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FG Clears Buratai Over Assets

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COAS, Turkur Buratai
COAS, Turkur Buratai

The Federal Government has investigated and cleared the Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai over his assets and military acquisitions just as the nature of his offshore investments has been shown to be based on capital market principles of shareholding.

Investigators found that the capital market principle that governed the properties in issue was akin to having shares in companies instead of wholly owning the properties.

The government, after investigating a recent media report over the acquisition of properties in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, UAE, by General Buratai, discovered that he and his wives invested as “shareholders” like many other persons in the properties mentioned in the publications and were not the sole owners.

A competent source told the media that “If you know the properties being referred to, you would know that they are like quoted companies. You buy into them and get dividends as profit from your investments. You can also do your own private findings on this fact”.

An intelligence military officer involved in the investigation also confirmed that apart from declaring the assets as required by law, “the Dubai property is real estate investment tailored to operate on capital market principles of shares for dividends and profits as proceeds from investment rather than total ownership of the property.”

The source further disclosed that Buratai had been into farming since he was a major. “The large scale farm produces grains, cassavas, millets and also has fish pond apart from variety of animal and reptile that provides specialized nutrients and medicament for different clients. The 1999 Constitution (as amended) under Fifth Schedule Part 1- permits a public officer to engage in farming,” the officer said.

While Defence Minister, Muhammad Mansur Dan-Ali has come out publicly to disclose that the Army Chief did not hide the properties, as he declared them on more than one occasion to both the Nigerian Army and Code of Conduct Bureau, CCB, other investigations further buttressed the transparency in all the deals.

It was gathered that Buratai had declared his assets as Commander of the Multi-National Joint Task Force and as Chief of Army Staff to the Code of Conduct Bureau where all the assets were disclosed.

It was also gathered that his two wives have been operating a quasi-micro finance social intervention scheme called ‘Sana’armu’ which means “our collective enterprise,” where they earn profits from soft-loan businesses that also help budding entrepreneurs to start their businesses.

While it was discovered that General Buratai did not operate any Skye Bank account as alleged in the recent media report, the special rugged vehicles that were procured for counter-insurgency campaigns were found to be brand new.

The officer said: “The rugged buffalo vehicles are not only brand new but they are 2014 model that were imported from Libya rather than from Niger as alleged.”

There are suspicions that some officers affected in the recent compulsory retirement of officers may be involved in the smear campaign against the COAS, but the source said Buratai has been more focused on prosecuting the ongoing anti-terrorism operations than engaging in the politics of witch-hunting anyone.

The officer said that “General Buratai has taken personal efforts to ensure that innocent officers are not unduly sanctioned and had suggested retirement rather than dismissal on some of the offences to protect the image of the military.

“In fact that was the reason he always guards against disclosure of the identities of affected officers to avoid stigmatisation. Even though many officers and friends are disturbed about recent campaigns against him, General Buratai has remained calm leaving everything to God,” the source added.

Qatar donates food items to Borno IDPs

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File: Donations to IDPs
File: Donations to IDPs

The Government of Qatar has donated food items valued at N6.5 million to Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs in Borno State, comprising of bags of rice, beans, millet, guinea corn, maize and gallons of palm oil.

Presenting the food items at the Borno State Government House, Maiduguri on Tuesday, Mohammed Ajur Director of Qatar Charity, said the food items was to complement “humanitarian assistance and intervention” of the United Nations and other donor agencies to the IDPs.

Ajur said the foundation in collaboration with the Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido and the Shehu of Borno, Abubakar Garbai El-Kanemi, donated the items to the Borno state government for onward distribution to the IDPs to cushion their hardships.

He thanked the royal fathers and state government for their cooperation and prayed for quick return of peace to the state and the country at large, while urging the government to ensure judicious distribution of the relief materials.

Receiving the materials on behalf of Governor Kashim Shettima, the Deputy Governor, Usman Durkwa thanked the government of Qatar and the NGO for their support and assistance to the state government and IDPs.

He called on other NGOs and humanitarian organisations to emulate them, while assuring that the items will be distributed to the right beneficiaries.

NNPC Holds Road-Show In China To Attract Investments

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Ibe-Kachikwu

The Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, has kicked off a road-show in the Chinese capital, Beijing aimed at attracting investments into the nation’s oil and gas industry.

