NIGERIAN afrobeat star Tiwatope Savage, widely known as Tiwa Savage,has postponed all shows, including her first-ever headline Arena concert in London, due to an illness.
On Tuesday, October 17, the artiste took to her official Instagram page to announce that she had been battling a virus and had been placed strictly on medical rest, thereby leading to the postponement of all her shows.
“To my dear Savage Soldiers, I’ve been fighting off a virus for the past few weeks and was today firmly instructed to be on strict vocal rest for the next few months.
“I will unfortunately have to postpone all performances, including my first-ever headline Arena show in London.
I’m heartbroken and devastated, but I have to do this to save what’s left of my voice.
I’m so sorry. I love you all and promise to be back performing once I’m fully healed”, the statement read.
The singer was set to host her first-ever headline concert at Wembley Arena, London, on November 26. The performance will make her the first female Afrobeat artiste to headline an event at the 12,500-capacity arena.
In May 2023, Tiwa Savage performed at the coronation concert of British King Charles III, making her the first and only Nigerian to perform at a foreign royal coronation/event.
The Wembley Arena, formerly Empire Pool, is the 9th largest indoor arena in the United Kingdom (UK) and the second largest in London after the O2 Arena.
In 2019, Burna Boy made history as the first Afrobeat artiste to sell out at the Wembley Arena. His achievement earned him a well-deserved plaque, presented by the venue’s management in recognition of his feat.
Other Nigerian artistes that have headlined the Wembley Arena are Fireboy, Nathaniel Bassey alongside Victoria Orenze and Dunsin Oyekan, amongst others.
A FEDERAL Capital Territory High Court in Abuja has told Peter Nwachukwu, the husband of the late gospel singer Osinachi Nwachukwu, that he had a case to answer regarding her death.
In a ruling on Tuesday, October 17, the court dismissed the no-case submission filed by Nwachukwu.
The judge, Nwosu-Iheme, declared in her ruling that the prosecution had proven its case against the defendant.
Nwachukwu is standing trial on a 23-count charge over his spouse’s death.
The defendant entered a not-guilty plea, and the court ordered that he be held at the Kuje detention facility pending further proceedings.
Throughout the trial, which started on June 20, 2022, and finished on March 10, 2023, the prosecution summoned 17 witnesses.
The court remanded Nwachukwu in the Kuje correctional facility pending the determination of the case filed against him.
The case was filed at the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, on May 20, 2022, by the Head of Sexual and Gender-Based Violence, Department of Public Prosecutions of the Federation, Federal Ministry of Justice, Yewande Gbola-Awopetun.
Nwachukwu was detained at the Lugbe Divisional Police Headquarters, Abuja, following his arrest in April 2022, shortly after his wife’s death.
He was arrested over allegations that he repeatedly assaulted his wife until she died from injuries she sustained.
Osinachi died after spending days at an undisclosed hospital in Abuja.
The gospel artist’s death sparked anger after her family alleged that Nwachukwu subjected her to domestic violence.
Following an autopsy, the National Hospital in Abuja reported that the deceased bore no signs of violence.
Osinachi’s death was attributed to a variety of factors, according to the report, including “generalised organ pallor; bilateral leg swelling; fluid in the sac containing the heart; tumour deposits in and on the heart, lungs, and kidneys; a massively enlarged heart; and fluid around the lungs that restricted breathing.”
After the report, Nwachukwu’s lawyer, I.A. Aliyu, filed a no-case filing, ostensibly claiming that Nwachukwu had no case to answer.
According to Aliyu, the medical professionals’ testimony cleared Nwachukwu of the charges of culpable homicide and domestic violence.
According to him, the autopsy report showed that Osinachi’s death was caused by tumours that had grown outside her body, which led to cardiac tamponade, the primary cause of death, and abnormal tissue growth (cancer), the secondary cause of death.
He requested that the court clear his client of all charges.
The court rejected the no-case submission, and the defendant was then told to present his case.
The judge adjourned the matter until November 22 and 23 for defence.
THE Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has expressed worry over the increasing rejection of banks’ cheques, threatening sanctions on deposit money banks (DMBs) from November 1, 2023.
The apex bank stated this in a circular issued on Tuesday by its director of the Banking Services Department, Sam Okojere.
