In a statement signed by the Senior Special Assistant to the governor on media, Sam Onwuemeodo, the government urged the people of the state not to panic as their lives and properties would be protected. The government, it said, has also moved to nip the threat in the bud.
Experience news blogging in a modified, rebranded and repackaged format.lol & emm remember 'God is able to do just what He says He will do'. Shalom!
Friday, 21 March 2014
Biafra threat: Imo beefs up security
In a statement signed by the Senior Special Assistant to the governor on media, Sam Onwuemeodo, the government urged the people of the state not to panic as their lives and properties would be protected. The government, it said, has also moved to nip the threat in the bud.
NIS recruitment: Applicants Drag FG, Abba Moro to court
Specifically, four persons acting for themselves and onbehalf of all those applicants to recruitment exercise which claimed 18 lives yesterday dragged the Federal Government, Minister of Interior and four others before a Federal High court seeking an order declaring that the conduct or the execution of the Recruitment Exercise illegal, unwarranted, in violation of the Applicants’ fundamental rights to life.
The suit was brought under Sections 33,34, and 44 of the 1999 Constitition (amended) and the equivalent articles of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Right Act.
Also joined as respondents in the suit are the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Ministry of Interior, Nigerian Immigration Service and its Comptroller General, David Shikfu Parradang.
The applicants, Charles Ugwuonye, Friday Danlami, Chinedu Onwuka and Samson Ojo through their counsel, Emeka Ugwuonye had among other things want the court to declare the recruitment exercise illegal and restrain the NIS from spending the money realized from the recruitment exercise.
Automatic Employment: Desperate Job Seekers Besiege National Hospital Abuja Feigning Injuries From NIS Recruitment
Following yesterday’s announcement by the Federal Government that families of applicants, who died in last Saturday’s Nigeria Immigration Service, NIS, recruitment exercise nationwide, have been offered three slots each, while those that sustained injuries would be automatically absorbed into the service, countless jobseekers have turned the National Hospital, Abuja, into a Mecca of sorts in their desperate attempt to be counted among the injured.
It was learnt that early Thursday, those, who hospital sources described as “wounded racket”, visited the center displaying various degrees of injuries they sustained during the stampede at the National Stadium, Abuja at the weekend, demanding to be put on the hospital’s list of wounded applicants.
However, they were not among the estimated 40 injured applicants rushed to the National Hospital for treatment on the wake of the stampede that left no fewer than 19 applicants dead nationwide.
Jonathan admits treating terrorism with kid gloves
President
Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday admitted that his administration had
hitherto been treating terrorists in the country with kid glove.
Terrorists, especially members of the
Islamic sect, Boko Haram, have hold sway in the North-East zone in the
past three years, killing thousands of citizens in attacks on villages,
military and polie facilities, worship houses and drinking joints.
The President said his government had
now decided to be more forceful in its approach because of its desire to
stamp out terror groups from the country.
He spoke in Windhoek, Namibia, during a bilateral talk with President Hifikepunye Pohamba.
“Initially, we handle it (terrorism)
with kid glove, but now we have decided to be a little more forceful
because we must thrash out these terror groups. We must not allow it to
continue to slow down economic growth in that part of the country,”
Jonathan said.
Jonathan told his Namibian counterpart
that a terror attack on any part of the world is an attack on everyone,
saying terrorism has become a global phenomenon though the intensity
might vary from one country to the other.
Robbers invade church, steal phones, N2m
No
fewer than 15 armed robbers invaded the Christ Apostolic Church in
Alagbado, Lagos State, stealing about 40 phones and money estimated at
N2m.
The robbers, who operated for about 20
minutes, were said to have also attempted raping some of the church
members before they left the church premises.
It was learnt that the men came around 2am penultimate Friday while the over 450 congregation was engrossed in a prayer session.
A member of the church, who craved
anonymity, said some of the members had observed a strange man making
phone calls while the vigil was on.
He said, “The vigil actually started
around 12 midnight. Some of us observed a man who came in around 1.30am.
He was seated in the women’s section. About four persons tried
persuading him to change seat, including the pastor, but he refused. So
they left him.
“I observed him going out several times
to make phone calls. At about 2am, I overheard him saying, ‘start
coming, they are praying’. Few minutes later, I heard a gunshot.”
Moro, NIS boss fought over immigration recruitment – Investigation
Facts
have emerged that a cold war between the Minister of Interior, Mr. Abba
Moro and the Comptroller General of the Nigerian Immigration Service,
Mr. David Parradang, played a major role in the NIS recruitment that
resulted in the death of 20 job applicants on Saturday.
It was learnt on Wednesday in Abuja that
both Moro and Parradang had been on each other’s throat over who should
conduct the exercise.
