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Chelsea & British Consulate Investigating Stabbing Of Fans In Istanbul

Two Chelsea fans were stabbed In Istanbul last night ahead of the club’s Champions League last-16 showdown with Galatasaray.

Chelsea is currently involving the incidents which saw the duo stabbed.

Both victims were nor taken to hospital as the injuries were thought to be minor.

The victims were stabbed in two separate incidents around the city centre area near Taksim Square, where Chelsea fans gathered.

Chelsea has revealed they are aware of the incidents and their security officials and the British consulater are now investigating.

Demonstrations are expected at the Taksim Square today as protests against the current government escalate.

UN Secretary-General Condemns Yobe Students’ Killings

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has strongly condemned the brutal killing of students at the Federal Government College, Buni Yadi, in Yobe.

The condemnation is contained in a statement issued on Wednesday in New York and made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.

It expressed sincere condolences to the bereaved families and hoped that the perpetrators would be “swiftly brought to justice.

“The secretary-general is deeply concerned about the increasing frequency and brutality of attacks against educational institutions in the north of the country.

“He reiterates that no objective can justify such violence,” the statement said.

On Tuesday, President Goodluck Jonathan condemned the killings, calling them “heinous, brutal and mindless”.

Yobe is one of three north eastern states along with Borno and Adamawa put under emergency rule last May by President Jonathan as the military continues to combat the insurgency in the area.

Diego Simeone Won’t Mind Facing Barca & Real Madrid Weekly

One man who is not worried when playing against Spanish giants, Barcelona and Real Madrid is Athletico Madrid coach,  Diego Simeone.

The coach says he won’t mind playing Real Madrid or Barcelona more often. He believes media hype and coverage is one one of the reasons La Liga teams fear the classico giants

“It’s better for us. In the sports papers, 10 pages are dedicated to Madrid and another 10 to Barca and if they win 4-0, it’s as though they won 16-0 because they constantly repeat the highlights” .

“That creates a situation of fear and so when you have to play against them, you’re almost losing from the start.

“For foreign teams it’s a bit different, meeting Madrid or Barca motivates them as they are less affected by the media hype. If it was up to me, I’d play against them every week,” the coach told Ole.

Simeone also spoke about creating a strong mentality for his Athletico team to face Barca and Real and also challenge for titles

“We want to build a team which shows commitment,” he continued.

“That is a very big word to use and I mean it in the sense of being committed to play, to run, to train, respect your rival, understand the intelligence that lies behind the game.

“At Atletico, I think we are achieving that and it’s fantastic to see a kind of commitment that few people have in life

“We have a very specific way of working. We know that, as a team, we are dangerous and competitive.

“We also know that, over 40 weeks, Real Madrid and Barca will be streets ahead of us but in the day-to-day, we feel very close to them.”

Ceding Of Oil Wells To Akwa Ibom: Cross Rivers Has Lost N7bn Since June 2012

7 billion Naira has been lost by Cross Rivers state over the past 20 months after the Supreme court in July 2012 through a  judgement ceded 76 oil wells which were being disputed to Akwa Ibom state. That decision by the Supreme Court saw Cross Rivers state losing its 13 percent derivation share as an oil producing state.

Prior to that judgment, Cross Rivers state usually collected between N345 to N400 million as its derivation share every month. The last derivation share Cross Rivers state received was N345 million in June which was shared just before the Supreme court judgement in July.

With that judgement, Cross Rivers ceased being an oil-producing state and left the league of Akwa Ibom, Rivers, Delta, Bayelsa, Edo, Ondo, Abia and Imo which are the oil producing states currently.

The Supreme court judgement by Justice Olufunlola Adekeye had cited the ceding of Bakassi peninsula to Cameroon by the federal government as a reason why Cross River would not be considered an oil producing state as the state could no longer lay claims to the disputed oil.

The supreme court made it clear that “a non- littoral state cannot claim oil wells offshore as she has no maritime territory” since the International Court Of Justice (ICJ) had ceded Bakassi , its boundary and sea to Bakassi.

The derivation share which was formerly due to Cross Rivers state was channeled derivation to Akwa Ibom, which happens to now benefit the most from the derivation formula.

Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) documents reveal that Akwa Ibom got N12.3 billion as its derivation share for the month of June, 2012 but their allocation in July rose to N13.3 billion after receiving Cross River’s share in July

N48 billion was shared between eight oil producing states in December 2013. Akwa Ibom received N15 billion; Delta got N10 billion; Rivers received N9 billion; Bayelsa got N9 billion; Ondo received N1.9 billion; Edo bagged N1.4 billion; Abia pocketed N473 million and Ondo managed N469 million.

Tunde Leye: What We Can Learn From Maitatsine History, Understanding Boko Haram

I had a conversation with friends in my car on the way to work on Tuesday morning, and was amazed that all four of them, in their late twenties to early thirties had no idea what I was talking about. It dawned on me that many in my generation do not know much of what happened in Nigeria of say, thirty years ago, and we therefore miss the lessons from our history. Hence we repeat the mistakes made a mere generation ago.

The question I asked was “who knows about Maitatsine?” It is interesting that none did, in spite of the obvious similarities between what Maitatsine was in the late seventies to early eighties, and what Boko Haram has been for the past five to six years. Let me elaborate.
Maitatsine, whose real name was Mohammed Marwa was born in a town called Marwa on the hazy border of Nigeria with Cameroun. He started preaching in Kano in 1945 and was exiled by the British Colonial government when he began to foment trouble. While preaching Islam, he claimed to be a prophet and a Mujahid in the mould of the founder of the Sokoto Caliphate, Usman Dan Fodio. He preached against radios, watches, bicycles, cars, and possession of any excess money. His following grew in Kano, drawn from both almajiris and some middle class youths who left home. They refused to mix with other muslims, living in their own enclave, and it did not take long before their practices conflicted with the authorities. His growing following was such that the Islamic religious leaders in the north at first didn’t know what to do with him and his message. Then they accepted him after he went on hajj to Mecca in 1975. But in 1979, they rejected him, after he rejected the prophethood of Mohammed (SAW) and the Hadith and Sunnah.

However, at that time, Abubakar Rimi’s government in Kano State belonged to Aminu Kano‘s People’s Redemption Party, which was in the opposition to Shehu Shagari’s National Party of Nigeria which was at the center. Hence, rather than nip Maitatsine in the bud, the federal government and the state government chose to dilly dally and play politics with the matter, until Maitatsine’s sect grew. He was arrested by the police a couple of times but always managed to be released.

In the late seventies, people began to disappear in Kano. Reports of people entering the sect’s compound and not coming out became rife. The Emir of Kano became very worried, as the sect members, unlike other regular muslims did not respect his authority – they respected only one authority, that of their leader. In the years leading up to 1980, the number of violent confrontations between Maitatsine members and the police increased as the number of sect members increased. The town was saturated with expectations of the inevitable. When it happened, it was on a Friday, after the Jumat prayers. Maitatsine members had been stockpiling weapons and more sect members from outside Kano had come in, but the governments at the state and federal level (represented by the police) had done nothing about this. When the onslaught began, the sect overran the mosques, churches, and police stations. Clearly, the authorities had underestimated the strength and organization of the sect. At the end of the days of violence, over five thousand people were dead. There were reports of sect members being impervious to bullets, of sect members having a gaze that paralyzed people that went out to fight them, leaving the fellow helpless to be finished off.

The army eventually moved in, and overpowered the sect, killing Mohammed Marwa, the leader.

Now, let’s do a little exercise, shall we? Imagine everything as a mathematical equation, where each thing I mention is a mere variable, replaceable with another value. Now, replace Mohammed Marwa with Mohammed Yussuf. Fast forward from late seventies/early eighties to the present. Replace Kano State with Borno State. Replace Shehu Shagari with Goodluck Jonathan and NPN with PDP. Replace Abubakar Rimi with Ali Modu Sherriff and PRP with ANPP. Does Maitatsine increasingly look like Boko Haram? In the way it started, grew, and in how the governments at state and federal level played ruling against opposition politics with them. How they were allowed to create an enclave governed by their own rules? How they had increasing confrontations with the police as the sect members grew? How they held themselves separate from other muslims and the general condemnation by other muslims? How they attacked and killed other muslims? The anti-government, anti-tech message? How they were allowed to stockpile weapons? The explosive confrontation that led to many deaths? The killing of their leader?

