Address by Jonathan At The Nigerian Economic Summit in Abuja
Members Of Igboville Against Killing of Igbo by Boko Haram
OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE FROM MEMBERS OF IGBOVILLE ON 10TH NOVEMBER 2011.
“We the members of Igboville wish to condemn in the strongest term possible the continuing targeting and killing of Igbo men, women and children living or working in parts of the North.
Most worrisome is the targeting and killing of Igbo youth corpers who were posted to the North to serve their fatherland. While we are yet to come to terms with the gruesome and heartless murder of Ikechukwu Ukeoma and his colleagues last April, our attention has been drawn to the merciless killing of Eucharia Remmy and others in Damaturu, Yobe State. It is totally unacceptable and MUST stop forthwith.
On behalf of Igbo professionals in Nigeria and the Diaspora, we hereby demand the following:
1. NYSC should immediately cancel the posting of any Igbo person to the volatile areas of the North. Obviously, neither the NYSC nor the state governments can guarantee their safety.
2. All Igbos currently serving in the volatile areas of the north should be re deployed to the South East, South West or South South, till security conditions improve.
3. Employers and NYSC should not sanction Igbo Corpers that abandoned their primary assignments because of security concerns. Life first.
4. The governors of the south east states should immediately meet with their northern counterparts to map out strategies to ensure the security of life and properties of Igbo living in the North. Immediate evacuation of those in harms way should be carried out without further delay.
5. The federal and relevant state governments should ensure adequate compensation for our people who lost their lives and properties in recurring violence across the North.
While we continue to believe and have hope in one Nigeria, that is the greatest country in the world, we will not support the blood of Ndigbo being used to water the tree of Nigeria unity. We have shown sufficient faith in the Nigerian project and that explains why our people are in all nooks and crannies of Nigeria spreading development, peace and love. Those targeting Ndigbo are basically targeting ONE Nigeria. We should not allow them to win.
Igboville is therefore calling on all Igbo youths and groups to please avoid acts of retaliation in any form. We are christians and our traditions strongly forbid blood shed.
We are also calling on the federal government of Nigeria led by Dr Goodluck Jonathan to rise to it’s responsibility of protection of lives and properties of Ndigbo and Nigerians. Every necessary measure must be taken to preserve life and defeat the insurgents, who represent nothing but darkness.
The federal government should also as a matter of urgency convene a National Conference involving all nationalities that make up Nigeria. This will enable all aggrieved groups and interests table their issues for discussion and remedy. We cannot continue to pretend that all is well with our unity. Not when active war is being levied on the Federal Republic by a group whose best stated objective is to carve out an Islamic Republic from our current structure. We believe that it is the duty of the federal government to create an avenue for demands such as that to be peacefully tabled and discussed in the spirit of oneness and brotherly love.
God Bless Igboville
God Bless Ndigbo
God Bless Nigeria.”
