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Afe Babalola heads panel on Ekiti airport

Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi has inaugurated a nine-man committee, chaired by the legal luminary, Aare Afe Babalola (SAN), to examine the possibility of establishing an airport in the state.

He said his administration is committed to the transport sector as a key area in the state’s development.

The governor said his administration has invested heavily in road construction and rehabilitation in the 16 local government areas to drive home its commitment to the development of the transport sector.

Dr. Fayemi said the proposed airport would bring Ekiti State into the limelight with its emerging economy and attract investors as well as tourists, who have flair for comfort.

He noted that though the establishment of an airport would require a lot of money, the state government, through a Public Private Partnership (PPP) arrangement, would accomplish the task.

The governor said the airport has become necessary as the Federal Government is establishing an Export Conditioning Centre and a silo in the state while the Ikogosi Resort would also attract many visitors and tourists.

A statement by the Chief Press Secretary to the governor, Olayinka Oyebode, listed the terms of reference of the committee as: examining the viability and feasibility of an airport in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, and proposing a practical implementation roadmap for same.

Fayemi was optimistic that when the Ikogosi Resort becomes functional, the proposed airport would market it. A South African hotel management group has agreed to manage the resort for the government.

Babalola described the inauguration as “historic in the history of Ekiti State”.

He noted that the project is dear to members of the committee.

The eminent lawyer tied the lack of industries in the state and the failure of the take-off of the Ikogosi Resort to the absence of an airport.

“There is an urgent need for meaningful industrial development in Ekiti by involving foreign developers from China, Europe, Japan, the Middle East and America. Any foreigner who comes to Ekiti with the intention of establishing an industry and who comes through Lagos by road to Ado-Ekiti or from Abuja by road, otherwise called the death traps, would never come back to Ekiti,” he said.

Other members of the committee are: Sir Remi Omotoso, Afolabi Esan, Segun Ologunleko, Femi Tolani, Kayode Jegede, Babajide Arowosafe, Jide Adeniji and Capt. Bolaji Agbelusi.

-The Nation

Hoodlums waylay Amosun’s convoy

By DAUD OLATUNJI
ABEOKUTA—Ogun State Governor Ibikunle  Amosun was Monday  evening pelted with stones at Station Road Garage in Ijebu-Igbo, Ijebu North  Local Government  Area of the state.

Pandemonium broke out  shortly after  the  governor  concluded   his tour of the local government area when  his   convoy    was waylaid and the governor was allegedly  pelted    with  stones    by  hoodlums  who were reportedly not happy with his style of governance.

Vanguard checks  revealed that security operatives attached to  the governor  shot sporadically into the air  to  resist  the hoodlums before the governor allegedly  alighted and trekked  few metres  in the direction of the  attackers.

The  security operatives and  men of the State Security Service were said to have been  able to bring the situation under control.

Neither the governor nor any member of the entourage was injured in the attack.

Confirming the incident, the Police Public Relations Officer in Ogun State, Mr. Muyiwa Adejobi,  said no fewer than 14 suspects have been arrested.

According to him, ”We condemn the incident in its totality. We have arrested 14 of them and  they are at the State Criminal Investigation Department.  We are still investigating.”

Aregbesola lists gains of hard work

OSOGBO— Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State, yesterday, admonished the state’s workforce over being diligent at work as thousands of workers gathered to celebrate the International Workers’ Day.

A statement by the  Director, Bureau of Communications & Strategy, Mr Semiu Okanlawon, quoted the governor as saying;  “May Day is not just to commemorate workers’ struggle for emancipation, it is also to admonish and encourage us to take our work seriously; to value our work regardless of our place in the work hierarchy.

”We must realise that, through our work, we are contributing our quota to the overall development and progress of our society.”

This was even as the governor said contrary to reports in a section of the media that security agents turned back the state’s delegation to this year’s workers’ celebration in Cuba, the delegation is now in Cuba taking the advantage of the exposure to the South American country.

It was an event where the leadership of the workers in the state also commended the Aregbesola administration for its worker-friendly posture.

Aregbesola, whose entry electrified the Technical College, Osogbo, venue of the May Day celebration, waved to workers energetically as shouts of admiration rent the air when workers burst into various songs.

Reminding workers of the virtue in the dignity of labour, Aregbesola said regardless of the place of a worker in the hierarchy, he must give his very best to his duty, saying that work is the only antidote against poverty.

Debunking the insinuation that members of the state’s delegation to Cuba were turned back, Aregbesola said: “Osun State’s representatives are now in Havana celebrating with the Cubans contrary to lies being told by a section of the media.”

Chairman of Trade Union Congress, Mr. Francis Oladele, commended the governor for what he described as “his welfarist programmes.”

