Friday 6 October 2017

Immigration accuses Justice Ngwuta of dubious passport use


Immigration accuses Justice Ngwuta of dubious passport use


From: Godwin Tsa, Abuja
Nigerian Immigration  Service (NIS) yesterday told a Federal High Court in Abuja that the use of two diplomatic passports and two other standard international passports simultaneously by Justice Sylvester Ngwuta of the Supreme Court was not a genuine mistake.
An Immigration official, Nuhu Tanko Kutana, stated this during the trial of the Supreme Court Justice.
Under cross examination led by counsel to Justice Ngwuta, Mr. Kanu Agabi, SAN, the third prosecution witness said that the defendant was in possession of four diplomatic passports – three Standard International Passports and one ECOWAS passport.
He further told the court that the defendant’s conduct and use of the passports, which he had declared in sworn affidavit as missing, did not show it was a genuine mistake, as he went ahead and started using them.
Kutana further stated that the defendant would have reported to the Nigerian Immigration Services, which replaced those passports when he recovered the ones he claimed were lost.
The witness admitted he made two statements and the additional statement was based on what he saw later in the document. The defendant’s lawyer requested to tender the additional statement and it was admitted in evidence as an exhibit.
Mr. Kutana said he analysed the seven passports handed to him by the office of the Attorney General of Federation and found that they were genuine. That they were authorised based on letters written on the directive of the defendant by one Mrs. L Nwankwo, a protocol officer with the Supreme Court.
He agreed that Mrs. Nwankwo misinformed the NIS but on the directive of Justice Ngwuta that he had lost the passports.
He said that under the law, there were circumstances where a citizen could have standard passport and diplomatic passports, “but you are not allowed to have two valid diplomatic passports at the same time.
It is illegal,” he added.
He explained that when passport is issued in replacement of an old one, the number is endorsed on the new passport.
The witness also stated that there were two valid visas on exhibit 5 (a) diplomatic passport that was reported lost and exhibit 5 (b) the  replaced diplomatic passport because the defendant went and applied for another visa for the  replaced passport exhibit 5 (b).
He said it is an offence to discard passport that is valid and ask for the issuance of a new one. He said the defendant failed to report when he found the old one and began to use it. “We make allowance for genuine mistakes, but the defendant’s conduct did not show that it is a genuine mistake as he went ahead and started to use it,” Kutana said.
Justice John Tsoho adjourned the case to October 20 and 27 for continuation.

IPOB condemns killing of The Sun salesman


IPOB condemns killing of The Sun salesman  

       

From Jeff Amechi Agbodo, Onitsha

The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) under the leadership of Nnamdi Kanu, has commiserated with the management and staff of The Sun Publishing Ltd over the killing of its sales representative in Onitsha, Anambra State, Mr. Fabian Obi, by armed robbers.
The group said the untimely death of Obi came as a shock to all, as such heinous crime rarely occurred in the past, stressing that it was a sure sign, if any is needed, that life under the current socio-economic and political climate in Anambra State was no longer safe.
A statement by its Media and Publicity Secretary, Emma Powerful, said, “it is quite unfortunate that this type of unfortunate incident could happen in Anambra State governed by Chief Willie Obiano, who has often boasted about his crime fighting credentials. It appears that Governor Obiano’s allegedly use of armed services like the Hausa- Fulani army and police is usually reserved for the unarmed law abiding citizens exercising their right to freedom of assembly and association and not against violent criminals.
“We wonder what the governor and his South East counterparts are doing with the security votes meant for securing lives and property in their respective states. We pray to God Almighty to grant the family members of the deceased, the management and staff of The Sun Newspapers Limited, the fortitude to bear the loss.”

Kachikwu keeps mum after meeting with Buhari


Kachikwu keeps mum after meeting with Buhari


• Baru meets Osinbajo
From Juliana Taiwo-Obalonye, Abuja
The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu on Friday at the end of the meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari, refused to comment on what transpired. He met behind closed doors with the President  at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
Kachikwu, who wore black suit arrived the Villa at about 11:35am and left around 12:50 p.m. He simply said “No comment “ when approached by State House Correspondents as he walked out of the President’s office with the Special Adviser to the President on Media and publicity, Femi Adesina.
Kachikwu’s letter to the President in which he alleged gross insubordination by the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Maikanti Baru, was leaked to the media during the week.
He had alleged that Baru, using the NNPC awarded $25 billion worth of contracts without following due process. He had also alleged that the $25 billion deal was struck without consulting the office of the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources or the board of the corporation.
Meanwhile Baru, was also seen leaving the Vice President wing, at about 1.15 p.m. He too avoided commenting on his meeting with Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. He however participated in the Ju’mat prayers in the Villa.

