any omission to perform that duty.” ( See Sections 304 of the Criminal Code Act, Cap C38, Vol. 4 LFN, 2004.  ” When  a person undertakes to do any act, the omission to do which is or may be dangerous to human life or health, it is his duty to do that act; and he is held to have caused any consequences which may result to the life or health of any person by reason of any omission to perform that duty” ( See Section305of the Criminal Code Act)
“A person who unlawfully kills another in such circumstances as not to constitute murder is guilty of manslaughter ; and “any person who commits the offence of manslaughter, is liable to imprisonment for life”‘ ( See Sections 317 and 325 of the Criminal Code Act)
The Minister and his subordinates were in charge of the immigration recruitment exercise and, in particular, in charge of the public venues where the selection and interview charade took place on Saturday, 15th of March. In Abuja, Federal Capital Territory, applicants, far in  excess of a 60,000 capacity National Stadium, were said to have been invited to the venue of the mass slaughter. The Minister and his subordinates owed the dead applicants a duty of care. They breached that duty of care. And they must be held responsible in civil actions ( unlawful killing, breach of fundamental right to life), and in a criminal charge  for the resultant damage ( injury) and deaths.
So, sue them. Let them be investigated, charged to court, and punished. And as an interim measure of penitence, let the Federal Government of Nigeria compel the Ministry and Immigrations to be disgorged of that illicit over Five Hundred Million Naira, and let that money be shareed amongst the families and next of kin of  our martyrs of the raging war for  survival in Nigeria, the departed victims of one more catastrophic evidence of a fast failing State.
This is the only sensible way to deal with the Abba Moro Massacre.
Mr. Ogunye, social justice advocate, attorney at law, and Premium Times Legal Adviser writes from Lagos.

WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH MEN TODAY? : DEVILS IN HUMAN SKIN: Five men rape 17-year-old girl and post pictures on internet ... SunNews

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Five young men are currently in trouble in Lokoja, the capital of Kogi State. Their crime? They allegedly gang-raped a 17-year-old Senior Secondary 3 girl and posted pictures of the criminal act on the Internet
According to Daily Sun investigations, the boys, sometime in February this year, accosted the innocent girl, Ezema Ginika, in Ankpa when she was returning from an errand. She was allegedly hit with a ring suspected to have been charmed. She immediately fell unconscious, it was learnt.
The boys then took her to an uncompleted building where they turned her to a sex machine. Besides raping her in turns, two of the suspects also took photographs of the act.
The pictures were later circulated to friends through the internet while some were printed and circulated in the town
While parading the suspects before journalists, the state police commissioner, Seidu Madawaki said immediately the girl became unconscious, the suspects collected her handsets, tore her underwear and took her to an uncompleted building where they satisfied their lust one after the other.
The police boss gave the names of the suspects as Musa Bala, Uchenna Chiaghanam, Farouk Edeh (now at large) Jemilu Wada ( now at large) and one other person. He lamented that the boys had engaged in a most odious act, wondering how the suspects would feel if such thing was done to their daughters or sisters.
He said the world had, in the name of civilization, been turned upside down, noting that the suspects would certainly not go unpunished. He vowed that the long arm of the law would soon catch the fleeing suspects.
Speaking with Daily Sun, the leader of the gang, Musa Bala who confessed that he actually initiated the act, said he got the talisman ring from a juju man in the village, saying he merely wanted to test the potency of the charm.
“I have been admiring this girl for a long time, and when I approached her to be my lover, she turned me down, saying she could not befriend an Igala boy, I left her in annoyance and vowed that I must do all I could to get her.
“So, when I saw her passing, I said, this opportunity must not pass me by. Then I went to gather my friends and blocked her near one mango tree. I called her name and said today I must have sex with you.
“But I want to tell you that it was only three of us that actually had sex with her. The other two were busy filming us and taking our pictures,” he added.
Narrating her ordeal to Daily Sun, the victim said Bala had been disturbing her since last year. She said the boy, at a point, even threatened to beat her if she would not succumb to his amorous moves which made her to report him to one his relations.
“On this particular day, my father sent me on an errand and while I was coming back, I did not know that these boys were trailing me. They just accosted me in a corner and started saying some funny, funny things.
“When I sensed that I was in an unprotected area, I wanted to run away, but Bala overpowered me and hit me with something. Then I fell down and became unconscious.
“I did not know what actually happened again until I just came back to my senses after about two hours, only to see that I had been messed up. My underwear, my bra and everything had been torn. Oh my God,” she cried.
Also speaking with the reporter, father of the victim, Mr Ginika, a petty trader in Ankpa, said it was a sympathiser that drew his attention to the ugly incident which prompted him to quickly alert the police.
He called on the police to ensure that they arrest the fleeing suspects and prosecute the boys to serve as a lesson to others.
The Sun

FOR THE RECORDS : Looking For Jobs, Finding Death, By Femi Fani-Kayode ... PremiumTimes

