Sunday 31 January 2021

YORUBA DISUNITED !! Ondo: Fulani Herdsmen flout Akeredolu’s order, residents express mixed feelings

 


Following the activities of some herders perpetrating criminal activities in Ondo State in the past few months, the status of the state as one of the most peaceful in Nigeria is gradually being eroded.

With kidnappings and banditry holding sway in most parts of the state, the Northern Senatorial District of the State has been the most hit with the daring moves of criminals operating under the guise of herders.

The dreaded roads which had become a haven for kidnapping activities allegedly perpetrated by herders include, Owo-Ose highway, Akure-Owo highway (between Ogbese and Uso), highways within Akoko axis of the State, Ilesha-Akure highway as well as Akure-Owena highway.

In recent times, aside the series of kidnappings in which victims pay huge ransoms to their abductors in order to be freed, killings were also recorded among whom were prominent personalities.

Some of the high profile killings included that of the monarch of Ifon in Ose Local Government Area of Ondo State, Oba Israel Adeusi who was killed by bandits at Elegbeka junction along Owo-Ose highway as well as the Deputy Registrar of the Federal University of Technology, FUTA, Dr Amos Arijesuyo and Mrs Funke Olakunri, daughter of the National Leader of Afenifere.

With the herders growing in their audacious move, Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu had ordered that herders in the state should register with the appropriate agencies or quit the forest reserves across the state in a bid to identify who is who among the herders operating in the state.

Meanwhile, five days after the herdsmen under the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, MACBAN, agreed to comply with Akeredolu at a meeting which was attended by some southwest governors and two governors from the north, the State is yet to record any fresh case.

However, recent development indicated that the herders are yet to fully comply with Akeredolu’s directive as some herdsmen during the week led their herds of cattle to destroy vast farmlands belonging to some farmers in Idanre, headquarters of Idanre Local Government Area of the State.

While counting their loses, the farmers who had arrived their farms for the day’s farming said the herders perpetrated the act in the midnight.

With crops worth millions of Naira eaten and destroyed by the cows led by the herdsmen, the farmers at Obasooto farm settlement where the incident happened, said all their sweat and labour had vanished due to what they described as deliberate wickedness on the part of the herders.

According to one of the farmers, Mr. Friday Ayaghi, his cassava plantation which he had been cultivating for a while were eaten and destroyed by the cows.

While emphasizing that every penny on him was invested on the plantation in order to use the proceeds to take care of his wife and children, Ayaghi said all the plans had gone to ruins.

It was the same story by other farmers in the community as they lamented that they had thought that the meeting held with the leadership of the herdsmen by the governors will put to rest the age-long farmers/herdsmen crises, but that was not to be as the herders invaded their farms mindlessly in the community.

Similarly, with open and night grazing banned in the state, the herders had also failed to comply with the directive of the state government as DAILY POST on Friday sighted a herdsman moving and grazing with his cows at School of Nursing axis in highbrow Alagbaka area, a few meters from the Governor’s Office, Akure, the state capital.

It was the same situation in Odigbo, in Odigbo Local Government Area of the state where cows were seen freely moving across the streets on Thursday unchallenged.

With the developments, some residents of the state had began to be skeptical over the potency of the order by Governor Akeredolu.

According to a Pastor of one of the pentecostal churches, Damilola Olarewaju, a situation that cows continue to be seen on the streets despite Akeredolu’s order is an indication that herders are being backed by powerful forces in the country.

“Just look at this, cows moving freely in Akure, not just Akure, but here in Alagbaka. A GRA that is also the seat of power of government in Ondo State.

“Just on Monday, governors were here in Akure, where they all agreed to ban open grazing with the Miyetti Allah people also in support of it, but they are the ones going against the agreement.

“I just want to believe that these people (herdsmen) are very powerful as people say. How on earth will a governor speak and some people will just flout it within days after agreeing to it?”

Another resident who is a farmer, Adebola Kasali stated that his joy that grazing had been banned in the state was short-lived when he heard that some farms in Idanre were invaded.

“What happened in Idanre to fellow farmers was devastating.

“I had thought that such things won’t happen again following the intervention of Aketi (Akeredolu) but I was wrong.

Also, some residents were of the view that the peace witnessed in the state in the last few days might soon fade off.

According to them, if the ban on open and night grazing is being ignored, it is just a matter of time for some criminal minded herders to hold the state by the jugular again by returning to the highway.

Meanwhile, findings has revealed that some herdsmen have made up their minds not to register as most of them have in their numbers been leaving the state for neigbouring states.