Now, let’s see how Maitatsine grew after their leader’s death. Did they end? You guessed right, they didn’t. The same way a Shekkau led the Boko Haram insurgency after Mohammed Yusuf was killed in Maiduguri, after 1980, a certain Musa Makaniki fled to Yola with other Maitatsine members and in 1984, Kano was repeated in Yola, with one thousand people dying and half of the sixty thousand population of Yola ending up homeless. That was after the 1982 riots in Bulumkuttu near Maiduguri by Maitatsine members who had fled Kano, and in Kaduna, leaving three thousand dead. After Musa Makaniki’s Yola riots were quelled by the military under Buhari, he fled to Gombe where, a year later, sect members again killed hundreds. He was then pursued into Cameroun. He was finally arrested in 2004.

If we observe the way the sect fragmented after Mohammed Marwa was killed in Kano in 1980, and how the killings followed them to all the places they fled to, we will do well to take the lessons from these incidents in dealing with Boko Haram today. There’s a State Of Emergency plus military onslaught against them in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe today, and a bounty on Shekau’s head. As the military crushes the sect in those places, they must not lose sight of the fact that fragments of the sect can and will attempt to flee to other parts of Nigeria. They will attempt to do exactly what they have done before in the new places they flee to. Already, we are seeing a prelude to this with the attack on Daura, in the North West, an area where there had never been a Boko Haram incursion until the full scale military action against them in their former haunts. We must learn from history, and use the lessons to prevent this from happening, and save future thousands from dying at the sect’s hands. The way the two sects rose, plus Kalo Kata (read that up, dear reader) between them in the nineties shows that the emergence of each sect is symptomatic of some deeper seated issues in the north that need to be dealt with, otherwise, after Boko Haram is crushed, in another decade, we’ll be dealing with another insurgency. Finally, our politicians need to stop irresponsible politicking with issues like insurgencies. The same way NPN/PRP allowed Maitatsine to fester due to politics, PDP/ANPP politics contributed to Boko Haram’s ability to grow into the monster it has become. The knee jerk reactions from the yet to be fully formed APC to the state of emergency is another example of playing opposition politics rather than contributing to dealing decisively with an insurgency. This has to stop.
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Tunde Leye @tundeleye is a fiction writer. He believes that the stories written form a priceless resource that is the basis of society, all the other arts (film, music, theatre, visual arts) and hence he is committed to telling stories out of Africa that show it as it was, is, and is going to be. Article originally published on Demolare Waju’s blog

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Senator Saraki Seeks Bipartisan Approach To Ending The Recent Massacres In Nigeria

Senator Bukola Saraki has revealed he is devastated over the recent attack in Yobe state which saw over 43 children of Federal Government College, Buni Yadi killed. The senator was short of words over the recent killings in Nigeria especially in Borno and Yobe state:

I can’t find the right words to describe the activities of this man-made locust that continues to wipe away our communities and children needlessly.

While we are still mourning the last attack in Konduga and seeking for ways to prevent further attacks, the latest killings obviously shows the effect of Mr President and the Governor of the state not been on the same page and it is important that we all put heads together to address this menace before we are all consumed.

Saraki revealed he was tired of sending condolence messages  just as he urged those involved in the massacres to resolve their differences and stop the incessant killings:

This month alone, we have lost hundreds of lives to the activities of these militants terrorizing our existence and as a father, I am tired of having to send condolence messages to grieving mothers, fathers or siblings on this wanton spate of killings.

I urge the key stakeholders to please sheath their sword and differences in the interest of these innocent kids and for our overall peaceful existence to work in harmony and an action plan to stop this uprising.

He urged the Nigerian government to help improve security in the nation as he also implores all Nigerians to support the fight against terrorism my providing useful information to the security agencies

I believe that with the continued attacks in Northern Nigeria, the support from each and everyone of us irrespective of political party, religious belief and ethnicity is vital for combating violent extremism in Nigeria. This support also needs to have the necessary resources allocated by our Government to help ensure our nation’s security. Every Nigerian can assist the government in our own ways by providing information that may be useful to the security agencies.

The senate concluded his statement by sending out his heartfelt condolences to the families of all those who are in grief over the recent massacres in Borno and Yobe state

My sincere condolences goes to the parents and families of the deceased and all those who mourn one relative or the other. I pray Allah will have mercy on the deceased and return our country back to its green days.

