Tag: Nigeria

  • Schoolgirl shot as violence erupts in Lagos over ‘Okada Ban’

    A schoolgirl was hit by a stray bullet at Iyana Ipaja, Lagos, on Wednesday during a violent clash between a mob protesting the ban on ‘okada’ (commercial motorcyclists) in certain areas and security operatives of the Lagos State Task Force.

    The girl, who is yet to be identified, was promptly taken to Peak Health Hospital where she was stabilised before she was referred to the General Hospital, Orile Agege for treatment, a medical officer at the former told PREMIUM TIMES.

    The violence, which broke out on Wednesday morning, was as a result of a restriction placed on the operations of motorcycles and tricycles by the state government. Videos circulated on social media revealed how people were scampering for safety as the clash erupted.

    The protesters also shattered glasses of vehicles and lit bonfires on the highway, disrupting movement and business activities. Vehicles belonging to the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) were also burnt by the protesters.

    ‘No life lost’- Police

    The Lagos State police spokesperson, Bala Elkana, told PREMIUM TIMES that the victim of the stray bullet was hit at Aboru when a faceoff occurred between operatives of Lagos State Task Force and miscreants.

    Mr Elkana said the operatives of the task force and police officers carried out the enforcement exercise in the area and 86 motorcycles were impounded.

    “The riders of the impounded motorcycles and thugs in large number advanced to Iyana-Ipaja and attacked police officers on duty at Iyana Ipana roundabout, Alaguntan junction and Aboru junction,” he said.

    Mr Elkana said no life was lost in the attack, “but Salifu Umar, an Inspector of police was injured by the hoodlums.”

    He said one LASTMA vehicle and two Neighbourhood Watch patrol bicycles were burnt by the hoodlums.

    He said 34 suspects were arrested in connection with the violent attacks and will be charged to court.

    A similar violence occurred at Ijora area of the state on Monday when a mob protested the restriction. The police said 24 suspects were arrested during the said attack for blocking major roads in Ijora, “burning tyres, looting and stealing from unsuspecting road users and causing obstructions in the area.”

    Source: premiumtimesng.com

  • Nigeria’s new visa policy to attract foreign talent

    Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari has unveiled a new visa policy which he says is intended to attract innovation, specialised skills and knowledge from abroad.

    The president had last November in Egypt, announced the new visa policy which he described as a “strategic decision to bring down barriers that have hindered the free movement of our people within the continent”.

    The new policy sees the introduction of visas on arrival for short visits for holders of passports of African Union countries.

    There are 79 new categories which the government say is to ensure that “visas are more efficiently matched to the purpose of travel, thus helping improve the efficiency of processing and response”.

    The government also announced a new biometric visa database which is able to conduct checks for those on Interpol watchlists.

    Source: bbc

  • Nigerian authorities find $8m hidden in car

    The Nigeria Customs Service say $8m (£6m), wrapped in large brown envelopes, were found hidden inside a car at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in the commercial capital Lagos.

    The cash was allegedly being smuggled out of the country by a “money laundering syndicate assisting corrupt government officials,” customs boss Hameed Ali said.

    Two drivers working for a company at the airport, who are alleged to have been caught moving the cash into the airport, have been arrested.

    Source: bbc

  • We informed Nigeria of impending visa ban – US

    The United States Government has said it notified all foreign governments of a change in its performance metrics for identity-management and information sharing criteria since March 11, 2019, which led to the visa ban on those countries.

    The Minister of Information, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, had initially described the report of the visa ban as speculative, stressing however, that if it turned out to be true, the federal government would respond comprehensively.

    But the US government disclosed that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) identified the worst-performing countries for further interagency review and for an assessment of the potential impact of visa restrictions.

    In a proclamation published on the White House website, the US said that Nigeria and the five other affected countries were among the worst-performing in the world.

    It stated: “The process began on March 11, 2019, when the United States government formally notified all foreign governments (except for Iran, Syria, and North Korea) about the refined performance metrics for the identity-management and information-sharing criteria,” the proclamation read.

    “DHS identified the worst-performing countries for further interagency review and for an assessment of the potential impact of visa restrictions.

    “In addition, the United States government, led by the department of state, continued or increased engagements with many countries about those countries’ deficiencies.”

    The US government noted that a number of foreign governments sent senior officials to Washington, D.C to discuss those issues, explore potential solutions, and convey views about obstacles to improving performance.

    It said that as a result of this engagement, one country made sufficient improvements in its information-sharing and identity-management practices and was removed from consideration for travel restrictions.

    It however said that there are prospects for near-term improvements for the six countries.

    In the proclamation, the US President, Mr. Donald Trump, said the acting secretary of homeland security submitted a report on September 13, 2019 recommending the actions to be taken on the countries identified including “incentivising those foreign governments to improve their practices”.

    The proclamation imposes a ban on the issuance of immigrant visas to Nigerian passport holders.

