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NNPC Says Vandals Stole N50bn Worth Of Petrol From Single Pipeline

Vandals stole nearly $250 million worth of petrol from a single pipeline in Nigeria in the first nine months of 2015, the country’s state-run oil company said Thursday, as motorists complained of shortages.

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) said 531 million litres of petrol worth more than 50 billion naira were lost between January and September.

The petrol was taken from the System 2B pipeline which stretches from the financial hub of Lagos to Ilorin, some 260 kilometres (160 miles) away to the northeast, the company added in a statement.

Nigerian governments past and present have repeatedly blamed pipeline vandalism and theft in the oil sector for hitting revenues as well as supplies to consumers.

The Pipelines and Product Marketing Company, an NNPC subsidiary, told a Senate committee that “incessant hacking” of the System 2B pipeline had “made the task of providing seamless flow of petroleum products to retail outlets more burdensome”.

Long queues have formed at petrol stations across Nigeria in recent days.

The situation has been blamed on a payment dispute between oil marketers, who import petroleum products, and the government.
Nigeria is Africa’s number one oil exporter but has imported most of its petrol because of a lack of domestic refining capacity.

The government keeps prices at the pump low and pays the difference in the international market rate to the importers.

PPMC managing director Esther Nnamdi Ogbue said earlier the company was “working hard” to resolve the issue, according to comments from a radio interview posted on the NNPC Twitter feed.

“We have been pushing 35 million litres every day to the market and there’s no reason why there shouldn’t be fuel,” she added, blaming “sharp practices” such as hoarding in some areas.

Fuel shortages are a regular occurrence in Nigeria and in May the country was brought to a virtual standstill after importers shut depots over subsidy payments.

President Muhammadu Buhari has been urged to scrap the subsidy scheme, which is seen as riddled with corruption, but a previous attempt to stop the payments led to violent mass protests in 2012.
NNPC managing director Emmanuel Kachikwu in August called the subsidy scheme an unsustainable drain on the economy, which has been battered by the global fall in oil prices.

Group Urges International Community To Check Buhari’s Rights Abuses

The international community,  human rights groups,  and amnesty international have been urged to pay close attention to human rights abuses by President Muhammadu Buhari or have a Syria on their hands.

They warned that unless Buhari was checked early,  his actions may have devastating consequences that could go beyond our borders like Syria

The group, Leaders and Accountability Initiative , in a statement in Abuja,  maintained that Buhari if today is not different from when he was a military dictator.

In the statement signed by Country coordinator,  Prince Henry Nwazuruahu Shield and scribe, Elder Ndem, the group cited examples of the violation of the rights of ex NSA,  Col. Sambo Dasuki ( rtd ),  ex CSO to Goodluck Jonathan,  Gordon Obuah, invasion of the Akwa Ibom State Governors lodge,  and raid on the residence of ex Sokoto governor,  Attahiru Bafarawa by agents of Buhari.

It said ” Buharis dictatorship was earmarked by chilling human rights abuses which included draconian decrees exemplified by Decree 20 under which the judicial murders of Nigerian citizens, Lawal Ojuolape, Bernard Ogedengbe and Bartholomew Owoh were authorized by Buhari. Particularly, Ogedengbe was murdered for a crime that did not carry the death penalty at the time it was committed in violation of the universal revulsion of ex post facto laws.”

“After celebrating fairness , due process, and the rule of law last July to win the goodwill of the United States,  Buhari returned to Nigeria to do what he knows best. He went after perceived opponents in the name of fighting corruption. Prominent was the  vendetta against  Dasuki, and former CSO to Goodluck Jonathan, Gordon Obuah.  The latter nearly died in DSS’s custody …He placed Dasuki under house arrest, confiscated his passport , charged him with fire arms and money laundering violations, and sought a secret trial to prevent independent scrutiny.

“Justice Adeniyi  Ademola explained that an accused is presumed innocent before the trial , and that a citizen’s health is paramount before the law. Buhari was ordered to release Dasuki’s passport , the order was defied. He put Dasuki’s house under siege, a microcosm of the Bosnian Serb siege of Sarajevo. Dasuki returned to court Justice Ademola reaffirmed his order, asserting “ my own orders will not be flouted”

The group maintained that “it is instructive to note that while the government should recover monies stolen by past government officials, and thereafter prosecute those found wanting, the Federal government’s anti corruption agencies must not violate the fundamental human rights of the people.”

