31 May 2016
Biafra anniversary: 52 MASSOB, IPOB members, 3 policemen killed
… Only 2 persons died -Army
Fifty-two members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and three policeman were feared killed in Anambra, Rivers, Delta and Abia states, during the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the declaration of the Republic of Biafra.
Biafra was declared by Col. Chukwuemeka Ojukwu on May 30, 1967.
Some reports, however, said casualties are much higher. Some eyewitnesses told Daily Sun that 32 people were killed in Onitsha while another set of eyewitnesses insisted 20 people were killed.
In the same breath, IPOB Media and Publicity officer, Mr. Emma Powerful insisted 40 members were killed yesterday, bringing the casualty figure to 72.
It was also gathered that three policemen were killed during the protest while one soldier attached to the Onitsha 302 military regiment was stabbed and seriously wounded.
Nnewi South Regional Administrator of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), Chief Anthony Nwodo and 14 others were arrested by the Joint Security Taskforce.
He was said to have been arrested at Ezinifite, on his way to his town from Onitsha.
Sources also said of the 32 people who died, two were killed at the Niger Bridge Head while moving into Onitsha from Asaba in Delta State and another two people were killed at Nkpor while the rest died at various locations in Onitsha.
Daily Sun gathered that on getting to the bridge, protesters met stiff resistance from members of Joint Task Force (JTF) resulting in a bloody clash which also led to the death of a policeman and the stabbing of a soldier.
Powerful alleged the army went to St Edmond Church at Nkpor where members who came in the midnight of Sunday from far places had camped for the Monday programme. He said the soldiers shot some of them and injured many and insisted that over 40 persons were shot dead and many injured on Monday even before the commencement of the programme at Nkpor-Umuoji Road, venue of the programme. He added that the army opened fire on the pro-Biafran agitators who gathered in various places for the ceremony in remembrance of dead Biafrans.
“Army/Navy men killed over 40 members of IPOB and MASSOB at Nkpor Uno, Eke Nkpor, New Parts, Building materials market, Ogbunike, St. Edmond Church Nkpor. “They killed about 25 of our members at Nkpor without any cause. They just opened fire on us as we were having a peaceful procession. They shot and killed them and took away their corpses. Many other people sustained bullet wounds and could not be treated because when we took them to hospitals they demanded police report before they will commence treatment, more people who sustained injuries will still die because there was no treatment to control the bleeding.”
Our correspondent, who monitored the situation in Onitsha and Nkpor, reported that a combined team of army and naval officers, with four Hilux vans carried corpses to the military cantonment. They shot sporadically and made a U-turn at People’s Club busstop when they met a bonfire made of tyres and subsequently diverted to Onitsha Expressway.
At Nkpor junction, some policemen and civil defence officers, who were stationed there, used teargas to disperse people who gathered while pro-Biafran agitators set bonfires along the roads.
But, a statement by Captain Jonah Unuakhalu, spokesman of the 4 Brigade of the Nigerian Army, said only two people died while “three persons, including a man performing rituals and incantations on the highway during the incident were injured.”
Meanwhile, two police officers were allegedly killed while several others were injured yesterday in Asaba during a confrontation with pro-Biafra demonstrators who marched through the streets of the Delta State capital.
The pro-Biafra agitators, under the aegis of Biafra Independent Movement (BIM) and MASSOB allegedly dumped the corpses of the late police officers into the River Niger and continued with the demonstration.
BIM-MASSOB agitators, who were decked in red and black attires, took to various streets in Asaba and its environs after their efforts to march towards the Head Bridge was thwarted by policemen who sprayed them with teargas.
Trouble however, started when some policemen allegedly sprayed teargas on the pro-Biafra group at Abraka, a suburb of the town. The agitators swooped on the police team, disarmed and attacked them with weapons. This led to the death of two officers while others were injured. The situation created pandemonium in the metropolis as motorists and travelers en-route Benin-Asaba-Onitsha expressway were held hostage, while business outfits hurriedly closed shops for fear of the unknown.
