Home Blog Page 2315

INVESTIGATION: Dana, Wema Bank risk prosecution for flouting Money Laundering Act

Dana Air, owner of Sri Sai Vandana Foundation, a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) and WEMA Bank Nigeria may be prosecuted by the anti-graft agency for the airline’s inflight donation collected between 2014 and 2018 without following due process.

“The EFCC will take it up. We will investigate and prosecute the crime element once prima facie is established,” the acting spokesperson to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Tony Orilade told The ICIR.

Dana started Nigeria’s Sri Sai Vandana Foundation  in 1995 and commenced the inflight donation in partnership with the Sickle Cell Foundation of Nigeria. But after the airline suffered a major crash in Lagos in 2012 in which 153 persons died, it ceased the collaboration, ‘re-strategised’, and solely ran the inflight donations. 

The ICIR earlier reported how Dana through Sri Sai Vandana Foundation, got the inflight donations between January 2014 and October 2018, raking in millions of naira deposited into the Wema Bank account number 0121291839 without due registration with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), a prerequisite for complying with the Special Control Unit against Money Laundering (SCUML) regulations.

When asked if it is the board or the organisations that would be sanctioned, “The company itself,” the EFCC official added.

“When there is a vacuum that is when we will lift the veil.”

He further explained what he meant by ‘Lifting the veil’: “The company cannot run without humans. So, it is when everyone denies being members of the company that we go after the individuals.” 

Envelop shared to passengers by Dana airline during flight. This particular envelope was collected by a passenger in April File Copy

In line with the Money Laundering Prohibition Act, it is mandatory every Designated Non – Financial Institution, DNFI, to register with SCUML in order to legally operate in Nigeria. This is not true

Drama at SCUML Headquarters 

At the SCUML headquarters, the reporter inquired about the implication of an NGO not registering with the Unit and operating a bank account as Sri Sai Vandana Foundation did, and an official told the reporter that it is a “jailable offence”.

“Are you bothered about the years of imprisonment?” she responded when asked the likely jail term. “You are going to put the person into a big problem because they are all corporate. First, the account officer that opened the bank account is in problem because he has committed a criminal offense against the government.”

“How are you able to open the account in the first place when you don’t have the corporate document?” she queried.

SCUML is charged with the responsibility of monitoring, supervising and regulating the activities of DNFIs, which includes NGOs. In fact, the Unit works in collaboration with the EFCC for the enforcement of the provisions of the anti-money laundering law through the prosecution of non-compliant DNFIs.

SCUML’s responsibilities also align with the provisions of the Terrorism (Prevention) Act (TPA) 2011 and functions under the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment provisions.

What the law says 

Contravening the SCUML guidelines have some specific penalties, including “suspension or revocation of license, fines or imprisonment or both,” according to Sections 15 to 17 of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act 2011 (as amended). 

It stipulates a maximum of 14 years jail term for an individual but, in the case of a corporate organisation, the law says such organisation would pay “a fine of not less than 100 percent of the funds and properties acquired as a result of the offense committed” and would also have its license withdrawn.

Precisely, the law defines the unlawful act listed in subsection (2) of the Act to include “corruption, bribery, fraud, counterfeiting, and piracy of products…or any other criminal act specified in this Act or any other law in Nigeria.”

As such, Wema Bank officials involved in Dana’s account opening process may as well be prosecuted by the anti-graft agency, as soon as SCUML forwards its findings to the EFCC.

The Federal Government set up SCUML in 2005 as part of measures to track illicit financial flow and monitor likely funding of terrorism activities to enforce the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act 2011 (as amended).

But all through the years under investigation, findings revealed that Dana contravened the SCUML guidelines, the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act 2011 (as amended), and yet succeeded in running a bank account with Wema Bank.

Acting EFCC Chairman, Ibrahim Magu                                    File Copy

In June, Ibrahim Magu, the Acting EFCC Chairman during a workshop in Abuja described DNFIs as safe havens for money laundering and terrorism financing, due to poor supervisions and regulatory function. “As a result of lack of adequate supervision and regulation of Non-Profit Organisations (NPOs) and by extension DNFIs, criminals have now turned their focus on the DNFIs sector to perpetrate money laundering and terrorism financing,” said Magu, who was represented by Francis Usani, the Head of SCUML.

“The DNFIs has been identified as the most vulnerable sector in money laundering and terrorism financing because criminals no longer use conventional financial systems like banks to launder their ill-gotten wealth.”