What Buhari told me on Biafra agitation – Gov Umahi


What Buhari told me on Biafra agitation – Gov Umahi


Recently, Governor David Umahi of Ebonyi state and Chairman, South East Governors’ Forum, travelled with President Buhari to New York to attend the UN General Assembly. In this interaction covered by our correspondent, OBINNA ODOGWU, the Governor revealed the details of his private discussions with Buhari on Biafra agitation as well as the President’s response.
Hate speeches seem to be the order of the day in Nigeria. What is the Ebonyi State Government doing to curb the menace?
We have a very important law we are going to make and that will be on hate speeches. You will have to prove henceforth whatever allegations you put forward, whether it is on the social media or on the pages of newspaper. We are going to make the law so that when you are accusing anybody you will have to prove it. We will create a department that will be in charge of that so that we regulate hate speeches in the state.
Already, Kaduna state did it and I told the Governor, please export whatever you have in Kaduna and bring here. What is pulling this country down is our mouths and mindset. People just sit down at one corner and start to destroy people and cook up all kinds of things you cannot prove. We know that this is democracy but he that comments must prove his or her point and we must insist on that. The courts are there to prove our points and strengthen democracy. Anybody who stays at the corners of his/her house to accuse you, that person must be fished out to prove it.
From all indications, the country will soon be restructured in view of the clamour all over the nation. How prepared are South East states?
Very soon, there will be no more money coming from Abuja, it will happen just suddenly. If they just say okay let us do restructuring and of course the North is doing greatly very well, how do we survive? North has a lot of opportunities, they are moving into agriculture.
And so some people see restructuring as a dream that may not come to pass. If they say we must restructure and let every region harness its resources and keep it, bring 50% of it to the centre, 30% to common pocket to be redistributed and 20% to the federal government. The question is: what are we going to bring to the centre? But this is one of the aspects of restructuring and so we must wake up. I will continue to shout it, we must hear that and I am happy the President commended Ebonyi state in agriculture and fertilizer. One of my fights in this state is such that the Abakaliki rice would not be dimmed because it is known all over the world. But we have to do different things if we must excel. We have improved in agriculture actually but we have not reached our destination and we must get to the destination in rice production in this country.
What can you say about the ongoing agitations in the South-East region for the actualization of Sovereign State of Biafra and the recent proscription of IPOB?
I want to thank the Governors of South-East and the North for their efforts in ending the ugly incident that occurred recently. Let me assure Nigerians that Mr. President has heard you and he is going to address all the issues raised.  There is no need to continue insulting our leaders and abusing other tribes. No need trying to pose danger to the existence of our people. We are not untrustworthy people. We are very, very trustworthy. We are hardworking and well cultured people and so, we have made our points.
I had private discussion with Mr. President in New York and I want to assure the South-Easterners that the President will address all our problems. Nigeria is going to see peace. We are stronger when we are bigger. Let me also tell our people that we are playing too much politics. It is only in the South-East that you see petitions that they are piling in the EFCC. Everything is now about politics and we left our hard work for politics.
As the incumbent and 3rd civilian Governor of Ebonyi State since its creation 21 years ago, what efforts have you made in living up to the dreams of the founding fathers?
In our efforts to create a new Ebonyi State of the dreams of our founding fathers, we christened the platform upon which God brought us to leadership and raised us so high above distractions through the divine mandate. We remain grateful to God. We can humbly say that we have achieved a lot through God’s divine mandate within the two years of our administration. We have kept hope alive and delivered on our campaign promises despite obstacles that have stirred us and still stirring us in the face, but we are surmounting most of them.
Undoubtedly, this year’s celebration for us as a people is an important juncture in the annals of our statehood; because, we have worked hard to bring development to our state.
In the previous years, we have devoted this celebration to enumerating our collective challenges in which insecurity had formed the major challenge. But today, we have modified this annual event such that it has become a convention for our collective achievements. We have kept hope alive and tackled our challenges as a people who are destined to succeed.
Let me emphasize that the dream of our founding fathers was that should Ebonyi State be created; it will survive based on the human and mineral resources that God endowed us with. It is important that we know how far we have harnessed these resources that God gave to us.

