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Government Not Protecting Displaced Persons From Abuses – Human Rights Watch

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human-rights-watch-says-government-not-doin-enough-to-protect-idps-from-abuses


The Nigerian government is not doing enough to protect displaced women and girls from sexual abuse and exploitation from officials in charge of Internally Displaced Persons camps across the Northeast region of the country.

This was contained in a report released on Monday by the Human Rights Watch, HRW, one of the international Non-Governmental Organisations currently rendering humanitarian assistance in the insurgency ravaged region.

The report stated that government officials and other authorities including, camp leaders, vigilante groups, policemen, and soldiers, have raped and sexually exploited women and girls residing in the IDP camps, adding that the government has done nothing to ensure that the victims have access to their basic rights and services, or to sanction the abusers.

Mausi Segun, a Senior Nigeria Researcher at HRW said: “It is bad enough that these women and girls are not getting much-needed support for the horrific trauma they suffered at the hands of Boko Haram.

“It is disgraceful and outrageous that people who should protect these women and girls are attacking and abusing them.”

In late July, 2016, HRW said it documented sexual abuse, 43 cases of rape and sexual exploitation of women and girls living in seven IDP camps in Maiduguri.

The group reported that “Four of the victims (said) that they were drugged and raped, while 37 were coerced into sex through false marriage promises and material and financial assistance.”

“Many of those coerced into sex said they were abandoned if they became pregnant. They and their children have suffered discrimination, abuse, and stigmatization from other camp residents,” it added.

Quoting another report by a Nigerian research organization, NOI polls in July this year, the HRW said that “66 percent of 400 displaced people in Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe states said that camp officials sexually abuse the displaced women and girls.”

On why these cases of sexual abuses were not being reported by the victims, HRW stated that they “feel powerless and fear retaliation if they report the abuse.”

The group narrated the story of a 17-year-old girl who just fled from Dikwa and was staying in an IDP camp in Maiduguri, and how a policeman had approached her for “friendship”

“One day he demanded to have sex with me. I refused but he forced me. It happened just that one time, but soon I realized I was pregnant,” the girl said.

“When I informed him about my condition, he threatened to shoot and kill me if I told anyone else. So I was too afraid to report him.”

HRW said that “Irregular supplies of food, clothing, medicine, and other essentials, along with restricted movement in the IDP camps in Maiduguri, compounds the vulnerability of victims – many of them widowed women and unaccompanied orphaned girls – to rape and sexual exploitation by camp officials, soldiers, police, members of civilian vigilante groups, and other Maiduguri residents.

“In some cases, men used their positions of authority and gifts of desperately needed food or other items to have sex with women,” reported the human rights group.

“A woman in a Dalori camp said residents get only one meal a day. She said she accepted the advances of a soldier who proposed marriage because she needed help in feeding her four children. He disappeared five months laterwhen she told him she was pregnant.”

The ugly development had resulted in a surge in cases of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV, in the camps.

“A medical health worker in one of the camps, which has 10,000 residents, said that the number of people requiring treatment for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections has risen sharply, from about 200 cases when the camp clinic was established in 2014 to more than 500 in July 2016,” says HRW.

“The health worker said she believed that many more women could be infected but were ashamed to go to the clinic, and are likely to be suffering in silence without treatment.”

The Borno State Emergency Management Agency, BOSEMA, has direct responsibility for distributing aid, including food, medicine, clothes, and bedding, as well as managing the camps, while the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, supplies raw food and other materials for internally displaced people to the state agency under a memorandum of understanding.

The Boko Haram conflict has led to more than 10,000 civilian deaths since 2009; the abductions of at least 2,000 people, mostly women and children and large groups of students, including from Chibok and Damasak; the forced recruitment of hundreds of men; and the displacement of about 2.5 million people in northeast Nigeria.

Troops Lose Men In Boko Haram Ambush

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Nigerian troops


The Nigerian army authorities have said that five Nigerian soldiers and four members of the civilian vigilante group were killed on Sunday in an ambush by Boko Haram terrorists in Damboa local government area of Borno State.

Army spokesman, Sani Usman, in a statement, said that 19n other soldiers and a Civilian-JTF operative were injured in the attack.

Usman stated that the troops came under attack “at Ugundiri village, Damboa Local Government Area, Borno State, while returning to base after clearance operations yesterday,”

“Unfortunately, 5 soldiers, 3 vigilantes and 1 Civilian JTF lost their lives during the ambush, while 19 soldiers and 1 Civilian JTF sustained various degrees of injuries,” he added.