It said, “It has come to our notice that MICR rejects have been on the increase and in furtherance of the Bank’s effort to reduce the number, Deposit Money Bank (DMBs) are hereby directed to contact their personalisers and reiterate the need to revalidate the MICR code-line details for correctness in accordance with the NCS and NICPAS version 2.0.
“Please note that the Bank [CBN] will monitor compliance with the provision of this circular, and any bank with MICR reject starting from 1st November 2023 would be penalised in accordance with the Sanction Grid.”
Simply put, MICR (magnetic ink character recognition) is a character recognition technology used mainly by the banking industry to streamline the processing and clearance of cheques, and it is the coded numbers that appear at the bottom left of the cheque.
Concerned about the MICR rejection, CBN stated that the presenting and receiving banks should thoroughly examine their in-house cheque processing equipment to ensure that they are appropriately calibrated and supervised to eliminate distortion of image and data being transmitted during the cheque truncation process.
The apex bank had, in a circular issued on September 18, 2018, to DMBs, Accredited Cheque Printers/ Personalisers, and the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS), approved the revised Nigerian Cheque Standard (NCS) and Nigerian Cheque Printers Accreditation Scheme (NICPAS) to commence February 1, 2019.
In January 2021, the CBN announced that NICPAS version 2.0 would commence on April 1, 2021, and the NCS/NICPAS 2.0 sanction grid would be operational on the same date.
The new date was an extension from the earlier deadline of January 1, 2021, which was due to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and the impact it had on the NCS and NICPAS version 2.0 project.
In August 2023, CBN updated the list of its accredited cheque printers and personalisers for efficient payment and settlement.
The accredited six printers are Superflux International Limited, Triple Gee and Company Plc, Yaliam Press Limited, Marvelous Mike Press Limited, Kas Arts Services Limited and Papi Printing Company Limited.
Similarly, institutions accredited as personalisers are Zenith Bank Plc, Eco Bank Plc, Stanbic IBTC Bank, First Bank Nigeria, Keystone Bank Limited, Wema Bank Plc and Providus Bank Limited.
This was disclosed in a statement by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Ajuri Ngelale, on Tuesday, October 17.
According to the statement, the President exercised the powers conferred on him as established in Section 3(6) of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act of 2000.
“The new Chairman of the ICPC is nominated for confirmation by the Nigerian Senate, following the President’s approval of the outgoing Chairman’s request to proceed on pre-end of tenure leave beginning on November 4, 2023, ahead of the expiration of his tenure on February 3, 2024,” the statement read.
“The position of Secretary to the Commission does not require Senate confirmation and, therefore, by the directive of the President, the appointment of Mr. Clifford Okwudiri Oparaodu as Secretary of the Commission takes immediate effect.”
The presidency said Aliyu had embarked upon many far-reaching reforms as the Attorney General of Jigawa State since September 2019 and held Bachelor, Masters and Doctorate degrees in Law.
It added that Oparaodu is a lawyer with over 30 years of experience and had served meritoriously in the public service as a member of the Rivers State Judicial Service Commission and Chairman of the Caretaker Committee of Port Harcourt City Local Government Council.
The President urged the new ICPC leaders to always act honestly and impartially as they discharge their responsibilities.
On October 12, The ICIR reported President Tinubu appointed Ola Olukoyede the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) chairman.
He is the first head of the EFCC from Nigeria’s south since its creation 20 years ago.
The ICIR also reported that human rights lawyer Femi Falana said the heads of the EFCC and ICPC should not come from the same geopolitical zone.
He argued that appointing the two leaders from the same zone was against the federal character principle.
Falana spoke on the backdrop of President Tinubu’s appointment of Olukoyede from the country’s southwest as EFCC chairman, while the outgoing ICPC chairman, Bolaji Owasanoye, also from the South-West, was still in office.
Lack of potable water and poor personal and environmental hygiene have been identified as two of the major causes of waterborne diseases, such as Cholera. While there have also been several reported cases of the disease, some communities still depend on rivers as a source of drinkable water yet practise open defecation.
Shishipe, a community in Katampe, the Federal Capital Territory community, has faced the harsh reality of obtaining drinking water from a small stream. This is alongside the community practising open defecation, as there are no proper WASH facilities available. This community, along with three suburbs -Eke Bassa, Dagiri and Patenka- in Nigeria’s capital city, risk an outbreak of cholera disease, The ICIR’s Mustapha Usman reports.
