Monday, September 7, 2020

 



 

The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ondo State has said  the All Progressives Congress (APC) will know which party is dead in the state after the October 10 governorship election.

It said the party (APC) was dreaming to declare that the PDP was dead in Ondo State.

Spokesman for the PDP,  Kennedy Peretei, in a statement, said even nature rejected the launch of the APC campaign on Saturday through the torrential rains.

Peretei said PDP defeated the Muhammadu Buhari-led APC at the 2019 presidential election and won two of the three senatorial seats.

He said: “How can such a party by any stretch of imagination be said to be dead?

“It is shameful that the only project APC came to inaugurate in three and a half years is the Revenue House, a building that stands as a signpost of multiple taxation of the Ondo State people, 10 per cent of which goes to the pocket of Akeredolu’s son.

“PDP is offering affordable education and health care delivery as against Aketi‘s engineered astronomical tuition fees that have thrown many of the students in tertiary institutions out of school.”

A photo of a security man who allegedly murdered a 35-year-old lady in her apartment in Asaba has been released on the public domain.


 

The Niger State indigene who gave his names as Isaac Sunday, allegedly killed one Miss Joy Obiageli Onakanse, a bride-to-be and buried her in a shallow grave

Naija News understands that Onakanse was about two weeks ago reported missing in a report after her relatives could not reach her.

A thorough investigation, however, followed after a tip-off revealed Sunday was seen driving one of Joy’s cars with his wife and children inside the same compound. The investigation finally led to the discovery of a shallow grave in Asaba where the body of the deceased was buried by the suspected guard.

Naija News learnt that the security guard was arrested alongside a Nollywood movie director, Nonso Ekene, from Anambra state for interrogations. It was reported that Ekene resides in the same compound as the deceased.

See below a photo of the lady reportedly killed.

Sunday, October 16, 2016

RAPE ATTACK

Man charged for ‘raping his 98-year-old grandmother and a two-year-old girl’ after having been released from jail for having sex with a cow
A man has been accused of raping his 98-year-old grandmother, just months after being released from jail for raping a cow

The man had been jailed for having sex with a cow just two years before the heinous attack

A MAN has been arrested for raping his 98-year-old grandmother mother as well as defiling a two-year-old in the same village, just months after being released from jail for having sex with a cow.
The man, who had been released from jail in 2015 for the bestiality act, was caught in the latest act by his teenage cousin in Kenya, Nairobi News reported
The 19-year-old said he heard the grandmother’s screams, managing to bust into the locked home in Mathioya to see the assailant naked.
The alleged attacker then fled the scene in the Gacharage-ini village.
The 19-year-old who had heard the grandmother’s screams said: “I alerted the other family members and neighbours and we launched a manhunt. As we searched for him, we heard that he had defiled the girl after he escaped.


The man targeted two victims in a matter of minutes in the village of Murang
The man targeted two victims in a matter of minutes in the village of Murang

The 36-year-old father of one had been released from jail in 2015 after being caged for having sex with a cow.
The latest attack reportedly happened on Wednesday, October 12 about 7pm.
The man is now set to face court over the charges.

TOT TRAGEDY



Four-month old baby savaged to death by Staffordshire bull terrier-type dog and his brother is left with ‘life-changing injuries’

Archie Rogers

Little Archie Darby died from his injuries after being attacked by a Staffie-type dog

PC Clare Ferdinand, 31, is believed to own the dog that attacked two kids and a woman in Colchester, Essex