The army spokesman stated that “the bodies of the late soldiers and civilians have been evacuated to Maiduguri while the injured are receiving commensurate medical care and are in stable condition.”

He however added that despite the fatalities “the troops destroyed the terrorists gun truck and recovered 2 Anti-Aircraft guns, 2 spare Gun barrels, 1 General Purpose Machine Gun, 1 Rocket Propelled Grenade, 1 AK-47 Rifle and 320 rounds of 7.62mm ammunition.”

“Troops have been mobilized into blocking positions to further neutralize fleeing Boko Haram terrorists,” he said.

Usman further stated that in a another incident, troops “neutralised” Boko Haram fighters based on information received about their gathering around Bori village, which is 16 kilometres away from Mainok, outskirts of Maiduguri.

“The troops recovered 3 Motorcycles, 1 hand Grenade, 1 round of 7.62mm ammunition, Solar panel, a pair of Niger Republic military camouflage uniform, 1 Gionee mobile telephone handset, 1 Wet Cell battery and half bag of groundnut” said Colonel Usman.

Jonathan Criticizes Clampdown On Free Speech In Nigeria

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Former President Goodluck Jonathan
Former President Goodluck Jonathan

Former President Goodluck Jonathan has criticized the perceived clampdown on freedom of expression by the government in power, and called on Nigerians to continue to support democratic governance.

He said this during a dinner organized by the Nigerian Lawyers Association in the United States of America.

The former president also urged Nigerian legal practitioners in the country and in the diaspora to also contribute to the development and strengthening of the country’s institutions.

He said: “Under my watch not a single Nigerian was sent to prison because of anything they wrote or said about me or the administration that I headed.

“Nigeria had neither political prisoners nor political exile under my administration.”

There has been an increase in the arrest and detention of citizens, journalists and bloggers, with regards to statements perceived by security agencies as being critical of the government.

Governor Okezie Ikpeazu of Abia State once admitted to plotting the arrest of Emenike Iroegbu, a blogger and indigene of the state.

Also In Katsina, a blogger was arrested and detained for 22 days for posts criticizing the administration of Governor Aminu Masari.

In Kaduna, Akwa Ibom and FCT, there had been reports of arrests and detention of bloggers for allegedly spreading false information about the government in power.

Jonathan pointed out that his administration made appreciable efforts to promote transparency and accountability.

“We enacted the Freedom of Information Act and by that we tore the veil of secrecy covering governance,” he said.

“We gave institutions unlimited freedom and ensured that the NBA, other professional institutions were devoid of any governmental influence.

“We ensured that appointments to INEC were not based on personal relationships,” he added.

The former president also advised that all government’s action must be carried out with respect for Nigeria’s diversity.

He pointed out that during his time as president, cabinet members were selected to reflect the diversity of Nigeria, adding that no leader should exploit the country’s fault lines.

“Diversity could remain a strength only when all interest groups in the society feel safe and secure.

“Most of my principal aides in government hailed from different ethnic nationalities.

“We never placed ethno-religious interests above merits or individual values when making decisions.

“Nigeria is for all Nigerians. We must resist the push of ego that may make us want to pursue a regional or narrow agenda,” he said.

Though Jonathan did not make any direct reference to the Muhammadu Buhari-led government, not a few Nigerians are inferring that already, some even predicting the former president may soon be arrested.

Troops Foil Another Suicide Attack On Displaced Persons’ Camp

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Troops Soldiers Army


Barely 24 hours after the twin suicide bomb attacks that claimed 9 lives in Maiduguri, troops of the Nigerian Army on Sunday foiled an attempt by a suspected Boko Haram member to sneak into the Bakassi displaced persons camp with explosives.

According to a statement by army spokesperson, Sani Usman, a Colonel, the suspect, a male, was seen trying to enter the camp from the back through the defensive parapet dug to prevent such intrusion.

“The vigilant sentry sighted the bomber and laid in wait until the suicide bomber came close. The sniper instantly shot and killed the terrorists as he tried to force his way to the western flank of the IDP camp fence,” the statement read.

The explosive device did not go off, Usman said, prompting the deployment of a combined team of explosive ordinance device made up of soldiers and policemen to safely detonate the bomb.

Maiduguri-Bama had not witnessed suicide bombings for some months, a development that saw security measure relaxed a bit, including extension of curfew to 10pm.