As the seven-day ultimatum given to herdsmen to vacate forest reserves across Ondo State has expired, some herders have begun to leave the forests in their numbers.

The herders vacating the forest reserves were those within Ifon axis in Ose Local Government Area of the state and Ala area in Idanre Local Government.

Photos: Herder with cows at Alabama, Akure on Friday.


- DAILY POST




Group asks Ogun to probe ‘beating of residents by soldiers protecting herders’

 


The Yoruba Leadership and Peace Initiative (TYLPI) has called on the Ogun state government to probe the alleged harassment of some residents who clashed with herders. 

Soldiers had allegedly backed the herders and started flogging the residents.
Olusegun Ahmadu and Olufemi Adefemiwa, president and general-secretary of TYLPI, in a statement said the soldiers molested traditional rulers and indigenes of some communities in Ketu area of the state.

“The group therefore demanded that the Ogun state government should immediately constitute a public judicial inquiry into what it said would amount to treason if it emerged that truly, Nigerian troops, wearing army uniforms and bearing arms procured with tax payers’ money, openly took sides against a group of law abiding Nigerians on their ancestral land,” the statement said.

The group said a judicial probe is needed to establish the truth in the reports, warning that “the Yoruba will not accept anything short of that as many police and administrative investigations into similar incidents in the past yielded no tangible outcomes”.

The group also decried what it called the “deafening silence of top Yoruba leaders over the prolonged collapse of law and order in the Ibarapa area of Oyo state , resulting in kidnapping, rape and killing of hapless citizens, particularly in Igangan and its adjoining communities”.
The group said it is worried that no Yoruba politician of note raised a voice while the crisis raged.

TYLPI, however, praised Rotimi Akeredolu, governor of Ondo state, whom it said displayed courage and forthrightness in providing leadership on the issue.
The group also commended Sunday Adeyemo, better known as Sunday Igboho, a youth leader “for taking the bold initiative to fill the leadership gap created by politicians and state actors who, rather than support and defend the people of Ibarapa, who were being kidnapped and killed with impunity by herders, opted to keep silent in a futile bid to protect  what they considered to be their immediate political interests”.

The group appealed to the federal government to engage superior technology such as drones in order to locate the hideouts of kidnappers and insurgents across the country and take them out.

- THECABLE

Anti-gay law: 40% of Nigerian lawmakers, over twelve governors are homosexuals – Uche Maduagwu

 


Nollywood Actor, Uche Maduagwu has called on the US President, Joe Biden, to place sanctions on the Nigerian government over the 2014 anti-gay law, alleging that 40% of the current lawmakers and over twelve governors are homosexuals.

The law was signed by ex-President, Goodluck Jonathan and it prohibits all forms of gay relationships in Nigeria.

The law also states that a 14-year jail term awaits anyone caught in an act of homosexuality.

However, Uche in a post via his Instagram account asked President Biden to sanction the Nigerian government over the law.

He also alleged that 40% of the current lawmakers and 12 state governors are homosexuals but are hiding behind closed doors.

“Dear President Joe Biden. I am proudly gay, and I beg you to place sanctions on Nigerian government for its inhuman laws against law-abiding homosexuals.

“This same government pampers wicked Fulani herdsmen who kidnap and cause trouble in southern part of Nigeria.

“We are tired and scared despite the fact that more than 40% of current legislatures and over twelve governors are homosexuals in naija; why the hypocrisy,” he said.

Recall that the Controversial Nollywood actor, recently revealed that he is gay.

Maduagwu made the declaration via his Instagram page on Thursday, asking his followers to learn to accept and respect other people’s choices.

- DAILY POST

Hairdresser Ifesinachi hides N21b worth of cocaine in 16 duvet covers

 


A 33 year-old Nigerian woman, Onyejegbu Ifesinachi Jennifer, has been arrested by National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) for smuggling cocaine worth N21 billion into Nigeria.

The cocaine, weighing 26.84 kg, was concealed in 16 duvets, that she brought into the country from Sao Paulo, Brazil.

It was the biggest single seizure from an individual in the past 15 years.

Ifesinachi was said to be a hairdresser

Her arrest at the Murtala Muhammed Airport in Lagos on 27 January came amidst the vow by the new NDLEA chairman, Brigadier Buba Marwa to dismantle drug trafficking cartels across Nigeria.

According to the spokesman of the agency, Jonah Achema: “On the 27th of January 2021, at about 1320hours, during the inward clearance of Ethiopian Airline passengers at the E- arrival hall of Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Ikeja, Lagos, a female passenger by name Onyejegbu Ifesinachi Jennifer, 33 years, who arrived Nigeria from Sao Paulo, Brazil via Addis Ababa, was intercepted by NDLEA operatives.