Shishipe
THIRTY-FIVE-YEAR-OLD Moses Joy takes the same route daily to access water from the nearby stream. It has been a daily ritual. All her life, she has been used to the same water source as the river, which remains the only available water for domestic use by residents of the Shishipe community.
Shishipe, a local neighbourhood in Katampe area of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), struggles for potable water like several other smaller communities in the territory.
Joy, 35, fetching water from a stream on the outskirt of the village. Joy says she knows the consequence of feeding on such water as her children have been diagnosed with water-borne diseases but has no alternative. Picture: TheICIR/2023
Multiple sources in the community told The ICIR that despite the impurity level of the river, over 500 residents rely on it. Due to the river’s location on the outskirts of the village, residents would usually do a long trek to get some scoops while also serving as a water source for herds.
The situation is much worse during high demands when the stream becomes muddy and dirty. Besides, not only are the residents of Shishipe community confronted with no access to clean water, but they are also vulnerable to water-borne diseases due to unhealthy practices of open defecation.
Cholera, an endemic disease, is still one of the major diseases that affect Nigerians, particularly in the rural region of the country. The disease, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO), isan acute diarrheal infection characterised, in its severe form, by extreme watery diarrhoea and potentially fatal dehydration.
In 2020, the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), a body leading the national response to outbreak of cholera and other epidemic diseases across states in Nigeria, attributed the surge in cholera cases in the country to poor access to clean water, open defecation, poor sanitation, and hygiene.
“This is the only water we rely on; we drink, wash and bathe with the same water. Although we would have preferred a working borehole, we are still happy that we can still feed on this.
“The government came to construct a motorised borehole for us many years back, but it didn’t last long before it got damaged. And ever since then, we are back to our usual hustle for water,” Joy narrated.
But there was more to Joy’s predicament. She almost lost her two children. On several occasions, she was advised by health workers to stop feeding her daughter with water from the stream.
Sometime in 2022, a medical centre in Katampe diagnosed her two children with Cholera. They were admitted for two weeks before being discharged. “I was told it’s the water they drank, and needed to stop them from further taking the water, but that was just a mere talk as we have no other way to get water in the village.”
A section of the river in Dagiri, Gwagwalada Area Council, turns into an open toilet and dumping site. Picture: The ICIR/2023
Dagiri
This is the situation of some other communities visited by The ICIR. For instance, in Dagiri, a neighbourhood in Gwagwalada Area Council, a section of the river that runs through the area has been transformed into an open toilet and a dumpsite.
A resident who identified himself as Sheidu said many individuals who lack toilets in their homes resort to using the side of the erosion gully as a place to defecate.
Another view of the riverside turns into an open toilet, dumpsite. Pc: TheICIR/2023
Sheidu further explained to The ICIR thatthe riverside has been turned into a dumpsite by most residents living nearby.
The FCT, in June 2021, recorded 91 suspected cases of cholera and seven deaths in the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC) due to the same problem.
Former Acting Secretary of FCT Health and Human Services Secretariat (HHSS), a medical doctor, Mohammed Kawu, while speaking to newsmen in Abuja, listed Bwari and Gwagwalada among the two other affected areas. About a month later, the Federal Capital Territory Administration revealed 514 suspected cases, of which eight laboratory investigations were confirmed to be cholera.
Outbreak since 2021
Nigeria is one of the 13 African Countries battling Cholera over time. The current outbreak has been ongoing since 2021, when the country reported 111,062 suspected cases, which include 3,604 deaths, according to data from NCDC.
The cases were reported largely among children of the 5-14 age group across 33 states and the FCT.
The data reveals that both genders affected share the same percentage. Four states among the 33 affected states plus FCT, which are Bauchi, Jigawa, Kano and Zamfara account for 53 per cent of all cumulative cases.
Bauchi, which topped the total number of cases reported, had 19,558 cases, translating to 18 per cent of the actual cases, while, Jigawa (15,141), Kano (12,116) and Zamfara (11,931) represented 14, 11 and 11 per cent.
Meanwhile, the NCDC recorded 1,286 suspected cases in the FCT, while 77 deaths were confirmed. There are projections that the figure might have been high if all residents had visited the public health centre or hospital to complain about the waterborne disease.
Comparing the cases recorded to 2022 data, the country, between January 1, 2022, to December 30, reported a cumulative number of 23,763 suspected cases of Cholera with 592 deaths across 32 states plus FCT. Although there were concerns over the number of cases reported, the data shows a significant decline to 2021.