    The proclamation however forced President Muhammadu Buhari to set up a committee to study and address the issues that made the US place visa restrictions on Nigerian passport holders.

    Mohammed had initially described as ill-conceived, the plan by the US to add Nigeria to its existing list of visa travel ban countries.

    Speaking to international media and other think tank in London, he had reportedly said: “On the issue of the travel ban our position is that it is still speculative because we are yet to be communicated. When we are communicated we will respond comprehensively.

    “However, in our view it was not well thought out but based largely on negative narratives spread by naysayers.

    “I know that we are working very well with our neighbours to ensure that terrorism is addressed. We are working with international community including the EU and the U.S.

    “Our advice to the US is that it should have a rethink on the issue because any travel ban is bound to affect investment and growth in the country and those who will be affected are the most vulnerable people in Nigeria,” he said.

    President Buhari at the weekend, reacted to the suspension of the issuance of ‘immigrant visas’ to Nigerians by the United States’ Government by setting up a committee to look into the matter with a view to meeting the requirements of the new US’ policy on visa issuance.

    “The committee will work with the US Government, INTERPOL and other stakeholders to ensure all updates are properly implemented,” Presidential spokesman, Mr. Femi Adesina, reportedly said in a statement.

    The new visa regime, which was announced by the US’ Government on January 31, comes into effect on February 21.

    Source: thisdaylive.com

  • Videos; Horses Hit Lagos Street Following The Ban Of Okada

    Riding on motorcycles have become the over used means of transportation in Nigeria. About 80% of transportation are normally done with an Okada.

    The government of Nigeria recently announced the ban of Okada in the country.
    The Lagos state government banned the use of the Okada due to excessive deaths and disorderliness caused by motorbike and motorized tricycle taxis, known as “Keke napeps”.

    Citizens of Nigeria have however resorted to horses as means of transportation for everyone who wants to reach their destinations in a haste.

    This ban took effect on 1 February and will be enforced on all major highways and bridges. It will be extended to other areas after an impact assessment is done.

    Smartly, horse owners hit the road to replace the Okada riders.

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  • Okada, tricycle riders clash with police in Nigeria over ban

    Suspected riders of motorcycles and tricycles, on Monday, protested their ban by the Lagos State Government. During the protest in Ijora area of the state on Monday, the riders reportedly clashed with police officers.

    It was learnt that the clash occurred when the police officers attempted to stop the protest embarked upon by the riders. During the protest, which started around 08.21 am, the protesters blocked the road, burning tyres.

    Before the Monday protest, thousands of motorcycle riders working for Gokada and Max had on Friday protested at the Lagos State House of Assembly.

    The riders, who carried placards with different inscriptions, demanded the suspension of the planned ban on motorcycle and tricycle riders in 15 local council areas of the state.

    The riders lamented that the ban would not only take their means of livelihood but also render them jobless.

    Meanwhile, commuters have lamented that they were stranded at Bus Stops, had to trek long distances and pay higher transportation fares to their destinations since the ban commenced.

    The Lagos State Government had on January 26 announced that it would commence enforcement of the extant Transport Sector Reform Law 2018 from February 1.

    The law banned the operation of motorcycles, popularly known as Okada, and Tricycles in some Local Government Areas and Local Council Development Areas.

    They include Apapa LGA, Apapa Iganmu LCDA, Lagos Mainland LG, Yaba LCDA, Surulere LGA, Itire-Ikate and Coker-Aguda LCDAs and Ikeja LGA, Others are Onigbongbo and Ojodu LCDAs, Eti-Osa LGA, Ikoyi-Obalende and Iru/Victoria Island LCDAs, Lagos Island LGA and Lagos Island East LCDA.

    The state government also listed highways, bridges and roads where the law also banned motorcycles and tricycles from operating in the state. Barely 24 hours after the implementation of the law, Lagos State Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr Gbenga Omotoso, said the compliance level on the ban of the commercial motorcycle and tricycle was over 90 per cent.

    The Lagos State Police Command also said it had impounded 188 motorcycles and 78 tricycles as well as arrested 40 persons for refusing to comply with the ban on motorcycles and tricycles in certain areas by the state government.

    Source: vanguardngr.com

  • Nigerian Authorities shut down Chinese supermarket in Lagos over Coronavirus

    The Nigerian authorities have made moves to shut down a Chinese-owned Panda Supermarket in the Jabi area of Abuja as part of measures to prevent the spread of Coronavirus.

    The FCCPC said in a series of tweets made hours ago that it had seized some frozen food items illegally imported from China into Nigeria.

    The pictures of some of the frozen food items posted on Twitter showed that they had expiry dates of 2089 which further aroused suspicion that they were not certified by the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control before almost hitting the market.

    The agency said in a series of tweets, “The FCCPC inspected Panda Supermarket, Jabi, on credible reports that it discriminated and had a concealed area for Asian nationals. The allegation was confirmed. Seafood and animal products imported illegally from China were discovered.

