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VIDEO: Praljak, Bosnian war criminal, dies after poisoning self in court

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Slobodan Praljak, a Bosnian Croat war criminal, has died in hospital after drinking poison during an appeal hearing before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague on Wednesday.

The 72-year-old drank from a tiny bottle after his 20-year prison sentence was upheld by the court. He was immediately rushed to a hospital where he died.

In 2013, Praljak was sentenced for crimes in the city of Mostar during the Bosnian war of 1992 to 95.

He was one of six former Bosnian Croat political and military leaders who are standing trial before the ICTY.

After hearing the verdict, Praljak said he rejected the ruling, insisting that he was not a war criminal.

“Slobodan Praljak is not a war a criminal, I am rejecting the court ruling,” he said, before raising his hand to his mouth and swallowing some liquid from a tiny glass bottle.

“I have taken poison,” he said.

At that, Carmel Agius, the presiding Judge, immediately suspended the proceedings and an ambulance was called.

“We suspend the… We suspend… Please, the curtains. Don’t take away the glass that he used when he drank something,” Agius said.

The UN court subsequently announced that the courtroom was now “a crime scene”.

An ambulance was later seen arriving outside the tribunal while several emergency rescue workers also rushed into the building carrying equipment in backpacks.

In a statement, the ICTY said Praljak “was immediately assisted by the ICTY medical staff” and was “transported to a nearby hospital to receive further medical assistance where he passed”.

An independent investigation is now underway.

Commenting on the incident, Andrej Plenkovic, Croatia’s Prime Minister, said Praljak’s death was regrettable.

“His act, which we all unfortunately witnessed today, speaks most of a deep moral injustice towards six indicted Croats from Bosnia and the Croatian people,” Plenkovic said.

“The government expresses its condolences to all victims of all crimes committed in the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina. We voice dissatisfaction and regret about the verdict.”

Praljak, a former Commander of the Main Staff of the Bosnian Croat defence forces (HVO), was jailed for crimes against humanity.

The court ruled that Praljak was aware that soldiers were rounding up Muslims in Prozor in the summer of 1993, but he failed to make any serious efforts to stop the action.

Those appearing with him included Jadranko Prlic, the former Prime Minister of the Bosnian Croats’ breakaway statelet.

The ICTY was set up by mandate of the UN Security Council in 1993, and is due to close when its mandate expires at the end of the year.

Adeosun suspends Gwarzo, SEC DG, over ‘multiple financial improprieties’

The Federal Government has announced the immediate suspension of Mounir Gwarzo, Director-General of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Gwarzo was suspended on Wednesday by Kemi Adeosun, Minister of Finance, following “several allegations of financial impropriety levelled against him”.

According to a statement issued by Patricia Deworitshe, Deputy Director, Press at Ministry of Finance, “the suspension is in line with the Public Service Rules (PSRs) 03405 and 03406”.

The statement explained that the suspension was to allow for an unhindered investigation of into the allegations against Gwarzo.

“The Honourable Minister has set up an Administrative Panel of Inquiry (API) to investigate and determine the culpability of the Director-General,” the statement read.

“She has directed the suspended SEC Director-General to immediately handover to the most senior officer at the Commission, pending the conclusion of investigation by the API.”

Adeosun also suspended two management staff of the commission, namely, “Abdulsalam Naif Habu, Head of Media Division and Anastasia Omozele Braimoh, Head of Legal Department”.

They were as well alleged to have engaged in financial impropriety in the Commission.

CONFIRMED: Bilyamin Bello is NOT Haliru Bello’s biological son

Bilyamin Bello, the man believed to have been stabbed to death by his wife for alleged infidelity, is not the son of Bello Haliru, former Chairman of the People Democratic Party (PDP), as widely reported in the media.

Rather, the slain man is the nephew of the two-timer former Minister.

According to a family source, who did not want to be named because the family had been told to avoid media interviews, Bilyamin’s mother and biological father divorced long ago.