“As a standard operating procedure, all passengers to and from high-risk countries are always profiled using passengers’ manifest.

“It happened that the above-named suspect was targeted. Consequently, she was taken to the NDLEA office at the airport, where her bags were searched thoroughly, and in the process, whitish powdery substances were found concealed inside 16 pieces of duvet contained in her two travel bags

“Field test was conducted on the recovered substances and proved positive to cocaine and weighed 26.850kilograms. The suspect who is a hairstylist and based in Brazil was interviewed and she confessed to having agreed to smuggle the hard drug for the N2m only.

“Although she refused to disclose the names of her associates, she mentioned that she was asked to hand over the drugs to another person. The street value of this singular seizure is put at over N21billion.”

- PM NEWS

Lagos records over 1,000 new COVID-19 infections — its highest daily count

 


Lagos state’s single-day count of COVID-19 infections has exceeded 1,000 — with 1,040 cases reported on Saturday.

This is the highest daily count recorded by the state where the first COVID-19 case in the country was confirmed on Feb 27, 2020.

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), in its update for January 30, reported 1883 new positive cases of COVID-19 across 22 states and the federal capital territory (FCT).

Trailing Lagos is the FCT with 298 cases, Anambra 86, and Rivers 54.

Other states that confirmed new infections include: Taraba (45), Ogun (42), Oyo (40), Akwa Ibom (38), Sokoto (30), Ebonyi (30), Imo (28), Kaduna (28), Osun (27), Kano (21), Benue (19), Edo (17), Gombe (15), Ekiti (9), Delta (8), Jigawa (3), Kwara (2), Bayelsa (2) and Plateau (1).

According to the NCDC, a total of 932 recoveries were recorded on Saturday with 461 discharged patients in Lagos state.

Also, one new death was recorded on Saturday, bringing the country’s fatality toll to 1,578.

A breakdown showed that Lagos has the highest number of positive cases with 8,576 patients –one-third of 25,267 active cases in the country.

Out of 130,557 confirmed cases in Nigeria, a total of 103,712 patients have been discharged.

 

 — NCDC (@NCDCgov) January 30, 2021

 

Transfer: Sergio Ramos to quit Real Madrid for Man Utd

 


Real Madrid captain, Sergio Ramos, will leave Real Madrid for Manchester United this summer, according to the UK Mirror.

Ramos is out of contract at the end of this season and negotiations over a new deal have stalled.

The 34-year-old is already free to talk to clubs outside Spain this month, and it is believed that his agent and brother, Rene Ramos, is eyeing a move to the Premier League.

Ramos will reportedly snub a move to Paris Saint-Germain, as he is very keen on playing in England.

The centre back also has offers from clubs in Asia, but his family are not thought to be keen on moving there.

Ramos has been offered a two-year contract on the same £10.8m-per-year net deal that he is on now.

The defender has won 18 trophies during his 15-and-a-half year spell with the LaLiga side.

- DAILY POST

JUNGLE FOR LIFE !!! How corrupt Nigerian leaders spent millions to train children in UK Schools – Report

 


A report by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace has detailed how Nigerian political leaders spent millions of pounds for their children’s school fees in UK schools.

The report, titled: “West African Elites’ Spending on UK Schools and Universities: A Closer Look,” gave graphic details how Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs) send their children to UK Schools using funds stolen from public coffers to pay their children’s humongous school fees while schools in Nigeria rot away.

The report detailed how former Governor of Plateau State, Joshua Dariye charged with corruption in 2007 and convicted in 2018, sent his children to school UK boarding schools and universities, with estimated £240,000 spent.

It also cited the example of former Governor of Delta State, James Ibori, who was convicted by a British Court in 2012 for money laundering and yet sent his children to UK schools with estimated £286,000 paid.

According to the report, relative lack of review has allowed some West African PEPs to channel unexplained wealth into the UK education sector.

“It is not easy to estimate the overall value of this flow, yet it likely exceeds £30 million annually. Most of these funds emanate from Nigeria and, to a lesser extent, Ghana; compared with these two countries, only a handful of students from elsewhere in West Africa seek an education in British schools. Tackling this small but significant illicit financial flow should be a priority for UK policymakers.

“In doing so, they would be helping to realize the UK’s global anti-corruption objectives, advance its International Education Strategy, and close a troublesome anti–money laundering (AML) loophole. Failing to do so would exacerbate existing corruption challenges both at home and abroad and increase the UK education sector’s reputational liabilities,” it said.