Lagos Court Sentences Man To Six Months Imprisonment For Samsung Galaxy Phone Theft

A Magistrate Court in Itire, Lagos  sentenced a 37-year-old man, Okafor Emeka, to six months imprisonment on Tuesday for theft of a Samsung Galaxy phone worth N85,000.

The accused Emeka was not given an option of fine by the Magistrate, Mrs A.O. Gbajumo.

“Based on the facts given by the prosecutor and other evidence produced before this court, I find the defendant guilty of the charge.

“I hereby sentence you to six months imprisonment with no option of fine,”  Gbajumo said.

|Reports from the News Agency of Nigeria reveals that Emeka  pleaded guilty on arraignment.

The Prosecutor, Insp Olakunle Shonibare, had told the court that Emeka stole the phone from Mr Saheed Gbadegeshin on Feb. 4, at No. 2, Araromi St., Odo-Eran, Itire, Lagos.

He said the convict went into Gbadegeshin’s shop to steal the phone while pretending he wanted to buy a stabilizer. Gbadegeshin then noticed the theft and raised an alarm.

Shonibare noted that theft contravened Section 285 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.

Atiku Abubakar Condemns Yobe Attack, Urges Jonathan To Sit-Up

Nigeria’s former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar was in tears on Tuesday when he was informed about the  murder of  students over 40 students of Federal Government College, Buni Yadi, Gujiba Local Government Area of Yobe State by the suspected members of the dreaded Boko Haram sect.

Atiku has described the attack as unfortunate. He has also urged President Jonathan to seriously tackle the Boko Haram foot soldiers.

In a statement on Tuesday, he said:

My heartfelt condolences go to families of the slain school pupils. It is unfortunate that innocent school children, will become victims of armed attacks.

“This will not be the first time in recent times that school children are being attacked, and it is particularly disheartening that the Federal Government is yet to devise a strategy of keeping our schools safe from terror attacks. If our counter-insurgency strategies are not strong enough to keep our children safe inside their schools, then one must wonder if such a strategy isn’t mere chasing shadows.

“It is important that the Federal Government ups its counter-insurgency strategy and desist from taking credits in pushing armed attacks to the fringes, as the president would like to put it. No Nigerian’s life is less in value to another”.

Tabloid Publishes Names Of 200 Top Ugandan Homosexuals

Just a day after President Yoweri Museveni signed into law a bill criminalizing gay activities, a Ugandan newspaper has published names of the country’s 200 top homosexuals.

The post on Red Pepper was titled “Exposed”. Some of those on the list are Ugandans who had never identified themselves as gay previously

Popular gay rights activist, Pepe Julian Onziema, a popular hip-hop star and a Catholic priest are included in the  list

PPPRA Says The Reappearance Of Long Queues At Filling Stations Is Artificial

The Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) says the reappearance of long queues at filling stations across the country is artificial and uncalled for.

Mr Lanre Oladele, the PPPRA Spokesperson, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Abuja that there was no basis for the scarcity currently being experienced.

Oladele said that there was enough stock to keep the country going for days, adding that with the release of allocation of licences to marketers for the first quarter of 2014, there was no reason for the fuel scarcity.

He described claims that the scarcity was due to the delay in the release of import allocation to marketers as false and unfounded.

Oladele said the last allocation was enough to sustain the market till when the next allocation would be released.

“We can assure Nigerians that we have enough to wet the nation, what we have is artificial scarcity to create false impression whereas the entire nation is wet with the products.”

He said contrary to insinuations by marketers that their allocations for the third quarter of 2013 expired on Dec. 31, 2013, they actually covered transactions up to January.

Oladele staid that the allocation was usually done in such a way that it would overlap into another quarter, to make provision for any exigency.

According to him, the marketers create the impression that allocation has been delayed for over one month and they engaged in hoarding of the products to create false impression.

He advised Nigerians not to engage in panic buying, adding “what we have is artificial scarcity, we have enough stock to keep the nation wet for days’’.

Similarly, the Pipeline and Products Marketing Company (PPMC), a subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) responsible for the supply of the products, said there was enough stock.