    “The store was closed for cautionary reasons considering the Coronavirus. Products with expired and irregular shelf life were also discovered at Panda. Regulatory activities to remove all such products from the supermarket continue.”

    The Federal Government had earlier in the week assured Nigerians of its readiness to strengthen surveillance at five international airports in the country to prevent the spread of Coronavirus.

    The Minister of Health, Osagie Ehanire, said the government would also set up an inter-multisectoral committee to scale up surveillance and vigilance.

    “The risk of importation is possible in all countries. However, the ministry wishes to assure all Nigerians that the capacity to detect, access and respond to this and other public health challenges are put in place,” he had said.

    The minister said that in addition, the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control had set up coronavirus group and was ready to activate its incident system for coronavirus if any case emerged in Nigeria.

    First identified by Chinese researchers with the pathogen behind a mysterious illness that had sickened 59 people in Wuhan, Hubei in 2019, a city of 11 million in central China, coronavirus is a group of viruses common among animals but now confirmed that it could also infect humans.

    The large family of viruses can cause diseases ranging from the common cold to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome otherwise known as SARS.

    The disease has spread to Chinese cities, including Beijing and Shanghai, as authorities of that country confirmed 1,975 cases of the new coronavirus, while death toll from the virus rose to 56.

    It had also spread to the US, Thailand, South Korea, Japan, Australia, France, and Canada.

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  • Female Lawyer stabs her husband to death and cuts of his manhood off

    A High Court in Lagos Nigeria has remanded a 48-year-old female lawyer identified as Udeme Otike-Odibi, at Kirikiri prison for reportedly stabbing her 52-year-old husband, Symphorosa Otike-Odibi to death.

    The female Lawyer stabbed her husband and mutilated his corpse by cutting his manhood off.

    According to reports, the lawyer after a heated argument with her husband lost her cool and quickly ran to the kitchen to take a knife, before the husband could say jack he was on the floor with blood oozing from his belly region.

    The culprit ( Udeme Otike-Odibi ), was accused by the Lagos State Government on a two-count charge of murder and misconduct with regard to a corpse. She, however, pleaded not guilty to the charge.

    The offences violate Sections 165 (b) and 223 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015. Section 165 (b) provides five-year imprisonment while Section 223 also stipulates death.

    The presiding judge, Adedayo Akintoye, despite that, remanded the accused in prison and adjourned the case until further hearing.

    Ghpage.com is steadily following the story to keep our cherished readers updated.

    Source: Ghpage

     

  • Leprosy still endemic in 18 states in Nigeria – Govt

    The federal government has said that 18 states are currently leprosy endemic, with few cases of the disease also being reported in others.

    It said Nigeria was among the few countries in the world still reporting above 1000 new cases annually, adding that in 2018 the country recorded 1095 new leprosy cases.

    According to the 2015 National Leprosy Review, government said 18 states were still endemic in leprosy although there were pockets of endemicity in few other states of the federation.

    The Minister of state for Health, Senator Olorunnibe Mamora, who stated this at the ceremonies marking the 2020 World Leprosy Day, held in Abuja recently, said the federal government has made notable progress in tackling the scourge through the National Tuberculosis and Leprosy Control programme by ensuring treatment for over 33,000 patients from 2009 till date, including men, women and children.

    He also said the country was among the countries that met the target of reducing the prevalence to one leprosy case to 10,000 persons.

    “We have been to reduce the registered prevalence from 250,000 in 1989 to about 2000 in 2018. The number of newly registered leprosy patients has fallen from 7,827 in 1994 to 2,095 in 2018,” he said.

    The minister said that the country presently has at least one multi-drug therapy clinic for management of leprosy patients in each of the 774 local government areas, while it maintains free medical treatment for the patients.

    He said the World Leprosy Day celebration which is usually observed on the last Sunday of every January was used to mobilise support for leprosy control.

    He said that the occasion provided opportunity for Nigeria to focus attention on the ancient disease which has caused a lot of pain and misery to humanity over the years.

    He said the day gives government an opportunity to appraise stakeholders with updates on efforts to deal with leprosy, as well as things being done to monitor progress made at attaining global targets set in that direction.

    According to Mamora, leprosy is a mildly infectious disease, known by its slow multiplying bacteria, with an incubation period of about five years, while its symptoms may take as long as 20 years to appear.

    The National Director, Leprosy Mission Nigeria, Dr. Sunday Udoh said the group will be launching its knowledge-driven chemoprophylaxis Pilot Programme (PEP) in the six geographical zones of the country in order to accelerate efforts towards achieving zero transmission of the disease by 2035.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Police accused of bedding sex workers during night patrols

    Despite the country courts decriminalizing ‘loitering for purposes of prostitution’, sex workers in Harare’s Epworth dormitory town have raised red flags over abuses they face at the hands of police officers who reportedly raid their spots, demanding sex as bribe to continue with their trade.

