Home Blog Page 1883

Amotekun confirms two deaths in ambush by herdsmen in Ondo

0

The Western Nigeria Security Network (WNSN), popularly known as Amotekun, has alleged that two of its operatives were killed by herdsmen in an ambush at Ago Sanusi, along Ute Road, Owo Local Government Area of Ondo state.

The ICIRlearnt that the ambush against the Amotekun men took place in the forest.

A source disclosed that the attack took place at about 2:00 am on Wednesday, with the suspects fully armed with dangerous weapons, including AK 47 riffles.

Adetunji Adeleye, commander of Amotekun Corps in the state, who confirmed the development, said a farmer whose name was given as Lanre, who had earlier been abducted in the area, was also found dead in the forest.

He also stated that a member of the Vigilante Group of Nigeria was equally shot dead.

He said it was the villagers that alerted the Amotekun men of the attacks, adding that the suspects burnt down an Amotekun vehicle parked in the village and scared the villagers away.

Adeleye, however, debunked the news making the rounds that the head of operations of the corps in Owo Local Government, Oluwasesan Adebayo, was missing.

This is coming barely 48 hours after Amotekun claimed it arrested two armed herdsmen and about two hundred cows following the ban on under-aged grazing, night grazing, movement of cattle along highways and open grazing by the state government two weeks ago.

Although the presidency has charged security operatives to arrest any herdsmen found with an unauthorised weapon, criminality attributed to armed herdsmen has become a growing concern in the South-Western part of the country.

READ ALSO: Old Edo video resurfaces online amidst Hausa, Yoruba clash in Oyo State

Wole Soyinka, Nigerian Nobel laureate, has predicted that if the situation is not urgently and decisively addressed by President Muhammadu Buhari, it could degenerate into a civil war in the country.

On Thursday, the Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) announced an outlaw of open grazing in all the 36 states of the country.

In a communique issued at the end of its 25th virtual meeting and signed by Forum chairman, Kayode Fayemi, the governors were encouraged “to put in place systems to accelerate the grazing initiative of the National Livestock Transformation Plan and ranching in the country.”

The consensus was reached to address the rising insecurity in the country, which had been linked to armed herdsmen operating as bandits.

Meanwhile, the Forum condemned the ethnic profiling of crime in the country and resolved to “convene an emergency meeting of all Governors” on the matter.

“The Forum respects the right of abode of all Nigerians and strongly condemns criminality and the ethnic profiling of crime in the country in an effort to frame the widespread banditry and the herders- farmers crisis,” the communique said.

Inside suspension of Emirates, Air Peace flights from Nigeria to Dubai

0

On Thursday, Emirates airline announced the suspension of flights from Lagos and Abuja into Dubai, the United Arab Emirates’ capital.

Emirates announced in a statement posted on its official website the suspension of flights from Murtala Muhammed and Nnamdi Azikwe International airports to Dubai on Thursday

“In line with the government directives, passenger services from Nigeria (Lagos and Abuja) to Dubai are temporarily suspended until February 28, 2021.”

The airline further said that passengers who had been to Nigeria in the past 14 days would not be allowed entry into UAE until the stipulated date.

However, it noted that its flights from Dubai to Lagos and Abuja airports would continue to operate according to the normal schedule.
The ICIR can confirm that the suspension of Emirates flights is in connection with a ban earlier placed on the airline a few days ago by the Nigerian government.

The Nigerian government had suspended outbound flights from Nigeria to Dubai through Emirates airline over failure to comply with government directives.

According to the suspension notice, the Nigerian government said Emirates airline was demanding RDT test conducted in unapproved laboratories from Nigerians after the PCR had been done. This was against the Nigerian government’s directive.

The Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 (PTF) had warned the Emirates airline to either accept passengers with PCR test only or suspend its flights pending the time the Nigerian government would come up with an approved infrastructure for RDT test.

Sam Adurogboye, spokesperson for the NCAA, during a telephone interview, told The ICIR that the suspension of flights by the Emirates airline could have something to do with compliance with government’s earlier directive.

He noted that although the NCAA did not suspend the flight, the airline took the initiative to suspend part of its operation following the government’s directive.

“At first instance, we suspended their operation for violating the PTF protocol on air travels and the protocol is that they cannot be asking for extra test for Covid. They have to abide by what we have. Maybe alluding to the issue of fake results, they introduced an additional measure on their own and, of course, they are making the passengers pay,” Adurogboye said.