It said further “Dasuki is yet to travel anywhere because he is technically barred by the Department of State Services (DSS). The Air Vice Marshall O. N Ode (Rtd) panel set up to probe the arms deals has already submitted an interim report indicting Dasuki and a host of others, subsequently, their arrests was ordered by Buhari.”

According to the group “wether there is substance in the allegations of fraudulent arms contracts leveled against Dasuki, or not, the fact is that the DSS’s tough action ordered by Buhari has done violence to standard rules and procedures of investigations.”

“To make matters worse the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Mustapha Malami, instead of protect the rights of citizens, says the detention of Dasuki is in public interest.

His weird argument “It is not enough to conclude that the order was flouted. You have to look at the peculiarities of the prevailing cases on ground . You can be granted bail with respect to one case and there can be other cases that public policy demands investigation.

“he Washington  Times had few months ago indicted President Buhari over the current ordeal of a former National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki rtd, despite the  subsisting court order that which granted him permission to embark on a medical trip abroad.” The group recalled

“The consequences of not respecting such rights often have devastating consequences that that could have chain reactions outside the borders of the affected nations, like is being experienced in Europe with the mass migration from the middle east.”

“such wanton abuse and disregard of people’s rights  hampers development, and could envelop the nation in a huge tragedy of global proportion, the agitation by the Independent Peoples Of Biafra suffice”

Governor Wada Files Suit To Stop APC Substitution Of Another Candidate For Kogi Election

The Governor of Kogi State, Captain Idris Wada, has filed a suit at the Federal High Court in Abuja, seeking to stop the substitution of the late governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

In the suit, the Governor is asking the court to stop the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) from conducting the proposed supplementary elections with a ‘substitute candidate’ to be fielded by the APC.

In a 15-page originating summon filed by Chris Uche, the Governor and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) want the court to determine the legality or otherwise of the decision of the APC to substitute its candidate.

The APC candidate, late Mr Abubakar Audu, died a day after the November 21 election, few hours before the Kogi governorship election was declared inconclusive by INEC.

The plaintiff is also praying the court to declare as illegal the decision of the APC to substitute its candidate after the governorship candidate of the party died.

In the alternative, the plaintiff is asking the court to order a fresh governorship election within a specified period.

The INEC had said that the APC would be required to fill the vacancy created by the death of its candidate before it would organise the supplementary election on December 5.

Also giving his view about the next action after the election was declared inconclusive, the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr Abubakar Malami, said that the APC could substitute its candidate in the Kogi State governorship election.

Mr Malami said section 33 of the Electoral Act provided for such substitution.

 

Lai Mohammed Says The Media Must Report That The Military Has Turned The Tide Against Insurgency

The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has urged the media to galvanize support among the populace for the war on terrorism, which he described as a major challenge facing the nation.

”The war against terrorism is not a war for the military alone but for all Nigerians. The media must reflect this in their reporting and galvanize the people to know that it is not just a battle against a few insurgents but a war for the very survival of our nation,” the Minister said when he met representatives of media professional bodies in Abuja on Friday.

He said it is important for the media to report the fact that the military has turned the tide against the insurgents, degrading their ability to carry out spectacular attacks and retaking captured territories, ”thus paving the way for displaced persons to gradually return to their homes, for schools that have been destroyed to be rebuilt and for pupils who could not go to school to do so”.

Alhaji Mohammed also stressed the need for the media ”not to remain on the fence” over the issue of national unity.

”Apart from the challenge of terrorism, there is also the issue of national unity. If anything, we have taken our unity for granted and have not made a conscious and concerted effort to constantly service and strengthen it.

”Unfortunately, what started as a crack is now widening into a gorge. The media must not remain on the fence when the issue of our national unity is involved. They must carry out their duties in such a way that will unite, rather than divide our people. Our unity is fragile, and the fragility comes into the open at a time of economic downturn as we have now. We cannot afford to be neutral on the issue of national unity,” he said.