“Haliru Bello is not his father as everyone has reported, but only the legal guardian,” he said.

“Bilyamin is his nephew. His biological father separated from his mum long before she passed away. Haliru Bello is his guardian; he is Biliamiyu’s mother’s elder brother.”

The source also spoke on Amina Shagari, who posted an emotional tribute saying she and Bilyamin “decided to get married”, prompting speculations she may have been his wife.

“Amina is not his ex-wife,” he said. “She’s Biliamiyu’s friend, or do I say she was his friend. But she is not his ex-wife.”

He spoke on yet another myth — the speculation that “killer wife” Maryam Sanda, who is in remand at Suleja Prison, was responsible for Bilyamin’s divorce from his first marriage to Fakhriyya Ben-Umar.

“You know, he did not expressly say that to anybody. But we strongly believe she is the main reason why he left his first wife,” he said.

Of the Bilyamin family’s chances of getting justice, given the high connections of Maimuna Aliyu, mother of the accused, he said: “We, on our own part, are very cooperative with the authorities, that is the Nigerian Police; they are the prosecuting authority.

“We have tried and we have given them everything we have, at least for whatever it is they want to do. We are putting all hope and faith that they will do whatever they can do to see that justice is prevailed on this matter.

“We know she [Maimuna Aliyu] is a society woman, and she could go to whatever length to see that this matter dies down. That is not our problem; all we know is, let the system do its best.

“Whatever happens, we know she is just putting her best to it. Whatever goes wrong should not be from their own angle; after all, whatever we do in this world is temporary. God has the ultimate decision.

We believe she is very influential and we believe she is doing everything she possibly can to either frustrate this matter or to kill it.”

Buhari ‘appalled’ that Nigerians are being sold ‘like goats’ in Libya

President Muhammadu Buhari has condemned the alleged selling of Nigerian migrants in Libya, and promised that those still stranded in the country will be brought home and rehabilitated.

Buhari made the comments at a session with the Nigerian community in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire, on the sidelines of the African Union-European Union Summit holding in the country.

He was reacting to recent video clips on the conventional and social media showing the sale of Africans in an auction in Libya.

“It is appalling that some Nigerians were being sold like goats for a few dollars in Libya,” Buhari said.

He ciriticised Libyans for not learning anything useful since the ouster of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

“After 43 years of Gadhafi, why are they recruiting so many people from the Sahel, including Nigerians?” Buhari asked.

“All they learned was how to shoot and kill. They didn’t learn to be electricians, plumbers or any other trade.”

Similarly, members of the Senate took turns to condemn the ugly situation.

Dino Melaye, Senator representing Kogi West, said it is disheartening that the government is yet to take a position on the issue despite the videos.

“The social media has been awash for over a month now with different video clips with very excruciating pictures of Nigerians being humiliated,” Melaye said.

“It is high time we resigned to citizen diplomacy as practised by the United State of America. Nigeria and Nigerians must take the life of every Nigerians not only seriously but to defend Nigerians anywhere in the world.

“I am particularly surprised Mr. President that these video footage have been on YouTube and social media for over one month and there’s not been one very drastic position by the federal government to condemn and take very proactive position on the lives of Nigerians outside the shores of this country.”

Contributing on the motion, Ali Wakili said government must address the root of the matter, which are poor governance, poverty and poor education standard in the country.

“We need to address the root causes of this issue of illegal migration. There is the issue of poverty that is bedevilling our people,” he said.

“There is the issue of poor governance, there is the issue of fact that we have corrupt leaders that have taken our wealth to the western countries and it is not helpful to them, nor to their descendants nor to us people.

“Our education needs to be looked into. We churn out graduates that are not employable, especially in the digital period in which we find ourselves.

“Our education system needs to be looked into so that we can have vocational training and others so that they can meet up with local challenges.”

On Tuesday, 242 Nigerians were repatriated from Libya courtesy of a collaboration between the the International Organization on Migration (IOM) and the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA).