He added that the NCAA noticed the violation and placed a ban on them following which the airline promised to comply with the government’s directive.

“When we saw the violation, we placed a ban and they wrote us again, pledging to abide by our own position. Now, we gave them two conditions: It’s either you bring in passengers and don’t take out or suspend your operations. They chose to opt for one of the conditions until a certain period,” Adurogboye further stated.

UAE government ban Nigerians

Apart from Emirates airline, Air Peace announced Thursday that the UAE government had suspended the airlifting of Nigerians to Dubai until February 28. According to Air peace, the directive was in connection with UAE’s  ‘measure’ on COVID-19.

“The Management of Air Peace wishes to notify the flying public that the UAE Government has stopped the airlifting of Nigerians from Nigeria to UAE as part of its COVID-19 measures.

“However, flights bringing Nigerians back from UAE are not affected. To this end, Air Peace flight from UAE(Sharjah-Dubai) to Lagos is not affected. Normal flights shall resume when the restriction is lifted from February 28, 2021,” said Air Peace.

The refusal of the UAE government to allow Nigerians into the country at this period is said to be in connection with reports of fake COVID-19 test in Nigeria. There are reports that some Nigerian passengers have been travelling to other countries with fake COVID-19 tests.

Adurogboye had also suggested that ‘maybe’ the reason for the request for the RDT test was due to the issue of fake COVID-19 tests in Nigeria.

The alleged issue of fake COVID-19 result is not peculiar to Nigeria or Africa as some European countries have also been found to either possess fake COVID-19 test results or to be travelling with them.

Does Rivers State have the highest number of unemployed people?

SOBOMABO Jackrich, the Convener, Network for Defence of Democracy and Good Governance (NDDGG) claimed that Rivers State has the highest number of unemployed people.

Nyesom Wike, governor of Rivers State, in January of 2021, donated 500 million Naira to Sokoto State to support the rebuilding of the state’s central market which was gutted by fire.

This gesture has generated reactions from many people.

The pensioners in his state said the 500 million Naira could have been used to meet some of the demands of retired civil servants.

Jackrich, reacting to the 500 million Naira donation, said,  Wike is unbothered that his state ranks number one on the unemployment index. He said:

The action of the governor clearly proves that he does not seem to have a protected future at stake or vision for our dear [Rivers] state.

He is not bothered that the state ranks number one on the unemployment index having the highest unemployed population as published by the National Bureau of Statistics and other institutions.

THE CLAIM

Rivers State ranks number one on the unemployment index having the highest unemployed population.

THE FINDINGS

Findings by the FactCheckHub show that the claim is TRUE.

The FactCheckHub checked the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) website for the data on Nigeria’s labour statistics to determine the total number of the unemployed population in the country per state.

According to the statistics  on Nigeria’s labour force released by the NBS for 2nd quarter (Q2) of 2020, Rivers State has a total number of 1.7 million (1,714,188) unemployed people.

This makes it the state with the highest number of unemployed people in Nigeria.

Kano State follows with 1.4 million (1,424,685), and then Kaduna State with 1.3 million (1,339,952).

READ ALSO: Will Nigeria’s unemployed population rank 9th most populous country in Africa?

The Q2 data is the current unemployment data released by the NBS as at the time of this report.

Nigeria unemployment by states q2 2020 1

It is essential to note that the total unemployed population is different from unemployment rate.

The former is the total number of people who are unemployed within a state while the latter is the percentage of the labour force that is unemployed within a state.

THE VERDICT

Based on the statistics on Nigeria’s labour force released by the NBS for the 2nd quarter (Q2) of 2020, the claim that Rivers State has the highest number of unemployed people is TRUE.

Lagos, police insist #OccupyLekkiTollGate, #DefendLagos protests will not hold

0

CITING security concerns, Lagos State government and state police command say they will not allow any protest to hold at Lekki tollgate this Saturday.

At a press conference held in Lagos on Thursday, Moyosore Onigbanjo, Lagos State attorney general, and Gbenga Omotoso, commissioner for information, said it was not an auspicious moment to hold protests in Nigeria’s commercial capital.

While calling on the organisers of the protest to shelve their plans, Onigbanjo said the government would not allow any group to push the state, once again, to the edge of carnage.

