Crime Facts

Parents, visitors barred from Call to Bar ceremony

The Body of Benchers, Nigeria has barred parents and visitors from the Call to Bar ceremony which will hold from July 27 to 29, 2021. The Secretary, Daniel Manasseh Esq, in a statement issued on Thursday said the ceremony, holding at Eagles Square in Abuja, is strictly for aspirants. He, however, said the ceremony, which is for candidates in the December 2020 and March 2021 Bar Finals Examination, will be broadcasted on national television and live-streamed on Youtube. The statement read in part, “All attendees are required to maintain physical distancing and adhere to all protocols on preventing the spread of the COVID-19 virus such as the use of facemask and hand sanitisers. “We regret to inform the parents/guardians of the aspirants and the general public that the ceremony is strictly for the aspirants, hence no guest will be allowed in. “However, there will be live coverage of the ceremony on national television and live streaming on Youtube. “Aspirants should note that they are required to be seated by 8.30am as the gates will be closed afterwards.”

LG Polls: Lagos Restricts Movement On Saturday

The Lagos State Government has announced a restriction of movement across the State between the hours of 8 am and 3 pm on Saturday, July 24, 2021. This is to enable the Lagos State Independent Electoral Commission (LASIEC) to conduct hitch-free local government and local council development areas elections. LASIEC is to conduct elections into positions of chairmen and councillors in all the 57 local government and local council development areas in the State on Saturday. According to a statement issued by the Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr Gbenga Omotoso, the restriction will facilitate the ease of movement of the electorate, election materials and LASIEC officials for the sanctity of the election, effective monitoring and enhanced security. Omotoso urged all eligible voters to participate in the elections while also calling for the cooperation of all residents. Our reporter had earlier observed a rally by members of the All Progressive Congress (APC) seeking the support of the people at the poll for candidates representing Agege Local Government Area.

Fake Custom officer bags 20 years for employment scam in Ilorin

Justice Mahmood Abdulgafar of Kwara State High Court sitting in Ilorin on Thursday sentenced one 34-year-old fake Customs officer, Yakubu Azeez Afolayan, to 20 years imprisonment having found him guilty of offences bordering on impersonation and job scam. The convict was allegedly parading himself as Customs officer. In the assumed capacity, the court held that the convict fraudulently swindled a number of unsuspecting job seekers under the guise of helping them secure employment into the Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) before the long arm of law caught up with him. ‌ The 34-year-old Afolayan from Share in Ifelodun Local Government Area of Kwara State was upon arrest arraigned on March 14, 2019 on a four-count by the Ilorin Zonal Office of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). One of the counts reads: “That you, Yakubu Azeez Afolayan, between the months of November 2018 and January 2019 in Ilorin, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, with the intent to defraud, obtained the gross sum of N267,000 (Two Hundred and Sixty-seven Thousand Naira) only from one Usman Janet Opeyemi through your UBA account number under the false pretence that you are capable of securing employment for her son with the Nigerian Customs Service; the representation you knew to be false and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 1 (a) of the Advance Fee Fraud and other Fraud Related Offences Act, 2006 and punishable under Section 1 (3) of the same Act.” He pleaded not guilty to the counts thereby setting stage for full trial. In the course of the trial, which lasted for over two years, the prosecution called four witnesses including one of his victims; an officer from the Nigerian Custom Service and the Investigating Officer who is an operative of the EFCC. Documents were tendered by the prosecution through the witnesses and admitted in evidence by the court. In a well-considered judgment on Thursday, Justice Abdulgafar opined that from the totality of the evidence placed before the court, the prosecution had proved its case beyond reasonable doubt and linked the accused person to the crime. “It is very clear from the totality of the evidence of PW1 – PW4 that the prosecution has proved its case beyond reasonable doubts. It was the evidence of PW1 that the Nigerian Custom Service does not sell its recruitment forms to job applicants, but the defendant was collecting various sum of monies from his victims as application fees. All these evidence were not challenged or controverted by the defendant”, said the judge. He further said, “Another aspect to be considered in this case is the statements made by the defendant while he was in the custody of the EFCC. The statements were made voluntarily and he (Yakubu) confessed to the crime”. While evaluating other documents Justice Abdulgafar said, “The statements of account of the defendant is additional evidence in this case. The statements showed how monies were deposited into his account domiciled with the UBA by several job seekers”. The judge said, “It’s the opinion of this Honourable Court that the case of the prosecution has merit”. In his allocutos, Yakubu’s counsel, S. O Ishola, urged the court to temper justice with mercy saying that, “the convict is a first time offender”. Responding, counsel to the EFCC, Andrew Akoja, drew the attention of the court to Section 1(a) and 1(3) of the Advance Fee Fraud and other fraud related Offences Act, 2006, which prescribed maximum of 7 years imprisonment for the offence for which the defendant was charged on count 1 and 2. Akoja further told the court to consider Section 386 of the Penal Code Law, which prescribed maximum of 3 years imprisonment for the offences on counts 3 and 4. Consequently, Justice Abdulgafar said there was nothing the court could do than to follow the provisions of the law in sentencing the convict. “I hereby sentence you, Yakubu Azeez Afolayan to 7 years imprisonment on count 1; 7 years imprisonment on count 2; 3 years imprisonment on count 3 and 3 years imprisonment on count 4, to run concurrently”, the judge ruled. “The convict is to spend his custodial sentence at Mandala Correctional Centre with effect from November 14, 2019,” he said. YOU SHOULD NOT MISS THESE HEADLINES FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE Fake Custom officer bags 20 years for employment scam in Ilorin We Have Not Had Water Supply In Months ― Abeokuta Residents In spite of the huge investment in the water sector by the government and international organisations, water scarcity has grown to become a perennial nightmare for residents of Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital. This report x-rays the lives and experiences of residents in getting clean, potable and affordable water amidst the surge of COVID-19 cases in the state. Fake Custom officer bags 20 years for employment scam in Ilorin.

