Saturday, 27 February 2016

‘Niger Delta Vandals Are Enemies Of Progress’-Ex-Militants Leaders

On Thursday, scores of ex-militant leaders from the 9 States of the Niger Delta region gathered in Yenagoa, the capital of Bayelsa State, to review the recent attacks on pipelines and oil installations in the area. The ex-militants warned the perpetrators of these acts to cease their activities and branded them as "enemies of progress".
Niger Delta militants
The ex-militants, who spoke under the aegis of the Leadership, Peace and Cultural Development Initiatives (LPCDI),  also warned against efforts to unseat the Chairman of the Amnesty Implementation Programme, Brigadier General Paul Boroh. The assembled leaders warned the politicians behind the attempt to remove Mr. Boroh would cause the practical development of the region to falter.
The ex-militants argued that the politicians had no right to threaten General Boroh’s positions and that such meddling would only serve to scuttle the development policies of President Muhammad Buhari.
According to the group, through its National Coordinator, Pastor Reuben Wilson also known as General Wilson, said the claims against the Amnesty office are not true and
they are sponsored by some persons from the region.
“Many of these politicians claimed that the Amnesty Chairman is living in opulence. The Amnesty office is not for them but for the ex-militant youths and leaders.
“We call on Nigerians and politicians of these programmes. Amnesty is a programme. It is the office of those that accepted amnesty,” Pastor Wilson said.
To stem the tide of the new wave of nefarious activities across the creeks and the waterways, Pastor Wilson also urged the Federal Government to offer amnesty to people who are still operating in the creeks.

“The Federal Government should be commended for its amnesty program. This will help us know the good from the bad. This program also showed youth that President Buhari has good intentions,” Pastor Wilson explained.

Wednesday, 17 February 2016

Davido And Wande Coal Set To Work On New Music


Posted by Posh on February 17, 2016 

2016 is definitely going to be a great one musically for Davido.
The talented musician, days back announced he will be working with American rapper, T.I and his label act, Shina Rambo. Just two days ago, he again made another announcement.
Davido, took to twitter to reveal that he will be working with Wande Coal on a new song.
Wande-Coal-thrills-the-audience-600x398Davido
He tweeted:
ME AND @wandecoal BOUTTA SHUT SHIT DOWN!!!
Wande Coal also confirmed the news, tweeting some minutes ago that:
Iskaba they dunno.
The pair worked on a song together back in 2012, with Wande featuring on Davido’s song, ‘Throw way.’

Tuesday, 16 February 2016

You won't believe these until you read it.... Former head of states that have been jailed for offenses committed



Israeli ex-premier Ehud Olmert, who began a 19-month jail term for corruption on Monday, is not the first former head of state or government to serve time behind bars.

Here are some others who went before him.


Israel: Moshe Katzav – The former Israeli president was sentenced to seven years in prison and incarcerated in December 2011.

He was convicted of the rape of two aides while he was tourism minister in the 1990s, and of sexual harassment, attempting to intimidate witnesses and obstruction of justice.

Katzav, who was president from 2000 until his forced resignation in 2007, has repeatedly protested his innocence.

Portugal: Jose Socrates – The former Socialist prime minister (2005-2011) spent more than nine months in temporary detention before being placed under house arrest in September 2015, a measure that was lifted on October 16, 2015.

He was arrested on November 21, 2014 and charged with corruption, money laundering and tax fraud. He continues to proclaim his innocence.

Croatia: Ivo Sanadar – Sanadar, a conservative, served as prime minister from 2003 until his resignation in 2009. He was convicted of corruption in November 2012 and sentenced to 10 years in prison. The charges stem from kickbacks he is said to have received from the Hungarian energy company MOL.

In March 2014 he was convicted and sentenced to nine years in a separate trial over the alleged embezzlement of 10 million euros ($112 million) in public funds.

But in November 2015, the Croatian supreme court overturned that conviction and ordered a retrial and his release on bail.

