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G7 leaders in France approve $251M to support women entrepreneurs in Africa

EMMANUEL Macron, French President and G7 leaders on Sunday in Biarritz, France approved $251 million in support of the Affirmative Finance Action for Women in Africa initiative to support women entrepreneurs in Africa.

The move to begin implementation of the AFAWA project, aimed at establishing a financial mechanism for women’s economic empowerment adopted by African leaders in 2015 has been hailed as a much needed strategic move towards women development in the continent.

“I am particularly proud, as the current G7 president, that the programme we are supporting today, the AFAWA initiative, comes from an African organisation, the African Development Bank, which works with African guarantee funds and a network of African banks,” Macron stated at a press conference at the G7 Summit.

Also, Akinwumi Adesina, AFDB president applauded the support of the world economic leaders that would provide ‘incredible momentum’ to the project.

“This is a great day for African women. Investing in women entrepreneurs in Africa is important because women are not only Africa’s future, they are Africa’s present.

“Currently, women operate over 40 per cent of SMEs in Africa, but there is a financing gap of $42 billion between male and female entrepreneurs. This gap must be closed, and quickly.

“This financing effort for women is the most significant in the continent’s history,” Adesina said.

AFAWA is expected to raise up to $5 billion for African women entrepreneurs while the African Development Bank will provide $1 billion financings.

The initiative is solely focused on three fundamental principles– improve women’s access to financing, provide capacity-building services, and improving the legal and regulatory environment.

Championing gender equality as a major theme of his five-year term, Macron heads the presidency of the G7 in 2019.

 

Trial of Cameroonian soldiers caught killing four must lead to justice-Amnesty Intl

THE Amnesty International has called on Cameroonian government to pursue a fair justice on the case of seven soldiers caught on video brutally murdering four citizens in July 2018.

The trial of the soldiers caught on video killing the four people has been set for August 27.

The video that went viral in July 2018 showed seven men on a military uniform, brutally leading two women and two children to a remote place. They were all shot dead.

Initially, the Cameroonian authorities had denied any link to it and described it as “fake news”.

But an investigation carried out by the Amnesty International confirmed that the Cameroonian military personnel was responsible for the shocking extrajudicial executions caught on video.

It had relied on multiple strands of credible evidence including expert analysis of the uniforms and weapons used, and linguistic and other contextual clues in the speech that gave away the identities and ranks of the soldiers. The evidence had suggested that Cameroonian soldiers were the ones extrajudicially executing civilians in the video.

Cameroonian soldiers leading the two women and two children away to a remote place for murdering. Photo credit: Facebook.
Cameroonian soldiers leading two women and two children to a remote place for murdering. Photo credit: Facebook.

In the same vein, the BBC Africa Eye also published documentary in September 2018 that pinpointed the exact location to be near the town of Zelevet.

It narrowed down the date it had occurred to late March or early April 2015.

Consequently, the government announced the seven soldiers had been arrested. Issa Tchiroma Bakary, Cameroon Minister of Communication who made this announcement added that they had been disarmed and would be prosecuted.

The seven will appear on 27 August before a military court in the capital Yaoundé on charges of joint participation in the murder, breach of regulations and conspiracy.

“The Cameroonian authorities must leave no stone unturned in their pursuit of justice for two women and two children who were brutally murdered by the military,” the humanitarian group wrote in a statement made available to journalists on Monday.

“This horrifying video shone a spotlight on the way civilians in Cameroon’s Far North have been ensnared in atrocities amid the fight against Boko Haram,” said Samira Daoud, Amnesty International’s West and Central Africa Deputy Regional Director.

She said security forces who were supposed to be protecting people had instead carried out “arbitrary and extrajudicial executions”.

“The Cameroonian authorities must draw a line and ensure no army personnel responsible for atrocities will escape from prosecutions.

“Tomorrow’s trial is the first step towards justice and reparations for victims and their loved ones,” said Samira.

She urged the government to also ensure that all those reasonably suspected of crimes against civilians were brought to justice in fair trials before civilian courts.