“The attention of the state government has been drawn to the planned protest scheduled for Saturday, February 13, 2021 at the Lekki Toll Gate for and against the opening of the Admiralty Toll Gate. The state is aware of Sections 39 and 40 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), which guarantees the rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly. However, such right does not permit the violation of the rights of other citizens in the state,” he said,

“While the state recognises the importance of exercising the rights to peaceful protests, the same cannot extend to blockage of roads or actions preventing other members of the public from enjoying their fundamental rights to move freely within the state. Any individual or corporate body that incites or condones any act leading to the destruction of public and private properties shall be prosecuted under the extant laws and in addition to any penalty the court might pronounce. Such person or body will be liable to compensate for any damage, which may arise as a result of the action or inaction of such person or body.”

On the hand, Omotoso called for peace, urging the organisers of the planned protests to allow the Lagos Judicial Panel of Inquiry to conclude its investigation on what transpired between the military and #EndSARS protesters.

“We believe this kind of tension and anxiety being brought forward by the planned protest will not allow the panel to do a thorough job,” he said.

“If the authorities allow the protest and counter rallies to go on, there would be a breakdown of order, and Lagos is not ripe for such action. It is on this premise that the State Government is appealing to all parties to tread with caution. Both sides have the right to express their feelings, but the time is wrong.”

In a similar vein, Hakeem Odumosu, state commissioner of police, added that the security intelligence gathered by his command indicated that the #OccupyLekkiTollGate protest and planned counter rally would degenerate into a breakdown of law and order.

“The Police Command has gathered credible intelligence that some hidden agents of destruction and shadow parties that orchestrated the last #EndSARS violence have concluded plans to cause another mayhem in Lagos and spread the same to other parts of the country, tactically and spontaneously, like the recent violence,” he said.

Read also: Police affairs minister says Lekki Toll Gate not a place for protests

“Premised on the available intelligence and due threat analyses carried out on the planned protest, the Police Command perceives such proposed protest as a calculated attempt to cause pandemonium and massive destruction of lives and properties under whatever guide. Such will not be allowed to hold in Lagos.”

The warnings are coming barely hours after the federal government had given a similar stern warning to the protesters.

Lai Mohammed, Nigerian minister of information, had earlier on Thursday, warned that law enforcement agents would be on the ground to prevent any eventuality.

On Monday, The ICIR reported how the plan to #OccupyLekkiTollGate came on the backdrop of the controversial ruling of the Lagos Judicial Panel of Inquiry to reopen the Lekki tollgate.

The Doris Okwubi-led panel ruled in favour of the Lekki Concession Company (LCC) to repossess the toll plaza for repairs and insurance claims at its last sitting on Saturday.

The ruling was supported by five members out of the nine-man panel, with four other members, including Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, a senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN), and the youth representatives, opposing it.

Some youths have also planned the #DefendLagos rally to counter the protest which is scheduled for Saturday 13th, February, 2021.

The Lekki tollgate has been shut by the panel since last October 20, 2020, when armed soldiers opened fire on unarmed protesters, allegedly killing some and injuring several others.

 

Fulani Crisis: Buhari is not in charge of Nigeria – Soyinka

0

WOLE Soyinka, Nobel Laurette, has said that President Muhammadu Buhari is not in charge of Nigeria, considering the response of his government to Fulani herders’ crisis.

Soyinka said this on Thursday when he virtually featured on Arise TV over the invasion of his property by cows and the state of the nation due to Fulani crisis.

“I have said this before and I wish to repeat this, Buhari does not appreciate the situation, he doesn’t understand. I see no evidence that he understands how grave the situation is and I have said again and again that I don’t believe he’s in charge,” Soyinka said.

He suggested that due to the grave situation of the herders’ crisis and low response from the government, there was something ‘critically’ wrong within the leadership of Nigeria.

“It’s not possible, in my view, that in a country that has a head of state, commander-in-chief of the armed forces that says he is presiding over a nation, and things get to this level. Something is critically wrong in and within the leadership of this nation,” he further said.

He urged the Nigerian government to make leaders, who had claimed responsibility to criminal offences at different times, take back their words, apologise to the nation and even carry out restitution.

Read AlsoHerdsmen crisis may develop into a civil war – Soyinka

Soyinka’s home invasion by cattle

Speaking on the controversy surrounding the invasion of his home in Abeokuta, Ogun State capital, Soyinka said he thought the police needed to be educated.