A BABY died and his toddler brother was badly hurt when they were savaged by a dog at their aunt and uncle’s home — a week after moving in for “a better life”.
Archie Joe and Daniel-Jay Darby were staying with the couple when the Staffordshire bull terrier-type beast pounced.
Archie Darby
Archie’s parents paid tribute to their son, saying “heaven has gained a beautiful little angel”
Attack ... A Staffordshire bull terrier on owners Facebook page
Attack … A Staffordshire bull terrier on owner’s Facebook page
They had recently moved in to their aunt and uncle’s home with their mum, Jade.
It has been suggested the pet may have attacked the young children in an effort to establish territory after they moved into the home.
Four-month-old Archie Joe was mauled and one-year-old Daniel-Jay suffered “life-changing” injuries and was in hospital.
Their mum Jade Rogers, 24, was also treated for wounds sustained as she tried to save her sons.
Unconfirmed reports suggested she was in the bath when the attack took place in Colchester, Essex.
In a statement on Friday, the boys’ parents said of their “loveable” sons: “It doesn’t seem real that our little Archie Bum has gone to heaven and our little Daniel is in intensive care because of a tragic, tragic incident.
Family ... John and Clare
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Family … Uncle John and policewoman Auntie Clare
Archie Darby
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The boys’ mum Jade Rogers was treated for injuries after trying to save her sons from the dog
The attack happened at an address in Colchester, Essex, today
EASTNEWS PRESS AGENCY
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The attack happened at an address in Colchester, Essex
The two young children are seriously injured in hospital
EASTNEWS PRESS AGENCY
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The baby tragically died in hospital after being seriously injured by the dog
Dog attack death
PA:PRESS ASSOCIATION
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Flowers and teddies have been left at the scene in Colchester after the baby boy was mauled to death
“We have lost our gorgeous little four-month-old baby and our beautiful 22-month-old boy is being treated for his injuries.
“Heaven has gained a beautiful little angel and he will be greatly missed by us all. Our other little soldier is still fighting strong.”
Police confirmed the dog had been removed from the property and was destroyed on Friday with the owners’ permission.


Friday, October 14, 2016

Right War Against Judicial Corruption, Wrong Tactics

Right War Against Judicial Corruption, Wrong Tactics

By Okey Ndibe… Last week, agents of the Department of State Security (DSS) carried out a series of commando-style raids at the residences of numerous justices, including two members of the Supreme Court. If the DSS is to be believed—and I see no reason not to—the raids netted an astonishing haul of CASH the targeted judges had stowed away in their homes. The implied subtext is that the judges are rogue, that they sell their verdicts to the highest bidder, that they have besmirched their exalted seats.

In a country where there’s consensus that corruption has metastasized, you’d expect the unmasking of judicial traders masquerading as judges to inspire near-universal approval. Instead, the DSS operation became controversial. Many lauded the action, hailed it as a long overdue devastating uppercut on the chin of desecrators of the country’s bench. But many also felt disturbed by the action, denouncing it as a chilling attempt to cow judges and ravage the independence of the judiciary.

I am not surprised about the dichotomy in public response. That split speaks to a broader problem with President Muhammadu Buhari’s anti-corruption agenda. In my VIEW, that agenda is misconceived, on at least two grounds.

The first is procedural. Even in doing the right thing, it is essential that there be compliance with pertinent rules. There’s good reason why warrants are required in many cases before searches may be conducted or arrests made. Perhaps in keeping with a military mindset, Mr. Buhari and his team appear to mistake drama for effectiveness and impact.

Where Nigeria needs systemic change, the president and his advisers have OFFERED symbolic gestures that, in the long run, are effete. The second is the absence of an overarching vision in President Buhari’s approach to corruption—and to other urgent crises besetting Nigeria. He has been content to deploy tried and failed methods to fight deep-rooted, structural problems.

When the Buhari administration began its prosecution of Senate President Bukola Saraki, I wrote a column where I stated my response: a yawn. It seemed clear to me then that the government, or at least elements within it, saw the senator’s ostensible trial as an opportunity to leave an impression. I wasn’t convinced that the trial would go anywhere. If anything, I was certain that the trial was altogether about something else: a settling of intra-party squabbles. Today, the government has withdrawn its forgery charges against Mr. Saraki and deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu. My MONEY is on a similar outcome in Senator Saraki’s prosecution for alleged falsification of his asset declaration. For that matter, what exactly has stalled the government’s prosecution of former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki?

There are several reasons President Buhari cannot wage a sustained, meaningful war against corruption. One is that he has not taken time to acquire the tools for fighting such a war. He has not proposed one piece of legislation to strengthen the monitoring of financial transactions in Nigeria, to empower the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and other law enforcement agencies to act decisively against corruption, and to reform the judiciary in ORDER to quicken the pace of court cases.

Truth is, the EFCC is so teetered to the Presidency that its chairman, Ibrahim Magu, dare not arrest a serving minister without seeking the president’s permission. Nor can there be an effective campaign against corruption unless the country addresses the way judges are appointed (ensuring the elimination of candidates who VIEW the bench as a means to sudden, spectacular wealth) and a radical reform of the judicial process itself. Sadly, the current administration has shown no inclination to undertake the task of giving teeth both to investigative and prosecutorial entities.

