Friday 1 February 2019

EFCC : 19 internet fraudsters arrested in Ibadan


Operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on Friday nabbed 19 suspected internet fraudsters in Ologuneru and Akobo areas of Ibadan, Oyo State.
Tony Orilade, the commission’s acting Head, Media and Publicity made this known in Ibadan.
According to him, 15 of the suspects were arrested at Ologuneru area while the remaining four were nabbed at Akobo area.
”All the suspects who are between the ages of 21 and 35 were arrested at their hideout in the early hours of Friday.
”The commission got wind of their activities following series of intelligence report.
“Which alleged that they engage in various fraudulent activities ranging from obtaining money by false pretences through sending of scam emails to unsuspecting victims.
”Some are engaged in romance scam on several dating sites.
”Among the things recovered from the suspects included four exotic cars, five laptops, 20 telephones, including 10 iPhones and one small bag containing items suspected to be fetish objects.
”Others are several documents, including international passports and ATM cards.
”SIM cards, one exotic car, laptops, telephones, female under-wears and four bags of fetish objects were recovered from four of the suspects arrested for cyber crimes at Akobo area.
”The suspects are: Babatunde Afeez, Akorede Olalekan, Adeleye Damilola and Moshod Richard.
“Others are Bamidele Samson, Bamidele Philip, Tunji Sowale, Bololaji Olalekan and Abdulrauf Abiodun, Olaleye Pelumi and Anuokuwapo Olanrewaju.
”The remaining ones are: Paul Damilola, Olateye Tobi, Arewa Ibrahim, Oyesanmi Oluwaseun, Olaleye Israel, Adediran Kemisola, Omobolade Alarape and Olowolusi Oluwatomisin,” he said
He said that all the suspects would soon be arraigned in court soon.
- PM NEWS

35,000 Nigerians seeking refuge in Cameroon

The UN refugee agency said the estimated 35,000 Nigerians had fled across the north-eastern border into Cameroon in the last two weeks of January.
There are also several thousands of Cameroonian refugees hosted across Nigeria, reported News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).
There are concerns about the possible forceful ejection of the Nigerian refugees in Cameroon as the country have threatened severally. But the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) are assuring that the Nigerians are safe.
“For now, the 35,000 Nigerian refugees are safe in Cameroon, although many are once again putting themselves at risk by returning to Rann on foot, to collect a few personal possessions which were not looted or burnt,” UNHCR said.
The UN agency said the people had fled Rann in the last two weeks after Boko Haram extremist fighters repeatedly attacked the town.
“The outlawed terrorist group has been active in this impoverished corner of north-east Nigeria for over a decade. Thousands of people, not just in Nigeria but over the border in Cameroon and Chad, have been killed, many summarily executed.
“The livelihoods of tens of thousands of others have been destroyed in the insurgency, as regional governments struggle to put an end to the ongoing violence.
“The refugees left Rann following the recent withdrawal of the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) which came to secure the city after an attack on January 14.
“The MNJTF was set up by the affected countries – Cameroon, Chad, Nigeria, Niger and Benin – to counter Boko Haram, and other terrorist groups which are gaining ground across the Lake Chad region,” UNHCR said.
Speaking on a visit to Goura in Cameroon on Friday, the UN Resident Coordinator in Cameroon, Allegra Baiocchi said: “I have seen many fearful people here, whose lives have been destroyed by Boko Haram.
“The people who came here really had no choice. This is where they need to be now if they want to stay alive.”
The United Nations and its partners have responded to the sudden influx into Goura by providing basic services in what is now a makeshift refugee settlement.
Some 13,000 people have received food ratios and each registered refugee is getting six litres of clean water a day, some way below the recommended 15 litres minimum.
The UNHCR top official in Cameroon, Geert de Casteele said in Goura that: “The response from humanitarian workers here has been impressive in what is an extremely challenging environment.
“We need to scale up the response keeping in mind the local population; that is the next step and I am hopeful we can achieve, with increased funding.”
In January, the UN, in coordination with the Government and aid partners, announced its 2019 Humanitarian Response Plan which focuses on the whole of the country, including areas affected by Boko Haram.
Around 4.3 million Cameroonians, mostly women and children, are now in need of life-saving assistance, according to the UN.
- PM NEWS