“While playing an important role in defending people threatened by Boko Haram, the Cameroonian security forces’ response has too often been heavy-handed and rife with human rights violations.

“Amnesty International is calling on authorities to bring all those suspected of criminal responsibility to justice in fair trials, before ordinary civilian courts and without recourse to the death penalty,” the statement submitted.

Port Harcourt mosque only demolished in part -Police

THE Police in Port Harcourt on Monday said that the alleged demolishing of mosques trending on Twitter is  ‘not entirely true’ and that Nyesom Wike, governor of the state, did not declare the rich oil state solely Christian .

“That report is not too correct, in the sense that it wasn’t the complete mosque that was destroyed.”

Following reports on the removal of the Muslim place of worship in Trans Amadi quarters of the Obio-Akpor Local Government Area(LGA),  Twitter was abuzz, with allegations that Wike had declared the state a Christian state.

However, Omoni Nnamdi, the Police Public Relations Officer in Rivers State, speaking to The ICIR, said that the police cannot comment on the matter as it would be  prejudicial to a court case since judgment is yet to be delivered in the matter. However, Nnamdi did confirm that the mosque was demolished in part but “not entirely”.

“That matter is in court, and they are seeking redress in court. It would be prejudice when we continue to comment on matters that are already in court. So the matter is in court incur the wrath of the court by going on air to devour the court of competent division.”

The oil-rich state over the years has witnessed internal ethnic disputes arising from perceived exclusion in the process of resource distribution.

However, the current situation is considered by many commentators as an attack on the freedom of association and religion.

Checks by The ICIR showed that @Gimba Kakanda–was among the people who with large followers that tweeted about the demolition: “Why did Governor, Wike demolish this mosque in Trans Amadi, Port Harcourt? I am asking this question because, in spite of our history of intolerance, places of worship hardly feature in our politics of hate. We are descending into a new low and it’s sad,” he tweeted.

Kakanda, however, deleted the tweet after an update stating “ I have been informed that the structure of the mosque had not been erected as reported and that there is no incident of demolition at all. Unless anyone has a counter to this, I think we should all let it slide”.

This, nevertheless, elicited mixed reactions among tweeters. While some condemned the development as that which may fuel unrest in the society,  others disbursed the information as false.

 

The ICIR could not reach, Mr. Simeon Nwakaudu, the Special Assistant on Electronic Media to the Rivers State governor because he did not answer his call.

Beware of fraudulent loan offers on social media, CBN warns investors

THE Central Bank of Nigeria on Monday has denounced knowledge of calls for loan applications to small and medium- scale business being circulated on social media, says it is fraudulent.

Issac Okorafor, Director, Corporate and Communication Officer of the apex bank in a press release said although the bank has several development finance intervention programmes, that the central bank ‘does not’ carry out such transaction through direct interaction with the applicants.

He advised prospective applicants to follow proper procedures for accessing CBN intervention funds often disbursed through Deposit Money Banks, Development Finance Institutions, Microfinance Banks and participating institutions.

“The attention of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has been drawn to fraudulent messages in the social media circles requesting unsuspecting loan seekers and owners of small-scale businesses to apply for loans provided by the Federal Government through an e-mail address (empowermentcbnloan@gmail.com) purportedly being handled by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)”.

The apex bank also warned the social media users to disregard messages requesting them to send personal details—phone numbers, email passwords-to empowermentcbnloan@gmail.com or any other one that may be contrived.

“These messages are fake and anyone who enters into correspondence with them does so at his or her own risk.”

NNPC records 77 per cent increase in pipeline vandalism in June

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THE Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, on Sunday revealed in a Twitter post that pipeline vandalism had increased significantly by 77 per cent according to its records for June.

This was contained in its Monthly Financial and Operation Report, MFOR, released in Abuja boosting its monitoring mechanism of supplies and distribution of petroleum products across the country.

It also stated that about 1.76 billion litres of Premium Motor Spirit, PMS, also known as petrol, was supplied in June, while 58.65 million litres of petrol was distributed daily for the period under review.