DANA – It’s a learning process, we are committed to giving back

In response to questions from The ICIR, Kingsley Ezenwa, Media and Communications Manager of Dana Air said the entire situation was a learning process for the organisation, restating airline’s commitment to give back to the society. On why it failed to register the NGO, he rather emphasised on the zeal of Dana’s commitment to its Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR).

Kingsley Ezenwa, Dana Corporate Communications Manager
Photo Source: Whistler NG

“When you work on certain things, you learn along the line,” says Ezenwa.

He explained further, “After the accident, we were not even carrying loads (passengers). We were trying to rebuild. We did not even do it [Inflight donation] in 2014 at all. We felt that as a management team, considering our commitment and the incident of 2012, we needed to focus on re-strategising our CSR.”

This was also his narration on reasons Dana terminated its partnership with the Sickle Cell Foundation.

“We looked at it, conducted research and felt cancer is something we should focus on; got organisations working on cancer awareness, so we adopted Project Pink Blue and started supporting them.”

“We have been supporting Project Pink Blue and it’s been like that since 2015.”

The spokesperson’s response apparently showed a lack of understanding between the airline’s charity work through Sri Sai Vandana Foundation and its corporate social responsibility, as he appeared to confuse the two.

When asked if Pink Blue Project, an NGO devoted to providing cancer awareness and counselling to Nigerians, Runcie Chidebe, the project director said, indeed, Dana Air had assisted it, by offering free tickets for some of its activities.

“Since 2015, we have been partnering with Dana Air and working together and it is amazing seeing corporate organisation support us from 2015 till today (July 22 2019). We are also working with them on a programme called Port Harcourt Cancer Walk. I just arrived from the Dana Air flight from Port Harcourt to Abuja.”

“I can’t really say emphatically now but they actually have been providing flight tickets for us, the medical team and our patients to receive medical treatments anywhere Dana Air flies,” the cancer awareness advocate said when asked specific amount the airline offered since 2015 till date.

A look into the NGO’s 2015 annual report, as at 31st July identified only five donors excluding Dana. The airline was only listed among the supporters. 

Donors are those organisations and individuals that donate money to the Cancer-fighting group, while supporters are those who render free services or provide food for the NGO among other non-financial supports. 

 

Prostate Cancer Awareness organised by Project Pink Blue with supports from Dana Air
Photo Source: Dana Air

The 2016 annual report revealed that Dana also supported with free air tickets. The airline was excluded among the four major donors which include Tony Elumelu Foundation, Union for International Cancer Control, Pfizer Oncology and Civicus World Alliance for Citizen Participation. Dana Air tops the list of 18 supporters in the report, though there was no financial commitment.

In 2017, the annual report prepared by K. E. Onuoha and Co. (Chartered Accountant)  showed 17 donors and Dana was also not part of the list. The following year, the report, prepared as at 31st July 2018 by the same auditor had a list of 17 donors. Only 11 made financial support including the United States Embassy, Nigeria. Dana Air was also not included. This understandably is part of the airline’s corporate social responsibility but it would be dubious for the airline to claim that it pays itself for these free tickets from donations by Nigerians meant for charitable purposes.

Asked how it was able to open an account with WEMA without registration, Ezenwa responded that his focus as a Public Relations (PR) person was not where the money goes but its right utilisation. “As a PR person, my focus is to ensure that the CSR is carried out, which is what the money is meant for based on the commitment of the organisation since 2012. And that’s why I’m giving you information on what we have done and what we will continue to do.”

“My business is not with how an account was opened but we have re-strategised our job to ensure the money is used for its purpose.”

He refused to comment on if Dana’s chairman was a director in WEMA, as it is assumed that the chairman used his position to open the purported account. “I am not aware of that,” he said.

However, Ezenwa made available pictures of projects, which he claimed were implemented by the airline either independently or in partnership with other NGOs. He also disclosed that the airline would henceforth send detailed reports to the email of the passengers on how the inflight donations are spent.  

Project Pink Blue Cancer Awareness Campaign Supported by Dana Air Photo Credit: Dana Air

Some of the projects he listed include: Free breast cancer screening organised in partnership with the Project Pink Blue in 2016 at Lagos Television, Agidingbi, Ikeja; Walk, Race and Cycle Against Cancer 2017 organized by Project Pink Blue in partnership with Dana Air, on Allen Avenue, Ikeja Lagos; Free Prostate Cancer Screening, Awareness walk in Lagos 2018 and a few others.

Ajide Shola, Convener, Divine Eagle Support Ministry, was listed among those whose NGO was used to reach orphanages. The ICIR contacted Ajide via a text message after repeated unanswered calls and he listed the orphanages. They are Ijamido Children Home, Sango Ota, St. Monica Orphanage (Catholic Orphanage Home) Iju-Ishaga, Light for the Lost Orphanage Alagbado and Navidad Home for the Orphanage and Less Privileged, also in Sango Ota, Ogun State.