According to the Nobel Laurette, the police needed to be educated on the meaning of invasion of someone’s home.

“When people talk about the invasion of home, they are not just talking about the physical building, they are talking about the home which includes the ground,” Soyinka said.

He refuted claims that cattle or herders attacked him, but insisted that his home was invaded.

“No cattle people attacked me, that is a fact, that never happened… But my home was invaded by cattle. Why should the police go to such length to suggest that I had nothing better to do than to go accosting cattle on the road,” Soyinka said.

He stated that it was after he and his groundsmen had driven the cows out of his property that he called the police to come to take over as against suggestions that the cows were never on his property.

“I led the cattle to the roadside and called the police to come and take over. Why should the police find it necessary to suggest that the cattle were never in my property,” he added.

Soyinka stated that he wanted the people to understand that what happened to him was typical of what was happening to millions of people in the country.

For many years, Fulani herders-farmers crisis has continued to create several debates on open grazing. Many farmers have decried the destruction of their crops by cattle while some residents in the Southern part of the country have said they are being killed, raped and kidnapped by Fulani herders.

The Fulani crisis again created a national crisis following the order of Rotimi Akeredolu,  governor of Ondo State, on Fulani herders to vacate the state’s forest reserve due to several reported cases of kidnappings allegedly perpetrated by some them.

After his order, a series of violence ensued in Ondo and Ogun states in a bid to ‘drive out’ Fulani herders from some communities.

Mad cows and even madder narratives

0

By Wole SOYINKA


THE most distressful aspect of my recent interaction with cows and herders is that it has created a most unwanted distraction from the ongoing life and death Nigerian narrative. One has to take time off to deal with distortions and Fake versions, while students are being reportedly waylaid and killed and/or kidnapped in Ondo and farmers are being slaughtered in my own state. In short, the killings continue even as panels are being launched to enquire into immediate past human violations. For those who truly seek details of the Ijegba incident, I hereby affirm that I was never physically attacked, neither did I attack any cows. The cows and herders did however attack my property – and not for the first time.

The police need to be very, very careful, learn to be straightforward with public information. Failure to adhere to that obvious, basic form of conduct means that the public will lose total confidence in security agencies and constantly bypass them in times of civic unrest, no matter how trivial or deadly. How on earth could the police claim that my property was not invaded by cattle? It was. My groundsmen knew the drill and commenced the process of expelling them. Fortunately, I was then driving out and was able to lend a hand by vehicle maneuvering. Both cattle and herdsmen were flushed out of my property.

Read also: Police attribute death of 22 cows in Ondo to poisonous water

Once they were outside the gates, I came down from the vehicle and beckoned the herdsmen to come over. At first, they pretended not to understand, then, as I approached, fled into the bush. We thereupon “arrested” the cows, confining them to the roadside, while I sent my groundsman, Taiye, to the police to come and take over. Since they took rather long in responding, I summoned a replacement and proceeded to the police station. On the way, we met a detachment, turned round, and together we returned to the scene of crime. The police wanted to commence combing the bush for the fugitives but I stopped them – what was the point? Keep the cows, I advised, and the owner will show up. Of course, that owner eventually did.

I thoroughly resent the police version which suggests that the cows never invaded my home: home is not just a building; it includes its grounds. And it was not a stray cow, or two or three. It was a herd – we have photos, so why the lie? It is so unnecessary, unprofessional and suspiciously compromised. The police suggest that I have nothing better to do than to go accosting cows on the public road – to what end? If the police demand proof, the next time such an invasion takes place, I warn that there will be no lack for cadaver affirmation and the police will be officially invited to join in the ensuing suya feast. So please, let us get serious!

Getting serious means seeking with a sense of urgency, ways of terminating mayhem, impunity, and the homicidal culture being imposed on us through some near cultic business minority who just happen to trade in cattle. It means not giving up on peaceful solutions, but also being prepared for the worst. Those of my line of thought have been working on various ways of sensitizing the nation to the very real and imminent danger issuing from this cattle aberration. The menace, I repeat, challenges us as a cohesive entity and as communities of free individuals, committed to the dignity of existence. Cattle imperialism under any guise is an obscenity to humanity. So let me serve notice that we are about to commence a process of public sensitization; we hope even the police will join hands with the agenda as it progresses.