The report showed that there was a 77 per cent rise in cases of oil pipeline vandalism in its network of pipeline infrastructure, where 106 pipeline points were breached, compared to the 60 points vandalized in May 2019.

Aba-Enugu axis in the system 2E pipeline corridor accounted for 25 per cent of the total pulverized points, while the Lagos Atlas Cove-Mosimi axis of the system 2B had 23 per cent of the compromised pipeline points.

Also, the Ibadan-Ilorin leg of the System 2B pipeline accounted for 18 per cent of affected lines, followed closely by the PortHarcourt-Aba section of the system 2E which was responsible for 13 per cent of the affected pipeline.

“Other areas accounted for the remaining 21 per cent of cumulative line breaks,” the report reads.

Stating the frequent breaches of its critical pipeline network during the period, the corporation had ensured continuous fuel supply and effective distribution across the country for the month under review.

In the gas sub-sector, the report disclosed that 223.98 Billion Cubic Feet, BCF, of natural gas which translates to an average daily production of 7,466.09 Million Standard Cubic Feet Per Day, mmscfd, produced in the month under review.

“The figures posted a slight increase of 0.11 per cent compared with the previous month’s gas production. For the period June 2018 to June 2019, a total of 3,063.89BCF of gas was produced representing an average daily production of 7,873.58mmscfd during the period,” the report reads.

“Period-to-date Production from Joint Ventures, JV, Production Sharing Contracts, PSC, and NPDC contributed about 68.93 per cent, 21.34 per cent and 9.74 per cent respectively, to the total national gas production,” it concluded.

EFCC to ‘cooperate’ with US on $1.1billion internet fraud by 77 Nigerians

NIGERIA’s anti-corruption agency, the Economic Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on Friday pledged to ‘cooperate’ with the United States (US) government security operatives including the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in the $1.1 billion cyber fraud allegation levelled against 77 Nigerians.

Though, it claimed it is yet to receive official complaint as well as the list of the accused persons from the US Government.

Ibrahim Magu, the EFCC Acting Chairman disclosed this when Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerians Diaspora Commission visited headquarters of the Commission in Abuja.

She was accompanied by Dr Nasiru Mohammed Nadan, Director-General, National Directorate of Employment (NDE) and other top government functionaries at the meeting that ended late in the evening.

Describing the cyber-fraud incident as very sad and, a borderless crime, Magu restated that the EFCC would support the security operatives of the US government. He said the commission, through its “operation wire-wire”, once partnered with the US to flush the internet fraudsters from the country, especially in Lagos state.

“Is like the era of 419 is coming back, I remember we worked with the FBI in Lagos and Benue. We carried out this operation wire-wire. I think the FBI mentioned us among the agencies that participated in the operation and it was very successful only to come back to this 77 Nigerians. We will go out to their strongholds and hideouts,” says Magu.

“We will also cooperate with our partners.

“Last time we were in Ghana, you will realise that when the heat was so much here most of them moved to Ghana. They are now operating in Ghana and neighbouring countries. So we will cooperate with our neighbours also to check the menace of these yahoo-yahoo guys and the cyber-crime issue because it’s a borderless crime.”

The EFCC chairman, who emphasised that tackling the menace should be a collective effort, expressed excitement that the Americans did acknowledge participation of the commission against the crime in joint operations.

He urged the media to help enlighten the public, stressing that some Nigerians don’t believe the internet fraud is illegal. According to him, the group has ‘mothers of yahoo-yahoo association’ such that each time the accused persons are arrested; they launch protests, converge at the EFCC office demanding for their releases.

“One woman was saying that his father (the accused’s father) did not do achieve anything or build a house but when the boy started, within three months, he demolished the whole place and built a new structure. So it is very difficult,” Magu added.

However, he disclosed that 42 convictions on internet fraud have been secured only within the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) since January till date while 32 cases are still in court.

In her remarks, Dabiri-Erewa said the Federal Government would support extradition of the accused persons if requested by the US government.

But she stressed that the identified persons are not guilty until proven otherwise by a competent court.