ABSUTH sacks 6 medical doctors for allegedly abandoning work

The Chief Medical Director, Abia State University Teaching Hospital (ABSUTH), Dr Shedrack Offiah, said the management had sacked six doctors for abandoning their jobs after collecting their salaries. Offiah disclosed this on Thursday in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) while showcasing steps taken to deter ABSUTH doctors who use government time to work in their private hospitals. He said he sacked the six doctors recently to discourage absentee staff members who do not work but collect salaries, adding that such were ghost workers and should be treated as such. He said that some doctors who had left the institution still come to the school to collect salaries, noting that he would not allow such to happen again. “It is not just punishment. I have sacked six of them. You will not hear it because I don’t make noise. “In June, paid three months that they did not work for and I am taking record. “Anybody that refuses to come to work from August will not be paid. We will only pay salaries to people who are coming to work. “If we look at you and find out that you are among the people that just put your name here and you are somewhere, we will sack you,’’ he said. Dr Nnamdi Erondu, Chairman, National Association of Resident Doctors’ (NARD), ABSUTH Chapter, said the body was only interested in finding lasting solutions to the quagmire ABSUTH has found itself and not fighting the management. He said the workers who were owed salaries deserved to be paid and urged the government to seek ways of ending the institution’s endless crises. He said that one of the ways to end the strike was to pay the salaries of workers to a reasonable extent and then fund the upgrade of the institution’s equipment and service-delivery capacity. He urged the government and ABSUTH’s management to consult NARD members to show them development models of teaching hospitals in other states which improved their functionality. He expressed regrets that Abia government’s inability to provide money for the institution’s accreditation was opening it up for shutdown by supervisory bodies. The NARD had recently said they would shut down ABSUTH because of Abia government’s inability to pay its workers which kept them on strike almost all-year-round. Erondu said the institution’s accreditation lapsed over six months ago and that Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu’s promise to give them N80 million for the accreditation processes had not been fulfilled. He said the unfulfilled promise also contributed to the dire situation of the school which was suffering myriads of challenges that had been affecting both staff and students in obvious ways. Erondu said the government did not give any concrete plans on how and when it will commence payment of the 11 months salary arrears which Ikpeazu admitted he was owing. “The governor promised to look into the Medical Residency Training Programme and to start financing the programme. “He further promised to release N80 million for the accreditation of the departments in the medical school but till date, he has not honoured any of those his promises,” he said. NAN