A special practical plea: now that the railways are being resurrected, let us make cattle wagons a priority. I grew up with the regular sight of those practical conveyances. It is time to bring them back.

Tracking bank fraud perpetrators in Nigeria could cost victims more than they lost

VICTIMS of bank fraud in Nigeria can pay more than they actually lost to fraudsters in an attempt to track the criminals and recover their money, findings by The ICIR have shown.

The payment includes other costs such as time spent and other inconveniences in investigating the perpetrators.

Tale of Lagos fraud victim who lost N370,000

The story of Grace Aderinola (not real name) who lost N370,000 in her accounts with Zenith and Access banks to fraudsters on January 14, this year captures the agonies that people whose bank accounts are compromised face in the country.

Aderinola was attacked by some armed men on January 13, around Ifako-Ijaye, Ogba in Lagos state when she went to buy household needs around 8 pm.

After overpowering her, her assailants snatched her phone and took other valuables on her. She immediately contacted her banks through their customer care lines and other persons she thought could be reached through her phone.

But she couldn’t get through to the two banks that night and later proceeded to hospital where she received treatment for trauma caused by the attack.

She then reported the matter at the Area G police station, Ogba, the following Monday and then headed to her banks to check her accounts. At the banks, she discovered that all the N370,000 in the accounts had vanished.

In her banks’ statements seen by The ICIR, N170,000 was transferred from her Zenith account to Kuda bank account 2002928595, operated by one Bankole Johnson Abayomi. The fraudsters then wired N101,000 from her Access account to the same Kuda account.

Another N99,000 was transferred from the Access account to another Access account number 1415028881. The account belongs to one Felix Kunle Oke.

All the transfers were made on the 14th of January, as revealed by her account statements.

The fraudsters also borrowed N13,500 from the victim’s Zenith bank account and went further to call her with a phone number 09029915687,   promising to return the phone to her. That was after she had discovered, through her account statement, that a phone number 08167008800 had been recharged with her zenith bank account.

They told her to come for her phone at Haruna Bust Stop, Ifako Ijaye. She went there, but the men did not show up. They also did not answer her calls. She left the bus stop after waiting for hours.

She told The ICIR that the incident had brought her life to a halt. “I have nothing on me again; to feed myself has been a problem for me since the incident happened. My siblings are in school; I couldn’t pay their school fees or provide food for them,” she said.

Police demand N70,000 for court order 

She said officers at the Ogba Area G police station advised her to approach the beneficiaries’ banks with a police report. She did, but Access and Kuda refused to suspend the beneficiaries’ accounts as she requested. They instead asked her to obtain banker’s order, a court document that authorizes banks to stop or freeze any account suspected of having benefitted from an illicit transaction or against which a judgment has been awarded over-indebtedness among others. The order is procured through a police report.

With the order, investigators can obtain data of beneficiaries of illicit funds from their banks to ease their tracking and arrest.

According to Aderinola, Zenith bank notified Kuda and Access banks of the fraud, but the banks could not suspend the beneficiaries’ accounts until she provides a banker’s order.

She agreed to get the order, but the police officers who would assist her in getting it demanded 70,000 as the cost of obtaining it in Oyo state.

The ICIR independently found out that the order could not be procured in Lagos, but Oyo state.

N70,000 not too much to get order outside Lagos  – Police command

While the victim argued that 70,000 naira was “too big for someone whose account had been emptied” to pay for a banker’s order,” CSP Muyiwa Adejobi, Lagos state police public relations officer thought otherwise.

He said he had received calls from people in the state over police requests for payment for the order.

He said courts in Lagos state no longer issue the order, stressing he didn’t understand why it had been so.

He said if any police officer chooses to help members of the public get the order, his demand for transport cost and other logistics should not be mistaken for exploitation, adding that public members who feel they could not afford the cost should get the order by themselves. He said anybody who needs the order could apply for it through a police report and it’s not only police officers that could obtain it.

He said the public should instead appreciate the police officers who volunteer to risk their lives on the dangerous Nigerian highways such as Lagos-Ibadan expressway to obtain an order that persons who need it could get by themselves.

According to him, if police officers choose to charter commercial vehicle from Lagos to Ibadan, pay for modest accommodation and feed, and return to the nation’s commercial hub, N70, 000  would not be too big to foot those costs. He said drivers of most chartered vehicles going on such a journey could charge as much as N50, 000, depending on the part of Lagos state where they are taking off from.