Yoruba Leaders, others gather to launch Yoruba Academy

As Nigerians are preparing for elections to elect the President and other public office holders between Saturday February 16 and March 2, 2019, the former Chief of staff, Lt. General Ipoola Alani Akinrinade has lamented that the country is heading no where.
Akinrinade, who made this lamentation at the launching of Yoruba Academy, which has its secretariat at Quarter 844, Government Quarters, Agodi GRA besides JAMB Zonal Office, opposite Ikolaba Grammar School, Ibadan, pointed out that the future of Nigeria is not certain.
Stressing, “Nigeria is going nowhere”, the retired army General while interacting with the newsmen said that the current constitution of Nigeria does not have the capacity to create egalitarian society where the system would be fair to all the ethnic groups in the nation.
Akinrinade, who wants an immediate review of the constitution or possibly a new constitution for the nation, noted that restructuring the nation is imperative and not negotiable.
“We elders don’t want Nigeria to divide but the youth are agitating for it. It is better and beautiful the way we are. The Nigerian project can work if we are sincere and stop being selfish. Why can’t each state manage its own resources? Sharia Law has been in existence in the North for long and I don’t have problem with that but why will anybody feel that it should be imposed on other regions? They can practice Sharia anywhere but they should not bring it to the South West”.
Speaking earlier, an astute politician and a Yoruba leader, Ayo Afolabi narrated how the Yoruba Academy started.
The project, according to him, started at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, IITA, in 2007 when some notable Yoruba individuals came together to discuss the future of the Yoruba.
He noted that some Yoruba elders and scholars like late Professor Babatunde Fafunwa and Professor Wale Omole earlier running similar organization were approached and enjoined to merge their organizations with them. “When we came together, we now appointed Professor Fafuwa as the Chairman of Board of Trustees,” he stated.
He said, “I am not happy that some of us who started this project are not here. We were at IITA discussing and we felt that we needed to establish Yoruba Academy. There was no money and all of us who were there contributed what we had to kick start the project. We actually started working in 2008. It was Jimi Agbaje and Tola Abolurin who contributed the highest. We registered Yoruba Academy with the government. Later, Chief Bisi Akande came to pay us a visit and after interacting with us and got to know our mission, he gave us substantial money and we used part of the money to pay salaries and got an office at Bodija but not quite so long the owner of the place gave us quit notice because he wanted to sell the house and that was how we started looking for another office. We went to General Akinrinade who said that he did not have any house in Ibadan to give us and asked us to see the Governor, Senator Abiola Ajimobi for assistance. We were not making head way until one day when I got a call from General Akinrinade telling me that he was in Ibadan and that I should join him for us to go and see Governor Ajimobi”.
Speaking further, Afolabi stated, “When we got to Governor’s Ajimobi’s House at Ring Road, we were told that he has not woken up and General Akinrinade said that we will wait for him outside. When Ajimobi heard that Baba is waiting for him outside, he rushed out in his pyjamas to find out what the problem was and Baba told him that we needed a place for Yoruba Academy. He asked us to go and find a government vacant space and when we might have found one, we should come back and that he would see what he could do. The civil servants assisted us in finding a place and we eventually got this place and we went back to him. He said that he could not give us free and that we will have to pay N14m to lease the place for 25 years. Where are we going to get N14m? Not long after that, General Akinrinade launched a book in Lagos and all the money he realised from the launching, he gave it to us without removing a penny. Out of it, we paid N14m to the government and that was how we took possession of this place. When we got to this place, it was not habitable at all and so we had to renovate it and that is why we have something like this. However, we don’t have money to do many things. We don’t even have money to pay salaries and so, Yoruba here and abroad have to come together to fund this place”.
Speaking on Yoruba Academy, the Director General, DAWN Commission, Mr Oluseye Oyeleye stated that the academy is an independent, non-profit, non-governmental organisation established as a multi-disciplinary institution.
According to him, the institution is charged with the task of bringing together everyone committed to the best traditions of the promotion of modern democratic life, adding that it also aimed to ensure the preservation of Yoruba Language, culture, social practices, values and institutions.
Oyeleye, who noted that the academy is a medium where succeeding generations can feed into the Yoruba history and contributions, particularly the core being as a people, pointed out that the academy would be committed to engaging in, encouraging and funding research and systematic reflections on the history, culture, position, and future of the Yoruba in the context of Nigeria and in a globalized world, towards helping to create and sustain freedom for all and life more abundant.
Speaking on the relevance of the academy, the DG said that the academy would serve as a central clearing house for scholarly works about Yoruba and support the next generation of scholars who would be the ones to accentuate what has been done right in the areas like politics, economy, arts and culture, technology, military and strategic studies, as well as documenting the wrongs done to avoid such mistakes in the future.
He said, “The institution engages all leading scholars and intelligentsia-home and abroad-to chart a new course for the Yoruba race whilst preserving and celebrating our past as a people. We will have Fellows of the Yoruba Academy who will share thoughts, ideas and insights and analyze the state of the diverse sub-fields that constitute Yoruba studies and plan the directions which the academy will take. Doctoral students of Yoruba extraction will be encouraged to submit their work to the academy, enabling the institution to tap into the welter of knowledge available among them…The Yoruba Academy strives to make us discover our position and pride as a people. The Omoluabi concept that defines our essential characteristic as responsible, ethical and people of sound moral standards needs to be projected and reinforced. Therefore, the Yoruba Academy is paramount in ensuring that the collective works it promotes have positive impact on our being”.
He stated further, “The Yoruba Academy exposes us to the outside world, creating a better understanding of what it is to be Yoruba and in particular, educate those who have lost their bearings. The Yoruba Academy re-connects the race to the richness of our history and the fertility of minds among the growing generations who may no longer feel the need to identify with Yoruba because of the challenges of our not too good recent past, and the exposure to and influences of our current global space and existence… The Yoruba Academy is an institutional framework for the totality of our learning and development as Yoruba people…The Yoruba Academy assists every Yoruba man and woman to redefine his or her identity”.
Among those in attendance were: Elder Statesman, Dr. Amos Akingba, Prof Ladipo Adamolekun, The Chairman of Atayese, Mr. Tokunbo Ajasin, a retired Nigerian footballer, Segun Odegbami, Director of Charis Ventures, Dr Iyabo Bassir, Bucknor Arigbede Adeyemi of IACD, Hon Femi Egbedeji, Chief Tunde Odunlade, Chairman, Afenifere Renewal Group, ARG, Hon. Wale Oshun, ARG Publicity Secretary, Kunle Famoriyo, ARG Coordinators in Ekiti, Kogi, and Kwara, Bunmi Akanbi Awotiku, Ayo Abereoran and Bamidele Abdulateef.
- PM NEWS  

El-Rufai to Onnoghen: Resign now, even Dangote can’t forget millions of dollars in his account

Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna State on Friday advised suspended Justice Walter Onnoghen to resign as the substantive Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN).
He gave the advice when members of Coalition of Civil Society Organisations in the state took their protest to the Government House in Kaduna.
El-Rufai, who received the protesters’ solidarity letter to President Muhammadu Buhari on the suspension of the CJN, said with just over 20 years in public service, Justice Onnoghen possibly has more money than Aliko Dangote, the richest African.
According to him, the suspension of Onnoghen was in order, saying that even Dangote cannot forget one million dollars in his bank account.
“The case of Justice Onnoghen is the case in which somebody who has worked in government for past 20 years suddenly has millions of dollars in his account.
“He has admitted, but says he has forgotten about them. I want to express happiness to all of you for coming together to convey this very clear statement from the people of Kaduna State that in Kaduna we do not support corruption, in Kaduna we do not support injustice, in Kaduna State we are 100 per cent behind the integrity of our president.
“I can assure you that the message you have given to me will be delivered to the president today.
“The case with Justice Onnoghen is a very sad one. Othman Dan Fodio, the founder of the Sokoto Caliphate, wrote that the worst form of corruption you can find in any public service is judicial corruption.
“This is because when the president is corrupt or the governor is corrupt, it is to the judge that ordinary people can take their case to. When the judge himself is corrupt, it is the highest form of corruption and must never be condoned.
“The president did the right thing by asking him to step aside pending investigation. It is the proper thing to do. It is what is done in every organised and civilised society.
“Unfortunately, some people in Nigeria are trying to make white black and black white. They are using technicalities to delay bringing this man to Justice.
“Mr President did not remove Onnoghen from office. He said in honour of the Judiciary, he should step aside so that the charges against him can be investigated and prosecuted.
“But the man is shameless; he does not want to go but it is time for Nigerians to come all out and tell him he must go. Our judiciary must be clean. Our judiciary must consist of judges who cannot be bought,” the governor said.
Leaders of the civil society organisations, Messrs Zubairu Muktar and Abubakar Abubakar, said all well-meaning and focused Nigerians interested in the progress of the country must continue to support the anti-corruption war of this administration.
They commended Buhari for taking the decisive step to restore the lost glory of the judiciary by rejuvenating our nascent democracy.
“It is indeed a step very timely and commendable,’’ Muktar said.
“As a coalition of more than 150 CSOs, we wish to convey to our President that we will continue to stand firm, straight and tall with him as he continues to purge out corruption embedded in the Nigerian system which has become a hindrance to the economic, political and social development of our dear nation,’’ he added.
On his part, Abubakar said: “We equally commend President Buhari for his continuous pledge of free, fair and credible elections. We wish him good health, wisdom and long life to re-engineer the country towards an enviable direction.”
- PM NEWS