However, in October alone, there have been three explosions and about 17 deaths, with the first happening three weeks ago at Muna Garage, a neighbourhood on the outskirts of Maiduguri, along Gamboru Ngala road.

The latest occurred yesterday, when two separate explosions, within 30 minutes of each other, went off at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, depot and in front of the Bakassi IDPs camp.

Senator Vows To Stop Diversion Of Relief Items

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Senator-Ali-Ndume
Ali Ndume

Senate Majority Leader, Ali Ndume has vowed to curb the reported theft and diversion of relief materials and food items donated by the federal government and other humanitarian agencies for the benefit of Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs, in the Northeast region.

Ndume made the pledge at the Northeast zonal office of the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, where he had gone to take delivery of some tons of grains donated to the state by Presiden Muhammadu Buhari.

The senator, who was accompanied on the visit by the Minister of State for Power, Mustapha Shehuri, said that the supply of grains was President Buhari’s response to the food needs of the people of the Northeast which is why 113 tonnes of grains were allocated to Borno out of 300 available in the reserves.

He commended the President for his commitment to the welfare and wellbeing of the people in the region, adding that the president’s action has spurred him and his fellow lawmakers to do more for their people.

Ndume said he was happy the EFCC had waded Into the issue of some missing trucks of grains and will soon apprehend the criminals, stressing that “as long as I am still alive, I will make sure all the grains sent to our people are delivered.”

He noted that it was disturbing that some contractors hired by the ministry of agriculture could even dream of diverting the food meant for the IDPs who he said have been traumatized by the insurgency in the region.

Ndume further said that he, together with all lawmakers representing Borno State in the National Assembly, were investigating the alleged diversion of food trucks by contractors, as well as the allegations of food theft by the camp officials.

The senate leader also assured people of the region that the passage of the North East Development Commission, NEDC, will address the poverty, trauma and malnutrition which has characterized the state since the advent of the Boko Haram insurgency in 2009.

He added that the addition of Kano and Plateau States as part of beneficiaries of the NEDC was a mistake that would be addressed via a “legislative conference”.

It was gathered that seventy nine trucks have been received so far by NEMA officials in the region, and about thirty five trucks is being awaited.

The donation was approved by President Buhari about six months ago in order to cushion the sufferings of internally displaced persons in the Born state.

Water, Water Everywhere Around Lagos, But Not A Drop To Drink

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The title of this review is paraphrased from lines in the poem, “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.


By Chido Onumah

Favour, 15, and her four siblings live with their parents in a two-room apartment in Bariga, a suburb formerly under Somolu Local Government Area of Lagos State, but now a Local Council Development Area (LCDA) of its own.

Like in other places, the taps in the building have gone dry for years, and so is the public tap down the street erected by the government to meet the water needs of the people in the area.

So they are forced to buy water from mai ruwa, the ubiquitous water vendors who have become a permanent feature of life serving the needs of the people in virtually every community in the State.

But most of the time the family can’t afford the vendors, so she and her brother, Tomi, 13, would pick up the jerry cans to go search for water for the use of the household before they go to school. To get enough water every morning, they have to do three trips each. And when they return from school, after homework, the other major preoccupation is to go look for water.

Almost on a daily basis, they live with the stress of pounding the streets with adults and early teens like themselves who are routinely roused from sleep before dawn by their parents to go and fetch water, not just for drinking and cooking, but also for other domestic needs for which the commodity is required.

This is the depressing spectacle that is common in the coastal city of Lagos, a dreamy landscape of over 21 million residents

Snuggled in the caressing coolness of the lagoon and the Gulf of Guinea, Lagos is the fabled city of water; water everywhere, yet in a disarming twist of cruel irony, its residents, especially low-income earners that form the bulk of the population, have no access to water.

Thank God for mai ruwa. What would have happened without the intervention of this itinerant group of resilient economic hustlers whose main source of water supply are the boreholes and water tankers?

Of course, this acute water shortage has severe consequences, including compromised sanitation and the impoverishment of Lagosians.

It is this embarrassing dilemma bedeviling the city that the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria seeks to address in its latest audacious report entitled, Lagos Water Crisis: Alternative Roadmap for Efficient Water Sector.

A tour de force of no mean reckoning, the 56-page report (including references) is at once an eye-opener—a sobering, reflective and penetrating excursion into the stark profile of public water utility in Africa’s most populous city. T

hankfully, while it paints an ugly picture of this sector, this document also offers a ray of hope.