The Minister assured that the government would work with the media in the interest of the country.

”For example, we are working on forging a partnership between the government and the media that will see military and intelligence chiefs interfacing with you to give you first hand information on the progress of the war against terrorism.

”We believe it is important to carry the media along, because if you are well informed about the war, you will be in a better position to inform Nigerians about it. In this regard, you will hear more from us in the days to come,” he said.

Alhaji Mohammed assured that under his watch, the Ministry of Information and Culture will ensure that the media get timely and accurate information from the government, saying ”if you run into any roadblock while seeking information from any government establishment, kindly notify us”.

He hailed the media for effectively playing their watchdog role during the last elections that saw the opposition ousting the ruling party for the first time in the history of our country.

”Whereas a few media establishments fell short during the last elections, jettisoning professionalism on the altar of political expediency, the media largely availed themselves creditably by maintaining their professional integrity,” the Minister said.

Buhari Bounce Becomes Bust As Nigeria Policies Irk Investors – Bloomberg

When Muhammadu Buhari clinched victory in Nigeria’s presidential elections in March, stocks soared as investors looked to the former military ruler to reverse decades of economic mismanagement and policy inertia. Now hopes have fizzled in his ability to turn around Africa’s largest economy and oil producer.

Money that flowed into stocks and bonds in the West African nation, which McKinsey & Co. says could become one of the world’s 20 biggest economies by 2030, is now fleeing as growth prospects diminish along with oil prices. While Buhari, 72, has prioritized stamping out the graft that has plagued Nigeria since independence from Britain in 1960, policy-making appears as uncertain and haphazard as ever.

“After the initial euphoria, people have become disillusioned,” Ayodele Salami, who oversees about $500 million of African equities as chief investment officer of London-based Duet Asset Management Ltd., said by phone. “He would probably say that he’s being deliberative and cautious. But we expected more.” Duet’s Africa fund has cut its investments in the country to about 24 percent of the total from 38 percent in the last year.

Buhari waited five months before naming his cabinet, hasn’t proposed a clear plan to revive growth and backed foreign-exchange controls aimed at defending the naira. His retention of gasoline subsidies, plans to raise spending in the face of declining revenue and silence about a $5.2 billion fine levied on mobile-phone operator MTN Group Ltd. have added to investor unease.

Nigeria’s benchmark stock index has plunged 22 percent since reaching a year-high on April 2, the day after Buhari was declared the winner of the presidential race against incumbent Goodluck Jonathan. That’s the third-worst performance globally in the period, after the bourses in Ukraine and Egypt. The index advanced 12.5 percent in the two days after Jonathan conceded.

To be sure, Buhari inherited depleted government coffers and a bureaucracy that multiple probes have blamed for looting billions of dollars of oil revenue. The president has said he delayed appointing ministers because he needed time to vet suitable candidates.

Garba Shehu, a spokesman for Buhari, didn’t immediately respond to written questions after requesting they be sent that way.

The hiatus has compounded the pain caused by the slide in the price of crude, which accounts for two-thirds of government revenue and 90 percent of export earnings. Growth, which averaged 6.3 percent annually over the past decade, is set to slow to a 16-year low of 3.3 percent this year, according to the median estimate of 15 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

Many filling stations ran dry this month as the government withheld fuel subsidies to suppliers, preventing them from restocking.

Lengthening lines forced Buhari to ask lawmakers for permission to pay 413 billion naira ($2 billion) in overdue payments, an amount that hadn’t been budgeted for.

While next year’s budget has yet to be finalized, Buhari wants to raise spending by 56 percent, according to a person who attended a briefing on the government’s plans and asked not to be identified because the matter is private. Vice President Yemi Osinbajo says the government plans to spend its way out of a slowing economy and that an infrastructure fund will be created with public and private financing.

The penalty imposed on MTN’s Nigeria unit last month for failing to register about 5 million subscribers may be an attempt to plug the hole in government finances, according to Cobus de Hart, an economist at NKC Independent Economists.

“You cannot deny there might be a fiscal element to the massive fine,” he said by phone from Paarl, near Cape Town. “It will make investors a little bit more wary of investing in Nigeria.”

