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Gov. Okorocha Proposes Pay Cut, 3-Day Working Week

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Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha
Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha

Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo has said that his administration will consider reducing the number of work days in the state from five to three so as to enable the government cut salaries.

The governor was briefing journalists on the state of affairs in Imo on Friday.

He said reducing work days would enable workers to engage in other activities in order to supplement their monthly salaries and take care of their families.

He said, “I encourage Imo workers to find additional things to do to support their families because of the economic situation we are facing in Nigeria. We are considering to reduce the working days from five to three in Imo, so that workers will use the rest of the days to work and support their families’’.

The governor said that Imo state pays the highest salary scale among the other South-eastern states of Abia, Anabmbra, Ebonyi and Enugu.

“Directors in these other South-eastern states receive something a little above N90, 000 while in Imo they receive more than N100, 000.

“We intend to clear salary arrears up to July by next week. After that, we will consider downward review of salary to workers to be at par with other states of South-east,’’ he said.

He however did not say when the three-work-days-per-week policy will be implemented.

Governor Okorocha also praised the people of Imo North Senatorial district and those from Isiala Mbano and Oru East state constituencies for voting APC candidates in the just concluded rerun elections.

He said the victory had shown that APC was strong in the South-east.

Owners Of Turkish Schools In Nigeria Deny Terrorism Allegations

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MD NTIC
MD NTIC, Orhan Kermit

Owners of the Nigeria Turkish International College, NTIC, have denied allegations by the Turkish Ambassador to Nigeria that the schools were owned by terrorists and asking the federal government to close them down.

Managing Director of the college, Orhan Kermit, issued a statement on Friday urging the Nigerian government to disregard the allegations as the ambassador’s statement was flawed with ulterior motives.

Kermit said the school is a privately funded institution by a group of Turkish investors and has nothing to do with the Turkish government.

He described the school which was founded in 1998 as only Turkish in Name but Nigerian in deeds and operates on a philosophy of dialogue, love and tolerance.

“The general public is at the moment urged to ignore and disregard the statement by the Turkish ambassador. Our school is fully functional and would continue to be,” Kermit wrote in the statement.

A document released by the Turkish embassy in Nigeria had listed a number of Turkish-owned schools and institutions which it alleged were owned by suspected terrorists who sponsored the failed coup in the European country in mid-July.

The schools included: Surat Educational Limited, Abuja; Nigerian-Turkish International School in Abuja, Kaduna, Kano, Yobe, Ogun and Lagos; and the Nigerian-Turkish Nile University, Abuja.

Also indicted by the Turkish embassy were: The Association of Businessmen and Investors of Nigeria and Turkey/Abinat, Abuja and Lagos; Ufuk Dialogue Foundation, Abuja; Nigerian-Turkish Nizamiye Hospital, Abuja; and Vefa Travel Agency, Abuja.

Meanwhile, a check on the social media handle of one of the Turkish establishments listed by the embassy, UFUK dialogue, showed that the group had released a statement condemning the failed coup that occurred on July 15.

The UFUK dialogue in a statement on 18 July, three days after the coup attempt, said, “We, Ufuk dialogue, strongly condemn the attempted military coup that occurred in Turkey… and reiterate that there is no place for military interventions in democracy.”

Though the group admitted being loyal to Fethulah Gulen, the man accused by the Turkish President, Recep Erdogan, for the failed coup, it maintained that Gulen was innocent.

“President Erdogan and his close circles’ blame on the Hizmet Movement is very irresponsible and concerning. We hope that Turkey will overcome these difficult days and take this sad incident as an opportunity to strengthen its democracy,” the statement added.

Missing Soldiers May Have Been Killed By Boko Haram

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IMG_3671

By Samaila Yila

The www.icirnigeria.org can authoritatively report that 11 of the soldiers declared missing by the Nigerian Army may have been killed by Boko Haram insurgents.

The soldiers were declared missing after troops of 156 Task Force Battalion coming from a clearance operation at Guro Gongon on July 22, were ambushed by Boko Haram.