The content page has seven sub-headings and kicks off with the executive summary that outlines the aim of the report, which includes charting a pathway out of the Lagos water problem, highlighting the impact and reasons why the current water system is not working, offering blueprints from around the world that would suit the Lagos situation and making concrete proposals that can be exploited in the interim, as well as continuously by the Lagos State government and the Lagos State Water Corporation.

According to the report, Lagos is responsible for more than 60 percent of industrial and commercial activities in Nigeria. The Lagos State Water Supply Master plan estimates daily water demand in the city at 540 million gallons per day (MGD) and production by the Lagos State Water Corporation at 210 MGD.

It says, however, that the Corporation’s website lists total production capacity at only 163 MGD. By 2020, water demand is expected to reach 733 GMD.

The report opens a rare insight into the health and economic implications of the Lagos water crisis. It notes that since water and sanitation are crucial factors in public health, the impact of water crisis on public health is grave.

“Indeed, it puts the State’s booming population at risk of diseases like cholera, dysentery, diarrhea and salmonellosis, in addition to escalating cases of typhoid and malaria fever,” the report observes gravely.

Quoting Dr. Jide Idris, Lagos State Commissioner for Health, it recalls that in February 2016, 25 children in Otodo Gbame, in Ikate Eti-Osa Local Government Area of the state died after drinking the community’s pathogen-infected water.

Unfortunately, many houses are currently serviced by boreholes. The dangers of drinking such water, it says, include long-term exposure to toxins. Also quoting a 2012 report published in Resources and Environment, the report says some borehole water samples examined in Lagos contained high concentration of the heavy metals lead and cadmium at levels above the World Health Organisation (WHO) maximum acceptable concentration (MAC). It warns that only adequate water treatment could help control heavy metal exposure.

On the economic consequences of water shortage, the report notes that the high cost of sourcing water has made Lagos residents poorer.

It notes, “The average family could use up to seven or eight jerrycans daily, which translates to N10,000 to N17,000 monthly in a nation where the middle class average family income is N75,000-N100,000. This high price threatens the availability of water, which improves the quality of life and makes citizens healthier for economic activities and development.”

Faced with such high human and economic cost as a result of water crisis, it is pertinent to examine how Lagos found itself in this awkward position.

For starters, the report observes that the root of Lagos water crisis is not traceable to a single cause, but to a number of causes which includes, first and foremost, the fact that for decades expansion of the public water system has not corresponded with the rapid growth of the metropolis.

Other reasons include ageing and insufficient water infrastructure, decades of policies that did not work, failure to ensure meaningful public participation, poor labour practices, regulatory failures, and, of course, inadequate budget allocation.

For example, though the governor of Lagos State, Akinwunmi Ambode, described the State’s 2016 budget as the “people’s budget,” it falls short on water, with only N17.6billion or 2.7 percent for the State’s Water Corporation.

In spite of this, the report notes that with the right financial and social policies, Lagos can fund the water structure required to ensure all Lagosians have affordable access to safe water.

If there’s one significant achievement of this report it is the fact that it brings to the fore the problem of access to water as a human rights issue. It clearly underscores this notion through interviews with a cross section of Lagos residents that show that the public desires a system that sustains their right to water and allows the people to participate in making decisions about their water needs.

However, to fulfill the human right to water, the report says governments must ensure water is available, physically accessible, affordable, safe, and acceptable in odour, colour and other qualities. The concept of water privatization being canvassed in some quarters is unanimously rejected by all individuals and groups featured in the interviews.

The report examines public water successes, citing examples and models from around the world, which Lagos could draw from if it is committed to re-inventing its public water system. It reminds those who are angling for the privatization of water that the most prominent examples of efficiency are located in the public sector, not the private sector.

“For example, public operator Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority (PPWSA) increased coverage from 20% to 90% in less than 20 years,” the report says.

Pointing the way forward for Lagos, the report offers Governor Ambode and the State House of Assembly a set of policy guidelines which, if followed with the appropriate political will, could transform the Lagos water system “from a source of disease, conflict and suffering into a model for all the world to emulate.”

Well-researched and brilliantly rendered, ERA/FoEN has through this report once again demonstrated its capacity to intervene and proffer solutions in critical areas of life, especially as it affects the environment.