Divine Eagle ministry, he said, is the supporting arm of Divine Eagle Civil Solutions Limited but he refused to say if the NGO was registered. But findings by The ICIR revealed the company was registered but the NGO was not.

“We approached Dana Air when I organised this outreach for the less privileged in 2017 and they supported all the orphanages that came with bags of rice, household materials, toiletries, noodles etc.” Shola said. “We also organised the event in 2018 and Dana gave the same support. We are looking to approach them again, hopefully, this year. We hope to have more of passionate firm supporting the needy.”

However, he said ‘cash’ was not given to the orphanages. He also did not respond to other specific questions on how he received the bags of rice, the quantity and number of other items offered including pictorial evidence.

Checks on social media showed no information relating to the NGO. The only Christian group found on Facebook, which bears a similar name is owned by a woman based abroad and it has a non-profit arm known as Daughters of Esther Charity.  

However, further searches revealed that Ajide does have a Facebook account in the name of Ajide Sola joseph (Divine Eagle), where he promotes the work of his ministry, including Divine Eagle Civil Solutions. However, there is no mention of any Dana Air supported activity or anything relating to the outreach to orphanages.

Ezenwa further listed support offered to a team of United States-based Doctors, led by Dr Mfon Essiet, a Nigerian based abroad, to engage in a free surgery in Uyo communities. “…Dana Air provided free round trip tickets for our medical professionals between Lagos and Uyo once we landed from USA,” says Essiet in a Direct Message sent to The ICIR via social media. She added all the Doctors were from the US. We got support for “12 round trip flights. Originally planned for 22 tickets but some team members did not make the trip.”  

Mfon Essiet (with black top) alongside members of the team arriving in Uyo for the Surgical, Medical, Dental, Optometry Mission
Photo Source: Global Image Foundation

Search by The ICIR also showed short footage of medical assistance and surgeries offered to 1,784 patients by her NGO – Global Image Foundation in Akwa Ibom State.

It further showed a similar surgical, medical, dental and optometry mission the NGO – Global Image Foundation held in Akwa Ibom state at St. Luke Hospital, Anua in late May.

“Join us! Seeking medical professionals and volunteers for our second annual surgical, medical, dental and optometry mission in Nigeria on May 27-31, 2019”.

Every other question asked especially on SCUML registration, compulsory filing to the CAC, SCUML and NFIU, he said they are being taken care of.

But, from the list of NGOs DANA claimed it supported, only four were registered while others are not. The registered ones are Ijamido Children Home, St. Monica Home for the Elderly, Light for the Lost Orphanage Home and Project Pink Blue – Health and Psychological Trust Centre. 

The ICIR could not reach out to three of the registered NGOs as their contacts were missing from the company name searches conducted at the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC). They were as well not visible on social media. They include Stella Ifeoma Willoughby (Secretary) Ijamido Children’s Home; Umunmwagho Omosede Onuwaje (Secretary) St. Monica Home for the Elderly and Lady Evangelist Glory Ebenezer (Secretary) Light for the Lost Orphans Home.   

WEMA Bank remains indifferent on offence 

Oluwafunmilayo Falola, Wema Bank Brand and Marketing Communications Manager Picture Source: Social Media

However, Wema Bank declined to comment regarding the allegations, except for a terse response by the bank’s Brand and Marketing Communications Manager, Oluwafunmilayo Falola, “…Please note that Ramesh Hathiramani is not on the board of the bank,” she wrote in an e-mail. The ICIR’s check showed that Hathiramani was a board member until  2014. This implies that Hathiramani left Wema as Director about six months after Dana ended its partnership with the Sickle Cell Foundation to start operating its inflight donation for Sri sai vandan foundation. 

Falola referred The ICIR to the bank’s Chief Compliance Officer as the right authority to respond to the questions about account opened for Dana’s NGO. “Given that this issue involves account opening documentation, our chief compliance officer will provide a response in due course,” she said.

She, therefore, promised to inform the chief compliance officer to call back. Three days after, no response came from her or the compliance officer. The ICIR later sent a reminder, and she promised the Bank’s chief compliance officer would respond ‘soon’. On July 19, nearly a month later, there was still no response. Another reminder was sent and she replied saying, “In truth, we would rather you do not proceed with the story. Recall you had published one at a time and it really put us in a bad light, we would rather we do not continue with this line.”