Mr Nasir Imodagbe, the PPMC Spokesperson, said “we have robust supply of fuel, same with NNPC to serve the country for days. I don’t know where the issue of scarcity is coming from.’’

Imodagbe warned marketers to desist from hoarding fuel, adding that anyone caught would face the full wrath of the law.

“We are appealing to Nigerians not to engage in panic buying because there are enough products to keep the country moving.’’

Meanwhile NAN checks revealed that fuel tankers were seen at some mega filling stations in the FCT waiting to discharge fuel.

Boko Haram Massacred 59 Pupils, Death Toll Rise In Yobe Boarding School Attack – Reuters

(Reuters) – Gunmen from Islamist group Boko Haram shot or burned to death 59 pupils in a boarding school in northeast Nigeria overnight, a hospital official and security forces said on Tuesday.

“Some of the students’ bodies were burned to ashes,” Police Commissioner Sanusi Rufai said of the attack on the Federal Government college of Buni Yadi, a secondary school in Yobe state, near the state’s capital city of Damaturu.

Bala Ajiya, an official at the Specialist Hospital Damaturu, told Reuters by phone the death toll had risen to 59.

“Fresh bodies have been brought in. More bodies were discovered in the bush after the students who had escaped with bullet wounds died from their injuries,” he said.

Rafai, who had given an earlier estimate of 29 killed, said all those killed were boys. He said the school’s 24 buildings, including staff quarters, were completely burned to the ground.

President Goodluck Jonathan called the attack “callous and senseless murder … by deranged terrorists and fanatics who have clearly lost all human morality and descended to bestiality”.

The Islamists, whose struggle for an Islamic state in northern Nigeria has killed thousands and made them the biggest threat to security in Africa’s top oil producer, are increasingly preying on the civilian population.

Militants from Boko Haram, whose name means “Western education is sinful” in the northern Hausa language, have frequently attacked schools in the past. A similar attack in June in the nearby village of Mamudo left 22 students dead.

They have killed more than 300 people this month, mostly civilians, including in two attacks last week that killed around 100 each, one in which militants razed a whole village and shot panicked residents as they tried to flee.

That attack prompted U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry to condemn Boko Haram for “unspeakable … acts of terror”.

The failure of the military to protect civilians is fuelling anger in the northeast, the region worst affected by the four-and-a-half-year insurgency. An offensive ordered by Jonathan in May has not succeeded in crushing the rebels and has triggered reprisals against civilians.

A military spokesman for Yobe state, Captain Lazarus Eli, said “our men are down there in pursuit of the killers”, but gave no further details.

Addressing a news conference on Monday, Jonathan defended the military’s record, saying it had had some successes against Boko Haram. He said Nigeria was working with the Cameroon authorities to try to prevent militants from mounting attacks in Nigeria and then fleeing over the border.

The military shut the northern part of the border with Cameroon on the weekend.

The insurgents mostly occupy the remote, hilly Gwoza area bordering Cameroon, from where they attack civilians they accuse of being pro-government. They have started abducting girls, a new tactic reminiscent of Uganda’s cult-like Lord’s Resistance Army in decades past.

(Additional reporting by Ibrahim Mshelizza in Maiduguri; Writing by Tim Cocks; Editing by Andrew Roche and Alison Williams)

Corp Members Charged With Committing Homosexuality Dismissed By Court

An Ibadan Chief Magistrate’s Court sitting in Iyaganku on Tuesday discharged two corps members charged with committing sodomy on one of their students.

The Chief Magistrate, Mrs Kehinde Durosaro-Tijani, said the two accused, Daniel O’ Tega and Sulaiman Abari, were discharged but not on merit.

Durosaro-Tijani said: “this is based on the withdrawal letter and affidavit deposed to by the father of the victim.”

This followed the withdrawal of the case by the victim’s parents, Alhaji Hammed Sulaimon and Kafilat.

Sulaimon, in the affidavit, said he had forgiven the accused as Sulaiman’s father, Mr Dauda Abari and O’Tega’s guardian, Mr Michael Edewhosa, intervened in the matter.

Sulaiman, a graduate of Lagos State University, Ojo, and O’tega were serving at St. Louis Secondary School 2, Molete, Ibadan.

The two were arraigned on a three-count charge of conspiracy, procuring as well as getting hold of their victim.

Credit: Oodera