Home Blog Page 3374

NSCDC Distances Agency From Land Racketeering

0

The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, NSCDC, has said that the 61 houses and 45 plots of lands recently seized by officials of the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission, ICPC, does not belong to the organisation.

Chairman of the ICPC, Ekpo Nta, told the Senate last week that his commission had seized the properties spread across the Federal Capital Territory and Nasarawa, from a top NSCDC official.

According to a statement signed by its public relations officer, Emmanuel Okeh, on behalf of the NSCDC Commandant-General, Ade Abolurin, the para-military agency stressed that “the property seized by the ICPC do not belong to NSCDC; rather, they belong to some indicted officers who are currently under investigations.”

It said the seized property were purportedly acquired with proceeds of the illegal land sales by the scammers.

Abolurin noted that the NSCDC is not involved in sales of land and did not at any time delegate persons, organisations or agents to do so on its behalf, adding that it neither has land for sale, or any housing estate in its name.

He said the mandate of the corps as a para-military agency was to protect and safeguard the critical infrastructure of government and the country’s national assets.

It listed some of the assets as petroleum pipelines, power transmission equipment and telecommunication installations, among others.

The commandants said further: “The corps, therefore, does not have any business with the purported land sales and the officers who are culpable must be sanctioned according to the law.

House Of Reps Investigates NNPC Over New Oil Scam

0

The House of Representatives on Tuesday mandated three of its committees to investigate the alleged connivance of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, with some Swiss oil dealers to “rob” Nigeria of billions of dollars.

The committees are Petroleum Resources (Upstream), Petroleum Resources (Downstream) and Justice.

The resolution followed a motion moved by Abiodun Balogun (APC-Ogun), at plenary which was adopted without debate when put to vote by the deputy speaker, Emeka Ihedioha.

The motion was titled “Urgent need to investigate the alleged connivance of NNPC with Swiss oil dealers to rob Nigeria of billions of dollars”.

Balogun noted that there had been a long standing allegation of secrecy surrounding the operations of the NNPC and the oil industry.

According to him, the National Assembly had carried out several previous investigations into the sector with far reaching recommendations which has saved Nigeria billions of Naira.

The legislator expressed concern that there are still allegations of corruption in the sector in spite of the actions of the National Assembly.

He further expressed concern over the new report by a Swiss non governmental advocacy organisation, the Berne Declaration, which detailed how NNPC connived with major Swiss oil trading companies.

Balogun said the report showed how Swiss oil trading companies were draining Nigeria of billions of dollars in revenue through the sale of crude oil below the market value.

He said that the report entitled “Swiss Traders Opaque Deals in Nigeria’’, detailed the schemes employed by NNPC and foreign oil companies to dupe the country.

The lawmaker was worried that the Berne Declaration had described the Nigerian oil scam as the greatest fraud Africa had ever known.

According to Balogun, the Berne report specifically mentioned Vitol and Transfigura Commodity Trading Firms (NNPC partners) in the shady deals.

He said the report also accused the NNPC and its subsidiaries of not publishing detailed reports since 2005.

Balogun urged the relevant committees to wade into the matter and find out the truth concerning the allegations.

“I am not passing judgment here, but our economy is at stake, I am only asking that an investigation be done to ascertain the truth” he said.

Jonathan Postpones 2014 Budget Presentation

0

The Senate on Tuesday in Abuja said President Goodluck Jonathan had postponed the presentation of the 2014 budget due to “certain exigencies’’.

Jonathan had written to the National Assembly last week seeking to present the budget proposal to a joint session of the National Assembly on November 12.

The chairman, Senate Committee on Information, Media and Public Affairs, Enyinnaya Abaribe, told newsmen that no further reason was given by the presidency for the postponement.

He said the postponement was conveyed in a correspondence to the lawmakers.

“It was supposed to happen today, but the President wrote to the National Assembly asking that the event be put off till November 19 due to exigencies that were beyond the control of the Presidency.