Ibe Kachikwu, Minister of State for Petroleum, during the event described Nigeria as a reservoir of natural resources waiting to be tapped, urging Chinese investors to join their counterparts around the world who have invested in Nigeria and were doing well.

Kachikwu who also signed an agreement worth $30 million, stated that Nigeria was the preferred investor’s destination because of its liberal policies and quick returns on investment.

Anibor Kragha, a top NNPC official who presented the areas of investments to the businessmen, described Nigeria’s oil company as the biggest investment in the African continent. He assured the businessmen of a friendly environment and quick returns on investments in Nigeria’s oil industry

An indigenous investor in the oil industry, Bryant Orjiakor, who also took part in the roadshow, lent his voice to the attraction in the nation’s oil and gas industry.

Orjiakor said Nigeria’s oil and gas sector was a major platform on which the country aims to expand its economy, adding that the country’s population was an advantage for quick yields on investment.

Nigeria is targeting about $15 billion dollars foreign investment from China and the Gulf States to replace and expand ageing infrastructure in the oil industry.

Group Criticises Dickson For Extending Tenure Of Bayelsa Head of Service 

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Gov. Seriake Dickson
Bayelsa State Governor, Seriake Dickson

A pressure group, the Bayelsa First Initiative, BFI, has criticised the decision of Governor Seriake Dickson to extend the appointment of Head of Service of Bayelsa State, Peter Singabele, by six months with effect from 16 June 2016.

The BFI in a statement signed by Nathan Egba, its director-general, accused Dickson of manipulating public institutions and policies for his personal interest.

Serena Dokubo-Spiff, Secretary to the State Government, SSG, had in a statement on Monday, June 20, announced the governor’s approval of the elongation of the tenure of the HOS.

The BFI said it was worried as to why the governor would extend the services of the HOS after he had attained the mandatory retirement age of 60 or 35 years in service, even when there were competent civil servants in the state that could occupy the office.

“From the foregoing therefore, we are at a loss as to the basis for the decision to further extend Peter Singabele’s appointment as Head of Service after he had clocked the mandatory retirement age of 60 years or 35 years in service,” the statement reads.

“We in the BFI do not doubt Singabele’s integrity or capacity. If anything, we applaud his meritorious service to the state, but we do not believe that there is no other civil servant qualified enough to occupy that exalted office in the entire Bayelsa State civil service.

“If however, the governor’s claim that Singabele needed to be around to complete the reorganisation of the civil service is true, then we advise that he be given an appropriate political appointment that will empower him to complete that assignment and perhaps carry out other ones too.”

The BFI said the governor’s action was “in line with his penchant for manipulating government institutions and policies for his personal interest.”

“We remember vividly his unfortunate decision to sack the Head of Service he met, who was barely a year in office ostensibly because she was not the most senior Permanent Secretary at the time of her appointment by his predecessor in office, Chief Timipre Sylva.

“So then, why is he now suddenly bending the rules by not wanting to appoint the next most senior Permanent Secretary to the position of Head of Service?” the group queried.

The BFI therefore wants the governor  to rescind the decision to elongate the HOS’s stay in office so as to avoid setting a bad precedence and weakening the morale of civil servant.

Court Refuses To Acquit Former Nasarawa Governor Over Fraud Allegations

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Former Nasarawa State Governor, Abudullahi Adamu
Former Nasarawa State Governor, Abudullahi Adamu

Former Governor of Nasarawa State and Senator representing Nasarawa West at the Senate, Abdullahi Adamu, has failed in his bid to secure acquittal over a N15 billion misappropriation charge brought against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.

Adamu was arraigned in 2010 alongside twelve others for allegedly misappropriating Nasarawa state funds while he was governor of the state.

But on May 28, 2016, Manchi Danji, lead counsel for the EFCC, filed an application for the withdrawal of the case. This was accepted by the lead counsel of the respondents, Yusuf Goodluck, who also sought for an acquittal alongside the withdrawal request.

Delivering her ruling, on Tuesday, at the Federal High Court, Lafia, Justice A.A Okeke, ruled that the case has been discharged following the application of the prosecuting counsel and acceptance of the defendant counsel.

She however explained that the prosecutors had withdrawn the charge prior to the plea of acquittal by the defending counsel.