MYSTERIOUS! WOMAN MARRIED TO DEAD MAN FOR 5 YEARS


MYSTERIOUS! WOMAN MARRIED TO DEAD MAN FOR 5 YEARS


ω Husband vanishes with only child as kinsman identifies him
From Linus Oota, Lafia
For several years, she searched unsuccessfully for a man to call her own amid pressure from her mother to get married because age was not on her side. Her desperation heightened when her bosom friend, Veronica, kissed goodbye to spinsterhood in an elaborate ceremony that remained fresh in her memory.
On a business trip sometime in February 2011, she encountered an alluring young man with whom she later fell in love. A reserved, handsome stranger who exuded a romantic charm that was shrouded in mystery swept her off her feet.
Beginning of trouble
Expectedly, her parents were full of joy when she arrived her village on a Saturday evening to commence the traditional marriage rites, but payment of the bride price was defered because she was already pregnant and the tradition forbade such. Notwithstanding, they returned to Lafia, where they settled down and cohabited as a couple for over five years.
A few months after presenting her heartthrob to her parents at Lokobo village in Keana Local Government Area of Nasarawa State where she hails from, she was delivered of a baby boy, a development that further lifted her soul and strengthened their bond. Within a period of five years, she also had two miscarriages, which she believed, was an act of God.
Unraveling the mystery man
Suddenly, in March, this year, she discovered that for almost six years, she had been living with a dead man who she called her husband, the father of her child. It sounds like a fairy tale, but it’s true. This is the story of 39-year-old Angela Tyoor Agber, a boisterous woman of Tiv extraction resident in Lafia, until the macabre encounter turned around her life.
She is yet to recover from the shock, after an unscheduled visit by two guests to their home on Obi road, on the outskirts of Lafia, blew the veil off her ghost marriage. He disappeared since that day with her four-year- old son, Joseph Jnr., to a world unknown, leaving her in sorrow and fear.
The bubble burst when Angela, who sells oranges, wanted to rent a shop at a plaza located close to the Lafia-Makurdi Roundabout to expand her business. As part of the conditions, the property owner, Alhaji Musa Usman, requested to meet her husband ostensibly to ensure she was a responsible woman.
Unfortunately, her supposed 42-year-old husband, “Barrister” Tyopenda Joseph, was too busy to meet Usman, who decided to visit the couple at home on the fateful day. He was accompanied by a mason, Mr.Targba Iortim, whom Usman had contracted for a building project. Iortim, also a Tiv from Taraba State, had joined Usman in Lafia for a trip to Abuja. But Usman decided to meet Angela’s husband before embarking on the journey.
He drove to the couple’s home without prior notice in company with the mason, unknown to him that Iortim was acquainted with Angela’s husband at Andole village in Kashak Local Government Area of Taraba State, a Tiv community where he hailed from. Angela had barely ushered the visitors into the sitting room when the unexpected happened.
Iortim was jolted when her husband emerged from the bedroom to meet his guests. There was pin-drop silence as Joseph, popularly known as Big Joe while alive, seemed to have frozen on seeing one of his visitors. Moments later, Iortim reportedly summoned courage and hailed him by his nickname, and then, added a shocker: “Big Joe, but you are no more, why are you here”? The response was a thunderous sound; when Angela and her guests recovered from the shock, her husband and child had vanished.
Shock and disbelief
She collapsed and went blank. After being revived, she was told her husband had died over 11 years ago, precisely December 2005, in an auto crash on Takum road in Taraba State. His body, which was badly mangled, was buried same month in his village. Four months after, members of his family were wiped out during a clash between farmers and Fulani herdsmen in the state when his village was completely razed. Iortim, who said he attended Joseph’s burial, gave horrendous details of the event.
Angela eventually pulled herself together and briskly packed her belongings out of her “matrimonial home”. Consumed by fear, she has relocated to Lokobo, her village, far away from Lafia where she had toiled since 2007 and barely savoured her blossoming trade in oranges. She has now realized why everything about Joseph was enigmatic; why she neither saw nor heard about members of his family and friends, why he rarely spoke of his past, beyond the fact that he hailed from Kashak Local Government in Taraba State, and his family perished during an invasion of his village by suspected Fulani herdsmen.
Strange behaviour
Though they lived in a secluded area on the outskirts of Lafia, Angela never suspected anything about her husband who told her he was a legal practitioner and relocated from Taraba State as a result of communal crises. Strangely, he vehemently opposed to enrolling Joseph Jnr., their only child in school even when he was aged four. While her son whom she described as a lively and gentle boy did not exhibit any strange behaviour, her husband was withdrawn and often spoke about death, which unsettled her.
“Each time I complained about his quietness, he tells me that he was thinking about his people who died back home, and that he would join them someday. Most times, he talked about his terrible dreams, how water surrounded him while he was going to a farm. There was a day he asked me how I would feel if he slept one day and didn’t wake up; there was a day he told me he had a dream that Joseph Jnr., our son, died and was buried. In all the years we spent together, he never attended a church service even for once; he had no friends. On the day he went to my village for our introduction, two young men and a woman accompanied us; he told me one of the men was his uncle who came from Kaduna, while the other was his friend from Makurdi. He said the woman was with us to represent his mother and was a relation from Makurdi.
Since then, I had not seen any of them after they accompanied him to my village, but we sometimes talk only on his mobile phone. When I was delivered of my son, my mother visited and spent some days with us, but none of those people came. Whenever I raised the issue, he gave excuses. There was a time he promised taking me to his village in Taraba, but he later reneged on the grounds that herdsmen had taken over their community and I became afraid. About two years before my shocking find, he kept travelling and hardly stayed around. All along, he gave me the impression that his village had been razed completely by the herdsmen and because of the stories we hear from there, I was convinced. I never knew I was married to a dead man”, she lamented.
Spiritual help
It’s a cruel fate for Angela which members of her family had resolved not to make public, as they seek spiritual help to cleanse her of any evil spell. Following a tip off by a relation of an arrangement for her to take sanctuary in a church led by a female prayer warrior at Otukpo, Benue State, our correspondent laid siege to a spot popularly known as Obi Bus Stop situated a few kilometers away from Lafia, from where they were to transit to their destination on the scheduled day for the trip.
On Wednesday, last week, the effort paid off as Saturday Sun met Angela in company with her uncle, Anodohumba Adzor, as they embarked on the journey en route Otukpo. It was a horrifying encounter as she narrated how she got hooked to a ghost marriage, and a dark cloud of uncertainty that has enveloped her. She told Saturday Sun her story in detail.
How we met
“In 2007, I relocated from my village to Lafia with the assistance of Veronica, a close friend who sold oranges. Since I wasn’t educated and couldn’t farm, my late father raised a sum of N6000 for me and encouraged me to set up a business. I joined my friend in the orange business which made me travel frequently to purchase the fruit at interior villages in Konshisha, Ushongo and Gboko areas of Benue State where they are cultivated in large quantity and cheap.
“My mother did not give her blessing to the business I was doing; she felt since I couldn’t engage in farming, I should marry and settle down for whatever business I wanted to do in my husband’s house. My father didn’t send me to school, because he was opposed to sponsoring the education of a female child. So, my mother was against my stay in Lafia alone; she wanted me get married and complained about it each time I went to the village. Though, I had several boyfriends in Lafia, none was ready to marry me. They were only interested in having sex, but my mother kept pressurizing me, more so, when my friend, Veronica got married. Due to the pressure, I also became desperate to marry, but could not find the right man.