In 2017 alone, about 3,480 young Nigerian migrants have been returned from Libya under this arrangement.

Buhari nominates Isa from Jigawa to head Code of Conduct Bureau

President Muhammadu Buhari has written the Senate to seek confirmation of 10 nominees as members of the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB).

According to a letter read by Bukola Saraki, Senate President, Buhari asked the lawmakers to grant the nominees an expeditious confirmation hearing.

“In compliance with section 541 of the 1999 constitution as amended and in pursuant to sections 1(2) and 1(3) of the code of conduct bureau act LFN 2004, I write to request for the confirmation of the following nominees for appointment as chairman and members of the bureau,” Buhari’s letter reads.

The appointees are:

Muhammed Isa – Chairman Jigawa, North-West

Murtala Kankia – member, Katsina North-West

Emmanuel Attah – member, Cross River, South-South

Danjuma Sado – member, Edo, South-South

Obolo Opanachi – member, Kogi, North-Central

Ken Madaki Alkali – member, Nasarawa, North-Central

S.F. Ogundare – member, Oyo, South-West

Ganiyu Hamzat – member, Ogun South-West

Sahad Abubakar – member, Gombe North-East

Vincent Nwanne – member, Ebonyi, South-East

The letter reads further: “The curriculum vitae of the nominees are attached herewith.

“It is my hope that this Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria will in their usual expeditious manner consider and confirm the nominees. Please accept, Mr. Senate President, my assurances of my highest consideration.”

Ondo govt grants amnesty to kidnappers of Igbonla schoolboys

The abductors of six students of the Lagos Model College, Igbonla, Epe, Lagos State in May have been granted amnesty by the Ondo State Government.

They were among the militants who surrendered their arms to embrace the ongoing state amnesty programme.

The militants have been responsible for several crimes in the riverine area of Ondo, including pipeline vandalization, oil bunkering, kidnapping for ransom and armed robbery.

Led by their leader, Ogailo Young, better known as O.C, the militants surrendered their arms and ammunition at the Collection and Documentation of Arms Centre in Ajakpa Community in Ese-Odo Local Government Area.

Young said he and his men accepted to lay down their arms and embrace the amnesty in order to allow peace to reign in the Niger Delta area of the state.

He said it was joblessness, poverty and neglect by the government that led them into crime.

“If we were asked for the reasons for embarking on this struggle, our simple explanation to the public and other concerned authorities is that it is joblessness, suffering, poverty, oppression and neglect by the government,” Young said.

“As it got to this point, we did not find life very easy, then we relocated to Ogun State where the government college Igbonla, Epe schoolboys were kidnapped; their release led to the present arrangement through the courageous efforts of the deputy governors of Ondo and Delta states.

“We did not kidnap these boys for mere ransom but to negotiate our freedom and full reintegration to normal life.”

Also speaking during the exercise, Agboola Ajayi, Deputy Governor of Ondo State and, who also doubles as Chairman of the Amnesty Committee, said he was impressed by the execution of the exercise so far.

“Looking at the sophisticated guns and ammunition surrendered, I’m happy that they (militants) made a promise and fulfilled it,” he said

Ajayi assured the public that the federal and state governments will also fulfill their promises to the militants by introducing programmes capable of making them self-reliant.

He also promised that the government would not launch any attack on the oil-producing areas of the state after the submission of arms and ammunition by the armed youths.

The Igbonla schoolboys — Peter Jonah, Isiaq Rahmon, Adebayo George, Judah Agbausi, Pelumi Philips and Farouq Yusuf — were whisked away by gunmen who broke into their school dormitory on May 25.

They were released two months later, following negotiations between the kidnappers and the boys’ parents who told reporters that they paid a total of N31 million in ransom to their abductors.

Maimuna Aliyu temporarily escapes arraignment due to judges’ conference

The trial of Maimuna Aliyu, the rejected nominee to the board of Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), slated to begin on Tuesday has been adjourned to December 5.