The army had confirmed the attack and said some soldiers were missing but did not say how many.

Sources told www.icirnigeria.org that the dead bodies of 11 of the missing soldiers had been recovered around the scene of the ambush by an army rescue team.

This website was informed by military sources close to the operation that 16 soldiers and three officers were unaccounted for, including the commanding officer referred to as Lieutenant Colonel Ibrahim.

The army sent in a search and rescue team of more than 50 soldiers comprising its Special Forces and others to rescue the missing soldiers. The next day, July 23, the army announced that five soldiers, including the commanding officer, had been found.

However, sources close to the operation, including members of the search and rescue party, told our reporter that some of the missing soldiers found their way to the battalion headquarters at Maulud with little help from the battalion reinforcement team. This team, we were informed, did not reach the scene of the ambush, but stayed at a distance from where they saw some of the fleeing and wounded soldiers. It was at that point that the team helped their wounded colleagues and drove them to their location.

We had reported that the soldiers successfully conducted their patrol and were on their way back when one of their vehicles got stuck in mud and in the process of removing the vehicle, the insurgents struck.

According to a member of the rescue team, who did not want to be named, the soldiers who survived said the vehicle that got stuck in mud was a Hilux mounted with Anti-Aircraft gun they recovered from the insurgents at Guro Gongon.

“They tied the Hilux to one of their vehicles and wanted to tow it to their location. When the vehicle got stuck, some of the soldiers tried to push it from the back while the driver of the vehicle the truck was tied to tried to see if he could drag it with his vehicle,” the soldier said.

The soldier said the insurgents must have known that the soldiers would encounter trouble passing through Markas, where the attack happened, and decided to ambush them there. With the soldiers busy with the stuck vehicle, a rocket propelled grenade, RPG, hit one of their vehicles, killing four soldiers near it.

Before they could get themselves together, the insurgents had started shooting. Some of the soldiers had kept their riffles in a vehicle while they attempted to retrieve the stuck vehicle and could not reach for their rifles quick enough. Moreover, their extra ammunitions were in a box inside a vehicle, which they also had no time to reach.

There were conflicting reports about the conduct of soldiers, with some saying they defied their commanding officer’s orders that no soldier should run away but stay and fight. Some of the survivors claimed that they fought for three hours and only fled when they ran out of ammunitions but other soldiers said that was not true.

“Some soldiers at the battalion headquarters said they heard sound of gunshots but only for about one hour and it was at that point that reinforcement was sent. From my experience, if you engage Boko Haram for three straight hours, they will withdraw because of fear of reinforcement. I think what might have happened was that immediately they saw that they were ambushed, some of them took to their heels and the way we recovered the corpses gave credence to this,” the soldier explained.

Our reporter was informed that the soldiers never expected to come under such attack, as they had on several occasions in the past gone on clearance operations and met little confrontation from the insurgents. Usually, the insurgents would flee at the sight of soldiers, just as they did on that day at Guro Gongon.

Narrating what they saw, the soldier, who said the search team got to Markas a day after the incident, said they recovered 11 dead bodies of soldiers, 10 of which were badly burnt.

“Under a baobab tree some distance away from the scene of the incident, we recovered five corpses. The officer’s corpse, who another officer with us identified as Abdullahi, was seen more than a kilometre from the scene. His corpse was the only one not burnt. We saw another one not far from the bombed vehicle,” he said, adding that they noticed that the insurgents must have stripped the soldiers of their uniforms and boots and made away with them.

They also made away with the soldiers’ weapons and ammunition, including those the soldiers recovered earlier at Guro Gongon.

He pointed out that each corpse had two bullet holes in the head, a style adopted by the insurgents to ensure that their victims did not survive.

According to the soldier, only seven corpses were retrieved because aside the fact that there was not enough space in the vehicle to convey them all, four had decomposed.

“Ten soldiers transported the corpses and said they would come back for the remaining four but till we left they did not come back,” he said.

Describing the terrain, another soldier said he had not seen anything like it, including the dreaded Sambisa Forest.