“In February, 2011, I was returning from a business trip to Konshisha via Makurdi en route Lafia. On that fateful day, I boarded a taxi at Makurdi to Lafia with about six sacks of oranges which filled up the back seats. The driver charged N2, 500 as my fare and my load and as I pleaded with him to collect N2000, a young man in black suit who was seated at the front, offered to make up the balance of N500 so that we could move immediately; he said he was in a hurry for an appointment in Lafia.
“As we commenced the journey, he started a conversation with me; he probed into my life and when he realized that both of us were of the Tiv ethnic group, he changed to our language so that the driver, who was Hausa, would not understand our discussion. He identified himself as Barrister Tyopenda Joseph, hailed from Taraba State, and said he had just relocated to Lafia after being displaced by herdsmen/farmers clashes in Taraba which consumed his entire family. He said he was starting life afresh in Lafia, and we exchanged contacts. Eventually, we started an affair which led to marriage within a short period.
Before then, he lived in a lonely area on Obi road; he told me how all his family members were killed in an attack on his village. It was sympathetic and based on the kind of stories he told me, I didn’t bother anymore to probe into his roots in Taraba, though he told me he hailed from Kashak. At this point, we were deeply in love. He proposed marriage so that he could settle down properly, and that was the first time a man would propose to marry me. Since that was what I had long awaited, I did not give it a second thought to investigate him further, at least, within Lafia. I was already spending most of my nights in his house. I leave home early in the morning for my business and return late in the evening. Whenever I returned, he would tell me he had also just arrived home, and I believed everything he told me. He regularly assisted me with money for my business; really showed me love, and I loved him passionately. I was ready to do everything to please him, and one thing that made me give him my heart was that he satisfied me sexually, the way no man had done since I lost my virginity.
Seven months into our relationship, I became pregnant and he gladly accepted to shoulder the responsibility. All along, I had wanted to marry because my only friend had married and I had gone an extra mile to make my dream a reality. He was about 42 years. I took him to my parents who were happy, particularly my mother. A forum of family members and elders of the village was convened, where he was introduced as my husband. He bought drinks and performed some traditional marriage rites, but the bride price was not paid instantly because I was pregnant and our tradition forbade collecting bride price for a pregnant woman. This was in November, 2011. He promised to pay the bride price after I was delivered of the baby. We returned to Lafia and lived in peaceful matrimony. He was reserved and had no friend. Daily, he left home by 6am and returned at about 8.pm weekdays; he doesn’t go out on weekends.
I was delivered of a baby boy in June, 2012, and thereafter, had two miscarriages. Throughout the period of our marriage, he did not go back to the village to pay the bride price as he earlier promised. He kept giving excuses, but my family exercised patience with him because he catered for them; he solved every problem to which his attention was drawn. Our son behaved normal; he was a gentle boy always comfortable wherever you kept him. But one strange thing his father did was that he never allowed me to enroll him in school; he warned me not to enroll him in Lafia as he was planning to relocate to Abuja where he would attend a good school. My son was four years old at that time. I felt bad and reported the matter to my mother, but she told me I should allow my husband do what he desired for his son.   
“Sometime in March, 2017, I wanted to rent a shop at a plaza along Lafia/Makurdi Roundabout to expand my business. The property is owned by one Alhaji Musa Usman who requested to see my husband before letting the shop to me. I told him how busy my husband was, but he insisted and instead, offered to visit our home on a Saturday. He said he was travelling to Abuja same day for a business trip that would take him a month. I forgot to tell my husband about Alhaji’s visit and the man came with a mason, a Tiv man who relocated from Taraba State to Makurdi who knew my husband while he was alive and attended his funeral when he died. That was when my world crashed like a pack of cards. I had no inkling my husband had died before, but I later believed because if it wasn’t true, he wouldn’t vanish with his son; it’s true. I’m short of words to express how I feel, but have to accept my fate as an act of God. It is shocking, because we had come a long way and now, the man has gone”.
Family speaks
Anodohumba Adzor, Angela’s uncle who accompanied her to seek divine intervention at Otukpo, Benue State, said the family was concerned with how to manage the attendant stigmatization, following the incident. “When she packed her belongings and returned to the village, people thought she had misbehaved and was divorced by her husband. The truth is that except for few persons, most people are not aware of what happened. We want to manage the incident carefully so that her future will not be ruined; so that she can live her life in the future. Since the incident happened, we have approached several spiritualists who confirmed that the man was a ghost; he wasn’t a human being and the woman need to undergo some traditional rites for living with a ghost for years. But we shall do our best for her to return to her normal life; that is why we are keeping her away from people. We have been directed to a woman at Otukpo for spiritual help and we are going there”, he told Saturday Sun.
I attended Joseph’s funeral –Iortim
Targba Iortim, also a Tiv who hails from Taraba State, is the mason who unmasked Angela’s ghost marriage. He spoke about her husband’s lifetime in an interview with our correspondent, during which he revealed Joseph’s true identity and members of his family. He gave his father’s name as Mr. Gbamwuam Tyopenda, and his mother, Mrs. Oladi Tyopenda. He also mentioned Iorna Sunday Tyopenda and Akem Humphrey Tyopenda, as Joseph’s younger siblings. Unfortunately, suspected Fulani herdsmen killed all in an attack on their village. That was however, after Joseph had died in an auto crash in 2005.
“I knew him very well; he wasn’t a lawyer. He did a diploma in Law at the Benue State University sometime in 2002. We used to live together in Taraba State. He was into politics, had two motorcycles and a Volkswagen Golf car, which he hired out for commercial purpose. He was a boyfriend to my late elder sister; in fact, he wanted to marry her before she took ill and died of cancer infection. I still have photographs he took with my late sister, but I don’t have them here with me. He was always in our house; I knew him well. He died in an accident on Takum road in 2005, and I attended his funeral. He was a neat, gentle and humble man whose aspiration was to be a lawyer; he took the West African School Certificate Examination four times without a credit in Literature, but he refused to study any other course apart from Law.
“You could hardly predict him, but he was in love with my sister. When she died, he left the village for an unknown destination for more than a year. A few months before he died, he travelled to Ibadan and spent about three months; when he returned, he started practicing as a medical personnel. At a point, he wanted to contest councillorship election, but later dropped his ambition. He lived a lonely life at Andole village in Kashak Local Government Area of Taraba State. He doesn’t talk much and his favorite food was pounded yam as well as roasted yam served with palm oil, which my late sister used to prepare for him. He loved watching football”.
Friend corroborates
Iortim was emphatic on his claims and linked our correspondent with Mathew Kpeber, his (Joseph’s) close friend in Taraba who had also relocated to Makurdi, for a confirmation. When contacted on his mobile phone, he confirmed Joseph died over a decade ago. “I used to ride one of his commercial motorcycles in Taraba, but we fell apart after we had issues over remittance of proceeds. He died in an accident on Takum road, though I didn’t attend his burial because I had a surgery at that time and was on admission in a hospital. But I know that Big Joe was dead”.