According to legal practitioners who were present in court, the ruling means that the EFCC can file a fresh charge against Adamu and the other accused persons.

FG To Restructure YouWin Programme

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YOUWIN Logo
YOUWIN Logo

The federal government is set to begin the restructuring and refocusing of the multi-billion naira Youth Enterprise With Innovation in Nigeria, YOUWIN, programme.

A director in the Ministry of Finance, Salisu Dambatta, made this known in a statement on Tuesday, adding that consultations are ongoing with beneficiaries and other stakeholders with the objective of injecting new ideas for the sustainability of the programme.

The ‘YOUWIN’ programme was initiated in 2011 during the Goodluck Jonathan Administration and under it, 18,000 young entrepreneurs have been trained in various aspects of Small and Medium Enterprises management and business skills.

At least 3,900 of them, including 1,200 women were each given non-repayable take-off grants ranging from one million to ten million naira to start-up businesses of their choice.

Dambatta said “The third edition of the programme, which is still running with 1,500 beneficiaries, has received the sum of N11.2 billion in funding, and so far, grants totaling N7.4 billion have been disbursed to awardees.” He added that “in June 2016 alone, the sum of N1.687 billion was paid to 638 awardees.”

Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun had said the YOUWIN programme had to be restructured to ensure efficiency, transparency, and accountability in investing the capital grants given to the beneficiaries by the federal government

She reiterated that government will meet all its commitments under the YOUWIN programme, but stressed that due diligence would be carried out on every beneficiary before disbursements.

The ministry of finance which has been running the programme since inception has scheduled a consultative meeting for July 22, in which representatives of the beneficiaries from the six geo-political zones and other stakeholders are expected to chart a way forward for the programme.

Court Remands Fani-Kayode, Nenadi Usman In Prison

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2016_6$largeimg21_Jun_2016_170139017gallery

Justice Sule Hassan of the federal high court, Lagos, has ordered that former ministers Femi Fani-Kayode and Nenadi Usman be remanded in prison pending the hearing of their bail applications in a suit brought against them by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.

The 17 count- charge filed against the accused persons border on unlawful retention, use and payment of money to the tune of about N4.9 billion.

Others charged alongside the former ministers were Danjuman Yussuf, Olubode Oke and Join Trust Dimensions Nigeria Limited.

In the charge, the accused persons were alleged to have committed the offences between January and March 2015.

They pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The Duo of Fani-Kayode and Usman, former ministers of aviation and finance respectively had played major roles in the failed presidential campaign of former President Goodluck Jonathan.

The accused persons are to remain in prison custody until Friday, July 1, to enable the prosecuting counsel study and respond to all the bail applications.


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US Might Bar Nigerian Legislators From Future Fellowships

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James Entwistle, US Ambassador to Nigeria
James Entwistle, US Ambassador to Nigeria

Following accusations of sexual misconduct levelled against three members of the House of Representatives by the United State Embassy in Nigeria, federal legislators might be barred from the prestigious International Visitors Leadership Programme, IVLP, and other fellowships sponsored by the American government.

A source in the American Embassy in Abuja who spoke to the www.icirnigeria.org on Monday on condition of anonymity said that the American government will take no action or prefer criminal charges against the legislators, but confided that the IVLP, the programme which took the legislators to the US, might be reviewed to exclude members of the National Assembly in future.

Such a ban could also involve other programmes sponsored by the American government or any of its agencies.

The United States Ambassador to Nigeria, James Entwistle, had in a letter to the leadership of the House of Representatives accused three legislators, Mohammed Gololo (APC Bauchi State), Simon Ikon (PDP Akwa Ibom) and Mark Gbillah (APC Benue) of sexual misconduct while on a US State Department – sponsored fellowship in Cleveland, United States.

While Gololo was accused of groping a hotel attendant, the other two lawmakers allegedly solicited for prostitutes by asking a parking attendant to look for women for them to sleep with.

All three of them have denied the allegations, with Gbillah threatening to slam a law suit on the US authorities for defaming his name.

Our source said that the embassy did not want the scandal to become public knowledge and insisted that the letter written by the Ambassador to the leadership of the House of Representatives must have been leaked from within the legislative chamber.

It was gathered that the embassy made attempts to handle the matter diplomatically and that the letter to the Speaker would have been unnecessary but for the attitude of the alleged offender legislators.

