Home Blog Page 2906

West and Central Africa Face Threats From Lake Chad

0

west-and-central-africa-face-threats-from-lake-chad1


The Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Khadija Ibrahim, has said that the continued recession of the Lake Chad poses a lot of threats to the West and Central African Sub-regions, adding that about 40 million youth in the region have been exposed to poverty and unemployment as a result of the development.

She was speaking during a workshop on “Water Resources and Sustainable Environmental Management in the ECOWAS region” in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

Ibrahim, who was represented by Ahmed Gusau, said that the theme of the workshop was appropriate and timely because the receding of the Lake Chad has in no small measure contributed to the insecurity and strife on the African Continent.

She listed the countries most affected as a result of the recession of the Lake to include Nigeria, Chad, Niger and Cameroon.

“There is urgent need to brainstorm on the lingering issues of Water Resources and Environmental Management in the ECOWAS region,” the minister said.

“At the extended level of the African Union, AU., New Partnership for Africa’s Development, NEPAD, The African Peer Review Mechanism, United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisations, UNFAO, and so many other Multinational Institutions, the problems of water recession and environmental degradation have been frontally addressed yet the problems still persist.”

According to Ibrahim, an important angle to the receding lake Chad, is the devastation of the ecosystem caused by environmental degradation through refuse dump on coastal lines which emits toxins that are injurious to human health.

She noted that environmental pollution has been identified as the major reason for the depletion of ozone layer with harmful radiation on human body and skin diseases.

The minister however reassured participants at the workshop that the government will do its best to address the issue of receding Lake Chad, River Niger and any threat on the coastal line to reduce the menace of water recession and environmental degradation.

Chairman of the occasion and Vice-Chancellor of University of Maiduguri, Ibrahim Njodi, said that Boko Haram in the Northeast is a symptom of the challenges of water resource management in the Lake Chad Basin Areas.

Njodi who was represented by the University’s Deputy Vice Chancellor, Administration, Haruna Godowoli, said that the decision of Governor Kashim Shettima to shift his attention from Security to issues of water resources shows that peace is being gradually restored in the state.

The Borno State Head of Service, Yakubu Bukar, who represented Governor Kashim Shettima, said that the workshop will complement the efforts of the state government as it works to make life easier for citizens of the state whose lives had been devastated by the Boko Haram Insurgency.

Lawyers Protest DSS’ Refusal To Obey Court Orders

0

lawyers-protest-dss-refusal-to-obey-court-orders


A huge number of protesters, made up of mainly lawyers,  took to major streets in the Federal Capital Territory, to protest the alleged continued disobedience of court orders by the Department of State Security, DSS.

The lawyers, who were joined by members of civil society organisations, took their protest to the Headquarters of the Federal High Court, in Maitama, as well as the offices of the Attorney General of the Federation and the National Human Rights Commission, NHRC.

They then made their way to the Three Arms Zone, where the Aso Rock presidential villa, the Supreme Court and the National Assembly are situated.

With regards to the issue of corruption allegations by the DSS against some judges, the protesting lawyers say the judges should not step down from cases involving the DSS, arguing that doing so would mean that they  have bowed to intimidation.

The protesters also want all judiciary workers to initiate an industrial action until the DSS obeys all pending judgments.

Witnesses say major roads in the Abuja city centre were barricaded as the protesters were being prevented by security agents from entering the villa.

The DSS has been accused of blatant disregard for court judgments and on more than one occasions, there had been instances where Judges had to lash-out on the Service for disobedience to court rulings.

On July 22, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba of the Federal High Court, Abuja, criticized the DSS for flouting an order of the court to remand a defendant in prison.

Dimgba had ordered that retired Air Commodore Umar Mohammed, who was arraigned before him the previous day, be remanded in Kuje Prison pending the hearing of his bail application, but the DSS instead kept the suspect in its custody and failed to produce him in court on the day of the hearing for his bail application.

Dimgba said that he took strong exception to the service’s disregard for the court’s order by keeping a defendant in its custody, describing it as an embarrassment to democracy.

On another date, August 9, when an application was brought before Justice Dimgba by the DSS, the judge refused to grant it.

“The court will not grant any application of the DSS until there is sufficient proof that all orders of the court have been obeyed,” Dimgba said.

“It will be counter-productive for the court to take this application and grant the reliefs sought by the DSS.

“This court hereby adjourns this application sine die until the applicant’s counsel files an affidavit deposing to the fact that all outstanding orders of this court on the DSS have been complied with,” the judge added.

Also the DSS had on more than one occasion refused to adhere to court rulings, granting bail to the former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, as well as the leader of the pro-Biafra group, Nnamdi Kanu.