An even bigger concern for many investors is the authorities’ naira policy. The Central Bank of Nigeria, with Buhari’s backing, has burned through $4.3 billion of reserves this year and choked off supply of foreign exchange to banks and their customers to defend the naira, even as major oil exporters such as Russia and Colombia have let their currencies slide. The restrictions prompted JPMorgan Chase & Co. to remove Nigeria from its local-currency emerging-market bond indexes, tracked by more than $200 billion of funds, in September, triggering a selloff in the nations’ assets.

While the naira has been all but fixed at about 198 to 199 per dollar since March, forward prices suggest it will drop by almost one-fifth, to 243.5, in a year.

Buhari Has Spent More Than 40 Days Junketing Outside Nigeria Since Inauguration

President Muhammadu Buhari has spent more than 40 days in trips to different parts of the world since he was sworn in on May 29, 2015. The president’s frequent foreign trips have come under scrutiny and criticism as Nigeria faces myriad crises, from intractable fuel shortages to terrorist assaults in the country’s northeast.

Saharareporters account reveals that President Muhammadu Buhari has spent more than 40 days in trips to different parts of the world since he was sworn in on May 29, 2015. The president’s frequent foreign trips have come under scrutiny and criticism as Nigeria faces myriad crises, from intractable fuel shortages to terrorist assaults in the country’s northeast.

An audit of Mr. Buhari’s itinerary by our team of reporters discovered that the Nigerian president has traveled to Chad, Germany, France, Ghana, India, Iran, South Africa, Cameroon, Iran, and twice to the United States of America.

Critics of the president’s junkets state that the trips have consumed a significant amount of cash in a country that is beset by a considerable financial crunch, a result of a deep dip in Nigeria’s earnings from oil exports. The president’s foreign trips represent a drain on Nigeria’s meager resources, with travel allowances to members of the presidential entourage, payments to pilots, aircraft maintenance and fueling as well as hotel accommodation and other sundry expenses.

By contrast, Mr. Buhari has made very few official trips within Nigeria. Our research indicates that President Buhari has made official trips to a relatively few number of states, including Cross Rivers, Kaduna and Adamawa states. The president also visited Ogun State just yesterday to attend the burial of Mrs. Hannah I.D. Awolowo, wife of the late Nigerian political leader, Obafemi Awolowo.

In addition to visiting his home state of Katsina, Mr. Buhari has also recently visited Kebbi State recently where he launched a N20 billion ‘Anchor Borrowers’ program initiated by the Central Bank of Nigeria for rice farmers across the country.

Opposition critics accuse President Buhari of engaging in wasteful international junkets, adding that he has taken to attending conferences that should have been assigned to his political aides, permanent secretaries or ministers.

Past Nigerian presidents also established a fascination with foreign trips, often at times when domestic problems within the country cried for attention. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo set the tone, spending much of his first term as president on junkets around the world. The lone exception was the late Umaru Yar’Adua who did very little traveling during his short-lived administration but spent long periods ensconced in hospitals in Germany and Saudi Arabia on the account of a terminal disease that eventually took his life.

SaharaReporters had also done detailed reporting of former President Goodluck Jonathan’s penchant for foreign trips. Mr. Jonathan often took huge numbers of aides and other political figures as part of his contingent during his trips. In one instance, Mr. Jonathan’s delegation to a meeting of the United Nation’s General Assembly topped 600 people. In addition, his wife, Patience Jonathan, also spent considerable time abroad, sometimes for medical treatments that were concealed from the Nigerian people.

Mr. Buhari’s critics question the wisdom of his high volume of foreign trips at a time when Nigeria is mired in one of its worst fuel shortage crises in years. The fuel shortage has also been compounded by a sharp drop in electric power supply in Nigeria. A business executive in Abuja told SaharaReporters that most businesses in the country are badly affected by the fuel and power crises, adding, “The Buhari administration has got to act quickly before companies are forced to shed huge numbers of their employees in order to stay afloat.”

In addition to the lingering fuel and electric power problems, members of the Islamist insurgent group, Boko Haram, have stepped up attacks in the northeastern zone of Nigeria.