It’s absurd that numerous cases filed by the EFCC during the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo are still languishing in courts. Meanwhile, many of the defendants in those corruption cases are deeply entrenched in the country’s business. Some are ministers or members of government boards. Worse still, many are “honorable” members of the National Assembly: a case of (potential) outlaws making laws for their country. If President Buhari has chosen to play by rules set by Mr. Obasanjo, then he cannot expect to get different results.

For all his vaunted detestation of corruption, it may be the case that President Buhari, deep down, lacks the stamina to take on the colossus of corruption. In a posture that most Nigerians must find bizarre, Mr. Buhari allowed himself to declare that the late dictator, General Sani Abacha, was not corrupt. A man capable of such ridiculous statement, such unabashed denial of reality, can hardly be expected to have a clear view of the extent of corruption under his watch. Might that account for the president’s conspicuous silence on the long-running saga of around the issue of budget padding in the House of Representatives? And what is to be made of the president’s indifference to press reports about suspicious financial transactions by appointees in his administration?

From the administration’s perspective, last week’s raid on some judges’ homes may have served its purpose: assuring Nigerians and the world that the promised war against corruption was afoot, that the change agenda, as far as graft was concerned, was still on course. But—the sheer drama of the move aside—there was nothing in the DSS’s operation that translates into proof of a principled, no holds-barred battle against corruption.

Of course, it would be silly to dismiss the gravity of the presumed case against the detained judges. While they are presumed innocent until their guilt is proved in court, they have an uphill task explaining the source of all that haul of CASH in their homes. But there’s an even more important point. It is this: that corruption in the Nigerian judiciary, as in other sectors of Nigerian life, is much wider than was reflected in the arrest of a token handful of judges.

If the president were out to stamp out corruption in the judiciary, the DSS should cast their investigative net wider than they have done. And they should go about the task in a sober, methodical manner, scrutinizing judges’ financial and other assets in comparison to salaries and other earning for judicial officials. Such an investigation should not have been done in a flash-and-dash style, in a mode that could be perceived as a selective targeting of some corrupt judges or an attempt to intimidate the judiciary.

Another point is pertinent. A government with a serious anti-corruption agenda would define a broad, encompassing plan. Such a plan should involve the institution of measures designed to drastically reduce opportunities for corruption. I’d propose, for example, the redrafting of Nigeria’s immunity clause to empower prosecutors to arrest and indict governors and the president if they are seen to abuse their offices by committing crimes. The scandal called security vote should be expunged from our political space. And there should be a law barring the movement of huge sums of cash.

Chuma Nwokolo, a lawyer, writer and social conscience, has proposed a formula called “Bribe Code” (see www.bribecode.org for details) for detecting and fighting corrupt practices. He has tried to get the National Assembly to look at the sound prescriptions in his plan, but the legislators—perhaps out of corrupt self-interest—have been indifferent. President Buhari ought to look to Mr. Nwokolo’s document for an example of the kind of systemic program of action that is likely to make a real and lasting difference in Nigeria’s interminably postponed crusade against graft and other public financial crimes.

If Mr. Buhari does not envision a game plan against corruption, he’s likely to go down in history as his predecessors did—as leaders who merely paid lip service to a war in which they had no heart. In a few days, the titillation over the arrest of a few judges is bound to die down. Then the cases will languish in courts manned by other corrupt judges, bent on frustrating any serious prosecution by approving incessant adjournments.

Rampaging custom officers kill motorcyclist, batter and arrest brother of deceased

Dolapo Badmos

The police have now begun investigations into the killing of a 25-year-old commercial motorcyclist (okada rider), Saheed Omotosho and the battering and subsequent arrest of his elder brother, Rasheed Omotosho, for protesting the unjust killing of his sibling.
Reports say trouble started at the Mosalasi bus stop, Alagbado, Lagos State when the Custom officials chased a vehicle loaded with suspected smuggled bags of rice on the Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway and eventually caught up with the smugglers.
But a group of hoodlums reportedly stopped the Custom officers from carrying out their duty and started offloading the bags of rice from the vehicle of the officers forcing them to call for reinforcement which eventually turned out to be bloody.