Romania: Adrian Nastase – A Social Democrat prime minister from 2000 to 2004, Nastase was sentenced to four and a half years for corruption in 2012, a milestone in the fight against graft in Romania.

He tried to commit suicide after receiving a two-year prison term in a separate case relating to the improper use of 1.5 million euros of campaign funds.

He was set free in March 2013, but jailed again in 2014 for accepting bribes worth a total of 630,000 euros in Chinese building materials and furnishings from a construction boss.

Nastase was granted probation in August 2014.

Peru: Alberto Fujimori – Fujimori, who served as president of Peru from 1990 to 2000, is still behind bars at the age of 77 after being convicted of multiple counts of corruption and human rights abuses.

In 2009, he was sentenced to 25 years after being found guilty of ordering massacres in 1991-92 that killed 25 people, including an infant.

The killings occurred during the state’s brutal suppression of an uprising by Maoist guerillas of the Shining Path movement.

He has also been convicted of bribery and embezzlement.

Guatemala: Alfonso Portillo – Portillo, a conservative who served as president from 2000 to 2004, was detained in Guatemala in 2010 and extradited to the United States where he was sentenced to five years and 10 months for money-laundering.

He returned to Guatemala in February 2015 after serving a little over a year in a minimum-security US jail, in consideration of the time he had already spent behind bars while fighting extradition and on trial.

Guatemala: Otto Perez – Perez, a conservative who resigned as president last September, is in custody awaiting trial over allegations that he organised a vast fraud ring which netted him $800,000 in bribes.

He was arrested the day after his resignation.

Senate of crime : 9 Nigerian Senators Facing Criminal Cases

At least, 9 out of 109 members of the Nigerian Senate are enmeshed in criminal cases, with nine of the cases at various stages of trials in courts, while one is still being investigated.  
The number of the lawmakers represents 10 percent of the members of the upper legislative chamber, one of the bodies responsible for making laws for the country. The majority of the cases are related to allegations of corruption, running into billions of naira that the senators are accused of misappropriating.
About six of the lawmakers have been docked at various courts for trial on fraud charges, most of them former governors.
Two of the senators, however, are facing charges of forgery and drug offences, respectively, while the last one has been interrogated by the Economic and Financial Crimes, Commission (EFCC) over alleged fraud.
Among the lawmakers, are the leadership of the Red Chamber, chairs and deputy chairs of sensitive Senate committees.
Bukola SarakiBukola Saraki
Topping the list of the senators facing corruption charges is the Senate President, Bukola Saraki (APC, Kwara Central). Saraki is a two-term governor of Kwara State (2003 to 2011) and on completion of his tenure, he got elected to the Red Chamber. At the moment, he is a 2-term senator and the number one lawmaker in the country.
Saraki as the Senate President is the chairman of the National Assembly, piloting the affairs of the legislative arm of government; he sets the tone and direction for the arm.
He is facing a 13-count charge at the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) bordering on false assets declaration while he was the governor of his home state and his spouse, Mrs. Toyin Saraki has a file at the EFCC over alleged squandering of Kwara State funds.
He has denied the allegations, describing them as politically motivated 
His bid to stop the trial at the CCT suffered a setback at the Supreme Court last week, when the court dismissed his appeal and upheld an earlier decision by the Court of Appeal, ordering him to face trial at the Code of Conduct Tribunal.
His colleagues, under the auspices of the Unity Forum, led by Senator Kabiru Marafa (APC, Zamfara Central) had asked him to resign and face the charges. But the Senate Leader Mohammed Ali Ndume and his supporters in the Like Minds group said he would resign only if he is found guilty after trial.
The CCT has fixed March 10, for the continuation of Saraki’s trial.
Ahmed Sani YerimaAhmed Sani Yarima
Senator Ahmed Sani Yarima is a three-term senator and former governor of Zamfara State. He represents Zamfara West Senatorial District in the Senate.
Yarima is the Chairman of Senate Committee on Marine Transport and a member of other committees, including Interior that oversees the police, prisons, immigration and the fire service.
In January, he was docked on a 19-count charge of corruption by the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) at the Zamfara State High Court in Gusau.
The commission accused him of diverting part of the N1 billion project funds for the repair of collapsed Gusau Dam and resettlement of the victims of flood to other purposes.
The alleged offences were committed in 2006 and mainly in October and November of that year, according to ICPC. 
He pleaded not guilty to all the charges.
Danjuma GojeDanjuma Goje
Danjuma Goje was the governor of Gombe State from 2003 to 2011. He is presently representing Gombe Central Senatorial District. 
Goje is a second termer at the Upper Chamber representing Gombe Central. Aside from chairing the Senate Committee on Appropriations, he is the chairman of the North-East Caucus of the National Assembly, making him to wield enormous powers at both chambers.
The senator, along with four others, is facing an 18- count charge bordering on conspiracy and fraud to N25bn instituted by the EFCC. 
The case was transferred to Jos from Gombe in 2015 on the instruction of the Chief Justice of the Federation over security concerns.  Hearing in the case was adjourned to April 12 this year.
 