The ICIR insisted via a reply to her email demanding an explanation as to why the bank opened the account for Dana’s NGO without the appropriate document, then she responded, “You have published this story in the past, are you republishing it?

“I do not have an update to the last time inquiries, except that Mr Ramesh resigned his appointment since 2014.”

“In response to your mail on Mr Ramesh Hathiramani, kindly be informed that Mr Ramesh Hathiramani resigned his appointment with the Bank effective July 31, 2014. He was a Non-Executive Director,” She earlier said in response to the question about when Hathiramani ceased to be a director in Wema Bank.

But as at the time of filing this report, there was no response from Wema’s chief compliance officer.

The ICIR also observed that as at July Dana still solicited and collected in flight donations from passengers for charity purposes.

Experts react

Barrister Uchena Amuleo, a human rights lawyer, described the operation of Dana’s NGO as deceitful which should be investigated by the anti-graft agencies. 

“It is a fraud and criminal,” says Amuleo. “Since they were not registered, they could be picked and prosecuted. A lot of that is going on in Nigeria as we speak.”

“Are you sure they did that and were collecting money… It is a corrupt practice. We can write to ICPC so that they account for the money they illegally collected from people between those periods.”

Mrs Lauretta Ugwoke, a barrister opined it would be difficult to register an account for an NGO without the CAC registration, except, “maybe the bank made a preference for them.” But she doubted such a possibility.  “Or they are using individual account or account of one of the trustees.”  

“It is not actually legal because it cannot be traced back to the NGO. It is not the right thing to do because there won’t be any connection to it (the NGO).”

Hadiza Gamawa, Head, External Cooperation of the EFCC, during a recent event themed “Effective Implementation and Regulations of AML/CFT within the NPO Sector” called for a national risk assessment of the sector. She said it helps identify weaknesses and gaps within the system and also offers likely solutions.

She believed good compliance will foster more Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs) but regretted DNFIs ranked highest in vulnerability to money laundering in the 2016 risk assessment with a miserable score of 0.77.

Ibinabo Mary Amachree, Head Information and Data Management of SCUML, while doing an overview of relevant standards on AML/CFT, as it relates to NPOs, called for proper supervision as lapses could aid terrorist organisations that pose as legitimate corporate entities.

FG accuses El-Zakzaky of displaying “unruly behaviour” in India

CONTRARY to the claim of Ibrahim El-Zakzaky, leader of Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN), of being treated like a criminal in India, the Nigerian government has accused him of displaying “unruly behaviour”, and making requests against “standard practice”.

El-Zakaky who had been in the detention of the Department of State Security Service since 2015 was granted permission by the court on August 5 to attend to his health, and on Monday he flew to Medanta Hospital in India.

His daughter, Suhaila Zakzaky, told the BBC in an interview on Thursday that he was suffering for lead and cadmium poisoning.

She said that the poisoning might be a result of shrapnel in his body “from when he was shot in 2015 when the Nigerian army raided our home”.

Meanwhile, El-Zakzaky’s complained in a video on Wednesday about how he was being treated in India “like a criminal” and not trusting the medical team assigned to him.

He accused the federal government of frustrating his medical treatment, with stringent security measures, worse than his stay in Nigeria.

The IMN leader added that he was in India for another detention as there were security agencies locked on every angle of his hospital apartment.

Responding to his claim, the Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Information and Culture, Grace Gekpe said El-Zakzaky had begun to “display ulterior motives against laid down procedures” on getting abroad.

She outlined a series of requests made by El-Zakzaky to include handing over his passport to him, demanding free movement and access to visitors of all kinds. Gekpe said he also asked to be allowed to check into a 5-Star Hotel instead of being admitted in the hospital. 

She added he had refused to subject himself to preliminary medical checks at the Medanta Indian Hospital, a hospital he chose before travelling out of the country.

Gekpe said he requested to nominate Doctors of his choice to join the ones tasked by Medanta Hospital to perform medical treatment on him and his wife. “This created a stalemate, which the Hospital insisted that he would not dictate to it on the choice of medical personnel to carry the required medical treatment,” she said.

All those requests were not fulfiled as he was in the “country for medicals and not as a tourist”, said Gekpe.

“Frustrated by his antics, the Indian authorities have expressed willingness to return him to Nigeria with immediate effect. This is on the account that they will not allow him to use their country to internationalize his group’s activities,” she said.

The Nigerian government commended the stand of the Indian Government as well as apologised for El-Zakzaky’s  “unruly behaviour”.

It affirmed its readiness to undertake his prosecution through the due process when he returned to Nigeria.

Meanwhile, a spokesperson of the Shi’ite sect, Ibrahim Musa said on Thursday that the controversy surrounding his leader’s treatment has been resolved.

