Crime Facts

JTF Arrests Eight Vessels With ‘Illegally Refined’ Diesel In Rivers

  The Joint Task Force of Operation Delta Safe has apprehended eight barges with about 100,000 litres of products suspected to be illegally refined Automative Gas Oil (AGO) also known as diesel, in the Bonny Area of Rivers State. The Maritime Component Commander of Operation Delta Safe, Adedokun Siyanbade, who led journalists on an inspection of the vessels on Sunday, said the JTF remained determined to end crude oil theft in the Niger Delta Delta. The commander said further investigation would be carried out and anyone found guilty must be brought to book. With the recent feat, the JTF of Operation Delta Safe vows to implement the mandate of the military chiefs to rid the Niger Delta region of economic saboteurs.

Flood sacks five Delta communities

  Ravaging flood across Delta State has sacked five communities in the Warri North Local Government Area. The affected communities included Torukubuagbene, Awanba, Koropigbene, Itagbene and Asigborodo as well as adjourning communities. The Councillor representing Ogbinbiri ward 18, in Asigborodo Community, Mr Kenren Pere, disclosed this to newsmen on Monday in Warri. Pere said the incident began more than a week ago and the situation became worse on Friday. While appealing for an urgent intervention by the state government, the councillor said that the life of his people were at stake. He said, “I cannot attribute the course to flooding or the heavy torrential downpour that has been happening in recent time, though, rain has been falling before, but we have not had it so bad like this. “Many valuables including local boats, clothes, food items, and other means of livelihood have been destroyed by the unfortunate occurrence. “Lives are at stake, people can no longer go about their normal daily activities to feed, so there is hunger in the affected communities. “The overflow started more than a week ago, but the situation became worse three days ago, leaving my people in fear,” he said. Pere also appealed to the state government to send relief materials including food items to the people “to alleviate their suffering.” The Director, Administration and Finance, Delta Emergency Management Agency, Daniel Okpor said the agency was not aware of the development. Okpor, however, requested for video clips of the incident to aid their findings and response. “Was the incident a result of flood or rainfall? We believe more on video than photographs. In the absence of video, you can send me photographs,” he requested. NAN

Insecurity: Ekpa warns Iwuanyanwu

  The factional leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Simon Ekpa, has warned the President General of Ohaneze Ndigbo Worldwide, Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu not to visit Finland to look for him. Iwuanyanwu, at a press conference on Sunday, said he is ready to lay down his life for peace to reign in the South-East. He also disclosed that Ohanaeze had perfected plans to send a delegation to Finland and other places to beg those causing bloodshed in the region to give peace a chance and end the ongoing bloodletting and violence. “I will beg all these people (unknown gunmen). I will even give them my life if that’s what it will take to bring peace back to Igboland, I’m ready to surrender. “The National Executive Council (NEC) of Ohanaeze Ndigbo has given me the approval to set up a committee that will go abroad to dialogue with the funders of these people. “We will go to Finland and other places and beg them. We’re not going there to arrest them. We’re not going there to kill them. I don’t want to kill any of my children. All these unknown gunmen are my children. That’s why we’re going there to beg and appeal to them to give peace a chance. Tell us what we should do and we are doing it already. I’m sure even those who are hungry, we can find what to do to make them happy. “But you see, the shedding of blood should stop. My new resolution is: ‘enough of bloodshed’. “I have noticed that these people are determined. It’s not easy to stop a hungry person who probably has been getting his livelihood through the use of guns. But, I’m sure, if I as a father go and cry to them, we will see what will happen. “I trust in God. My parents were very good Christians and they taught me from cradle to trust in God. So, I believe God will do this for me”. But, reacting to Iwuanyanwu’s plans to visit Finland, Ekpa, on his verified X handle, said Iwuanyawu would receive executive disgrace from him if he comes to Finland. He wrote, “Tell Iwuanyanwu that if he comes to Finland in the name of meeting with Simon Ekpa, I will use him to set an example; he will receive executive disgrace from me. “This is what I am promising him. He left Mazi Nnamdi Kanu in Dungeon and came to Finland to meet with Simon Ekpa. “May God punish you and punish all of you who are planning to send you to Finland. Come here, and you will see. I will arrest you for sending killers to Finland. “I will also arrest you for placing a bounty on me. And if you claim you didn’t place a bounty, did you make a publication distancing yourself? The answer is no!”