Meanwhile, Mr. Buhari is set to travel for another four days starting from tomorrow to attend the Commonwealth Heads of State meeting in Malta as well as a short visit to Paris for another conference.

Tunji Braithwaite Says Buhari Has Been Pampering Corrupt Government Officials

Elder statesman, Dr. Tunji Braithwaite, says President Muhammadu Buhari is pampering corrupt government officials in the immediate past government by recovering looted funds from them without prosecuting them.

President Buhari had, during his recent visit to Iran, said that many of those who stole public funds in the past government had started returning the funds. He, however, did not mention the names of the looters.

But Braithwaite said that allowing the corrupt government officials to return stolen funds without being tried was a bigger crime than the act of stealing the funds.

The human rights lawyer, who spoke with our correspondent in an interview on Thursday, said the President was promoting impunity by recovering looted funds through plea bargaining rather than keeping to his promise of ensuring total justice.

He said, “It is a crime against the state for anybody to steal public funds. Returning stolen funds quietly without being sanctioned is even worse than the crime of stealing the money. This is morally reprehensible and it can never serve as a deterrent to other corrupt politicians who might want to steal public resources.

“Buhari is pampering those corrupt leaders by just obtaining looted funds and not jailing them. With all the bragging and the promises he made during the campaign, we expected that his war against corruption will be rootless. These public thieves carted away our national assets and in the process, impoverished many Nigerians. Corruption is also responsible for the infrastructural decay we are experiencing. The roads are bad and many Nigerian youths cannot find jobs.”

While advising the President to be more determined in wiping out corruption, Braithwaite said it was possible to recover stolen funds and still prosecute the corrupt public officials.

Reuben Abati: Audu’s Inconclusive Death, Mugabe’s Wheelchair

“You look sleepy”

“My brother, let’s just say I slept at a fuel station, looking for fuel.”

“For which of the women in your life, because I hear these days, to please a woman in Nigeria, you must be ready to supply the three major things lacking in the land: money, fuel, and happiness.”

“Leave that matter, please. My condolences on the death of your man, Governor Abubakar Audu”

“We thank God for his life. He played his part.”

““To be so close to breasting the tape and then fall.”

“I know. I know. May be if he had not insisted on running again for the office of Governor in Kogi state, he would still be alive today.”

“The man drove himself too hard, publicly and privately. He ran for every Gubernatorial election in Kogi state since 1991. There must be something special in being Governor for him.”

“Don’t speak ill of the dead, I beg you. Simple etiquette.”

“But you know now?”

“I don’t know nothing”

“Then the man went and married a young, 23-year old. If the election had been concluded and the man had won, the First Lady of Kogi state would have been a 23-year old lady! Those who seek public office should always weigh their lifestyle and their health against their ambition, but politicians act as if they are superhuman.”

“Can you stop?”

“A 74-year old man, with a 23-year old wife. That alone is enough to give anybody hypertension.”
“He was 68”

“Official age. He was 74, somebody told me.”

“Excuse me! Respect the dead, please. Abubakar Audu was a democrat extraordinary, a courageous politician, a visionary, selfless, man of the people, and his party’s popular choice.”

“My view is that it is not the election in Kogi that is inconclusive per se, a supplementary election will be organized, a winner will emerge; it is Audu’s death that is inconclusive considering the many issues it has thrown up.”

“What kind of talk is that? Death is final. It is the cessation of all things, a necessary end.”

“Nothing has ended with Abubakar Audu’s death oh. Did you not see the desperate efforts made to get some Prophets to resurrect him? And some people actually believed that he could be the Lazarus of our time! They started jubilating.”

“That is concrete proof of his popularity. But I was shocked seeing Nigerians will believe anything, and being so superstitious. Even the grave diggers stopped digging, waiting for the prophets to perform a miracle.”

“I hear there was a meeting of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on the Kogi election but the moment the prophets waded in, even INEC suspended its meeting and did not reconvene until the prophets failed.”

“Only in Africa!”

“When the Prophets didn’t deliver, people got angry. They could have lynched those Prophets”

“Well, at least, some people will now know that the prophets are not always right in the age of biology and science. Who could have been behind such a hare-brained scheme?”