Senator Abdullahi AdamuAbdullahi Adamu
Alhaji Abdullahi Adamu was the governor of Nasarawa State from 1999 to 2007. He represents Nasarawa West Senatorial District and is the Chairman Senate Committee on Agriculture.
In Feb 2010, the EFCC arrested the lawmaker for allegedly misappropriating N15billion alongside 18 others.
He was subsequently arraigned on a 149-count charge of fraud to the tune of N15 billion, before Justice Ibrahim Buba, who was later replaced in the case by Justice Marcel Awokulehin. 
The lawmaker and his co-accused denied all the charges and challenged the jurisdiction of the court to try the case, arguing that the money in question belong to the people of Nasarawa State and therefore does not fall under the purview of the Federal Government and the EFCC to investigate and prosecute.
The court, however, ruled against the accused persons and ordered them to face trial. The lawmaker and his co-accused subsequently appealed the ruling to the Court of Appeal sitting in Markudi, Benue State.
The case is yet to be concluded.
 
Abdulaziz Nyako
Abdulaziz Nyako
Abdulaziz Murtala Nyako is the son of former Governor Murtala Nyako. He represents Adamawa Central Senatorial District in the Senate. 
He is a first timer in the Red Chamber and he chairs the Committee on Special Duties, which oversees the general affairs of the Senate President, Ecological Fund, among others.
In July last year, the EFCC docked Abdulaziz and his father, the former governor of Adamawa State, at a Federal High Court in Abuja cases of alleged corruption.
They were arraigned before Justice E. Chukwu of the Federal High Court, Abuja, on a 37-count charge bordering on criminal conspiracy, stealing, abuse of office and money laundering.
Also charged with them, were Abubakar Aliyu and Zulkifikk Abba. They were accused of using five companies to siphon over N15billion at various times, between 2011 and 2013, from Adamawa State coffers.
They all pleaded not guilty to the charges.
 Former Plateau State Governor Joshua DariyeJoshua Chibi Dariye
Joshua Chibi Dariye is the senator representing Plateau Central. He was the governor of Plateau State from 1999 to 2003 and was reelected in 2003, before he was impeached in 2006.
He is the chairman Senate Committee on Solid Minerals.
Dariye has been standing trial since 2007 on a 23-count charge bordering on money laundering, abuse of office and corruption. He was accused of embezzling over N1.2billion ecological funds.
He has denied all the charges. 
Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu
Ike Ekweremadu
Next to Saraki at the Upper Chamber is Senator Ike Ekweremadu (PDP, Enugu West) who rode on the division in the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the Senate to emerge as the Deputy Senate President on June 9 last year, when the 8th Senate was inaugurated.  
Ekweremadu, who has been occupying the position since the era of Senator David Mark in 2007, is facing a forgery case at the Federal High Court.
His colleagues, namely Senator Abu Ibrahim, Kabiru Marafa, Robert Boroffice, Gbenga Ashafa and Suleiman Hunkuyi, dragged him and others to the court over alleged forgery of the Senate standing orders, the document used for the conduct of the Senate elections.
Shortly after the inauguration of the 8thAssembly, he was grilled alongside the Clerk to the National Assembly, Salisu Maikasau and others by operatives of the Nigerian Police over the forgery case.  
The Federal High has reserved date for judgement in the case.
Early this year, Ekweremadu cried out that he cannot get justice from Justice Ademola, alleging that the judge is romancing with the national leader of the APC, Chief Bola Ahmed Tinubu. 
 