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One day Nigerians will appreciate the importance of facts, figures and statistics and the consequences of tolerating atrocious, lousy, insensitive and unaccountable governments.
Whether anyone likes to accept it or not, the bitter truth is that 80 per cent of our GRADUATES are unemployed in Nigeria today whilst 51 per cent of our PEOPLE are also unemployed. As a frightful and grave consequence of these shocking statistics, which I happen to believe may well be a world record in terms of unemployment, a terrible tragedy occurred in various cities in our country on 15th March, 2014.
On that day approximately 520,000 of our youths gathered together in sports stadiums in various cities all over our country for an aptitude test for just 4,556 jobs that were available in the Immigration Service. These staggering numbers were given out by the Ministry of Internal Affairs itself. Sixty thousand of those youths gathered at Abuja’s National Stadium alone and sadly 10 of them were were crushed to death in a stampede whilst looking for those jobs whilst many others were injured.
It did not stop there. Another 20,000 youths gathered in the stadium at Port Harcourt, Rivers state for aptitude tests for the same 4,556 jobs and there was another stampede there as well in which four of their colleagues were killed and four more were so badly wounded that they remain in a coma up until now.
Similar gatherings for the same Immigration aptitude test took place in cities all over the country all for a shot at the same 4,556 jobs and three young pregnant girls together with three male youths were killed in a similar stampede at the stadium in Minna, Niger state. The deaths of youths were also reported in stadiums in some of our other cities as well including Benin and Kano.
The only crime that all these children that were either killed, maimed or injured in these horrific stampedes in the stadiums of all these cities like Abuja, Port Harcourt, Minna, Lagos, Kano, Kaduna, Benin and elsewhere had committed was to try to get a job, to fight for a better life for themselves and to try to secure their future. What a tragedy!
One day Nigerians will appreciate the importance of facts, figures and statistics and the consequences of tolerating atrocious, lousy, insensitive and unaccountable governments. They will also understand the implications of having a government that has no qualms about taking advantage of the pitiful plight of its own youths and citizens and scamming them in the most obvious and shameful manner.
Why should anyone be surprised that 520,000 of our youths gathered in stadiums all over the country on March 15 just to apply for a relatively tiny handful of jobs that are available in the Immigration Service? This is so SIMPLY because there are NO jobs available for these youth in our country.
I repeat 80 per cent of our GRADUATES are unemployed and 51 per cent of our PEOPLE are unemployed. Sadly these figures have been confirmed by various international organisations even though the Nigerian Federal Government often seeks to deny them. Given this deplorable state of affairs, why won’t our youths die and be killed or injured whilst looking for the few jobs that are available? Why won’t they gather in stadiums all over the country in their hundreds of thousands just to do an aptitude test for a job in Immigration for which there are only 4,556 vacancies? Why should anyone be surprised by this madness and this turmoil? Why should anyone be moved by this horrific carnage when it is now a regular phenomenon in our country for children to be slaughtered. If they are not butchered whilst at school by islamist fundamentalists they are slaughtered whilst they are looking for jobs from a heartless government which has effectively destroyed their future.
Yet look for jobs they must because these children and these youth are desperate and they are suffering. To make matters worse they are also being taken advantage of and scammed by their own government who are desperate to extort money from them by all means available. If this were not the case why would the Comptroller-General of Immigration and the Minister of Internal Affairs order that each and every one of those youths that flooded the stadiums in their hundreds of thousands and that stood in the sun should be made to pay 1000 naira each for the forms that they were to use to do the aptitude test at the various stadiums all over the country.
Someone was set to make a whole lot of money considering the fact that 520,000 youths were involved in this shameless exercise and the amount of cash that they must have made runs into at least 520 million naira. The whole thing was just a massive and monumental scam to extort hundreds of millions of naira from these poor, young and innocent souls and many of our youths have paid for it with their lives.
This is what President Goodluck Jonathan’s Nigeria has done to them. We now have an army of angry, jobless, frustrated, disillusioned and desperate youths on our hands in this country and consequently we are literally sitting on a keg of gunpowder. May God help us and may He forgive us for failing these children and destroying their futures.
Other than this I will say no more on this matter because the truth is that most Nigerians no longer ”give a damn” when blood is shed and when lives are taken. This is so even when those lives are those of children. Permit me to give an example. On the very same day that our youth were dying in stadiums looking for jobs with Immigration, another 100 innocent people were being slaughtered by ”unknown gunmen” in southern Kaduna and no one seems to care. Again only two days before then, on March 13th 2014, 110 innocent Nigerians were butchered by what were described in the press as a group of ”Fulani gunmen who were on motorbikes” in Katsina state whilst the President was on an official visit there. What a tragedy!
Under President Goodluck Jonathan, we have become a nation of vampires where the death of innocent children and youths means nothing and where we cannot even provide jobs or a decent standard of living for our young ones. Instead we attempt to scam them and to extort money from them. What a government! What a country!
If our government had any sense of decency, justice or accountability, the Comptroller-General of Immigration and the Minister of Internal Affairs would have not only been compelled to resign or fired by now but they would also have been arrested and would be facing criminal charges for, at the very best, criminal negligence and manslaughter and, at the very worse, accessories before the fact to murder. Yet we know that that will never happen as long as President Goodluck Jonathan is in power. Far from it.
As a matter of fact instead of bowing his head in shame and showing any sense of contrition or remorse the Minister of Internal Affairs has come out shamelessly and blamed the dead youth themselves by saying that ”they did not exercise enough patience during the exercise”. May God forgive this man. I wonder if he would have expressed such sentiments if any of his own children had been killed in the stampede.
Permit me to end this contribution by quoting from a moving email that I received from a dear Nigerian family friend who herself is a mother and who presently resides in the United Kingdom with her family. She sent it to me the day after the tragic death of the youths in the stadium. I have obtained her permission to share her words in this write-up but for obvious reasons I will not mention her name. She wrote-
”Good morning uncle Femi. I honestly don’t know where to start from. My heart is so heavy. What is it about Nigeria that (or is it we as a nation) nothing good comes out of the news. I’m beginning to wonder if there is nothing wrong with me when I go through websites expectant of only bad news. Why don’t I ever expect anything good to come out if Nigeria? I don’t even know what to tell my children again. I try to give them a balanced view of the country but something would always come up to make nonsense of that. Why would any sane person want to come and live in that madness called Nigeria where nothing is guaranteed. Life is not guaranteed, jobs are not guaranteed, education is not guaranteed, security is not guaranteed, a decent daily meal is not guaranteed. I could go on and on. I came to a realization recently which is self-preservation. Abi shebi it’s life/self first. When I saw the early morning pictures of the crowd of youths at the Abuja stadium my heart just sank because I could almost write the script of what would follow. And so I waited (expectantly?)and wasn’t disappointed. Would anything come out of it? No. Would life go on? Yes. Do they care? No. And the moron of a Minister had the gall to say that candidates died because of ”impatience”. Meanwhile the so-called aptitude test was just a ruse. They had handpicked their preferred candidates weeks ago. The crowd alone told me that we have a serious problem of youth unemployment yet Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala would come out and be reeling stupid figures. Please tell her that she’s not fooling anyone. As if the unemployment is not bad enough government is opening more universities like daycare centers and still granting licenses for private universities. Who is going to absorb these teeming unemployed graduates? Where are the industries? Are you creating an enabling environment for investment? In fact I’m just done with agonizing over Nigeria. Self first please!”
Her words and counsel moved me to tears. As far as I am concerned she captured the mood very well and her simple yet succinct submission is reflective of the thinking and deep pain of millions of Nigerians from all over the world that are fast losing hope in their nation. Yet what can we do but just continue to hope and pray. What can we do for the future of our children and to better the fortunes of our nation? This is indeed food for thought. As the bible says, ”May God deliver us from bloodthirsty and evil men” and ”May the balm of Gilead heal our wounds and comfort our mourning souls”.