Biafra can never die –Ikedife


Biafra can never die –Ikedife


Former President General of Ohaneze Ndigbo and the convener of South East Elders Forum, Dr Dozie Ikedife has disagreed with those saying Biafra should be forgotten.
Ikedife, yesterday, in Nnewi explained that Biafra is very dear and close to the hearts of many people of the South East geopolitical zone to be forgotten. According to him, Biafra has become an identity for a people and as such nobody can tell them to forget their identity.
“These are people who met in the South Eastern part of West Africa in an area now called Nigeria when the Portuguese explorers of the 15th century came calling during their exploration of West Africa. Note that in any situation, anybody sitting comfortably would like the status quo to be maintained. On the other hand, anybody not sitting comfortably would call for adjustment. This is basic.
“They call for restructuring. We have to define what we are restructuring, to what extent will it go. Will it be far enough to remove all these traces of discomfort in the system or will it just be a perfunctory alleviation of the discomfort? We must understand that. And until the inequality, marginalization, uneven distribution of patronages, infrastructural development, unemployment, economic empowerment, accommodation or systematic exclusion are addressed, then the agitation up and down in this country will certainly not abate,” the elder statesman said.
He insisted that no real Biafran would accept to forget Biafra. According to him, no true son of Oduduwa or Arewa, would accept to forget their identities. Ikedife was also of the opinion that anybody who tells a group of people to forget their identity would be giving a wrong piece of advice “probably based on wrong perception or wrong understanding of what the agitation is all about.”
Ikedife further explained that he had always advocated that the issue of actualizing self-determination for the Igbo would be accomplished through dialogue, diplomacy, non-violence, legal means and operating within the law.

Jonathan at Rhodes Forum, calls for reform of UN


Jonathan at Rhodes Forum, calls for reform of UN


Former President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, has called for the reform and democratisation of the United Nations in order to make it more representative and responsive to global security challenges.
Jonathan made the call yesterday, while presenting his remarks at the opening panel of the Dialogue of Civilisations Rhodes Forum’s 15th Anniversary Summit in Greece.
Jonathan, who was the lead discussant, stressed that the UN Security Council should be expanded to ensure representations from all regions and power centres in the world, adding that the UN dialogue method must also change to guarantee a more peaceful world. Other members of the panel were former French Prime Minister, Dominique de Villepin; former President of Mali, Dioncounda Traore, Professor of globalisation, Ian Goldin and President of Infowatch Group, Natalya Kaspersky.
A statement issued by Dr. Jonathan’s media adviser, Mr. Ikechukwu Eze, quoted the ex-president as saying: “For the world to experience sustainable peace, effective leadership must come from the UN, the flagship of global organisations. The UN that would inspire this kind of leadership should ensure equity, with leading nations and power centres representing different regions of the world, sitting at the Security Council as permanent members.
“The UN dialogue method must, therefore, change. The Security Council of the United Nations must be democratised, in view of new global realities, in the interest of peace.”
He further noted that as currently constituted, “the UN is portrayed as a platform where nations come to quarrel and display their might, instead of its statutory role, as a forum for unity and world peace.
“In terms of carrying out the mandate of preventing a Third World War, we could say the UN has done exceptionally well up to this moment. However, we cannot say the same thing over its mandate of ensuring world peace, as it is obvious that the UN has not achieved much in this regard. From 1945, when 51 nations came together and now that the UN has 193 member states, the world has not known real peace.
“The truth is that despite decades of efforts at the multinational level towards ensuring peace, the world has remained mired in developmental challenges that question man’s ability to govern, collaborate, unite and make his world better. Those are challenges of poverty, healthcare, inequality and conflicts.”
This is because the world has not matched this zeal for organisation with a corresponding gusto for trust, good faith and the conscience for productive engagements, negotiations and dialogue.
“So, when I am asked to proffer solutions for achieving global peace and sustainable development, I will say that the answer lies in genuine dialogue. This entails negotiations, hard bargaining, inclusivity, persuasion and confidence building”.