But, coordinator of MASSOB in Delta North, Mr. Emeka Okafor and the administrator of BIM in Oshimili region, Chief Isaac Onwuamaeze dissociated the agitators from the killings and said they were celebrating Biafra.
Yesterday night, Delta State Police Command confirmed that two of its officers were killed while two others were injured during an encounter with the pro-Biafra agitators in Asaba. Acting Public Relations Officer of the command, Charles Muka confirmed the deaths.
Source:Daily Sun
30 May 2016
Oshodi murder: He earlier attempted to kill my mother twice —SON
Lagos—Distraught children of late Roselyn Osiugie, the woman
that was allegedly murdered by her husband last Friday in Oshodi area of Lagos,
have revealed that their father had earlier attempted to take their mother’s
life on two occasions. This is just as the family of the deceased alleged that
the suspect, Jafar Osiugie, 50, killed her for ritual purpose. The last attempt
on their mother’s life, according to the children, happened two weeks ago
The children alleged
that on one of the occasions, their father, pinned their mother down and held
her by the neck, forcing her to defecate on herself. But the 50-year-old
suspect was said to have released his grip when his eldest son, Collins, 19,
stumbled on the scene. About two weeks ago, Collins alleged, he met his father
trying to suffocate his 46-year-old mother with a pillow. He said: “Immediately
I entered the room, he was shocked and asked what I was doing there?” Speaking
with Vanguard, younger brother to the deceased, Mr. Israel Imomoh, said:
“Everything points to ritual killing. First, he (Jafar) never ate with the wife
until that day.
He was not usually home either. “My late sister always drank
tea before retiring to bed. On that day he was the one that prepared the tea.
From all indications, it is obvious that he drugged her tea because she did not
put up any resistance while he was cutting her neck. “After the incident, he
tried to burn down the house to make it seem like a fire incident.
He even struck some match sticks on the mattress, which
refused to ignite. Some of the sticks were found at the scene. “We were
informed that he announced that he was travelling to the village and from there
to Abuja. He borrowed N6,000 from his relatives, saying he had got a job in
Abuja.
We learned from the children that he had made several attempts
to kill her until he finally succeeded last Friday. “I was living with her. In
fact, she trained me. But I had to leave because of her husband’s behaviour. If
I had known this would happen, I would have remained there. She played the role
of mother and father to us since we lost our parents.” Police on guard in
hospital Meanwhile, policemen are guarding the 50-year- old suspect at the
Falomo General Hospital, Ikoyi, Lagos, where he was said to be lying
unconscious. A reliable police source said: “Jafar Osiugie, who hails from Edo
State, is still lying unconscious at the hospital. Our men are also there
guarding him.”
Vanguard learned that doctors were still trying to revive
the suspect, who reportedly became unconscious shortly after he was taken into
custody last Friday at the Lagos State Criminal Investigations and Intelligence
Department, CIID. It was gathered that the suspect initially acted as if he was
insane by shouting “chemical, chemical, I am dying.”
Source:Vanguard
29 May 2016
365 Days of Blood, Tears and Pain
Yemi
Adebowale; yemi.adebowale@thisdaylive.com ; 07013940521 (text only)
Last
Thursday night was one of the most traumatic for me. I was about to retire to
bed when it suddenly re-occurred to me that the Muhammadu Buhari administration
would be a year old today. As I sat down on the edge of my bed to reflect on
one year of the administration, I suddenly started shedding tears; tears for a
country where the truth has taken an indefinite flight; tears for my beloved
country, badly raped and brutalised by cold-blooded politicians.
Tears for a
country in desperate need of political, social and economic direction; a
country so rich, yet, fantastically poor; a country where deceit has been
elevated to a way of life. It is a shame that we are at a level where the
average Nigerian now struggles for a meal a day while those who ought to call
the government of the day to order look the other way. I eventually dozed off
at about midnightand woke up with my
pillow soaked with tears.
The last 12 months have
indeed been most traumatic in the 55 years history of this country. There is
too much human blood on our land; blood of the innocent. Human blood is sacred.