    One of the sex workers in Overspill, Epworth, Anna Mutukura (pseudo name) accused police of making their trade difficult by ambushing and demanding sex as a form of bribe.

    “Hupenyu hwaoma and its even hard to charge for our services. Dzimwe nguva unotodzoka ne30 bond husiku hwese and mazuvano haichatenge kana chinhu. On top of that, police comes, demanding sex as bribe,” said Mutukura.

    Read:Sex work is not a crime Nigerian judge declares

    Another sex worker, popularly known as Chihera said police officers were making their trade a nightmare despite it being their source of livelihood.

    Chihera denounced the police’s heavy-handedness, saying ladies of the night also deserved to be treated humanely.

    “If you do not have money to pay the bribe or you decline police officers’ sexual advances, you are imprisoned without trial,” she said.

    Read:Commercial sex workers donate items to Police stations

    Both women said ladies of the night had both deep seated fear and loathing for police officers whom they accused of being overzealous, heavy handed and abusive of them.

    In a telephone interview with Zimbabwe Republic Police, Inspector Paul Nyathi said the victims should report their cases to the police.

    “We encourage these sex workers to report to the police then we will take it from there,” said Nyathi.

    Read:Film on Nigerian sex workers disqualified from Oscars

    HIV and Aids advocacy groups have often argued that criminalizing sex work will result sex workers becoming more mobile, hard to reach, hampering the efforts to combat the deadly.

    They say the criminalizing the profession will make it difficult for sex workers to access medical services.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Two die, houses burnt as pipeline explodes in Lagos

    There was panic in the Ekoro area of Abule-Egba of Lagos State on Sunday when a pipeline belonging to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation exploded.

    Two persons were confirmed dead in the inferno, which began around 8.02pm, and was still raging as of the time of filing this report, with sources alleging that it was caused by the activities of vandals, who allegedly ruptured the pipeline in a bid to steal fuel.

    An eyewitness, who identified himself simply as Ito, said the incident had created tension in the community, adding that many residents abandoned their homes for fear of being burnt.

    Read:Fire guts Gusau Federal Medical Centre mortuary

    “The vandals, who ruptured the NNPC pipeline in the area, caused the fire incident. The fire started around 8pm and many people died, while others ran helter-skelter.”

    The Director-General, Lagos State Fire Service, Margaret Adeseye, said personnel from three fire service stations had been deployed in the area to curtail the inferno, adding that no casualty had been recorded.

    “Yes, a fire incident is ongoing. Personnel from three of our stations are present at the scene of the inferno. The fire is still on, but under control; we deployed personnel from the Agege, Alausa and Abesan fire stations in the area. The cause of the fire is still under investigation; no casualty has been recorded for now.”

    Read:Fire guts shops, carpenter with mild stroke burnt to death

    Also, the Director-General, Lagos State Emergency Management Agency, Dr Oluwafemi Oke-Osanyintolu, who confirmed the incident, said, “A raging fire from the explosion of a vandalised NNPC pipeline has caused panic among residents of Awori, U-turn and Pipeline communities in Abule-Egba. LASEMA and the Lagos State Fire Service are responding and on top of the situation.”

    He confirmed that two adults died in the inferno, while 11 trucks laden with 40-foot containers as well as seven houses were razed by the fire.

    An eyewitness said the fire was coming out from the ruptured point, adding that firefighters could not go near the point, but were ensuring that the fire would not spread to neighbouring properties.

    The Public Relations Officer of the state fire service, Jamiu Dosumu, said the General Manager, NNPC, Mosimin Depot, Bayo Ojo, confirmed that the pipeline had been shut down to reduce the intensity of the fire.

    Source: punchng.com

  • Nigerian communities struggle with devastating oil spills

    Martha Alfred used to harvest 20 bags of cassava each year before an oil spill forced her to abandon her field and hawk roasted fish to survive.

    Her smallholding at Ikarama-Okordia, a community in southern Nigeria’s Bayelsa state, became unfit for growing crops after crude from a nearby Shell facility spewed into the environment last August, she says.

    Today, the 33-year-old mother of two looks angry and helpless, her woes compounded by downpours during the last rainy season that flooded her land.

    “The soil has become infertile because of the spills,” Alfred told AFP.

    “Each time I remember the spills and now the floods, my heart bleeds,” she said.

    “People from Shell came and promised to do something for me. Up until now I have not heard from them.”

    Ikarama-Okordia, a collection of villages, is one of the most polluted sites in the oil and gas-rich Niger Delta.

    A major pipeline that passes through the fishing and farming community of 50,000 people has been the subject of spills and militant attacks for over 20 years.

    Shell said it recorded a total of 21 spills in the area between 2009 and 2018.

    Overall, rights groups say that millions of barrels of crude have leaked out across the Niger Delta region over the years.

    The oil companies blame most of the leaks on sabotage from local residents and criminal gangs stealing the crude.