As part of efforts to handle the matter diplomatically, Ambassador Entwistle had brokered a meeting between all ten legislators who travelled for the programme and the Deputy Head of Mission at the embassy, Maria E. Brewer.

The meeting was ostensibly to make the legislators understand the enormity of such acts of misconduct, the implications for American/Nigerian relations and to get assurances that they would not reoccur.

However, it was gathered that the three legislators accused of misdemeanour got angry at the meeting and allegedly disrespected Brewer which led to a stalemate.

Angered by the attitude of the lawmakers and the disrespect shown his deputy, Entwistle, it was gathered, decided to intimate the leadership of the House of Representatives of what had happened.

Even then, the Ambassador expected the letter to the Speaker to be a private correspondence and was surprise, it was learnt, to read about its content in the media a few days later.

The accusations against the legislators are grave under US laws and can be punished by fines up to $10,000 or imprisonment of up to 20 years under federal law.

Many observers have questioned why the legislators were not arrested in the US by law enforcement agents before they flew back home. This is important in the light of several previous similar cases, including one involving Dominique Strauss – Khan, former French politician and ex IMF chief, who was prosecuted for sexual assault and attempted rape in New York in 2011.

Strauss – Khan allegedly sexually assaulted a maid, Nafissatou Diallo, at the New York Sofitel Hotel in May 2011. Charges were brought against him and a grand jury indicted him on May 19, 2011 but the charges were eventually dismissed by the judge after the prosecution confessed that its case was near collapse due to the hotel housekeeper’s “diminished credibility.”

In the Nigerian legislators’ case, however, the American authorities did not involve law enforcement and allowed them return home before complaining.

However, the embassy source who spoke to this website said that the hotel called the programme officer attached to the fellows rather than law enforcement agents when a complaint was lodged and that that person decided to inform the State Department which in turn chose to handle the matter diplomatically.

Had the American authorities decided to take up the matter, the legislators would have been immediately arrested after the complaints were lodged against them and charged for misdemeanour or, possibly, felony, which carries stiffer penalties.

In the United States, laws differ from state to state although there are also federal laws that deal with sexual misconduct or harassment. Under federal law, a charge of sexual assault could fetch a penalty of up to $10,000 or up to 20 years imprisonment.

However, in the state of Ohio where the alleged offences were committed, Gololo would have been charged with “unwanted offensive touching,” a third grade misdemeanour offence that could be upgraded to fourth or fifth grade offence if the accused is found to be HIV/AIDS positive. Penalty could be fine or imprisonment of between two to ten years.

Soliciting for prostitutes, which includes negotiating with a third party, a pimp, madam or any other person, for the services of a prostitute, is also misdemeanour that could be upgraded to a felony that could impose a ten year jail term upon a guilty verdict.

Happily, however, whatever the case, the American Embassy has said that it will not pursue the matter or press charges. Even then, the last may not have been heard about the matter as at least one of the accused lawmakers has threatened to sue the American authorities.

Gbillah has said he would file a suit against the American embassy to claim damages for the disrepute brought upon his name by the allegations.

NGOs Are Benefiting From The Misery Of IDPs – Gov Shettima

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Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima
Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima

Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima has accused some Non-Governmental Organisations, NGOs, involved in some projects relating to Internally Displaced Persons in his state as living on the pains of his people rather than for it.

The governor made this declaration on Monday while delivering a keynote address at a High Level Emergency Round-table on the Humanitarian Crisis in Borno State which was held at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel in Abuja.

The meeting was convened by Ayoade Olatunbosun – Alakija, CEO of AOA Global, a humanitarian outfit working with the Borno State Government.

He said “some NGOs are taking huge advantage of the pains of internally displaced persons in Borno State and defrauding foreign philanthropists under the pretense of trying to help victims of the Boko Haram insurgency.”

Shettima, spoke in support of the disclosure by the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Nigeria, Mohammed Safieldin who had earlier said at the meeting that ‘most of the pictures of critically malnourished infants, children and some adults in circulation all over the social media since last week were those of victims recently rescued by the armed forces from the hands of Boko Haram fighters who held them hostage for years”.

The governor lamented that some NGOs go in search of such victims and take their photographs which they share to the world targeting unsuspecting philanthropists to part with funds for the purpose of helping the displayed victims while the fund end up in private pockets.