“The reasons were not made known, but if the President asks us to give him one more week I don’t think there is any reason for us to start looking for the `whys’,” the said.

The Senate spokesman, however, added that both chambers of the National Assembly were looking forward to hosting and listening to Jonathan during the joint session on November 19.

Abaribe said it was wrong as being insinuated that the postponement was because of the lawmakers’ inability to debate and pass the Medium Term Expenditure Framework, MTEF.

He said the MTEF report had been presented to the Senate.

Abaribe also said there was the possibility that the budget could be passed before the end of the year.


READ ALSO:


“Miracles have been known to happen and another miracle can happen and we will pass it. We will do our best within the time limit that we have,’’ he said.

The senator said the National Assembly was, beyond passing the budget 2014, far more focused on making sure that the 2013 budget was fully implemented.

“We also expect that the 2013 budget will be fully implemented because Nigerians need everything that can improve our economy,’’ he told newsmen.

Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa Hold Labour Summit

0

Trade Union organisations from Ghana, South Africa and Nigeria, will converge in Abuja, on Wednesday, for the second tri-lateral conference of workers organisations from the three countries.

Addressing the media, Vice President of Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, and Chairman, International Committee of the NLC, Issa Aremu, said the conference will give the participants the opportunity to among other things, share ideas about workers conditions in their respective countries.

They will also exchange ideas on how to improve the lives of their members.

Aremu, said that the conference would provide a veritable platform for the three organisations to strengthen the cooperation among them as well as re-position the trade unions in Africa to face the challenges in the place of work.

The three unions which are the Labour Centres in their countries, are the Congress of South African Trade Unions COSATU, Ghana Trade Union Congress GTUC and the Nigeria Labour Congress NLC.

The tri-lateral conference, the second in its series, is expected to host over 200 delegates from the affiliate unions.

According to Aremu “the forthcoming forum creates opportunity for the unions in South Africa and Ghana to meet with their Nigerian counterparts to exchange views on how to promote closer cooperation between the unions in the three countries.”

“It also complements the good relations between governments of the three great countries of Africa. It is a practical example of people to people international relations,” he said.

The conference, scheduled to be declared open by Vice President Namadi Sambo, has the theme “Working class solidarity for poverty eradication; the imperative for industrilisation and decent jobs in Africa”.

PDP Suspends Oyinlola, Baraje, Others

0

The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, on Monday suspended Olagunsoye Oyinlola, who was reinstated by a Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja, last Thursday.

In a swift reaction to the action, Oyinlola said it was taken in disobedience of the order of the Court of Appeal, adding that this was the kind of impunity that many members of the party were fighting.

Others suspended members are former acting national chairman of the party’s faction, Abubakar Kawu Baraje, former deputy national chairman, Sam Sam Jaja and Ibrahim Kazuare.

Monday’s action by the party to suspend the members is  interpreted by political analysts as calculated to forestall any move by the New PDP to enforce Oyinlola’s reinstatement.

The PDP has also directed that the four suspended party members face the national disciplinary committee of the party headed by Umaru Dikko.

The national publicity secretary of PDP, Olisa Metuh, who addressed journalists on the issue on Monday, said the decision to suspend the four persons, was in line with Section 58 of its Constitution.

Section 58 (1) states: “Subject to the provision of this constitution, the party shall have power to discipline any member who (b) commits any breach of the party’s constitution and or manifesto; (g) engages in disorderly conduct at meetings or rallies or at any party function; (h) engages in any conduct likely to cause disaffection among members of the party or is likely to disrupt the peaceful, lawful and efficient conduct of the business of the party; (i) engages in unauthorised publicity of disputes within the party or create a parallel party organ at any level.”

Oyinlola in his reaction said the suspension “is part of the impunity we are protesting against. None of us has been queried or requested to give explanations for any alleged offence.”

