Thursday, 3 September 2020

9-year-old killed as soldier opens fire around Shehu of Borno’s palace

A soldier identified as Bukar Mustapha Limanti of the Operation Lafiya Dole, has reportedly killed a nine-year-old boy in Maiduguri, Borno state.

TheCable gathered that the victim was killed after Limanti opened fire around the palace of the shehu of Borno in Shehuri north local government area (LGA) of the state on Tuesday.

Two other children reportedly sustained gunshot injuries.

A source who witnessed the incident said the private, who was known for his reckless shootings in the area, opened fire on the three children resulting in the death of the nine-year-old identified as Abdu Tijjani.

He said the two children who sustained injuries were taken to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) unit of the Borno state specialist hospital in Maiduguri for treatment, while the culprit fled the scene.

“The recent incident of reckless shooting may not be unconnected to the murder of the innocent man,” the source said.

“Bukar Mustapha Limanti is the son of the driver of the current chief imam of Borno state and he is serving at Chabbal IDP camp, along Maiduguri-Gubio road.

“He goes every morning to his duty post but comes back to town at night where he terrorises innocent people during the night with an AK-47.

“Two weeks ago, he shot a dog and a goat at Shehuri. This forced Digima Zubairu, the ward head of Shehuri north, to warn him, but he refused to listen and continued with the reckless shooting unabated.”

An unnamed source at the Maiduguri specialist hospital said the two victims who were badly hit were recovering.

The source added that a similar incident occurred two months ago, when an unidentified soldier shot a deaf man selling kolanuts in the same area.

- THECABLE


Premier League terminates China broadcast contract

 

The Premier League on Thursday said it has cancelled its contract with Chinese broadcasters PPLive Sports International after just one season.

The broadcasters, part of retail group Suning, paid around 700 million dollars for three years of English Premier League (EPL) streaming rights from the 2019/2020 season.

“The Premier League confirms that it has today (Thursday) terminated its agreements for Premier League coverage in China with its licensee in that territory.

“The Premier League will not be commenting further on the matter at this stage,” the league said in a statement.

It had been reported last month that the Chinese broadcasters had withheld payments due to the league in March.

In a statement posted on their official company Weibo account, PPLive Sports International said that it had held negotiations over the price of the rights with the league.

“COVID-19 has brought many challenges, and it’s especially obvious during broadcasting rights negotiations,” the statement said.

“After rounds of meetings, PPLive Sports and the Premier League have a disagreement on the price of broadcasting rights. We regret we couldn’t have an agreement with the Premier League.

“The direction of PPLive Sports’ strategic development will not change. Broadcasting rights strategy adjustment is based on objective reality and strategic thinking.

“PPLive Sports will continue to dedicate itself to providing high-quality services to fans, copyright holders and partners.”

The deal with PPLive Sports International was struck during the peak of Chinese interest in international football and marked a huge increase in revenue on the previous deal.

Beijing-based Super Sports Media was the previous rights-holder in China.

Local media reports have suggested they paid more than 1 billion yuan (145.13 million dollars) for a six-year deal until the end of the 2018/2019 season.

The ending of the PPLive Sports International deal is a further loss of income for Premier League clubs following the coronavirus outbreak, which forced a stoppage in play lasting several months.

The League resumed games in June and July without fans.

- REUTER/NAN

Man City takes fresh stance on Messi’s transfer from Barcelona

 

Manchester City will ‘try until the end’ to sign Lionel Messi, according to Guillem Balague.

Messi’s father, Jorge, met with senior officials of the LaLiga club on Monday.

However, both parties failed to reach an agreement over the 33-year-old’s exit, which means he remains a part of Ronald Koeman’s squad.

Balague believes City will continue to monitor the situation unless Messi commits his future elsewhere.

The Premier League has already made it clear they will hand over if there is eventually a legal battle.

City will also not be able to afford a fee of more than €100m, with Messi expected to demand a mammoth salary.

The six-time Ballon d’Or winner is attempting to activate an expired clause in his contract and wants the expiration date adjusted because of the Coronavirus pandemic.

- DAILY POST

OPL 245: Groups ask FG to protect Nigerian whistleblower sacked by Dutch embassy

 Image result for OPL 245: Groups ask FG to protect Nigerian whistleblower sacked by Dutch embassy

Some organisations, including the Human and Environmental Development Agenda (HEDA), have asked the federal government to intervene in the sack of a whistleblower by the embassy of Netherlands in Nigeria.

