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Peter Obi congratulates Nigerian professor appointed Cambridge varsity college President

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The Labour Party presidential candidate, Peter Obi, on Monday, congratulated the Nigerian born professor, Ijeoma Uchegbu, who was appointed as the President of Wolfson College, at the University of Cambridge.

In a series of tweets on his X handle on Monday, Obi wrote, “I wish to joyfully congratulate Ijeoma Uchegbu, a Nigerian and Professor of Pharmaceutical Nanoscience, celebrated for her exceptional work in nanoparticle drug delivery, who has just been announced as the 7th President of Wolfson College, one of the 31 colleges of the University of Cambridge.“

Prof. Uchegbu, currently a lecturer at University College London, is also globally celebrated for her high intellectual and global works in  Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) which have won her numerous awards, fellowships, and accolades, as she continues to trail the blaze in pharmaceutical nanoscience.

“Her innovative breakthrough and academic excellence, reborn out of years of dedication and hard work, have not only led to the development of new treatments that promise to transform pain relief but have also paved the way for deeper research in pharmaceutical science for the improvement of health – a very critical index of human development. As she boldly steps into her new position next year, I wish her more all-around success.”

The former Anambra State Governor also stated that he is hopeful that she will make more global impacts, and through her position, raise a generation of enthusiastic researchers who will advance the frontiers of science, medicine and global health.

He also urged her to continue to contribute to the development of Nigeria, especially in health and education.

Chidi Odinkalu: An itinerant jurist, an unfinished honeymoon and a judicial transaction

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Supreme Courts are places where lawyers and judges regularly encounter one another. On 17 November 2023, one of such encounters occurred, not in the regular halls of Nigeria’s Supreme Court in Abuja but in its Mosque. 

There, Abdulaziz Waziri, a Justice of Appeal wedded Zaynab Bashir, a Judge of Nigeria’s National Industrial Court. The wedding reception followed thereafter at a well-appointed venue in up-market Maitama, in Abuja.

Justice Waziri has been nothing if not busy this season. For his duty station in this election petition appeal season, Justice Waziri was stationed in Jos, Plateau State, where the Justices of Appeal, in the state from which the President of the Court of Appeal hails, have been busy re-writing the results of the elections, taking seats from one party and generously handing them to another party on the bases of jurisprudence that can most charitably be described as extraordinarily specious. 

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. From Jos, His Lordship went to Abuja for his matrimonial rituals at the Supreme Court. The location and duration of the ensuing honeymoon was, advisedly, ensconced in discretion. 

A mere 25 days after the wedding, however, the aforesaid Justice Abdulaziz Waziri was listed to deliver the opening keynote at the Law Week of the Nigerian Bar Association in Yola. Rumours that the jollities of a richly earned honeymoon would distract His Lordship from this appearance proved to be admirably unfounded. 

Yola is the place where His Lordship honed his skills in the law and where his judicial career began. The arrival in power of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has coincided with a career break-out for His Lordship. In March 2016, Governor Jibrilla Bindow elected on the platform of the APC swore him in as a judge of the High Court of Adamawa State. A mere five years later, in June 2021, he became a Justice of the Court of Appeal following appointment by the party leader, Muhammadu Buhari.

Regular judicial duties and election petition season conspired to keep His Lordship away from home. So, the invitation by the Yola Bar served a healthy purpose. On 12 December, Justice Waziri arrived Yola in person and went swinging with the gusto of a man whose virility had been recently tested and proved. 

Speaking to the Yola Bar, Justice Waziri launched into a wanton defence of the jurisprudential proclivities of the Court of Appeal in the Plateau State election petition appeals. 

He invited participants – in a manner of speaking – to understand why the judges know better than the voters who should rule over them and asked them to show greater understanding for the generosity of the Court of Appeal Bench in overriding the voters of Plateau State and dutifully handing their mandate to persons other than those whom they had chosen.