Buhari bars Obono Obla from office over certificate forgery

0

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari has suspended the chairman of the Special Presidential Investigation Panel on the Recovery of Public Property, Okoi Obono-Obla, from office pending the conclusion of an ongoing investigation.

In a letter, signed by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha, Obla was directed to step down and then proceed to answer questions from the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission, ICPC.

“This suspension shall subsist until the conclusion of the on-going ICPC investigations into cases of alleged falsification of records and financial impropriety against your person,” reads a section of the letter.

“You are required by this instruction to strictly observe and comply with the provisions of PSR 030405 (a-c) of the Public Service Rules. For the avoidance of doubt, the Solicitor General of the Federation and Permanent Secretary. Federal Ministry of Justice shalt be the authority to whom you shall report,” it read.

His suspension is linked to an investigation by the anti-graft agency, ICPC, which found that he had forged his WAEC result to enroll at the University of Jos, where he studied law in the 1980s. He also attended the Nigerian Law school on the back of the fake high school records.

The findings of the ICPC also corroborates a previous inquiry by an ad – hoc committee of House of Representatives in 2018. It investigated Obono-Obla’s WAEC documents, having found out that it was fake and asked President Buhari to remove him from office.

The lawmakers also said Obono-Obla’s university degree and law school certificate should be withdrawn and he should be handed over to the federal authorities for prosecution.

In a report, he dismissed the allegations against him stating that they were the handiwork of his detractors to sidetrack the presidential task force on its anti-corruption fight.

“It is time we call the myths out for what they are, as the news making the rounds appear to us as a smear campaign from people with their protectionist agenda in favour of persons being investigated,’” he said.

#FreeAustinTice: Seven years later journalist is still unaccounted for in Syria

REPORTERS Without Borders have raised another call for the release of Austin Tice an American journalist who was abducted seven years ago in Syria.

The former veteran United  State Corp before his abduction in Damascus freelanced for McClatchy News, the Washington Post, Associated Press, AFP, and broadcast on CBS, NPR, and BBC.

Tice was among the lead journalist to venture into the war-stricken zone to report factually on the war events.

In May of 2012, the summer before Austin’s final year at Georgetown Law School, he chose to go to Syria as a freelance journalist.  Austin went to tell the story of the ongoing conflict there and its impact on the ordinary people of Syria.

“He was hearing reports from Syria saying this is happening and that is happening but it can’t be confirmed because there really are no reporters on the ground. And he said, ‘You know, this is a story that the world needs to know about,” his father said.

In August 2012, Austin reportedly made his way just south of Damascus to write his final pieces.  He planned to depart for Lebanon on August 14, three days after his 31st birthday.

Boarding a car in the Damascus suburb of Darayya to make the trip, he was detained at a checkpoint and have not been seen ever since.

However, five weeks later, a 43-second video emerged with the title, “Austin Tice is Alive”.  It showed Austin being held by a group of unidentified armed men.

“No other message accompanied the video.  This is the only information we have received from his captors.  No one has contacted us to claim responsibility, nor have we been told what is required to secure his safe release,” the parent of the journalist lamented.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) in February 2015 had earlier launched a pro bono #freeaustintice campaign.

With little or no information on the way about of Tice, the Federal Bureau for Intelligence (FBI) in April 2018 placed a $1,000,000 rewards for information regarding Tice’s whereabout after a previous effort to facilitate the release of the journalist through Russia playing a middleman between the US and Syria did not yield positive fruit.

With no reports on Tice, US officials still believe he is alive and being held by the Syrian government or allies.

Tice reporting in 2012 was recognized with the 2012 George Polk Award for War Reporting and the 2012 McClatchy Newspapers President’s Award, among others.

 

Over 190 phone calls were exchanged between Army Captain and kidnap kingpin prior to the killing of police officers – Report

1

FOLLOWING, the arrest of the Nigerian Army Captain who allegedly ordered soldiers in Taraba State, to open fire on police personnel leading to the death of three police officers, investigations revealed that the escaped kidnap kingpin, Hamisu Wadume had exchanged over 190 phone calls with him according to a report

The army captain who was arrested alongside five other military personnel, who allegedly took part in the dastardly act, are currently being interrogated at the Defence Headquarters, Abuja.

Police investigations showed that conversation via phone had existed between the army captain and the notorious kidnapper,  Wadume which the records indicated that over 190 phone calls were exchanged between the duo from July 9, 2019, and August 6, 2019.

Efforts made by The ICIR to speak to Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, Frank Mba, to confirm the veracity of the story proved abortive as calls on his line were not answered and a text message sent to him was not replied at the time of filing this report.