The 2022 reported cases were on a high between July and November before a sign of decline in December.
In September 2022, the country recorded 7,322 suspected cases with 171 suspected deaths, making it the highest within that period. Likewise, in December, Nigeria recorded its lowest number of cases as it reported 219 suspected cases with nine suspected deaths.
Data further shows that 5-14 year-old children were mostly affected, while 49 per cent of the reported suspected cases were male, and 51 per cent were females. Borno, having 12,465 cases, led the way as the state with the highest number of cholera cases. Yobe (1,888 cases) and Katsina (1,639 cases) joined the state in the three top most plagued states.
These three states, together with Gombe (1,407 cases), Taraba (1,153 cases) and Kano (1,131 cases) account for 83 per cent of the total reported suspected cases.
Mapping out Cholera cases across the country so far in 2023
Suspected cholera cases across the country from Jan-June, 2023. Infographics by James Emmanuel.
Already in 2023, the country has recorded several suspected cases of Cholera across 24 states. As of July 2, a total of 2,052 suspected cases, including 55 deaths, have been recorded. And the common story here is that children under age were mostly affected by the outbreak.
Out of the 22 states, Cross River, with 718 cases accounts for 25 per cent of all the suspected cases thus far. According to the data, Obubra Local Area of the state reported the highest number of suspected cases of 515 cases, translating to 25 per cent of all the suspected cases.
However, early this year, on January 21, The ICIRreported how a cholera outbreak in Obubra LGA was said to have claimed over 60 lives. Just like The ICIR investigations reveal that residents of some FCT communities depend on a river as the only source to get water, inhabitants of Obubra also live on a river as the only water source.
About three months after the crisis, the LGA led other affected LGAs as the most vulnerable areas. Katsina, Ebonyi and Zamfara had 288, 227 and 216 cases, respectively.
Other communities with similar woes
Issa Rose, a twenty-six-year-old resident of Bassa, alongside her younger sister, fetching water from their only water source. Pc: TheICIR/2023
Ikeh Bassa
About a year after The ICIR first published a story detailing how Ikeh Bassa faced several hurdles in accessing potable water, this reporter visited the town and discovered that the community still shares water with the herd.
Issa Rose, a twenty-six-year-old resident of Bassa, has been touring the bush to fetch water from the river since she was four years old. When she eventually gets the water, she and her family use it for sustenance.
Even after getting married, Rose maintains this routine and supplies water from the muddy source to her two children. This persists despite doctors instructing her against the actions.
“I have been to the hospital on several occasions to treat my children anytime they complain of stomach ache or other symptoms. I have been told it’s cholera; sometimes, the Doctor will say it’s diarrhoea, fever or malaria.
“This happens almost every time, and I would have to spend my hard-earned money from farming to treat them. Some of us that are adults are used to it, and we hardly fall sick, but our kids fall sick almost every time.”
A UNICEFreport stated that although about 70 per cent of Nigerians are reported to have access to basic water services, more than half of these water sources are contaminated, meaning that over 60million Nigerians drink contaminated water, which has generally been linked to several deadly diseases, including cholera.
Ikeh Bassa water source
Ikeh Bassa Youth leader Musa Ibrahim described the community as a hunter’s dog who, despite all his efforts to make the hunter achieve his goal, doesn’t benefit from it.
He said, “Not that we are not casting votes, we are casting votes and participating in elections, but at the end of the day, they will leave us as the hunter’s dog that we go to the farm and catch, after catching even to eat the bone, they won’t allow it to eat it.”
He explained that the residents have tried their best to seek the government’s assistance to construct a borehole so as to stop drinking stream water but didn’t yield a positive result.
The community has also written to the Kwali Area Council, stating their plights, but the government has turned deaf ears.
A letter addressed to Kwali Area Council requesting potable water, others. PC: TrackaNg/Twitter.
In a letter addressed to the council and received on March 9, 2022, the community spelt out their needs, including water, hospital and road.
The ICIR reports that N50 million naira was budgeted in 2021 for the construction of motorised boreholes in Kwali and Kuje Areas Councils. However, Ikeh Bassi hasn’t benefited from the supposed allocation.
In Patenka area of Berger junction, Lugbe, the issue of open defecation and waste dumping continues unabated. Pc: The ICIR/2023
Lugbe and the challenge of waste management
Aside from poor access to potable water, waste management is a great challenge in the Patenka area of Lugbe, as humans find themselves in a constant struggle for space with waste and filth. This dire situation affects traders who sell at the entrance of the market and passersby who pass through the road to Lugbe Zone 9.