VIDEOS: Fire razes section of Supreme Court

  A portion of the Supreme Court is on fire. Our correspondent gathered that the fire engulfed a side of the judges’ chamber of the apex court. Details about the incident are still sketchy as of the time of filling this report. The spokesperson of the court, Akande Festus, could not be reached as of the time of filling this report. The spokesperson for the Federal Fire Service, Paul Abraham, asked our correspondent to call him back.     Details later…

DAILIES TOP STORIES: ASUU Says 50 Per Cent Of Students May Drop Out In Next Two Years Over High Fees

  Monday 25 September 2023 $10bn debt: CBN defaults on payment to banks, dollar nears N1,000 Why I refused N20m bribe – Jos kidney harvest victim’s husband Concrete roads: Cement price to hit N9,000, say manufacturers Post-subsidy talks: Reps vow to protect vulnerable Nigerians Tinubu Orders Security Agencies To Rescue Abducted Zamfara Students Lagos Govt Asks Shanty Owners On Blue Rail Corridor To Leave Boko Haram Ambush Motorists In Borno, Kill Four Including A Soldier Taraba Approves N75,000 Medical, Housing Allowance For Corps Members Posted To Schools ‘Danfo’ Driver Strips Naked After Stabbing LASTMA Official NDLEA Destroys 16-Hectare Cannabis Farm In Ekiti, Intercepts Drugs In Lagos, Others Police Step Up Search For Missing EKSU Student Helen Okorie Hike in fees’ll force students out of school —JAF NLC battles OPS over stand on planned nationwide strike Lagos govt condemns TUC, RTEAN planned protests Why some officers aren’t favoured in promotion, posting — Army Council Chairman Condemns Killing Of 70-Year-Old Fulani Leader In Plateau FG Awards Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway Contract FCT, States Lose Trillions Of Naira To Unpaid Ground Rents Wike Revokes New Plots Of Land In Abuja, Issues Ultimatum To Embassies, Others Niger: France Backs Down, Ready For Dialogue With Junta Over Withdrawal Of Envoy, Troops Visit a newspaper stand this morning, buy and read a copy for yourself…

BREAKING: Gunmen abduc Commissioner for Information

  The Benue State Commissioner for Information, Culture and Tourism, Mr. Matthew Abo has been abducted by unknown gunmen in Zaki Biam, Ukum Local Government Area, LGA, of the state, Vanguard is reporting. A former Special Adviser on Media and ICT to the immediate past Governor of the state, Mr. Tahav Agerzua who broke the news of the alleged kidnap on his facebook page on Sunday night disclosed that the newly inaugurated Commissioner was taken away by armed men who stormed his private residence at about 8pm Sunday night.   Mr. Agerzua in the post disclosed that the armed men besieged the home of the Commissioner on motorbikes and took him away at gunpoint after ordering his wife children and others with him to lie faced down. Part of the post by Mr. Agerzua reads: “There are confirmed reports that several gunmen stormed the residence of Matthew Abo, Benue State Commissioner of Information, Culture and Tourism in Zaki-Biam and abducted him about two hours ago. “Eyewitnesses state that the kidnappers came on four motorcycles, ordered everyone in the house including the commissioner’s wife and children to lie face down and took him away to an unknown destination on one of the motorcycles. “The witnesses said the abductors compelled the commissioner at gun point to sit behind the rider of one of the motorcycles while a gunman sandwiched him. “The abduction took place after 8 pm on Sunday, 24th September, 2023. The matter has been reported to the police.” Recall that the abducted Commissioner was sworn in as a member of the Benue State Executive Council on August 29, 2023 and he hails from Ukum LGA. Ukum is in the Sankera axis of the state which is made up of Ukum, Logo and Katsina-Ala LGAs. That part of the state has remained the epicentre of attacks, killings and kidnappings by unknown gunmen whose activities have gradually taken firm root in that axis despite the presence of security personnel. Effort to get the reaction of the Police Public Relations Officer, Superintendent, SP, Catherine Anene was unsuccessful.