Buruji Kashamu
Kashamu Buruji 
Senator Kashamu Buruji is representing Ogun East. His clash with the former President Olusegun Obasanjo popularized his alleged drug peddling case.
He is facing a threat of extradition from the National Drugs Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), acting on the request of the United States. 
In May 2015, a Federal High Court in Lagos stopped the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Attorney General of the Federation(AGF) and nine others from arresting the senator for extradition to the United States over alleged drug-related offences.
Justice Okon Abang gave the restraining order in his verdict in a suit filed by Kashamu.
He based his order on an existing judgement of the court that was delivered on January 6, 2014, in which he restrained the IGP, SSS, NDLEA, NCS and the AGF from taking any step from arresting Kashamu on the strength of a petition linking him to a drug offence.
Buruji, who is the vice chairman of the Senate Committee on States and Local Governments, raised alarm last week over fresh plot to ferry him to the United States of America (USA) by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).
He got a reprieve from the Senate as the Minister of Justice, and Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and NDLEA have been asked to suspend further action on him.
His lawyer, Barrister Ajibola Oluyede had petitioned the Senate over a plot to abduct his client and extradite him to the USA where he is facing charges bordering on drug peddling.
Godswill Akpabio
Godswill Obot Akpabio 
Widely known as uncommon governor when he held sway in Akwa-Ibom State for eight years, Senator Godswill Obot Akpabio (PDP, Akwa-Ibom North-West) is being investigated for corruption.
By virtue of his position as the Minority leader, Akpabio is one of the most powerful senators presently in the Upper Chamber. He has firm control of his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the Red Chamber.
Akpabio, who is the vice chairman of the Senate Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters, was twice invited by the EFCC last year, over allegation of N108bn fraud. 
The invitation was in connection to a petition by an Abuja-based lawyer and activist, Leo Ekpenyong, who accused the senator of looting the said amount belonging to the Akwa-Ibom government and called for his probe.

The Minority Leader has, however, described the allegation as a falsehood bandied about by people with no idea about the workings of government.

Power supply drops by 1,589MW.... Main reason for electricity default


Power supply to households and businesses across the country has plunged by 1,589.69 megawatts since the nation achieved its peak generation of 5,074.70MW on February 2.

Electricity supply on Sunday, February 14, dropped to 3,485MW from the 3,558.39MW generated that day, data obtained from the Federal Ministry of Power on Monday showed.



Power generation and supply stood at 4,150.64MW and 4,068.5MW on February 11, according to the Presidential Task Force on Power.

Officials at the ministry said on Sunday that issues around gas pipeline rupturing by vandals as well as oil theft had led to a plunge in power generation.

They, however, noted that the Federal Government was working tirelessly to address the problem.

The recent dip in electricity generation came after the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, had promised that the country would increase its power production by 2,000MW before the end of this year.

He stated that given the various plans undertaken by the present administration in the sector, power generation would increase by 2,000MW in the last quarter of this year.

Fashola stated that a lot had changed in the management of power in Nigeria in recent times.

“Distribution of power is no longer a government business but has been taken over by private companies.

Also, government has privatised power generation, which has steered towards the full privatisation of the sector with transmission aspect being managed by Manitoba International of Canada,” he had said.

Friday, 12 February 2016

Buhari unhappy as German president's welcomed into Nigeria with bomb through BH



President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday regretted that Boko Haram chose to welcome German President, Joachim Gauck, into the country with the bombings at the Dikwa camp of Internally Displaced Persons on Wednesday.

