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Philippine Mayor Killed At Manila Airport

Gunmen have shot dead a town mayor and three other people at Manila Airport in the Philippines on Friday, sending travellers fleeing for safety.

The mayor of the town of Labangan in Zamboanga del Sur province, Ukol Talumpa, was killed together with his wife, an 18-month-old baby and one other person.

Manila Airport manager, Jose Honrado, said four other people were wounded in the incident.

Honrado, speaking alongside Manila police officials at a news conference, said that Talumpa was waiting for a ride with his family outside an airport terminal when the gunmen on a motorcycle shot him and others at close range.

“Airport security force chased the gunmen but they escaped on their vehicle in the heavy late-morning traffic outside the terminal,” Honrado said.

He added that the authorities did not know the identity of the attackers nor the motive behind the attack.

“Government agencies are trying their best to determine the perpetrators and bring them to justice,” Honrado said.

Talumpa, a member of the political opposition, won a hotly contested electoral contest for mayor of Labangan in last May’s local elections.

News reports in the Philippines said Talumpa had survived several other attempts on his life, including a September 2012 grenade attack in Pagadian city where he was vice-mayor, and a 2010 shooting in Manila that left he and a nephew wounded.

Manila’s Ninoy Aquino International Airport is named after prominent opposition politician Benigno Aqunio, who was shot dead there in 1983 as he arrived home from self-exile. His son, also Benigno Aqunio, is now the country’s president.

President Jonathan Approves Privatisation Of Nigeria’s Four Refineries

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The Bureau of Public Enterprise, BPE, said on Friday in Abuja that President Goodluck Jonathan has approved the privatisation of the nation’s four refineries.

The four refineries are Port Harcourt Refining Company Ltd. (PHRC) I, Port Harcourt Refining Company Ltd. (PHRC) II, Kaduna Refining and Petrochemical Company Ltd. (KRPC) and Warri Refining and Petrochemical Company Ltd. (WRPC).

According to a statement signed by the head of public communications of BPE, Chigbo Anichebe, the approval for the privatisation of the refineries is in keeping with the economic reform programme of the Jonathan administration which seeks to provide an enabling environment for private sector driven economy.

It said that the President also approved the constitution of a steering committee chaired by the minister of petroleum resources, Diezani Alison- Madueke, which consists of stakeholders from relevant ministries and agencies for the privatisation process.

Other members of the committee are the minister of finance, Ngozi Okojo-Iweala, the minister of power, Chinedu Nebo, minister of labour, Emeka Wogu, the supervising minister of national planning, Bashir Yuguda, minister of mines and steel development, Musa Mohammed Sada and minister of justice, Bello Adoke.

Anichebe said the steering committee will advise the National Council on Privatisation, NCP, headed by Vice President Namadi Sambo on the best way to privatise the refineries.

“The committee will review the diagnostic reports and recommendations of the transaction advisors and make recommendations to the NCP, propose modalities and make recommendations on labour matters to ensure a successful privatisation,” he said.

They will also oversee the general process, make recommendations and carry out any other ancillary activities relevant to the attainment of the goals of the federal government in the privatisation of the nation’s refineries.

Meanwhile, the director general of the BPE, Benjamin Dikki, pledged the commitment of committee to carry out the privatisation exercise in a transparent mannner.

“The directives we have is to conduct the privatisation process transparently, complying with due process and international best practice. We are expected to improve on the high standards set in the power sector transaction, which has received accolades all over the world as being very transparent,” he said.

Dikki added that further details on the transaction structure and time table would be announced after the steering committee’s inaugural meeting.

Workers Protest Appointment Of New Pro-Chancellor For UNN

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Administrative and academic activities were paralysed at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, UNN, on Friday as the workers protested the appointment of a new Pro-Chancellor for the institution.

The federal government on Thursday appointed Emmanuel Ukala, as the new pro-chancellor/chairman of the governing council of the University of Nigeria. Nnsukka, UNN, following the suspension of its former one, Emeke Enjere.