The Yoruba have won their agitation

By Frederick Nwabufo The Yoruba are exceptional people; precocious, tactful, urbane, and temperate. They are about the most sophisticated of the ethnic groups in Nigeria. They know when to pounce when to retreat, and when to negotiate. For the Yoruba, it is about the collective. It is always about the whole. Group interest does not succumb to the sway of individual ambition. They live by the winsome ‘’kparapo philosophy’’, and the ‘’omoluabi element’’ is never musty. Let me detour. A united Nigeria remains the most operational means of preserving and protecting the variegated interests of those within the territory. While the ‘’big three’’ — Igbo, Hausa, and Yoruba – jostle for sectional dividends, they forget that there are other groups — the presumed minority ethnic nationalities — in the phylum. Nigeria has over 250 ethnic nationalities, but are they supposed small lot lesser citizens? Should the interest of the ‘’big three’’ be the governing aspiration and grail of other groupings in the taxonomy? Have we asked what the Affade in Yobe state; the Afizere in Plateau state; Afo (Eloyi) in Nasarawa state; the Baushi in Niger state; the Boki in Cross River, the Annang in Akwa Ibom, and many other classes under the Nigerian family tree want? Some apostles of secessionism have even conscripted these ethnic nationalities into their abstract territories by fait — without considering their peculiarities. The arrogance of the Igbo, the Yoruba, and the Hausa are largely responsible for the parlous state of the country. Nigeria should not rise and fall on ‘’this big three’’. Nigeria is bigger and stronger than any of this group on which the country currently pivots. A united Nigeria guarantees freedom – to exist — for the small ethnic genus. As I have always said, a united Nigeria remains a viable venture for all. End of detour. I have followed the agitations for self-determination by the peoples of southern Nigeria, and my interest is piqued by the crusading techniques of the agitators from the south-west. Even in potentially combustible situations, they have managed to arrest their emotions and keep their demons in the abyss. Although they took their agitation to the streets a number of times, they have always been circumspect about when to retreat and not go off the deep end. Tact is a weapon the Yoruba deploy masterfully in knotty situations. Instead of going ‘’all-head-in’’, they step back and dispatch the greatest ammunition in the armoury of human civilisation. Tact does it for the Yoruba. On Thursday, the Ilana Omo Oodua, the group crusading for an independent Yoruba nation led by Banji Akintoye, released a manual to guide its members in their cause for self-determination. They declared: ‘’NO TO VIOLENT STRUGGLE’’. This declaration comes in the heat of the arrest and detention of Sunday Igboho, the firebrand agitator, in the Benin Republic. Here is a demonstration of great percipience by the Yoruba nation agitators: “We, Yoruba, lead in the choice of the peaceful and law-abiding path to our goal of a separate country of our own. And we the servants of the Yoruba nation in this struggle faithfully operate, and will always faithfully operate, with methods of peaceful organisation, peaceful demands, peaceful propaganda, peaceful protests, peaceful legal actions, peaceful political persuasion, and peaceful negotiation. We will push for negotiating tables and never push for street brawls or any other kind of conflict. And if we find, among our people, any nationalist activist person or group that is inclined towards violence, we will encourage them to turn instead to peaceful and law-abiding means. ‘’After careful studies of the records of separatist movements in our world, we are persuaded that the peaceful approach is more likely to succeed. Various nationalist agitations in various countries of the world have, in the course of the past century, employed violent means at various times while striving to achieve their nationalist goals. Yoruba groups engaged in serving the Yoruba nation need to note carefully that none of these uses of violent or terroristic methods achieved their purpose of self-determination or autonomy for their nations; all they succeeded in doing was to generate confrontations and wars with the governments of their countries.’’ By denouncing violence and emphasising peaceful methods for achieving self-determination, the Yoruba nation agitators have judiciously submitted to Nigeria’s laws while not obviating their agenda. It also wins them more sympathy. This is in contrast to the approach of their sibling crusaders in the Lower Niger Area who unleashed violence on security agents and citizens, threatening critics, destroying property, and ended up turning their region into Aleppo in Syria. Violence achieves nothing but death, broken bones, and spilled blood. Self-determination is a universal right, but taking up arms to kill citizens and security agents of government is terrorism. Really, in all the agitations across divides, the endgame is not to secede. The 2023 presidential election is the Venus flytrap with nectar attracting all kinds of creatures. I believe by that time these agitations will taper off. The agitations are ‘’precious material’’ for political negotiations. The Yoruba are playing their cards right. Tact has won this ‘’agitation’’ for the Yoruba. By Fredrick ‘Mr OneNigeria’ Nwabufo Twitter/Facebook/Instagram: @FredrickNwabufo