Signed for Igboville:
Emeka Maduewesi (USA)
Emeka Chuks Obinnwa (UK)
Uche Onuh Lucas (NIGERIA)
Uzoamaka Jennifer (NIGERIA)
Valentine Uche Chukwuma (USA)
Maria Afikpo Chic (NIGERIA)
Okafor Udoka (UK)
Godwin Endi Okorie. (NIGERIA)
Nelo Fina (NIGERIA)
Inno Uzuh (NIGERIA)
Mbaekwe Amobi (UAE)
Amaechi Benson Ugwu (NIGERIA)
Johnson Okeagu Abiriba (GERMANY)
Ukaegbu E. Ukaegbu (USA)
Eneh Victor Chigozie (NIGERIA)
Mary Ikoku (NIGERIA)
Nnanyelugo Ani (NIGERIA)
Ethel Onoh (NIGERIA)
Ngozi U. Chigbundu (NIGERIA)
Nze Anizor (USA)
Uju Nwokorobia (USA)
Eresi Grace Okoh (IRELAND)
Philip Akwari (IRELAND)
Nkechi Violet (NIGERIA)
Ogbonnaya Agwu (NIG)
Uchechukwu Enyidi (NIG)
Camilus Ogechukwu U (USA)
Samuel Kalu (NIG)
Gaius Onu Ndukwe Onu (NIG)
Elvis Nwachukwu (USA)
Afam BC Nnaji (NIG)
Kachi Eluigwe (USA)
Chin AKano (UK)
Chris Ojinnaka (NIG)
Ndubuisi Ojimadu (NIG)
Paul Kalu (NIG)
Christopher Chineme (NIG)
Joseph Inem (USA)
Onyemaechi Nwamba (USA)
Nick Nwauda (USA)
Onuoha Kingsley Chuks (NIG)
Sandra Paul Nenye (NIG)
Chijioke Ogbonna (NIG)
Benjamin Emenike David (UAE)
Daniel Elombah (USA)
Frank Ogugua Okoye (NIG)
Chidi Okonta (NIG)
Kingsley Uzoaganodi (NIG)
Grace Iwuagwu (NIG)
Kachi Eluigwe (NIG)
John Okoroni (NIG)
Hon. Nelda Chioma (NIG)
Johnpaul Edochie (NIG)
Iyk JP Igwe (UK)
Simon Ufomba
Chukwuemeka Eric Chukwuemeka (NIG)
Joy Okefi Babatunde (NIG)
Shawn Joe (NIG)
Larry Iloh (UK)
Prince Emeka Ezeani (NIG)
Obinna Kelechi Oliaku (NIG)
Okwudili Michael (NIG)
Xavier Ikeche (NIG)
Augustus CJ Chijioke (NIG)
Stella Ude (NIG)
Chukwuma Christopher Osaji (NIG)
Obichi Ikechi (USA)
Damian Uchenna Ugwuanyi (NIG)
Maxwell Ohtugo (Netherland)
Orji Chigozie Udemezue (NIG)
J Duke Anago (UK)
John Obasi (Hong Kong)
Eresi Emole (NIG)
John Okiyi Kalu (NIG)
Kelechi Nwagbaraocha (NIG)
Obinna Ukwueze (NIG)
Charles Okoronkwo (NIG)
Benneth Ikenna Abanihe (NIG)
Socrates Ebo (NIG)
Hrm Eze Akuenwebe Emechebe (SA)
Mazi Yako (NIG)
Uju Nwankwo (NIG)
Chinnaya Mba (USA)
Amechi Benson Ugwu (NIG)
Nnaemeka Franklin Ugwoke (NIG)
Aguzuru Magnus Valentine (NIG)
Mitt Okorie (NIG)
Pascal Zubby (NIG)
Chidiebere Sunday (NIG)
Matthew Mbanaja (NIG)
Sylva: Is Jonathan Behind The Maladies?
By Nna Frank-Jack
Sir Winston Church-hill was right, when he said “the truth is incontrovertible, panic may resent it, ignorance may deride it, and malice may distort it, but there it is”
At a time like this, when Gov. Timipre Sylva of Bayelsa State is seeking re-election, it is to be expected that critics and the so called opposition would be poised to play the spoiler. The most important strategies are rather predictable: “What has the governor done to deserve re-election?” He has foreign bank accounts, and owns a conglomerate of companies and business concerns.
It is very easy to be a critic. Also when you crave relevance, simply pitch tent with the opposition as a critic, you can be assured of being treated as a celebrity. “What is the government doing?”, “Does this governor expect us to endure this rubbish?” are some of the catch phrases you must learn how to deploy once you set out to be a critic.
I do not see them changing strategy at this stage. For the critics of Sylva, the measure of achievement is confined to a discourse on physical structures and public infrastructure. How many roads have been built by the Sylva administration? How many new schools built and old ones renovated? Are there massive bridges being constructed? How many transformers have been procured and distributed to communities? What of industries?
It is no wonder that so much money and fun fare accompany the commissioning of projects by our chief executives. And some of them have indeed elevated the weird practice to the level of the obscene, such that they are on live television to celebrate so called “Festival of Projects” every other week.
But the Sylva administration has made the state more united, peaceful and irrevocably hoisted on progress and development. It is the same reason for which Sylva seems to have triumphed above his traducers.