The protesters comprising members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, Non-Academic Staff Union, NASU, and National Association of Academic Technologists, NAAT, paraded the campus singing solidarity songs in support of Enejere.

Addressing the protesters, chairman of the UNN branch of ASUU, Ifeanyi Abada, demanded the immediate and unconditional reinstatement of Enejere, urging the federal government to give reasons for the suspension of the former pro- chancellor.

“We reject any appointment of a new pro-chancellor until the government tells the public the crime committed by the suspended council chairman. We do not have any problem with the pro-chancellor,’’ he said.

In his remarks, the NASU chairman, Godfrey Ugwu, said the staff had resolved to continue the protest until the government reinstated the suspended pro-chancellor.

Spokesman for NAAT, Anthony Onwu, said he wondered why the government did not consult with relevant unions in the university before taking its decision.

The protesters were in black dresses during the protest

Christmas Day Bomber, Kabir Sokoto Jailed For Life

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The 2011 Christmas Day bomber, Kabir Sokoto Umar has been sentenced by a Federal High Court in Abuja to life in prison for the bombing of St. Theresa’s Catholic Church, Madalla, in Niger State.
Justice Adeniyi Ademola gave the sentence on Friday after declaring Umar guilty of the two-count charge against him.
“The prosecution has proved their case beyond reasonable doubt in the two-count charge. Umar is guilty as charged,” the judge ruled.
He held that the convict belonged to an illegal organisation, Boko Haram, and facilitated terrorist acts intended to bomb the Police Headquarters in Sokoto State.
Justice Ademola also held that Umar had information about the planning and bombing of St. Theresa’s Catholic Church, Madalla, on December 25, 2011 but failed to disclose such to security agencies.
The first charge is punishable with a life sentence, and the second charge attracts 10 years imprisonment under Section 7(1) under Terrorism Act, 2011.
The judge described the convict as a pathological liar who did not show remorse throughout the trial.
He commended the prosecution counsel for a job well done, as well as the Department of State Security Service, SSS, for the diligence in investigating the matter and bringing the trial to a conclusion.
The judge, however, noted that the police were not able to investigate the circumstance that brought Umar to the Borno Governor’s Lodge in Abuja, where he was arrested on January 14, 2012.
He urged them to investigate the matter with a view to bringing to justice whoever was involved in helping Umar to hide in the lodge, no matter how highly placed.
Umar was arraigned by the SSS on April 19, in connection with the December 25, 2011 bombing of St. Theresa’s Catholic Church, Madalla, Niger.

Several Insurgents Killed In Foiled Attack On Military Base In Bama

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Musdapha Ilo, Maiduguri

A “massive” attack was staged by members of the banned terrorist group, Boko Haram on Friday in Bama, Borno state whivc left several persons dead.

An exact figure of the casualty cannot be ascertained at the moment but the military said several members of the deadly sect were killed in the attack targeted at one of the army barracks in the state.

Eyewitnesses who spoke with our correspondent expressed fears that some innocent civilians may have also been caught in the crossfire in which Improvised Explosive Devices, IEDs. and petrol-bombs were freely used.

The attackers were said to have tried to gain entrance into the barrack through the Cameroonian border road of Gulumba, but the army soon got wind of the plan and in a repel attack killed some members of the sect..

Confirming the incident Friday in Maiduguri, the acting spokesman of 7 Division of Nigerian Army, Aliyu Danja, a Captain, said there was an attempted attack on a barrack in Bama, which was made by suspected Boko Haram terror suspects, but they were repelled and crushed.

“The soldiers were able to kill several members of the Islamist sect,” he said.

Danja said several arms and vehicles used by members of the sect in the attack were destroyed, adding that details on the number of casualty will be made available to journalists when the troops return from the fields.

Also confirming the attack, the director, Defence Information, Chris Olukolade, a Major-General, said Bama barracks was attacked by terrorists who came from cells located across Nigerian Border with Cameroun through Banki town.

“High caliber weapons such as anti-aircraft and rocket propelled guns were freely used in the attack that lasted several hours,” he said.