Urging his listeners to “always stand on the side of the law”, His Lordship panned those belly-aching about the Court of Appeal, saying that the “critics of the judgment were missing the point as the (Peoples’ Democracy) Party – whose victories the Court of Appeal has systematically stolen – had no structure on ground at the point of presenting their candidates.” He claimed that the “structures” of the party had been wiped away by a high court decision and that they did not exist for the purpose of conducting the party congresses that yielded their candidates in the elections of 2023. 

These remarks by a relatively junior Justice of Appeal were considered sufficiently weighty to make the headlines across all platforms in the country. As befits the trajectory of a man whose recent life has been rife with consistent coincidence, the beneficiaries of the seats which he has been busy handing out as a Justice of Appeal just happen also to be his appointive benefactors, the APC.

It is impossible to be devoid of fraternal feeling for a man in mid-life crises battling the exertions of an unfinished honeymoon. Any effort to address him must afford him the mitigation that his head may be located elsewhere as an anatomical proposition, and not just a figure of speech. These extenuating circumstances notwithstanding, Justice Waziri’s remarks must detain us. 

The traditional view is that judges speak most credibly and authoritatively through their judgments. It is at best unusual and mostly ill-advised for them to resort to the soapbox or its diction to rationalize what they do on the Bench. But we are in extraordinary times in Nigeria. A generation ago, it would have been considered judicial malpractice for a judge to speak in public about whether or not a political party has “structures” going into an election because few would think that to be judicial province.

In this case, the judge did more than just go out of his substantive province. Jos, the capital of Plateau State, where the Justices of Appeal have done their thing, is located in north-central Nigeria. It is a drive of over 520 kilometres from Yola in the north-east, where His Lordship mounted his judicial soap-box. 

But it is not altogether unwelcome that His Lordship in this case feels called upon to mount a spirited defence of the detour by the Court of Appeal into the realm of electoral burglary clothed in the ruse of law. His bid for the judicial soap-box relieves one of any of the usual constraints invoked when encountering a judicial figure on the Bench.

The facts are less complicated than his Lordship sought to portray them. Following the state congresses in Plateau State in 2022, one Augustine Timkuk sued to challenge the legality of what transpired. The defendants included the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP).

After failing to set aside the congresses and the resulting slate of candidates at the High Court, Mr. Timkuk appealed to the Court of Appeal in appeal number CA/J/300/2022 between Augustine Timkuk v. INEC and 6 Others. Days before the onset of election season in 2023, on 11 February 2023, the Court of Appeal sitting in Jos, Plateau State validated the state congresses and dismissed Mr. Timkuk’s case. There was no appeal against this decision and no judgment existed prior to the election nullifying the party congresses or the slate of candidates from them.

Sitting in a post-election capacity, however, Justice Waziri and his colleagues on a separate panel of the Court of Appeal have acted with injudicious premeditation, ransacking decisions of the self-same court of appeal and inventing justifications for things that endanger the standing of the judicial organ as a deliberative institution constrained as it ought to be by norms of evidence, precedent, logic, and institutional self-restraint. They have done worse than infantilise the people of Plateau State, telling them that they are unfit to choose who represents or governs them. Instead, they assert in words as in their deeds that they as Justices of Appeal know best. 

The most charitable one can be about this is to describe it as judicial overreach. Others inclined to be less charitable may see Plateau State as the site of a criminal judicial transaction. 

Plateau State, the victim of this perverse transaction is also one of the most chronic atrocities sites in Nigeria, going back to 1994. Official literature abounds to prove that the state does not need much provocation to unhinge. The consequences for elective government as for coexistence are destined to be very corrosive. Justice Waziri knows this and so must his colleagues on the Court of Appeal.

But there are also precedents from nearby in case they wish to be reminded. In April 2020, Mali’s Constitutional Court overturned the results in 31 parliamentary seats won by the opposition. Its decision to hand these seats over to the ruling party sparked an uprising that led first to the dissolution of the Constitutional Court, later followed by the overthrow of the government in a military coup.