He reasoned that if their suspension was a reaction to the issue of the New PDP, “why did they decide to leave out the serving state governors, senators and members of the House of Representatives who have been very vocal?”

“It’s all an attempt to circumvent the ruling of the Court of Appeal,” he said but added, “certainly, the last has not been heard on this matter and I am sure that the truth will prevail over falsehood.”

Spanish Police Arrests 25 In Nigerian Sex-Trafficking Ring

Spanish police say they have arrested 25 people in a sex-trafficking ring that brought women from Nigeria to work as prostitutes.

The women, allegedly lured with the promise of good jobs in Europe, were first flown to Mexico or Brazil, travelling with false documents.From there, they were flown to Paris, then smuggled into Spain to work in the sex trade, police say.

Five women who were victims of the sex ring were freed in the raids.

Police found one member of the gang performing an abortion on one of the five women, the BBC reported.

The arrests, apparently coordinated,  were made across Spain – in Madrid, Toledo, Cantabria and Palma de Mallorca.

More than 100 vans concealing luxury goods were also seized.

The gang used the vans to launder their profits and send them back to Lagos, police say.

The vans, with dark-tinted windows and welded doors, were stocked full of beer but had luxury items hidden deeper inside.

Police say the gang was formed more than 20 years ago in Nigerian universities and was also known for sending scam  letters by email, asking recipients to send money.

Taraba House Gets New Speaker

0

Josiah Kente on Monday emerged new Speaker of the Taraba State House of Assembly after an election that resolved to retain the position for the Taraba south senatorial zone.

Kente who was former deputy majority leader, replaces Haruna Tsokwa who died on November 4 after a brief illness.

Monday’s election comes after an assassination attempt on the deputy speaker, Adamu Maikarfi, on Sunday by four masked gunmen who trailed him to the residence of one of his relations but unfortunately did not find him there.

Maikarfi said he would not be intimidated by those who are bent on stunting the growth and development of the state, adding that the matter had since been reported to the police.

After Kente’s appointment, the Taraba lawmakers also announced the names of nominees for the post of commissioners sent to them by the Acting Governor, Garba Umar.

The screening of the nominees will commence on Tuesday.

Borno Welcomes Federal Aid To Victims of Boko Haram Insurgency

0

Musdapha Ilo, Maiduguri

The Borno state governor, Kashim Shettima on Monday hailed the decision of the federal government to give assistance to the victims of Boko Haram insurgency, saying such a move was long awaited.

The governor in a statement by his special adviser on communications, Isa Umar Gusau, said the willingness expressed by the federal government to set up a committee that will work out assistance to the victims of the insurgency was one of the greatest news for the people of the Borno state.


READ ALSO:


He said although no material assistance can be adequate for a child that lost one or both parents or for someone that lost a loved one, the assistance will go a long way in alleviating the sufferings of victims, as well as accelerating their recovery.

“We will be very glad to see the actualization of this important promise and our citizens are anxiously looking forward to this support which they also deserve as Nigerians,” Shettima said.

The governor also noted that peace has returned to Maiduguri, Bama, Biu and other urban areas affected by terrorist activities and commended the efforts of security agencies as well as youth volunteer for their sacrifice in restoring peace to the state

Alakio Massacre: Commission Concludes Enquiry

0

By Godwin Ojoshimite

The Judicial Commission of enquiry probing the massacre of security operatives in Alakio and other related issues concluded its public hearing Monday with a firm assurance that the panel’s recommendations will guarantee fairness to all.

The commission, which opened the floor for the submission memoranda on July 22, rounded off its public sitting after receiving addresses from counsels.

Delivering his closing remark, the chairman of the commission Joseph Fola Gbadeyan, a retired Justice said it received a total of 22 memoranda, seven of them belonging to Eggon communities which were read by the commission’s secretary after the people of the area withdrew their participation.

He added that in the course of the proceedings, the commission took evidence from 89 witnesses including first class rulers.