“A few who committed the crime must not tarnish the image of all other Nigerians. So those who committed these crimes will be brought to book,” says Dabiri-Erewa.

Nadan also charged Nigerian youths to take advantage of the NDE’s new work portal – NDE as well as the Mentored Graduate Attachment Programme. He also mentioned the Graduate teaching Scheme all accessible to interested youths on the organisation’s website.

The ICIR earlier reported how the accused persons allegedly stole the huge sum within seven months, after over 14, 000 petitions were submitted to the security operatives.

“I’ll like to give you some numbers. In the first seven months of this year, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) internet crime complaint centres received nearly 14, 000 complaints from victims reported Business Email Compromise (BEC) incidents with a total loss of $1.1 billion,” says Paul Delacourt, the FBI Assistant Director in charge of the case.

The accused persons, most of whom the United States Justice Department claimed are in Nigeria have been under surveillance for arrest and prosecution for the alleged offence committed.

Two among those allegedly involved, Valentine Iro, 31, and Chukwudi Christogunus Igbokwe, 38, had been arrested by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

 

Africa’s history shows the perils of degrading the rule of law

By Chidi Anselm ODINKALU

THE rule of law is undergoing chastening times in many African countries as rulers and their parties – struggling to hang on to power – look for convenient devices to eliminate the uncertainties associated with democratic competition, kettle their opponents (both real and imagined), disrupt vocal civics and dismantle legal constraints on abuse of power.

Across the continent, governments are doing their best to intimidate judges and degrade the rule of law. In December 2018, for instance, Kenya’s Chief Justice, David Maraga, and his wife survived a suspicious-looking car crash. The following month, Nigeria’s ruling party decapitated the judicial tenure of the Chief Justice, Walter Onnoghen, with a dubious ex-parte order from an executive organ. In the third week of August 2019, Gabon’s government procured the suspension of an appeals court judge, Paulette Mba, for doing her job when she accepted to hear an application on whether or not to evaluate the medical fitness of a manifestly crocked President Ali Bongo.

It’s all redolent of the immediate post-colonial period, whose abiding lessons for the would-be destroyers of the rule of law appear to have been lost on a contemporary rulership deliberately devoid of memory. Some illustrations may drive home the point.

As French West Africa prepared for De Gaulle’s self-rule referendum in 1957, Ernest Boka was one of the most promising stars in the region’s politics. In his native Côte d’Ivoire, Boka was only eclipsed in popularity by the Felix Hophouët-Boigny, the wealthy Baoulé Chief who was the first black person to be appointed Minister in France. Born in 1928, 23 years younger than Hophouët, Boka was a bright lawyer who appeared destined for greatness. At just 28 in 1957, he became Chief of Staff to the Governor-General, before rising from 1958 to 1959 to ministerial portfolios, first in education and then public service. As Independence approached in 1960, Boka was one of the leaders of Houphouët-Boigny’s Parti Démocratique de la Côte d’Ivoire (PDCI), who strong-armed other platforms from the contest, enabling Houphouët to emerge unopposed as Côte d’Ivoire’s President.

As Boka’s reward, Houphouët appointed him Côte d’Ivoire’s first Supreme Court President in 1960, where he initially proved to be a trusted believer. But Boka was always a man of the people with socialist sympathies. At 35, in March 1963, Ernest Boka resigned as Supreme Court President. Shortly thereafter, in August 1963, he was among hundreds rounded up under the direction of Houphouët-Boigny for allegedly plotting to kill the President with Juju. A special security court sentenced 19 to life terms and condemned another six to death. But Ernest Boka did not live long enough to stand trial. His lifeless body was found hanging from the ceiling of his cell in Abidjan bearing marks consistent with torture. In response to strong rumours that Boka’s death was not suicide, Houphouët-Boigny himself called foreign diplomats and correspondents to a briefing in April 1964 at his presidential palace for what turned out to be a trial of a dead man. At the briefing, Houphouët announced that Ernest Boka had confessed to an attempt to use Juju to assassinate the President. As evidence, Houphouët-Boigny, a practising Catholic, produced two suitcases containing an assortment of magic potions, dried remains of dead animals and a collection of puny coffins reportedly seized from Ernest Boka’s family house.

