Friday, 12 May 2017

National Assembly Accused of Owing Aides N1.3billion


A legislative aide has said that the National Assembly owes them Duty Travel Allowance amounting to N1.3bn.
 
Speaking on condition of anonymity, the aide told NAN, “We have been owed since 2015 and the management informed us that the allowance was not captured in the 2016 budget.

“With this development, we are aware of what is appropriated for legislative aides in the 2017 budget; we are now sure the money is there and there will be no room for excuses anymore.
 
“The DTA for an individual is N75,000 and about 3,000 aides are being owed.”
 
The 2017 budget provides N9.6bn for legislative aides, the Senate Public Accounts Committee takes N118.9m and that of Reps N142.7m. 

Father & Son shot daughter in an attempted honour killing for loving a village man


An 18-year-old girl, Ruby is fighting for her life after her father and brother shot her in the face and chest in an attempted honour killing because she loved a man in her village.

From a small village in Sambhal, in India, had been in a secret relationship with Ibrahim, 24, for the last three years. But yesterday her younger sister overheard her talking to him on the phone and told her brother and father.

Within minutes of finding out, Ruby's brother, Iftikhar and father, Sameraj confronted her. They brutally beat her before shooting her twice, once in her face and once in her chest.

Neighbours heard loud screams and called the police who rushed to the scene.


They arrived at approximately 4am this morning to find Ruby lying on the floor outside her home, bleeding to death as members of the family did nothing.

Police rushed her to a local government run hospital where her condition was reported as critical.

Due to a lack of facilities she was referred to a private hospital in Moradabad, around 40 kms away, early this morning.

Her brother and father were arrested at the scene.


Officer Brahmapal Singh Baliyan, from Asmoli Police Station, said: 'It's an honour killing case. The girl told us at the hospital that she was shot by her brother and father after they came to know about her relationship.

'She also said that her mother was involved as she opposed a marriage between the girl and her boyfriend. She is currently in a critical condition and is being treated at a private hospital with police protection.'

8 day old girl dies in a gridlock caused by APC political meeting in Lagos




A Lagos worker, identified only as Bashir, has lost his first child due to a traffic created by the meeting of the Lagos State chapter of the All Progressives Party at its secretariat on Acme Road on Wednesday.

PUNCH Metro learnt that the child, who was named on Tuesday, had taken ill and was rushed to a private hospital in the Ikeja area, from where he was referred to a specialists’ hospital on Lagos Island.

The child, christened Oluwatamilore, was being conveyed to the hospital when he gave up in the traffic and was confirmed dead by a doctor.
Our correspondent had reported that commuters and residents of Lagos State were stranded on Wednesday after Acme Road, Ikeja, was blocked because of the APC meeting.

The blockage, which started from 7am, was stretched from Victorious Army Ministry International, a church, to a filling station, Magic FX.

Many people were reportedly forced to trek for hours as commercial buses quit operation, while motorists were held up in traffic on adjoining streets for hours.

Our correspondent gathered that Bashir’s eight-day-old child died in the traffic.
Bashir, who goes by the alias, distraught dad, onTwitter, expressed his anger over the incident in a series of tweets aimed at the APC and the Lagos State Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode.

He said, “@AkinwunmiAmbode@APCNigeria,thanks to you guys today for the road you blocked without prior notice. My eight-day-old boy died in the traffic.
“My boy died in traffic on the way to the hospital, the day after his naming ceremony.

“I prayed for you (the child) this morning, kissed you and told you I would see you and your beautiful mum when I’m back from work.”
A Twitter user, Godspeed, however, doubted Bashir’s claims, saying the bereaved father was playing politics.

Godspeed also said there were six ambulances stationed around the venue of the convention, adding that he could have alerted security agencies and emergency workers.

In his response, Bashir said, “Please tell me where they were stationed? I took that same route to work that morning; I didn’t see any ambulance. Was it only Acme Road that was blocked? Are you forgetting Acme Road is a connecting road to a lot of places?

“Does it occur to you that because Acme Road was blocked it caused a lot of traffic around there? You think I am politicising this issue? Such a level of insensitivity!

“I work for the Lagos State Government and I have benefitted from the government, apart from being a Lagosian. I am mourning and you are supporting people that would allow the same thing happen to you?”

He further stated that he was in the office when the child took ill, adding that his mother, father, wife and aunts made efforts to save the child.

 “Why didn’t the LASTMA officials who my parents were begging to let them through because of the emergency, call the attention of an ambulance or LASEMA? Imagine your child dying in the presence of his mother and grandparents inside traffic?”

Efforts by PUNCH Metro to speak with Bashir were unsuccessful, as he didn’t reply to our correspondent’s tweets and enquiries on his wall.
However, investigation by PUNCH Metroconfirmed that the Lagos worker was not lying.

Three co-workers and a friend confirmed that he indeed lost the child in the traffic.
A fellow worker with him at the Lagos Inland Revenue Service, said he visited him at his home on Thursday.