“You know, Sambisa is huge but there is a large part of it that is not bushy. But when we got to Markas, we were shocked that such a place existed. The place is a massive swathe of land with thick bush all through. To tell you the truth, even we were scared. The bush is so thick that you could not see or tell if someone was hiding close by. It is a massive area and one can live there for years without being discovered,” the soldier said.

“A Fulani man living nearby and who knew about the attack told us Boko Haram members populated the place only two years ago. He said from next month, when rain becomes heavy, there is no way in and out of the place till dry season.”

The Nigerian military has greatly degraded Boko Haram and reclaimed virtually all territories from the group but it is obvious that Markas may harbour a substantial number of the insurgents.

“Our vehicles got stuck on many occasions, disrupting our movement. Even when we saw the insurgents and they shot at us from a distance, we could not go after them because it would be suicidal do so on that road. We had to spend about four days there because the towing truck we went with also got stuck and after we managed to remove it, it got spoilt. A mechanic had to be escorted from Maiduguri to come and fix it.

“During those nights, nobody could sleep, as we kept hearing gunshots,” he narrated.

Our reporter was informed that a jet was sent but did nothing.

“The jet came the first day we went and also the following day. On that second day, it communicated with the officer that led us, Captain Nura, that it had seen the insurgents and was going to shell them but nothing happened and after some minutes of hovering above, it left and did not come back,” another soldier said.

Sani Usman, a colonel and Acting Director, Army Public Relations, denied that any dead body was recovered, adding that a missing in action person cannot be declared until after a year.

“You cannot confirm any declared missing in action personnel (dead) until after a years, even at that there must be a board that has recommended so, or when the dead body is seen and confirmed to be that of the missing personnel. so far, there is none yet,” he said in text message.

 

Senate Leader Calls Budget Padding Allegation Mere Media Hype

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Senate Leader, Ali Ndume
Senate Leader, Ali Ndume

The Senate Leader, Ali Ndume, has dismissed the ongoing altercation between the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and Abdulmumin Jibrin, former Chairman of the House Committee on Appropriation, as mere media hype borne out of personal differences.

He said this on Friday while fielding questions from State House correspondents after observing the Friday Jumaat prayers with President Muhammadu Buhari.

Ndume said, “The issue of budget padding is more of a media hype than reality. We are not doing budget now, we only have Appropriation Act which is a law and you know the process of implementing a law.”

“What is happening now is a fallout between individuals, it is more of personal thing between Dogara and Jibrin. That is not the way differences should be settled. We have an in-house process that is followed if we have such issues,” he added.

The Senate Leader said members of the National Assembly are empowered by the constitutions to make changes and adjustments to the constitution otherwise there would have been no need for the president to send the budget to the legislators.

“I do not know where the issue of this budget padding we are talking about is coming from. If we are not to tinker with the budget as submitted by the President, then there would not have been the need to submit it to the National Assembly.

“We have the constitutional duty to add, subtract and adjust. That was what was done. This is the first time we did a budget that was collectively produced in the sense that it was done in such a way that the Senate, House of Representatives and the Executive played different parts,” Ndume said.

He added that in this year’s budget, “the President took his time to ensure that he did not only sign on the budget, but also signed on budget details that he is satisfied with.”

Ndume said he had been reaching out to the parties involved in the crisis in order to settle the disagreement peacefully.

Buhari Reassures Donor Agencies On Accountability

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President Buhari poses with the Global Fund team
President Buhari poses with Gavi and the Global Fund team

President Muhammadu Buhari has assured the International community and donor agencies that his administration was making progress in its effort to correct the lapses of Nigeria as a nation.

According to Presidential spokesman, Femi Adesina, President Buhari said this while receiving a team led by Seth Berkley, Chief Executive Officer of Gavi and The Global Fund, in the State Houseon Thursday.

The President said he was impressed with the patience and steadfastness of leading supporters of health care in Nigeria, “despite our shortcomings as a nation.”

“We are making genuine efforts to correct the lapses. We are very serious about people behaving themselves, and being accountable,” the President said.