Indeed, one must ask why the governor has consistently returned victorious, even when all odds are staked against him. Why is the opposition unable to displace him even after enlisting conspiracies at the highest level?
It is appropriate at this stage to recall that Sylva took over the reins of administration in 2007 against the backdrop of insecurity and threat to lives and property, particularly in Yenagoa, the state capital and the creeks. Armed robbery, hostage taking, and attack on oil installations were the order of the day.
The Niger Delta was a hotbed of crisis, with Bayelsa State as a major flashpoint. Although the crisis which started in the creeks was originally designed for economic emancipation and environmental justice, it snowballed into intense militancy. It manifested in the form of illegal oil bunkering, violation of oil facilities, kidnapping for ransom and other glaring acts of criminality which adversely affected the Internally Generated Revenue of Bayelsa.
The insecurity in the State was heightened by the proliferation of lethal weaponry and gun running characterized by pervasive criminality among the angry youths.
In Bayelsa State, the deployment of federal troops led to the destruction of many communities. Virtually all communities tasted the bitter pills of military invasion, destruction and siege.
He discovered that the upsurge of militancy is a by-product of marginalization and youth unemployment.
And accordingly went to work by putting in place the institutional framework and strategy for conflict resolution and peace building. Four major steps were taken in this direction.
On December 6, 2007, Sylva signed a Peace Accord with all armed militants to the effect that there should be cessation of hostilities. Hence, December 6th of every year was declared as Peace Day in Bayelsa State. The Sylva administration decided to take this bold initiative in recognition of the fact that without peace, there can hardly be development in any modern society.
He established the Peace and Conflict Resolution Committee, with Chief James Jephthah as Chairman. Chief Jephthah met with nineteen ex-militant leaders and persuaded them to renounce the pressure from politicians to provoke conflict in the State. Accordingly, the Committee promised that ex-militants will be recognised and accorded their respect as partners in the peaceful journey if only they renounced violence. It is against this background that Governor Timipre Sylva is described as the principal architect of the amnesty programme even before the Federal government embraced it.
Little wonder that, when the Federal Government established the Niger Delta Peace and Conflict Resolution Committee headed by former Senator Brigidi, the Jephthah Committee worked hand-in-hand with the national Chairman of the Committee. The Committee embarked on a tour of militants’ camps in the creeks to parley with them on the need to give peace a chance. The Committee also embarked on massive awareness campaign and won over many militants to embrace peace.
Conscious of people’s expectations, the governor promptly inaugurated the famu tangbei- a Security outfit to police criminality. For operational efficiency, government donated a fleet of 20 Toyota Hilux vehicles to the Bayelsa State police Command as well as 20 speedboats to the security outfit to protect lives and property in the waterways. So far, the security outfit has lived up to expectation.
This saw a drastic reduction in militancy and crime to the barest minimum, following this up by advocating that the Federal Government should offer amnesty to the aggrieved youths in the creeks as a way of restoring total peace in the Niger Delta.
Regrettably, envy from the high echelon disbanded it. The mastermind also ensured the shake up in the state police command, leading to a sad question “why must we play politics with human lives and security.
The initiative of the government in providing street lights has further cut down crime. Whereas kidnapping, robbery, car snatching and political assassinations are rampant in neighbouring states, the reverse is the case in Bayelsa. Yenagoa in particular has witnessed unusual influx of migrants as direct consequence.
Perhaps of greater significance is that students in tertiary institutions also enjoy enhanced bursary, while first class graduates are giving a scholarship to pursue their masters and doctorate programmes in any part of the world, thus engendering excellence among the youths.
Today, as politics heats up, the most noise is coming from those expecting the governor to out rightly “share the money”, which he has bluntly turned down. Bayelsans themselves may be at the forefront of Sylva’s re-election.
The sordid eyesore unfolding in the Bayelsa gubernatorial politics tells the story of desperados in a last dance to loot the treasury. And pitifully, the parties and personalities featured in the political carnage hide their faces in the sand of greed and selfishness. They reside majorly in Abuja.