SPECIAL REPORT ... GOING UNDERCOVER FOR THIS MOVING ACCOUNT OF A CRMINAL TRADE : The Making of the Human Traffic Story, By Evelyn Groenink ... PremiumTimes

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Photo: guardian.co.uk

“Maybe I am overly worried. But it is the first time, I think, that a female journalist goes undercover as a prostitute?”

“So there are signs to warn against human traffic all over on the side of the road from Lagos to Cotonou?” I ask colleague Idris Akinbajo.  “This means that they know?” Akinbajo is here, in 2011, investigating networks of illegal migrants in Amsterdam and the conversation has turned to women being trafficked from Nigeria for sex work in Europe. I have asked the question because of the many newspaper reports, in the Netherlands and elsewhere in Europe, that say that women from Nigeria and other ‘feeder’ countries are forced into prostitution upon arrival here; that they have been told to expect work as babysitters and chamber maids in hotels.
Akinbajo hesitates. “It is theoretically possible”, he says, “that they would not understand the signs. If they are illiterate maybe. But then there are also radio broadcasts all the time. And if they don’t want to go into prostitution, I think they could always get off as soon as they reach Cotonou. That town is in Benin, which is a different country, but it is only 100 kilometers from Lagos. Maybe you should come to Nigeria and ask the women there.”
I do not manage to get to Nigeria in person, but the conversation, later on, by email, turns to the possibilities that Akinbajo’s newspaper, Premium Times, will conduct such an investigation. It is on the 14th of May 2013 that I receive a message from him that Premium Times has assigned a reporter to investigate why so many women go with human traffickers.  The resulting story will be published both by ZAM Chronicle and Premium Times. “Her name is Tobore Ovuorie and she is all good to go.”
 African women are not naive
In the following days we talk on email: Premium Times editors, Tobore Ovuorie and I. I put the story plan to her. Can she interview women who are targets of human traffickers?  Go on a border road trip with a consignment of trafficked women from Lagos to Cotonou?  We have a colleague in Cotonou, health reporter Reece Adanwenon, who could meet her there and arrange for transport back.  “Definitely, I am excited and quite interested in being part of this”, Tobore says.
I mention the key question.  Are the traffickers forcing the women into prostitution or are they merely smuggling them with their cooperation? Do the women know what they are in for? Tobore answers as if she already knows some who consider, or have considered, being trafficked (I will later learn that this is true). “(Ignorance) is not the whole truth. African women, especially girls, these days, are not naïve; they are smarter than themselves!”
We conclude provisionally that that image of very naïve, ignorant women may do a disservice to willing sex work migrants.  It may play right into the hands of the trafficking syndicates, making women, if they went into prostitution willingly, feel guilty and complicit -and therefore more dependent on their traffickers. “Legalizing sex work is a good debate”, says Ovuorie, adding that it is a difficult one in Nigeria because “we are such a pretentiously religious nation!”
 Risk analysis
Tobore and I then talk to Reece Adanwenon in Cotonou, who is also excited about the story. “It would be great if we could interview the women Tobore will be travelling with, even if anonymous. I am interested, too, to know if they are forced or if they travel willingly.” Reece has done stories about sex workers in Cotonou’s red light district before and is aware that there is a lot to interrogate and discover. She undertakes to be on call to help extract Tobore from any Lagos transport that she is taking. According to Reece, there are probably several such transports every single day.
Which doesn’t mean that going on such a transport won’t be risky. Now that the reporters and the story idea are in place, we need to discuss risk analysis. On 23 May I write to Idris Akinbajo, now investigations editor at Premium Times, to suggest that we put a safety net in place, with telephone contacts, emergency money, physical help, etcetera, close to wherever Tobore may find herself. Knowing that Premium Times reporters live and work in Nigeria, where journalists are often threatened by violence, and that Idris and his team are quite used to this, I add: “Maybe I am overly worried. But it is the first time, I think, that a female journalist goes undercover as a prostitute?”
Idris responds on the same day. “I understand your fears and they are genuine. I’ve discussed with Tobore on her proposal and the risks inherent. Truth is, there is hardly any other way she could get the information needed for the story.  Tobore is a determined lady.  We will do all we can to minimise and hopefully eliminate the risks.”
Fumes and tabs
In the next few months, whilst Tobore walks the streets of Abuja dressed up as a call girl, infiltrating the milieus where the traffickers operate, Akinbajo and his chief editors, Musikilu Mojeed and Dapo Olorunyomi, make efforts to get her some protection. After much discussion they decide against involving Nigerian security agencies for fear they may have been infiltrated by criminals–as many Nigerian state institutions have. But they do alert some trusted individuals in the security sector to keep tabs on Tobore.  Additionally, Tobore knows that she mustn’t be alone with traffickers and ensure that she stays with the group at all times.  As soon as she goes on the transport, Idris Akinbajo and his fellow editors will keep their phones on 24/7 to ensure they don’t miss any call for help.  And in the end, I tell myself, how much can happen during a minibus trip between Lagos and Cotonou?
On the 10th of October, I receive a Facebook message from Tobore saying that she has been hospitalised “during the course of attending a party organized by some of the pimps last week Sunday.”  She tells me that she “inhaled so much cigarette fumes and other banned substances”, that she had an asthma attack and that she was on “oxygen, nebulizer, drips and injections in the hospital until Wednesday afternoon.”
After her discharge from hospital Tobore goes back to her work in the streets, waiting for ‘her bosses’ at Premium Times to give her the go ahead to join a Cotonou transport. “I am really eager to get this story done”, she says a number of times, implying, with frustration, that her bosses seem to be dragging their feet. She is passionate about doing this. Maybe too passionate.
Women in burka
We finally meet in person at the African Investigative Journalism Conference in Johannesburg on 28 October. Standing in the doorway to Wits University’s restaurant the Origins Centre, thin as a reek, poised, made up and serious, with glasses, she is very different from the happy, cheerful pictures she posts on social media.  Based on the girlish, jolly poses –with friends, at parties, next to a fountain- , she likes to adopt, the pink and orange summer dresses and all the laughing, I had feared that she, even if passionate, might be too lighthearted and reckless to fully understand what she was getting into.
But in the Origins Centre, Tobore talks of a woman she has interviewed, recently returned from brothels in Algeria, suffering from Aids as well as anal gonorrhoea.  Of a man who has been sexually abused so severely in Russia that he has suffered intestinal damage and is now vegetating back in his village. She tells me of the ‘hypocritical religious communities’ where doctors refused to treat those who have been ‘bad girls and boys’. Of women in burka, who ply their trade on the road to Kano airport in the north.  “It’s not always poverty, but families are greedy. They will encourage their girls to do this, whilst pretending to the outside world that they are the purest of the pure.” Of a close friend who died of Aids after a trafficked stint in Italy, and highly placed officials, who can be seen in church every Sunday, but who are clients of prostitutes, even of little girls and boys.