    But under Nigerian laws, the firms are obliged to clean up all spills whatever their cause.

    Villagers argue some spills are due to operational factors.

    “It’s not completely true all the incidents are caused by sabotage. Some of them are due to equipment failures,” Ikarama community leader Morris Lamiengha told AFP.

    Asked about the allegations from the residents of Ikarama-Okordia, Shell insisted it meets its obligations on all clean-ups and helps affected communities whatever the reasons for the leakages.

    “Shell has always and will always live up to its responsibility,” spokesman Bamidele Odugbesan told AFP.

    “The problem we face is re-pollution. After we clean a site, the vandals will go back and damage the facility to steal the oil without considering the negative impact on the environment.”

    ‘Destroyed the ecosystem’

    A vicious cycle is repeated across the entire region: environmental degradation, pollution, neglect, under-development, anger, frustration and pain.

    In oil-rich Ogoniland, it took a 2011 United Nations Environment Progamme (UNEP) report before the government launched a clean-up of the spills in the area that looks set to last some 30 years.

    In Oloibiri, where crude was first discovered in Nigeria in 1956, the locals live in abject poverty. No jobs, roads, hospitals and schools.

    The Oloibiri oil well no longer produces and is overgrown with weeds, while the residents drink and wash in stream water.

    A government promise in 2001 to erect an oil museum in Oloibiri as a monument to the first oil well in Nigeria has yet to be fulfilled.

    Locals and environmental campaigners say oil majors like Shell, Exxon Mobil, Eni, Total and Chevron, are not doing enough for host communities despite many decades of oil exploration in the region.

    Nigeria, Africa’s largest producer, produces an average of two million barrels of crude per day, which accounts for 90 percent of foreign exchange earnings.

    “The oil firms have destroyed the region’s ecosystem through their operations,” said Michael Karikpo of Environmental Rights Action lobby group.

    He said the people’s mainstay of farming and fishing has been ruined without providing an alternatives, forcing local residents to engage in criminality for survival.

    “That’s why incidents of bunkering, oil thefts, pipeline vandalisation and illegal refineries will continue in the Niger Delta,” he said.

    He said only very few Nigerians were benefiting from oil money, while tens of millions eke out a living on less than two dollars per day.

    For him, the only way to avoid spills is do away with oil production entirely.

    “We should stop oil production in Nigeria because of its negative impact on the people and the environment and focus more on renewable energy,” he added.

    ‘Sitting on gunpowder’

    Anyakwee Nsirimovu of Niger Delta Civil Society Coalition said the nation is “sitting on a keg of gunpowder if nothing is done to address the grievances of the oil-producing communities”.

    He said rather than being a benefit, “oil has been a curse for the people”, adding that there was little or nothing to show for the billions of dollars made from the sector.

    “Our situation is like someone who lives at the bank of a river but washes his hand with spittle,” he said.

    He recalled the unrest in the region in the early 2000s by militants seeking a fair share of the nation’s oil wealth for the local people.

    Months of militant attacks on pipelines and oil infrastructure slashed Nigeria’s output to less than a third at the time, hurting government revenues.

    It took a 2009 government amnesty for the oil rebels before they laid down their arms and halted the attacks.

    Source: France24

  • UK and US considered Nigeria naval blockade over Saro-Wiwa execution

    The UK and US considered a navy-backed oil embargo against Nigeria, following the 1995 execution of writer and activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, a document released by the UK government reveals.

    Saro-Wiwa and eight other campaigners from the Ogoni ethnic group were hanged on 10 November 1995.

    They had been found guilty by a secret military tribunal of the murder of four Ogoni chiefs by a mob.

    The nine denied the charge and said they had been framed.

    Saro-Wiwa led mass protests against oil pollution in Nigeria’s Ogoniland.

    The protests were seen as a major threat to Nigeria’s military ruler at the time, Gen Sani Abacha, and Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell.

    Read: Nigeria army, police smoke out armed robbers holed up in bank

    The executions led to Nigeria suspension from the Commonwealth.

    The UK’s then Prime Minister, John Major, called it a “fraudulent trial” and described the executions as “judicial murder”.

    Notes of a meeting between Mr Major and US President Bill Clinton, nearly three weeks after the executions, show the steps the leaders contemplated to isolate Nigeria.

    The two men met while Mr Clinton was on a visit to the UK.

    According to the notes, the UK believed that an oil embargo would “only be effective” if done through the UN Security Council and “could only be made to work by a naval blockade”.

    Such steps would result in “wrecking Nigeria’s economy” as it was heavily reliant on oil exports.

    ‘Sycophants surround Abacha’

    Mr Clinton agreed, but said the US would only implement an embargo if “all other parties” were willing to do so, pointing out that sanctions would be vetoed by China if brought before the UN Security Council.

    There had been pleas from across the world for Nigeria’s military leader at the time, Sani Abacha, to exercise clemency, but Western governments had struggled to reach the leader.