A source quoted in the report stated that “top police hierarchy believes that the army captain might have been providing cover for the kidnapper, who is alleged to have received hundreds of millions as ransom from his kidnap victims.”

The arrested soldiers had admitted they received orders to attack the policemen from the captain, whom they said informed them that Wadume had been kidnapped and was being transported in a silver-coloured Toyota Hiace Bus.

The soldiers also claimed that they acted on the orders of the captain, being their superior officer, but police sources at Force Headquarters Abuja disclosed that the police authorities have established strong links between the army captain and the notorious kidnapper, alleging that the army captain was on the kidnapper’s payroll.

In another development, elder brother of one of the slain police officers, Andrew Ediale in a press conference on Wednesday in Abuja, demanding that justice be meted on the soldiers who participated in the killings

“Justice should be done, we want justice. The same army that is charged with protecting the citizens of this country are the perpetrators of this barbaric act,” he said.

He questioned the role of the army’s involvement in the alleged killings and their sponsors.

“Our question is who are these soldiers working for? Whose side are they on and whose payroll is this military personnel on? These are the many questions we demand answers?

“We demand to know why? And why the kidnapper was released, and the effort of the gallant police officers was not only compromised, their life was equally cut short, we demand justice,” he concluded.

Nigeria Prisons Service now Nigerian Correctional Services

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday approved a change of name, for the  Nigeria Prisons Service to be called the Nigerian Correctional Service.

This was disclosed by the presidency in a statement, made available to The Premium times.

The law according to the Nigerian Correctional Service Bill, 2019, read:

“This Act repeals the Prisons Acts and changes the name from Nigeria Prisons Service to Nigerian Correctional Service, otherwise known as the Correctional Service.”

The statement also revealed the president had changed the name of a Nigerian institution: The Federal University of Agriculture Markudi in Benue State.

The university’s name was changed to Joseph Sarwuan Tarka University, Markudi.

The development was a sequel to President Muhammadu Buhari’s decision to sign a bill to amend the law that backed up the decision that set up the university.

The university of agriculture was established in 1988, following the recommendations of a 1987 federal government White Paper on Higher Education curriculum and development in Nigeria.

The Nigerian Prisons Service is a government agency of Nigeria which operates prisons, and it’s under the supervision of the Ministry of the Interior and the Civil Defence Immigration and Prisons Board.

Armed men abduct another Kaduna Pastor, demand N20m ransom

LESS than two weeks a clergy in Kaduna was kidnapped and later killed, the pastor in charge of Nagarta Baptist Church in the state had also been abducted on Wednesday.

The pastor identified as Elisha Numan was reportedly kidnapped in the early hours of Wednesday by heavily armed men totalling more than 20, according to Punch.

His abduction was confirmed by Chairman of the Kaduna State Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Joseph Hayab.

“One of our pastors has been kidnapped early this morning. Pastor Elisha S. Numan of Nagarta Baptist Church Ungwan Makere near Udawa. Udawa is in Chikun Local Government of Kaduna State. We are yet to hear from him,” he said.

The armed bandits, numbering about 20, reportedly invaded the clergyman’s residence on Wednesday violently, abducted him and his son,  Emmanuel Elisha.

But the son who was later released was informed to provide some ransom in terms of money within five days to secure the release of his dad.

“They forced their way into our houses and vandalised properties. They carted away from some valuables including mobile phones and clothing in my mother’s box,” Elisha narrated their ordeal.

“They picked me together with my father. But after a while into the bush, I was released and they went away with my father. One of them was dressed in military camouflage,” he added.

However, the kidnappers later made contact with the family, demanding N20m ransom before the pastor could gain his freedom.

The Nigerian Army in late July discovered a group of bandits dressed in military camouflage along Abuja-Kaduna highway that mounted an illegal roadblock. Army said they would have been ordinarily perceived by “unsuspecting members of the public as military personnel”.

The clergy that was abducted today was pastoring a church at the same local government area – Chikun Local Government- the late Jeremiah Omolewa church was situated.

Omolewa, before he was killed, was the resident pastor of the Living Faith Chruch in Romi New Extension, a suburb of Kaduna.

He was shot dead on the Abuja-Kaduna road on Sunday, August 4 by the armed abductors who also kidnapped his wife. The armed men later demanded a ransom of N50 million.

After spending five days with the abductors and some money was paid, she regained her freedom. The chairman of Kaduna State Christian Association of Nigeria, Joseph Hayab, who disclosed her release to newsmen said the late pastor’s wife was picked along Kaduna-Abuja highway after some undisclosed money was paid.