“The man’s in-laws, for example.
“Oh, come on”
“Or persons who may have been promised appointments and contracts. Or it could be persons who invested in his candidacy. Elections in Nigeria are business investments. The investors must have thought of a last minute strategy to reverse the situation. Simple economics. ”

“You and your theories. The same people will do business with whoever eventually wins the election, anyway.”

“There is also the inconclusive matter of the 23-year old wife. When the death was announced, many commentators on social media were more concerned about the young widow. Comments about how she will cope, what she would do next. One guy asked for her phone numbers.”

“Stupid, callous fellow.”

“Another fellow actually said he was ready to inherit all of Audu’s assets and liabilities in that regard.”

“Let him go ahead. Ole!”

“Besides, Audu’s death has turned everybody into a Constitutional expert. What happens if a candidate dies in the course of an inconclusive election? Who becomes the new candidate?”

“Simple. The APC will field another candidate, appeal to whoever is aggrieved within the party to step down until an appropriate candidate who definitely must be Igala, is identified. I don’t see the APC fielding any candidate who will automatically make them lose the election.”

“You think the APC candidate must still be Igala? But nothing is ever that straightforward in Nigerian politics.”

“Of course, otherwise, it will be a walk-over for Governor Idris Wada. The Igalas have the numbers. Politics is a game of numbers. The stakes are high. I foresee many court cases”

“Let them field Audu’s young widow then”

“Are you out of your mind? Why are you so obsessed with this lady?”

“Or may be his son. Does he have any son who is qualified? Let them make it a family affair. If he had supported his son as a candidate…But people just don’t know when to quit and hand over to the next generation.”

“With a 23-year old wife, he was definitely committed to the next generation.”

“Some people are of the view that his running mate should just run with the mandate, but I don’t think the circumstances favour him. He is from a minority group in Kogi state. He is a Christian, and the party may not back him.”

“Poor James Faleke”

“Yeah, he must be troubled. What if he and Audu had won. And they had been sworn in. But now, there are no guarantees.”

“God’s will is supreme. That is one lesson we all must learn from all this. Remember Abacha? When it was time, God intervened. We are all pencils in God’s hands. You can amass all the wealth in the world, marry all the young women, misapply the people’s money, get so close to Cannan, but you can then fall sick and die. In life, things happen and all you have left is six feet, rich or poor, six feet.”

“Six feet”

“I hope Robert Mugabe knows this. I hope Grace Mugabe knows.”

“Why Robert Mugabe?”

“Didn’t you read that story about 50-year old Grace Mugabe, First Lady of Zimbabwe, buying her Robert, a special wheelchair?”

“The way you pronounced Robert, you make it sound like Robot”

“Isn’t that what the 91-year old President of Zimbabwe has become, a Robot. Grace Mugabe’s Robot”

“Sad. In his days, Robert Mugabe, multiple degrees holder, was a shining star. And now, his wife is pushing him around”

“She actually has a PhD, awarded in two months, without examination or dissertation, by her Robert in his capacity as Chancellor of the University of Zimbabwe!”

“Mugabe! A Pan-Africanist, who stood up to the British and neo-colonial imperialism; today, he is falling down at public functions, he reads the wrong speech in parliament, he is old and tired, and yet he won’t quit.”

“He should. Zimbabwe already has the oldest President in the world, and he has been in power since 1980- 35 years!”
“With a wife like “Dis Grace” Mugabe, he won’t. She says she is ready to push the wheelchair herself, just in case anybody is in any doubt.”
“I won’t put anything past that woman. Didn’t she once proclaim that any woman who wears mini-skirt and gets raped should not complain? Is that not the same woman who punched a journalist in the face during a foreign visit?”

“Mugabe has stayed too long and has allowed a woman to destroy his legacy. He is so smitten with “Dis-Grace”, he allegedly fired his Chief of Defence Staff last year for staring at her derriere!”

“That’s madness.”

“But the woman get am oh. The thing dey; very seriously. And you know in that part of Africa, the women don’t need to buy it and enhance it like Kim Kardashian, the thing just dey and you can lose your head.”