    Mr Clinton’s special envoy to Nigeria, Donald T McHenry, had been unable to see Abacha and concluded that he was “almost wholly insulated from the outside world” and “information was filtered by sycophants: they had no idea of genuine opinion within Nigeria or internationally”.

    The hanging of the Ogoni campaigners took place just as Commonwealth heads of state were meeting in New Zealand for their biennial gathering.

    The UK issued a statement condemning the executions, but it was South African President Nelson Mandela who led the international criticism.

    He called for Nigeria to be suspended from the Commonwealth “at once” and that the suspension should not be lifted until the country had shown “much quicker” progress in returning from military to civilian rule. All political prisoners should be released, he argued.

    In this, Mandela was backed by his Zimbabwean counterpart Robert Mugabe and Kenya’s Daniel arap Moi, but the suggestion was criticised by a number of other African leaders, including Ghana’s President Jerry Rawlings.

    Mandela outspoken

    The Commonwealth went ahead with the suspension, but Mandela was determined that the measures should not end there.

    He continued his international engagement, making phone calls to Mr Clinton and keeping in touch with Mr Major by phone after the Commonwealth summit ended.

    In demanding strong action Mandela appeared to have been isolated from the rest of his government.

    Newspaper reports at the time indicate that then Deputy President Thabo Mbeki and the Deputy Foreign Minister, Aziz Pahad, had been reluctant to pursue sanctions against Nigeria.

    The UK, together with the European Union (EU), took a number of steps.

    Ambassadors to Nigeria were recalled, military training and aid were suspended and an EU-wide arms embargo was instituted.

    While Mr Major was willing to consider wider economic sanctions, he was unwilling to do so alone.

    The UK accounted for just 1% of Nigeria’s oil exports, while the US took 40%.

    As a result, Mr Major told Mr Clinton, “we were not well placed to press for [sanctions]”.

    The UK also had a good deal to lose if Nigeria retaliated.

    Read: Nigerian man narrates how he survived attack from 11 boys using guns and machete

    Pressure from Shell

    There was a considerable British expatriate community in Nigeria and UK investments in the country totalled between $3.9bn and $6.5bn (£3bn and £5bn).

    This included Shell, which extracted half of the country’s oil and was contemplating building a major natural gas project.

    The Shell chairman at the time, Cornelius Herkströter, wrote to Mr Major at the height of the controversy, pointing out just how important these investments were.

    He argued that the gas liquefaction plant would “make a major contribution to environmental improvement in the region” since it would reduce the need for the flaring of gas.

    In the end, the problem of getting UN Security Council approval for an oil embargo appeared to have blocked progress on wider sanctions.

    Nigeria was only re-admitted to the Commonwealth in May 1999, on the day on which the country’s new civilian government assumed power – ending three-and-a-half years of isolation.

     

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigerian prince sentenced to death

    A Nigerian Prince, Adewale Oyekan of Lagos, was on Monday sentenced to death for the murder of a businesswoman.

    Prince Adewale is the son of the late traditional ruler of Lagos Adeyinka Oyekan and had been employed by the deceased as a restaurant manager.

    Read:Nusrat Jahan Rafi: Death penalty for 16 who set student on fire

    He had been charged alongside Lateef Balogun, a former domestic servant, for the murder of their boss Sikirat Ekun.

    Ms Ekun was strangled to death and her body dumped in a well at her Lagos home on 17 October 2012.

    Read:Death sentence for Moroccan trio who killed European tourists

    Justice Raliatu Adebiyi of Lagos’ Ikeja high court in her Monday judgment said that the prosecution had proved the charges of conspiracy to commit murder and murder beyond a reasonable doubt.

    Nigeria’s Herald newspaper tweeted a photo of Prince Adewale and his co-accused.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigerian pastors arrested for conducting fake miracles

    Personnel of the State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department of the Lagos State Police Command have arrested four suspects, including two pastors, for allegedly staging fake miracles to defraud unsuspecting members of the public in the Lekki and Epe areas of the state.

    The alleged pastors, Favour David and Favour Chimobi, were said to have connived with Rukayat Folawewo and Bunmi Joshua to perpetrate the crime.

    The state Police Public Relations Officer, Bala Elkana, said in a statement that the suspects specialised in procuring members for the Wonders Assembly Ministry, situated opposite the Lagos Business School on the Lekki-Epe Expressway in Ajah.

    Read:6 pastors who give hilarious meanings to scriptures

    Elkana stated, “The command has arrested four suspects in Lekki/Epe area, who pose as pastors to conduct fake miracles, prophecies and testimonies for unsuspecting members of the public to collect money from them and engage in other dubious means of enriching themselves.