Unlike the Lagos water, the language of this report is accessible, and is made more captivating by graphic illustrations that accentuate as much as the word the quality of the entire package.

This is not a document that should be left to gather dust on the shelves of public libraries (where they exist) or government offices. It is a report that state governors across the country should permanently hold on to if they are serious about solving the water crisis in their states.

Perhaps as a way of driving home the importance of water, it is just as fitting that the authors summoned the immortal words of Leonardo Da Vinci to wrap up this excellent report: “Water is the driving force of all nature.”

Onumah is the Coordinator of the African Centre for Media & Information Literacy (AFRICMIL).

 

Benue Flags Off Cargo Airport Project

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Governor of Benue State, Samuel Ortom
Governor of Benue State, Samuel Ortom

Governor of Benue State, Samuel Ortom, has flagged off the construction of a cargo airport at Dauda in Guma Local Government Area of the state.

The governor said the project would be beneficial to rural farmers, boost agricultural activities and reduce post-harvest losses, because it will provide an easier platform for faster transportation of farm produce from the state to markets abroad.

He added that the government expects that the project would attract industries, power plants, estates and other economic activities in the area.

“This project, when completed, will serve as a direct connection to the world’s economic powers and provide opportunity for the international community to have direct and easy access to our local produce,” governor Ortom said.

“We are partnering Cargopolis Development Consortium, CDC, to build this airport because the Nigerian Air Force have refused to share their Makurdi terminal with us for the construction of a cargo wing.

“The flagging off of this project has put shame on the faces of the opposition elements in the state who have chosen to see nothing good in the APC-led administration in the state,” he added.

A representative of CDC, Robert Orya, explained that the company had signed a 25 year concession agreement with the government to construct and manage the airport.

Orya explained that the airport has a completion deadline of 18 months, and under the agreement, 15 people from Benue State would be trained as pilots by the CDC.

Emmanuel Manger, Commissioner for Works and Transport in Benue state, noted that the airport would have a general cargo warehouse and cold store, and was designed to meet international standard.

Cameroonian Army Commander Lauds Nigerian Army In Fight Against Insurgency

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Acting GOC 7 Division, Brig. Gen. Victor Ezeugwu in a handshake with Brig. Gen. Bouba Dobekreo, shortly after the visit to Headquarters of the 7 Division
Acting GOC 7 Division, Brig. Gen. Victor Ezeugwu in a handshake with Brig. Gen. Bouba Dobekreo, shortly after the visit to Headquarters of the 7 Division

By Kingsley Obiejesi

Despite Saturday’s twin suicide bomb blasts that killed nine people in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State, a senior officer in the Cameroonian army has commended the Nigerian army for the success recorded against Boko Haram.

Bouba Dobekreo, a Brigadier General and Commander Sector 1 of the Multi-National Joint Task Force, MNJTF, gave the commendation in Maiduguri when he led a team on courtesy call to the General Officer Commanding 1 Division Nigerian Army, Victor Ezugwu, also a Brigadier General.

Suspected suicide bombers had detonated their explosives within 30 minutes of each other, first close to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, depot and the Bakassi camp, where 16,000 displaced persons are sheltered. Despite this setback, Dobekreo praised the Nigerian Army for degrading the Boko Haram insurgency that caused so much concern and spread to the West African countries of Cameroon, Chad and Niger.

“General Bouba described the challenges posed  by the terrorists as a test for West African countries to handle security threats in the region by themselves (and) called on West African countries to always be security conscious along the borders of the Chad Basin,” a statement issued by spokesperson for 1 Division, Mustapha Anka, a Colonel, read.

Responding, Ezugwu, thanked the visiting delegation and also commended the role played by Member of the MNJTF in the counterinsurgency.

According to him, the cooperation between member countries, particularly in the area of capacity building, has contributed to the success against insurgency in the region.

“He described the visit as timely and that it will afford the Commanders the opportunity to sit and re-strategize for the final onslaught against the terrorists,” the statement added.

The Cameroonian Army chief was accompanied on the visit by Commander 4th Military Region of the Cameroon Defence Force, Kodji Jacob, a Brigadier General, Operation Officer MNJTF, ML Ashetkuemun, a Lieutenant Colonel, and some officers of sector 1 MNJTF.

Clinton ‘Confident’ Over New FBI Email Probe

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US Democratic Presidential Nominee, Hilary Clinton
US Democratic Presidential Nominee, Hilary Clinton

Hillary Clinton says she is “confident” a new FBI probe linked to her emails will not change its original finding that she should not be prosecuted.