“I think someday in Africa, we’d have to start voting for these First Ladies too. Voters should be given the right to choose the President’s wife, or at least they should be screened by parliament. In Africa, the wives wield so much influence.”

“They do in other places too. It is the man that matters.”

“When Mugabe sits in that wheelchair, Zimbabwe is finished!”

“For democracy to work, we need to worry about the leadership recruitment process in Africa. How do we free democracy from a debilitating sense and culture of entitlement. How do we get persons who are still up to it, and who will not aspire to rule till they are on wheelchair or life-long medication.”

““All men who play God and who aspire to be God, let them be reminded, it is just six feet. In Cameroon, Paul Biya has been sitting tight for 33 years, in Congo, Nguesso has been in power for 36 years, in Equitorial Guinea, Mbasogo is almost a god in human form. And you have dos Santos in Angola (36 years) Bashir in Sudan (22 years) Museveni in Uganda (29 years), Idris Deby in Chad (25 years) and Jammeh in Gambia (21 years).”

“Six feet. Just six feet in the grave.”

“I hope they all know.”

“It is also a lesson for the poor, including those young ones who play God with their talents.”

“Absolutely. There are people these days who play God with their laptops, their pens and I-pads. Imagine some people jubilating over other people’s misfortune.”

“Six feet, my brother, not an inch more nor less. In the grave, all men are equal.”

Court Quashes Charges Against Timipre Sylva

Adeniyi Ademola, justice of the federal high court, Abuja, has struck out a case filed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) against Timipre Sylva, former governor of Bayelsa state.

The EFCC had filed 50-count charge bordering on stealing to the tune of N19.2 billion, against Sylva. But on Thursday, Ademola struck out the case on the grounds that it was an abuse of court process. The judge held that the charges had been dismissed by two federal high courts, and a resuscitation was tantamount to an abuse of court process.

He also held that the court lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the criminal charges against Sylva, who is now the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Bayelsa governorship election.

In June, Ahmed Mohammed, a justice of the federal high court, Abuja, dismissed a 42-count charge of stealing which the EFCC brought against Sylva.

The anti-graft agency later amended the charge, adding eight more charges, and brought the suit before Ademola. But the judge held that all the 50 charges were the same; hence the suit of the EFCC was a “regurgitation of a settled matter”.

He also inferred that Sylva’s case was one of persecution by people who want to get at him at a cost using the EFCC. He thereafter dismissed the case against the accused person.

Senate Committee Gives Petroleum Minister, Buhari Two Weeks To End Fuel Scarcity

The Senate Committee on Petroleum Downstream has given the Minister of State for Petroleum and the NNPC two weeks to end petrol scarcity in the country.

The committee handed down this directive at a meeting with officials of the Ministry of Petroleum, NNPC and agencies in the petroleum sector.

For nearly three weeks, there have been long queues at different petrol stations across the country; a situation that has defied solutions by previous administrations and has again reared its head a few months into the present government.

The heads of the agencies explained the reason for the problem in the petroleum downstream sector which they say have made petrol scarcity a recurring problem in the country.

The problems which the head of petroleum agencies identified as being responsible for the recurring problem of fuel scarcity are not new. They are the same problems which the agencies identify almost every time they have appeared before the Senate in the past few years.

The Managing Director of the PPMC, Mrs Esther Nnamdi-Ogbue, highlighted issues with petroleum marketers, pipeline vandalism, sharp practices at depots and diversion of fuel.

Members of the committee sought to find out the real issues including the outstanding amount owed petroleum marketers, noting that if the present administration does not address these issues head on, the problem of petrol scarcity might continue for a very long time.

The head of the Senate committee, Senator Uche Ekwunife, then directed the officials of the Ministry and the NNPC to find ways to put an end to the fuel crisis with the next two weeks.

“Nigerians want to see the immediate end to this fuel scarcity and also the uniformity of the price of the product across the country.

“As a committee, our target is that scarcity and discrepancies in price must stop and it must be done.

“Therefore, we are mandating the Minister, the Permanent Secretary and other relevant agencies in the sector, that fuel scarcity must stop in the next two weeks.