He said, “There were many sympathisers. It is sad.”
Another worker said the news had spread in the LIRS.

“The child was named Oluwatamilore. He died in the traffic,” a close associate said.
The Lagos APC spokesperson, Joe Igbokwe, said he was just learning of the incident.

He said, “The turnout was beyond our expectation. We have been having events in the past without any traffic problem, but this was an exception and we sincerely apologise to Lagosians. I am just getting to know about the death. But I will confirm.” - Punch

FG suspends FUTA, FUNAAB VCs over alleged N957m fraud


The Federal Government has suspended Vice Chancellors of Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta (FUNAAB) and Federal University of Technology, Akure (FUTA)  over alleged N956 million fraud.

FUNAAB vice chancellor, Prof. Olusola Oyewole, is currently facing a criminal charge in court.

The May 5, 2017 suspension letters  was signed by the acting Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Education, Hussaini Adamu, on behalf of the Minister of Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu.
The letter directed Oyewole to hand over the affairs of the institution to the most senior staff.
The EFCC charged Oyewole, alongside former Pro Chancellor of the school, Adeseye Ogunewe, the Bursar, Moses Ilesanmi to court for alleged abuse of office and misappropriation of funds.

They were investigated after whistleblowers tipped off the anti-graft agency and accused the trio of suspicious dealings totalling N800 million.
The case is before Justice O. Majekodunmi of the state High Court.

In November 2016, EFCC arraigned Oyewole, Ogunlewe and Ilesanmi on an 18-count charge of financial misappropriation.

Members of Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) in the institution had earlier shut down the school in protest, and called on the federal government to probe activities of the institution under Oyewole’s leadership.

They, however, pleaded not guilty to all the charges. - The Sun

193 Nigerians die of cancer every 24 hours – Expert


Prof Atawodi, a biochemistry don at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, also said cancer was fast killing Nigerians because facilities for treating the disease were grossly inadequate in hospitals across the country.

The biochemistry expert, who spoke with journalists on the sideline of the Nigerian Academy of Science’s public lecture and induction of new fellows in Abuja Thursday, said virtually every home in the country has a cancer sufferer and rate is increasing by the day. 
  
“It is serious: in every seven minutes, one Nigerian is dying of cancer. The case is made worst with inadequate facilities across our hospitals”, he said.

He said though most cancers are preventive and curable, many Nigerians only go for treatment when they have done much havoc in their bodies.  

Earlier in a lecture titled ‘Cancer: Keeping the monster at bay’ which he delivered during the programme, Prof Atawodi quoted a World Health organisation report as saying there were about 19.3million new cases of cancer in 2015.

According to him, the WHO report shows that 8.2m cancer deaths were recorded globally in 2012, and these will increase further by 2025.

The don who lamented the low cancer awareness in the country called for legislation that would make cancer treatment more accessible and available to the citizens.

‘‘In general, we are not very good in preventive measures. Because of the high cost of treating cancer in Nigeria, the government should subsidise cancer treatment. 

‘‘Also, the necessary policies to ensure all necessary facilities for treatment of cancer should be put in place. The facilities for radiotherapy are not efficient in the health institutions. 

‘‘There is a recommendation by WHO that there should be one radio therapy machine for every 1 million people. Meaning that we need about 180 of the machine for the 180 million population we have in Nigeria but we actually have only 8 only and out of these 8, only one is functional, which is unacceptable,’’ he stated.

