Thursday, 19 December 2013

Obituary of ASUU Strike



To God be the Glory! Everything that has a beginning must surely have an end!
With gratitude to God for a life well spent, we wish to announce to you the home-call of our dear brother, father, grandfather, and great grandfather, Pa #ASUU #STRIKE, who LIVED between Monday, July 1st 2013 and Tuesday, December 17th, 2013.
He was aged five months and two weeks.
You have contributed your quota to the Nigerian university education sector.
Though you lived for a ‘short-period’, yet it was so long a short time’.
If you have an opportunity of coming back to this world and Nigeria in particular, please do not stop by in our schools again, because we are tired of seeing your face.
You may wish to resurrect in Aso Rock, or at National Assembly, Abuja. Truly, we love you but the Federal Government loves you most.
When you get to your destination, please eat with them what they eat there, drink with them what they drink there.
Rest in Peace, Oh ASUU strike!
#Adieu #ASUU #Strike

Maradona Backs Ronaldo for Ballon d’or



Argentina legend, Diego Maradona have put his weight behind Cristiano Ronaldo to win the FIFA Ballon d’or than compatriot Lionel Messi.
The prestigious award is set to be handed out in Zurich on January 13, with Ronaldo, Messi and Bayern Munich’s Frank Ribery all in the running to be crowned the World’s best player.
A win for the Argentina international would see him ranked as the best player on planet for the fifth year running, but Maradona claim 2008 winner Ronaldo should take the honour.
Former Argentine international, Maradona, his country coach for the FIFA 2010 world cup in South Africa feels Messi injury problems this season have held him back and Real Mardrid forward Ronaldo has earn the accolade. “Cristiano Ronaldo should win, Messi has been injured a lot this year”, he told Algerian newspaper Le Buture.
Mean while, FIFA president, Sepp Blatter caused controversy prior to the final shortlist being announced when he appeared to state his preference for Messi over Ronaldo.
He described Messi as a “good boy who every mother and father would like to have at home”, adding that “he will always get a lot of votes because he’s this nice man”.

37 PDP Lawmakers Decamp To APC


37 members of the House of Representatives who were formerly under the umbrella of the Peoples’ Democratic Party have defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC)

The lawmakers said that they are joining the APC due to “division and factionalisation” within the ruling party.
Decampees also said that their defection to the APC is in obedience to section 68, subsection 1G of the constitution.
The Nigerian constitution stipulates that a lawmaker can only defect to another party without loosing his seat if there is adequate proof that the political party he is moving from is in crisis that must have divided the party.
Lawyers have said that only in a law court would it be determined if the the crisis in the Peoples Democratic Party was enough backing for such defection.
The defection from the PDP began after some aggrieved PDP governors decided to join the opposition, APC, in November.
List of members who decamped include:
Abdulahi Balarabe (Sokoto), Abudulmumin Jibrin (Kano), Ali Ahmad (PDP, Kwara), Abudulahi Wamako (Sokoto), Aliyu Pategi (Kwara), Ahmed Zerewa, Aishatu Ahmed (Adamawa), Aiyedun Olayinka (Kwara), Alhassan Garba (Kano), Aliyu Madaki (Kano), Aliyu Shehu (Sokoto) and Aminu Shagari (Sokoto).
Others include Aminu Suleiman (Kano), Aminu Tukur (Adamawa), Andrew Uchendu (Rivers), Asita Honourable (Rivers), Bashir Babale (Kano), Blessing Usiegbe (Rivers), Dakuku Peterside (Rivers), Dawari George (Rivers), Gibson Nathaniel (Adamawa), Gogo Bright Tamuno (Rivers), Isa Bashir (Sokoto), Kabiru Achida (Sokoto), and Maurice Pronen (Rivers).
Also in the group are Sabo Mohammed, Mpigi Barinada (Rivers), Mukhtari Muhammad, Musa Ado (Kano), Musa Sarkin-Adar (Sokoto), Mustapha Dawaki (Kano), Mustapha Mashood (Kwara), Ogbonna Nwuke (Rivers), Rafiu Ibrahim (Kwara), Sa’ad Nabunkari (Sokoto), Sani Aliyu (Kano), Shuaibu Gobir (Sokoto), Sokonte Davies (Rivers), Umar Bature (Sokoto), Yusuph Dunari Sule (Jigawa), and Zakari Mohammed (Kwara).

Letter To Obasanjo: Iyabo and I Met In Cambridge And She Expressed The Same Sentiments, Chief Segun Osoba Confirms

Former Governor Segun Osoba of Ogun State who is also a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has confirmed that he met Iyabo Obasanjo, the daughter of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, during his trip to the United States in September 2013. Recounting his chance meeting with Ms. Obasanjo to SaharaReporters, Chief Osoba said he was in the United States for the 73rd anniversary of the Nieman Foundation Fellowship when he ran into Iyabo, a former senator in Nigeria. The former governor told SaharaReporters he was staying at The Charles Hotel in Cambridge when he had a chance encounter with the daughter of the former president who told him her car was parked in the hotel’s basement parking lot.

