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Insecurity: ‘There are forces bent on frustrating our efforts’ – Zamfara Government

The Zamfara State Governor, Bello Matawalle has lamented that there are forces who are bent on frustrating its efforts in addressing the security challenges bedeviling the state. According to Governor Matawalle, the recent resurgence and escalation of attacks by armed bandits in some parts of the State is worrisome.

In a press statement signed by the media aide to the Governor Zailani Bappa on Saturday, the governor said “In spite of employment of both kinetic and non-kinetic strategy to defeat this nagging problem, the recent escalation in attacks by bandits in some parts of the State is a serious source of concern”.

The statement adds that despite all efforts to contain the lingering security challenges in the state, communities are been attacked on a daily basis leading to loss of lives and properties

According to him, it is clear that the state is in dare need of additional troops to face the recalcitrant bandits terrorizing various communities making live unbearable to law abiding citizens

They appeal to all commanders deployed to keep peace in the state to take necessary measures that will ensure rapid response to distress calls to avert attacks

” Government is aware of the challenges faced by security commands especially as they seemed obviously overstretched. In spite of the obvious shortfall, Government requests that special consideration should be given to Zamfara State in terms of the deployment of more forces for quicker response to all security threats”

“The Matawalle’s administration also observed that part of the hurdles hindering the success of the fight against banditry in the State is the lack of quick response by the Security forces in the wake of attacks by bandits. Hence, all commanders deployed in the state are enjoined to take necessary measures that will ensure rapid response to distress calls”. The statement adds

Just In: Gunmen attack and burn Police Station, High Court in Imo

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The Atta Divisional Police Headquarters in the Njaba Local Government Area of Imo State has been attacked and burned.

NewsWireNGR also gathered that the hoodlums also razed the Atta Magistrate and High Court and vandalized the community’s health centre on Saturday morning.

According to The Punch correspondent who visited the area, the attacks happened between 1 and 2am early Saturday.

Sources in the area also said the hoodlums shot repeatedly for close to an hour before burning the government facilities in the community.

A former president-general of the community, John Agbaso, while speaking to journalists said:

“I was the one who built the police station and the magistrate court and mobilised youths under the auspices of Transformations Ambassadors of Atta Nwambieri to build the high court. I did this so that our people will have access to government facilities. This latest incident is coming a week after they razed the house of our president general and killed his wife. The government should come to our rescue.”

However, the Police Spokesperson in the state, Bala Elkana, said that he had not been briefed.

Kebbi Government vows to review maritime law after boat mishap

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Governor Atiku Bagudu of Kebbi State has announced his administration’s resolve to review the extant maritime laws to prevent further loss of lives and properties.

In a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media, Malam Yahaya Sarki in Birnin Kebbi on Saturday, The Governor explained that the review was necessary in the face of recurring cases of boat mishaps, resulting in the loss of lives and properties of innocent passengers in the state.

No fewer than 22 victims have also been rescued alive as of today,” the statement added.

It said that 59 of the recovered dead victims were from Warrah town, expressing hope that more of the victims would be rescued alive.

“Bagudu also acknowledged and appreciated the flurry of search and rescue efforts by divers, private boat owners, governmental and non-governmental agencies.

“The governor condoled with the families of the victims, as well as prayed for the repose of the souls of the departed victims, while he also prayed for the quick recovery of the injured victims.

“Bagudu called on people, especially boat users and passengers to learn from previous experiences and desist from acts capable of endangering their lives.

“In whatever we do, we must stick to rules, boat users should stick to specifications on the exact number of passengers to be carried by each boat.

“There should always be passengers manifest, even before boarding. The basic marine transport protocols should be observed.

While paying a condolence visit to the Emir of Yauri, Dr Muhammad Zayyanu, following the unfortunate boat mishap that involved a canoe believed to have been overloaded with over 160 passengers, the Governor said the incident was unfortunate and saddening, yet, It was ordained by the Almighty Allah.

SPONSORED: Biggest Horse Races In The Second Half Of 2021

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The first half of 2021 has been littered with huge racing action, and that will continue into the second half of the year with some more compelling action around the world.