Justice Gbadeyan explained that for the purpose of fair hearing, the state governor, Tanko Al-Makura, waved his immunity and offered evidence on some critical issues raised at the commission by individuals and groups.

He reiterated the commission’s commitment to the cause of fairness, justice and equity as stated in its inaugural remark.

“The commission will carefully study all memoranda, evaluate only the admissible evidence adduced before us in addition to all the exhibits tendered and admitted with a view to coming up with proven findings of facts before arriving at appropriate recommendations”, he said.

The chairman added that” the relevant recommendations, it is hoped, will accord with demands of justice and at the same time help to enhance peaceful and harmonious co-existence amongst the over 30 diverse predominantly agrarian ethnic groups in Nasarawa State and by implication Nigeria as a whole”.

The chairman conveyed the appreciation of the commission to journalists for giving the commission a fair coverage in the course of its proceedings.

Over 10,000 Feared Dead In Typhoon Haiyan

0

About 10,000 people are believed dead in Tacloban, the provincial capital of Philippine after one of the worst storms ever recorded unleashed ferocious winds and giant waves that washed away homes, schools and infrastructure.

Corpses hung from tree branches and were scattered along sidewalks and among flattened buildings, while looters raided grocery stores and gas stations in search of food, fuel and water.

Even in the disaster-prone Philippines, which regularly contends with earthquakes, volcanoes and tropical cyclones, Typhoon Haiyan appears to be the deadliest natural disaster on record.

Haiyan hit the eastern seaboard of the Philippine archipelago on Friday and quickly swept across its central islands, extending into the South China Sea and packing winds of 235 kilometers per hour with a storm surge that caused sea waters to rise 6 meters.

The typhoon raced across the eastern and central Philippines, inflicting serious damage to at least six of the archipelago’s more than 7,000 islands, with Leyte, neighboring Samar Island, and the northern part of Cebu appearing to take the hardest hits.

It was not until Sunday that the scale of the devastation became clear, with local officials saying that there may be 10,000 dead in the provincial capital of Tacloban alone, even as there are projections that the death toll could climb even higher when emergency crews reach areas cut off by flooding and landslides.

Regional police chief in Leyte, Elmer Soria said the provincial governor had told him there were about 10,000 deaths there, primarily from drowning and collapsed buildings. Most of the deaths were in Tacloban, a city of about 200,000 that is the biggest on Leyte Island.

Leo Dacaynos of the provincial disaster office said 300 people were confirmed dead in Samar, and another 2,000 were missing, while some towns have yet to be reached by rescuers.

He pleaded for food and water and said power was out and there was no cell phone signal, making communication possible only by radio.

A massive relief operation was underway, but the Philippine National Red Cross said its efforts were being hampered by looters, including some who attacked trucks of food and other relief supplies the agency was shipping Sunday from the southern port city of Davao to Tacloban.

With rampant looting being reported, President Benigno Aquino III said Sunday that he was considering declaring a state of emergency or martial law in Tacloban, as city officials have proposed.

The national disaster agency can recommend such a measure if the local government is unable to carry out its functions, Aquino said.

A state of emergency usually includes curfews, price and food supply controls, military or police checkpoints and increased security patrols.

The massive casualties occurred even though the government had evacuated nearly 800,000 people ahead of the typhoon. About 4 million people were affected by the storm, the national disaster agency said.

In Washington, defence secretary, Chuck Hagel, directed the military’s pacific command to deploy ships and aircraft to support search-and-rescue operations and airlift emergency supplies.

The United Nations office in Geneva said in a statement Sunday that the U.N. and the “humanitarian community have ramped up critical relief operations,” but that access remains a challenge because some areas are still cut off.

Meanwhile, Pope Francis led tens of thousands of people at the Vatican on Sunday in silent prayer for the victims of the typhoon.

The Philippines has the largest number of Catholics in Asia and Filipinos are one of Rome’s biggest immigrant communities.