Sadly, the community has reached a point where the traders have reluctantly accepted their fate, as ‘Baban Bola’ – young men working as independent waste collectors – and local cleaners take charge of the location.
WASH Burden
An infographic showing the percentage number of people with access to WASH services between 2018-2021.
While reports have shown that Nigeria has recorded some improvement around the issues related to Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH), there are growing concerns with regard to Nigeria achieving the Social Developmental Goal (SDG) by 2030.
According to a report published in 2022 by the Ministry of Water Resources, with data from the WASHNORM 2021 survey sampling over 24,600 households across the country, only 10 per cent of Nigeria’s population had access to integrated basic WASH services, which has serious negative health and security implications on the populace as well as in the attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs 6) by the federal government.
An infographic showing access to safely managed water, water supply and WASH across geopolitical zones in 2021.
Approximately 179 million Nigerians, which accounts for up to 87 per cent of the population, lack access to safely managed drinking water services. The situation is particularly dire in the North, where access remains insufficient, with the Northeast having the lowest access rate at just 2 per cent. In contrast, the Southwest region has the highest access rate at 29 per cent.
However, access to basic water supply services stood at 67 per cent of the population. The predominant sources of drinking water were boreholes/tubewells, utilised by approximately 37 per cent of the households while 11 per cent of the population use pipe-borne water and just 4 p use water from a source that is piped into their premise. Likewise, about a quarter of the population (25 per cent) still depend on unimproved and surface water supply for their daily water needs.
An infographic showing the percentage access to basic water supply and services, trends in the use of basic sanitation and rate of open defecation in Nigeria between 2018, 2019 and 2021.
Comparing this data with WASHNORM 2019 report, there is a 3 per cent decline as 70 per cent of people had access to basic water supply services in 2019. In 2018, 68 per cent of the population had access to basic water.
Similarly, open defecation remains a challenge in the country, showing that as many as 48 million Nigerians across the country still practise open defecation. This data represents 23 per cent of the population.
WASHNORM survey showed that 46 per cent of the population was found to have access to basic sanitation services in 2021 compared to 44 per cent in 2019, representing a 2 per cent (6.9 million people) increase in the number of persons accessing basic sanitation services.
Despite the increase in the number of people with access to basic sanitation services, the proportion of people practising open defecation in the country has barely changed since 2019, with the number increasing from 46 million in 2019 to 48 million in 2021.
In FCT, 30 per cent of people sampled practice open defecation, while 52 per cent of the population have access to basic sanitation services. Ebonyi tops the list of states with the highest practice of open defecation, as 73 per cent defecate openly and only 14 per cent of the population have access to basic sanitation services in the state.
Meanwhile, Zamfara state, only recorded 1 per cent of the sampled people practising open defecation. This was despite the fact that the percentage of people having access to basic sanitation in the state stood at 43 per cent.
Just like Shishipe’s neighbourhood, where water facilities constructed by the government didn’t last a year, 38 per cent of all water supply facilities across the country were not functional at the time of the survey.
WASHNORM estimated the number of water points across the country to be 2.3 million water, with about 60 % located in rural areas and 40% in urban areas. 31 per cent of these facilities were motorised boreholes and about 1 in 10 (11 per cent) of the motorised boreholes were solar-powered. Handpump boreholes, including force-lift hand pump boreholes, make up only 13 per cent of water points in Nigeria.
The rapidly growing population and impact of Covid-19 were factors mentioned to be dwarfing the efforts made by the government so far.
The report warned that without addressing the WASH needs, cholera and other WASH-related infections and the associated childhood morbidity and mortality rates will remain high above the regional and global average.
Looming outbreak; expert warns
Cholera can be dangerous in children, particularly in areas where access to clean water, sanitation, and healthcare services is limited, according to a Public Health Physician, Dr Adewumi Babatunde.
Children are more vulnerable to severe complications and have a higher risk of mortality due to several factors, as highlighted by the Physician.
“Nigeria faces significant challenges in the implementation of WASH initiatives, particularly in underserved regions and among marginalized populations. Access to clean water remains limited, especially in rural areas, due to inadequate infrastructure and poor water treatment facilities.