About the time Ernest Boka was being liquidated in Côte d’Ivoire, a lowly court clerk and interpreter was working his way into reckoning in Spain’s African plantation in Equatorial Guinea. Francisco Macias Nguema was famous for allowing financial inducements to dictate the content of his translations. As one of few locals with facility in Spanish, the colonialists came to hang on his every word, mistaking him for a man of influence. In one year between 1966 and 1967, Macias rose from assistant interpreter to Mayor, then Minister for Public works before becoming Deputy President of the Governing Council. When the gong sounded for Independence in 1968, he was well placed to be installed as Equatorial Guinea’s first President on 12 October 1968.

But Macias was unwell and given to outbursts of paranoia and violence fueled by dependence on tropical hallucinogens. Six months after being installed as President, in March 1969, he personally bludgeoned his foreign minister to death before having opposition leader, Bonifacio Ondo Edu, abducted from exile in neighbouring Gabon and executed. A reign of terror ensued during which Equatorial Guinea’s small population of professionals, including lawyers and judges were either killed or exiled. Rules were dismantled. With no judges, regime enemies were tried and executed by youth militias organized and administered by Macias’ nephew, Teodoro Obiang Nguema M’ba N’Zogo, an army Lieutenant-Colonel.

On 3 August 1979, Teodoro Obiang toppled his uncle and had him put on trial for mass atrocities, including genocide and embezzlement. As there were no judges left in the country nor lawyers to defend accused persons, the trial was conducted in a cinema hall by militias of precisely the same sort that liquidated his enemies. Macias’ fate was predictable. On 29 September, 1979, the militia found him guilty and sentenced him to death. Hours after his predicted condemnation, an elite military unit flown in specially from Morocco executed him by firing squad at the Black Beach Prison in Malabo.

Two years after the death of Macias, on Christmas Eve in 1981, the government of Dr. Hastings Kamuzu Banda abducted Malawi’s exiled, first Attorney-General and Justice Minister, Orton Chirwa, and his wife, Vera, from Zambia and returned them to Lilongwe. Orton Chirwa was the founding President of the Malawi Congress Party (MCP), which led Malawi to Independence in 1964. He was also Malawi’s first lawyer. As minister in the transitional government in 1962, Orton took issue with the presumption of innocence and burdens of proof in criminal trials, arguing for their replacement with traditional African norms and institutions. As Attorney-General, he pushed for these reforms but was turfed out of Cabinet in September 1964 in a power tussle with Banda, his successor as MCP President, before they were promulgated. Following the collapse of the Chilombe Murder trials in 1969, Banda scrapped criminal trials by regular courts, transferring jurisdiction over crimes to Traditional Courts, comprising a traditional chief as chair, with three citizen assessors and one lawyer. The traditional court system was appointed by Banda, who was both President and Justice Minister. They also reported to him.

In an ironic twist of fate, Orton would be arraigned for treason in 1983 before the kind of traditional courts he had advocated for as Attorney-General. His trial was a charade. The court denied him and his wife – herself also Malawi’s first female lawyer – legal defence or the right to call witnesses. Initially sentenced to death on conviction, Banda commuted this to life imprisonment. Orton spent the remainder of his life in solitary confinement at the Zomba Prison in Malawi, where, in December 1992, he died at the age of 73.

As Nigeria’s military ruler from 1985 to 1993, Ibrahim Babangida eviscerated the courts, mostly precluding them by military decree from jurisdiction over whatever his regime did. In 1991, he issued a special decree making legal proceedings against his regime a felony punishable with up to two years’ imprisonment. Out of power in 2001, a successor regime asked him to appear before a Commission of Inquiry to defend his record. Rather than do that, the man who made going to court a crime hired a coterie of highly prized lawyers to go to court and question the powers of an elected civilian administration to ask him to account. The case ended up before a Supreme Court presided over by judges, some of whose judicial careers Babangida had advanced.