The Dutch ministry of foreign affairs reportedly fired the worker, a Nigerian, after she revealed relevant information expected to aid local and international investigation into the controversial acquisition of OPL 245 oil field involving Shell and Eni oil companies.

She was said to have blown the whistle on Robert Petri, the then Dutch ambassador to Nigeria, for allegedly leaking confidential information to Shell senior officials.

In a petition to Geoffrey Onyeama, minister of foreign affairs, on Thursday, Olarewaju Suraj, chairman of HEDA, asked Nigeria authorities to provide the necessary shield for the sacked worker who lost her job while defending her country’s sovereignty.

“You have the responsibility to take practical actions to protect a Nigerian citizen who was sacked for providing relevant information on corruption and the sovereign wealth of the Nigerian people,” Suraj said.

“We urge you to strongly consider suspending the Memorandum of Understanding on Bilateral Consultations between Nigeria and the Netherlands signed in 2018 and the 2019 Agreements signed during the Dutch Prime Minister’s visit to Abuja in 2019.

“This dutiful and patriotic Nigerian was sacked by the Dutch embassy for performing her civic duty. It is unfortunate that she has been left to carry her cross, all alone.

“The Dutch parliament is on record to have questioned the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the roles of Ambassador Petri on this, reflecting the concerns of MPs about the ramifications of his actions for the investigations into corruption by Shell and the potential international diplomatic repercussions of his breach of confidence.

“Indeed, her record of employment was unblemished. Her evaluations were always very good and, immediately before she was sacked, her contract had been extended for seven years.”

The groups said as a whistleblower, she should have been furnished with every protection but that instead she has been put through the mill by her former employer, the Dutch ministry of foreign affairs and “not only losing her livelihood but also undergoing the stress of court proceedings to obtain justice and redress whereas the rule of law and the fight against corruption depends critically on whistleblowers.”

- THECABLE

Nationwide curfew now from 12 midnight to 4am, says PTF

 


The nationwide curfew from 10pm till 4am has been adjusted to 12 midnight till 4am.

Sani Aliyu, national coordinator of the presidential task force (PTF) on COVID-19, announced the adjustment at a media briefing on Thursday.

He added that persons on essential services are exempted from the curfew hours.

“We are modifying the curfew to commence from 12 midnight to 4am nationwide, effective from 12:00 hours tonight,” Aliyu said.

“This does not apply to people on essential services and international travellers that might be returning from abroad.

“In terms of other aspects of general movement, no formal restriction will be applied within the country but the risk remains there. For citizens in particular vulnerability groups, the elderly, those with underlying medical illnesses are strongly advised to continue keeping away from mass gatherings and general public and staying at home.

“We will be engaging closely with state governments with regards to the issue of compliance, particularly with face masks because we remain quite concerned about the low level of compliance with this simple intervention measure that we know is quite effective.”

President Muhammadu Buhari had approved a nationwide curfew from 8pm to 6am on May 4, as part of measures to check the spread of COVID-19.

It was later adjusted from 10pm to 4am.

- THECABLE

Electricity tariff, food and petrol price hike – who will bankroll Nigerians?

 The Buhari administration has ruptured the ceiling of liberties it enjoys. Like King Solomon in his last uneventful years, the government has compounded the yoke of the people with the rocketing of the prices of essential commodities. It appears the administration has lost its sensory organ and has become insentient to the ‘’wailing’’ of citizens. And like the Israelites in the twilight of a failing Solomon rule, Nigerians are seeking another ‘’messiah’’.

Just five years ago, President Muhammadu Buhari made overtures of blunting the economic perils Nigerians endure. He seduced citizens with the promise of humbling the dollar and arresting the price of petrol. Buhari once famously said: “Who is subsidising who?’’ This was in reaction to the fuel subsidy controversy and the intransigent price of petrol.

Initially, the president was very unequivocal about retaining the price of petrol. On different occasions, he insisted that the price of the product will not be increased to attenuate citizens’ burden. Perhaps, he did not understand the economics of the oil industry or he was just making political statements. Also, it could be that his genuine intentions do not dovetail with the realities of the oil market – this rests solely on ignorance.

Nigerians took to the streets in January 2012 when the Jonathan administration announced a hiked petrol price. The mass action wore on for weeks. Some of the appointees of the Buhari government were the dramatis personae of that protest. The Buhari campaign seized the citizen angst and deployed it for political advantage in 2015. There were posters of Buhari promising to slice the price of petrol to N87 from N97. Today, the price of the product is about N160 per litre in the retail market.

