Monday, 1 March 2021

Osinbajo has been left out of Buhari government – Bamgbose



 The National Coordinator of Concerned Advocates for Good Governance, (CAGG), Olusegun Bamgbose claimed that Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo has been sidelined from President Muhammadu Buhari’s government.

Bamgbose in an interview on Monday said Osinbajo is no longer part of the decision-making caucus of the current administration.

“It’s quite embarrassing that the Vice President of Nigeria, Professor Yemi Osinbajo has been left out of the scheme of things,” Bamgbose claimed.

“He is not consulted or allowed to air his views about the security situation of the country.”

He further accused a cabal of playing politics with the lives of the citizens, asking why the government pays ransom to bandits.

Bamgbose lamented that the vice president who knows how banditry in the country can be handled is not being carried along.

“I have this strong feeling that he knows what to do to suppress the bandits, but most, unfortunately, he is not carried along in the scheme of things. The cabals seem to be playing politics with the lives of the citizens”.

- PM NEWS

Don’t just fight for salary review, save Nigeria – CSO tells Labour, Trade Unions

 


A Coalition of Civil Society Organizations in its project tagged “Say No Campaign,” has called on labour leaders as well as their Trade Union counterpart to go beyond their core mandates of seeking increment in wages and other welfare packages for their members and show interest to wider concerns of the society.

The CSOs also urged them to use their influence and evoke accountability from relevant government institutions for the general good of the public.

The convener of the project Ezenwa Nwagwu stated this over the weekend in a workshop for labour and trade union anti-corruption network held at the Watbridge hotels and suites, Uyo, Akwa Ibom State capital.

Nwagwu said labour leaders should show interest in the local government issues not just as local government unions but as a wider citizen’s approach to fighting corruption.

He, however, lamented the spate of abandoned projects in communities, as well as deplorable roads and wondered why labour leaders and other civil actors had kept blind eyes on the malaise, adding that, they should raise their voices against these as they always do whenever their wages were been owed or withheld by government.

He urged the labour leaders to join in the broader conversations which affect the society by showing interest in the budget of their local governments and its implementation processes, track abandoned projects as well as demand for good governance.

He noted that this class of people (labour unions) wield power and influence, both nationally and internationally, hence their interest in the activities of government would check some excesses.

According to him, “we have to shift attention of labour from simply participating in the core mandate of seeking increment in wages of members to having relevance to the wider concerns of the four communities they belong which include, community of your nativity, where you reside, where you work and the community of the affected.

“All we say, is, you have the competence, you are respected, you have the influence, use that influence beyond trade union issues and see how you can energize the concerns of larger citizens which we are mobilizing today, we are working with traditional rulers and people at the grassroots to see how we can hold government accountable and ensure good governance.

“Labour also should utilise the Freedom of Information act, seek information about the budget of their local government, ask questions on how the monies were expended and why some projects were abandoned.

“From information gathered, labour leaders are not interested in what is happening in their communities. Some have not even seen the budget of their communities. If all these men and women who are respected both nationally and internationally do not talk about this, is it our brothers and sisters who live in the backwater communities struggling with existential challenges that should talk about it?”

- DAILY POST

Ex-French president convicted of corruption, sentenced to three years in jail



Nicolas Sarkozy, former French president, was on Monday handed a three-year jail term by a court in Paris.

He was sentenced on charges of bribery and influence peddling.

The sentence includes one year in prison and two years of a suspended sentence, NAN reports.

He was accused of offering a lucrative job in a Monaco bank to a senior magistrate in 2014.

In return, Sarkozy was said to have requested leaked information about a judicial inquiry against him.

The former president was said to have authorised his lawyer, Thierry Herzog, to broker the deal.

Despite the sentence, Sarkozy is allowed to request that his prison term be served at home with an electronic bracelet.

He is also expected to appeal against the conviction.

- DAILY POST

Police raids Barcelona, arrests CEO Oscar Grau, Bartomeu, others

 


The Spanish police on Monday raided Barcelona football club and arrested the club’s CEO, Oscar Grau and Roman Gómez Ponti, the Barca’s head of legal, according to Cadena SER radio.

Barcelona’s former president, Josep Maria Bartomeu, and his right-hand man, Jaume Masferrer, were also arrested.

They were arrested on suspicion of “unfair administration, corruption between individuals and money laundering” after paying money in instalments to avoid internal financial controls.

This is coming amid the continued investigation into ‘BarcaGate’, in which Barcelona’s officials were accused of launching a smear campaign against the current (Lionel Messi, Gerard Pique) and former players (Pep Guardiola and others) who were critical of the Catalan club and Bartomeu.

Recall that Bartomeu and his board of directors resigned last year in controversy.