Again, Nnamdi Kanu’s American lawyer demands immediate release

  Barely one month after the apex Igbo socio-cultural organisation, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, called on President Bola Tinubu to free leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Bruce Fein, international counsel of the detained agitator, has also called for his immediate release. The lawyer had, several months ago, asked the Federal Government to release Kanu from over two years of detention. Kanu was arrested in Kenya and renditioned to Nigeria in June 2021, which has been a subject of litigation. A Federal High Court sitting in Abuja and headed by Justice Binta Nyako, had dismissed 15 charges against Kanu in 2022. Also, the Court of Appeal headed by Jummai Sankey, the same year, struck out the remaining charges and discharged Kanu. In a latest call, in an open letter to President Tinubu entitled, “Continued Criminal Detention of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu” and dated September 23, 2023, Fein demanded the release of Kanu from detention in compliance with the order of United Nations Human Rights Council Working Group. In the letter, the American lawyer told Tinubu: “You confront a choice between becoming a firefight or being the fire. The former would crown you with a possible Nobel Prize. The latter could consign you to Dante’s Seve Circles of Hell as portrayed in his Divine Comedy. You would become a firefighter by immediately ending the criminal, illegal detention of Nnamdi Kanu as ordered by the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention and Nigeria’s Court of Appeal over a year ago.” He said that the Nigerian government, earlier headed by President Muhammadu Buhari exemplified “lawlessness, including the illegal kidnapping and torture of Nnamdi Kanu.” According to him: “On multiple occasions, the Nigerian government denied me the right to meet with my client or to be present in the courtroom to observe Nnamdi Kanu’s proceedings and to consult (but not to act as a licensed Nigerian practitioner). “Nnamdi Kanu is every bit as much the leader of Biafrans as Nelson Mandela was for South Africa’s blacks.” Fein said that the IPOB leader is fighting for a referendum to save Igbo from extinction “at the hands of herdsmen terrorists and the Nigerian Armed Forces,” adding that Kanu and his group have the right to peacefully agitate for self-determination under international conventions. Fein told President Tinubu: “History waits on you to do the right thing and earn your place of pride on its sacred pages.” He urged the Nigerian leader to emulate the government of South Africa under President F. W. de Klerk, which “released Nelson Mandela from Robben Island and negotiated an end to black subjugation.” According to him, “for his political courage, vision, and magnanimity, President de Klerk was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993 jointly with Mandela,” adding: “Persisting in the wrong thing will bring you no respite. In the matter of Nnamdi Kanu’s release from criminal detention, the cause endures, the hope still lives, and the dream will never die until fulfilled.” It will be recalled that despite Court judgment setting Kanu free, the Federal Government has continued holding him at the detention facility of the Directorate of State Security Service (DSS), while appealing the case with the Supreme Court. Kanu had been extraordinarily from Kenya and handed over to the Nigerian authorities in June 2021, which prompted the United Nations Human Rights Council to set up the Working Group to examine the case and issue the due directives. Fein is capitalising on the emergence of a new leader in Nigeria, Tinubu, to renew the call for Kanu’s release in the hope that the new government would be more agreeable to a peaceful settlement as opposed to former President Buhari’s hard line stance.