However, which races are set to take place in the second half of the year, and which horses could potentially win these races?

Belmont Stakes

The first huge race in the second half of the year is the final Triple Crown of the season. The Belmont Stakes will take place in June, as the best three-year-olds in training in the United States line-up for the final time this year in Triple Crown competition.

Medina Spirit won the opening race at the Kentucky Derby, before Rombauer won the Preakness Stakes.

The Kentucky Derby winner won’t be involved at the Belmont Stakes, as the NYRA has suspended Bob Baffert. The Belmont Stakes could be an interesting contest, with Essential Quality returning after losing his perfect record at Churchill Downs.

Hot Rod Charlie is another that could run well after missing the Preakness Stakes. Bet on Belmont stakes online with TwinSpires.com.

St Leger Stakes

It won’t be just the American Triple Crown that will be coming to an end in the second half of the year, as the third and final English Triple Crown is also run. The St Leger is one of the oldest races in the world of racing, as its first renewal took place way back in 1776.

Nowadays, horses that are three years old compete over one mile and six furlongs on the turf, and it serves as the final leg of the series after the 2,000 Guineas and Epsom Derby.

It’s very rare in this modern day that we see a horse try and win all three of the races, which makes for a very competitive betting market for the St Leger before the declarations are made.

High Definition and Bolshoi Ballet are currently the two shortest-priced runners that could compete in the final Triple Crown race of the season. High Definition returned to the track in May, as he finished third in the Al Basti Equiworld Dubai Dante Stakes. Hurricane Lane, who won that race, is also one that could target the St Leger.

Bolshoi Ballet could be a much smaller price closer to the day, as the three-year-old has been in excellent form so far this season, as he has won on both runs at Leopardstown.

Melbourne Cup

The biggest race in Australia also takes place in the second half of the year, as the Melbourne Cup will captivate audiences around the world at the beginning of November.

The betting for the race is still wide open at this stage, with many questioning the horses that will be lining up for the famous race at Flemington.

Prince of Arran for trainer Charlie Fellows is currently the narrow favourite at the top of the betting, and it’s likely that he will once again be travelling to Australia to compete in the famous race once again.

He competed in the Melbourne Cup last year, and finished a close third behind Twilight Payment. He is yet to win since returning to the track and was recently beaten by Ascot Gold Cup hero Stradivarius at Ascot.

Other likely contenders that we could see at the Melbourne Cup in November include Tiger Moth and Tawnawa. One Ruler and Kilcruit could also be outsiders with a chance.

Kilcruit came second at the Cheltenham Festival, before winning over two miles at the Punchestown Festival by a dominant four and three-quarter lengths from O’Toole.

Farooq A. Kperogi: COAS Appointment as Missed Opportunity for Unity

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The appointment of my namesake, Major General Farouk Yahaya, as Chief of Army Staff to succeed the late Lieutenant General Ibrahim Attahiru who died in a plane crash on May 21 is yet another tone-deaf but entirely predictable mismanagement of Nigeria’s diversity at a time it desperately needs to be cared for with deliberate symbolic nourishment. 

There is no question that General Yahaya is qualified for the job. His CV shows evidence of immense professional and academic preparedness for the position. But the alternatives to him are just as qualified, so this is never about competence for the job. It’s about symbolism and the politics of representation at a time of heightened national storm and stress.

Many people had hoped that the regime would appoint Major General Benjamin Ahanotu from Anambra State as Attahiru’s successor both to water the perishingly shriveling tree of national unity in the country and to pacify the Southeast whose sense of alienation in the last five years is resurrecting the ghost of Biafra secessionist agitation.  

Since Ahanotu is just as professionally and academically prepared as Yahaya is, a lot more would have been gained in symbolic and substantive terms if the regime had chosen to not appoint another Northern Muslim to succeed a northern Muslim who succeeded a previous northern Muslim.

In no previous civilian administration has this ever happened. Former President Shehu Shagari had ethnic and religious diversity in his choice of Chief of Army Staff. He started with Lieutenant General Ipoola Alani Akinrinade, then appointed Lieutenant General Gibson Jalo, and finally Lieutenant General Mohammed Inuwa Wushishi.