Former Nigerian President, Goodluck Jonathan, mediated that situation unsuccessfully. When Justice Waziri considers himself in need to some distraction from his honeymoon and from the peregrinations of an itinerant jurist, he may benefit from paying a visit to Otuoke for a private seminar on how not repeat the Mali crisis in Nigeria. 

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A lawyer and a teacher, Odinkalu can be reached at [email protected] 

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Minister of Women Affairs, Uju Ohanenye has ordered the arrest of an Uyo-based lawyer known as Mr Ebong for assaulting his wife in a viral video

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The Minister of Women Affairs, Uju Ohanenye has ordered the arrest of an Uyo-based lawyer known as Mr Ebong for assaulting his wife in a viral video.

Mr Ebong was seen in the video standing over his bloodied wife who was in her underwear, while several people intervened stopping him from beating her.

A bystander also accused the man of beating his wife for more than four years

Reacting to the horrible scene on Sunday via a post on X, the minister wrote that the “Federal Ministry of Women Affairs Nigeria has ordered the arrest of this demonized lawyer Mr Ebong, who must face the law squally and I promise this act can not be swept under the carpet.”

Hon.Ohanenye insisted the lawyer would face the law irrespective of the wife’s refusal to push for prosecution.

“Even if the woman decides she doesn’t want her husband to be sued, due to family pressure. the man must face the law as justice will have its way.” 

She also reiterated the Ministry’s commitment to ending gender-based violence in the country

“This remains one of the most insane and unbelievable scenes one has seen in the brutalization of women.”  

“As I have always emphasised, this is a ‘Renewed Hope’ government and such an act can not be allowed in our country.” 

Wike has warned politicians not to pull the ladder they used in getting to exalted positions

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Amid the political crisis rocking Rivers State, ex-governor Nyesom Wike, has warned politicians not to pull the ladder they used in getting to exalted positions.

“Don’t pull the ladder that you use in climbing. When you are coming down, the ladder may not be there,” Wike said on Sunday.

“And leave the ladder too so that other people can also climb the ladder.”

Wike, who has been embroiled in a dispute with his successor and incumbent governor of the oil-rich state, Siminalayi Fubara, spoke at his residence in Port Harcourt, the state capital while addressing the traditional ruler of Ogbaland who had come to felicitate with him on the occasion of his birthday.

The chiefs and other members of the traditional institution from Ogbaland in Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Local Government Area of the state were led by the traditional ruler, Nwachukwu Nnam-Obi III, who sued for peace in the state.

In his response, Wike, who is also the minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), assured the monarch that he will listen to his advice and that he is welcome to peaceful resolutions.

Speaking further, the minister debunked claims that the political imbroglio is an ethnic war, insisting that there is no such consideration.

“We didn’t vote based on ethnicity…but for the unity of Rivers,” the minister said.

“We shall never be part of violence but will always support peace.”

“There are rules within the political group you emerge.

“You cannot say that because an Oba has emerged and then an Oba will not follow the rules of the traditional institution. No; an Oba will always obey the rules. So also in politics, there are things you must not do and there are things you must do.”

JAMB announces 2024 UTME/DE registration dates, fees increase

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The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has announced the official start of profile creation for the 2024 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) and Direct Entry (DE) registration exercise.

JAMB announced this in a statement on Sunday, stating that prospective candidates can now begin creating their profiles on the JAMB website, with the official sale of application documents set to begin on Monday, January 15th, 2024.

It also stated that the prospective candidates have six weeks, until Monday, February 26, to complete their registration.

The examination body also noted that the registration fee for the 2024 UTME varies depending on whether a candidate wishes to participate in the optional mock exam, adding that candidates opting for the mock exam will pay N7,700, while those opting out will pay N6,200.

“Sale of Application Documents for Foreign Candidates: $30,” it added.