Reps: We’re working to lift 16.5m Nigerians out of poverty

  The house of representatives says it is working on a framework that will lift 16.5 million Nigerians out of poverty. In a statement on Sunday, Almustapha Aliyu, chairman of the house committee on alternative education, said in the past weeks, “several” engagements were held with relevant government agencies towards actualising the goal. A 2022 data by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed that 133 million Nigerians are multidimensionally poor. The lawmaker said the needed machinery has been put in place to achieve the intervention which is targeted at reducing poverty in the six geo-political zones of the country. Providing a breakdown, the lawmaker further said the objective of the intervention is to lift four million people out of poverty in the north-east; north-west 3.4 million; north-central 2.5 million; south-east 3 million; south-south 2.1 million; and south-west 1.6m. ‘WE’LL ENSURE 14M OUT-OF-SCHOOL CHILDREN RETURN TO CLASS’ The lawmaker said the framework will also ensure that 14 million out-of-school children return to school. According to a 2022 report by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), over 20 million children and youths are out of school in Nigeria. Early this year, Adamu Adamu, the then minister of education, said Nigeria accounts for 12.4 percent of out-of-school children in Sub-Saharan Africa. Aliyu said the out-of-school children will also be trained with relevant skills to become productive members of their communities. The lawmaker said the intervention by the lower legislative chamber under the leadership of Tajudeen Abbas, speaker of the house, in partnership with government agencies, will improve access to education for all Nigerian children in line with the aspirations of sustainable development goals. The legislator said the project christened: ‘Nigeria Mass Reduction of Out-of-School Children and Youth Project (NiMPROP)’, will run for four years. He added that the committee will work with concerned government agencies including; the national commission of almajiri and out-of-school children; the national commission for mass literacy, adult and non-formal education; and the national commision for nomadic education.

Niger: France Backs Down, Ready For Dialogue With Junta Over Withdrawal Of Envoy, Troops

  France has backed down on its hardline stance against the coupists who overthrew President Mohamed Bazoum of Niger Republic in July. The colonial power had kicked against the coup and insisted on the reinstatement of Bazoum. It had also refused to recognise the junta, which announced that Niger had severed ties with its colonial master. But on Sunday, President Emmanuel Macron said France would soon withdraw its ambassador from Niger, followed by its military contingent. France has about 1,500 soldiers in Niger as part of an anti-jihadist deployment in the Sahel region. In the wake of the coup, France had said its troops would remain in the West African nation despite hostilities by the junta. “France has decided to withdraw its ambassador. In the next hours our ambassador and several diplomats will return to France,” Macron told French television in an interview on Sunday evening. He added that military cooperation was over and French troops would withdraw in “the months and weeks to come” with a full pullout by the end of the year. “In the weeks and months to come, we will consult with the putschists, because we want this to be done peacefully,” he added. Niger’s military leaders had told French ambassador, Sylvain Itte, to leave the country. But a 48-hour ultimatum for him to leave, issued in August, passed with him still in place as the French government refused to comply, or to recognise the military regime as legitimate. Macron in the interview reaffirmed France’s position that Bazoum was being held “hostage” and remained the “sole legitimate authority” in the country. Macron said French ambassador in Niger was being held hostage in the embassy “He was targeted by this coup d’etat because he was carrying out courageous reforms and because there was a largely ethnic settling of scores and a lot of political cowardice,” he argued. The Sahel region south of the Sahara has suffered what Macron has previously called an “epidemic” of coups in recent years, with military regimes replacing elected governments in Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea as well as Niger.

How Nigeria’s courts became ‘the lost hope of the common man’