Africa’s history has firm lessons for powerful men who want to get ahead by retarding legal process. The biggest argument for defending and preserving the rule of law is self-interest – those who degrade it often end up in need of it, usually to save them against their own collaborators. Karma has a brutal sense of humour.

Odinkalu, co-convener of Nigeria Mourns, works with the Open Society Foundations.

Seven million Nigerians fall into extreme poverty in 13 months

The number of extremely poor Nigerians has risen to 94, 212 064 million, data from the World Poverty Clock shows.

The figure implies that virtually half of Nigeria’s population now live in extreme poverty.

As Nigeria faces a major population boom—it is estimated by the United Nations in a 2017 report that it would become the world’s third-largest country by 2050—it’s a problem likely to worsen.

The latest figure shows that an additional seven million Nigerians have since fallen under the poverty line.

Also, the 2019 Global Multidimensional Poverty Index in July of this year indicated that the multidimensionally poor Nigerians rate increased from 86 million to 98 million between 2007 and 2017.

The report which was released by United Nations Development Programme and the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative, noted that in Nigeria, even though the proportion of people who are multi-dimensionally poor has remained constant at just over 50 per cent over the past decade (up to 2017), the actual number of people who are multi-dimensionally poor increased from 86 million to 98 million over the same period.

Nigeria population according to the Poverty Clock currently stands at 197, 543 429 million, making 47.7% of the country population in extreme poverty.

The country is considered the world capital of poverty.

The World Poverty Clock is a tool to monitor progress against poverty globally.

It uses publicly available data on income distribution, production, and consumption, provided by various international organisations, most notably the United Nations, World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund.

The World Poverty Clock had in June of 2018 named Nigeria the poverty capital of the world when it revealed that Nigeria had 87 million people living in poverty.

But the Buhari-led government had rejected the report when it was published by the organisation, insisting that it had created jobs especially in the area of agriculture and reduced poverty.

Former British Prime Minister, Theresa May, however, reiterated the statistics during her visit to South Africa in  August 2018.

May during the visit said Africa is home to a majority of the world’s fragile states, and a quarter of the world’s displaced people.

She added that Africa has the highest number of poor people in the world, stating that 87 million Nigerians were living below the poverty line of $1 and 90 cents per day.

“Much of Nigeria is thriving, with many individuals enjoying the fruits of a resurgent economy, yet 87 million Nigerians live below $1 and 90 cents a day, making it home to more very poor people than any other nation in the world,” the UK prime minister said.

The World Poverty Clock, which was created by Vienna-based World Data Lab on the 13th of February 2019, revealed that 91.16 million Nigerians were now living below a dollar a day.

A report by Brookings Institution in the same year, said Nigeria has now taken over as the nation with the highest number of extremely poor people, overtaking India which use to hold the position with a population of 1.324 billion people as against Nigeria’s 194 million.

Nigeria is moving upward in global poverty rankings Credit: Brooking Institute, June 19, 2018

The report said then that the number of Nigerians in extreme poverty increases by six people every minute.

According to our projections, Nigeria has already overtaken India as the country with the largest number of extreme poor in early 2018, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo could soon take over the number 2 spot (Figure 1 below).

At the end of May 2018, our trajectories suggest that Nigeria had about 87 million people in extreme poverty, compared with India’s 73 million. What is more, extreme poverty in Nigeria is growing by six people every minute, while poverty in India continues to fall.

In fact, by the end of 2018 in Africa as a whole, there will probably be about 3.2 million more people living in extreme poverty than there are today.

Already, Africans account for about two-thirds of the world’s extreme poor. If current trends persist, they will account for nine-tenths by 2030. Fourteen out of 18 countries in the world—where the number of extreme poor is rising—are in Africa.

The International Monetary Fund Chairman Christine Lagarde in March of 2018, said Nigerians are getting poorer and that “coherent and comprehensive” economic reforms are urgent.

Policemen extort Lagos motorist for using Google map

THE Lagos State Police Command has promised to investigate the alleged extortion of a motorist by some of its personnel.