Source: Sahara reporters
Chief Osoba said that, after the meeting, Ms. Obasanjo went downstairs to get her car and then drove him to the offices of the Nieman Foundation Center where he had an event. He said commute took close to an hour, leaving plenty of time for a long conversation between him and former President Obasanjo’s daughter.
Speaking further, Chief Osoba disclosed that Iyabo expressed exactly the same sentiments about her father contained in her letter that was just published by SaharaReporters. According to the former governor, Ms. Obasanjo stated that her father would divide the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) more than it was then after his so-called intervention in the party. He said Ms. Obasanjo also stated that she had no plans to return anymore to Nigerian politics, a sentiment she expressed in the acerbic letter to her father.
Chief Osoba added that, after his return from the US, he met former President Obasanjo a month later at the 80th birthday party of Chief Adedoja Adewolu and told him of his encounter with Iyabo in Massachusetts, including her view of his intervention in the PDP. Former Governor Osoba said he strongly believed that his discussion with Mr. Obasanjo might have prompted the former President to tell his daughter to run on the platform of the APC, another revelation made in her letter.
Former Senator Iyabo Obasanjo wrote an 11-page letter to her father which she sent to Lagos-based Vanguard newspaper. In the letter, she described her father as a liar, manipulator and a hypocrite. She also characterized her father as a wife-beater and abominable father.

Guilty verdict in Lee Rigby Murder Trial

Michael Adebolajo and Michael Adebowale are on trial at the Old Bailey



Michael Adebolajo and Michael Adebowale have being convicted for hacking British Soldier Mr Lee Rigby to Death.
The two men involve in the killing of a British soldier, Mr Rigby have been convicted for their complicity in the hacking to death of Mr Lee Rigby which happened in May 22, 2013 in Southeast London. The extremists’ sentence is to be delivered January next year.
The two men accused of the murder of Lee Rigby wanted armed officers to shoot them dead so they could "achieve martyrdom", the Old Bailey has heard.
They took an unloaded gun with them to ensure armed police arrived at the scene in Woolwich, Michael Adebowale's defending counsel Abbas Lakha QC said.
Mr Adebowale, 22, who chose not to give evidence, and Michael Adebolajo, 29, deny murdering the soldier on 22 May.
They also deny attempting to murder a police officer.
Judge Mr Justice Sweeney told the jurors he expected them to retire to consider their verdicts on Thursday morning.

'No evidence'
In his closing speech, Mr Lakha said: "We submit that you will conclude that there is no evidence that there was ever any plan to kill a police officer."
He said the only reason the men had brought a gun - a 90-year-old weapon that had not been oiled, was not in working condition and was not loaded - was to ensure that armed police arrived.
And he said it was his client's intention for the officers who attended the scene to "fear for their lives".
Both men wanted the armed officers to kill them, he said.
"That is what both defendants intended - that they would be shot and therefore would achieve martyrdom," said Mr Lakha.
He later added: "His [Mr Adebowale's] actions from beginning to end speak for themselves - it was martyrdom he was after."
 
'Acted together'
The two men are accused of running Fusilier Rigby over in a car and hacking him to death close to Woolwich Barracks.
Mr Lakha said both men killed him "as soldiers of Islam - this was a military operation they planned together and their target in that operation was a British soldier, and only a British soldier, no-one else".
Referring to both men with their adopted Islamic names, Adebolajo as Mujahid Abu Hamza and Adebowale as Ismail Ibn Abdullah, Mr Lakha went on: "On behalf of the second defendant [Adebowale], I did not challenge Mr Abu Hamza's evidence.
"What that means is Ismail agrees with what Mr Abu Hamza said about the reasons for the killing of Lee Rigby and they were acting together in that way and for those reasons. That is his case."

Mr Lakha added: "The fact he has not given evidence doesn't mean he says nothing in this trial.
"He uttered the two most important words any man in any court in this land can utter - he said the words 'not guilty'."
Summing up the case, Mr Justice Sweeney warned the jury not to let media reporting, speculation or "emotion" affect their verdicts.
"What's required of you is a cool, calm, careful and dispassionate consideration of the evidence," he said.


Lee Rigby

Queen's peace
He said jurors must consider three key questions in relation to the murder charge.
The first was whether Fusilier Rigby was under the "Queen's peace" when he was attacked - effectively whether he was killed in the course of war.
The other questions were whether he was unlawfully killed and whether the defendants were in a joint enterprise to kill or seriously injure him.
He told the jury there was no psychiatric evidence that either defendant was incapable of forming an intent.
"Just like a drunken intent, an intent driven by religious belief is still an intent," he added.