    “On Friday, November 29, 2019, the command acted on an intelligence report by covert operatives of the SCIID, who monitored the activities of a fraudulent syndicate. A pastor, Favour David, who specialised in defrauding unsuspecting members of the public by procuring fake members for the Wonders Assembly Ministry, was arrested with two women, Rukayat Folawewo and Bunmi Joshua, who pretended to be members and were miraculously healed by the pastor after being involved in a car accident.

    Read:Renowned Pastor allegedly impregnates married woman; begs husband to accept responsibility

    “While the other woman, Bunmi Joshua, gave fake testimony to church members that her son, who was deaf and dumb, could now hear and talk and was healed by another pastor, Favour Chimobi of the Elijah Ministry 9, Igirita Street, Port Harcourt, who works alongside Pastor David Favour.”

    Elkana stated that during investigation, detectives found out that none of the stories and testimonies was true, adding that the suspects were arrested during a vigil.

    In another development, the Commissioner of Police in the state, Hakeem Odumosu, has ordered that 50 suspects arrested for various crimes, such as murder, cultism and robbery, be prosecuted.

    Read:Two pastors exchange insults; trade blows over preaching space in Kumasi market

    Elkana said, “In line with the directives of the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Hakeem Odumosu, who has sensitised the management of the entire command and its personnel to his zero tolerance for human rights abuses, he has ordered the decongestion of all cells and formations across the state.

    “To this end, a total of 50 suspects have been charged for various offences at the SCIID Panti. Two suspects were charged for the murder of a LASTMA official, three for the murder of one Sodiq Abubakar, three for the murder of one Seun Abdullahi, six for armed robbery, one for misconduct, and 35 for cultism related activities.”

    Source: punchng.com

  • Nigerian in court for allegedly defiling nine-year-old

    A 25-year-old Nigerian who allegedly defiled a nine-year-old girl consistently in a bathroom at Nungua has appeared before an Accra Circuit Court.

    Festus Ogun, unemployed is facing a charge of defilement.

    Ogun who was without any legal representation, however, denied the offence and the court admitted him to bail in the sum of GH¢20,000 with three sureties.

    The court presided over by Rita Abrokwa-Doko directed that two of the sureties should be Ghanaians and one of the sureties should come from within the Greater Accra Metropolis.

    The matter has been adjourned to December 17.

    Prosecuting, Chief Inspector Kofi Atimbire told the court that the complainant is the mother of the victim.

    Chief Inspector Atimbire said the parties in the case reside at different locations in Nungua, Accra.

    He said on November 4, this year, when the victim came from school, the complainant detected that the victim was not feeling well and questioned her.

    Prosecution said the victim informed the complainant that someone had been luring her into a bathroom anytime she comes back from school and that the person has been having sex with her.

    According to the prosecution, she said that the person had warned her not to inform anyone about the act or else she will die.

    Mr Atimbire said the victim told the complainant that she could identify the perpetrator.

    He said based on that information on November 5, this year, the complainant went with the victim to “monitor” the said perpetrator.

    The prosecution said Ogun emerged and the victim identified him and the complainant mobilized some witnesses who grabbed the accused and sent him to the Police Station in Nungua.

    He said a medical report form was then issued to the complainant to seek medical care for the victim.

    Source: adomonline.com

  • Nigerian prison chief arrested after $1m scam

    The head of a maximum-security jail and a prison doctor have been arrested in Nigeria, following allegations that they enabled a prisoner to conduct internet scams.

    Hope Olusegun Aroke carried out a million-dollar fraud while serving a 24-year jail sentence – for fraud.

    He had access to a mobile phone and the internet.

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    He was originally arrested in 2012 and convicted of obtaining money under false pretences and forgery.

    The country’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) said the two prison staff were arrested for falsifying medical reports that enabled Aroke to get treatment outside prison in a police hospital.

    “The first suspect, [Emmanuel] Oluwaniyi, who is the Controller, Kirikiri Maximum Prison, as well as the second suspect, [Hemeson Edson] Edwin, who is in charge of the medical facility, were arrested on Monday, November 25, 2019, by operatives of the commission,” the EFCC said in a statement.

    Aroke was one of two Malaysia-based Nigerian undergraduate fraudsters arrested by the EFCC towards the end of 2012 in Lagos, following a tip-off, the commission added.

    He had claimed to be a student of computer science at Malaysia’s Kuala Lumpur Metropolitan University, but was in fact the “arrow head of an intricate web of internet fraud schemes that traverse two continents”, it said.

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    He used a network of accomplices to commit the fraud, it added.

    After getting himself admitted to a police hospital, authorities say Aroke moved to a hotel, receiving guests and attending parties.

    He had used the fictitious name Akinwunmi Sorinmade to open two bank accounts and bought a luxury car and homes during his time in prison.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigeria challenges UK’s court asset seizure ruling

    The Nigerian government has appealed against a London court ruling which required it to pay $200m (£155m) to prevent a firm from beginning to seize the country’s assets worth $9.6bn.

    In August, a British court ruled in favour of the company, Process and Industrial Developments (P&ID).