According to the statement, ground troops backed by the Air Force repelled the attack and are in pursuit of the insurgents, even as reinforcement has been dispatched to enhance the operation.


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“Details of casualties recorded in the incident will be released when the ongoing cordon and search operations in the general area is concluded,” he added.

Normalcy is being been restored in the barracks and the surrounding communities have been properly secured.

Bama, which is about 65km from Maiduguri the state capital has witnessed some of the fiercest attacks launched by terrorists in the state, forcing residents to flee to neighbouring towns for safety, leaving it deserted.

Gov Kwankwaso Dumps PDP For APC

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Governor Rabi’u Kwankwaso of Kano State has formally dumped the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP and has declared membership for the All progressives Congress, APC.

This is coming barely 24 hours after the mass defection of 37 House Representative members from the ruling party to the new opposition.

Kwankwaso made the declaration shortly after a meeting with former PDP stakeholders at the Government House, Kano, on Thursday.

He said he found it necessary to leave the PDP in order to bring about democratic change in the country.

“It is imperative to leave the old order and embrace the new order found in the APC to bring about democratic change in Nigeria,’’ he said.

The governor, who hoisted the flag of the APC in the midst of party supporters from the 44 local government areas of the state, promised to carry everybody along in order to move the state forward.

The APC flag had also been hoisted at the main gate of the Government House, Kano.

FG To Evacuate 200 Nigerians Trapped In CAR

As the sectarian violence in the Central African Republic, CAR, which began in March following the overthrow of President Francois Bozize rages, the federal government has perfected plans to evacuate 200 Nigerians trapped in Bangui, the country’s capital.

Chairman, House of Representatives committee on foreign affairs, Nnenna Ukeje, who disclosed this during a live interview on NTA network news, said the 200 Nigerians were currently taking refuge at the Nigeria Embassy in Bangui.

She said the committee had engaged the foreign affairs ministry and the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, to immediately provide an aircraft for their evacuation

According to Ukeje, there are about 30,000 Nigerians living in CAR.

Human Rights Watch reported that Christian militia fighters in CAR have committed atrocities against Muslims in a cycle of violence that “threatens to spin out of control.”

Emergencies director for Human Rights Watch, Peter Bouckaert, said the “potential for further mass violence is shockingly high.”

The UN estimates that about 600 people have been killed in less than two weeks while some 210,000 people have been forced from their homes in the capital alone.

Earlier this month, the UN Security Council authorised an African-led and French-backed peacekeeping force to quell the spiralling violence.

France has deployed 1,600 troops under the UN mandate to help the African peacekeeping force to restore security in the country.

Gov Oshiomhole Chides Striking Doctors In Edo

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Caption: Gov Oshiomhole Shaking hands with Abe Eghe of the Joint Action Committee of the Medical and Dental Consultants Association

From Jefferson Ibiwale, Benin

Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State on Thursday, lashed out doctors in the state for abandoning their jobs and embarking on a warning strike in solidarity with their colleagues under the payroll of the federal government.

He described the action of the doctors as provocative, illegal, avoidable and unnecessary.

It would be recalled that doctors across the country under the umbrella of the Nigeria Medical Association, NMA, began a five-day warning strike to protest failure of the federal government to keep to a deal on improved welfare for workers and funding for healthcare.

But Oshiomhole in a meeting with the Association of Resident Doctors, Medical and Dental Consultants Association in government House in Benin, said doctors in the state had no business joining the strike when the issues behind the strike had no direct impact on them.

He said as staff of the state government, their salaries and other emoluments were taken care of by the state, adding that the doctors had no right abandoning their jobs for a solidarity strike without first seeking the permission of its employer.

“If you have any grievances you are obliged by law, you are obliged by tradition, you are actually compelled by your own oath not to abandon your patients off as if there is pleasure…The Federal Government has no hand in your employment, no hand in your promotion and they have no hand in your posting… So, I believe therefore, that even if we are to talk in the context of employer-employee relationship, you are obliged by law to state the particulars of your grievances to your employer,” the governor said.