The operators and leaders of the PDP have made no secret of it as one of the South West leaders of the party stated that the PDP is ‘fixing’ to teach the governor of Bayelsa State a lesson he will never forget. He was quoted in the National Tribune Newspaper. That means the PDP has become a quandary against the tenets upon which democracy rests upon ethics and morals of fairness, openness and true transparency of a democratic system.
Thus far there has been no convincing reason for the so-called National PDP to deny the Governor of Bayelsa, Timipre Sylva the chance to contest in the PDP primaries against the upcoming gubernatorial elections slated for 2012 in Bayelsa. Instead, what the PDP has found themselves engaging is playing the dirty good old game the way it played during the dark horrid days of the Obasanjo regime when the PDP w as a despotic body that crushed and elevated people’s careers and lives as Obasanjo deemed fit. An ugly past that INEC boss, Prof Attahiru Jega has come to clean.
In Adamawa State where a similar gubernatorial election is scheduled to hold in 2012. Gov. Nyako was not only cleared to participate in the PDP primaries, his opponents were actively encouraged to drop their gubernatorial aspirations for the governor. The same appears the case in Kogi State. The chosen candidate of the Governor of Kogi State was given a near automatic ticket for the gubernatorial contest of 2012.
The questions become why the disparity in Bayelsa State? Why the interference? Could it be that the Presidency might have a hand in the ongoing maladies showcased by the fledgling PDP? Is President Jonathan really involved? Why would President want to deny Gov Timipre Sylva the PDP ticket? What does Jonathan have against Sylva?
The peculiarities surrounding the coming of President Jonathan into the public terrain owes plenty to the mercy and grace of justice and equity and the embracing arms and hopes of the down pressed boosted by the spirit of a silent revolution of an oppressed majority. It is not farfetched expecting for him to understand the tenets of equity and justice for all regardless of personal feelings or experience.
A cogent advice for President Jonathan would be for him to unclog the wheels of democracy and allow the process of fairness and equity to proceed without further interference. To do less is to prove a hypocrite.
To deny Sylva the chance to contest is undemocratic. The PDP and Jonathan must understand this.
It may have been perceived that Chief Sylva has the backing of Bayelsans and therefore the candidate to beat, hence the fear that may have driven the adversaries to plot the unfashionable.
All the allegations of fraud is sacrilegious hypocrisy. The triumph-up thoughts are not only frivolous but also a figment of the authors, who themselves are fraudulent. But, like the biblical admonition, a voice within me just asked, “who among Sylva’s accusers stands among the prophets, let him cast the first stone”.
For the avoidance of doubt, here is a list of few of the great achievements of governor Sylva.
In 1000 days, Sylva engaged in massive road constructions and bridges, and today all roads in Yenagoa are inter linked.
He constructed and commissioned the Diete-Koki Memorial Hospital, Melford Okilo Specialist Hospital among other giant strides in the health sector.
On education, Sylva has made out breaking achievements. All the courses in Niger Delta university have received accreditation. The Law School at Agudama, College of Education, Okpoma, robust bursaries to students and award of scholarships to indigent students for study overseas and the revival of primary and secondary education are some of his achievements.
In sports development, power supply, transport, housing, culture and industries among others, the administration has done very well.
What is clear in this circumstance is that ignorance and deep seated malice are resenting, deriding and distorting the obvious facts.
Enugu debunks CLO’s claims on Ugwu
The Enugu state government has again faulted claims by the Civil Liberties Organization (CLO) that it was responsible for the current incarceration of labour activist Osmond Ugwu saying that such claims were ill-informed and unfounded.
The government was reacting to a report in a national daily in which the leadership of the CLO in neighbouring Anambra State accused the government of being behind Ugwu’s current travails in order to stop his “unrelenting quest to ensure better living conditions for workers in the state”.
A release signed by Chukwudi Achife, Chief Press Secretary to the Governor Sullivan Chime, said the government was appalled at the way the organization misrepresented facts relating to Ugwu’s incarceration adding that it had also made references and comparisons that were unfounded both in fact and logic in an apparent attempt to castigate it.