A court clerk told journalists at the premises of the Federal High Court, Jabi, Abuja, where the case was expected to come up, that the trial judge, Justice M. A. Nasir, was attending a conference.

The ICIR was able to establish that judges in other FCT courts were also out of town attending the unnamed conference.

Aliyu, who is being prosecuted by the ICPC for allegedly pocketing N57 million proceeds of the sale of three plots of land she sold off on behalf of Aso Savings and Loans Ltd, was also not in court.

As exclusively reported by the ICIR on Monday, she is currently in hiding.

A three-count charge of abuse of office, misappropriation of public funds and criminal breach of trust was slammed against her on August 15 by the ICPC.

She is also accused of making  false statement to officials of the Commission, all contrary to Sections 19 and 25(1) (a) & (b) of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act, 2000; and Section 311 of the Penal Code Act, Cap 532, Laws of Northern Nigeria 1990.

Maimuna was one of 14 persons nominated on August 1 by then Acting President Yemi Osinbajo to the ICPC board, but she was dropped after an exclusive report by the ICIR detailing how the ICPC was investigating her — as well as Sa’ad Alanamu — for multimillion-naira corruption.

QUESTION: Was Buhari someway involved in Maina’s recall? Perhaps.

When President Muhammadu Buhari ordered the immediate dismissal of Abdulrasheed Maina, former Chairman of the Pension Reforms Task Team (PRTT), on October 23, it was announced with a curt statement reflecting presidential surprise.

“President Buhari has directed the immediate disengagement of Mr. Abdulrasheed Maina from the Federal Civil Service. The disengagement is with immediate effect,” read the statement, signed by Femi Adesina, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity.

It read further: “PMB has also asked the Head of Service to submit a full report of the circumstances of Mr Maina’s recall and posting to the Interior Ministry.

“The report is to be submitted to the office of the Chief of Staff to the President before the close of work today, Monday, Oct 23, 2017.”

But events that followed Maina’s dismissal suggest that the President may have been in contact with the fugitive, either directly or through some of his officials, and that he was aware of Maina’s recall and reinstatement into the civil service.

BACKGROUND

Maina was an Assistant Director in the Pension Department of the Ministry of Interior before his invitation by Steve Oronsaye, in 2010, to head the newly formed PRTT.

However, after recovering billions in cash and assets from alleged pension thieves, Maina was alleged to have re-looted the recovered funds, in collaboration with Oronsaye and one Osarenkhoe Afe, who served as a consultant to the PRTT.

While Oronsaye and Afe have both pleaded not guilty to the charges, Maina has remained at large, refusing to honour several summons from the EFCC and a Senate committee that was set up to investigate the matter.

He was declared wanted by both the EFCC and the Nigerian Police in 2015, and it is believed that he fled to Dubai from where he continued to keep tabs with happenings back home.

CLANDESTINE RECALL

 

Eventually, Maina was secretly reinstated into the civil service in October, and the Federal Government would have gotten away with had Premium Times not broken the story.

The controversial reinstatement immediately triggered intense public criticism, prompting Buhari, who was in New York attending the United Nations General Assembly at the time, to immediate mandate Maina’s disengagement.

THE INTRIGUES

Hardly had the presidential order been issued than Maina’s family addressed a press Conference in Kaduna, where they accused the government of hypocrisy.

Aliyu Maina, spokesman of the Maina family, told pressmen that it was the Buhari government that actually invited Maina to come home and join the ongoing anti-corruption campaign.

“Abdulrasheed was in fact invited by this administration and he was promised security to come and clean up the mess and generate more revenue to government by blocking leakages,” Aliyu said.

“He succumbed to the present administration and came back to Nigeria. He has been working with the DSS for quite some time and he was given necessary security.

“So, one wonders why all the agencies and various individuals responsible for his return are now denying.”