According to the governor, the underlying reason behind the strike may be to enrich those doctors engaged in private practices by shutting down public hospitals so that those who are sick have no choice but to go to private clinics and where they cannot afford the bills, are left to die.

“If solidarity was the basis of your participation, why are doctors in the private practice not part of the action? It is a gross abuse of your skills. It borders on blackmail on the entire system and holds all of us to ransom. ‘When a doctor no longer borders about the life of a patient, that is the beginning of the end,” Oshiomhole said.

He said even if doctors in the state feel obliged to join their colleagues in registering their dissatisfaction, they are to join in the strike days or weeks after the initial start off date as a form of secondary action and not in the manner that they have done as if they were directly affected.

“I do understand the logic and essence of solidarity, but in this business, before you resort to solidarity action, people who are themselves directly involved in the dispute may choose on their own to first go on strike. If after sometime you feel that no one is listening and there is need to reinforce by way of solidarity, subject to the rule of law, then you can decide to go on a secondary action. I am not aware that you can go on strike the same day as those who are directly affected,” he said.

Responding on behalf of the others, Eghe Abe said the ssociation would convene to consider the position of the governor in the interest of the state.

 

CBN Recants On Missing $49.8 Billion

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The governor of Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, has reversed his position on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC’s unremitted $49.8 billon being proceeds from oil sales, saying he never said the sum was missing.

Sanusi who appeared before the Senate committee on finance on Wednesday, said he only asked for investigations into the matter, adding that “in truth, there is no missing money. Chairman, we did not see the letter as a conclusion of our investigation, but an invitation to investigate.”

“So, the conclusion that $49.8 billion was missing was wrong, even though we had the allegation that it was un-remitted,” Sanusi said.

According to him, after reconciliation meetings with a technical team from the bank, the ministry of finance, ministry of petroleum resources, the Federal Inland Revenue Service, FIRS, and the Department Of Petroleum Resources, DPR, the CBN discovered a shortfall of only $12 billion.

Sanusi also expressed regrets that a private letter written to the President was leaked to the public and pleaded for more time to enable the CBN, NNPC and all relevant agencies come up with a collective figure.

“What I would like to do is, given the progress we have made, to request that we be given little more time to continue with this process and come back with the final position that is a common position among us if the committee will so grant us,” he requested

However, the Senate says it will continue investigations into the matter.

Speaking earlier, Senate President, David Mark, noted that the controversial amount was still an allegation but stressed that it was a serious one.

“At this point, all that we have is an allegation, but it is a serious allegation. The essence of this public heading is to establish the fact. It’s for us to get facts so that when we come back we can make useful and meaningful contributions,” he said.

He urged members of the committee to remains unbiased and deal with the matter objectively according to available facts.

Sanusi had alleged in a letter to President Goodluck Jonathan dated September 25 that the NNPC had failed to remit $49.8 billion between 2012 and 2013 but the NNPC had said that no money was missing.

Nasarawa To Conduct Council Polls In March

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By Godwin Ojoshimite

Nasarawa Indepndent Electoral Commission, NASIEC, has fixed March 15, 2014 for elections into all the local government areas is the state.

Chairman of the commission, Abdullahi Moddibo, announced the new date on Wednesday while briefing journalists in Lafia, the state capital.

Moddibo, who also released the detailed timetable for the election said the commission is committed to conducting a free, fair and ncredible elections.

He said the ban on political campaign had been lifted with the release of the time table, adding that political party primaries are scheduled to hold between January 4 and 13, 2014.

He said all logistic arrangements for the polls had been concluded, including the recruitment and trainning of ad-hoc staff for the exercise.

The NASIEC chairman appealed to politicians in the state to play the game with all sense of decorum in order to ensure hitch-free polls in the state.

He also appealed to members of the public to sustain the relative peace in the state, stressing that it would enhance successful polls in the interest of all.

The commission had earlier fixed December 14,2013 for the election but had to post-pone it, citing security challenges facing the state as a reason.