This Tobore Ovuorie is not a happy-go-lucky young journalist, merely excited about a challenging assignment. She talks and talks, quietly, denouncing, unhaltingly, as if she wants to say everything now already, just in case. It’s not the prostitution that makes her mad. It is the abuse, the powerlessness, and, most of all, the hypocrisy. The monsters at the top of the syndicates, the officials in power who work with them.  She shakes her head when I tell her, once again, that she doesn’t have to go through with this. With a quiet, steely, anger, she says she is going to.
At this point –maybe it is also the olive green suit she is wearing- she reminds me of the guerrilla students I interviewed in the eighties in Central America: youngsters equally determined to take up arms to fight the dictatorships whose death squads terrorized the population. But is this journalism, or activism?  “Maybe I am an activist journalist”, she says. “But they need to be exposed. And that is what I am going to do.”  Our colleague, Ghanaian investigative journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas, also sitting at our table –I wanted the two to meet- nods. He knows. He has been in confined spaces with armed criminals, too.
 Shaved and beaten
A week later, Tobore texts us that she is about to go with the syndicate to Cotonou. First, the message reads, she is to go for ‘pickpocketing training’, but then the transport will leave. That is the last I hear of her for another maddening three days.  (I later understand that she has had no internet access, but has been in touch, via SMS, with her editors in Nigeria.)
Three days. It doesn’t take three days to get to Cotonou. I contact Reece. Nothing.
It is the 9th of November when Reece contacts me on Facebook. “I am with Tobore.”  I call and hear that Reece and Tobore are together on the other end, but the connection is bad and I can’t hear what they say. We revert back to Facebook. Reece has put Tobore on. “Morning. My hair was shaved yesterday by a native doctor. Right now I have no hair on my head.” I smile, assuming that shaving must be part of the strange voodoo rites that trafficked women in Nigeria are subjected to, to impress obedience on them because ‘if they talk, the demons will get them’. We have heard quite a few such stories.
I suggest a wig, new clothes. If the pimps are after her, she should disguise herself.  As I am typing, she continues to type too. About her escape, about the native doctors, about having been accused of harbouring a ‘bad spirit’. I am still smiling, thinking that even if she is bald, she is alive and talking and reporting, so all is probably well.  I type in some extra advice, trying to impress on her that she is not safe yet, that the criminals will have friends in Cotonou, that she may be followed. I don’t see the new message that appears. “The madam turned out to be a ritualist. Also deals in human sacrifice.” I miss it because I am typing, rattling on about the wig she should buy.
The madam turned out to be a ritualist, also dealing in human sacrifice
She doesn’t bring it up again in the following days. She only mentions that the witch doctors beat her. Reece has taken her to a doctor, and she has been prescribed pain killers and sleeping tablets.  A few days later, Reece and some friendly Beninese officials help –informally- to get Tobore back to the border, where she crosses, again illegally, and takes a taxi back to Abuja, where she is met by Dapo Olorunyomi. I feel terrible about the shaving and the beating, but am also mightily relieved that she is safe.  And, apparently, also in good spirits. “The criminals know my name because they took my passport, but I still want to publish under my own name anyway. I will need to go underground for some time.”  “I salute your courage”, I write, still not knowing exactly how much courage it is that I am talking about.
 What does ‘slaughtered’ mean?
I’ll find that out when, on 28 November, the attachment –Tobore’s story- lands in my email. I read with fascination until I get stuck at a sentence. “There are screams as the two are slaughtered in front of me”, it reads. ‘Slaughtered?” What does she mean slaughtered? I send her an email immediately. “Do you mean beaten”? No”, the answer comes. “Beheaded and slaughtered, murdered. For the sale of their body parts. For rituals.”
They had pointed at Tobore first. Tobore could have been beheaded, cut up, murdered. But the story explains that one of the witch doctors apparently told the traffickers that a powerful spirit was protecting her. That she should be sent away. What is going on with these witch doctors? Did they check Tobore’s background and decided that she was, in fact, ‘protected’? We still don’t have answers to these questions even now.
It is only then that I slowly start to understand how it works. How the syndicates will make money out of people, be it from sex work, bank fraud, drugs, or body parts. How they work together, different specialities, same network. How they link with the criminally infiltrated Nigerian state, how witch doctors, putting fear of ‘demons’ in the hearts of adventurous young people, are on their payroll. How sex workers have been driven into their nets because they provide the only way out of Nigeria. How they provide the clients, the brothels, the routes.
This is what Tobore has been saying all along. Criminalisation of women whose only crime is to look for greener pastures, are made dependent on monsters who expose them to unsafe sex and send them home to die, who simply cut them up if they happen to be worth more dead than alive.
These are the criminals Tobore has been so hell bent in exposing, and she has done just that. This little sprig of a thing with her orange dresses and happy poses on Facebook.
Nervous breakdown
Shortly after writing the story, holed up in a safe house, she has a nervous breakdown. It is no surprise, of course. But during her sleepless, nightmarish days, and nights, where she tries to recover, we keep writing to one another. I nominate her for all the awards I can think of. Premium Times sees to it that she is shielded and gets treatment. She gets better, slowly, and responds elatedly when she hears that other international media (in South Africa, Netherlands and Belgium) are co-publishing the story.
It is during this period that a progressive weekly in another western country refuses to carry the story because the part about murderous witch doctors ‘may confirm cliche’s about Africans.’ Tobore can’t believe her ears. “Surely the fact that some persons were found (doing this) does not apply to all Africans? Just like families have a potpourri of the good, bad and ugly, so do societies, be they European or African.”
After the rush is over, I ask her if she has no regrets. The answer comes within an hour:  “It’s true that it was risky. But I am grateful that I did it. I just can’t stand by while these things happen in my country. My sisters and brothers are dying and I had to do something about it.” Was signed: Tobore Ovuorie, investigative journalist in Nigeria.
Tobore Ovuorie’s expose led to a Nigerian government investigation and to questions in the European parliament. The story is also the subject of a case study by an institute of journalism training in Nigeria and has formed the basis for a new cross-border investigation into trafficked sex workers in Europe, in which ZAM and Premium Times are participating. 
Evelyn Groenink (1960) is ZAM Chronicle’s investigations editor.