    Read:Nigerian chief imposes wedding tax in his village

    It had fought a long-running legal battle with the Nigerian authorities over a failed project to build a gas processing plant.

    P&ID claims successive Nigerian administrations failed to fulfil their end of the deal, causing it to lose on its investment.

    Read:Nigeria to open border after Buhari, Akufo-Addo meeting Minister

    The Nigerian government says the deal was fraudulent and amounted to economic sabotage.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Lion removed from posh Lagos apartment block

    A lion has been removed from an upmarket residential apartment block – opposite a school – in Nigeria’s biggest city, Lagos.

    Officers from the Lagos State Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences Unit tranquilised and captured the animal which had been kept in a cage in the residential compound in Victoria Island. It has been taken to a zoo.

    Read:Rogue elephant named after Bin Laden kills five Indian villagers

    Officials have urged the owner – believed to be an Indian national – to report to police by the end of Monday or risk arrest.

    It is unclear why the two-year-old lion was kept in the complex, but local media have reported that it was guarding the property.

    Officers had been monitoring the apartment block since Friday after receiving reports from other residents that a lion had been kept there.

    Read:Zebra shot dead after causing accident on German autobahn

    * This post has been amended to reflect that the lion was kept in a cage in the residential complex.

    Source: bbc.com

  • ‘Mentally ill people being mistreated in Nigeria’

    The campaign group, Human Rights Watch (HRW), says thousands of mentally ill people in Nigeria are being abused and kept in chains in care facilities.

    Its researchers visited nearly 30 private and state-run centres across the country.

    Read:The mentally ill 29-year-old helped to die by Dutch doctors

    In all but one, they found patients were being chained up.

    Staff at the facilities said the practice stops the patients from leaving or harming others.

    Read:Cultists kill 13 university students in Nigeria

    In recent months, the Nigerian authorities have carried out a series of raids on private religious centres, freeing more than 1,000 people who had been kept in shackles.

    HRW is calling for those rescued to be given proper support by the government.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigeria’s borders closed to trade until January 2020

    Nigeria said on Sunday its borders would remain closed to trade until at least January 31, 2020.

    Nigeria launched a partial border closure in August to tackle smuggling of rice and other goods. Last month the head of customs confirmed that all trade via land borders was halted indefinitely.

    Read:Closure of Nigeria borders irresponsible ECOWAS Court of Justice

    Joseph Attah, spokesman for the Nigerian customs service said the “present phase” of the closure would end on January 31, 2020, and that would not be the end of the closure.

    “The operation is in phases, it will continue until the set objective is attained,” Attah told Reuters by phone.

    Read:Smuggling not enough reason to shut border Nigerian lawyer to Buhari

    A private memo sent by the customs service comptroller for enforcement, Victor Dimka, to colleagues called the closure operation an “overwhelming success”, but said there were some strategic objectives yet to be achieved.

    The memo did not outline which objectives these were.

    Source: africanews.com

  • ‘Go back home’ – Nigerian High Commissioner tells Nigerians in Ghana

    The Nigerian High Commissioner to Ghana, His Excellency Ambassador Olufemi Michael Abikoye has told their citizens particularly those doing businesses in Ghana to return home since the economy of Nigeria is now in a good shape

    “Things are getting better in Nigeria and I can assure you. ..And I don’t see any reason why we should not be proud of Nigeria”, the High Commissioner admonished in a meeting with the members of the Nigeria Union of Traders Association Ghana (NUTAG) in Kumasi over the weekend covered by the reporter, Kwabena Danso-Dapaah.

    Read: Border closure: Nigeria provides respite for locked Ghanaian goods

    Shops owned by Nigerians at Suame in Kumasi, the capital of the Ashanti Region, were recently ransacked by raucous Ghanaian youths in the early hours of Wednesday, 19 June 2019 by the locals to register their displeasure against a decision by the Ghana Union Traders Association (GUTA) to reopen closed Nigerian retail shops.

    “Anywhere in the world when you hear any two Black Men making an achievement, it is either the two are Nigerians or at least one other is Nigeria”, Excellency Ambassador Olufemi Michael Abikoye are Sensitization and Interactive Session with Ashanti Regional Security Council (RESEC) stated.

    Nigerian traders closed their shops temporarily on Friday, 14 June 2019 over what they described as attacks from their Ghanaian counterparts.

    The Ghanaian traders argue that they are only enforcing the laws of Ghana which bar foreigners from engaging in the retail sub-sector, a preserve of Ghanaians.

    Read: Nigeria border closure: Ghana must retaliate GUTA

    The rampaging youth, who wore red bands and attires, also lit car tyres as part of their protest.

    The Ghanaians also expressed anger about the kidnapping scourge in the country which involves Nigerian suspects.

    They, therefore, resolved and threatened to deal with the Nigerians since the authorities have not been able to intervene in the matter.

     

    Source: Kwabena Danso-Dapaah