OPEN LETTER TO NIGERIAN ELECTRICITY REGULATORY COMMISSION

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Mass Disconnections taking place illegaly

MASS DISCONNECTION OF COMMUNITIES IN AGBADO/OKE-ODO LCDA ALIMOSHO LGA
We are using this medium to bring to your notice the mass disconnection of the following communities in Agbado/Oke-Odo LCDA without ANY sort of disconnection notice.
These are Meiran, Ojokoro, Abule-Egba, Ekoro, Olota, Omoroga, Akintan, Ehilo, Aberu-Agba, Ileke, Omologede, Amose, Adebari, Anisere, Oguntolu, Siwoku, Alese etc,etc which comprises over 45 Sub-Stations (Transformers) and this was done under the pretext  of insecurity of life of their Staff.
We under the CDC Agbado/Oke-Odo has investigated the above allegation and fund out that it was not true. While the disconnection resulted in various degree of losses for business activities and treat to security of lives and properties. It however lasted for three weeks ie (between May 8th and June 2016) under the watchful eyes of one Engr. Johnson which was reconnected by Engr. Ayodele Dosumu on June 6th 2016.
Our investigation revealed that various documents were attached to the above letter to drive home their complaints.

With the above complaints and documents which we got from our source it was evident that the so called Engr. Dosumu and his company has been going about with so many illegalities under FALSE pretext, bearing in mind the laws that guided their acts.

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Protest for Blackout in some communities.

Public Notice On Mass Disconnection From Electricity Supply Of Communities By Distribution Companies


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The attention of the Commission has been drawn to incidents of mass disconnection of electricity supply to Communities, Villages, Local Government Areas and Estates by Distribution Companies premised on purported nonpayment of electricity bills.
Please note that the Commission has developed procedures for disconnection of defaulting customers as contained in the Regulation on Connection and Disconnection for Electricity Services. The Commission has also banned mass disconnection of electricity customers. Therefore, any Community, Village, Local Government Area or Estate wrongfully disconnected from electricity supply should report to the Commission for its further action.
Consequently, electricity disconnections by Distribution Companies (DisCos) are strictly to be effected in accordance with the provision of Section 5 -11 of the Commission’s Connection and Disconnection Procedures for Electricity Services Regulation. Electricity Customers who pay their bills should not be disconnected via a mass disconnection of his/her community, blocks of flats estate etc.
Any mass disconnection carried out by the Distribution Companies in contravention of the provisions of the above Regulation is illegal and should be reported to the Commission via the following addresses:




Thursday, October 13, 2016

Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission





Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) is an independent regulatory body with authority for the regulation of the electric power industry in Nigeria. NERC was formed
in 2005 under the Obasanjo administration’s economic reform agenda through the Electric
Power Sector Reform Act, 2005 for formation and review of electricity tariffs, transparent
policies regarding subsidies, promotion of policies that are efficient and environmentally
friendly, and also including forming and enforcing of standards in the creation and use of
electricity in Nigeria. NERC was instituted primarily to regulate the tariff of Power
Generating companies owned or controlled by the government, and any other generating
company which has a license for power generation and transmission of energy, and distribution
of electricity.