REVEALING THE MURKY DETAILS : My traducer, Financial Reporting Council, got N500million from CBN, Sanusi says ... PremiumTimes

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Central Bank Governor, Lamido Sanusi
The Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria [FRCN], whose report and recommendations President Goodluck Jonathan relied upon to suspend the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Lamido Sanusi, is a beneficiary of the CBN “intervention” spendings, the suspended CBN chief has said.
The FRCN had, in a 13-page report, following its review of the audited financial statement of the CBN for 2012, made allegations of financial impropriety against the CBN under Mr. Sanusi.
Based on the report, President Jonathan, in suspending Mr. Sanusi from office, expressed his government’s loss of confidence in the bank chief’s ability to lead the Central Bank to achieve its mandate as enshrined in the CBN Act.
But Mr. Sanusi, in a response to the FRCN report, described the allegations against the CBN under his leadership as not only “false and unfounded”, but also “malicious and fabricated.”
He dismissed the entire report as full of “misconceptions, misrepresentations and erroneous inferences” that could have been cleared if the FRCN was not in a hurry to “mislead the president into believing that the management of the Central Bank was guilty of misconduct and recklessness.”
The embattled CBN governor expressed surprise that the management of FRCN could make such damning allegations when, indeed, it was one of the prime beneficiaries of the benevolence of the CBN.
Mr. Sanusi said that apart from the N220 million paid directly by the CBN to the Council, the banking sector, through the Banker’s Committee, also mobilised and paid another N280 million, totaling N500 million, to the FRCN, for the construction of its International Financial Reporting Standards, Academy.
It is not clear how these funds, which did not reflect in the Council’s budget and reports, were spent.
PREMIUM TIMES’ investigations revealed that details of these financial donations were not disclosed by the FRCN in any of his statement of accounts or annual reports.
A review of the 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 federal budgets also revealed that there was no budgetary appropriation for the IFRS Academy project and the donations received for the project were not reflected.
Although a brochure promoting a N2 billion Fund Raising Dinner to mobilize funding for the IFRS Academy is published on the FRC’s website, the list of donors and their donations during the event were conspicuously missing.
The event, organised by the former Nigerian Accounting Standards Board, NASB (which eventually metamorphosed to the FRCN) in Abuja on May 31, 2011, merely listed items for sponsorship and the amounts needed as well as the roll of honour of individuals, groups and corporate organisations invited for the event.
Key invitees on the fund raiser included the CBN; the World Bank; Corporate Affairs Commission, CAC; Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation, NDIC; Nigeria Investment Commission, NIPC; Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC; Pension Commission, PENCOM; Nigerian Communications Commission, NCC; Nigeria Export Promotion Council, NEPC; Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC; and Federal Inland Revenue Commission, FIRS.
Other invitees included heads of professional groups and institutions, members of the National Assembly, federal ministries, departments and agencies as well as various industry chieftains.
It is not clear why the FRCN, in the spirit of transparency and accountability, refused to highlight in its report the N500 million it collected from the CBN for the project as well as other donations.
Attempts by PREMIUM TIMES to contact the Executive Secretary of the Council, Jim Obazee, for clarification, were unsuccessful. Several calls to the telephone lines listed on the council’s website were not answered.
At the Council’s Abuja office at 15 Ajesa Street, Wuse 2, an official, who gave his name as Nasiru, said he was not authorized to comment on the issue.
He also declined to provide contact details for the executive secretary, who was not in the office when our reporter visited. He, however, promised to get into touch with Mr. Obazee to inform him of the reporter’s enquiry.
Although he promised to call back with the executive secretary’s response, he is yet to do so about 48 hours later.
Mr. Sanusi said the President Jonathan and the CBN board were aware and approved most of the interventionist spendings his bank made during his tenure.
“All of these requests were duly submitted to the CBN Board of Directors and were duly approved,” Mr. Sanusi said. “The Federal Government of Nigeria has been aware, supported and encouraged the CBN intervention projects, in recognition of their positive contribution to development. It is also important to emphasise that the grants under the Intervention Program were duly budgeted for, and made on a limited and selected basis.”
He said having provided detailed explanations, backed by verifiable documents, the President should “adhere to his policy of fairness and justice, and apply the same rationale and rigour to other agencies of the Federal Government that have had serious allegations and queries levied against them, and prevail on them to provide responses and explanations with the same level of clarity and transparency.”

TRAGEDY : Popular Broadcaster, Femi Segun Dies in Power Bike Crash ... SJ

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Son of renowned writer, Mabel Segun, Femi is dead.
The popuar broadcaster who married the first child of Afrobeat legend, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, Yeni died in a fatal power bike accident in Lagos on Friday morning.
Femi Segun who is a Public Relations practitioner was behind the campaign strategy of many politicians in Lagos State.
His death sent a shock wave across the Lagos social circle.
His last social event was at the Encomium magazine’s black and white ball where he was the event anchor.

DONT WE ALREADY HAVE ENOUGH PROBLEMS IN BENUE? : Bizman Caught Pants Down Having Sex With Student In Benue ... VIEWERS DISCRETION

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A Businessman who has been notorious in molesting and having sex with young school children has been caught in the act in Benue State. The businessman (name withheld) was apprehended while having sex inside a bush path with his latest catch who was old enough to be his daughter. Someone who noticed the act quickly alerted other people and the swoop on the two lovers .He was caught pants down having sex with the girl whose mates were in school.The man was given the beaten of his life,paraded naked and later handed over to the police.Some of his neighbours who spoke about the incident,said the man uses his money to entice school girls with mouth watering offers.

WHEN DISCIPLINE COUNTS IN HIGH OFFICES : Assemblies Of God's Church Nigeria Suspends General Oveerseer