According to JAMB, for those seeking admission through Direct Entry, the registration process starts later, on Wednesday, February 28, 2024, and closes on Thursday, March 28, 2024.

It added that the 2024 UTME mock examination will be held on Thursday, March 7, 2024, allowing students to test their preparedness and identify areas for improvement before the actual exam and candidates can print their examination slips starting on Wednesday, April 10, 2024.

The main UTME itself will take place over ten days, from Friday, April 19th, 2024, to Monday, April 29th, 2024. 

“For more enquiries, kindly visit our website at http://jamb.gov.ng, our social media handles or any JAMB office near you.”

Cambridge University college announces Nigerian professor as next president

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A professor of Pharmaceutical Nanoscience, Ijeoma Uchegbu, known for her ground-breaking work in nanoparticle drug delivery, has been announced as the 7th President of Wolfson College, one of the 31 colleges of the University of Cambridge. She will succeed the current President, Professor Jane Clarke, on October 1, 2024.

Uchegbu is currently a Professor of Pharmaceutical Neuroscience at University College London (UCL). She was raised in Southeast Nigeria and Hackney. She completed her pharmacy studies at the University of Benin in 1981 before attending the University of Lagos to obtain her master’s degree. As a result of infrastructure issues, she was unable to finish her doctorate in Nigeria.

After returning to the UK, she studied postgraduate work at the University of London, earning a PhD in 1997. Alexander (Sandy) Florence, the Dean of the School of Pharmacy supervised her dissertation. From 2002 to 2004, she worked as a lecturer at the University of Strathclyde.

Her pioneering work on the mechanisms of drug transport has led to the development of new treatments that promise to transform pain relief, including the enkephalin pain medicine candidate (Envelta), designed to address the opioid crisis. With her visionary leadership and extensive experience in academia, Professor Ijeoma is set to make a profound impact on the college’s future. Her appointment brings a fresh perspective and a wealth of knowledge that will undoubtedly contribute to the growth and development of both the college and its students.

Her work has won her numerous awards, fellowships, and accolades, and she holds positions on several academic boards and councils including the Wellcome Trust, and the Academy of Medical Sciences, and is an honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry. She has also played a leading role during her time at UCL as Pro Vice Provost for Africa and the Middle East, in forging new research partnerships in those regions and as UCL’s Provost’s Envoy for Race Equality, steering the organisation’s race equality agenda.

Responding to her appointment, she said: “I am so thrilled to be joining Wolfson College, an ambitious and forward-thinking College. It will be an honor to lead such a lively, diverse, and engaged student community in an environment where people are stimulated culturally, socially, and intellectually. I look forward to working with the Governing Body, staff, and students to help realize their ambitions and potential.”

Her leadership will undoubtedly foster a research-intensive environment where innovation and critical thinking thrive. Moreover, her dedication to community engagement and inclusivity aligns perfectly with Wolfson College’s values. She strongly believes in creating a diverse and inclusive educational environment where individuals from all walks of life can thrive.

Ondo police arrest Okada driver for raping passenger, robbery

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Ondo State Police have arrested a 23-year-old motorcycle driver, Ogunleye Ayorinde, on charges of armed robbery and rape.

Ayorinde allegedly targeted a young woman around 7:30 p.m. while she boarded his motorbike for a ride towards Alagbaka from Owo Road.

The suspect reportedly threatened the victim with a knife and forced her to an unfinished building, where he sexually assaulted her.

A source said Ayorinde then stole the victim’s Android phone and forced her to transfer N120,000 from her savings account to a mobile payment platform. 

Detectives from the Okuta-Elerinla division tracked down the suspect using his mobile number and apprehended him.

The state police spokesperson, Funmi Odunlami, confirmed Ayorinde’s arrest and his confession to the crimes. 

Odunlami stated that the suspect would soon be charged in court following a full investigation.

In another development, a businessman, Chidi Chukwu, was attacked and robbed by 11 armed individuals while riding his motorcycle in Akure. 