PDP’LL CRUSH APC IN 2019 –ISHOLA FILANI


PDP’LL CRUSH APC IN 2019 –ISHOLA FILANI


The All Progressives Congress, APC has been described as a party of strange bed-fellows. Making the assertion in this interview with ’TUNDE THOMAS, former National Vice-Chairman, Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Chief Ishola Filani said the time was up for the party and boasted that the PDP would inflict a crushing defeat on the APC in 2019.
Filani, who was also Publicity Secretary of the defunct Social Democratic Party, SDP, and Director of Media, M.K.O Abiola’s Hope ’93 Campaign Organisation also spoke on other national issues.
As the former National Publicity Secretary of the defunct SDP and former Director of Publicity, late M.K.O Abiola’s Campaign Organisation, Hope ’93, what’s your reaction to the ongoing claims and counter-claims by some eminent Nigerians over the conditional bail granted late Chief Abiola by General Sani Abacha’s regime. Some have also argued that Abiola would have been alive today if NADECO leaders then had not advised him to reject the bail.
Let me start by recalling how late M.K.O Abiola called some of us to a meeting in his house before he accepted and gave the go-ahead for members of the defunct SDP, his own political party, to serve in Abacha’s cabinet. He explained his reason for allowing them to serve in Abacha’s government.
He told us that the same invitation given to SDP members had also been extended to the defunct NRC to also nominate some members to serve in Abacha’s government. NRC and SDP were the two parties that contested the 1993 general election that was annulled by General Ibrahim Babangida’s military government. It was a series of other events later that led to the emergence of late Gen. Sani Abacha as Head of State.
What Abiola told us was later put to debate among those of us at that meeting. The impression Abacha gave when he took over the reins of government was, it was either he handed over to Abiola or conduct another election. As at that time, anybody who was a politician would know that it would be very difficult for anybody to recall Abiola to become the president because the June 12, 1993 election had been annulled and what the military were used to was to enact decrees to give backing to their actions. Although these decrees could be challenged in court, you would hardly be successful challenging those decrees in courts.
Our hope was that if we didn’t join the government and the NRC joined, it would look as if we were not cooperating with government. There were feelers then that NRC people were eager to join Abacha’s government which they eventually did. So, at that meeting, and with M.K.O Abiola’s consent, it was   agreed that SDP members should join Abacha’s cabinet. There was no doubt that Abiola won June 12, 1993 presidential election before it was annulled.
But it was only wise for us to cooperate by joining Abacha’s government with a faint hope that the annulled June 12, 1993 election would still be revalidated.
This decision to allow SDP members to join Abiola’s cabinet was solely taken by SDP, with Abiola’s consent. NADECO had not been formed at that time. So, the claims being made by NADECO leaders that they were the ones that gave the go ahead to Yoruba ministers who served in Abacha’s cabinet to do so was false. It is a big lie.
NADECO was not a baby of the SDP. It was the SDP and Abiola that took the decision that those who served in Abacha’s cabinet should do so. NADECO was not in existence at the time that decision was taken.
So, where you didn’t nominate somebody to go and join and serve, how would you ask such individuals to withdraw from the cabinet. Some of the claims being made by Senator Femi Okurounmu and other NADECO leaders on the June 12 crisis are not true. NADECO leaders were not the ones that nominated those Yoruba ministers who served in Abacha’s government like Ebenezer Babatope, Lateef Jakande, Elder Wole Oyelese and others. They don’t have the right to ask them to withdraw from Abacha’s cabinet.
Contrary to Okurounmu’s claims that Babatope, Jakande, Oyelese, and other Yoruba ministers in Abacha’s cabinet helped to bury June 12 struggle and worked against M.K.O Abiola’s interest, it was rather the other way round. It was actually Okurounmu and other NADECO leaders, through their selfish actions, that scuttled June 12 struggle. They were the ones who worked against Abiola. Okurounmu and other NADECO leaders sabotaged June 12 struggle.
But it is the belief of some Nigerians that NADECO, a pro-democracy pressure group actually stood by M.K.O Abiola during the June 12 struggle even when some of his own SDP party members had abandoned him …
Let me tell you this which may shock millions of Nigerians. Majority of the leadership of NADECO opposed Abiola. They didn’t want him to become Nigeria’s president. They deceived him. They gave Nigerians and Abiola the impression that they were working for his interests, while in actual fact, the NADECO leaders were saboteurs. They were the ones who not only scuttled but scattered the June 12 struggle.
Why would NADECO leaders oppose Abiola, and work against his interests?
These NADECO leaders said it was Abiola who didn’t allow late Chief Obafemi Awolowo to become the President of Nigeria. They said when Abiola was supposed to support Awolowo, he supported Alhaji Shehu Shagari to become president.
I remember that myself, late Ojo Maduekwe, Dayo Abatan went for a rally at TBS in Lagos campaigning for M.K.O Abiola in 1993, and some Awolowo supporters saw us. They called us aside and chastised us for supporting and campaigning for Abiola who, according to them, didn’t support Awolowo then. They even called us bastards.
When they chastised us, I remember Ojo Maduekwe telling them that look, it was Yoruba politics you people were playing, and that Abiola, as far as he was concerned ,was contesting for the Presidency of Nigeria, and that he, as an Igbo man was supporting him. NADECO, as far as the struggle for June 12 was concerned, was alien to those of us who actually campaigned and fought to ensure that Abiola got justice over the June 12 crisis. NADECO to us was an alien body. NADECO can’t and should not be counted among individuals and groups that worked for Abiola’s interests and June 12 struggle.
Senator Okurounmu who has been trying to portray NADECO group as a patriotic organization concerning June 12 struggle, I never met him, or saw him during that period. He was never in the picture during the events that took place before, during and after June 12 elections in 1993. He might have come into picture much later when they formed their NADECO and many of us who were principal actors in the June 12 struggle were not members of NADECO.
But Senator Okurounmu claimed that it was actually NADECO leaders who mobilized support for Abiola especially in the South West geo-political zone that enabled him to get 100 percent of the votes and that Awolowo’s supporters had no bitterness against Abiola …
This is not correct. Okurounmu is not saying the truth. Awolowo’s supporters were against Abiola, and some of them didn’t hide it. NADECO was more or less a Yoruba organization with the exception of few non-Yoruba like Rear-Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu, Commodore Dan Suleman. Most of these NADECO leaders were known as die-hard Awolowo supporters. To make matter worse for M.K.O Abiola that time, while SDP leaders were negotiating to provide an amicable settlement of June 12 crisis, NADECO turned the issue into something like trade union affair,  and this was not in the interest of Abiola.
The Epetedo declaration made by M.K.O Abiola when he declared himself president was a NADECO affair. NADECO people misled Abiola into making that declaration. SDP, Abiola’s party, was not part of it. We were not privy to it. NADECO leaders hijacked Abiola, and eventually played the spoiler game in the June 12 struggle.
While those of us in SDP stayed together as a group under the leadership of Alhaji Baba Gana Kingibe and trying to negotiate to see how a favourable solution could be reached over Abiola’s issue, the NADECO people played a spoiler role by making or advising Abiola to make that Epetedo declaration.
If Babatope, Jakande, Oyelese and some others are accusing NADECO leaders of contributing to Abiola’s failure or working against his interest by advising him not to take that conditional bail granted him by Abacha’s government, they are absolutely right. I agree with them.