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The Assemblies of God Church Nigeria (AGN) has suspended her General Superintendent (GS), Rev. Paul Emeka, over allegation of misconduct, highhandedness, financial misappropriation and other sundry matters.
The church also decried that it had degenerated to its lowest ebb since his regime as he had single handedly ran the church as a private establishment.
The General committee of the church has henceforth appointed the Assistant General Superintendent, Rev. Dr. Chidi Okoroafor, as the acting General Superintendent to pilot the affairs of the church in line with the church’s constitution and bye-law.
In a swift reaction, the suspended GS has described his ordeal as the handiwork of his enemies in the church as well as a political and ethnic gang-up against him, noting that such blackmail was aimed at tarnishing his image but believed that he would surmount his perceived detractors.
A letter dated March 6, 2014 titled “Re: Rev. Prof. Paul Emeka, former General Superintendent, Assemblies of God, Nigeria” and signed Rev. Dr. John Ikoni, Rev. Dr. Chidi Okoroafor and Rev. Dr. Vincent Alaje; the General Secretary, Acting General Superintendent and General Treasurer respectively, stated, “Please be informed that at the meeting of the General Committee, Assemblies of God, Nigeria held on March 6 in the Conference Hall of the National Secretariat, Enugu, the General Committee suspended the Rev. Prof. Paul Emeka from membership of Assemblies of God, Nigeria.
“Rev. Prof. Paul Emeka who until this development served as General Superintended of Assemblies of God, Nigeria, therefore ceases to function in any of the duties assigned to the Office of the General Superintendent in the Constitution and Bye-Laws of the General Council of Assemblies of God, Nigeria, also with effect from today”, the letter added.
The church also accused the former General Superintendent of being autocratic in behaviour, financial mismanagement; abuse of power and above all taking the church to court, which is tantamount to tarnishing the image of the church and bringing it to public ridicule.
Among other matters leveled against the suspended General Superintendent include withdrawal of N200 million from the Pension Fund without due process, spending N250 million for the alleged acquisition of a property in Germany without the approval of the Executive Committee (EC), false claims to proprietorship of the Evangel University, false claim to the rank of Professor, and use of the same after his name with the attendant embarrassment to the church, among others.
The suspended General Superintendent, however, said that those allegations were targeted at discrediting him, adding that those who are championing the suspension issue are doing so because of their selfish and parochial interests.

WEDDING BELLS : Pictures From Psquare (Paul) Traditional Wedding In PortHarcourt ... We Wish Them A Happy Married Life

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The who is who in the entertainment industry where in Port Harcourt ,Rivers State yesterday to honour the invitation of Mr and Mrs Paul Okoye to their traditional wedding .Those in attendance to witness the Paul and Anita's engagements includes his twin brother,Peter,Nollywood actor Kanayo O Kanayo,MI,Uti Nwachukwu,Dare Art Alade,Mr Ibu,Banky W,Uche Jombo,Ice Prince ,Pasuma and a host of other stars. The event was anchored by Julius Agwu,while Keke Ogugbe gave the toast.A minute silent was also observed for the mother of the Psquare who died few years ago,

SO THESE PEOPLE TOOK THEIR ROFO ROFO FIGHT TO THE CONFAB? : CAN tackles Sultan’s group for saying Nigeria has only 40% Christians ... DailyPost.

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The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) has reacted to claim by an Islamic organisation, Jama’atu Nasril Islam, led by the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Abubakar Sa’ad III, that the process of selecting delegates to the National Conference was fair and will affect the credibility of its outcome.
The association also threatened to boycott the 2016 population census and subsequent exercises unless they underscore religion.
Secretary-General of JNI, Dr. Khalid Abubakar, had stated: “Christians, who by all acceptable records are not more than 40 per cent of the country’s population ironically constitute 62 per cent of the total delegates.”
But in a statement Saturday in Abuja, the General Secretary of CAN, Dr. Musa Asake, noted that inclusion of religion would correct certain negative impressions and rivalry about which religion has more adherents than others in the country.
He described the claim by JNI as an “unprovoked defamation of Nigerian Christians.”
“CAN may need to remind JNI of the argument and refusal of Muslims to include religion during the last census in Nigeria.
“We appeal to JNI not to use religion as a basis for their reservations about the National Conference. We believe the conference will do Nigeria a lot of good.
“The JNI should come out with the figures that make the Muslim population to be more than that of Christians as we in CAN will boycott future census in Nigeria beginning with the 2016 exercise if they do not include religion. Enough is enough!”
Continuing, “When and how are these figures by the international agencies arrived at? Which of the international agencies have census figures that Nigerians do not have?
“Has there been any census by international agencies in Nigeria? To put forward a suggestion or theory like this one by Khalid for others to consider should have been well thought out.
“In this case, the JNI Secretary-General goofed, having put out insensible arguments and thoughts. We are therefore challenging the Secretary-General of the JNI to make public the source of his population figures which shows that Christians in this country are 40 per cent.”
Asake insisted that if JNI fails to respond to the population issue, and produce their sources, it would use alternative means to ascertain the fact of their publication.
“We cannot continue to allow people like the JNI to be making reckless and false statements, bringing division among Christians and Muslims, when we are busy working hard to see that we live together in peace and harmony.
“The body of rules, ideas, principles and techniques that apply to subjects like census figures must be those matched by empirical evidence. Khalid’s ideas, thoughts and beliefs about 40 per cent Christian population and 62 per cent of delegates being Christians are therefore mere speculation and conjectures to buy in the idea of a region’s reluctance to attend the conference. It is another way of using religion to shoot down the conference,” CAN stated.

CHANGING TIMES .. CHANGING PERCEPTIONS : “We are dating for fun, not for marriage” – Tayo Odueke and Alao Malaika

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Fuji musician, Alao Malaika, and Yoruba actress, Temitayo Odueke, popularly known as Sikiratu Sindodo, have confirmed that they are into a relationship but not for the purpose of marriage.
tayo and sikiratu
The Fuji musician, who already has two wives, says he does not intend to marry her anytime soon.
‘There’s nothing like that, it’s not even in my thinking,‘ he said. ‘It’s unfair for people to just start fabricating lies about me that I want to marry a new wife. I only have two wives presently.’
“Some people called, asking me if it’s true that I am getting married to Alao Malaika soon. I told them I am not getting married anytime soon. But it is true that Malaika and I are back together. We are dating for fun now. No marriage plans in sight” Sikiratu Sindodo said.
Sikiratu is famous for having previously dated MC Oluomo, the Lagos State Treasurer of National Union of Road Transport Workers, who used to be a close friend of Malaika’s.
The duo have, in the past, been playing hide and seek with the media, denying their romance even when it was obvious that they were up to something.

WHAT GOES AROUND SURELY MUST COME AROUND. ONE DAY SOON OUR LEADERS WILL NOT BE ABLE TO ATTEND SOCIAL FUNCTIONS AGAIN IF NOTHING IS DONE TO CURB THIS INSECURITY IN OUR LAND : Mark escapes death as gunmen attack his convoy ... VanguardNews

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Senate President, David Mark last Thursday escaped death as his convoy was allegedly attacked by yet to be identified gunmen in Orlu, Imo State.
The Senate Present who had just retuned from Switzerland where he attended the International Parliamentary Union, IPU, conference, went to Nkwere, Imo state to attend the burial ceremony of late business mogul, Sir John Richard Anyaehie.