Achife noted that Ugwu was being remanded in prison with respect to a case he has with the police authorities in Enugu and not the state government adding that the charge of attempted murder arose from the accused person’s alleged attack on a police officer that had resulted in severe injuries to the latter.
The Governor’s spokesman wondered how such a case could be said to be said to have been engineered by the state government when the accused person has the opportunity to prove his innocence in court.
He emphasized that the order to remand Ugwu in prison custody was made by a court of law and not by the state government adding that anyone who wanted to challenge its propriety should do so before the court rather than resorting to the blackmail of an innocent party.
The release said the government held in the CLO in high esteem and expected that it would have taken time to investigate matters properly before making declarations that could not be sustained.
On the issue of Ugwu’s dismissal from the civil service, Achife said it was a matter that the CLO or any other interested party could ascertain from the state Civil Service Commission which is the only body that has statutory authority over the employment and dismissal of civil servants.
He noted that since such actions affected the rights of an individual, it would be more sensible for the individual to seek redress in court if he considered it irregular or unjustified, rather than trying to raise unnecessary sentiments of the pages of newspapers.
Achife stressed that the current state government had notably remained consistent in its submission to the rule of law and has exhibited an uncommon interest in the improvement of the welfare of workers.
He added that the recall of over 5,000 workers disengaged by its predecessor which the CLO acknowledged in the report, was one of the earliest and more significant demonstrations of that disposition.
Correcting the ‘fairy tale’: A SEAL’s account of how Osama bin Laden really died
“It became obvious in the weeks evolving after the mission that the story that was getting put out there was not only untrue, but it was a really ugly farce of what did happen,” said Chuck Pfarrer, author of Seal Target Geronimo: The Inside Story of the Mission to Kill Osama Bin Laden.
In an extensive interview with The Daily Caller, Pfarrer gave a detailed account of why he believes the record needed to be corrected, and why he set out to share the personal stories of the warriors who penetrated bin Laden’s long-secret compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.
In August the New Yorker delivered a riveting blow-by-blow of the SEALs’ May 1, 2011 raid on bin Laden’s hideaway. In that account, later reported to lack contributions from the SEALs involved, readers are taken through a mission that began with a top-secret helicopter crashing and led to a bottom-up assault of the Abbottabad compound.
Freelancer Nicholas Schmidle wrote that the SEALs had shot and blasted their way up floor-by-floor, finally cornering the bewildered Al-Qaida leader:
“The Al Qaeda chief, who was wearing a tan shalwar kameez and a prayer cap on his head, froze; he was unarmed. ‘There was never any question of detaining or capturing him—it wasn’t a split-second decision. No one wanted detainees,’ the special-operations officer told me. (The Administration maintains that had bin Laden immediately surrendered he could have been taken alive.) Nine years, seven months, and twenty days after September 11th, an American was a trigger pull from ending bin Laden’s life. The first round, a 5.56-mm. bullet, struck bin Laden in the chest. As he fell backward, the SEAL fired a second round into his head, just above his left eye.”
Chuck Pfarrer rejects almost all of that story.
“The version of the 45-minute firefight, and the ground-up assault, and the cold-blooded murder on the third floor — that wasn’t the mission,” Pfarrer told TheDC.
“I had to try and figure out, well, look: Why is this story not what I’m hearing? Why is it so off and how is it so off?” he recounted. “One of the things I sort of determined was, OK, somebody was told ‘one of the insertion helicopters crashed.’ OK, well that got muddled to ‘a helicopter crashed on insertion.’”
The helicopters, called “Stealth Hawks,” are inconspicuous machines concealing cutting-edge technology. They entered the compound as planned, with “Razor 1″ disembarking its team of SEALs on the roof of the compound — not on the ground level. There was no crash landing. That wouldn’t occur until after bin Laden was dead.
Meanwhile, “Razor 2″ took up a hovering position so that its on-board snipers, some of whom had also participated in the sea rescue of Maersk Alabama captain Richard Phillips, had a clear view of anyone fleeing the compound.