Here you are NADECO, you were not the ones that nominated these people, Babatope, Jakande, Oyelese, Osomo, and other Yoruba leaders into Abacha’s government, how could they tell them to resign? It is not possible.
Are you the one that nominated them into Abacha’s government?
No, but I attended the meeting at Abiola’s house where the decision for SDP members to go and serve in Abacha’s cabinet was taken. It was an SDP affair and not a NADECO affair. NADECO had not been formed as at that time.
Are you now saying that M.K.O Abiola and the June 12 crisis could have been resolved or well managed if NADECO had not joined the fray?
Yes… NADECO scattered June 12 struggle. NADECO did a lot of damage to the June 12 crisis. At a point, they turned the June 12 struggle into a Yoruba affair. The question we were asking them was this, are the Yoruba the only ones who voted for Abiola? NADECO turned it into a sectional issue. Perhaps, M.K.O Abiola would have been alive today if not for NADECO leaders’ antagonistic posture concerning the June 12 struggle. They pretended to be working for Abiola, but their activities and actions were inimical to Abiola’s interests.
There is a difference between fighting a war and making a political negotiation over an issue. Abiola was in captivity, he should have been allowed to regain his freedom first, these NADECO people should have allowed him to get out of captivity first, but they didn’t. They advised him not to take the conditional bail. Does a man that is in captivity have any advantage over those who held him? No. This is why he should have been allowed to come out of detention first before any other thing followed.
Each bail had conditions, so attaching conditions or granting conditional bail to Abiola was not even an issue, it was his freedom first, that mattered. Even if Abiola had been allowed to take that conditional bail, coming out of detention, he would have challenged the bail conditions. It should have been Abiola’s freedom first and that was our concern in SDP. Let Abiola come out first, and any other thing can follow.
At a point, NADECO leaders now turned those of us in SDP and who are genuinely committed to resolving the June 12 issue against him. They were feeding Abiola with falsehood against us. They were telling him that those of us in SDP were against him, that we didn’t want him to become president. NADECO did a lot of incalculable damage to June 12 struggle and Abiola’s interests. It is monumental. But for NADECO, Abiola would still have been alive today.
With what you are saying now, what is your advice to NADECO leaders?
They should stop feeding members of the public with falsehood. They should not attempt to write or turn history on its head, they should not try to claim or ascribe any noble role to themselves in the June 12 crisis. If there is any role NADECO leaders played in the June 12 crisis, it was not a patriotic role and for that, they should apologise to Nigerians for the harm they did to the June 12 struggle. The NADECO leaders should also apologise to the then SDP, and the family of M.K.O Abiola. Abacha’s regime was the worst thing to have happened to Nigeria.
Some Nigerians are saying that things can never be the same again with the PDP even though the Senator Ahmed Makarfi-led National Caretaker Committee had won the case against Senator Ali Modu Sheriff’s faction, do you agree?
I don’t agree.Those saying that are those who don’t know PDP very well. In the first instance, what happened to PDP was a result of problems which led to the party losing 2015 general election. PDP would have even won that election if the party had fielded somebody from the North because at that time, we had spent 16 years of democracy. But out of those 16 years, Presidency had been in the hands of the southerners for 14 years while the North had only enjoyed two years, and that was during Yar’Adua’s period. Therefore, if the PDP had fielded a northerner, the party would have won the poll.
But as for Sheriff crisis weakening PDP, I don’t agree. How many people were with Sheriff? Apart from Senator Buruji Kashamu, who else was with Sheriff that is a notable figure? There was nobody with him. Sheriff had no notable supporter apart from Buruji Kashamu. The situation in APC is more terrible than the situation in PDP. What we are doing now is reconciliation, bringing back to the party’s fold those who left at the height of the crisis engineered by Sheriff. And we are getting positive results. Many of them have expressed the desire to return to the PDP.
As for the Sheriff people in PDP, that’s his supporters, they are very insignificant. It is only Sheriff that has left us (PDP); anyway we are not yet sure whether he has left us or whether he is still with us, but if Sheriff decides to leave PDP today, nobody will miss him. Even where Sheriff expresses his intention to come back or still remain in PDP, we have to be very careful. His companion, Buruji Kashamu, is neither here nor there. Kashamu’s supporters are in the so-called mega party while Kashamu is claiming to be in PDP.
However, I’m optimistic that many APC members will defect to PDP. APC is having a lot of problems. APC is not a political party, but a conglomeration of political parties, and this is why APC has not been able to dissolve into one party.
Is it not baffling that even after winning the general election in 2015, APC has still not been able to fuse into one political party. APC still consists of different blocks. PDP will soon organize its national convention where its national officers will be elected, and from then on, PDP will be waxing stronger and stronger with the aim of winning the general election of 2019.
On the issue of picking principal officers for the party, PDP is believed to have agreed in principle to zone the presidential slot to the North, while the chairmanship has been reportedly zoned to the South …
South West is the only geo-political zone that has yet to produce a candidate for the office of the PDP National Chairman. So, in the spirit of fairness, equity and justice, the position should be given to the South West. That was one of the considerations that made the South to meet at a time, and agreed to allow the office be zoned to the South West.
A South West candidate would have even emerged at the party’s convention in Port Harcourt that was jettisoned as a result of court order and different injunctions being obtained by some individuals.
To all intents and purposes, we are appealing to our leaders, and in the interest of justice and equity, the zoning of PDP national chairman to the South West remains.
But even in the South West, some people are saying that there are too many candidates showing interest in the position and that is capable of creating crisis which may eventually threaten the zone’s chances, what’s your take on that?
Since the position has been zoned to the South West, anybody that is qualified can aspire, that’s the beauty of democracy. That the likes of Bode George, Tunde Adeniran, and Gbenga Daniel are aspiring for the position should not be seen as confusion.
This is why there is going to be a convention, let everybody go to the field and convince the delegates as to why they should be voted for. Left to me, Bode George is my choice. Bode George is an elder, and a seasoned politician. He was also a former state governor, and since he came into politics, he has been an asset to PDP.
He is a member of PDP Board of Trustees and former Deputy National Chairman of PDP. Bode George also led the campaign winning five South West states from the AD in 2003 general elections. He led PDP to victory in Ogun, Oyo, Osun, Ondo and Ekiti states. He was also the Director-General of Umaru Musa Yar’Adua Campaign Organisation. The PDP needs a strong candidate for the position of national chairman, and Bode George perfectly fits that role.
How would you assess the chances of PDP in 2019 general election?
PDP will definitely win. Like I said earlier, APC is not a political party, and this has clearly shown in the way the party has been conducting its internal affairs since 2015, and to some extent, the affairs of the country.
Nigerians now know the difference. APC is a house divided against itself, and this is why the party has not been able to get its acts together. This is why the party has not been able to fulfill its electoral promises to Nigerians. This is why Nigerians are now eager to change this party that came to power on the mantra of change which it has never effected or even manifested in terms of bringing it to bear on governance in the polity.