Although Obasanjo’s choices of Chief of Army Staff didn’t reflect religious diversity, they reflected regional and ethnic diversity. Goodluck Jonathan also chose only Christians from the South-South and the Southeast, which we condemned, but his security council was more broad-based than Buhari’s is.

Many well-placed northern politicians who are disturbed by the widening intensity of fissiparity in the Nigerian polity told me they intervened to ensure that the regime appointed someone other than a northern Muslim as Chief of Army Staff. One man told me he was part of a group that reached out to Professor Ibrahim Gambari, Muhammadu Buhari’s Chief of Staff, to persuade him to advise his boss to appoint Ahanotu—or another qualified southerner—as Chief of Army Staff.

Perhaps, that was where the group erred. Gambari has no powers to influence consequential policy decisions in this regime. A personage who is intimately familiar with the workings of the Presidential Villa told me a few days ago that Gambari was recently caught dozing off in the waiting room of Sabiu “Tunde” Yusuf, the 30-something-year-old cousin of Buhari’s who is also his special assistant. 

The man said the fact of Gambari drifting off in Yusuf’s waiting room was indicative of the extended minutes, perhaps hours, that he had been waiting for the young man. But, for me, it emblematizes Gambari’s powerlessness and lack of access to the man he is supposed to be Chief of Staff to.

As dramatic as this revelation was, it wasn’t shocking to me. I have always known that Sabiu “Tunde” Yusuf, whose highest work experience prior to joining his cousin’s government was a phone recharge card seller, is the real successor to Abba Kyari.

In my November 23, 2019 column titled “Government of Buhari’s Family, By His Family, and For His Family,” I described him as “one of the most powerful people in Nigeria today. He determines who sees and who doesn’t see Buhari. Only Mamman Daura and Abba Kyari can overrule him.”

I also pointed out in my May 16, 2020 column titled “Real Reason the Buhari Cabal Picked Gambari as CoS” that Gambari’s linguistic “handicap” in the Hausa language would ensure that he isn’t sufficiently close enough with Buhari to have any meaningful interpersonal relationship with him. That, I said, would whittle away the influence of his office.

A May 25, 2020 exclusive Daily Trust story titled “How Buhari’s Chief of Staff, Gambari facilitated removal of TCN boss” proved me right. “The Special Assistant to the President (President Secretariat), Sabi’u Yusuf, the same day, wrote a letter referenced PRES/65-I/COS/3/750, addressed to the CoS, Prof. Gambari, conveying Buhari’s approval of his earlier memo,” the story said.

So, unlike Abba Kyari who had a direct access to Buhari and whom Buhari said all ministers should meet if they wanted anything from him, Gambari has an intermediary between him and Buhari, and that intermediary is a blood relative of his planted there by Mamman Daura, his Trinity College, Dublin-educated nephew on whom he has always been emotionally and intellectually dependent. 

As I pointed out in my May 30, 2020 column titled, “Gambari: Embrace and Alienation of an Outsider on the Inside,” “The real Chief of Staff to Buhari is Sabi’u ‘Tunde’ Yusuf (of course, acting on Mamman Daura’s behalf) while Ibrahim Gambari is only the public face of the office— with some legroom to do the most obvious official requirements of his job.”

I’ve gone to this length to rejig the reader’s memory just to make the case that anyone who wanted to influence the appointment of the new Chief of Army Staff should have gone to Mamman Daura who is the real, if unofficial, president of Nigeria. But Daura has a really retrograde and fossilized understanding of Nigeria’s ethnic and religious diversity.

Nonetheless, in case people who can influence Daura are reading this, he should be made self-aware that in moments such as Nigeria is going through now, even little symbolic acts of inclusion go a long way. At the twilight of his life, he has become the luckiest Nigerian alive. He has unofficial presidential powers without winning or rigging an election, staging a coup, or even being appointed. Even for the sake of his grandchildren, he should snap out of his provincial cocoon and save the country from avoidable implosion.