There have been several reports about kidnapping, bandits killing, and attacks across Nigeria, particularly, in the Northern region.

According to Inspector General of Police Mohammed Adamu in June, Kaduna recorded the highest number of arrested kidnap suspects followed by Katsina.

Earlier in May, the IGP removed the then Kaduna State Commissioner of Police, Ahmed Abdulrahman over persistent insecurity in the state.

Though it was “part of efforts aimed at rejigging the fight against armed banditry, kidnapping and other sundry crimes across the nation, particularly in Kaduna and other contiguous States”, the police is yet to curb the crime as a pastor was reported to be kidnapped, less than two weeks after Omolewa was killed and his wife was released four days after being abducted.

Dozens of child sex abuse victims sue Catholic Church in New York after change in law

OVER 70 persons in New York State who were victims of sexual abuse as children have sued the Roman Catholic Church on Wednesday under a new law.

The Child Victim Act which came into effect today temporarily enabled victims to file lawsuits over decades-old crime.

According to the New York County Supreme Court records, most of them accusing priests of sexually abusing them as children and church leaders of covering up the priests’ crimes.

The Act will scrap for one year a statute of limitations that had barred older complaints. The change in the law means people of any age have a year to file a retroactive sexual abuse lawsuit against an alleged offender.

The change has been applauded by human right activists who said the new development is an enthronement of justice.

The bill amends “New York’s antiquated laws to ensure that perpetrators are held accountable for their actions, regardless of when the crime occurred,” Andrew Cuomo’s, Governor, New York State said in a statement after he signed the measure into law in February.

The law is expected to lead to hundreds of lawsuits against churches, schools and youth groups.

A lawsuit was has been filed already against Boy Scouts of America, accusing the national organization of knowingly employing thousands of leaders who were suspected of molesting children.

More cases are expected to be filed in the coming weeks against churches, schools, hospitals and other institutions across New York City, with defendants ranging from the plaintiffs’ relatives and neighbours to members of the clergy.

Weitz & Luxenberg, a law firm in New York said it would file 400 lawsuits under the Child Victims Act just in New York City, with plaintiffs ranging from teenagers to people in their 90s.

The firm claimed it was representing more than 1,200 people who were victims of sexual abuse as children.

A separate group of law firms, including Seeger Weiss, said it would be representing at least 170 plaintiffs across the state, many with complaints against the Roman Catholic Church.

After the one-year period expires, victims will have until the age of 55 to sue alleged abusers.

 

El-Zakzaky describes situation in India hospital as pathetic

THE leader of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) Ibrahim EL-Zakzaky has described the condition of his stay at the Medanta Hospital in New Delhi, India as pathetic and worrisome.

El-zakzaky in audio, on Wednesday, alleged that the Nigerian government was frustrating his medical treatment with stringent security measures, worst than his stay in Nigeria.

“On getting to the hospital, we were placed under a tighter security situation worse than what we have been witnessed in Nigeria. We are currently more confined than when we were in Nigeria, worse than a prison setting,” the cleric said.

He accused the federal government of failing to meet their own end of the bargain by interfering with the medical treatment been administered to him.

“The hospital officials received us well they told us that they parked two ambulance vehicles, deceiving the crowd while taking us out through another way, saying that it was for our own safety.

“…Back home in Nigeria, they agreed that nobody should take us to any other hospital aside the hospital of our choice but we got to realize that the doctors they brought to us were there just to give advice,” he said.

He lamented that the government had programmed them for another detention in India after a prolonged one in Nigeria.

“All what we have seen here, have shown us that there is no trust, they just brought us here for another detention,” He said.

He added that they lacked the freedom they barely had in Nigeria, as security agencies were locked on every angle of his hospital apartment.

“I have been in detention for about thirteen years but I’ve never seen this kind of security that I’m seeing here, even at the door of my hospital room, there are many security personnel waiting, heavily armed.

They didn’t even allow me to go to the next room, I started asking myself, all these while I’ve been in detention, I’ve never seen this type. Even if I’m in the cell, they usually lock us up around 9pm and open the cell around 7 am and they allow us to go anywhere we want in the area we are,” he said.

Reacting to this, Abdullahi Musa,  secretary of the academic forum of IMN, confirmed the authenticity of the audio as true, The Cable report.

Musa alleged that the federal government had conspired with the India government “to scuttle the treatment”.

“They brought a new set of doctors instead of the ones the Sheikh (El-Zakzaky) made prior arrangements with,” he said.

“So, the Sheikh smelled a rat and refused to submit himself to the doctors to treat him. He asked them why they prevented him from seeing the doctors he had earlier made arrangements with? So he said he will not allow them to treat him,” Musa noted.