The assailants, wielding machetes, hammers, and other weapons, stole Chukwu’s motorcycle and injured him on his right hand.

Two suspects, Bode Hammed (37) and Ayomide Adebayo (25), were apprehended shortly after the attack. 

Odunlami also confirmed they will face charges while the search for the remaining suspects continues.

Actor Emeka Ike shares his journey through depression & marital struggles

Renowned actor Emeka Ike has candidly shared his journey through a challenging period marked by battles with depression, marital struggles, and a career downturn within the Nollywood industry.

Appearing on the Rubbin’ Minds show hosted by Hero Daniels and reported by Per Second News on Sunday, the veteran actor opened up about his absence from screens for an extended period.

Ike explained that his hiatus was a result of personal challenges during turbulent times in his marriage and the industry’s shift from VCD to larger screens. The actor, along with some colleagues, felt excluded from the changing landscape, impacting the demand for their talents.

Recall that Emeka Ike’s marriage was dissolved by a Lagos Island Customary Court in 2015 due to alleged incessant battering, which added to the actor’s tumultuous journey.

However, in another revelation, the veteran actor disclosed that his time away from the limelight involved life-threatening situations, facing threats from assassins and gunmen with no apparent motive.

Despite these adversities, the seasoned actor has made a triumphant return to Nollywood, securing a role in Toyin Abraham’s upcoming movie, ‘Malaika.’

Emphasizing his comeback, Ike attributed his resurgence to a commitment to personal growth and perseverance in the face of adversities. His inspiring journey reflects a resilient spirit overcoming challenges in both personal and professional realms.

Middle Belt group kick against the installation of former Governor Nasir el-Rufai, as the Gbobaniyi of Ijebuland

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Middle Belt Patriots has kicked against the installation of former Governor of Kaduna State, Nasir el-Rufai, as the Gbobaniyi of Ijebuland by the Awujale, Oba Sikiru Adetona.

El-Rufai is reportedly the first Nigerian outside the South-West to receive a chieftaincy title from the Awujale in his nearly 64-year reign. The ex-governor was honoured alongside former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship aspirant in Ogun State, Jimi Lawal, who bagged two chieftaincy titles for his contributions to Nigeria at an event, which held at the palace of the monarch on Saturday. 

But in a statement, yesterday, General Secretary of the group, Patrick Anum, told the monarch that the former Kaduna helmsman does not deserve honour for his alleged involvement in supervising genocide in Southern Kaduna.He said the development in Southern Kaduna had raised significant concerns among the Middle Belt people and should concern the Yoruba people too. 

Besides, Anum alleged that el-Rufai’s actions in Southern Kaduna, such as changing the names of traditional stools and undermining chiefdoms, raised questions about his respect for and commitment to traditional institutions. 

According to Anum, honouring an individual with such a controversial background may not align with the values and principles that have guided the Yoruba traditional institutions throughout its rich history.He said: “As students of Obafemi Awolowo’s philosophy, we are confident that, if alive, he would strongly oppose the honouring of a character like el-Rufai, who the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) had to deplatform in August 2020 due to his stained image in public view after widespread criticisms visited his invitation to speak at the NBA conference.”

“Awolowo consistently advocated justice and the protection of traditional institutions. His writings and the statements issued by the Action Group (AG) during his time highlighted his commitment to opposing any form of domination, particularly in the Middle Belt, of which Southern Kaduna was a part in the First Republic.”

The Guardian gathered that the group’s concerns about el-Rufai’s association with the Yoruba traditional institution goes beyond his alleged involvement in genocidal activities, but up to his actions in Southern Kaduna, such as changing the names of traditional stools and undermining chiefdoms.

They added: “In 2018, after the controversial abduction and murder of the Agom Adara (paramount ruler of Adara nation), el-Rufai, then governor of Kaduna, sent a controversial gazette to the House of Assembly balkanising the Adara chiefdom. In its stead, he established an emirate in Kajuru, a local council that is predominantly Adara.”