Nigeria’s chance for continued existence going forward will be dependent on intentional symbolic gestures that nurture national cohesion. National cohesion doesn’t magically emerge out of thin air because people who are luxuriating in the decadent orbits of power facilely proclaim Nigeria’s unity to be “settled” and “non-negotiable.” Nation-building is never “settled”; it is always in a state of negotiation and renegotiation. 

Unity is not an article of faith to be internalized and accepted unquestioningly. It is consciously sowed, watered, and nourished by acts of kindness to the disadvantaged, by equity and justice to all, by consensus-building, by deliberate healing of the existential wounds that naturally emerge in our interactions as constituents of a common national space, and by acknowledging and working to cover our ethnic, religious, regional, and cultural fissures. The efforts will never be perfect or fool-proof but doing something about a problem is always better than complacency and smug self-satisfaction.

Most progressive Muslim northerners I know are embarrassed to no end by the extreme and unprecedented Arewaization of appointments in this regime. They are embarrassed and worried because the lopsidedness of the appointments invites unearned hate to innocent northerners who don’t materially benefit from them, line the pockets of a privileged few, and alienate our compatriots from the South. That’s not sustainable if we still want a country. 

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By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.

Twitter: @farooqkperogi

Disclaimer

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Civil society groups say Nigeria is on the brinks

For immediate release

Saturday, 29, May, 2021

Joint Statement by a Coalition of CSOs on the State of the Country* The situation in Nigeria has never been as tragic before as it is today.

We are seriously concerned about the country’s speedy slide into anarchy, government’s total disconnection from the people and its glaring incompetence in the face of ravaging insecurity which has enveloped the land.

Governance is in total abeyance and there is total loss of faith and hope in the country.

The challenges can be summarised as:

  • Rising insecurity due to failure of government to protect people from attacks by non-state actors
  • Eroded values system that allows corruption and impunity to fester
  • Mismanagement of the economy and widening of inequalities
  • Non-existent or inefficient public infrastructure impacting on provision of basic social services
  • Poor conflict resolution and lack of mitigation strategies
  • Violent repressive tactics by state security agents fueling an atmosphere of fear
  • Human Rights violations and abuses rife in many parts of the country with no effective remedy for victims and their families

Terrorist groups, bandits and armed herders have taken over the land, on the prowl and enjoying a free reign in virtually every state, kidnapping, committing rape, attacking communities, killing people and destroying farm lands without government or security intervention. Government has failed to protect the people from criminality and has failed to arrest and prosecute a single criminal.

It is either that government has no clue what to do or it is complicit. The bottom line is that it has failed to tackle insecurity, violence and crime.

Corruption by high level government officials continue unabated under a regime that campaigned and came to power with the mantra of anti- corruption without any action taken against any of the officials of government at all levels and tiers involved in high level corruption.

The bad economy which it also promised to revamp has remained in doldrums and almost permanently in recession – six years in the saddle.

Unemployment, underemployment and poverty remain very high, fuelling crime.

Infrastructure, especially power, housing and transportation and basic amenities including health and education remain in a state of disrepair and dysfunctionality

Bigotry, nepotism, injustices and divisive government policies and actions have raised the tempo of self-determination and separatist agitations and exacerbated calls for restructuring.

The recent resolutions by Southerner governors, among other things, calling for restructuring based on fiscal federalism and ban on open grazing- and the federal government’s dismissive response shows the federal government’s arrogant posture and tacit support for the bandits, its insensitivity and unreadiness to listen to the feelings and concerns of a large section of the country’s population; and its adamant refusal to right historical wrongs.