Eight moments to expect from BBNaija season six

Africa’s biggest reality show, Big Brother Naija, will premiere a brand new season on Saturday, June 24, 2021. Like he does every season, Big Brother is bringing a lot of twists and surprises to the show this year. From a double launch show to a revamped house, the viewers and the housemates are certainly in for a treat this season. As the countdown to the launch weekend begins, Ebuka will introduce the theme for the season. Here are a few things to look forward to: A double launch show: Season 6 is starting off with the biggest twist yet. The show will launch for the first time ever across two evenings. The first part of the premiere will air on Saturday, June 24 while the second part will air on Sunday, June 25, 2021. More interesting personalities: Big Brother has mastered the art of selecting the most exciting mix of people, and this year is no different. MultiChoice promises that the housemates this season will be more interesting than fans have ever seen on the show before. More engaging tasks: If you thought Big Brother Naija Lockdown had the most engaging and rewarding tasks, think again. Big Brother Naija season 6 will have even more incredible and financially rewarding activities for the housemates. A revamped BBNaija house: Biggie’s House is going to look completely different from the way it did last year. Expect new decor, new spaces, and even a surprise feature that has never appeared in other seasons. And like the previous season, the house is being completely designed by local artisans. Two new house currencies designed to be an integral part of the season’s gameplay: Biggie is retiring the old currencies used in the former seasons and will introduce two never-before-used currencies when the show premieres on Saturday. A brand new, exclusively packaged BBNaija show on Showmax: Showmax will broadcast an exclusive 30-minute show called The Buzz twice a week where viewers can get all the hidden action they may miss on other channels. The dedicated series will be a magazine-styled show with a host which will be released twice every week – on Tuesdays and Saturdays. No SMS voting: This year, all the voting will be done on the Big Brother Naija website and mobile site as well as on the MyDStv and MyGOtv apps. Fave Lock-In returns: The fan competition which was introduced last season is also making a comeback this season. The Fave Lock-In competition will give 30 BBNaija fans a chance of winning N1million each when the housemate they ‘Lock-In’ wins the sixth season of the show. Fans will be able to lock in the contestant they believe will win between July 29 and August 2, 2021. The 10-week-long reality TV show will follow the lives of strangers as they interact and compete with each other to win the grand prize. Source: The Nation

BREAKING: Super Tucano Aircraft arrives Nigeria

The first batch of A-29 Super Tucano aircraft has arrived in Kano, on Thursday 22 July 2021 at about 12.34 pm, Vanguard reports. Air Commodore Edward Gabkwet, NAF Director of Public Relations and Information confirmed the arrival of the fighter aircraft in a statement. “On hand to receive the aircraft were the Hon. Minister of Defence, Major General Bashir Magashi (Rtd), Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Faruk Yahaya and Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Oladayo Amao”, he said. Details shortly…

Benin Republic court begins hearing in Igboho’s extradition case

Sunday Adeyemo, Yoruba nation agitator popularly known as Sunday Igboho, has finally arrived in court in Benin Republic. The hearing in his extradition case is ongoing at the Court D’Apeal in Cotonou. His supporters had earlier converged at the court ahead of his arrival, but they later moved to the Brigade Criminelle facility where he was held. Igboho and his wife had been under interrogation by Beninese security operatives since Wednesday. They were held by Brigade Criminelle after their arrest at Cardinal Bernardin International Airport while on their way to Germany on Monday night. On Wednesday, some Yoruba people residing in Cotonou had thronged the court, singing solidarity songs and demanding freedom for Igboho. They also demanded an independent nation of Yoruba people. They said they have confidence in the Benin Republic justice system, expressing optimism that Igboho will be freed. Similarly, dozens of protesters had gathered at the home of Igboho in Ibadan, Oyo state capital, to protest his arrest. The protesters blocked Soka junction road, with hundreds of motorists caught in the traffic. Enita Ogunwusi, Ooni of Ife, has set up a 28-member committee of south-west leaders to look into Igboho’s arrest. Some of the people on the committee are Oba Olusola Alao, the Olugbon of Igbon; Senator Biodun Olujimi; Toyin Saraki; Segun Awolowo’; Doyin Okupe; Gbenga Daniel, and Muyiwa Ige.