Let nobody play with the security situation in Kano, deputy governor warns, says residents won’t accept injustice

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Ahead of the Supreme Court ruling on Kano governorship appeal, Deputy Governor Aminu Abdussalam has warned that the residents would resist any attempt to subvert Justice. 

He insisted that Governor Abba Kabiru Yusuf came to office through popular mandate.

His words: “We can see so much tension in Kano, and people are more agitated and want justice to prevail. The importance of Kano in Nigeria cannot be overemphasised, and so let nobody play with the security situation of Kano because doing that, may trigger tension in the country.”

Addressing the Kwankwasiyya movement loyalists yesterday shortly after inspecting the burnt Gwale council secretariat that went up in flames last Wednesday, the deputy governor alleged that the perpetrators were out to stoke crisis prior to the apex court judgment. 

Meanwhile, the All Progressives Congress (APC) has dismissed a purported out-of-court settlement report allowing Governor Yusuf to continue in office.
Chairman of Kano chapter of the party, Abdullahi Abbas, in a statement, urged the citizenry to ignore the story allegedly being peddled by members of the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP) that they have reached out to President Bola Tinubu to let the status quo remain.

He stated: “There is nowhere such meeting held with either Mr President or any leader of the party. President Bola Tinubu is a democrat, and strongly believes in the rule of law, and the right thing to be done, and therefore will not be part of any arrangement or reconciliation to subvert justice and support people, who have stolen votes or breach the Electoral Act to emerge as leaders.”

Mystery surrounding the murder of their 32-year-old, Joseph Chinedu Aniede of Enugu State

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The people of Isiogbo Nara community, in Nkanu East Local Council of Enugu State, at the weekend, appealed to the Enugu State Commissioner of Police to unravel the mystery surrounding the murder of their 32-year-old kinsman, Joseph Chinedu Aniede.

Aniede was, until his untimely death, a farmer and hunter in the community.

In a statement, the family asked the police boss to ensure the culprits are brought to book, to serve as a deterrent to others. Aniede, they said, met his death on November 1, this year.

Narrating the incident to newsmen in Enugu, his family members said he had gone out to respond to a call from a phone number, 08144388343, at about 4:00 p.m., on the fateful day but never returned alive.

“…Only for his lifeless body to be found in a pool of his own blood in a bush, near the borders of Isiogbo Nara community of Nkanu East Local Council of Enugu State and Isu community of Onitcha Local Council of Ebonyi State, the next morning,” Akachukwu Aniede said.

Chairman of the Isiogbo Nara Neighbourhood Security Watch, Emeka Eze, disclosed that he was alerted to the sad news by an officer of the Enugu State Forest Guard, who came to him in the early hours of November 2, 2023, and also led him to the scene.

Eze said although the police have since commenced investigation, people of the area are living in fear because such an incident had never happened in the community.

“It is shocking because the Isiogbo Nara community is not in conflict with any of its neighbours; hence, we want to know the source of the crime as nobody knows who is going to be the next,” he said.

Some residents, who spoke under condition of anonymity, said the victim was a hardworking and peaceful young man. One of them said: “Before his untimely death, he was a hunter and a farmer. He was also a member of the Isiogbo Nara Community Neighborhood security Watch Group.”

“He was the one providing for his mother (a poor widow) and siblings. And in this case, the family may not have the resources needed to follow up this matter to its logical conclusion.”

As economy bites, new breed of beggars known as “Corporate Beggars” on the rise in Abuja

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A new breed of beggars known as “Corporate Beggars” is on the rise in Abuja.

Findings by the News Agency of Nigeria revealed that the corporate beggars take begging as a means of livelihood and even earn more than some workers.

The beggars usually hangout around shopping malls, markets, bus stops, religious centres, hospitals and offices.

NAN accosted one of them at Wuse Market, who pleaded anonymoty, saying that most of them beg because they had no other means of livelihood.