Senate President David Mark
Senate President David Mark

In a statement by the Chief Press Secretary to the Senate President, Paul Mumeh Friday night, though no life was lost, the attack occurred in Orlu Senatorial Zone of the state.
Mark lamented that the attack happened a moment when a great philanthropist like Anyaehie was being buried, adding that it was not what should be expected in a senatorial district like Orlu.
He described late Anyaehie as a truthful man and good adviser, from whom he benefited as a young military Major in Port Harcourt, saying his first encounter with the deceased was the greatest in his life.
Mark advised Nigerians to always prepare for their death by being humble and godly like the late Anyaehie, noting that the deceased life united people of Nkwerre, Orlu Senatorial Zone and Imo State at large.
Also speaking at the ceremony, Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State described the late Anyaehie as one of the few but truthful and godly billionaires ever produced in Igboland, whose life was a lesson to all men.
Okorocha said death must come when it would and that what remained most important in life was the things people must be remembered for.
While praying for his death to bring peace in Nigeria, he called for the practice of selfishness to stop, as according to him, life is meaningless if others cannot benefit from people’s wealth.
In his sermon, the Bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Orlu, Rt. Rev. Benneth Okoro warned Christians not to die in sin as that could be very dangerous after death.
He advised politicians equipping youths to terrorise the society to endeavour to withdraw the weapons,
Stressing that it was only the good one did on earth that would speak for him on his last day.
The Bishop cautioned against primitive acquisition of wealth, saying however being wealthy was not sin but being proud and using same to oppress people was sinful before God.
Okoro described the late Anyaehie as a cathedral builder and a man who believed in the sovereignty of God in all things and astute businessman.
According to him, the deceased built the magnificent cathedral of SS John and Peter, Nkwerre at the cost of over N1 billion in 1993 as well as other churches in the area after God healed him from a deadly ill health.
The bishop said Anyaehie was a great philanthropist who empowered thousands of people across the country to the extent that his driver tried to lay down his life for him when armed robbers attacked, thereby converting the criminals to change their lives.

NOW THAT THE DIE IS CAST : APC finally settles for General Muhammad Buhari ... TheHerald

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Buhari
Multiple sources within the ranks of the All Progressives Congress have confirmed that the consensus candidate of the party for the 2015 elections is former head of state, Muhammadu Buhari.
Sunday Independent reports:
The All Progressive Congress (APC) may have decided to settle for former Head of State, General Muhammadu Buhari, as its presidential candidate in next year’s election.
Some of the notable leaders who spoke with Sunday Independent were of the opinion that a Buhari candidature would guarantee a lot of things, which include massive support from the Northwest and Northeast, because, according to them, most people in the North still see him as the messiah and would go out en masse to vote for him any day.
They also said Buhari is perhaps the only person that has qualities that are antithetical to anyone the PDP would bring forth.
This, according to them, would give the voters an alternative that would be favourable to the opposition party.
It was also gathered that the leaders are mindful of the effects a rancorous primary would have on the party and are doing everything to avoid it.
One of the leaders from the Middle Belt even said that Buhari is not only one of the leaders in the country who is not corrupt and have lived above board, he is also a unifying figure within the party.
The major headache of the party today, however, is how to conduct a credible and transparent primary in which Buhari will emerge the clear winner.
Sources said the party leadership is being very conscious that Nigerians are watching its nomination process, as a litmus test of whether or not the party will respect its own constitution and shame it’s traducers, is committed to a credible and transparent nomination process.
To this end, it was gathered that the leadership has urged all Buhari’s sympathisers within the party to redouble their efforts to ensure that he wins the Presidential ticket in a democratic manner.
“You can only envisage what would happen if the party failed to field Buhari. Remember that there are many people who joined the APC because of Buhari and they are ready to do everything for him.
“So, it’s something we have to manage very well. In fact, I can tell you emphatically that the unity of the party would be greatly affected if Buhari is not picked as our presidential candidate,” said the source, who craved anonymity because the party did not authorise him to speak on the matter.
Another party leader in a phone call from Abuja went out of his way to explain why the party would be better placed to field Buhari.
He said the leaders were well aware of the tag of a serial presidential loser placed on Buhari due to his inability to win previous elections, adding however that 2015 would be different, because of the increasing dynamics of the presidential race and the determination of APC leaders to forgo their personal interests to that of the party.
He said even though there are other presidential hopefuls in the party that are being speculated to have an ambition, like the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, and the Kano State governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso, he however said that the party cannot afford to take a gamble in presenting an electable candidate that can defeat the PDP.
His words:  “With Buhari, we are already sure of 16 million votes; and if you look at the current spread of our party’s configuration in the country, we are going to do well in the Northwest, Northeast, North-central and very well in the Southwest.
“The only problem we are likely to have is the Southeast. The Southsouth is going to be keenly contested because of the twin-factors of Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State and the Rivers State governor, Rotimi Amaechi, who are top contenders for the Vice-Presidency.
“Apart from this, don’t forget that Buhari has cult followership in the North and that he lost many of states in 2011 because he did not manage the nomination process of the candidates well.

AND ALL THESE PROBES TO WHAT END? : N10 bln Scandal: Reps obtain travel logs of Petroleum minister’s jet ... TheHerald

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The House of Representatives is said to have secured the travel logs of the Challenger private jet used by Diezani Alison Madueke, the minister of Petroleum. The move comes as outrage increases over allegations that the minister spent a whopping $550,000 monthly in maintenance of the jet over a period of two years. More outrageous is the fact that the minister is alleged to have used the private jet for her family’s personal use instead of flying commercial, and saving the country billions of Naira.
The travel logs are said to cover the minister’s trips to China, South Africa, Dubai, and the USA.
The petroleum minister is said to have aborted a foreign trip with President Jonathan in order to prepare her defense before the House of Representatives summons.
A source told Nation: “This probe is a result of painstaking efforts by some members in the last one year. Some of these members, including those from PDP in the House, have secured the travel logs of the minister to and from Nigeria.
“For instance, she had been to China, South Africa, United States, the UK and the United Arab Emirates with the jet. At a point, the jet was relocated to Ghana when controversy arose on the jet in August last year.
“Even if FAAN, NAMA and NCAA decide not to release the records of movement of the Challenger Jet, these countries will oblige the House of Representatives. Also, the leasing company is foreign owned, it cannot hide the records if it wants to remain in business.”
Another source said: “We have identified some issues for Diezani as follows:
• What informed the hiring of the jet?
• Why will the parastatal be paying for the jet?
• Why will the minister travel in a private jet while on the delegation of the president to some countries?
• Assuming that the hiring of the jet was due to exigencies, what informed the extension of the privilege to members of her family as was the case during the 2013 Easter Break trip to Dubai in UAE?
“We are not after the person of the minister but we want probity in government. We won’t allow a serving public officer use the public treasury for personal purpose.
“And what we are doing is not new because a group, Crusaders for Good Governance (CGG), sent a petition to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on the same issue last year.”
Sources close to the Petroleum minister told Nation that she intends to deny the allegations. The source who spoke anonymously stated, “The minister is just upset with the allegation, she decided to cancel her schedule abroad to clear her image. She believes the allegations are too grave to ignore.
“She is already preparing her defence; she has devoted the weekend to do this. The minister has told everyone around her that there is a total misconception and misplacement of facts and purely an act of political blackmail against this administration
“By the time she is through with the facts and figures, Nigerians will know the truth. She was seriously upset that some people are personalizsing the issue. She said the figures they are quoting were exaggerated; when the Minister opens up, it will be revealing too.”