He added: “I need to open up here by saying that in the midst of credible organisations trying to help us in Borno, we have seen occasional instances of some ‘business groups’ masquerading as NGOs smiling to the Bank on the agony of our people. I do not mean to disrespect any sincere NGO but there are those I have seen, whose only interest is to go round thousands of IDPs and figure out sick and skinny looking infants, pose for the cameras with them and upload on the social media mainly to attract funding from concerned philanthropists abroad.

“I have seen one example where someone I wouldn’t mention simply sent out horrible pictures of malnourished infants with a caption, DONATE. I think these children, bad as their situation might be, deserve to be respected no matter how much we want to help. We must respect the dignity of post-conflict victims as much we desire to be respected as humans”.

The Governor, who also reacted to a statement issued by the Médecins Sans Frontières otherwise called Doctors Without Borders, that there was acute malnutrition at the IDPs camp in Bama with more than hundreds deaths, mostly children, said the MSF did not put their statement in a proper context, a situation he said was not quite helpful.

Shettima said: “Yes, the situation is almost overwhelming, the challenges frightening, but we are doing our best to confront them. It is common knowledge to this audience that the operation and management of Internally Displaced Persons camps are historically replete with a litany of problems. Even camps located in advanced countries like the Calais Jungle in France or more professionally managed ones like the Dadaab Refugee Camp in Kenya are not without their bouquet of challenges.

‘It is against this backdrop that I would like to admonish us to exercise some degree of caution and restrain as we strive to bring the myriad of problems associated with the management of a humanitarian crisis of the scale existing in Borno Sate in particular and the North East in general to an end.

“While we do not deny that the challenges the report tried to convey do exist, sufficient justice was not done to the fact that the Borno State Government, a few reputable NGOs, domestic and International and of course, the U.N. institutions are doing everything within the limits of available resources to frontally address them.”

He regretted that MSF Statement issued last week completely ignored the fact that interventions were already being made to address the unfortunate cases of malnutrition at the Bama IDPs Camp.

He said over 100 Children were hospitalized out of over 1000 malnourished Children and adults evacuated from Bama and placed under special care in Maiduguri. A team was also constituted to evacuat 478 Children and 219 adults on Monday, the 13th of June, 2016 and all of them were immediately taken to a Special Care Unit and 61 Children hospitalized, he stated.

The roundtable was attended by Minister of Health, Isaac Adewole, Permanent Secretary of the State House, heads of different organs of the United Nations and Donor Agencies including the European Union, the United States Agency for International Development, the British Department for International Development and other actors.

“Five IDPs Will Die Every Hour If ……” UN Says

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Children at an IDP camp
Children at an IDP camp

The United Nations says Nigeria will be losing five Internally Displaced Persons every hour at the various IDP camps across the country if nothing is done to scale up interventions for their food and medicare.

Mohammed Safieldin, the UN humanitarian coordinator to Nigeria, made the shocking revelation at an emergency meeting with donor agencies and the Borno State Government in Abuja.

He said that over 200,000 persons, mainly children are at the risk of dying from malnutrition in Borno State as humanitarian needs of IDPs continue to rise.

This is coming at a time the Borno of State Governor, Kashim Shettima has expressed disappointment over what he described as the tactical withdrawal of support by the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA.

Shettima alleged that the last time NEMA supplied food to the IDPs was in February.

He urged donor agencies and philanthropists to look beyond the IDP camps as some returnees are facing similar food and healthcare challenges in their various communities.

Minister of Health, Isaac Adewole assured that government will give priority attention to the needs of victims of insurgency.

On June 16, ICIR reporter, Samuel Malik, who traveled to the Maiduguri had reported that “Urgent intervention was required to forestall a humanitarian crisis of grave proportions at the Internally Displaced Persons Camp in Bama, where hundreds are at the risk of dying.”

“Hygiene and sanitation in the camp is horrible. The environment is filthy, with faecal matter littering the whole place because, unbelievably, there are no toilets. When people need to use the toilet, they just go behind their makeshift shelter to ease themselves,

“The shelters are made by the displaced persons themselves with zinc, which they get from dilapidated buildings in the town. There is inadequate ventilation and when it rains, it is a sorry sight as the shelters can hardly protect them from the rain.”

Read Malik’s Report Here.