As if that was not puzzling enough, Ngozika Ihuoma, a former member of the House of Representative and Executive Director of Legislative Watch, appeared on AIT’s Focus Nigeria on November 6, where he said among other things that Ibrahim Magu, Acting Chairman of the EFCC, usually visited Maina in Dubai.

Ihuoma said: “The EFCC, in trying to be funny, sent invitation to him (Maina) through somebody who used to be his staff. This is what they are parading that they invited him,” Ihuoma said.

“Is this the proper way of inviting somebody? Ann (the person the letter was given to) saw Maina last in 2012, then in 2015 you gave Ann a letter under duress to go and give to Maina.

“Meanwhile, the EFCC Chairman from Larmode to Magu visits Maina in Dubai when he was in Dubai. Let the President bring back Maina. He is not on the run.”

OYO-ITA’S TESTIMONY

 

 

Again, on October 31, the memo written by Winifred Oyo-Ita, Head of Service of the Federation, in response to Buhari’s directive for her explanations, was leaked to the press.

In that memo, which was submitted to Abba Kyari, Buhari’s Chief of Staff, Oyo-Ita was quoted as saying that she had intimated Buhari on the plot by some top government officials to have Maina recalled.

She noted that she warned the President on the “damaging impact” such a move would have on the anti-corruption campaign.

“Please, note that the OHCSF was never in agreement with the reinstatement and consequently never conveyed the approval of the FCSC to Mr. A. A. Maina, nor approved his posting to the Ministry of Interior or any other MDA,” Punch quoted Oyo-Ita as writing in the memo,” Oyo-Ita stated.

“Rather, I sought audience with His Excellency, Mr. President, on Wednesday, 11th October, 2017 after the FEC meeting where I briefed His Excellency verbally on the wide-ranging implications of the reinstatement of Mr. A. A. Maina, especially the damaging impact on the anti-corruption stance of this administration.

“The move to recall Mr. A. A. Maina was at the instance of a series of letters from the Attorney General of the Federation…”

MAINA’S TESTIMONY

Perhaps the clearest evidence that Buhari may have been in touch with Maina came on Monday night, when Channels TV aired an exclusive video of Maina begging the President to give him a chance to prove his innocence.

Maina asked Buhari to give him only nine months, within which he would help government recoup N3 trillion.

“Mr President, I will give you information and documents that will fetch you over N3 trillion now in Nigeria, give me nine months,” he said in the video.

“Within the first three months, I will show you N1 trillion just like I showed you N1 trillion in this 2017.”

“…. Just like I showed you N1 trillion in 2017”? When in 2017 did this happen? Where did this happen? Has Buhari been in contact with Maina all along, as Maina has implicitly claimed? If that is true, then the President cannot entirely wash his hands off the mess of Maina’s recall.

VIDEO: Physically-challenged persons stage physical protest in Abuja

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The Joint Association of Persons with Disabilities (JONAPWD) in oil-producing communities in Delta State on Monday staged a protest at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) headquarters in Abuja.

The ICIR was at the scene of the protest.

JONAPWD listed three major demands: pipeline surveillance job slots, placement in skills acquisition centres, and to be given petroleum product loading tickets.

The videos below show what transpired at the protest

VIDEO: Maina begs Buhari for public hearing to prove his innocence

Abdulrasheed Maina, former Chairman of the now rested Pension Reforms Task Team (PRTT), wants President Muhammadu Buhari to convene a public hearing during which everyone connected to the allegations against him would be allowed to “say the truth”.

It is the first time that Maina, who is accused of spearheading a massive pension fraud running into billions of naira while he was the head of the PRTT, is speaking since his sack from the civil service.

In a interview with Channels Television during Monday’s News at 10, Maina expressed confidence in Buhari but noted that the President is surrounded by dishonest people.

He asked Buhari to give him nine months, during which he would show the President how to recover N3 trillion from pension thieves at the rate of 1Ntrillion per month.

Watch the video below: