Thursday, 24 January 2019

HOW A FEMALE LAWYER GRUESOMELY MURDERED HER HUSBAND IN LAGOS – POLICE


Udeme Otike-Odibi and Symphorosa Otike-Odibi

A prosecution witness on Wednesday gave graphic detail of last year’s gruesome killing of Lagos lawyer, Symphorosa Otike-Odibi, by her lawyer wife, Udeme, before an Igbosere High Court, Lagos.

The witness, Olusegun Bamidele, an assistant superintendent of police in the Homicide Section, State Criminal Investigation Department (CID), Panti, told the court that Udeme, in her statement, confessed to killing her husband and cutting his manhood.

Udeme was arraigned on June 13, 2018 on a two-count charge of murder and misconduct with regard to a corpse by Lagos State Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), Titilayo Shitta-Bey.

According to the prosecutor, Udeme stabbed Symphorosa, also a lawyer, to death and mutilated his corpse by cutting off his genitals on May 3, 2018, at their Diamond Estate, Sangotedo, Lekki, Lagos home.

The prosecutor said the offences contravened Sections 165 (b) and 223 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015. Udeme pleaded not guilty and was remanded in prison custody.

At the resumed hearing on Wednesday, the prosecutor called Bamidele, a police veteran, as the state’s final witness.

Bamidele told the court that as the head of a team that investigated the killing, he personally recorded the defendant’s statement.

He said that Udeme wrote a detailed confessional statement during an interactive session with her in protective custody in the police hospital.

According to him, the defendant was recuperating from what doctors described as “superficial and self-inflicted wounds,” when she made her statement.

He said the defendant spoke freely after identifying herself as a lawyer.

Bamidele said: “While she (Udeme) was writing her statement, it was an interactive session. I put questions to her, she would explain it to me and put it down in writing.

“She stated in her statement that she was married to the late Symphorosa and that they were having marital issues.

“She stated that the deceased was having extra-marital affairs and whenever she raised the issue with him, his responses were not satisfactory, he appeared nonchalant.

“She said that on May 2, 2018, she was preparing to travel to United Kingdom when she checked the bedside locker for her marriage certificate. When she could not find it, she went to the deceased where he lay on the bed and asked him about it but there was no response, the response given was not okay.

“She had a discussion with him and there was hot exchange of words, which made her to go to the kitchen and get a frying pan and knife.

“When she returned to where the deceased lay, she hit him on the head with the frying pan and said ‘Tell me, what is in your mind that you are withholding.

“She stated that the deceased called his mother to report her conduct. She continued to hit the deceased on the head again and again. Finally, she confirmed that she used the knife to stab the deceased in his abdomen.

“She also said while the deceased was lying on his back, she was still angry. She sat beside him, looking at his intestines coming out of the deceased and said: ‘If this your penis is the one that is giving you license to have the feeling of another person, it’s better we cut it off,’ she proceeded to do so with the same knife she used in stabbing him and hanged a piece of the penis in his right hand”.

Bamidele explained that later that night, Udeme sent her “close friend” Maureen Offor, a WhatsApp message which read: “I have done something terrible.”

The witness said further investigation showed that she sent two other WhatsApp messages, firstly to the husband of the deceased’s younger sister, Charles Akpoguma, which read: “Just pray for us. May God forgive.”

He said the last message was to her mother in Calabar the same night. It read: “Sorry mum, we engaged in a fight.”

However, things took a more graphic turn when the prosecution played pictures of the defendant on a hospital bed after the incident and her bloodied deceased husband on his deathbed.

Shitta-Bey also tendered, through Bamidele, several exhibits recovered from the defendant.

They included a big, shiny frying pan allegedly used by the defendant on the deceased, a blood covered kitchen knife Udeme allegedly used in killing Symphorosa, a blood stained pen, four phones, two of which were blood stained, Udeme’s Nigerian and British passports.

But when the prosecutor sought to tender the two statements which Udeme allegedly made to the police, her counsel, Mr Olusegun Banjoko, opposed the admissibility of the statements.

Banjoko prayed the court not to admit the statements as evidence, adding that they were not made in the presence of the defendant’s lawyer as required by law.

Justice Adedayo Akintoye adjourned until February 25 to consider the admissibility of the statements in a trial within trial.

(NAN)

ACPN DISOWNS EZEKWESILI , DECLARES SUPPORT FOR BUHARI

Crisis seems to be lurking at the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN) as the national leadership of the party has parted ways with its presidential candidate, Mrs Oby Ezekwesili.

The party Thursday responded to the announcement of withdrawal from the presidential race by Ezekwesili, saying it no longer recognises the former minister as its candidate.

Ezekwisili

Ezekwesili had earlier in the day announced her withdrawal from the 2019 presidential race, saying she would support an alliance against the candidates of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
However, ACPN said that it no longer shares the same aspiration with Ezekwesili.

In a statement signed by the National Chairman of ACPN, Abdulganiyu Galadima, the party said that it has resolved to endorse the APC presidential candidate, President Muhammadu Buhari.