The SEALs then dropped down from the roof, immediately penetrated the third floor, and hastily encountered bin Laden in his room. He was not standing still.
“He dived across the king-size bed to get at the AKSU rifle he kept by the headboard,” wrote Pfarrer in his book. It was at that moment, a mere 90 seconds after the SEALs first set foot on the roof, that two American bullets shattered bin Laden’s chest and head, killing a man who sought violence to the very end.
President Obama stepped up to a podium in the East Room of the White House that night to announce bin Laden’s death. That rapid announcement, explained Pfarrer, posed a major threat to U.S. national security.
“There was a choice that night,” Pfarrer told TheDC. “There was a choice to keep the mission secret.” America, Pfarrer explained, could have left things alone for “weeks or months … even though there was evidence left on the ground there … and use the intelligence and finish off al-Qaida.”
But Obama’s announcement, he said, “rendered moot all of the intelligence that was gathered from the nexus of al-Qaida. The computer drives, the hard drives, the videocasettes, the CDs, the thumb drives, everything. Before that could even be looked through, the political decision was made to take credit for the operation.”
And in the days that followed, as politicians sought to thrust their identities into the details of the bin Laden kill, the tale began to grow out of control, said Pfarrer.
“The president made a statement, and as far as that goes, that was fine, that was the mission statement,” he explained. “But, soon after … politicians began leaking information from every orifice. And it was like a game of Chinese telephone. These guys didn’t know what they were talking about. Very few of them had even seen the video feed.”
Pfarrer suggests that much of the misinformation was likely born out of operational ignorance, even among those sitting in the White House.
“One of the things that happened was that there were only a handful of people who know about this mission,” he said. “On the civilian side, there were only a handful of people in the situation room who were watching the drone feed. They were looking at the roof of a building taken from a rotating aircraft at 35,000 feet.”
“None of those guys, not a single one of them, had a background in special operations, with the exception of General Webb who was sitting there running a laptop,” Pfarrer went on. “No one knew or could even imagine what was going on inside the building. They didn’t know.”
“There was an alternative feed going to CIA headquarters where Leon Panetta sat there with the communications brevity codes [a guide sheet for the mission’s radio lingo] in his lap and a SEAL off-screen by his side to be able to tell him what was going on,” he said. “But these guys, none of them, really knew what they were looking at.”
As the media raised more questions, officials gave more answers.
Whether or not bin Laden resisted ultimately developed into a barrage of murky official and unofficial explanations in the days following. And statements from as high as then-CIA Director Leon Panetta offered confirmation that the endeavor was a “kill mission.”
Pfarrer dismisses that assertion.
“An order to go in and murder someone in their house is not a lawful order,” explained Pfarrer, who maintains that bin Laden would have been captured had he surrendered. “Unlike the Germans in World War II, if you’re a petty officer, a chief petty officer, a naval officer, and you’re giving an order to murder somebody, that’s an unlawful order.”
Pfarrer also suggests some of the emerging claims were simply self-aggrandizing “fairy tales.”
“The story they tried to tell — it’s preposterous. And the CIA tried to jump in. About mid-June the CIA tried to jump into the car and drive the victory lap. There’s this whole stuff about the CIA guy joining the operation, the gallant interpreter — he couldn’t even fast rope!” exclaimed Pfarrer, referring to a technique for descending from an airborne helicopter.
“There’s this fairy tale about him walking out of the compound during the operation to tell crowds of Pakistanis to go home and everything’s OK.”
Pfarrer tried to put this in perspective: “Do you mean that during the middle of this military operation at night, with hovering helicopters over this odd house in this neighborhood, that people came out of their houses to ask what’s going on, instead of [remaining] huddled in their basement?”
“And I think that there were so many of these leaks that were incorrect, the administration couldn’t walk them all back,” Pfarrer explained. “And so, in the middle of May, they froze everything.”
It was that freeze-out that left Chuck Pfarrer with nowhere to turn for the real story but the SEALs themselves.
Seal Target Geronimo delivers an account of the night Osama bin Laden died with a level of detail unlike anything previously reported. Pfarrer bills the story as “absolutely factual.”