Sanitation coverage is low, with open defecation practices persisting and insufficient proper toilet facilities. Hygiene practices, including handwashing, need improvement. Insufficient funding and investment hinder progress in WASH infrastructure and programs.
According to him, strengthening institutional capacity for policy development, coordination, regulation, and monitoring are a few of the crucial steps to be taken to improve health.
Speaking on possible solutions, Babatunde advised that Government at all levels should conduct public awareness campaigns to educate the population about cholera prevention and control measures is essential.
He added that strengthening of healthcare systems and improving vaccination coverage would help in putting a stop to the outbreak.
“Consideration can be given to vaccination campaigns targeting high-risk areas or vulnerable populations. Oral cholera vaccines are effective in preventing cholera outbreaks and can be administered to individuals or used as part of a mass vaccination strategy.
Babatunde further explained that Citizens can ensure they have access to safe drinking water by treating water through boiling, filtration, or adding chlorine.
“Proper sanitation practices, such as using toilets or latrines, help prevent the contamination of water sources and the spread of cholera. People should support efforts to improve sanitation infrastructure and discourage open defecation.
He also noted that by reporting early to hospitals, cases and spread of Cholera can be mitigated, adding that citizens who lack access to safe water should get vaccinated against Cholera as a way of preventing themselves from possible outbreaks.
THE Nigeria Artificial Intelligence Research Scheme (NAIRS), launched by the Federal Ministry of Communications, Innovation, and Digital Economy, invites researchers and startups working in AI.
It aims to finance 45 teams of businesses and researchers so that they can pursue additional chances to develop their work and build a sustainable AI ecosystem in Nigeria.
These research areas include agriculture, finance, healthcare, sustainability, utility, education and workforce with up to N5 million grant.
The initiative aims to foster a vibrant and sustainable AI ecosystem in Nigeria by providing financial support to facilitate knowledge sharing and collaboration among individuals and organisations in the AI industry.
The consortium should include a startup or technology company, a Nigerian academic researcher or a foreign researcher.
Also, research must have a proposal that aligns with the Federal Ministry’s AI priority areas.
The applicant must have a detailed proposal outlining the project and its potential impact on the Nigerian economy.
The deadline for the submission of the application is November 15, 2023. Interested researchers can apply here
THE recruitment of repentant criminals as constabularies by the Kano state government has sparked outrage among Nigerians on social media.
Several Nigerians, particularly on X, expressed dismay over recruiting individuals with a criminal record and or shady pasts to police communities.
On Monday, October 16, The ICIR saw pictures of Nasiru Abdullahi, popularly known as Chile Maidoki, donning a Kano State constabulary uniform alongside the State Police Command Public Relations Officer, Abdullahi Kiyawa.
Sometime this year, Abdullahi and two other notorious criminals were declared wanted by the Kano State Police Command with a bounty of N100,000 each.
A subsequent statement by the command confirmed that he surrendered himself to the command upon hearing the bounty placed on his head.
L-F: Nasiru Abdullahi and the commissioner of Kano Police Command, Usaini Gumei. PC; Kano Police/X
Also confirming the recruitment, a report shared by the Nigeria Police Force spokesperson Ademuyiwa Adejobi via his X handle revealed that 50 repentant thugs were selected from the 222 thugs that decided to embrace peace offered by the state command’s commissioner of police, Muhammad Usaini Gumel.
According to the report, Gumei, while addressing the selected repentant thugs during the passing out parade on Monday, October 16, said the initiative resulted from the repentant thugs’ commitment to ensuring peace in the state.
However, the Force spokesperson claimed that the constabularies weren’t Police officers but a community-based initiative by the state government.
“They are not policemen. I was told, and it’s been in the news, that they are repentant individuals who have been mobilised into the constabulary scheme of Kano state. The constabulary scheme is not Police but a community-based initiative.”.
Reacting to this development, an X user, Akpan Emmanuel, expressed hope that Kano residents would be safe from the hands of Police brutality and harassment.
“I hope Kano residents will be safe… I hope they won’t increase the quota for Police brutality. I just hope. So help us God,” he wrote.
Another X user, Olorumfemi Taiwo, said: “There are patriotic young, educated and sound citizens, but Nigeria always rewards criminals generously.”
Adekunle expressed his concern over the recruitment of thugs as constabularies, noting that the thugs will use the uniform to terrorise citizens.
He wrote, “Recruiting repentant thugs is a serious security concern to the nation. Most of these boys will use the uniform to settle scores and terrorise the citizens. I hope we can get better.”