The report explained further: “That said, it is difficult to approximate the financial value of these flows. In 2018, the Nigerian government identified 130,000 high net worth individuals and companies who had underpaid taxes by using tactics that included charging non-allowable personal expenses—particularly overseas school fees—as business expenses.

“Given that, in 2017, there were 12,030 Nigerian students studying in the United Kingdom (10,540 at universities and 1,490 at independent schools), it is plausible that a significant share of their fee payments involved such tax evasion. If a British university or school accepted a payment tainted by tax evasion, it could be violating UK law under the Proceeds of Crime Act.”

The report added that the most compelling red flag relating to West African PEPs’ payments to UK educational institutions is how greatly the payments exceed their official salaries, saying even these countries’ senior-most government officials earn relatively modest salaries.

“In Ghana, for example, cabinet ministers’ annual salary amounts to just £2,200 annually, not including allowances. A Nigerian cabinet minister takes home roughly £16,000 annually, consisting of a modest base salary plus several large allowances and gratuities

“Senior Nigerian civil servants earn considerably less than top officeholders. Since April 2019, the country’s public service pay ceiling has been N6.2 million (£12,784). Apart from a few top officials, however, most civil servants make significantly less than this amount. Many are also earning less in real terms than they were a decade ago owing to inflation, rising consumer prices, and the steady decline in the value of the naira. To illustrate, even though top civil servants earned less (N5.4 million) in 2010 than they did in 2020, that sum was worth more than twice as much in pound sterling at the start of the decade.

“Public officials’ earning potential is further constrained by a constitutional restriction that prohibits them from engaging in private business. Section 2(b) of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers of the Federal Republic of Nigeria states that “a public officer shall not . . . except where he is not employed on full time basis, engage or participate in the management or running of any private business, profession, or trade, but nothing in this sub-paragraph shall prevent a public officer from engaging in farming.” As such, many public servants lack alternative sources of legitimate income beyond their spouse’s earnings.”

It questioned: “So how do so many Nigerian government officials become inexplicably wealthy over their tenure? They appear to use a wide range of self-enrichment tactics that include misappropriating public property, engaging in various forms of contract fraud, collecting fraudulent allowances, accepting inappropriate gifts, soliciting bribes or kickbacks, and obtaining land grants for themselves and their associates, among many other schemes.

“To explain their newfound wealth, politicians and officials often will make vague, hard-to-verify assertions about their preexisting or inherited wealth or the income generated by investments such as rental property or company shareholdings. Many such PEPs will insist that—through savvy investing and disciplined saving—they have somehow prospered in a period of economic recession, rising living costs, and severe currency devaluation that has left millions of Nigerians struggling. To maintain a degree of plausible deniability about the origins of their wealth, many Nigerian PEPs will comingle their legitimate and unexplained earnings or launder their ill-gotten gains through businesses and properties they control. Some PEPs are genuinely wealthy before they enter government, but most are, in the words of one political journalist, “career politicians . . . who have never worked in their life but live off politics.”

“With regard to Nigerian officials’ freedom to spend their poorly monitored assets on educating their children abroad, the Nigerian government has been reluctant to pass legislation that could constrain (or even ban) them from doing so. In 2012, the Senate neglected to pass a bill amending the constitution to discourage public officials from schooling their children abroad. In 2017, the chair of the Senate’s Tertiary Education Committee dismissed calls for public officials to school their children domestically, claiming that “making a law to bar people from taking their children outside to study is something that will not be good for our country. We know that it is always good to mingle with people from other parts of the world when it comes to the issue of education.”

“Given these weak safeguards, the modest nature of Nigerian PEPs’ official salaries, and their high risk of accumulating illicit wealth, it is reasonable to question whether they can afford big-ticket purchases such as high-end property, luxury goods, or costly tuition fees. The fast-rising average annual cost of tuition at a UK private boarding school, for example, greatly exceeds the earnings of even Nigeria’s most senior officials,” the report said.

The report added that a review of publicly available information on past and serving senior Nigerian politicians that have held office since 1999 revealed that most had sent one or more of their children to a UK private boarding school and/or university.

“All of Nigeria’s presidents and vice presidents, for example, during that period had done so. Likewise, roughly 40 percent of Nigeria’s current and former state governors have educated their children in the United Kingdom. A comprehensive review of current and former senators, representatives, ministers, top military officers, and other senior officials almost certainly would reveal hundreds of more examples of Nigerian PEPs whose children went to British schools.

“Although some would have had the legitimate assets and earnings to do so, it is likely that many more used unexplained wealth to pay for some or all of their family member’s tuition fees,” it stated.

Click to read full report

- PM NEWS