Wednesday, 18 December 2013

Why VP Sambo, Tukur Stopped Me From Speaking At Late Yakowa’s Memorial Lecture – El-Rufa’i

Former Minister of Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Malam Nasir El-Rufai has adduced reasons why Vice President Namadi Sambo and National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur allegedly prevented him from eulogising late Governor Patrick Ibrahim Yakowa of Kaduna State over the weekend.
El-Rufai told reporters that it was late Yakowa’s family that invited him to the occasion of a first year remembrance lecture in honour of the late governor, but wondered why he was prevented from speaking.
The former minister said “My intention was to honour Yakowa and raise fundamental issues affecting the development of Kaduna State presently.
“I was invited by Yakowa’s family to attend the memorial lecture, and I was billed to speak there. But when Vice President Sambo and the PDP national chairman arrived, I knew there would be problem. I wanted to leave but Suleiman Hunkuyi insisted that we stay and see the end. It was when Yakowa’s son started giving vote of thanks that we knew it was over,” he said.
According to the All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain, “My task was to eulogise Yakowa and what he stood for, then raise fundamental questions regarding present situation of our state. Are they really preserving Yakowa’s legacies? What about local government funds? The 23 local government areas of the state are in bondage; their finances are being withheld and public funds are being mismanaged. Was that what Yakowa did? Absolutely no. This is why they are afraid and they stopped me from speaking but they cannot hide the reality of our predicament”.