The Dangerous Politics Of Buhari’s Health


I don’t know if protocol will permit it. But it would not be a bad idea for British Prime Minister Theresa May to visit President Muhammadu Buhari at the London hospital where the Nigerian president is being treated.
She has a story to share.
Three years before May unexpectedly became prime minister, she got a surprise. Theresa May was not feeling well and after weeks of assuming it may well be part of the misery of politics, she decided to do a medical test.
She was misdiagnosed at first, with the result showing that she had Type 2 diabetes. It wasn’t Type 2 diabetes, but the result of the second test was even more difficult to believe: she had Type 1 diabetes. She received the news with shock, doubt and confusion.
Why was it difficult to believe? Type 1 diabetes, also described as “juvenile diabetes,” is common among much younger people (some say 40 and below), especially children. She was 57 and thought it improbable that she would have a medical condition associated with juveniles.
And, by the way, how did it “progress” from Type 2, a condition where the pancreas is unable to produce insulin, which regulates glucose levels in the blood, to Type 1, a rare form?
It wasn’t just the difference between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes that bothered May. Her problem was twofold: the first was the debate about whether diabetes is a health problem or a non-threatening medical condition.
The second and main problem, which was to emerge three years after she unexpectedly became prime ministers, was the politics of her diabetes.
She had been Home Secretary for a while and had managed. But being prime minister was another thing altogether. Her critics insisted that diabetes was a health problem and that it would impair her performance.
How would she face the health-obsessed British public and tell them that after six years of David Cameron, who looked impressively fit, their new prime minister would be taking at least two shots of insulin every day and still be well enough to get the job done?
Some said she was criticized because she is a woman, insisting that these same critics had been milder with Tony Blair, who had a heart condition, or Gordon Brown, who is blind in his left eye.
But May had to face the situation for what it was. She had to come out. She takes her two shots of insulin everyday, does her exercises and watches her food like a mole. The British public is adjusting to the fact that diabetes is not a handicap.
Britain has learnt to live with May’s diabetes because she was honest with herself and with the public. From Andrew Jackson to Franklin Roosevelt and from François Mitterand to Félix Houphouët-Boigny, history is full of sovereigns who went the extra mile to hide their ailments or handicap from the public.
At 74 and in his second life at the nation’s top job, it is sad that President Muhammadu Buhari allowed reasonable disclosure of his health status to slip away from his hands.
Whether it is Crohn’s Disease as reported by SaharaReporters, prostate cancer, or whatever it is, any ailment that kept Buhari away in London for nearly six weeks before he was sworn-in after his election, and has kept him in hospital for 69 days out of his 712-day presidency, could hardly have been unknown to him before May 2015.
The danger of what now appears to be a malicious concealment of his health status is that politicians and a few around him who feel threatened will exploit it for personal advantage. And it’s happening already.
It’s ridiculous, for example, that the newspapers could not get the correct description of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo’s role in Buhari’s absence. A faction of the cabal, which obviously thought that expressly designating Osinbajo “acting President” the first time was a mistake, has opted for a muddle: coordinating vice president.
We don’t need to split hairs over that. Not designating Osinbajo as “acting,” means that Buhari is still fully capable of carrying out the duties of his office. He will receive any foreign heads of government that may be visiting at this time and receive the letters of credence of ambassadors from other countries, which he has not done since January.
Stephen Ocheni and Suleiman Hassan, the two new ministers recently confirmed by the Senate, have to wait for Buhari to swear them in. Osinbajo couldn’t do so on Wednesday because, under the circumstance, it would have been improper.
The report of the presidential committee that investigated allegations of corruption against Babachir Lawal, and the NIA Director-General Ayodele Oke, who gave safe haven to N13 billion orphaned cash will be left in the pending tray.
Ambassadors that have been cleared by the Senate will also join the line.  And in a matter of days when the National Assembly transmits the 2017 budget, Buhari will assent it, flesh and blood.
Sure, these are small potatoes in the presidential menu. But when it is time to eat the frog, it would be ridiculous for those who appear to have taken matters out of Buhari’s hands to play the sort of hide-and-seek we saw under former President Umaru Yar’Adua.
The danger, at times like these, is that power floats, partly drifting but largely being usurped by a few self-appointed oracles, who would want the public to accept their every word as Buhari’s wish. That is unacceptable.
If the President is away on health grounds – which is just as well – and he is expected to perform his full official duties while away, then the government must disclose where he is and the public must see, in daylight, how he is performing his duties.
We are not going to wait for former President Olusegun Obasanjo and co to speak in selfish parables from their coven or allow politicians who are only motivated by their own insecurity and self-interest to corner us, as they have always done.
The government has to come out and tell us what the British already know about the President’s health, so that we can watch and pray with knowledge.
Sovereigns who were able to conceal, misrepresent or understate, their health status in the past did so before Twitter. Now, it’s all out there in 140 characters or less.
May, too, would have hidden her health status, if she could. But her courage, honesty and love of country compelled her to do otherwise. If she could visit Buhari, she might just tell him that this a fantastically conducive moment to level with the country he desperately loves.
Ishiekwene is the MD/Editor-In-Chief of The Interview magazine and board member of the Paris-based Global Editor’s Network.

Police arrest fake Naval Captain in Cross River


The Police command in Cross River State on Friday said it had arrested one, Jeremiah Ogar, 31, for being in possession of a naval cap and impersonating as a Navy Captain.
The Commissioner of Police, Mr. Hafiz Inuwa, who presented the suspect to newsmen on Friday in Calabar, said that Ogar was arrested on April 26 at Utukwang village in Obudu Local Government Area.
Inuwa said the suspect had been using fake status of a Navy Captain to defraud and intimidate unsuspecting members of the public in the area.
“In our efforts to rid the state of heinous crimes and criminal activities, men of the operatives attached to Obudu Division of the Nigeria Police on April 26 arrested one fake Navy Captain, Jeremiah Ogar, aged 31.
“The suspect was arrested with a navy cap and he was parading himself as a navy Captain and using same to defraud and intimidate unsuspecting members of the public.
“Investigation is ongoing to ascertain the owner of the said cap and how he came about it.
“We remain committed in our efforts to rid the state of all criminal activities,’’ the Commissioner assured.
Ogar, a commercial motorcycle rider, told the News Agency of Nigeria that he bought the cap in the market alongside nine of his friends.
“I bought the cap in the market because I fell in love with the design. We were about ten of us that bought the cap in the market.
“I have not been using the cap to terrorise, intimidate or defraud anybody in this community. I am shocked why the police arrested me,’’ he said.