Zuma leaves prison for brother’s funeral

Ex-South African President Jacob Zuma South Africa’s jailed ex-president Jacob Zuma was allowed to leave prison on Thursday to attend his brother’s funeral, the government said. Zuma, 79, was sentenced to 15 months in prison for contempt of court last month after snubbing graft investigators probing his presidency. He turned himself in on July 8 to start serving his sentence in the southeastern town of Estcourt, and his brother Michael, 77, died several days later. His incarceration sparked riots and looting that escalated into the worst violence since the end of apartheid, killing at least 276 people, according to the official tallies. Zuma was discreetly driven early Thursday to his rural home in Nkandla, 175 kilometres (110 miles) from Estcourt, where the funeral was to be held, a government official who did not wish to be named told AFP. Soldiers manned the road leading up to a cluster of thatched-roof houses where Zuma’s extensive family resides, surrounded by rolling hills. An occasional convoy of black BMWs roared up the fence-lined tracks, lifting clouds of dust. Police vehicles also patrolled the area. Zuma’s brother died on July 11 after a long illness, according to local media. The former president was granted a 24-hour “compassionate leave” for the funeral as a “short-term, low-risk” prisoner, the correctional services department said in a statement. It added that inmates were not required to wear “offender uniform” outside correctional facilities, implying Zuma would not be donning orange prisoner dungarees for the ceremony. The media were denied access to the ceremonies to allow the family to mourn in privacy, but a picture published by a local newspaper showed Zuma arriving in a navy-blue jacket and a white Panama fedora hat. – Still popular -Inmates in South Africa are usually allowed to attend relatives’ funerals — a right denied to the country’s first black president Nelson Mandela when he was in jail for fighting the apartheid regime. Zuma himself spent a decade in prison for fighting white-minority rule, after which he fled into exile and became a feared head of intelligence. Charismatic and jovial, he succeeded Thabo Mbeki as president in 2009. After nine years in office, Zuma was ousted by the ruling African National Congress (ANC) over a string of graft scandals that arose during his presidency. Yet he retains a fervent support base both within the ANC and among the general public. Crowds of supporters had gathered in Nkandla after South Africa’s top court sentenced Zuma to jail on June 29, decrying his conviction and vowing to block his arrest. But the area was deserted on Thursday, with only locals on everyday errands strolling across a football field facing the precinct. Despite the scandals that have tarnished his reputation, Zuma has remained particularly popular among rural communities in his home province of KwaZulu-Natal. Starting off his life as a herdboy, he is widely viewed as a “people’s man” and still appeals for his strong family and cultural values. A teetotaller and non-smoker, he married seven times and has at least 20 children. Zuma is separately on trial for allegedly taking kickbacks from an arms deal with several international companies in 1999, when he was deputy president. He denies any wrongdoing.

Lady found dead, one other missing in Delta

The decomposing corpse of an unidentified lady has been found dead around the popular Federal University Junction axis of the East-West Road in Delta state. The Nation gathered the corpse was discovered Wednesday evening inside a drainage connected to nearby Agbarho River. According to a witness, the lady appeared to have been killed before she was dumped in the drain. Another witness claimed she may have been knocked down by a vehicle. The deceased was seen lying face down in the drain in a video watched by our reporter. In another development, a young lady identified as Stephanie Solomon, has been reported missing in Okumagba Avenue area of Warri South council area. Stephanie was reportedly last seen after close of work on Monday from a plaza close to Total filling station at the Okumagbe Estate Roundabout. One of her friends simply identified as Godwin told The Nation that she is believed to have boarded a tricycle from her place of work but never made it home. He said she usually closes from her work place, a law firm, around 4pm. He stated that the matter had been reported at the ‘B’ Division police station in Warri, According to him, Stephanie, 21, “is a “calm and easy-going person. I have known her since 2017 during her NCE programme in College of Education, Warri. “She is not the kind of person that will just go out like that, so everybody is worried”. Delta Police Command only confirmed the deceased lady’s incident, stating that it is suspected to be a hit-and-run incident. Its spokesman, DSP Bright Edafe said: “It is suspected to be a case of hit-and-run. The corpse is already decomposing, so we have contacted the local government authorities, while investigation is ongoing”.