According to Punch, the state Police Public Relations Officer, Bala Elkana, said that the command was already in contact with the victim and action would be taken.

The motorist had gone on the social media to allege that the cops extorted N45,000 from him for using Google map on his phone.

In a series of tweets the motorist, who wrote on the Twitter handle, @viva_jc, stated that he was late for work.

He said, “I was harassed by some policemen on my way to work this morning (Tuesday) at Ojota around 8.10am while I was in traffic. I had reached for my ID card and calculator (needed at work) from the armrest of my car, only for this unarmed policeman to jump in front of my car claiming that I was using the phone while driving. Of course, I argued with him and showed him the stuffs I had reached for, but he kept shouting.

 

“My reporting time was 9am and I didn’t want to get to the office late, so I rolled down and kept talking to him, only for his other colleagues (two in uniform and one not in uniform) to also join in the drama. The two guys in uniform took my keys and sat in the front seats, while the other two asked me to go to the back (seat) for us to go to the station.

“I was sandwiched between the two, who were not in uniform. Inside the car, they saw my phone; I was using Google map to get the best route to work and one of them kept saying that it was an offence to use Google map while driving.

“These policemen said they were going to charge me N120,000 for the ‘offence’. I had to resort to begging them when I realised that arguing with them wasn’t going to lead me anywhere and I didn’t want to get late to work.

“One of them asked for my driving licence; he snapped it with his phone and he started negotiating on how much they would collect, while they were driving me around feigning that they were taking me to the station.

“Throughout the negotiation, they took turns shouting at me while also playing the good cop and the bad cop in their minds. When they discovered that I needed to get to work as soon as possible, they kept saying the best they could do was to collect N50,000.

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 “After several pleas, the ‘good cop’, said they would only collect N45,000. By this time, we had got to Maryland and turned back (opposite direction to my office, which I had told them). At the end of the negotiation, they took me back to Maryland and parked by the roadside for me to go and withdraw money at the Wema Bank ATM (they had asked for the money to be withdrawn at the ATM); while one of them went with me, the other three stayed back in the car.”

Lamenting the extortion, the motorist added, “These policemen collected my hard-earned N45,000 for no reason and I still got late to work! This is injustice.”

Elkana, however, gave an assurance that the investigation would soon commence.

“The matter was reported to us and we are investigating it; the victim got in touch with me to report and I told him to come to my office so that we could investigate the matter,” he stated.

Similarly, Nigerian realtor and Human rights activist Segun Awosanya, popularly known for convening the campaign against police brutality in Nigeria on social media also gave assurance concerning the situation saying the case is being attended to.

 

Buhari to attend TICAD7 in Japan, departs on Sunday


PRESIDENT Mohammadu Buhari will depart Abuja Sunday for Japan to participate in the seventh Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD7) holding in Japan.

The conference deemed the largest international conference that generates innovative African Development is tagged “Africa and Yokohama, Sharing Passion for the Future” and will convene in the city of Yokohama.

On its Twitter account, the presidency announced that Buhari is expected to deliver Nigeria’s Statement during Plenary Session Three in which he will appraise Nigeria-Japan relations and takeaways from TICAD6 in Kenya of which the president was a part of.

“Nigeria has gained tremendously since her participation in TICAD6 at the highest level, during which Japan pledged $30 billion investment for the future of Africa combined with the private sector, $10 billion infrastructure investment, and $500 million for vocational training of 50,000 Africans.

“Since the Nairobi Conference, Japanese government and companies have been very active in supporting Nigeria’s agriculture, healthcare, electricity and youth empowerment,” said Femi Adesina, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity

Buhari will be accompanied by Governors Babagana Zulum, AbdulRahmam AbdulRazaq and Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Borno, Kwara and the Lagos States respectively; ministers and other top government officials.

The president and his delegation are expected to push for broader Japanese assistance in the areas of science and technology, innovation, human resource development, education, agriculture, power, health and disaster risk reduction, among others.

Buhari is to return to the country on the 31st of August after the conference.