A nation that overlooks the shedding of blood will never make progress. Rampaging
herdsmen and Boko Haram terrorists have spent the last 12 months killing
Nigerians.
The Boko Haram guys have been with us for some time. However, it was
never this bad. Under Buhari’s watch, these bloodthirsty terrorists slaughtered
almost 3000 Nigerians. Many will not forget in a hurry the massacre at the
Dalori IDP camp which claimed 86 lives; the 50 people killed in Sabon Gari
Market in Damboa; the 30 people killed in Yakshari and Kachifa villages in
Damboa; the 27 people killed in Molai-Umarari Village and the 60 people killed
in Maiduguri and Madagali last December. In all, almost 3000 people were killed
by Boko Haram in the last 12 months.
Just on Tuesday, the terrorists attacked five villages in Jere Local Government, just 10 kilometres from Maiduguri, killing 11 people.
The cruel rampaging herdsmen have also killed hundreds of Nigerians from Enugu to Benue; from Nasarawa to Ekiti and beyond. In Benue State alone, hundreds of people have been killed in the last 12 months.
The destruction of human lives
and farmlands by these herdsmen is unprecedented in the history of this
country. They operate with so much impunity. It also depressing that it took
Buhari almost a year to respond to the menace of these herdsmen. Even at that,
the response was feeble while the killings continued.
A distrusted Professor Wole
Soyinka remarked: “When I read a short while ago, the Presidential assurance to
this nation that the current homicidal escalation between the cattle prowlers
and farming communities would soon be over, I felt mortified. It is not merely
arbitrary violence that reigns across the nation but total, undisputed
impunity.
Impunity evolves and becomes integrated in conduct when crime occurs
and no legal, logical and moral response is offered. I have yet to hear this
government articulate a firm policy of non-tolerance for the serial massacres
have become the nation’s identification stamp. I have not heard an order given
that any cattle herders caught with sophisticated firearms be instantly
disarmed, arrested, placed on trial, and his cattle confiscated.
Let me repeat,
and of course I only ask to be corrected if wrong: I have yet to encounter a
terse, rigorous, soldierly and uncompromising language from this leadership,
one that threatens a response to this unconscionable blood-letting that would
make even Boko Haram repudiate its founding clerics.”
Clearly, nomadic cattle rearing have no place in modern societies. This anomaly must end with the first year of our president. The Buhari administration must take steps to restrict these vicious herdsmen to ranches in their states. State governments must also legally ban nomadic cattle rearing.
Our economy is another major
victim of Buhari’s one year. It has been in a mess in the last 12 months.
Buhari’s policies and actions are not yielding the desired results. To put it
fittingly, Buhari and his team are completely clueless about how to turn around
our economy.
It is even more painful that after 12 months, this administration
still cannot produce any blueprint on the problematic sectors of our economy.
Virtually all economic indices are now on the negative side. Instead of
tackling this, attention is being diverted to the lopsided war against
corruption. Buhari’s war against corruption has not translated into better life
for the people in the last 12 months. Badly battered Nigerians are being told
stories of billions of Naira being recovered without any impact on their lives.
The muttering of gloominess
is growing louder in our homes. Prices of basic food items are skyrocketing.
Factories are closing down and sacking workers for lack of supplies. Managers
of those still existing spend much of their time battling epileptic power
supply, fuel and forex crisis. Official statistics confirm the mass sack across
our nation.
According to the NBS, the unemployment rate climbed to 12.1 per
cent in the first quarter of this year compared to 10.4 per cent in Q4 of 2015
and 9.9 per cent in Q3 of 2015. The number of unemployed in the labour force
increased by about 1.449 million persons between Q4 of 2015 and Q1 of 2016. The
situation in the real sector is most precarious. This is why our GDP growth
rate declined to an unprecedented -0.36 per cent in the first quarter of this
year. Our economy requires one more negative growth rate in the next quarter to
technically enter into recession.
So many homes have been
destabilised by this raging inflation, depreciating Naira and sliding economy.