The Democratic presidential candidate called on the FBI director to explain the new inquiry to the American people.

Americans “deserve to get the full and complete facts immediately,” she said.

The FBI says it has fresh emails which may be “pertinent” to a previous inquiry into her use of a private server when she was secretary of state.

Republican presidential rival Donald Trump said the move was the “biggest political scandal since Watergate”.

The FBI’s announcement was made on Friday, just 11 days before the election.

The latest emails were discovered as part of a separate investigation into the estranged husband of top Clinton aide, Huma Abedin.

Devices belonging to her and Anthony Weiner, a former high-flying congressman, were seized in an investigation into whether he sent sexually explicit emails to a 15-year-old girl in North Carolina.

The discovery of the new emails was revealed by FBI director James Comey in a letter to Congress on Friday.

Comey said while he did not yet know the significance of the findings, the FBI would investigate if any of the emails contained classified information.

Democrat presidential candidate Clinton said she was “confident” the investigation into the emails would not change the FBI’s original finding in July.

The FBI decided she should not be prosecuted for her use of a private email server as secretary of state – a position she held between 2009 and 2013.

“It’s imperative that the bureau explain this issue in question, whatever it is, without any delay,” she told reporters on the campaign trail in Des Moines, Iowa, on Friday.

A senior media adviser on her campaign, James Rubin, told the BBC on Saturday that “when this is all over, this is going to be a gigantic tempest in a teapot”.

He also suggested the FBI decided to send the letter now to prevent it being criticised by the Republicans after the election.

Trump told a crowd of supporters at a rally in Iowa: “It’s everybody’s hope that justice at last can be delivered,” adding that “the FBI would never have reopened this case at this time unless it were a most egregious criminal offence.”

He compared the latest development to that of the 1970s Watergate scandal that engulfed then-Republican President Richard Nixon.

The FBI has already established that Clinton had classified information on a private email server.

In July, Comey said Clinton’s handling of sensitive material during her tenure as secretary of state was “extremely careless”, but cleared her of any criminal wrongdoing.

The revelation that she handled sensitive information while breaking federal rules by running her own email server out of her upstate New York home has dogged her campaign since last year.

Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta criticised the FBI’s “extraordinary” timing.

Opinion polls suggest Clinton is four points ahead of Trump, according to a Real Clear Politics average.

Paul Ryan, the highest-ranked elected Republican, called the FBI decision “long overdue”.

The House of Representatives Speaker renewed his call for the Director of National Intelligence to halt classified briefings for the Democratic candidate.

“She was entrusted with some of our nation’s most important secrets, and she betrayed that trust by carelessly mishandling highly classified information,” he said.

The former secretary of state’s private email server was first revealed in March 2015 by the New York Times.

Ondo Election: Appeal Court To Hear PDP’s Case Tuesday

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ondo-election-appeal-court-to-hear-pdps-case-tuesday


The court of appeal has fixed Tuesday, November 1, to hear the case of Eyitayo Jegede, factional candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in the Ondo State governorship election.

Jegede was the candidate that emerged winner of the primary election organized by the Ahmed Makarfi faction of the PDP and was recognized by the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC.

However, on Thursday when the electoral commission published a list of candidates contesting the election, it had substituted Jegede’s name with that of Jimoh Ibrahim, the candidate of the Ali Modu-Sheriff.

INEC said its decision to substitute Jegede’s name was based on a court ruling delivered on October 14, by Justice Okon Abang of the Abuja Federal High Court, ordering it to recognize Modu-Sheriff as the authentic National Chairman of the PDP and as such, to recognize Ibrahim as the authentic candidate of the PDP in the Ondo governorship election.

Jegede then approached the federal high court seeking for permission to appeal the judgement, but the application was denied as Justice Abang held that Jegede had no locus standi to appeal the judgement since he did not take part in the Modu-Sheriff organized primary.

However, on Saturday, a three-man panel of appeal court judges led by Jummai Sankey, said that due to the urgency of Jegede’s application, the court would hear the matter on Tuesday.

“In view of the contentious notice, the appellant objector and appellant applicant are hereby given 24 hours to file their processes,” Sankey ruled.

“Application of the appellant applicant will be heard on Tuesday.”

The appeal court also said it would also hear an application filed by the Makarfi faction of the PDP, challenging the ruling which declared it illegal.