Mandela, Obasanjo, And Jonathan By Okey Ndibe

 COMMENTARY
 
From the outset, I must offer an apology for the grave moral offense of seeming to bracket the late sage, Nelson Mandela, with Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan. In a way, the decision was not mine, but Mr. Obasanjo’s.
Last week, the former Nigerian president apparently leaked a letter he had written to President Jonathan. The timing of the leak was in bad form: the same week that South Africans and the world were mourning – celebrating – Madiba Mandela, a man who came to define extraordinary grace and a deeply human vision for our time. Like the rest of the world, Nigerians were engaged in the lofty business of honoring a truly elegant man when Mr. Obasanjo’s letter made its rude interjection. The letter seemed calculated to force Nigerians to abandon a sublime purpose – the extolling of a man who epitomized greatness – in order to obsess over a certified hypocrite’s delusions of moral authority.
Stripped of its verbosity, Mr. Obasanjo’s letter boiled down to this: that Mr. Jonathan was incompetent, dishonest, in thrall to clannish (Ijaw) interests, and deadly. Some of the former president’s specific accusations are that Nigeria’s incumbent president was running a political shop rife with corruption; that, beyond the deployment of troops, Mr. Jonathan had failed to come up with a broad plan for containing the festering scourge of Boko Haram terrorism; that Mr. Jonathan was trying to sidestep an ostensible pact not to seek a second term as president; that, in pursuit of said second term, Mr. Jonathan had kindled the embers of Ijaw militancy and groomed killer squads to take out perceived and real enemies; that Mr. Jonathan, though propelled into office by the Peoples Democratic Party, had brought nothing but misfortune to the ruling party, often working against the PDP’s interests by secretly boosting candidates of rival parties in several elections, including the recent governorship election in Anambra; that, instead of bringing together different factions within the PDP, Mr. Jonathan had compounded the fissures within the party; and that Mr. Jonathan seemed bent on sacrificing democratic norms to his selfish political interests.
Mr. Obasanjo’s letter invoked Thomas Paine, Chinua Achebe and others. It played up the words honor and trust, which he accused Mr. Jonathan of lacking, implying that the incumbent was versed in duplicity and deception.
Being no reader of minds, I don’t feel up to the task of revealing the former president’s motive. Was he seized by envy on witnessing the global gushing of (richly deserved) adulation for Mandela? The former president titled his letter, “Before It Is Too Late”. Was the title self-referential, in other words, did it express Mr. Obasanjo’s rising anxiety that time was running out for him to project himself as something of a midget-Mandela, a miniaturized, Nigerian-made version of the real Madiba? With newspapers and people around the world quoting some of Mandela’s memorable speeches, did Obasanjo, in an access of grandeur, imagine that his letter could have the same fascinating effect on (at least) Nigerians? Was it something even baser, a realization, say, that he and his acolytes had lost out in the internecine battle for the benighted soul of the PDP?
Only Mr. Obasanjo can tell the inmost reason that nudged him to write the leaked letter. But I’m willing to guess, based on Mr. Obasanjo’s all-too recent record, that he was not actuated by a desire to promote good governance or deepen democratic values.
Yet, we must give the former president his due. Some of the particulars in his charge sheet are right on target. President Jonathan has been unable to contain the threat of Boko Haram terrorism. He has not developed a good, much less a bold, program for tackling Nigeria’s myriad crises, including a scary healthcare sector, a collapsed educational system, and wretched infrastructure. He’s just another confounded resident of Aso Rock, a man occupying the space of president and commander-in-chief, without being able to rise nobly to the challenge of the office.
That conceded, it ought to be pointed out that there is not – there should not be – a feud between Mr. Jonathan and former President Obasanjo. As I argued in a column a few months ago, the former is the latter’s worthy successor. Reading the former president’s lengthy public letter, one often had the sensation of reading an autobiographical account of Mr. Obasanjo’s years at Aso Rock Villa.
Obasanjo’s Presidency was so thoroughly committed to the promotion of criminality that I nicknamed the man mischief-maker-in-chief. Lest we forget, Mr. Obasanjo was a callous president. In 2002, more than 1000 people perished when explosions rocked the Ikeja military cantonment. When the grief-stricken victims demanded a decisive response from Mr. Obasanjo, the then president insensitively told them off. “I’m not supposed to be here,” he told the hapless, shell-shocked survivors.
Mr. Obasanjo was a model of cynicism as president. In the early days of his Presidency, he started what he called a so-called “poverty alleviation” program, putting Tony Anenih in charge of disbursing billions of naira. When critics pointed out that the fund had not alleviated poverty in any way, Mr. Obasanjo then increased the funds significantly and launched a “poverty eradication” scheme. Nobody knows where all the cash went.
Lest we forget, Mr. Obasanjo was the president who authorized the wholesale massacres of the people of Odi in Bayelsa State and Zaki Biam in Benue State.
Let’s not forget too soon that Mr. Obasanjo empowered Lamidi Adedibu to operate like a parallel (and more powerful) “Governor” of Oyo State. When Governor Rasheed Ladoja refused to surrender some cash to Mr. Adedibu, the latter – whom Obasanjo flattered as “commander” – mobilized police officers and invaded Government House. Governor Ladoja was to scamper away to safety.
Let’s not forget, too, that Mr. Obasanjo also looked the other way as some two hundred police officers stormed Anambra State and abducted then Governor Chris Ngige. Incidentally, Mr. Obasanjo’s ruling had used rigging to impose Ngige as governor. Why, then, the desperation to sack the governor? Mr. Ngige incurred the president’s wrath by refusing to do the bidding of a coterie close to Mr. Obasanjo. Many Nigerian groups voiced outrage at the use of police officers to commit a serious crime. They insisted that the abductors and their sponsors be prosecuted. But Mr. Obasanjo characterized the felonious act as a mere quarrel within the family, case closed! A few months later, police officers escorted lorry loads of hired hoodlums as they swept through Anambra State burning any state government-owned property in sight. The plan was to instigate a bloodbath in order to offer Mr. Obasanjo the perfect pretext to declare a state of emergency and remove the obstinate governor.    
Mr. Obasanjo promised Nigerians, on his honor, to bring to an end the days of incessant electric power outages. He set a promise-delivery date of December 31, 2001, and set up a technical task force to effectuate his pledge. He poured between $10 and $16 billion into what was, in effect, a scam. Once the deadline arrived, Nigerians realized that they had been conned. If anything, power failures have worsened.
Have Nigerians forgotten how Mr. Obasanjo tried to change the Nigerian constitution in order to grant himself perpetual tenancy as president? When that illicit plan was thwarted, the former president virtually imposed the late Umaru Yar’Adua and Goodluck Jonathan as the ruling party’s candidates. Mr. Yar’Adua was deathly sick, but Mr. Obasanjo insisted he was a picture of vibrant health. Mr. Jonathan had had a nondescript run as governor of Bayelsa State. Yet, the former president advertised the tag team of Yar’Adua-Jonathan as the only ones in Nigeria’s political universe worthy of succeeding him, continuing his legacy as a self-styled “father of modern Nigeria.” Declaring the 2011 elections a “do-or-die” affair, he did everything to compel Nigerians, like it or not, to accept his anointed successors.
One member of the tag team spent more time tending to his health woes than to the affairs of state, and soon died. The other, Jonathan, is clearly overwhelmed by the demands of statecraft. And here we have Obasanjo, a shameless manipulator if ever there was one, the manufacturer of the defective goods, strutting about the stage denouncing the mess he chiefly authored.
Somebody ought to shoo Mr. Obasanjo off the stage. He must leave us in peace to focus on a true leader – Madiba Nelson Mandela – a while longer!
Please follow me on twitter @ okeyndibe
(okeyndibe@gmail.com)
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