Details shall be brought to you later…

Sunday, 20 January 2019

I AM THE MOST INVESTIGATED FORMER GOV IN NIGERIA – GODSWILL AKPABIO

In this interview former governor of Akwa Ibom State, Godswill Akpabio states that contrary to insinuations, he is the most invetsigated former governor by anti graft agencies in Nigeria. He also speaks on some other national issues.

Did you leave any debt in Akwa Ibom as governor?
There is no government without debt, even the current administration of President Buhari inherited debt, the colonial masters left debt for Tafawa Balewa. But when it comes to what they are speculating is balderdash and I am happy you asked that question. Some people said Akpabio left behind a whopping 500 billion Naira indebtedness, which is not true. What happened was that the total amount I collected as a loan from banks was 80 billion Naira. It was the first 50 billion Naira and later 30 billion Naira and the reasons were very simple. We were struggling to get Paris Club money of over 100 billion dollars, and 365 million dollars or so, if we had received that, we would have offset the 80 billion Naira loan. During my first term, I did not borrow one naira. It was when we started having dwindling revenue from oil; we were having zero allocation from NNPC. So when you hear Akpabio promised 31 industries but did not build any, it was because the money was no longer there and I was not going to build those sites, I was going make available 20 billion through the investment arm of the state every year for those four years  so that  people can access the money with conditions and then set up the industries, so that we can ensure that at least one person per local government was able to set up one industry. That was the way we wanted to do it and so we budgeted 20 billion, but we never touched 20 billion because the money was not there and part of what confuses people is that they dont know that budget is even an estimate, it is not realistic. It is when the incomes come, whether through IGR or FAAC, that you have the right to budget and project, it does not mean you have spent the money. And lack of funds also slowed us down in completing few of the projects we did not complete, we had over 3,000 projects completed at a time in one year. We commissioned about a thousand six hundred, when people started arguing, we put it out on the internet for people to see and name the communities. We laid underground pipes to bring the menacing issue of flooding in some part of the state to an end. We built flyovers, the kind of  project we had was to turn Uyo to a small Dubai. We were even planning  to work with masses energy to have a fuel depot in Uyo at the airport so that we can start flying with Emirates, that was why I started the taxi way so that when the plane, because of the large wing the 777 could have a free ride, that was why I expanded the runway from 3.6KM to 4.2KM and brought in the best lighting system. And we made sure it was in the same categories with airports in London and other advanced countries. We did underground pipe drainage system, 10.8 kilometres from the Stadium; it is this available for everyone to see in order for the road to last and that is the secret why some of the roads we commissioned in 2009, nine years after you will not see a single porthole. That is the secret of the survival of Itame junction that was flooded for 39 years and vehicles could not pass, that is the secret to make sure that area by the mega filling station that used to be permanently flooded during rainy season. So the debt you are talking about, I was privileged to see a paper from the Debt Management Office, (DMO) in 2016, the current administration when that bit of economic rush came in, when the current government started insisting that the states should comply with the government because it had just been in office for one and half years. So they had also incurred their own debt, so they added that to contractual indebtedness and outstanding obligation of my government and they brought it out and what they submitted to the debt management office was about 147 billion in December 2016, one and half years into Governor Udom Emmanuel’s administration. The total debt profile in the state contractual and otherwise was submitted as 157 billion. That is not what they said I left behind.  

But what did you leave behind? I don’t think the debt profile that we left behind was anything up to 60 billion, and don’t forget that except payment for contractors, you know you pay them on milestones as they work, so there must have been some outstanding IPCs also. But what happens is that, as money comes in you settle those, and the state used to sometimes receive up to 15 to 30 billion, so it is not as if these things can cripple a state. Even if you don’t do any other thing at all you can pay all the debts in four months. Government is about being able to move the people forward not as if government cannot owe and whatever was owed by the governor was taken and brought over by the Federal Government and spread over 25 years by the Federal Government including Akwa-Ibom, so that whatever the government will pay on a monthly basis will be reduced. So that the government can move forward. So that is what they did and the state government was not paying anything above 500 million naira a month. So, the 147 billion was brought over by the Federal Government. You can get the record from the Debt Management Office; they will give you the real details. Because of all these stories, people were saying he left behind 500 billion, he did this. That was why I went to find out what was submitted as total indebtedness of Akwa-Ibom state by Udom Emmanuel government in December 2016 to DMO and I have the record for all the states in the federation. What I saw there I can’t remember off hand, was 143 or 147 billion that is all we were even among the least indebted states. Some states are owing as much as 600,300,400 billion, and for Akwa Ibom, with the level of economic income, we should be saluted. I also left behind economic enablers, that if you were able to take one of them and then privatise or sell off 50 percent you will pay off the entire debt. For instance, I built Obon Power Plant, I completed Obon Power Plant people were offering me as much as 190 million dollars to sell sixty per cent or 70 percent but I refused. I said if we expand it, it will bring in a lot of revenue to the state. I also built a gas plant in conjunction with a company from the United Kingdom, I brought in a gas processing plant built it in Isereke and this is 69km of gas pipeline and I made sure the state holds significant stake that will buy the gas by two dollars by the time they completed the gas it was going for 2.8 so that is also another income to the state. And then we did 50 kilometres of gas pipeline from Eserege all the way to NNPP in Calabar, we are the one supplying NNPP in Calabar. I left behind economic enablers like hospitals, I built hospitals in Obolo and other places and these places are generating revenue, I built state of the art international hospital in Utame Junction. We invested over 250 billion on federal roads but the government told us they are going to pay in one way and all that and what the federal government accepted to pay at my time was 145 billion and before I left office, President Jonathan said part of it should be paid. I told the government after I handed over to pursue it. A month ago, they brought it to parliament because they wanted to use part of the borrowed money from China to offset some of the domestic debts. What was put in for Akwa Ibom was 178 billion and now from the 175 billion to be refunded to Akwa Ibom and the Paris club money that I did not collect. So you can see that from the Paris Club refund alone whatever I might have left as debt has been wiped off. We left a lot of economic enablers. So when they talk about debt, I laugh. When a government of that nature, for a government that completed over 3,000 projects, and was able to carry out such quantum of developments that was applauded even by the United States conference, talking about 145 billion was debt, when the state is expecting 175 billion from the Federal road refund, talk about the international prison that we built, over 3.7 billion is going to be refunded to the state. The airport itself is an economic enabler. We were able to carry out free and compulsory education not to talk of 100 to 300 billion Paris club refund left behind. I left the state far richer than I met it.  

What was really the issue then with the EFCC trying to get the state government to open its books to investigate you?
Those were baseless and unfounded stories. The job of EFCC was to investigate petition, so there was a young boy, a lawyer, who had a personal disagreement with me then, I met him and I assisted them in the law school, I paid his law school fees. Somehow, he had a personal disagreement with some of my staff and he has also come up to say he was also used by people I relieved of their appointment. He said so in an affidavit in the court of appeal voluntarily. So the EFCC has the right to look at that petition. But when I came back, I had an accident in 2015 I still said I must go because I was not around when I was invited. So I went to the EFCC personally to ensure that I answered to the petition and I answered them. I am the most investigated former governor in Nigeria. Go to anywhere in the world; I don’t have a single house that I could sell, whether in the United Kingdom or Dubai. So, forget about the contrived negative story that you heard about Godswill Akpabio.  

When we were talking earlier, you mentioned the current governor in Akwa Ibom state; you said he is not experienced?
How can I say that? He has been in government for three and a half years, how can I say that he is not experienced?   Okay, do you really think he is doing well? History will judge him, not me  

What I am trying to get at is that are you the person that gave this governor to Akwa Ibom?
No, the Akwa Ibom people voted for him.   Yes, they voted for him, but you facilitated his emergence? There is something that you need to know, I met the governor in a church in Surulere, Qua Ibom Church and I was told that he is a deacon in the church and also a Deputy Director in Zenith Bank. For me, I believe in getting the best person for my people, there were almost twenty-eight people who wanted to be governor of the state, but later twenty-three of them bought the governorship forms. One left to APC and it remains twenty-two aspirants. We have some of my commissioners and lots of people who have worked with me. It was not an easy task for me then, but I concluded that I will see my people if they will accept a peacemaker in form of a neutral person that they dont know, that was how His Excellency Governor Emmanuel’s name was chosen. When he came, the people love him, and I love him too but the other twenty-two candidates form an association against him. Even some elders went to court to testify against him then. I thank him because later he reconciled with all of them, he invited them one after the other, and he also honoured those elders that testified against him before in the court of law. I think in my own way that it is Godly for him to have forgiven them.  

What is the disagreement you have with the governor now?
I don’t have any disagreement with him, just that we are in different parties now. The only disagreement I had with him is that he said I came in a night bus to become a commissioner in 2001/2002 which is not true. I actually came in through Port Harchourt before my cousin took me up. Then again he said I came with a chartered plane to become the governor but he has forgotten that it is the state governor’s plane that he is still using that brought him. I carried him with the state plane he mentioned, which is Gulf Stream 450 and that was what he is still using till now. The disagreement is on the mode of transport and not on his performance.  

Is it true that you heard that the governor was going to move to APC, and you told him to wait for a while before you now made your own move?
It is not true; there is still room for defection, even till today.  

Akwa Ibom state has a lot of people thinking that it will become a battleground because of your defection to APC. Are you comfortable with the insinuation?
The APC have taken over Akwa Ibom even before I joined them. Do you know why a leader should move with his people? A leader should always look back and see if his people are following him. Even if they are running away from him, he will still hear footsteps, and if they are not following, you will definitely hear footsteps too. By the time I decided that I was going to APC, by the time I landed at the airport, the whole airport was APC. The whole of the airport to the town was APC. The whole of the plaza in UYO was APC, the jubilation was too much. Women and men were bringing their brooms from under their bed, which means they have been hiding them because of me and they were sweeping the roads. A distance of twenty minutes took us over two hours to cover because of the jubilation of Akwa Ibom people that came for the jubilation. I was now saying that so all these people belong to APC. When I asked them they said sir, after you left office, it wasn’t the same again. We have moved to APC, and I asked them when, and they said since 2015. Normally, every family has a civil servant, and in Akwa Ibom, the head of civil service command about sixty-four thousand workforces not to talk about the local government service in the thirty-one local governments of the state. In some local government, we have up to six hundred or seven hundred staffs, so you should be looking at twenty-four thousand people in the local government workforce. When you add that to the state civil service workforce, you will be looking at close to one hundred thousand people. Because you will also add the state assembly staffs, the NUT etc. Those people too have adult children who live on them. What really plays a major role in Akwa Ibom is that when the civil servants are happy, it reflects in their homes, in the churches. When a civil servant says there have never been a pay slip to even show what he collects on a monthly basis. Many people have died without collecting their gratuities. Eighty per cent of the people in the civil service are now in APC.  By the time they got to know that the leader who kept them together have decided to share their own view, the result was amazing. A woman while struggling to get registered had her hand cut off. She brought out hand in a coaster bus, and her hand was chopped up by the gate, and the hand fell on the floor. Up till today my wife and I have been taking good care of the woman. It was an incident that makes me weep. If you ask the APC headquarters, they will tell you that we have over three hundred thousand card-carrying members within six weeks. When I hear that Akwa Ibom is going to be a battleground, I laugh because there is no battleground in a state that has already shown direction. The Akwa Ibom PDP members in the state know that they will not be given money at the headquarters in Abuja to share if they are not talking as they are doing now. I can confidently confirm to you that the first state President Buhari will win within three hours of voting is Akwa Ibom. It is not because of me but because of the change that the federal government has started. The reason I am being attacked is just because I am a leader here and a lot of people came out boldly to associate with APC when I joined, but people have rejected PDP before I declared for APC.  

Who is the leader then in Akwa Ibom?
We have a leader in the person of Don Etiebet but they don’t probably know the numbers of followers they had then until when I joined. I was in London on Monday, and I joined on Wednesday. I couldn’t even move with my car and I have to trek. Even when I was coming from Enugu from the burial of my wife’s grandmother I was called on the phone that the youths from my senatorial constituency want to hear from me directly about my defection to APC, and the reason I moved to APC. They actually applied to the local government chairman to get a hall for the reception, but they were refused to use the hall by the chairman. They forcefully found their way into the hall but the chairman did not put on the generator set for them. I was shocked when I saw the crowd because it was raining on that day, and there were about forty-five thousand youths. You need to do your independent investigation about what I am telling you in Akwa Ibom. They said they will go anywhere I move to and I promise to take my people to the centre.  

It was alleged that at your first appearance at the National Assembly, you gave so much money to members to become a principal officer of the Senate?
People don’t like to give credit to whom it is due. There are people who shy away from the truth. The people of the South south are very proud of me because I changed the story of the South south. A lot of people say that lots of money goes to the South south, but there is little to show for it but for the first time I became a governor, that insult vanished because of what I achieved. Because if you come to Akwa Ibom; you will see some of my achievements. There is nowhere you come from across the world and you come into the Godswill Akpabio stadium in Akwa Ibom and you walk into the VIP stand with two hundred and fifty bulletproof seats that you will not commend me. When you walk into the governor’s office constructed under my regime that you will not marvel. It was constructed with ICT compliance. When the position was zoned to the South south, the people from the South south in the house said as their leader I should be the best person for the post. When they approached me, I refused and told them that I have never been on leave for eight years, and I need to rest. They insisted, and I have to honour them by taking the post. Don’t forget that I have been the chairman of PDP governors forum in Nigeria. I also owe the South south senators an apology for going to APC without informing them, because, after my meeting with the president, the story was already everywhere in the world, so I believe that even if I call them then, they will be looking at me as an APC person. I owe them an apology for not informing them. Some people were saying that I left without any followers but what about the forty-five thousand people at the stadium. When the president came and you saw over seventy thousand people at the stadium, some people don’t even have seats to seat in the stadium in a South south state. It is only God that can enthrone kings so I don’t want to brag. I have done over seventy-eight jobs in the states in Akwa Ibom. I have been a governor of the state for eight years, and I will always serve them till I die. I am collecting the pension as a former governor of the state.  

Some of you in the Senate are receiving pensions as former governors and also receiving your salaries as senators. People are saying that you should leave one of those allowances?
Nothing like two salaries, because we are collecting pensions as former governors and as a serving senator, we must be paid our allowance when due. At least we must maintain our office and as a former governor, we must get the pension for working as a former governor of a state. People don’t understand because you can only receive only one pension as a former governor, and a serving senator, you must get your allowance.

Saturday, 19 January 2019

PRESIDENCY SPEAKS ON PLOT TO ARREST CJN, FRAME COURT JUSTICES

The Nigerian Presidency has finally reacted to reports of a plot to arrest the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Walter Onnoghen and frame some Supreme court Justices.

In a statement made available to newsmen, signed by Femi Adesina, has described the reports as 'absolutely False'. 

"We have read with considerable concern and surprise, the fake news of the Presidency's alleged plan to arrest the Chief Justice of Nigeria and frame three other Supreme Court Justices.

This false story is being peddled by the Coalition of United Political Parties (CUPP) apparently to set the judiciary against the executive and cause major confusion ahead of the forthcoming general elections.

The story is absolutely false as the Presidency is not in any way involved in plotting against or framing anybody.

We note that the findings of the Code of Conduct Bureau against the Chief Justice of Nigeria, and the allegations arising from them, are being handled by the courts in the normal way, as is expected in a democratic society like ours. The Presidency has not, and will certainly not, interfere in the process.

We, however, want to draw the attention of the general public to this or similar false stories, which are ill motivated to further the political interests of their sponsors.

While the Buhari administration is very firmly committed to the fight against corruption, we want to assure the general public that Government will always pursue its mission with the highest standards of fairness, and in strict conformity with the relevant laws."

Thursday, 17 January 2019

INEC RELEASES FINAL LIST OF CANDIDATES FOR 2019 GENERAL ELECTIONS


Rose Orianran-Anthony, INEC secretary.

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has released the full names of candidates for the presidential and National Assembly elections.

The electoral umpire published the names on its website on Thursday, 29 days to the general elections.

The list was released by INEC secretary, Mrs Rose Orianran-Anthony.

The list contains the names of candidates for the presidential, senatorial, House of Reps and state Assemblies.

The information was contained on the verified Twitter handle of the Commission, @inecnigeria.

The presidential candidates’ list features 144 names comprising parties’ presidential candidates and their running mates.

The Social Democratic Party (SDP) did not present presidential candidate or running mate for the election, as two persons –- a former Minister of Information, Jerry Gana; and a former Governor of Cross River State, Mr. Donald Duke — are laying claim to the ticket.

Gana has been recognised by the courts, but he has not been accepted by his party.

On the other hand, Duke has been ousted by the courts but remains the acceptable candidate to the party.

There are 28 women on the list as either the candidate or the running mate.

The youngest candidate is the 30-year-old Johnson Omede, being a vice-presidential candidate of the New Nigeria People’s Party.

A total of 72 Presidential candidates and another 72 Vice-Presidential candidates are expected to run for the presidential election.

Others whose names appear on the list include President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, who are the candidates of the All Progressives Congress (APC); former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar, and former Governor Peter Obi who are the Presidential and Vice-Presidential candidates, respectively, of the Peoples Democratic Party, (PDP).

Others include Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili of the Allied Peoples Movement of Nigeria (APMN); Mr. Omoyele Sowore of the African Action Congress (AAC); Mr. Kingsley Moghalu of the Young Progressives Party (YPP) ; Mr. Sina Fagbenro-Byron of the KOWA Party; and Mr. Fela Durotoye of the Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN) 

See the final lists here:

Presidential candidates

Senatorial candidates

Candidates for the House of Representatives

N30,000 MINIMUM WAGE AND THE MIX OF UNCERTAINTIES WITHOUT END

When the Tripartite  Com-mittee on the new minimum wage submitted its report to President Muhammadu Buhari on November 5, 2018, workers were full of expectations. In fact, some had hoped to use the new minimum wage to celebrate the 2018 yuletide season following the National Assembly assurance of an accelerated process once it received the draft bill.

Recall that the Tripartite Committee had revealed that it included an executive draft bill in the report submitted to the President.

The Ama Pepple-led committee had in the report  recommended new minimum wage of N30,000, which  organised labour described as a product of compromise.

It will be noted that at one of the committee meetings, the Federal Government proposed N24,500, while the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, NGF, on the eve of the submission of the committee’s report proposed N22,500 after the committee had agreed on N30,000.

However, two months after the submission of the Tripartite Committee report, there is no sign if or when the new minimum wage will become a reality.

More worrisome is what appears to be government’s delay tactics and organised labour intentionally or unwittingly aiding government.

An indication that the government is not ready to fast- track the process came  after organised labour issued a December 31, 2018, to the government to either transmit a bill to the  National Assembly or risk industrial unrest afterwards.

Prior to the ultimatum, leaders of Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, had on December 17, 2018, put the government on notice of a nationwide mobilisation and sensitisation protest slated for January 8, 2019.

In its response, the Federal Government  through the Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige,  fixed a conciliatory meeting with the leaders of organised Labour on January 4, 2019.

While leaders of the NLC and the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria, TUC, honoured the invitation, leaders of the United Labour Congress of Nigeria, ULC, stayed away, claiming that the three labour centers had  on December 20, 2018 met in Lagos and  resolved that they would  not attend any further meeting on the minimum wage with the government.

As explained by Ngige, the meeting was aimed at pacifying labour to shelve the proposed nationwide protest scheduled for Tuesday,  January 8, over  government’s failure  to transmit the New National Minimum Wage bill to the National Assembly.

At the meeting, the leadership of labour had impressed it on government to forward executive bill on the N30,000 minimum wage as agreed by the Minimum Wage Tripartite Committee to the National Assembly within one week.

But the government delegation asked for four weeks to enable it finish its consultations and forward the bill to the National Assembly.

Speaking after the January 7 meeting, Ngige informed that the Tripartite Committee’s recommendations would also be transmitted to the Federal Executive Council, FEC, National Economic Council, NEC, and Council of State which comprises former Presidents and Heads of State for final ratification, and subsequently send to the National Assembly for enactment into law.

Ngige said: “We have made progress and tomorrow (Tuesday), we will know the definite date when the bill will be transmitted to the National Assembly. It has been difficult to arrive at a date because there are processes to follow on the bill. We have to go to the FEC with a council memo on the bill. After that, we will go to the NEC and the Council of State.

“We can control the FEC date, the same with NEC, but for the National Council of State, the President has to look at his own time-table and we inform past Heads of State and Justice of the Federation.

“This can take two weeks but we are trying to see if we can accommodate all these meetings by next week because we cannot do Council of State meeting again this week. Immediately after that meeting (Council of State), we will transmit.”

The National Assembly members who were  on Christmas and New Year  holidays  resumed on Wednesday, 16th January, 2019.

But it appears the leaders of the organized labour are unknowingly acting and playing the script of the government.

Many have wondered why Labour gave a December 31 2018 deadline to government to send an executive bill on the new minimum wage to the National Assembly or risk industrial unrest, and then decided to hold a national protest on January 8.

A former labour leader who participated in the last two minimum wage negotiations, faulted the rationale for a  protest and further meetings with government after a tripartite committee had concluded its report.

According to him, what the leaders of organised labour ought to have done at the December 20, 2018 meeting in Lagos, was to fix a date for a nationwide strike and not protest, saying “I hope our colleagues are not playing into the hands of government. Labour should push the government harder because the elections are around the corner. In few days from now the lawmakers and other government officials will be too busy with electioneering that if care is not taken, the minimum wage issue will become secondary.  Labour must take a decisive action now that there is a little window before it is too late.”

As it is, the uncertainty over the new minimum wage will persist because going by the scenario, the Attorney General of the Federation has to come up with an executive bill to be considered by the FEC, NEC populated by the governors and then to Council of States before taking the bill to the National Assembly.

To add to the uncertainty, there is an indication that the National Assembly members may  proceed on another break on January 24  to join their parties in the campaigns ahead of the general elections, a day after the Presidency is expected to submit an executive bill on the Minimum Wage to them.

At the National Assembly, the bill will be subjected to public hearing and it is not certain whether the lawmakers may have the time to follow the rigorous process before or after the general elections.

It should be emphasised that even if the National Assembly passes the bill into law, it will still be transmitted back to the President for his assent before it becomes an act.

As it stands, even with accelerated hearing, the earliest to expect the implementation of the new wage would be second quarter of this year.

Even if the National Assembly passes the bill into law, it will still be transmitted to the President for his assent before it becomes an act.

Going by recent activities, it is doubtful if organized labour will be able to muster the political will and capacity to quicken the implementation of a new minimum wage.

For the expectant workers, the N30,000 new minimum wage looks near, but still very far.

Credit: Vanguard. 

Sunday, 13 January 2019

BREAKING: BUHARI IN BIG TROUBLE, AS MILLIONS OF PROTESTERS SET TO SHUT DOWN NIGERIA, IN THE NEXT 24-HOURS


Buhari

Opposition parties under the platform of the Coalition of United Political Parties, CUPP, are planning a one-million-man march, to protest the planned trial of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, CJN, Justice Walter Onnoghen, before the Code of Conduct Tribunal, CCT, on Monday

Opposition parties under the platform of the Coalition of United Political Parties, CUPP, are planning a one-million-man march, to protest the planned trial of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, CJN, Justice Walter Onnoghen, before the Code of Conduct Tribunal, CCT, on Monday

The Coalition’s National Spokesperson, Imo Ugochinyere, disclosed this in a statement made available to Journalists, in Abuja, on Saturday.

Ugochinyere said that the protest is meant to save the nation’s Judiciary, and by extension, Nigeria’s democracy.

“Nigerian opposition will immediately commence mobilisation for a one-million-man march, to save the Nigerian Judiciary from President Buhari’s reign of destruction”, he said.

He described Onnoghen’s planned arraignment, as undemocratic and unconstitutional.

He said that the plan is the latest in the strategies being deployed by the present administration, to rig the forthcoming elections.

He added: “The Presidency had during the appointment of Justice Onnoghen, shown its card that it was not comfortable with his appointment, hence it was delayed until President Buhari was hurried out of the country, due to perennial illness.

“Justice Onnoghen has since shown that he is fair, firm, and able to do justice, and will not succumb to the pressures of a Presidency that is planning to rig an election, as the only hope of winning re-election, following their rejection by the Nigerian people.

“This dastardly move by the Presidency, is the last desperate act of an outgoing government to blackmail the CJN out of Office, and bring in a rogue Judge to allow APC’s rigging.”

He enjoined Onnoghen not to resign, for the sake of the nation’s democracy.

He said: “The trumped-up charges will fall like a pack of cards, like those filed against the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, and all the Judges whose homes were invaded, on October 7, 2016.

“These acts of desperation are an unequivocal declaration of war on the Nigerian democracy, by the Buhari Presidency and the ruling APC.

“President Buhari is now living in morbid fear of losing the election, after he wasted the opportunity freely and willingly given to him by Nigerians, to improve their lot.

“This can only be a plot to manipulate post 2019 election Tribunal. Nothing else can be behind this despotic move to desecrate Office of the CJN.