“That’s the other thing. I’m prepared for the White House to say, you know, ‘this is full of inaccuracies,’ et cetera,” offered Pfarrer. He told TheDC that in order to protect American interests, his book is “full of names that are made up, and it is full of bases that are not quite where they really should be.”
“But the timeline of my events,” he cautions, “and the manner in which it happened is 100 percent accurate. And they’ll know that.”
John Idumange, Pointblanknews Columnist in N20m Blackmail Against Bayelsa Gov [Documents Included]
Information available to 247ureports.com indicates that the Bayelsa State gubernatorial imbriglio may entail more twists than readily meets the naked eye. This is as new information reveals that the popular columnist for the online publication [pointblanknews.com] and a lecturer at the Niger Delta University and a recent ‘turn-coat’ critic of the governor of Bayelsa State, Chief Timipre Sylva – demanded the sum of N20million from the Governor of Bayelsa State, Timipre Sylva in return for his [John Idumange] silence.
In a recent conversation with a confident of the Governor of Bayelsa State, Igwe GreatPablo Cj, John Idumange disclosed that he will stop ‘fighting’ the governor if the governor reimburses him of the N20million he spent campaigning for him during the gubernatorial campaign season. He confirmed that he was working with the governor prior to requesting for the N20million. [See proof of conversation below]
In the words of Igwe GreatPablo Cj,
“I know that every sane mind must be disturbed by the level of allegation (which I consider as nothing but false stories) against Gov. Timipre Sylva. I am saying this based on the concrete evidence I have at hand. When I called, John Idumange, one of the major critics of Gov. Sylva, who was once a pro-Sylva up to the middle of this year, to know why he turned against Sylva overnight, he told me certain things that made him to turn against the governor.
1 – He told me that the governor who promised to make him head of the Universal Basic Education, (UBE) failed to keep to his promises.
2 – That the governor refused to pay him for the campaign he has been doing for him.
3 – That he was the most qualified to head the Due-Process and E-Governance Bureau, but the governor refused to grant him the appointment.
4- He also told me that when he started writing against the governor, he thought the governor should have sent for him for settlement, but he (the governor) never did that.
There was another day we had a chat via the facebook, I decided to ask him the way forward between him and Gov. Sylva, he told me that if Gov. Sylva will give him the 20million naira he spent in campaigning for him, he will not say anything negative against Gov. Sylva again”.
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Below is a facebook conversation showing John Idumange requesting for the N20million blackmail money.
Interesting enough, John Idumange whose major income is from his lecturing job at the university of Niger Delta may find it difficult providing the source of the N20m he claimed to have used for the campaign in support of Timipre Sylva. Also, he may find uneasy explaining whether the governor of Bayelsa, Timipre Sylva should distribute N20m to every Bayelsa State indigene.
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The rise and fall of Chief Nwobu Alor from Diaspora perspective
Prof Eze, Sacked Electoral Chief Sues Gov Obi, Assembly Over Sack
At last, the erstwhile chairman of the Anambra state Independent Electoral Commission(ANSIEC), Prof Titus Eze has dragged Gov Peter Obi and the state House of Assembly(ANHA) to court challenging the manner of his sack, last September 6, 2011.
The suit Ref. A/136/2011 has been fixed for hearing this morning before His Lordship Justice Ozor of the state High Court 3, Awka.
Among the four key issues for determination being canvassed by Prof Eze were that he was irregularly removed as due process was not followed, and that by virtue of Sec 199(1) with which he was appointed, and Sec 201(1) and 125(3), (4), and (5) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, his removal was unconstitutional.
Especially when there was no audit report or query to him or was he summoned or given opportunity before any administrative, judicial or legislative panel for his defense or answer any charges for which he was indicted.
According to Prof Eze’s originating summons, “in view of the fact that the defendants did not comply with Sec 201(1) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federation, and the fact that he was not removed for misconduct, moreso that the Auditor General of the state relied on his periodic inspection cannot be the basis of misconduct which misconduct is unfounded.”