“Petrol must be sold at the uniform price of N87 per litre everywhere in the country,” she said.

Despite Domestic Concerns, President Buhari Jets Out To Malta For Commonwealth Meeting

By Chris Nomjov

Amidst pressing domestic concerns, President Muhammadu Buhari has travelled out of Nigeria for the second time in less than a week; this time to Malta for the 2015 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

The meeting of 53 countries, will begin on Friday, and the Head of the Commonwealth, Queen Elizabeth II, is expected to formally declare the summit open.

The Commonwealth summit ends on Sunday, after which President Buhari will leave Malta for Paris where he will present Nigeria’s statement at the United Nations Climate Change Conference.
The official trips embarked upon by the President are somewhat I’ll timed given the fuel scarcity, economic downturn and security challenges plaguing the country. It is hoped that such trips would be productive and help assuage the current harsh economic climes.

 

#KogiDecides: Faleke Seeks Swearing-In As Governor, As APC Kogi East Prepares Late Audu’s Son For Primaries

By Chris Nomjov

The All Progressive Congress (APC) in Kogi east has nominated Audu’s first son to replace him in the supplementary poll, while the leadership of the party is planning to hold a fresh primary, which about 27 APC candidates have declared interest to participate in.

Meanwhile, the running mate of late Abubakar Audu, gubernatorial candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Late Abubakar Audu, in the November 21 election, Mr. Abiodun Faleke has asked the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to declare him winner of the poll.

In a letter addressed to Mahmood Yakubu, chairman of INEC, Faleke argued that “the election had been concluded and completed in compliance with the provision of the constitution”. He faulted the decision of the electoral body to declare the exercise inconclusive, describing it as “unconstitutional”.

“The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) conducted election to the office of governor of Kogi state on Saturday, 21st November, 2015,” read the letter issued on his behalf by Wole Olanipekun, his counsel.

“The election was held in all the 21 local government areas of the state: and to the best of our knowledge, information and belief, the said election was peaceful, and also in substantial conformity and compliance with the provisions of the electoral act, m2010 (as amended).”

INEC had explained that the margin of votes between the two leading contenders was less than the number of cancelled votes, in contravention of a provision of the electoral act.

Audu, who was leading the election, polled 240,861 votes, while his key opponent, Idris Wada, candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), secured 199,514 votes.

The margin between the two results was 41,353, while the total number of cancelled votes was 49,953.

Hence, Emmanuel Kucha, the returning officer, explained that supplementary election will hold across 91 polling units in 18 local government areas. Thereafter, INEC scheduled the fresh poll for December 5 and asked APC to replace Audu.

However, Faleke expressed dissatisfaction, saying he ran on a joint ticket with the deceased, and it will be improper to give the votes already cast in the substantive election to a fresh candidate.

“In law and logic, no new candidate can inherit or be a beneficiary of the votes already cast, counted and declared by INEC before that candidate was nominated and purportedly sponsored,” the letter read.

“Assuming without conceding that INEC is even right to order a supplementary election, the votes already cast, counted and declared on Saturday, 25th November 2015, were votes for the joint constitutional ticket of Prince Abubakar Audu and our client.

“Therefore, no new or supplementary candidate can hijack, aggregate, appropriate or inherit the said votes.

“Our client believes that election to the office of governor of Kogi state had been conducted and completed in accordance with the provisions of the constitution. Therefore, INEC has no alternative or discretion other than to announce the result of the election and declare our client as the winner.

“INEC is enjoined to declare a winner of an election based on lawful votes cast. Thus, the cancelled results by INEC, for whatever reasons, and assuming without conceding that INEC could legitimately cancel such results, amount to unlawful votes.

“In effect, INEC cannot declare a well conducted election as inconclusive based on unlawful votes. INEC is inadvertently prompting an avoidable political and legal crisis. What INEC should do is to obey, respect and comply with the letters, spirit, intendment and tenor of the constitution, by not only declaring APC as the winner of the election, but by also declaring our client as the governor-elect.”

Already, the PDP has asked the electoral body to declare its candidate winner on the grounds that the death of Audu left the APC with “no valid candidate”.