THE Labour Party (LP) senatorial candidate for Abia North in the 2023 election, Nnamdi Iro Orji, has asked the Appeal Court to nullify Orji Uzor Kalu’s election as senator representing the district at the National Assembly.
The LP candidate alleged the election did not adhere to the Electoral Act 2022.
In the appeal filed by his lawyer, Bert C. Iqwilo, Orji claimed that the election was not held in some polling units in addition to other violations of the Electoral Act.
“Without the record of accreditation by BVAS and the voters register, there is no election. These are basic provisions of the Electoral Act, 2022 and the regulations made by INEC,” he stated.
He pleaded with the appellate Court to resolve the issue in his favour.
Kalu was declared the election winner by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), with 30,805 votes, while Nnamdi Iroh received 27,540 votes in the February 25 election.
The ICIR reportsthat sacked Adamawa Senator Ishaku Abbo had accused Senate President Godswill Akpabio of orchestrating his removal from the 10th Senate.
In what he described as a targeted move against him and four colleagues, Abbo stated that his removal was retaliation for opposing Akpabio’s Senate Presidency aspiration.
He alleged the four targeted senators include Orji Uzor Kalu.
He said, “I have it from a reliable source that myself and four other senators within the fold of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) will be removed from the Senate through rulings from the courts, all because of working against the emergence of Akpabio as President of the 10th Senate.
“I won’t mention the names of all the four other ones targeted, but the next in line is Senator Orji Uzor Kalu.”
Abbo, a member of the Progressives Congress (APC), made this allegation on Monday, October 16, while speaking with journalists shortly after his sack by the Court of Appeal.
Meanwhile, Akpabio denied the claim. Speaking through his spokesperson, Eseme Eyiboh, the Senate President said the outcome of any court proceeding is a function of the evaluation of facts and evidence within the province of the rule of law.
“It is uncharitable for Senator Abbo to pour his frustrations on Senator Akpabio or anyone else and his action betrays the bile he has for Senator Akpabio.
“Senator Akpabio, for emphasis, has no ill will towards any of his distinguished colleagues, and as he has said in the past, the embers of the leadership election have been buried and replaced by the fraternal bond of nation-building he shares with the overwhelming majority of senators,” he said.
The ICIRreported that the Court of Appeal in Abuja sacked Abbo, who represented Adamawa North Senatorial District. In its ruling on Monday, October 16, the Court declared Amos Yohannah of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) as the winner of the senatorial election.
INEC initially declared Abbo as senator-elect in February 2023, but Yohanna challenged the decision at the Election Petition Tribunal.
Despite dismissing Yohanna’s plea, Abbo, represented by his lawyer, Johnson Usman, appealed the tribunal’s ruling through appeal number CA/YL/EP/AD/SEN/06/2023 at the Appeal Court.
The Court of Appeal concurred with Usman that, in light of Section 137 of the Electoral Act of 2022, the results showed that the Electoral Act was not followed.
The Court, therefore, took the illegitimate votes away from the candidates and ruled that Yohanna and the PDP had received the majority of valid votes to win the election.
NIGERIA’s headline inflation rose to 26.72 per cent in September 2023 from 25.80 per cent in August, despite the palliatives provided by the Federal Government to cushion the effects of economic hardship on the citizens.
The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) disclosed the figure in its latest report on ‘Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Inflation Report September’ released on Monday, October 16.
The September headline inflation is the second-highest rate recorded since the country reported 28.2 per cent in July 2005, checks by The ICIR showed.
The September inflation rate represents a 0.92 per cent increase compared to the 25.80 per cent reported in August.
Compared to the 20.77 per cent rate the statistical office reported in September 2022, inflationary pressure increased by 5.94 per cent.
The upward movement reflects the food inflation rate, which rose by 30.64 per cent in the review month compared to 23.34 per cent in September 2022.
The rise in food inflation was caused by increased prices of oil and fat, bread and cereals, potatoes, yam, tubers, fish, fruit, meat and others, NBS stated.
A critical economic indicator, CPI, measures the average change over time in the prices of goods and services consumed by people for day-to-day living.
Surging inflation defies FG’s palliative
Inflation has continued to surge in record times despite the palliatives to cushion the economic hardship of the masses, worsened by fuel subsidy removal and exchange rate unification by the new administration of President Bola Tinubu.