The president thanked the team for deciding to re-engage with Nigeria despite the country’s inefficiencies.

“You decided to be here, not minding our shortcomings. There are other countries that would bring less problems. We appreciate your commitment, and we will do our best to put ourselves in the best shape (for you) to help us,” President Buhari said.

Leader of the delegation, Berkley, had raised issues over the way donor funds for health care were utilized in the past, but noted that the three focal points of the Buhari administration; security, economic development, and anti-corruption were critical to the future of Nigeria.

He said Gavi and the Global Fund were disappointed when forensic audit revealed systemic weaknesses and corruption in the utilization of funds given in the past, adding that there is now a “breath of fresh air” under President Buhari’s leadership and fight against corruption and they were willing to “close the books of the past, and look into future support.”

Minister of Health, Prof Isaac Adewole, who was also at the event, disclosed that those indicted in the audit of the donor funds in the past, which was done between 2010 and 2015, had already been questioned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,EFCC, and would be arraigned in court soon.

 

Buhari Makes Five Appointments In The Health Sector

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President Muhammadu Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari has appointed new chief executives for five health agencies, namely the National Primary Health Care Development Agency, NPHCDA; Centre for Disease Control, CDC; National Agency for the Control of Aids, NACA; National Institute for Medical Research, NIMR and National Health Insurance Scheme, NHIS.

US-based Echezona Ezeanolue, a professor of paediatrics and public health at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, is the new boss at the NPHCDA, while Usman Yusuf, another US-based award-winning professor of paediatrics, becomes the executive secretary of the NHIS.

Also Chikwe Ihekweazu, a public health consultant, was appointed the new head of the CDC; Aliyu Hussein, a UK-based consultant in microbiology and infectious diseases is the new Director-General of NACA, while Babatunde Lawal Salako, the current provost of the College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, is the new CEO of the NIMR.

Three Nigerians Executed In Indonesia For Drug Crimes

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The executed prisoners being brought back by an ambulance
The executed prisoners being brought back by an ambulance

Three Nigerians and an Indonesian man were executed by firing squad in the wee hours of Friday morning for drug-related offences at the Nusakambangan prison island.

The Nigerians executed were Seck Osmane, Humphrey Jefferson Ejike and Michael Titus Igweh.

The Indonesian was named as Freddy Budiman.

Ten other convicts expected to have been killed along with the four had a last-minute stay of execution.

Those awaiting executions include three Indonesians, a Pakistani, an Indian, one Zimbabwean and four other Nigerians.

Amnesty International condemned the killings as a “deplorable act” that violated local and international law.

Indonesia’s Deputy Attorney-General Noor Rachmad said it was “not a pleasant thing but it was to implement the law”.

“The executions are only aimed at halting drug crimes,” he said, adding that the rest “will be carried out in stages”.

Indonesia has some of the world’s toughest drug laws, and has faced intense criticism internationally for resuming executions.

In April 2015, the execution of 14 drug convicts, mostly foreigners, was widely criticised.

Australia briefly withdrew its ambassador from Indonesia in protest over the execution of its citizens, Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo vowed to take a hard line against drug trafficking when he was elected in 2014, saying he would not compromise over death sentences to convicted drug dealers.

This is the third round of executions under Widodo.

Turkey Wants “Illegal” Turkish Establishments In Nigeria Closed

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Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan

The Government of Turkey has called on the Nigerian Government to shut down schools and other establishments in the country purportedly owned by Turkey as these organizations were owned by suspected terrorists.

Turkey said it had officially notified Nigeria of “the existence of 17 of such schools in Nigeria, which bear the name of Turkey” but were not owned by the European country.

The country said the institutions were allegedly owned by the Fethullah Gulen Terrorist Organisation, allegedly founded by Fethullah Gulen, the man accused by the Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, of sponsoring the recent failed coup attempt in the country.

Hakan Cakil, Turkey’s Ambassador to Nigeria, made these revelations when the Vice-Chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, Shehu Sani, paid him a visit at his office in Abuja.

Cakil said Turkey does not own any school in Nigeria, adding that similar schools established in Turkey had been shut down.