On a daily basis, armed herdsmen freely attack communities, raping women, killing people – young and old -, destroying farm lands and rendering people into internally displaced persons- in their own country- without any government or security intervention. While government fails to protect communities from the menaces of armed herdsmen, there are many instances- as we have seen in Kaduna State- where security forces were set against the same communities when they fought back or protested against herdsmen attacks and failure of the state to protect them

Bandits regularly kidnap school children and students of tertiary institutions in large scale are are not arrested and prosecuted, instead, government and its agents negotiate with them, and pay them ransom thereby encouraging and rewarding criminality

Government’s brute force approach to seperatist agitations has radicalised otherwise peaceful and unarmed groups into resorting to armed violence

The continuing, increasing and condemnable coordinated attacks on Police Stations especially in the South and particularly in Imo State is believed to be a grand diabolical scheme to decimate or weaken security agencies preparatory to the implementation of a more sinister agenda by the sponsors of the bandits

Similar despicable attacks on INEC offices is a threat to the 2023 elections but more imminently a threat to the November 2021 Anambra State governorship election

The upsurge in attacks in the South appears to have been pre-planned. During the Covid-19 lockdown in 2020 and despite the ban on interstate movements, vehicles carrying men and arms were freely transported across security checkpoints along the highways leading to the south. This was in clear connivance with the security personnel manning those checkpoints.

There has been no official explanation yet for the arms- laden truck that fell along Awka road, Anambra State some weeks ago spilling its contents. No words about the source and destination of the arms and those behind the movement of the arms.

Government attacks on the media and free speech and illegal bans on the exercise of the constitutional freedoms of expression, assembly and movement are shrinking the civic space

The Unprofessional and Dangerous Directives by the Acting Inspector General of Police, Usman Alkali Baba

We are more urgently concerned by the Inspector General of Police’s directive to police officers to enforce the President’s unconstitutional shoot at sight order and his further explicit directive that they should go after IPOB members and kill them. He also expressly asked them to ignore the rules of engagement- including observing the principle of proportionality in the use of force and firearms, with assurances that nothing will happen to them if they abuse human rights.

Following the said IGP’s reckless, unprofessional and dangerous directive, the police in Imo State have gone all out on indiscriminate mass raids, arresting, parading and killing people labelling them IPOB without evidence. We have received disturbing reports about invasion of markets and other public places by police officers who engage in sporadic shooting, indiscriminate arrest of young men some of whom are stabbed with daggers and taking away in police vehicles to undisclosed destinations

This brute force approach to tackling insecurity has resulted to heavy civilian casualties as we saw earlier this week in Imo State where innocent citizens were shot dead by security agencies who arrived about half an hour after hoodlums had attacked a police station in Orji, Owerri and disappeared.

No less than three persons including a young man and two women- one of whom was a petty trader- were shot dead by security forces who arrived and started shooting sporadically and teargassed the whole area.

Five young men were arrested and paraded without evidence that they were involved in the attack.

Raids and indiscriminate mass arrests of no less than 107 persons from various locations in Owerri have also been reported and kangaroo mass trials conducted in a police car park and other locations outside the court room based on frivolous charges and remanded in prison thereby complicating the problem of prison congestion.

This brutal and malicious policing approach is a direct outcome of the IGP’s directive to police officers to ignore the rules of engagement and to commit egregious human rights violation which has actually led to the harvest of egregious human rights violation including mass arrests and parading of arrested persons without evidence and extrajudicial killings. We view this with great seriousness.

The Nigeria Police has a Code of Conduct and Rules of Engagement. The general guidelines to the document requires that in the discharge of their roles, members of security agencies will ensure observance of and be guided by extant laws, rules and regulations as well as standard norms and practices among which are fundamental rights in accordance with the constitution, various regulations and orders, ECOWAS protocol on good governance and democracy, African charter on human and people’s rights, UN code of Conduct for law enforcement officials, UN basic principles on the use of force and fire arms by law enforcement officials, among others. The rules of engagement also prioritises the principle of minimum force and proportionality in the use of force. We are therefore appalled that the IGP could discard the NPF’s Code of Conduct and Rules of Engagement signed up to by the NPF and direct police officers to act in blatant violation of the Code of Conduct and Rules of Engagement.