Local authorities from Mossos d’Esquadra entered Barcelona’s stadium as the Blaugrana’s finance, legal and compliance departments are investigated.

The ‘BarcaGate; scandal, which has been investigated for almost 12 months, has long been denied by Bartomeu.

- DAILY POST

RUBBISH !! No food for South West until Fulani are safe – Miyetti Allah



Coordinator of the Kwara State chapter of Miyetti Allah Association of Cattle Breeders, Aliyu Mohammed, has said that the blockade of cattle and foodstuffs to the South West through Kwara State will continue until the safety of Fulani is guaranteed in the region.

Mohammed speaking to newsmen after a crucial meeting of the association in Ilorin on Sunday, said the action is a warning shot to ensure a peaceful operation of businesses by the Fulani and to end the harassment of the tribe in the south.

He also said not all Fulani are criminals, adding “Just as you have in any society where there are good and bad people.”

Mohammed insisted that “It is not only Fulanis that commit crimes in the country, but it was sad that everything happening now is heaped on Fulani herdsmen.”

The coordinator said the association was ready to fish out the bad eggs in their midst.

According to him, “We have concluded at our meeting today that anybody who comes to Kwara State claiming to be Fulani herder under questionable circumstances, will be reported to the security agencies for necessary action.

“Our vigilantes will monitor the bush and the forests where there are no security agencies and report suspected cattle rustlers who disguise as cattle herders to perpetrate crimes,” he added.

Mohammed appealed to the Federal government to arrest Sunday Igboho, who evicted the Fulani from Igangan in Ibarapa Local Government Area of Oyo State, for the alleged destruction of their properties and killing of their people.

He, however, commended Governor Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq for his statesmanship in accommodating and cooperating to ensure the safe landing of Fulanis in the state.

- PM NEWS

I was promised Europe but ended up doing sex work in Libya, says trafficking victim

 


Frasanna Adejoke, an alleged victim of human trafficking, has narrated how she was taken to Libya for prostitution despite being initially told she would be going to Europe.

Adejoke spoke on Monday while testifying in a case of human trafficking levelled against her at a federal high court in Ibadan, Oyo state.

She claimed that one Ayomide Philips deceived her to travel to Libya for a job and even encouraged her to steal from her employers.

“In February 2016, Philips told me that she could facilitate my successful immigration to Europe and make my living there,” Adejoke said.

“She even took me to her mother who advised me to pay her daughter’s charges promptly. Firstly, I paid Philips the N10,000 charge she requested from me and on May 1, 2016, we left Ibadan for Kano.

“We travelled through Niger to Agadez, on and on we went until we got to Tripoli in Libya, where she introduced Abora, her Arab agent, to me.

“Philips never gave me anything from all the money I made for working because they usually give the money to her. She also did not tell me why she took me to Libya and not Europe as she earlier promised.

“Though Philips and Abora first took me to a place where I worked as a househelp for three months and they gave her an equivalent of N180,000 as my wage.

“I was, however, dismissed as a housemaid, when I stole some money there. I did so because Philips had advised me to steal anything I find precious to me and that such opportunities were rare.

“At the prostitution joint, Philips received an equivalent of N200,000 from them as my wage and so was the case at the other places where I worked.

“However, I was deported on April 25, 2017, when the Libyan police raided my prostitution joint.”

After her testimony, S.A. Langryi, counsel to the National Agency for the Prohibition and Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), asked the court for an adjournment to enable him present more facts.

Justice Patricia Ajoku then adjourned the case to March 23 for further hearing.

- THECABLE

ANIMAL !!! Bandits: Kidnapping school students is lesser evil – Sheikh Gumi

 


Controversial Islamic Scholar, Ahmad Gumi on Monday described the kidnapping of school children by bandits as lesser evil.

Gumi said kidnapping school students was a lesser evil when compared to the ransacking of towns and killing of its residents.

He made the remark while featuring on BBC Pidgin.

The cleric also stated that his meetings was yielding positive results as bandits are now careful about human lives.

According to Gumi: “Kidnapping children from school is a lesser evil because in the end, you can negotiate and now bandits are very careful about human lives.

“Before, the mission of bandits was to go into a town, ransack it and kill people. By this, I can say our preaching is working and hopefully, we are coming to an end of banditry in Zamfara and other states.

“Bandits are more careful about lives now and just want to do sensational attacks which would bring attention to themselves.”

Lately, the activities of banditry has been on the rise in the Northern part of Nigeria.

Recall that Gumi had appealed to the federal government to grant amnesty to bandits. 

The Islamic Scholar had said amnesty to bandits would help calm down the tensed insecurity situation in the North.

Buhari has, however, vowed not to grant amnesty to bandits.

- DAILY POST