FOR THE RECORDS ... JUSTIFYING INCOMPETENCE : Sam Nda-Isaiah: Jonathan must run on his record ... TheScoop

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GoodluckJonathan
Last week, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) said the mass murders across the country were the handiwork of some people who were hell-bent on embarrassing President Jonathan because he “is a minority”. The statement was released by the PDP national publicity secretary, Olisa Metuh. This kind of statement should have embarrassed any normal president but Jonathan is far from being a normal president. He did not disown the statement and the PDP national chairman did not disown it, so it is safe to take it as the view of both the president and his party.
If the president was not embarrassed by that statement, I was embarrassed for him. I, in fact, felt scandalised and discomfited that a man who is president and commander-in-chief of the armed forces would think he is a minority. I wonder why somebody who is already the president of 174 million people would still be speaking this language of division. The PDP has even gone further to say that it is the statements of General Muhammadu Buhari, former head of state, and Nasiru el-Rufai, former FCT minister, that were the code words for the criminals to embark on their killing spree. The insinuation is that Buhari and el-Rufai are behind Boko Haram. Well, I think this is a good time for both Buhari and el-Rufai to go to court because this nonsense has persisted for too long. If Buhari, who as head of state crushed the Maitatsine uprising forever, would now become a Boko Haram sponsor, then, I think Olisa Metuh should have his day in court to prove this allegation. The PDP publicity secretary even went further to say that the Sheikh Ahmed Lemu panel indicted General Buhari in the 2011 post-election violence. I remember that the last time the PDP told a lie of this nature about Lemu, the Sheikh came out himself to say it was a lie. He said he never said anything like that and the report of their work, which Jonathan had dumped like every other work aimed at solving the nation’s problems, was still there.
All this talk by the PDP is just a desperate attempt to divert attention from President Jonathan’s unprecedented incompetence. If Buhari, el-Rufai and company were behind the violence all over the country, then, they must also be the ones who organized the kidnapping of the president’s foster father in Bayelsa State. And they must be gifted kidnappers indeed because they forced the president’s household to negotiate a handsome ransom. A whole president? That also means that Buhari, el-Rufai and company also organised the attack on the Enugu Government House, a few weeks ago. I didn’t know that Buhari and el-Rufai are also “biafrans”, because their boys who carried out the criminal attack on the Enugu Government House held a press conference to declare that they were “biafrans” and they attacked the Enugu Government House to send a clear message. Buhari, el-Rufai and company it must be that also organised the MEND bombing of Abuja on October 1, 2010. That must be why Jonathan insisted that the bombers were not MEND operatives even after MEND had claimed responsibility several times. If we are to believe the president and his PDP officials, then, Buhari and el-Rufai must be Boko Haram, MEND, Ombatse, biafran, Fulani, Birom, Tarok militiamen all at the same time.
I think the clowns around the president should stop this tomfoolery and face the reality of their principal’s crass incompetence. I have always said that Jonathan does not have the gift of leadership and the nation should have been spared this horror in the first place. It is very clear that the president is unable to secure this country from terrorists, kidnappers, armed robbers and the ubiquitous gunmen. And I think this fact is already too obvious to the PDP mandarins; that is why they want to distract attention from his incompetence. Is it also the opposition that has been stealing all the public funds on Jonathan’s watch? Or, is it Buhari and el-Rufai that have been massively stealing the crude oil in the Niger Delta and the president has been so similarly incompetent to deal with the situation?
If President Jonathan wants to seek re-election in 2015, he is very free to do so. I am, in fact, one of those that have consistently defended the president’s right to do so. But he must run on his record. Nigerians will evaluate how he has fared as president so far. They must know how he has been able to secure the people – which is the most elementary responsibility of any president. The north-east will want to know how he has been able to secure them from Boko Haram; those in the north-central will like to know how they have been protected from the Ombatse and the Birom, Tarok and Fulani militia who visit at night, while those in the north-west will ask how he has protected them so far from the “unknown gunman”. Those in the south-south, including his own household in Bayelsa, would like to know how he has protected them from the kidnappers and armed robbers. Ditto for those in the south-east. And those in the south-west will want to know why they have been abandoned to armed robbers.
Nigerians will ask to know whether this unprecedented insecurity that has engulfed the entire nation like a plague has something to do with the unprecedented stealing that is currently going on and which has grounded the Nigerian state to the extent that the police and other security agencies as well as state governments do not get their appropriated budgets.
Nigerians will also remind the president of the N2 trillion stolen in the name of fuel subsidy in 2011 which he has done absolutely nothing about. Ditto for the N100 billion stolen from the police pension fund and all the other funny figures of theft we hear every day. We will also ask what he has done about the dilapidated Police College, Ikeja, where the president’s dogs cannot even survive in. Nigerians will also remember that the president’s reaction then was “Who brought the press here?” and not why human beings were living in such sub-human conditions. And this is saying nothing about the missing $20 billion (about N3.3 trillion). There are lots and lots more Nigerians will be asking. This is the record the president must campaign on. We are not going to allow anyone to use his place of birth, creed, tribe, minority or majority status or religion to divide the people.
EARSHOT
Jonathan’s Standard Of Corruption
Again, this time in Namibia, President Jonathan has declared that the talk of corruption in Nigeria is blown out of proportion. I am actually beginning to believe that the president really means it. That is why I think Nigerians should begin to imagine what the real corruption would be if Jonathan ever got a second term.
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