  By Chidi Odinkalu When Ogbonnaya Ukeje died in Lagos two days after Christmas Day in 1981, Bode Rhodes-Vivour was a 30-year-old lawyer making his way up the rungs of public service in the Ministry of Justice in Lagos State. Mr. Rhodes-Vivour had been called to the Nigerian Bar a mere six years earlier, in 1975. In 1989, when Mr. Rhode-Vivour succeeded Nureini Abiodun Kessington as the Director of Public Prosecutions in Lagos State, the case concerning the estate of Ogbonnaya Ukeje was already in its sixth year in the High Court of Lagos. Mr. Ukeje’s daughter, Gladys, had filed the case in 1983 to challenge her exclusion from a share in her father’s estate merely on the ground that she was female. In January 1992, Justice Moni Fafiade, who became a judge of the Lagos High Court in 1983, the same year the case originated, delivered judgement in Gladys Ukeje’s case. The case lasted nine years in the High Court alone. Bode Rhodes-Vivour was still a Director in the Lagos State Ministry of Justice.   Two years later, in 1994, when Bode Rhodes-Vivour was appointed a judge of the High Court of Lagos, the appeal by Gladys Ukeje’s family against the decision of the High Court of Lagos in her favour had been pending in the Court of Appeal for two years. In 2005, five years after the first brief of argument was filed in the Supreme Court Appeal in Gladys Ukeje’s case, Justice Bode Rhodes-Vivour was elevated from the High Court of Lagos to the Court of Appeal. By the following year, in 2006, all the parties had filed their briefs of argument. Four years later, when Justice Bode Rhodes-Vivour arrived the Supreme Court, after a five-year sojourn on the bench of the Court of Appeal, the Supreme Court appeal in Gladys Ukeje’s case had been pending for over a decade. On April 11, 2014, thirty-one years after the case was filed in the High Court of Lagos, 20 years after he was first appointed a judge, and four years after his elevation to the court, Justice Bode Rhodes-Vivour delivered the judgement of the Supreme Court upholding the right of Gladys Ukeje to a share in her father’s estate. By this time in 2014, Ahmed Lawan was already something of a phenomenon in Nigerian politics. In 1999, Lawan arrived the National Assembly as the member representing the proud people of Bade/Jakusko constituency of Yobe State in the House of Representatives. He was a member of the All Nigerian Peoples Party, ANPP. In 2007, after two terms in the House, Lawan was elected to the Senate by the people of Yobe North Senatorial Zone. In 2019, twenty years after his arrival at the National Assembly and having logged the record for the most durable parliamentary career in Nigeria’s history, Ahmed Lawan became the 14th president of Nigeria’s Senate. In this capacity, Ahmed Lawan was, officially, the third most powerful man in the country. If he desired to extend the duration of his improbable political longevity, Lawan had few realistic options. As the 2023 election season approached, he made his bid for a ticket to the presidency on the platform of the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC, of which he was a founding member. When the final tally was announced on June 8, 2022, Lawan lost out in the contest, coming a distant fourth. Eleven days earlier, on May 28, the APC had organised the primaries for the Senate. In Yobe North, the seat that Lawan occupied in the Senate, the winner of the primaries was Bashir Machina, a rich businessman and politician, who had also served in the cabinet at the state level. However, as soon as the presidential primaries concluded, a concerted effort began to deny Machina the ticket in favour of Lawan. To forestall this, Machina sued on June 22, 2022 in the Federal High Court in Damaturu, the capital of Yobe State, asking the court to affirm the outcome of the senatorial primaries that he won. Three months later, on September 28, the High Court rendered judgement. By the beginning of December, the Court of Appeal had also issued judgement, and on World Anti-Corruption Day, December 9, 2022, the case arrived the Supreme Court. In less than two months, on February 6, 2022, the Supreme Court issued judgement, implausibly declaring Lawan the winner of senatorial primaries that he did not participate in. This kind of status-indexed shunt granted to political higher-ups like Ahmed Lawan by Nigerian courts is mostly manufactured or enabled by the judiciary. It is now crippling Nigeria’s courts and the irony is that the only people in the position to end it are the ones complaining. When he inaugurated a cohort of 72 new Senior Advocates of Nigeria, SANs, on December 8, 2021, then Chief Justice of Nigeria, CJN, Tanko Muhammad, reported that 33 or nearly five per cent of the 681 cases considered by the Nigerian Supreme Court during the year were “political cases”. This was rather a curious category to maintain or report on. Judicial doctrine ordinarily views political cases with reluctance. Nigerian law knows nothing of the sort. It knows of election petitions as are contests over the outcomes of elections, mostly governed by the Electoral Act, which prescribes strict time limits for their disposal. Most likely, this is a category of cases instituted by Nigeria’s politicians seeking to judicialise intra-party squabbles over the spoils of political plunder. Increasingly, it seems these have become the mainstay of judicial enterprise in the country. Last week, as he swore-in nine newly appointed Justices of the Court of Appeal, current CJN, Olukayode Ariwoola, reinforced the complaint from the judges that “political cases are taking a monumental toll on our dockets”. Gladys Ukeje and Ahmed Lawan are both Nigerians. One is female, the other is male. The former is from the South, while the latter is from the North. They both journeyed memorably through Nigeria’s courts, ending up in the Supreme Court with