El-Zakzaky was a Monday flown out of the country to India for medical treatment, following a court order by the Kaduna High court.

The cleric had reportedly been battling ill-health, due to lack of care.

El-zakzaky was arrested and detained since December 2015, alongside his wife, Zeenat.

#RevolutionNow: Nigerians protest arrest of Sowore, others in Abuja amid heavy security presence

NIGERIANS gathered at the Unity Fountain, Abuja, on Wednesday morning to protest the continued detention of Omoyele Sowore, publisher of Sahara Reporters, and others who have been recently arrested.

The protest took place in the presence of security personnel. During one of his speeches, human rights activist Deji Adeyanju said the people need to know the level of intimidation the protesters are dealing with.

“When it’s time to go to Sambisa forest now, they will start crying,” he teased. “They will say the ammunition is not enough. They will go to their religious leaders to pray that they don’t want the transfer. But when it is time to intimidate comrades, you will see their big chests. They will start changing their voice.”

Our reporter noted the presence of 15 patrol vans parked close to the protesters, including ones from the Nigeria Prisons Service, Nigerian Army, Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, and Rapid Response Squad. Also present were a bus from the FCT Fire Service and an Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC).

About 500 metres south of the park, opposite the Federal High Court, two vans and one APC were also stationed.

Towards the end of the gathering, six additional police patrol motorcycles arrived.

“Greatest of the greatest Nigerian people, please can we put our hands together,” Adeyanju said sarcastically once he noticed the overwhelming presence of the security paraphernalia.

“We just received six new bikes. They just joined us from the force headquarters. Please, can we put our hands together and celebrate them? We celebrate the police. We celebrate our security people. Oh, they are working. They are fighting crime all over Nigeria. There is no longer insecurity in the country.”

Adebayo Raphael, an Abuja-based human rights activist and development consultant, while addressing journalists described the system of government Nigeria currently practises as a democratic dictatorship.

“Nigeria has now turned into a festooned scar. In this country, we are no longer safe. In this country, we are no longer free. And in any country which practises democracy, where one of us is not free, then all of us are not free. If the freedom of one of us is taken, the freedom of all of us has been taken away,” he said.

“And so we must make it very clear to tyrant Buhari and all his cronies that we the people of Nigeria will not be cowed, that the voices of dissent in this country will not be subjugated, that our clamour for freedom will not wane, that it wouldn’t matter whether they mobilise one hundred people against us or they mobilise thousands of people against us, we will stand regardless of our numbers to say enough is enough. We will stand regardless of our numbers to condemn tyranny in every way possible.

“Stephen Kefas has been arrested. Sowore has been abducted. Jones Abiri has been abducted. So many others that we don’t even have their names. But you can see that despite these state-sponsored abductions, some of us are still here today. This is to show you the resilience of those they call Nigerians.”

He added that the activists and protesters will not give up until “the country is free” and all the arrested citizens are released, while the crowd repeatedly chanted “yes!” in agreement.

The Middle Belt Forum’s Deputy National Organising Secretary, Ndi Kato, also assured that the protest will be sustained in spite of the “campaign of fear unleashed”.

“We will come out whether bullets are flying. We will come out even if our friends are disappearing. We will come out knowing we may be the one to disappear tomorrow. Every day, we will come out,” she said.

“Today, you are alive. Tomorrow, you may not be. And people will move on because we are used to it. People will move on because no value has been placed on the life of any Nigerian. Your life is worth nothing as long as you are Nigerian.”

Kato appealed to the government to grant freedom to Abubakar Idris ‘Dadiyata’, Stephen Kefas, Sowore, as well as all who have been unlawfully detained in various states but whose cases do not have national coverage.

Cross-section of protesters and reporters at Unity Fountain on Wednesday

On Saturday, August 3, Sowore was arrested by operatives of the Department of State Services (DSS) following planned demonstrations in 21 states on August 5. They accused the human rights activist and 2019 presidential candidate of “threatening public safety, peaceful co-existence and social harmony in the country”.

On Thursday, the Federal High Court granted an ex-parte application by the security agency, filed under the Terrorism Prevention Act, to detain him for up to 45 days.

Kefas, a Kaduna-based journalist, was arrested in May by officers of the Rivers State Police Command for sharing an article, dealing with the death of Kajuru monarch Galadima Maiwada, on Facebook. And Idris, a PDP member popularly called ‘Dadiyata’, was allegedly abducted from his home by DSS operatives in August. His whereabouts and the circumstances leading to his disappearance remain unclear.