Ohanaeze Ndigbo: We want restructuring, not Biafra


Ohanaeze Ndigbo: We want restructuring, not Biafra

 

By Adetutu Folasade-Koyi
President General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief John Nnia Nwodo declared in Abia Stat, yesterday, that the region desires restructuring and not an independent state of Biafra.
Nwodo said this, yesterday, during the inauguration ceremony of newly-elected officials of Abia chapter of  Ohanaeze Ndigbo, in Umuahia.
He reiterated that restructuring of the polity remains Igbo’s position, in an ongoing debate about Nigeria’s future.
“We should forget Biafra and insist on restructuring; there is no Igbo person that is happy with the situation of things in Nigeria, we must seek for peaceful ways of resolving the issues.”
The group’s position is, however, at variance with that of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), which is in the vanguard of Biafra campaign.
IPOB has specifically urged the Federal Government to convene a referendum that would berth Biafra, for the South East and some parts of the South South.
But, Nwodo reiterated, yesterday, that Biafra is a tall order, given constitutional roadblocks in this dispensation.
He has also expressed dismay over the spate of hate speech on social media platforms by Igbo youths, under the guise of agitating for Biafra.
Nwodo said making inciting speech is capable of causing crisis which could lead to mass violence in the nation, and added that is pertinent to respect constituted authorities. He said the first hand experience he had during the civil war has given him an understanding of the throes of war  and that no country fights two wars and survived.
“There are 11.6 million Igbo people living in the North and, it will be wise for Igbo people living in the South East, and elsewhere, to put them into consideration while speaking or engaging in certain activities.
“I urged Igbo youths to desist from activities and comments  that could spark violence in the nation. At the moment, what  Igbo people need to fight for is restructuring of  the nation.
“Ohanaeze is in an era of transparency. I assure you that we have not relented in speaking for the Igbo people, especially in the area of restructuring for the benefit of Igbo people.”
He added that while the youths are justified in expressing their anger at the way Igbo are being marginalised in national affairs, they should moderate their actions and words.
The Ohanaeze leader revealed that, in their engagement with IPOB leader, Nnamdi Kanu, it was impressed on him that he and his members should tone down their words and desist from denigrating people and groups.
Nwodo also disclosed that Kanu was told that his insistence on Biafra restoration and boycott of the November 18, 2017 election in Anambra State was not acceptable to Ndigbo, hence, he should abandon his rigid position and join in the quest for restructuring.
Nwodo equally justified proscription of IPOB activities by the South East Governors Forum. He explained that what the state chief executives did was to stop IPOB from engaging in activities which included fatal clashes with security agencies. He said without the action taken by the governors, the zone ould still be engulfed in bloodshed, and added that he would not sit by and allow youths of Igboland be cut down prematurely.
Declaring the event open, Abia State Governor, Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu said Nigeria, and the world at large, is passing through perilous times, hence, the need to seek amicable ways to stop it from further denigration.
“We believe in justice, equity and fairness. I believe in live-and-let-live as nobody delights in being oppressed.”
Ikpeazu said it is the responsibility of every Igbo person to respect Igbo leaders  and support their efforts in campaigning for political and economic restructuring of Nigeria.
Earlier, in his address, Abia State President of Ohanaeze, Mr. Chimaobim Ajuzieogu said the apex Igbo socio-cultural organisation would “no longer sit on the fence; neither shall we continue to observe as spectators, in the affairs that affect us.
Elder statesman, Emmanuel Adaelu, who was chairman on the occasion, called for unity among Ndigbo, and said  the leadership of Ohanaeze Ndigbo should be recognised as the voice of Igbo and no group should try to usurp that authority.

Sports Awards: Moses battles Quadri


Sports Awards: Moses battles Quadri


By Monica Iheakam
Super Eagles and Chelsea player Victor Moses , tables tennis star, Aruna Quadri and Basketball sensation Ike Diogu will battle for the Sports Man of the year crown for the 6th edition of the Nigerian Sports  Award ceremony.
World Wrestling championship silver medalist, Odunayo Adekuroye , Super Falcons striker Assisat Oshoala and D’Tigress dunking queen Evelyn Akhator were nominated for the Sports Woman of the year category .
Africa basketball champions, D’Tigress of Nigeria alongside their male counter part D’Tigers who were runners up at the just concluded AfroBasket tournament in Tunisia and Nigeria Premiere League champions , Plateau United will jostle for the Team of the Year diadem. 
Lagos State governor, Akinwunmi Ambode and his Akwa Ibom counter part, Emmanuel Udom were shortlisted for the Sports Governor of the year Award.
Chairman of the award panel, Dr Kweku Tandoh disclosed that this year’s award to be held at the Eko Hotel banquet hall on November 17 would be in 16 categories.
that includes Discovery of the year, Wrestler of the year, Sports Administrator of the year, Ball Sorts of the year, amongst others.
Meanwhile, voting for nominees opened on Thursday October 5 and ends on November12, 2017.

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