Then came the months of agony Nigerians spent at fuel stations queuing for
petrol. This was followed by the frustrating petrol price increase without
corresponding increase in salaries.
The impression Buhari gave the nation while
campaigning was that the fuel subsidy regime was a scam and that there would be
no need to increase fuel price once he assumes office. It is a shame that after
12 months of Buhari, not even one of our four refineries is working optimally.
We still depend almost entirely on importation for fuel. With the petrol price
increase approved by Buhari to N145 per litre, a family that uses just 20
litres of petrol daily (for car and generator) will need about N90, 000 monthly
to sustain this. Poor man’s main source of energy for cooking (kerosene) is
also currently selling for between N170 and N200 per litre.
The next battle
ground for the stressed masses will be in the area of house rent and school
fees. Some landlords have given notices of increase in rents. Fees will
definitely go up when schools resume for a new session in September.
Power supply has remained
epileptic in the last 10 months. The improvement in supply in June and July
2015 was just a flash in the pan. The generation capacity of about 5500MW
inherited from his predecessor has since dropped to under 1500MW. Darkness has
since enveloped our nation, with homes and industries spending fortunes to
power generators.
When it comes to other sectors like health, education, housing and roads, the story has remained unimpressive in the last 12 months.
I knew that there would be trouble when Buhari could not hit the ground running after being sworn in. It took him six months to constitute his cabinet. When it was eventually constituted, it was dominated by tired legs and corrupt politicians. Our president subsequently spent almost the entire one year blaming his predecessor for the country’s woes.
I recommend to Buhari the
advice of Epichetus (AD 55-135), the Greek speaking stoic philosopher who said:
“Blaming others for ones misfortunes is a sign of ignorance; Blaming oneself is
the beginning of wisdom; Blaming neither others nor oneself is a sign of
perfect wisdom.” These words of wisdom are courtesy of my very good friend and
financial analysts, Olufemi Awoyemi.
Those who have been defending
this administration and blaming the suffering across the nation on dwindling
revenue should note that when Olusegun Obasanjo assumed office in 1999, he
inherited $3.7 billion in reserve, while Buhari met $30 billion, almost 10
times of what Obasanjo met then.
They should also be reminded that the price of
crude oil was a mere $9 per barrel when Obasanjo assumed duties. Instead of
complaining, Obasanjo simply went to work.
It is pertinent to remind Buhari’s fanatical supporters that crude oil never went below $28 per barrel in the last 12 months. As at yesterday, it was selling for $50 per barrel. Those blaming crude oil prices for our woes should look for another story to tell us.
It is pertinent to remind Buhari’s fanatical supporters that crude oil never went below $28 per barrel in the last 12 months. As at yesterday, it was selling for $50 per barrel. Those blaming crude oil prices for our woes should look for another story to tell us.
Our dear president also got about N2.5
trillion as federal government’s share of the monthly revenue from the
Federation Account in the last 12 months. Nigerians are desperate for a genuine
change in the next 12 months. The suffering in our land is becoming
excruciating. Even the N5000 promised unemployed Nigerians have been discarded.
Buhari is condemned to live up to the expectations of Nigerians. May Allah help
him.
A
Word for Akinwunmi Ambode
My dear Governor Ambode, I have read so many stories about your brilliant performances in the last one year. I hope you realise that those around you will only tell you stories about things you want to hear. I am sure that nobody told you that you have failed to impact on lives in some parts of the state in the last one year. The tattered state of blighted communities in Ikorodu West LCDA and Ikorodu North LCDA testifies to this.
My dear Governor Ambode, I have read so many stories about your brilliant performances in the last one year. I hope you realise that those around you will only tell you stories about things you want to hear. I am sure that nobody told you that you have failed to impact on lives in some parts of the state in the last one year. The tattered state of blighted communities in Ikorodu West LCDA and Ikorodu North LCDA testifies to this.