“I have been begging for over 12 years in different locations in Abuja, I am married and blessed with nine children.

“My husband is not a responsible father and I want my children to be educated.

“I use the money I get to feed and train them in school, they go to school during the week and they join me in begging at weekends, we share ourselves to different locations,” she said.

According to her, before the removal of fuel subsidy she used to make up to N150,000 to N200, 000 monthly.

“But because of the current economy, I now make between N90,000 to N100,000 monthly.

“The only thing I know how to do is begging as it pays me more than getting a job.

”I know when workers receive their salaries, and that is the time I go to government offices, every season has its location,” she said.

According to her, most Nigerians do not want to help when they do not hear sad tales.

A beggar with disability, Isa Isa, said that he was born that way into a family of 108, adding that his l father hadls four wives.

“Whenever he divorces anyone he replaces her immediately, which made him had so many children he could not cater for.

“I started begging at an early age, and naturally, people will feel pity for me because I did not have a wheelchair then, I used to roll on the ground.

“I was later given a wheelchair by the government which made it a bit easier for me. I am married with eight children, I have three graduates, four of my daughters are married and I have four houses, all proceeds of my begging.

“Now I beg for fun as its the only job I understand, I make more than N300,000 monthly,” he said.

Another 12 year-old beggar Nuhu Bello, said he begs for his family to feed.

“My father is dead, he was a beggar and my mum can not beg. I have to do it to feed her and my four siblings,” he said.

Another beggar, Emmanuel Eze, said that begging pays his bills, adding that he earns up to N5, 000 and above on a daily basis.

“I did not choose to beg but the economy turned me into one.

“I used to work in a factory but after the fuel subsidy removal the company left the country and made me jobless, I have people who depend on me, that was how I started begging.

”If I get a good job I may stop begging, but for now this pays the billss,” Eze said.

Meanwhile, there are those who prey on the sympathy of unsuspecting Nigerians who find it difficult to distinguish genuine requests from beggars who cook up stories in order for people to have pity on them.

They trick people into giving them money, citing personal challenges or family problems such as the inability to pay medical bills, school fees, and house rent.

Sometimes, they claim they are stranded with no money to continue their journey.

One good samaritan, Godson Amadi, said that he usually sees them at bus stops, markets and offices.

“I know most of their strategy, they are usually well dressed some are real and some are fake.

“It is either their wallets, credit cards have been stolen. They look out for people riding in SUVs, official cars, or those who are well-dressed. Once you respond to their greetings politely, they strike.

“I used to pay their transportation before I realised it was a group of people who do it every day, they beg on their way to and from their locations,” he said.

Halima Sani, a civil servant, narrated her encounter with a female beggar at the federal secteriat car park.

“She came to me and said her child was sick and she didn’t have money to get him drugs, out of pity I gave her N10,000

“After some months she met me at a bank with a baby strapped to her back when she accosted me, pleading for money to eat breakfast that she already had someone who refilled her cooking gas but was in need of money to buy food items to cook.

”I asked her if she remembered me and I narrated how we met first, she ran away.

“I believe in giving, whether your story is true or not, I try to help those in need,” she said.

Another victim, Esther Ibrahim, said that after her encounter with a corporate beggar at Kado fish market, she swore never to fall victim again.

“A well dressed lady came into the shop and we exchanged pleasantries, she looked round the shop and approached me, if I could help her pay for one fish that she needed to cook for a sick patient which I did.

“On that same line, I went to buy chicken only to find her there begging again. Some of them have agreement with the sales persons to return their share of proceeds at the end of the day.

“These so-called beggars prey on the empathy of human beings because they know that out of 10 people, six may be willing to help,” she said.

A businessman, Aliyu Audu, said that he was used to them and the lies they tell to exploit innocent citizens, who they end up earning more than.

“Its either they need money for food, transportation, hospital bills or drugs among others.”
NAN