A document released by the Turkish embassy listed the indicted schools and institutions as Surat Educational Limited, Abuja; Nigerian-Turkish International School, in Abuja, Kaduna, Kano, Yobe, Ogun and Lagos; and the Nigerian-Turkish Nile University, Abuja.

Others, according to the embassy, are The Association of Businessmen and Investors of Nigeria and Turkey/Abinat, Abuja and Lagos; Ufuk Dialogue Foundation, Abuja; Nigerian-Turkish Nizamiye Hospital, Abuja; and Vefa Travel Agency, Abuja.

According to the ambassador, confessions by the coup plotters, who are currently under investigation, have indicated that the same syndicate, which hatched the botched July 15, 2016 coup, own the schools in Nigeria.

The ambassador said, “You may be aware that the Government of Turkey has started to investigate the sponsors of the coup and it is now very clear that Gulen was behind the coup. There are some testimonies we have taken from the military officials,

“In Nigeria, they have 17 schools; some of them are in Kano, Abuja, Lagos, etc., and they are offering scholarships to their graduates. They are not Turkish government schools. The schools bearing “Turkish” are schools belonging to Fethullah Gulen,

“We are starting a legal process to take the name ‘Turkish’ out of the name of the schools. They are not the schools of the Turkish government; they are misleading the public.”

The ambassador said he had contacted the Nigerian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and had requested officially for the closure of these schools.

“Also, I have informed Mr. Geoffrey Onyema and Mr. Abba Kyari on this subject, requesting their support on closing down the schools,” Cakil said.

He said Turkey attached “too much importance” to the issue, adding that “We cannot claim to be a democracy and harbour people who will overthrow government in another country.”

Daily Post reported that the Director of Press and Public Communication of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Clement Aduku, however, said he was not aware of the letter by the Turkish mission.

Multinational Joint Task Force Captures Damasak

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File
File

The Multinational Joint Task Force, MNJTF, has announced the capture of Damasak, a town bordering Nigeria and Niger in northern Borno State, from Boko Haram.

Damasak, the capital of Mobbar Local Government Area, had been a stronghold of the insurgents, where attacks have been launched against troops on several occasions. The MNJTF said it is one of the last frontiers of Boko Haram.

The MNJTF, with headquarters in N’Djamena, is a collection of soldiers from Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad, Niger Republic, and Benin Republic. In a statement signed by spokesperson for the body, Muhammad Dole, a Colonel, Damasak was captured on Thursday.

“In continuation with clearance operation of the towns and villages by MNJTF, the troops of the Sector 4 in Diffa Niger Republic have successfully cleared Sure village, captured and occupied Damasak town today by 1000hrs.

“The forces are coordinating to stabilize the immediate environs. The gallant troops fought their way into the town with Close Air support by combined Air Operation from MNJTF member states,” the statement read, adding that troops’ morale remains high.

APC Wins Imo North Senatorial Re-Run Election

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Benjami Uwajumogu
Winner of the Imo North Senatorial Re-run Election, Benjami Uwajumogu

The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, has declared former Speaker of the Imo State House of Assembly, Ben Uwajimogu, of the All Progressives Congress, APC, winner of the Imo North Senatorial District election which was held on Saturday, 23 July.

Uwajimogu polled 56,076 votes to beat his opponent from the People’s Democratic Party, PDP candidate, Athan Achonu who had 43,815 votes.

The returning officer, Arinze Agbaogu announced the results at the Central Collation Centre in Okigwe Local Government headquarters, saying the APC candidate having scored the majority of votes in the election has been declared winner of the election.

Similarly, the APC candidate in Oru East, Nkenna Nzeruo and his counterpart in Isiala Mbano, Chiji Collins, were also declared winners of the State House of Assembly rerun elections in their area.

INEC had declared the election inconclusive in some areas, citing irregularities and saying that supplementary elections would hold on Thursday, 28 July.

Meanwhile, the PDP has rejected the results as declared by INEC, saying it does not reflect what actually played out during the election in the zone.