Adejobi said there is a need for public enlightenment on the order’s procurement, noting that members of the public who feel the police cheat them could go to court to obtain it.

He also frowned at the difficulty faced by the public in procuring the order.

The ICIR findings showed that the order could be procured with N20,000 by police officers on Oyo state.

A police source who pleaded anonymity told The ICIR that coming from Lagos to get a banker’s order in Oyo state “should not be considered legally appropriate” because Oyo state is another jurisdiction.

“So, to my knowledge, anybody coming from Lagos to Oyo usually works with the police in Oyo to get the order. In most cases, it’s not something one can apply for in one day and get.

“You have to go through the police here, make some settlements and even bribe some of the high court officials, so they can quickly process it for you. Only the high court judges give the order here in Oyo,” the source stated.

The ICIR further learnt that abuse of the order in Lagos state compelled the state government to suspend its issuance. Lower courts, like magistrates, were issuing it before in Lagos before it was stopped.

Kuda, Access, Zenith bank speak.

In a terse message mailed to The ICIR by Kuda, the bank expressed its willingness to assist any bank that communicates any illicit transaction in its customers’ accounts at any time. But, that might not be until the banker’s order is provided, as these victims claimed the bank rejected police report and emails from her bank notifying it of the fraud.

Access bank, which spoke with The ICIR through one Mr Emmanuel at its customer care desk said the victim had to obtain the banker’s order before it could suspend the beneficiary’s account of the fraudulent transfer.

“We don’t want to carry out the wrong action because sometimes, some people carry out erroneous transfers and we’ll not be able to perfectly capture the case until police or court can give us the detailed breakdown of what happened. If she confirms to the police or the court that she lost her phone, she is talking under oath. She will provide that information to us. We will use the court order to act.

“But, if she is unwilling to provide that information, the banker’s policy in which blocking an account has heavy implication on banks, will not allow us to carry out that action without legal backing.”

He explained further that there are instances where people do business together, and in the course of payment, they disagree. One party would want the bank to close the order’s account in a bid to retrieve the money already paid into the account.

He said in a circumstance whereby a bank wrongly suspends its customer’s account; it will pay a heavy price.  “If we destroy that person’s business, we are the ones to pay 100 percent full cost,” he stated.

Similarly, through Ayoola Kusimo, Head of its Corporate Communications, zenith bank said the bank could only act whenever it gets the banker’s order.

“Anything fraud, we don’t have the power to close the customer’s account when another bank is involved. We can’t compel Access, Kuda or any other bank to do anything. Let the police be involved. They know what to do.

“That is why banks are crying out every day to their customers to protect their accounts. We do this all the time on social media, newspapers, and other media because we know that the moment you allow fraudsters to get your details, getting your money back is a very long process.

“We can’t just block anybody’s account because the person was alleged to have defrauded another person. The police must be involved. It is the job of the police to do an investigation, not the job of the media,” as he condemned the involvement of the media by this victim on the matter.

He said bringing issue such as this to media’s attention “is not even newsworthy,” but the police, who should carry out investigations, should be allowed to do their work.

Experts react

Meanwhile, Uche Uwaleke, a renowned finance and capital market professor, told The ICIR that there is little the bank could do in the matter without an order from a court of competent jurisdiction.

While sympathising with the victim, the president of the association of capital market academics of Nigeria and a former commissioner of finance in Imo state, said the practice had to do with the age-long bank’s duty of secrecy or confidentiality which he said could only be waived in four circumstances where it is in the interest of the bank; it is by the consent of the bank customer; it is under compulsion of law, and it is the interest of the public.

Read AlsoINVESTIGATION; How online fraudsters feed on greed, naivety of victims in Nigeria

“The 4th condition (where it is in the public interest) is usually a tedious process most times involving the courts. You can see why it has been very difficult for the Nigerian government to recover stolen funds stashed in local and foreign bank accounts.

“As a matter of fact, Section 13 of the Money Laundering Act 2011 permits the EFCC to place any bank account under surveillance, but this is again subject to a court order.

“So, in my view, the bank position is in order as it is only trying to follow the law and avoid liability. Sadly, the court order has to be obtained in faraway Oyo State,” the associate professor of accounting & finance and head of banking & finance department at Nasarawa State University Keffi said

Tola Akinmutimi, a seasoned journalist and former business editor of Daily Trust Newspaper concurred with Uwaleke.