“This plot is as sacrilegious, if not more, as the demolishing of the homes of Judges, and not securing any convictions, but this is the last defence line of democracy, which must be protected at all cost, even with the blood of Nigerians.

“We know we are dealing with a President who is a maniac now. He is willing to bring Nigeria to a grinding halt. Nothing is sacred to President Buhari anymore. Not the lives of Nigerians, not our Institutions of State, not Security, not the Economy, just absolutely nothing.

“What President Buhari is doing is the height of impunity and rascality. The CJN cannot be forced out of Office, even with a trillion fictitious charges.”

Ugochinyere claimed that intelligence reports showed that some Ministers and Leaders of the APC, are behind Onnoghen’s ordeal.

JOB RECRUITMENT AT FIRST BANK OF NIGERIA LIMITED (5 POSITIONS)

First Bank of Nigeria Limited (FirstBank) is Nigeria's largest financial services institution by total assets and gross earnings. With more than 10 million customer accounts, FirstBank has over 750 branches providing a comprehensive range of retail and corporate financial services. The Bank has international presence through its subsidiaries, FBN Bank (UK) Limited in London and Paris, FBNBank DRC, FBNBank Ghana, FBNBank Gambia, FBNBank Guinea, FBNBank Sierra-Leone and FBNBank Senegal, as well as its Representative Offices in Johannesburg, Beijing and Abu Dhabi.

We are recruiting to fill the following vacant positions below:

1.) Team Lead, Corporate Budgets & Performance Management

Location: Lagos

Click Here To View Details

2.) Head, Corporate Control

Location: Lagos

Click Here To View Details

3.) Head, IT Infrastructure

Location: Lagos

Click Here To View Details

4.) Head, IT Application Solution

Location: Lagos

Click Here To View Details

5.) Head, IT Programme Manager

Location: Lagos

Click Here To View Details

Application Closing Date
Not Specified.

BUHARI'S FED GOVT, IS WORST EVER IN NIGERIA HISTORY - WIKE

Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike, on Saturday described the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari as the worst Federal Government ever in the country’s history.

Wike, who spoke during a mobilisation meeting at Unit 7, Ward 9 of Obio/Akpor Local Government Area, said Nigerians had suffered beyond measure under the Buhari administration.

The governor maintained that Nigerians should not expect any good from the Federal Government which he said had been fighting everyone.

He said that the current administration had also been fighting the judiciary so that they could manipulate the forthcoming general elections.

The governor stated, “The APC Federal Government is fighting everyone. They struggled to destroy the National Assembly and failed. They are also fighting the judiciary; so, they can rig the forthcoming elections. They are trying to intimidate the judiciary.

“This government has suffered Nigerians beyond measure. There is nothing good that will come out of this government. It is the worst Federal Government ever.”

Wike also called on Rivers people to vote out the APC-led Federal Government on February 16 to attract benefits to the state.

The governor said that Rivers people would queue behind the PDP presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, during the general elections.

He stated that in the 4,442 polling units in the state, the voters would vote out the APC Federal Government in unison, adding that since 2015, the Buhari administration had not executed any project in Rivers State.

The governor said that mobilisation for votes was happening at the unit level to carry all Rivers people along in the move to oust Buhari from the power.

He said, “Vote out Buhari and vote in Atiku Abubakar. Let Buhari and APC pack and leave the Presidential Villa. Buhari’s tenancy has expired.”

Wike urged the people of the state to be alert at their respective units to ensure that PDP got victory at all levels.

However, several calls and a text message to the state APC Publicity Secretary, Mr Chris Finebone, for him to react to the governor’s claim were neither answered nor replied as of press time.

N134BN OGONI JUDGMENT DEBT: SHELL LOSES APPEAL AT SUPREME COURT

The Supreme Court has dismissed the appeal filed by Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), which prevented First Bank of Nigeria Limited from paying the plaintiffs community a judgment debt now totaling N134 billion to the plaintiff community represented by 10 Ogoni Chief of Ejama Ebubu community of Ogoni in Rivers State.

In a ruling on Friday, Justice Kumai Bayang Akaahs said the notice of appeal filed by the oil giant was incompetent and struck out based on Order 8 Rule 7 of the court’s rules.

Justice Akaahs also said motion filed by Shell on July 16, 2018 had no leg to stand on it ought not to have been filed.

The Supreme Court consequently awarded N500,000 against Shell for filing an incompetent appeal in the court.

Citing authorities to back up his submission, the apex court held that since the notice of appeal filed by Shell sought to be amended was incompetent, no valid amendment could be effected because issues of fact or mix law and fact were raised in the original notice of appeal with leave of court.

He agreed with the submission of the lead counsel to Shell, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN) that an appellant who has a valid and subsisting appeal can seek the leave of court to do so, adding that in the instant case, there is no such valid notice of appeal that could be amended.

“Where the grounds of appeal are based on mixed law and facts and the leave of either the Court of Appeal or the Supreme Court is not sought and granted, the appeal is incompetent and neither the Court of Appeal nor the Supreme Court will have any jurisdiction to entertain the appeal.

“As the notice of appeal sought to be amended was incompetent, no valid amendment could be effected even though issues of jurisdiction were raised in the proposed notice of appeal.