As observed by A. H Abilagbo in ‘The Impact of Indiscriminate Use of Firearms and the Rules of Engagement in the Nigeria Police Force’

‘The growing concern by generality of the Nigerian public over the incidence of abuse of firearms by the security agencies, especially, the Nigerian Police, has demonstrated an absence of a comprehensive crime control strategy in the country. The damaging effect of this odious situation is hardly acknowledged by the government, let alone taking deliberate steps to put an end to it. Police officers need to legitimately carry firearms to incapacitate dangerous armed criminals, and are constitutionally empowered to use force during their daily tasks. However, the almost daily occurrence of “extra judicial killings,” “accidental discharge,” etc. causing fatal harms on innocent citizens, have now become a source of serious security and safety concerns in the country. The utter disregards of rules of engagements with impunity by the police not only question the ability of the government to protect its citizens but also undermine its credibility. Even though government has frequently appointed committees to advise it on the way forward, regrettably, the reports of such committees are never implemented’.

Conclusion

Killing innocent citizens would not be the appropriate answer to the menace of insecurity, violence and criminality in any state. How come only innocent citizens are killed all the time and always after the actual criminals have carried out their dastardly operations and disappeared?

OUR CALLS

1. *DECLINE CONFIRMATION OF USMAN ALKALI BABA AS INSPECTOR GENERAL OF POLICE* : Based on the Acting IGP's reckless and dangerous utterances and directives to police officers to disregard the Code of conduct and rules of engagement, we hereby convey our opposition to his confirmation as substantive IGP. We call on the Police Council and the Senate to, in the public interest, muster the courage to decline confirmation of Acting Inspector General of Police, Usman Alkali Baba as substantive IGP. He is unfit and unsuitable to be appointed to head a country's lead security agency. He is indeed a threat to public safety and security.

2. *INVESTIGATE  ARREST OF FIVE PERSONS IN OWERRI AFTER ORJI ATTACK:* We call for an independent investigation into the allegation that the five men arrested at Orji, Owerri, Imo State after the criminals had operated and disappeared are members of IPOB. The police must present credible evidence that they are member of IPOB involved in any legally recognisable crime or immediately free them with apologies

3. *INVESTIGATE 107 ARRESTS* : We call for an independent investigation into the circumstances surrounding the arrest of no less than 107 residents of Owerri Imo State who were also alleged to be IPOB members and arraigned on the preposterous allegation of attempts to overthrow President Buhari and Governor Hope Uzodinma.

4. *INVESTIGATE PATTERNS OF ARRESTS AND KILLINGS BY THE POLICE IN OWERRI* : We also call for Investigations into all other killings in Imo State by both the military and police and an end to predatory policing tactics.

*
5. CONVENE STAKEHOLDER DIALOGUES :* Government should prioritise dialogue and should immediately liaise with civil society, traditional, religious and community leaders and leaders of town unions and socio-political and cultural organisations as well as leaders of aggrieved groups to convene a joint stakeholders dialogues in the States and zones to discuss, design and implement a workable solutions to insecurity.

6. *PRESIDENT BUHARI SHOULD LEAD OR RISK IMPEACHMENT* :

Since the primary purpose of government is welfare and security,

  • Buhari should step up, provide leadership, restore order, promote justice and inclusive government which equally benefits all sections of the country or he should step aside by resigning.
    -The National Assembly as the People’s representatives should review current situation in the country and call on the Executive to respect the rule of law and the human rights of every person. They should also impress on the President as the Head of government to take decisive steps to restore order and protect human rights and if found wanting, take the step to impeach him.

Signed:

  1. Okechukwu Nwanguma for RULAAC
  2. Victoria Ibezim-Ohaeri for Spaces for Change
  3. Chido Onuma for African Centre for Media & Information Literacy (AFRICMIL)
  4. Mazi Chima Amadi for Centre for Transparency Advocacy
  5. Saviour Akpan Esq for COMPPART Foundation for Justice and Peacebuilding
  6. Hon. Ohams Chinedu G for Orlu Security Peace Holders Initiative
  7. Emeka Nwanevu, for Initiative for Public Safety, Security and Educational Development in Nigeria
  8. Lilian Ezenwa for Public Enlightenment Projects (PEP)
  9. James Ugochukwu for African Centre for Entrepreneurship and Information Development -ACEIDEV
  10. Gbenga Soloki for Centre Against Injustice and Domestic Violence -CAIDOV
  11. Godwin Kingsley for World Impact Development Foundation (WIDEF)
  12. Samuel Akpologun for Ace & Vanguard Legal Practitioners*
  13. ABDURRAHMAN AKINDELE AYUBA for Centre for Community Empowerment and Poverty Eradication ( CCEPE)
  14. Anthony Opara- The Difference Newspapers
  15. Comrade Nelson Nnanna Nwafor Executive Director
    Foundation for Environmental Rights, Advocacy & Development (FENRAD
  16. Ogechi Ikeh
    Citizens Centre for Integrated Development and Social Rights CCIDESOR
  17. Uzoma Aneto for Nde Oduko Foundation
  18. Justine Ijeomah (Executive Director) Human Rights Social Development and Environmental Foundation (HURSDEF )