The palliatives include the conditional cash transfer of N25,000 to households, N35,000 wage increment for workers, N75 billion to strengthen the manufacturing sector, and N125 billion to empower the micro, small and medium enterprises.
There is also N5 billion approved by the government for each state and the federal capital territory (FCT) to address the lingering hardship of the masses, among other palliatives.
However, the continued rise in inflation directs the argument that the various palliatives have yet to impact households, businesses and the broader economy.
Also, the September inflation rate mirrors the slowdown in business activity due to rising input costs and other skyrocketing economic goods consumers paid for.
Businesses to go under
Some economists who spoke to The ICIR expressed concerns over the impact of the rise on businesses and the cost of money.
“Many businesses will go under as a result of this development. Lending would shrink, and businesses will pay higher costs to access facilities from banks. Manufacturers would also face more difficulties in accessing funds for the raw material inputs for production because of the higher cost of funds,” a development economist, Celestine Okeke, said.
Another development economist, Kalu Aja, said the major driver of the rising inflation is food inflation and high insecurity in the food belt states.
“We need to get down food inflation seriously and address insecurity in the food belt states across the country. This would help inflation to go down. The CBN rates are not enough for now; the real cause must be addressed.
In reacting to the development, the Chief Executive Officer of the Financial Derivatives, Bismarck Rewane, said the government needed to address core inflation triggers, which comprise logistics costs and the high cost of diesel in transporting goods and services.
“We’ve reached the level of intensifying concession of the roads and even the airports to lessen logistics costs of transporting goods and services. The food inflation, which is the main trigger, is high and largely caused by logistics and high energy costs,” Rewane said.
Intense cost pressures business activity
According to the Stanbic IBTC Bank in its September Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), businesses operating in the Nigerian private sector have remained under pressure in September.
Although the PMI posted at 51.1 points in September, up from 50.2 in August, Stanbic IBTC said it was still only just above the 50.0 ‘no-change mark,’ which is the point business activity is said to have contracted.
Commenting on business activity in September, the head of Equity Research West Africa at Stanbic IBTC, Muyiwa Oni, said, “Nigerian private sector business activity expanded slightly in September, a reversal from the contraction in August, reflecting a slight improvement business activity but still showing price pressure strain on businesses.
“The headline PMI increased to 51.1 in September, from 50.2 in August, which was the lowest point over the past five months.”
Before the September print, the PMI had declined consecutively over the past three months as prices remained elevated, with input and purchase prices remaining at period highs.
“Input prices increased materially across the major sectors covered, with inflationary pressures most pronounced in wholesale and retail and manufacturing,” Oni added.
THE Nigerian men’s senior football team, Super Eagles, ended their 15 consecutive international friendly matches winless streak after defeating 10-man Mozambique, 3-2, at the Estadio Municipal De Portimão in Portugal, Monday evening.
The Super Eagles, who played out a 2-2 draw against Saudi Arabia last Friday, began their encounter against Mozambique with a sloppy start, which gave their opponent the early lead after Geny Catamo tapped in the ball past Nigeria’s goalkeeper Francis Uzoho into the net.
Mozambique’s early lead in the seventh minute evoked more determination in the Black Mambas as they mounted pressure in search of another goal to double the lead with a series of exchanged strings of passes to dominate possessions in the half of the Super Eagles.
But their lead was short-lived after Nigeria’s Terem Moff restored parity in the 19 minutes to ignite his team’s hope of tasting a first win after losing nine and picking six draws since claiming a 1-0 victory over Egypt in March 2019 in their past international friendly matches.
Eleven minutes later, Nigeria doubled the lead after Frank Onyeka slotted the ball into the net through a classic link with Dele-Bashiru.
In the 39 minutes, Mozambique’s Edmilson Dove was given a straight red after a rough foul on Eagles’ midfielder Joe Aribo.
Nigeria leveraged their opponent’s numerical disadvantage after Moses Simon extended the goal to three shortly before the first half.
Ten minutes into the resumption of the second half, Mozambique re-ignited their search for a goal despite being one man down as Faisal Abdul Bengal reduced the deficit after Geny Catamo assisted him.
The second goal conceded by Nigeria’s goalkeeper Francis Uzoho further raised concerns about his capacity as a capable goalie for the Eagles.
The International friendly matches are part of preparations for the 2023 African Cup of Nations, AFCON billed to be hosted by Cote d’Ivoire in January 2023.