Citing the case of Gov of Kwara state Vs Ojibara. NWLR p661 as decided Justice Oguntade, of the Supreme Court, Eze saw his ouster as judicial ambush which short-circuited all legal norms of natural justice, hence rendering their actions null and void.
Eze therefore wants his sack to be reversed and for the governor to be restrained from appointing anyone in his stead until the full determination of his suit. He was appointed in May 2010, for a five year term as the chairman of ANSIEC.
The suit, some political observers noted would help to put the conduct of the council election in the state on hold pending the final determination of the suit. This does not augur well for the state that last held council election in 1998.
However, others have expressed readiness to go to court to restrain the Minister Of Finance, the Accountant General of the Federation and the Fiscal, Revenue Mobilization and Allocation committee from releasing the allocations due the 21 councils in the state to Governor Obi pending the conduct of the council election in the state.
NFF consults spiritualists to cleanse Nigerian football
The leadership of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) may have resolved to ask God to intervene in the downward slide of affairs of the game employing the services of some clergymen who have a contract to start praying for the restoration of the game in the country.
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Olajide Ayodeji Fashikun
Weekend Editor,
National Accord newspaper,
Suite 005, TransPharm Plaza,
Opposite Jabi motor park, After ThisDay newspaper,
Jabi-Abuja, Nigeria
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2 shot, 7 injured as police, robbers clash in Onitsha
Two persons including an armed robbery suspect were confirmed dead yesterday while seven others sustained several degrees of injuries when Police swooped on a four man armed robbery gang terrorizing traders in the commercial city of Onitsha.
According to eyewitnesses’ accounts, the incident occurred at exactly 9.30 am at No 20B Ifejika Street, off Sokoto road when a four man robbery gang operating in commercial motorcycles attacked a Telecommunication office where they carted away cash and other valuables worth over N3 million.
The source further disclosed that the armed robbers held the staff and customers of the Telecommunication hostage for the period of ten minutes before police detachment from the Central Police Station (CPS) and Fegge Division led by the Patrol and Guard Officer and Divisional Crime Officer 2, Mr. Kabir Umar Farouk arrived and shot one of the robbers.
However according to Police source, the robbers had succeeded in dispossessing the victims and their customers of their valuables when on sighting the coming patrol van, the robbers opened fire on the police which was returned and one of the robbers was shot on the spot while others escaped with various gunshot wounds.
It was also gathered that another victim of the deadly robbery was one man suspected by be a member of the local vigilance group whom the police said must have been gunned down by the robbers when they saw him as a threat to their operation.
A police source who pleaded anonymity said “when we received the information that armed robbers were operating along the Sokoto road, we mobilized our men and stormed the scene but on sighting us, the robbers opened fire on us and in the process, one of the robbers ‘that was the one we shot’ fiercely shot the vigilante man before our men gunned him down” he said.
Speaking to our reporter at the Central Police Station, CPS, Onitsha the victim (names withheld) said that the robbers stormed his shop and ordered both the staff and customers to lie down before they dispossessed them of their valuables including cash.
The victim also revealed that during the operation which he said lasted for ten minutes, the robbers were manhandling his staff and customers, adding that they also used gun butts on them before the arrival of the policemen.
Addressing the policemen for their gallantry, the Assistant Commissioner of Police in charge of Operations, ACP, D.C Makama and Onitsha Area Commander, Mr. Larry Osita commended the efforts of the policemen in CPS and Fegge Divisions, Onitsha in responding to the distress call.
Mr. Makama also urged the men to be more proactive and battle ready to combat violent crimes in the commercial city of Onitsha especially armed robbery during the yuletide period, noting that the police would not allow armed robbers to have rest in the state.
Ureports also gathered that items recovered at the scene of the robbery by policemen from CPS and Fegge Divisions included two AK47 rifles, four magazines and 66 rounds of ammunitions.
Meanwhile the corpse of the slain vigilante had been deposited in an undisclosed mortuary while passersby who sustained gunshot injuries during the gun duel have been cleared for medical attention by the police as they affirmed their readiness to get the feeling members of the gang.