President Buhari Takes Second Dose Of COVID-19 Vaccine

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President Muhammadu Buhari has received his second dose of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine.

The President took the shot at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

The second dose is being administered exactly 12 weeks after the first shot was taken on March 6.

The President’s innoculation was done by the Chief Personal Physician to the President, Dr. Suhayb Rafindadi Sanusi after which he was presented with the e-vaccination card by the executive director of the National Primary Health Care Development Agency, Dr. Faisal Shuaib.

‘Write your wills before you step out’ – Police warns IPOB

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The Imo State Police Command says it is ready to deal with members of the Proscribed Independent People of Biafra Group.

In a statement by its spokesperson, Bala Elkana on Friday, the command asked residents of the state to ignore the sit-at-home order declared by the Indigenous People of Biafra on May 30.

The statement read: “The attention of the Imo State Police Command has been drawn to some messages circulating on social media purported to have emanated from leaders of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra directing innocent and law-abiding citizens of the state to sit at home from May 29-31, 2021.

“The command wishes to inform the good people of Imo State that adequate security arrangements are in place to guarantee their safety. The police in collaboration with other security agencies in the state has massively deployed its resources and Special Forces to provide watertight security across the state.

“To those who are bent on disturbing the peace of the state, we have this simple message for you: steer clear of the public space or write your will before you step out. The command is battle-ready to deal decisively with hoodlums and criminal elements in line with the law.” The statement further read.

NewsWireNGR recalls that In an earlier statement by IPOB Media and Publicity Secretary Emma Powerful, the group said while there will be a partial observation of the Biafra Day on Sunday, there will be a total lockdown on Monday throughout the South-East.

” We, therefore, expect Biafrans all over the world to stay indoors on May 31 for the respect and honour of our fallen heroes and heroines who paid the supreme price for us to live. It is our right to remember them for defending the genocidal attacks on our people between 1967 and 1970.” IPOB said.

‘I fight my own battles; I don’t report anyone to my husband’ – Remi Tinubu

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Senator Oluremi Tinubu says she does not report anyone to her husband, the national chairman of the All Progressives Congress APC; instead, she fights her own battles.

The Senator representing Lagos Central, said this while featuring on a TVC breakfast show, ‘Your View’ on Friday.

 “That you have a position doesn’t mean you have to lose yourself to that position, because the position will go and then, do you go back and find yourself? You have to be yourself in every situation.

“Most of the time when people see me talk strongly, yes, I am Asiwaju’s wife but Asiwaju is somebody that I don’t go home to report anyone to because he would tell me, ‘you are wrong’. I don’t know why but when you have a husband who tells you, ‘you are wrong’ when you are right, in your own view, would you go back to such a person? So, I do my own fight when I have to, especially in what I believe in.” She said

The Senator also addressed a viral social media video and allegations that she called a lady known as Arinola a thug during the Constitutional Review public hearings in Lagos on Wednesday.

According to her, she asked Oloko if she was a thug and not that she called her a thug. She said, “I only asked a question and I expected her to say, ‘Ma’am, I am not a thug’”.

Kano is important to Nigeria, Kano is also important to the railway sector – Amaechi

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Nigeria’s minister of transportation, Rotimi Amaechi has highlighted the importance of the Kano-Kaduna rail project to the country’s economic development. According to him, because of the economic viability of the state, the rail line and the Inland Dry Port would boost the business activities.