 Airport Traffic Records 9% Drop

0
Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos
Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos

Figures published by the National Bureau of Statistics reveal that the aviation sector has recorded a 9% decline in terms of Airport traffic in the second quarter of 2016.

The report showed a reduction in the numbers of aircraft, travellers, cargo weight as well as mails that were moved during the period as against what obtained in the first quarter of the year.

According to the NBS report, 54,405 aircraft arrived at, or departed from Nigerian airports in the second quarter of the year; a 9% reduction from the 59,808 aircraft recorded in the first quarter.

“A total of 59,808 aircraft arrived at, or departed from Nigerian airports in the first quarter of 2016, a decrease of 6.6 per cent relative to the previous quarter, and of 7.7 per cent relative to the first quarter of 2015.”

Also in the first quarter of 2016, a total of 3,549,360 passengers were recorded across Nigeria’s airports, but that figure reduced to 3,532,775 in the second quarter.

The report also revealed that there were 2,475,448 domestic passengers in the first quarter of 2016 and 2,411,251 in the second quarter, representing quarterly decline of 9.1 per cent and 2.6 per cent, respectively.

The aviation sector of the Nigerian economy has been one of the hardest hit by the current recession being experienced in the country.

A number of airline operators have either suspended operations or have been operating on a partial basis.

Recently, Emirates airlines and Kenya Airways announced that they were suspending flight operations to the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja.

While suspension of Emirate flights took effect from October 22, that of Kenya Airlines would begin on November 15, 2016.

However, it appears plans are already at advanced stages by the federal government to concession the four major Nigerian Airports in order to achieve better results.

In September, two committees namely: the Project Steering Committee and the Project Delivery Committee, were inaugurated by the Minister of State for Aviation, Hadi Sirika, in Abuja, to oversee the process to concession.

Boko Haram’s Drug Supplier Nabbed

0

boko-haram-drugs-supplier-nabbed


Troops of Operation LAFIYA DOLE have captured Kadiri Umate, a suspected drugs supplier to the Boko Haram terrorists.

The suspect was arrested at Firgi and Zawan axis of Bama Local Governmnet Area, Borno State, while trying to cross into Sambisa forest.

Sani Usman, a Colonel and the spokesman of the Nigerian Army, said the suspect was sighted in company of other Boko Haram terrorists, at a crossing point.

“The troops pursued them but were only able to apprehend Kadiri Umate, 35 years, while others fled into the bush,” Usman stated.

He added that “the patrol team recovered 35 packets of 500ml of Glocose Intravenous infusion (Drip), assorted analgesics and pain killer drugs, clothes, bathroom slippers, insecticides, salt, kolanuts and a bicycle” from the suspect, who is currently “undergoing preliminary investigations.”

The army spokesman further stated that in a related development, “a suspected Boko Haram terrorists’ logistics and fuel supplier, Fantoma Lasani was arrested by troops in conjunction with Civilian JTF at Muna garage when he came to pick his wife to finally relocate out of Maiduguri.”

Usman described the suspect who hails from Flatari village in Bama Local Government Area, as “among the unpatriotic elements in the society that had been supplying Boko Haram terrorists with Premium Motor Spirit and Automative Gas Oil in Bama, Gwoza and Sambisa general area.”

House Of Reps. Probe Panel Summons Customs CG

0
Controller General of Customs, Hammed Ali
Comptroller General of Customs, Hammed Ali

A House of Representatives ad-hoc committee, investigating alleged payments by government agencies to firms and individuals from 2013 till date, has summoned the Comptroller General of the Nigeria Customs Service, NCS, Hameed Ali, a retired army general.

Ali was invited to explain the payment of about N250 million to a firm – Fortis Insurance – as insurance cover.

The probe panel, headed by Adekunle Akinlade, noted that the company to which the huge sum was paid was not licensed to operate, adding that the Customs boss did not submit any memorandum to the committee on the matter.

The committee therefore wants the Comptroller General to appear before it on Wednesday to explain the situation.

In a related development, the Akinlade-led probe panel said it also discovered the payment of the sum of N105 million by the Federal Road Safety Commission, FRSC, to another unlicensed insurance company, Chrome Insurance.

Top officers of some other insurance companies were also questioned by the committee over payments made to their firms.

They include: Chief Executive of Guinea Insurance Plc, Isioma Omoshie- Okokuku; the Technical Executive Director of NICON Insurance, Akinsola Ade, as well as the Managing Director of Niger Insurance, Kola Adedeji.

The insurance companies were directed to produce relevant documents on their engagement by government for the insurance contracts.

Read also:

Government Not Protecting Displaced Persons From Abuses – Human Rights Watch

0

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

0

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

0
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

0

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

0
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.