These two LCDAs are like war
zones with very little government presence. You need to give these LCDAs
special attention during your second year and urgently tackle road challenges,
amongst others here. Please, visit these areas unaccompanied. Come in through
Isawo Road. Link Efunlaruja Street through Ori-Okuta Road and come out through
Ojokoro Road and you will understand the magnitude of the crisis in these
areas.
In the entire Ikorodu West
LCDA, there are only three roads with asphalt. Over 500 other inner roads are
tattered. Many in these areas have relocated and abandoned their buildings.It
is pertinent for you to swiftly tackle these challenges, so that it won’t
blight your achievements. Equal emphasis must be placed on arterial and inner
roads. This will motivate development and enhance the value of property in
these shattered communities.
Again, public water supply across the state has been epileptic in the last 12 months. The trauma in Surulere typifies this. Ambode, you need to rejig the state’s water corporation. You also need to tackle the infrastructural challenges in public schools and health institutions across the state. Yes, many schools have been renovated but others are equally still begging for attention.
Classes are still overcrowded with dilapidated structures. Please,
pay a surprise visit to schools like Isawo Primary School, Ipakodo Junior
School and Farm Settlement Primary School, Odogiyan, all in Ikorodu to
appreciate the magnitude of the problem. Of course, such dilapidated schools
are also in other parts of the state.
EFCC’s
Prickly Remand Warrant for Fani-Kayode
The warrant obtained by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to keep Femi Fani-Kayode in its custody for another three weeks is highly contentious. The agency had earlier obtained a 14-day remand warrant at an Abuja court. When it expired, the agency knew that it would be difficult to obtain an extension from the same court.
The warrant obtained by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to keep Femi Fani-Kayode in its custody for another three weeks is highly contentious. The agency had earlier obtained a 14-day remand warrant at an Abuja court. When it expired, the agency knew that it would be difficult to obtain an extension from the same court.
So, it whisked Fani-Kayode to Lagos
and obtained another warrant from an Ikeja Magistrate court to keep him for
another 21 days. Fani-Kayode’s lawyers had earlier served the EFCC notices from
a Federal High Court in Abuja on May 20 for the enforcement of his fundamental
human rights. But the EFCC ignored this. He has also met all his bail
conditions, yet, they refused to release him.
This is a gross abuse of court
processes and a denial of his fundamental human rights. This former minister
was invited by the EFCC and he promptly honoured the invitation. He has no
history of attempting to evade arrest. I don’t know what our anti-graft agency
stands to gain by this indecent tactics. I hope the EFCC is not confirming
insinuations that they have been directed to keep Fani out of circulation.
He
should not have been invited in the first place if the agency had not
established a prima facie case against him. This idea of detaining people while
continuing investigation has no place in a democracy. I am shocked that our
human rights lawyers are not speaking up against this impunity.
This morning, I
urge the EFCC to charge Fani-Kayode to court if they have a case against him or
release him immediately. The EFCC must please place a premium on propriety and
professionalism in its conduct.
Source:Thisday
28 May 2016
Dollar scarcity: British Airways may stop flights to Nigeria
British Airways is evaluating its routes to Nigeria, adding to aviation industry pressure on the government as sister carrier, Iberia and U.S. competitor United Airlines, halt flights to the country as traffic stutters and currency controls delay access to revenue.
Online business newspaper, Bloomberg, which carried the story noted that the development came amidst concerns by some foreign airlines on repatriation on their ticket sales.
The U.K. carrier is struggling to repatriate its share of the $575 million that Nigeria currently owes to airlines globally from tickets sold in the nation, said Kola Olayinka, country manager for British Airways’ and Iberia’s parent company, IAG SA.
Madrid-based Iberia halted flights on May 12 to Lagos, “due to very difficult operating circumstances and dwindling passenger numbers,” he said in an e-mailed response to questions.
International Air Transport Association Chief Executive Officer Tony Tyler met with Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo this week, the lobby group said in a statement on Wednesday and warned that Lagos could lose its role as a hub to West Africa.
United Airlines informed employees on Wednesday that it would end flights from the U.S. to Nigeria on June 30 because of a lack of demand and difficulty in collecting payments.
Source:Tribune
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