He said banks need the court order before the beneficiaries’ accounts could be suspended.

He urged all bank account holders to protect their accounts and ensure their phones and other devices are protected with a password.

He advised that in no circumstance should anyone save their account pin, bank verification number and other sensitive codes on their phones, laptops and related devices.

While sympathising with the lady, he urged authorities vested to investigate such cases to do all within their powers to apprehend the criminals behind the act, after the bank order had been procured.

#OccupyLekkiTollGate: Nigerian govt fumes, says no protest will hold

0

AHEAD of Saturday’s planned #OccupyLekkiTollGate protest, the Nigerian government has issued a stern warning to those behind it to desist from doing so, stating that security agencies are ready for any eventuality.

Lai Mohammed, Nigeria’s minister of information and culture,  who gave the warning at a press conference in Abuja on Thursday, said chances that any peaceful protest would be hijacked at this time were very high.

On Monday, The ICIR had reported how the plan to #OccupyLekkiTollGate came on the backdrop of the controversial ruling of the Lagos Judicial Panel of Inquiry to reopen the Lekki toll gate.

The Doris Okwubi-led panel ruled in favour of the Lekki Concession Company (LCC) to repossess the toll plaza for repairs and insurance claims at its last sitting on Saturday.

The ruling was supported by five members out of the nine-man panel, with four other members, including Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, a senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN), and the youth representatives, opposing it.

Some youths have also planned the #DefendLagos rally to counter the protest which is scheduled for Saturday 13th, February, 2021.

The Lekki toll gate has been shut by the panel since last October 20, 2020, when armed soldiers opened fire on unarmed protesters, allegedly killing some and injuring several others.

But Muhammed at the press conference claimed that there was intelligence that some activists within and outside the country in connivance with some ‘subversive elements’ were planning to destabilise the country with the protest.

“Any further resort to violence in the name of #EndSARS will not be tolerated this time.

“The security agents are ready for any eventuality. A situation in which six soldiers and 37 policemen were murdered in cold blood by hoodlums will not repeat itself.

“The attack, looting and razing of 269 private and public property will not happen again. The killing of 57 civilians will not be re-enacted.

“We therefore strongly warn those who are planning to re-occupy Lekki Toll Gate on Saturday to desist. We know that many of those who have been loudest on social media in advertising the plan to reconvene in Lagos on Saturday are not even in Nigeria. They are elsewhere around the world fanning the embers of violence and inciting gullible people back home. No one should fall for their antics.”

He added that “no government anywhere will allow a repeat of the kind of destruction, killing and maiming wrought by the hijackers of #EndSars protests last year. After all, only one policeman – (plus four others) – was killed in the invasion of the US Capitol in January, yet the FBI has continued to hunt down and prosecute the perpetrators. No life is more important than the other.”

We are almost back to military dictatorship in Nigeria, says Falana

0

FEMI Falana, a human rights lawyer and senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN), has said that the country is almost back to its early days of full military dictatorship.

Falana said this on Thursday when he featured on Sunrise Daily, a breakfast show on Channels Television.

While responding to a question about change in landscape with respect to human rights in Nigeria, Falana said no progress had been made.

“I will tell you that, very unfortunately, we are almost back to those days of full military dictatorship in Nigeria,” Falana noted.

He said there was an occasion last year where he had to remind Muhammadu Buhari,  Nigerian President, that even when he served as a military dictator, he still complied with court orders.

“Where the court made orders for the release of Nigerians under the State Security Detention of Persons Decree Number 2 of 1984, including myself, I was detained and the court said “release him”  and I was released. Under Ibrahim Babangida military regime, we were released,” the human rights lawyer stated.

He added that he could not fathom how a democratic government would say it would avoid a court order on the basis of national security, adding that even under the military regime, it was unheard of not to talk of a democratic government.

However, he noted that on paper and officially, Nigeria had one of the best human rights law administrations in the world but not so in reality.

Falana noted that Chapter 4 of the Nigerian Constitution, African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and others were there but observed in breach by the government.

He noted that the assertion that court orders would not be obeyed was wrong because it was  the court that should determine what national security would be based on facts made available to it. Falana stated that the country should not be debating whether the government would obey court orders or not.

In 2019, The ICIR reported how the State Security Service (SSS)refused to obey a Federal High Court order for the release of Sowore following several days of detention.