Amaechi made this known when he led a delegation of Nigerian Shippers Council and Nigeria Railway Corporation on a courtesy visit to Gov. Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano.

”Kano is important to Nigeria,  Kano is also important to the railway sector and we are trying to see how to bring Maritime into Kano, it is important to note that the Nigerian Shippers’ Council North-West Zonal Office is located at Kano because of the economic importance. “We believe that the government has the capacity to protect those projects and respond to the needs of the users,”he said.

” We are here because we want to see how far you have gone with the Dala Inland Dry Port because between now and July we will start work on the Kano-Kaduna part of the rail and wherever we link the Kano rail to Kaduna and link Ibadan to Abuja,  then we have solved the problem of cargoes.” The minister said.

” We have to learn how to manage cargoes that come to Kano as you know,  we are also linking Kano-Maradi, so Kano will be the hub for the railway sector with a major station in Kano, it will be able to control the volume of human traffic in Kano.” He further stated.

Responding,  Ganduje said that he was delighted that the Zonal Office of the Nigerian Shippers Council was located in the State because of the commercial nature of the State. Ganduje said that based on the population of the State, the volume of imports and export was very high noting that Kano has the highest vote during elections and the highest seat at the National Assembly. He pledged to make the Dala Inland Dry Port wet in terms of performance.

President Buhari wins the Trophée Babacar Ndiaye 2021 award

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President Muhammadu Buhari has been named winner of the 2021 Great Builder Super Prize for Trophée Babacar Ndiaye.

President Buhari took over from Abdel Fattah al-Sissi of Egypt, who won the 2020 prize.

According to a statement from the African Development Bank (AfDB) on Friday, President Buhari was named winner during the inaugural Africa Road Builders Conference held on March 31 in Cairo, Egypt.

The trophy would be awarded on June 24 on the side-lines of the AfDB’s Annual Meetings.

Fattah al-Sissi, received the award “for his personal leadership and for the efforts made to ensure road safety and the health of the population in the context of transport,” the statement said.

 Improving road safety and air quality
The selection committee, however, cited Nigeria’s efforts to improve road safety and air quality for road users.

It also commended efforts to obtain Covid-19 vaccines and for advancing major transport projects, especially in the rail sector that would ensure the optimal operation of roads and transport.

The Babacar Ndiaye Africa Road Builders Award is organised by Acturoutes, an information platform on infrastructure and roads in Africa, and Media for Infrastructure and Finance in Africa (MIFA), a network of African journalists specialised in road infrastructure.

The AfDB President sponsors the award.

The selection committee comprises Media representatives from the five regions of the continent who rely on media reports and experts on road networks, transport, and sustainable development.

The award was created in honour of Babacar Ndiaye, President of the AfDB Group from 1985 to 1995.

Presidency say Buhari has recorded giant strides in various sectors of the economy

The Presidency, on Friday, said when the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari breasts the tape in another two years, the applause would be resounding, even from the worst of skeptics.

A presidential spokesman, Femi Adesina, said this in a statement titled ‘The Buhari Administration at 6: Counting the Blessings One by One’.

The statement catalogued the achievements of the incumbent federal government led by President Buhari in the last six years.

Adesina said the administration had recorded giant strides in various sectors of the economy that would be recognised by “those who are dispassionate and fair-minded, not beclouded by political partisanship and undue cynicism.”

The statement read in part: “The Muhammadu Buhari administration clocks six years May 29, 2021.

“This milestone affords the opportunity to reflect, and recount the impact that has been made (and is being made) on different sectors of national life.

“From infrastructure, to finance, education, healthcare, sports, anti-corruption, human development, housing, oil and gas, foreign relations, and many others, the administration is recording giant strides, enough to make Nigerians proud.

“That is, those who are dispassionate and fair-minded, not beclouded by political partisanship and undue cynicism.

“Some people claim: ‘We don’t see what they are doing. We don’t hear about it.’

“When the Administration breasts the tape in another two years, by the grace of God, the applause will be resounding, even from the worst of sceptics.

“Facts are undeniable, and always remain so. They are stubborn things.”