Investigations revealed that while the
minister insisted that it was the responsibility of the Ministry of
Interior to handle the recruitment as the presiding ministry, the
comptroller general was of the view that the service should be allowed
to handle the recruitment.
A source, who spoke to one of our
correspondents on ‘the drama’ that preceded the immigration jobs
tragedy, said the Immigration boss had argued that those to be given
jobs would work with the NIS as such the service could not be left out.
Monday, 17 March 2014
PDP owes me, says Atiku
A
former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, has said his former political
party, the Peoples Democratic Party, owes him a debt of gratitude.
Abubakar, however, said he did not owe the ruling party anything.
It will be recalled that the National
Publicity Secretary of the PDP, Chief Olisa Metuh, had recently said
that Abubakar owed the party a debt of gratitude for providing him a
political platform that helped him to emerge as the former Vice
President.
But the former Vice President said in a
statement in Abuja on Sunday, that contrary to the claim by the
leadership of the PDP, it was indeed his former party that owed him a
debt of thanks.
The former Vice President, who resigned
his membership of the PDP in February to join the All Progressives
Congress, noted that the insinuation being peddled by Metuh that he was
ungrateful to the PDP was a distortion of history.
Confab: Bakare says he won’t receive allowance
Serving
Overseer of the Latter Rain Assembly, Pastor Tunde Bakare, has said
that he will not partake of the N12m to be paid to each delegate to the
three-month National Conference to be inaugurated by President Goodluck
Jonathan on Monday (today).
Bakare, representing Ogun State at the
conference, said he made the decision not to collect the money to be
paid to delegates by the Federal Government in order to dispel any
speculation that his motivation for accepting to take part in the
conference was material.
Each of the 492 delegates to the
National Conference would be paid N4m per month for the three month
duration and this has been the subject of controversy with some
Nigerians condemning the amount to be spent.
Announcing to his church members that he
had accepted to be a delegate to the conference, Bakare told the
congregation that he would be giving them weekly report as the
conference progressed.
He said, “A friend of mine called me
this (Sunday) morning that he heard on the radio that ‘Pastor Bakare had
accepted to go, that his own fee is N12m’. Pastor Bakare will not take a
kobo in the National Conference.
UN condemns FG over poor power supply
The United Nations has criticised the Federal Government for failing to provide improved power supply to millions of Nigerians.
It also condemned the government’s inability to offer effective electricity metering system.
The UN Special Rapporteur on Extreme
Poverty and Human Rights, Ms. Magdalena Carmona, and the Special
Rapporteur on Adequate Housing as a component of the right to an
adequate standard of living, and on the right to non-discrimination, Ms.
Raquel Rolnik, signed a petition in which they criticised the
government.
A statement from the Socio-Economic
Rights and Accountability Project on Sunday said the two rapporteurs
blamed the government of President Goodluck Jonathan “over the impact of
the Multi-Year Tariff Order II and its potential detrimental impact on
the realisation of human rights of people living in extreme poverty in
Nigeria.”
A check on UN website confirmed the petition.
Sanusi to Jonathan: Allegations against me baseless
The
suspended Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Lamido Sanusi,
has described the allegations of financial recklessness levelled against
him by the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria as a malicious and
calculated attempt to mislead President Goodluck Jonathan into believing
that the management of the bank is guilty of misconduct and
recklessness.
In what can be described as his first
official response to the allegations, Sanusi, in a letter to Jonathan,
said that contrary to the claims by the Presidency that he was asked to
respond to issues raised in the FRCN report, he only saw the “Briefing
Note” of the council for the first time when it was attached to his
suspension letter.
In the letter, sent to the President on
March 10, a copy of which was made available to journalists on Sunday,
the suspended governor said at no time were the allegations in the
report sent to the CBN either by the President or the FRCN for comments
or explanations.
He said, “On Wednesday March 10, 2014, I
submitted a memorandum to His Excellency, Mr. President, with
supporting documentation, effectively addressing all the allegations
contained in the FRCN Briefing Note, the letter of suspension and the
Akingbola petition.
Tension in Kaduna as death toll hits 114
Tension
rose in Kaduna town and environs on Sunday, following the killing of
no fewer than 100 people in three villages in Kaduna State on Friday
night.
There was a heavy security presence at
all churches in the state capital and environs where the Christian
faithful had converged to worship.
Our correspondent observed the movement
of combat-ready policemen and other security agents in trucks at the
Sabo Tasha and Refinery areas of the city to maintain law and order as
people spread rumours that all was not well in those parts of the state
capital.
The victims of the massacre were said to have been buried in mass graves on Sunday.
The umbrella body of the Southern Kaduna
people in the state, the Southern Kaduna Peoples Union, on Sunday put
the death toll from the attacks at 114.
It said over 40 attacks had been
recorded so far in the Southern Kaduna communities since 2011. The group
also accused Fulani herdsmen as being behind the attacks.