Kogi state’s claim about recording highest foreign investment in 2020 is FALSE

KINGSLEY Fanwo, the Kogi State Commissioner for Information on February 2, 2021, claimed the state attracted the highest Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) into Nigeria during the fourth quarter (Q4) of 2020.

The assertion was made on  Channels television breakfast show, ‘Sunrise Daily’.

Fanwo was on the national television programme to dispute the declaration of Kogi state as a high-risk area by Nigeria’s Presidential Task Force (PTF) on COVID-19.

The programme is also hosted on the television’s YouTube platform which has over 1.4 million subscribers.

Fanwo said:

PTF and NCDC are saying that people should not go to Kogi because it is a high-risk state.

Where is the statistics to support their claims? They don’t have any statistics to support their claims. The death rate in 2020 is less than what we had in 2019.

So, it is not like some people are hiding the ailments or people are dying secretly. There was nothing like that. And you could see that in the last quarter of 2020, Kogi was declared the state with the highest influx of foreign investments in the entire country.

That shows that the people of the state are healthy, the state is safe. The statement by the PTF is targeted at the economy of the state.

The claim

Kogi state attracted the highest foreign investment in the fourth quarter (Q4) of 2020.

Kingsley Fanwo Kogi State Commissioner for Information
A screenshot from the programme.
The finding

Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) are business ventures established in a country by foreigners.

It largely contributes to the growth and overall development of the host nation’s economy. It is also one of the parameters used to benchmark the economic growth of a nation and its respective states.

The Corporate Finance Institute also described FDI as an investment from a party in one country into a business or corporation in another with the intention of establishing a lasting interest.

FDI is a subset of capital importation alongside portfolio investment and other investment.

In Nigeria, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS),  in its report detailing the activities for the last quarter of 2020 says the country witnessed a significant drop in capital importation with a total of 9.68 billion dollars.

In 2019, it was 23.99 billion dollars while in 2018  it was 16.81 billion dollars.

The report reads “The total value of capital importation into Nigeria stood at 1,069.68 million dollars in the fourth quarter of 2020. This represents a decrease of -26.81 percent compared to Q3 2020 and -71.87 percent decrease compared to the fourth quarter of 2019.

Similarly, the total value of capital importation in 2020 stood at 9,680.49 million dollars, compared to 23,990.05 million dollars in 2019, representing a decline of -59.65 percent between the two periods.”

According to the report, the United Kingdom (UK) remains the top source of capital investment in Nigeria in the last quarter of 2020 with $236.88 million. This sum accounts for 22.14 per cent of the total capital flow.

Moreover, “by the destination of investment, Lagos state emerged the top destination of capital investment in Nigeria in Q4 2020 with 829.64 million dollars. This accounted for 77.56 per cent of the total capital inflow in Q4 2020.”

In Q3 2020, Lagos also ranked top among states in the country with the highest destination of investment. Lagos pulled 1.20 million dollars of capital importation, followed by Abuja with 195,570 dollars then Abia State with an investment value of 56,070 dollars.

CAPITAL IMPORTATION BY DESTINATION Q3-Q4 2020
CAPITAL IMPORTATION BY DESTINATION Q3-Q4 2020
Did Kogi State attract the highest investment in Q4 2020?

In Q3, 2020 Kogi had no record of foreign investment and could not make the NBS list of states that recorded ‘capital importation by destination’.

It was the same in Q4. The state did not attract capital importation at all based on the NBS data.

Aside from Lagos state which attracted 829.64 million dollars of capital importation in the last quarter of 2020, the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja followed with 222.64 million dollars.

Kogi recorded zero.

Nigeria’s total capital importation for the year was 9,680.49 million dollars.

The NBS report further stated that the “Data is supplied administratively by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and verified and validated by the NBS”.

The FactCheckHub further reached out to Sunday Ichedi, the NBS Head of Public Affairs and International Relations, as to why some states like  Kogi recorded zero.

Ichedi explained that the information on their report was sourced from the Nigeria Investment Promotion Centre (NIPC).

“On investments, the NIPC is the government body working in that area. So, those states without figures don’t have investments as of the time it was reported,” Ichedi said.

The verdict

Based on the above data sourced from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), the claim that Kogi State has the highest Foreign Direct Investment for the last quarter of 2020 is FALSE.