“Learned senior counsel for the appellants stated that correct legal position that the appellant who has a valid and subsisting appeal can seek the leave of court to do so but in the instant case, there is no such valid notice of appeal that can be amended, Justice Akaahs held.

The suit was first commenced in 1991 before a Rivers State High Court sitting at Nchia Division, when the Ejama community represented by Isaac Osaro Ogbara, Victor Obari, John Oguru, Joseph Ogusu, G. O. Nnah, George Osaro, and Adanta Obelle, had sued Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Netherlands, Royal Dutch Shell Plc, United Kingdom, and SPDC over alleged oil spills in 1970 that occurred when Shell operated in the community. Judgment was entered for the sum of N6Billion in favour of the community by the Nchia High court. That judgment was conceded on appeal because the Supreme Court had in a sister case decided that States High Court have no jurisdiction in oil related matters. The Plaintiffs in 2001 refiled the suit at the federal High Court, Port Harcourt.

However, this 2001 case, presided over by Justice Ibrahim Buba claiming N17billion and interest thereon went through full trial. Justice Buba, after listening to the submissions of the parties in the suit, in his judgment in 2010, awarded N17 billion to the representatives of the Ogoni people.

The court equally granted the Ogoni chiefs 25 per cent interest charge on the principal sum of about N17 billion.

SPDC then appealed against the judgment and applied for a stay of execution of the judgment pending the appeal.

As a condition for granting the stay of execution, the court required Shell’s bankers, FirstBank, to provide a guarantee of the judgment sum plus interest.

This condition was complied with. But Shell’s appeal failed on merit because Shell failed to file a brief of argument in support of their appeal but instead claimed that they were granted leave to file an amended brief of argument, which the Court of Appeal found not to be correct.

Against that judgment, Shell proceeded to the Supreme Court where its lawyer, Olanipekun, SAN now leading Olawale Akanni (SAN) who was the company’s lawyer at the Court of Appeal when that appeal was dismissed, filed a fresh application asking for leave to amend the original notice of the appeal filed by Akoni in the Port Harcourt court of appeal registry in order for him to argue fresh points not raised at the court below and in order for him to argue 36 additional grounds of appeal.

Upon the new application at the apex court, the respondents’ lawyer, led by Lucius Nwosu, SAN, filed a preliminary objection. It must be noted that the appellants against whom judgment was entered at the court of appeal are Shell companies – Shell International DV of the Netherlands, Shell International of UK, and Shell Development Company of Nigeria Ltd.

Nwosu, assisted by Lawal Rabana, SAN and others, argued that the findings of the Court of Appeal dismissing their appeal were based on facts, adding that the law is that an appeal must arise out of the decision complained against.

He stated that if the decision complained against was based on findings of fact, the constitution requires that you cannot appeal them except you first seek leave of the Court of Appeal.

The respondents’ lawyer contended that since that notice of appeal at the Court of Appeal was filed without leave, it meant that, that notice was incompetent and cannot be amended because it would mean putting something on nothing and expecting it to stand.

However, in December 2017, the judgment creditors (Ogoni chiefs) commenced garnishee proceedings at the Federal High Court in Owerri presided over by Justice Lewis Allagoa.

They urged the CBN to pay them N122.53 billion out of FirstBank’s account in its custody.

THISDAY gathered that they calculated the principal sum of N17 billion and the accrued 25 per cent interest charge per annum to arrive at the sum of N122,533,403,392.

In January 2018, Justice Allagoa granted them a temporary order (garnishee nisi) ordering the CBN to pay them the sum from FirstBank’s account with it.

But the CBN asked the court not to make absolute the temporary garnishee order it granted six chiefs representing the Ogoni community, compelling it to pay the sum of N122.53 billion on behalf of FirstBank.

CBN’s lead counsel, Professor Fabian Ajogwu (SAN) while responding to the garnishee proceeding, stated that making the order absolute and compelling the CBN to pay out the huge sum would be against the interest of justice because the matter was still pending at the Supreme Court.

He also argued that compelling the CBN to pay the N122.53 billion from FirstBank’s funds domiciled with it could have far-reaching consequences for Nigeria’s oldest and biggest lender by assets and deposits, and a systemic impact on the rest of the financial system and wider economy.

With the dismissal of the Shell’s appeal last Friday, it is not clear if the application filed by the Ogoni chiefs seeking garnishee absolute against FirstBank and reserved for ruling by Justice Ibrahim Buba of the Federal High Court in Lagos would not be granted.

Reacting to the Supreme Court judgment yesterday, Nwosu said: “With this decision, therefore, all arguments of FirstBank that Shell was on a further appeal at the Supreme Court for which they were renging from honouring their obligation that was due by virtue of their guarantee has completely collapsed and as of today, the guarantee is standing at N134 billion, contingent liability of First Bank’s assets. And that there is a garnishee order nisi attaching First Bank’s money at the CBN which since had been served on the Central Bank.

“With this judgment now, the central bank is under an obligation to set aside that amount of money with interest still running from First Bank’s account to satisfy that judgment debt based on what the law says under garnishee orders.”