Mass disconnection of consumers: NERC, DISCOS on war path 

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Uneasy calm reigns in the country’s ailing electricity sector over orders and counter-orders on mass disconnection of ‘chronic’ debtors, particularly in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).
‎Already, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) as well as the Association Nigeria Electricity Distributors (ANED) are up in arms against one another over whether to continue with mass disconnection of debtor-consumers or embark on selective disconnection.
The nation’s 11 Distribution Companies (DISCOS) had through their umbrella body, ANED, got the permission of NERC to embark on debt recovery from consumers who refused to pay accumulated electricity bills.
But due to widespread public outcry, when DISCOS embarked on mass disconnection, the commission ‎stopped the exercise that affected both defaulters and non-defaulters.
The notice issued to all distribution companies by NERC drew their attention to a procedure it has developed for disconnection of defaulting customers as contained in the regulation on connection and disconnection for electricity services.
It stated also that the commission has banned mass disconnection of electricity customers and advised any community, village, local government area or estate wrongly disconnected from electricity supply to report to the NERC for necessary action.
But reacting, AEDC’s spokesman, Shekarau Ahmed, said the company never embarked on indiscriminate mass disconnection ‎of customers.
He said the company was aware that some consumers, even within an estate that is not metered, have their personal meters, and could not have been disconnected from the feeder pole just because many others were owing.
“In case of some chronic debtors like the military, AEDC cannot just enter military barracks and commence mass disconnection, because some of the officers though not metered by us, their salaries are being deducted from the source for electricity bills and it will be unjust to embark on any mass disconnection that would affect them.
“For instance‎, in the case of the mammy markets around the barracks, when we were collecting our bills directly from them, we used to realise at least N12 million to N13 million monthly. But in some cases, the authorities insist on collecting from them with the pretext that they would remit to us, but we see nothing”, he said.
‎Similarly, ANED has told the NERC that the exercise cannot be withdrawn because the only way they can serve the public better is to recover all debts owed by consumers which amount to billions of naira.
The ANED Executive Director, Surrey Oduntan, told Abuja Metro that NERC has no reason dictating to distribution companies on how they could recover the huge debt owed them by some customers. According to him, they would not disconnect pre-paid customers who have their meters and were not owing, but would not spare chronic debtors.
Admitting that most customers were yet to be metered, Oduntan noted that many DISCOS have fulfilled their meter obligation to their customers to a greater percentage.
He assured that concerted efforts were being made to meter all electricity consumers and ease the challenges of estimated billing arrangement.
However, NERC said its directives to electricity distribution companies not to embark on mass disconnection was misunderstood.
It stated that subsequent attempt by some consumers to ride on that directive to evade settlement of their debts was not proper, adding that the Commission has clarified that persistently defaulting customers could be disconnected.
Acting Chairman of the commission, Dr. Anthony Akah, said the clarification became necessary due to media reports on the NERC’s earlier directives warning electricity distribution companies against mass disconnection of cities, towns and villages including consumers, who had paid their electricity bills or have pre-paid meters.
Akah, while restating the Commission’s position against mass disconnection of consumers, said: “We are unambiguous in our directives that the distribution companies should observe laid down procedures in disconnecting electricity customers. This directive, which is line with our subsisting regulation, does not negate the ongoing disconnection of chronic electricity debtors by electricity distribution companies.
“All electricity customers, including ministries, departments and agencies of government are advised to clear their electricity debts to avoid disconnections.
“What we frown at is a situation whereby a block of flats is disconnected without regard to the right of a customer who is up to date in his/her bill or a whole community is mass disconnected, not minding the rights of non-defaulting customers within that community. This is absolutely unacceptable to the Commission.”
Checks revealed that Sections 6a and b of the Regulations on Connection and Disconnection Procedures for Electricity Services 2007 permit electricity distribution companies to disconnect without notice, where a customer is illegally connected to its network or if such connection is hazardous to the system. But, Section 5 of the same regulation further stipulates that electricity distribution companies should formally notify a customer of intention to disconnect.
He urged consumers to settle their bill, to enable the industry garner funds needed for efficient service delivery.
He also advised service providers to fast- track implementation of metering plan as contained in their service performance agreements to remove opacity in the billing system, stressing that it will reduce rising complaints of alleged overbilling.
Reacting to threats by some consumers to manhandle staff of electricity distribution companies involved in mass disconnection, the NERC has advised then to explore its complaint and redress mechanism rather than resort to jungle justice in settling disputes with officials of DISCOS.
The NERD, however, directed DISCOS to ensure completion of metering of maximum demand customers on Credit Advance Payment for Metering Initiative ‎(CAPMI) scheme or face sanction.
In another directive, it stated: “Any customer who approaches your DISCOS for metering under CAPMI scheme must have their meters within CAPMI stipulated timeline of 45 days. The scheme remains as an option for customers but a compulsory requirement for DISCOS to implement when customer offers to contribute to metering through CAPMI.”
The directive further encouraged the DISCOS to publicise CAPMI and encourage consumers to subscribe to it, so as to close the wide metering gap in the industr‎y. The Commission said it would sanction any defaulting DISCOS beginning from third quarter of the year.
The directive was sequel to the rising complaints from all categories of customers over estimated bills they considered irreconcilable with the available power supply in the networks.
The commission frowned at the failure of DISCOS to meter their maximum demand customers under CAPM, which is one of the NERD’s initiatives permitting willing electricity customers to pay for meter by advancing money to a DISCOS who installs the meter within 45 days. A customer who subscribes to CAPMI is refunded his money with interest through discounted electricity bills over a period of time.
The commission said most of the DISCOS have refused to accept maximum demand customers under CAPMI scheme. Maximum demand customers are fewer than the other categories of consumers.