Really, I submit to allowing market forces govern the price of commodities – in deference to the principles of a market economy. I also believe that the fuel subsidy regime deserved to be couped and banished. It was an egregiously corrupt system. However, my grudge against the current administration and I think that of many Nigerians as well is its insincerity. The government was never honest about its intentions; all its promises were just a gambit. And it has reversed itself in plethora of pledges and aborted its contract with citizens.

Also, these are perilous times for Nigerians. Citizens have been negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Unemployment rate is at its highest – 27.1 percent — and businesses are shutting down and furloughing workers. Who will bankroll Nigerians? It is a contradiction, that while the prices of commodities soar, there is no form of safety net for citizens. Yes, while we allow market forces to play, it is the duty of the government to protect citizens from the crushing effects of this free-for-all – as it is the case in other market economies.

But instead of frontally addressing the economic fallout of the pandemic, the government busied itself with programmes such as — feeding school children at the waning of the lockdown – in which over N500 million was wolfed down. Let us even assume that the children were even fed, have their hunger pangs ceased? Were they given the bread of life? This is simply deodorising a problem instead of surgically attacking it. Lack of access to jobs, education, and growth opportunities foregrounds poverty and hunger.

And while the government was administering the “COVID-19 lottery”, its agencies were going after Nigerian businesses which ordinarily should be protected from the perils of the pandemic. NIPOST announced a new licensing regime for the post and delivery sector, mandating businesses to renew their licence with N20 million. The agency backed down after an outcry by citizens, but this does not obviate the general insensitivity of the government.

A thinking government will identify real businesses (especially SMEs) afflicted by the pandemic and intervene seminally; not this conjuring by the ministry of humanitarian affairs. It is even more complex when the government cannot aggregate the data of businesses needing a lifeline in the country. The economic interventions by other governments in countries in the throes of similar health crisis have been heavily on SMEs.

But instead of protecting businesses, the government is over-burdening them with taxes and tariffs in the heat of a meltdown effectuated by COVID-19. Nigerians need a stimulus not asphyxiation. What has the administration done for Nigerians and their businesses this period? This is the reason for the pushback and outrage over the electricity tariff and petrol price hike. To Nigerians, the government would rather tax than help them through a rough patch.

Really, it appears the response of the government to the concerns of citizens is tax and tariffs. Even if the price hikes are natural, the question still is, what is the government doing to protect Nigerians, especially the poor? I believe Nigerians will pay whatever tax or price there is to pay, if there is an enabling system for their business to thrive and opportunities for jobs and growth.

The concomitant effect of the petrol price hike is the ballooning of the price of foodstuff and other essentials. This is why Nigerians are wailing. If there was a means to afford an adjustment in their lifestyles or living conditions, they would not be railing against it. No job, no business and no medium of survival. How do you extract a toll from a broke man? He can only pay with his blood – and that is by a revolt.

The Buhari administration has failed to “bankroll’’ Nigerians where it matters. Instead of spreading prosperity, it is promoting and perpetuating poverty. The administration will remain an asymptote of hypocrisy and deception long after it is gone.

-Fredrick Nwabufo is a writer and journalist


DAROCHA !! Wike builds, hands over 24 duplexes to Judges in Rivers State

 

Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike has handed over some finished blocks of duplexes to accommodate Judges in the state.

Governor Wike also announced that N150 million has also been handed to Judges who opted for cash payments to build their own houses.

The Governor made the announcement during the commissioning of the judges’ apartment in GRA, Port Harcourt.

He said the building is in fulfilment of the promise made by his administration in 2015, in a move that is necessary to improve on the living conditions of the judges who contribute to the dispensation of justice in the country.

“The Rivers State government now bears full responsibility to provide befitting accommodation for all Judicial officers of Rivers state origin beyond your service years for life.

“Judges have a choice to receive a properly built house from the state government or opt for cash payments to build or buy their houses by themselves.

“We are putting practical effect on this promise to commission these 24 duplexes.

“The state government spent the sum of six billion naira to build, furnish and landscape this estate.

“Similarly, 23 of the Judges who opted for cash payment have received the approved sum of N150 million each to build and buy their own house,” the Governor said.

The highlight of the event was the commissioning of the Judges Quarters by the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Tanko Muhammad.

The exercise was carried out in Port Harcourt by a justice of the Supreme Court, Justice Mary Odili who represented the CJN.

Speaking during the commissioning of the quarters, Justice Odili thanked Governor Nyesom Wike for building the edifice.

The Rivers Judiciary quarters is named after the late Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Chinwe Aguma, the former Commissioner for Justice and Attorney-General of Rivers State.

- DAILY POST