Despite the incident that claimed over 58 lives, however, Buhari told Guack, who visited him at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, that his administration had succeeded in stopping the sect from attacking installations and towns as it used to do.

Buhari spoke at a joint press conference after their close-door meeting.

He said at the inception of his administration, he sought to know the reasons behind the failure of the Nigerian military to secure 14 local governments out of the country’s 774.


He, however, said the reasons had been revealed with the the $2.1bn arms purchase scandal.

Buhari said it had become clear that some officials of the past government shared the money meant for military equipment, therefore forcing soldiers into mutiny.

He added, “It is a pity Boko Haram welcomed you with explosions in Maiduguri that took so many lives, but I have attempted to explain in so many fora that Boko Haram is not what it used to be.

“While they were firmly holding 14 out of 774 local governments when we came in, they are not holding any local government now.

“What they have resorted to is using improvised explosive devices to cause maximum casualties on soft targets as they did yesterday (Wednesday).

“But for them to organise conventional attacks on military, police installations and take hold of towns, I think they are not able to do that. They send groups to kill vulnerable targets.”

Buhari admitted that the Federal Government must redouble its efforts to rehabilitate displaced persons.

He regretted that children and orphans constitute over 60 per cent of the two million IDPs, saying the least his administration could do was to quickly resettle the children and rebuild schools.

He commended Germany for helping Nigeria in the fight against Ebola and polio as well as its assistance in the IDP camps.

Buhari sought Germany’s support for Nigeria’s quest for a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council.

“Outside bilateral, in the United Nations, Nigeria and other African countries feel we are qualified by our number, by our size and by our position in Africa to have a seat on the United Nations Security Council. We hope that Germany will support us,” the President said.

Guack, who spoke through an interpreter, promised Europe’s support of $50m for African Union’s initiative to fight terrorism.

He said Germany saw in Nigeria one of its most important partners on the continent. He also declared his support for the country’s anti-corruption and anti-terrorism campaigns.

Guack added, “You (Buhari) personally have made it clear that it is in a determined way that you intend to fight Boko Haram and its methods that deeply violate the principles of humanity.

“We intend to support you because we believe that it is a very good approach that you have chosen and that is something; we would make available financial support and that approach consists of joining forces with neighbouring countries to fight Boko Haram together.

“You have already taken steps in that direction as members of the African Union. We, as Europe, will support that initiative with $50m.”

He said he told Buhari during their meeting that development was not possible without good governance.

He promised that Germany would continue to provide humanitarian support, especially for women and children.

Meanwhile, Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo and the United States have condemned the attacks on the IDP camp in Dikwa, Borno State, on Tuesday.

Osinbajo said the country’s security agencies would hunt down the masterminds of the attack.

Female suicide bomber refuses to strike because she was scared she would kill people

 5


A teenage girl packed with explosives by Boko Haram ripped off her vest to avoid taking part in the attack on Borno Internally Displaced Persons camp (IDPs) in Dikwa, Borno State on Tuesday.

Two others with her, however, walked into the middle of hundreds of people lining up for food before they blew themselves up in the attack that killed 58 and injured 78.

It was the most lethal attack launched by the sect in recent months.

A Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) fighter Modu Awami said yesterday that the third would-be bomber, looking about 14, has confessed.


Awami, who helped question the girl, said she was scared because she knew she would kill people.

A rescue official who confirmed it, said the girl has given officials information about other planned bombings

The United States (U.S.) Embassy in Nigeria yesterday condemned the attacks on Dikwa.

The US Diplomatic Mission in Abuja, in a statement, restated the U.S. government’s continued support for the Nigerian government in fighting terrorism.

“The US Embassy condemns the reported suicide attacks on internally displaced persons in Dikwa town, Borno State,that occurred on Feb. 9.

“The US remains committed to assisting internally displaced populations in North-Eastern Nigeria through humanitarian relief efforts.

“We will also continue to support the Nigerian government in its fight against terrorism,’’ it said.