He said: “In the last two years of this administration, workers in the state have benefitted so much from the welfare programmes of the governor. I wish, on behalf of the TUC and NLC, to commend the governor for his administration’s welfare programmes.”

Chairman of the state council of the Nigeria Labour Congress, Mr. Saka Adesiyan, said the May Day called serious reflection given the spate of insecurity in the country arising from the activities of terrorists; harsh economic conditions arising from fuel price increase and a host of other difficulties.

#Nigeria : How “religion, land and population” under-develops the North By Muhammad Jameel Yusha’u

Muhammad Jameel Yusha’u

Exploitation of religion has become the norm, religious leaders are happy to manipulate their followers to earn government favour or even extort the congregation to satisfy their personal needs

 

The title of this piece is not mine. It is the product of a discussion in Boston, United States when, by coincidence, I met a former Nigerian military General on March 11, 2012 as I visited my friends in the city. As usual with every meeting of Nigerians, nothing attracts attention more than the affairs of our country. While we were having this conversation, this military General remained quiet. However after about two hours, he finally intervened in our discussion. He said as youths you have to think about the future of Nigeria , and for those of you from the north three things stand out and he mentioned “religion, land and population”.

According to him, in the north we have the largest population in Nigeria , we have the most fertile land that can almost feed Africa , yet we still live in poverty, and our population is becoming a problem to us because we refuse to turn it into an asset for economic development. Religion is no longer taught by the scholars who have a versatile knowledge; rather, to both Muslims and Christians, becoming an Imam and a Pastor is so easy that people can just develop an army of followers even if they don’t have sufficient knowledge to guide the people. This actually reminded me of a discussion I heard recently with one of the leading Islamic Scholars in Nigeria who said that in Ramadan, with just little understanding of the Arabic language, without a deep understanding of the expertise needed to provide exegesis of the Qur’an, people just start giving Tafseer (interpretation of the Qur’an) in various Mosques. Similarly a teacher of mine once expressed concern on how some of his former students abandoned their studies and decided to become Pastors. I hope in the nearest future this General will find time to write in detail what he meant by his thesis of ‘religion, land and population’ as I believe he is more than intellectually equipped to do so.

However this piece is a minor contribution on what in my opinion should constitute why we should think critically on how to utilize religion which defines our identity, land which can sustain the economy and population which should turn the two around.  A review of the economic development of China in the last thirty years suggests that the vision of its leaders to utilize their population and land to boost agriculture led to industrialization and urbanization, and today China is the second largest economy in the world, and in the nearest future it will overtake the United States as the strongest economy in the world to be followed by India, another country where population has become an asset rather than a burden, despite the challenges it is facing. You only need to look at the fields of medicine and information technology to know how India utilized its population to become a source of strength, not for India alone, but the entire world.

How did the population of northern Nigeria become a burden, religion mismanaged, and land under utilized? Possibly, the answers could be found in five key issues; colonial legacy, the curse of oil, lack of respect for the dignity of labour, exploitation of religion and the selfishness of northern elites.

Since the conquest of northern Nigeria by Frederick Lugard and the colonial policies that followed in the region, northern Nigeria has not recovered. Muslims in particular were the heavy casualties of this conquest as expertise in religion and knowledge of other fields of knowledge studied in Arabic or ajami (writing in local language using Arabic letters) was no longer considered a skill that provides employment. The ajami script was substituted with roman script thereby rendering the largest segment of the population illiterate as the knowledge they acquired in Arabic doesn’t provide employment except for few individuals whose services are required to serve as judges, school teachers etc. This was further complicated by the perception of the people in the region that Western education is meant for proselytisation rather than economic development. The effect of this is still being felt.

While the effect of this was still biting, the discovery of oil did not help the population of northern Nigeria as the land used for agricultural production, which was sustaining the region and contributing to the federal government was abandoned. The same population that has been robbed of its intellectual capacity has now lost its economic strength because its population decided to engage in rural-urban migration in search of easy money. Neglecting agriculture is not exclusive to northern Nigeria ; it’s the problem of the entire country. The example of United Arab Emirates will be relevant here. When oil was discovered the leaders of the country came together and assembled their intellectuals to advise them on what to do with it. They were advised that they have two potentials, the Sun and the Sea; what that meant is they have two great assets that can be used for trade and tourism, and the oil money was used to develop these two sectors. Today UAE can survive without oil. Think of northern Nigeria , how can the population of the region be transformed into what India and China have done with their people, and for the UAE parable what can the region do with the Sun and  its abundant land? Perhaps when there is 100 per cent resource control, the region will sit up. And I am not joking, I heard a deputy governor from the Niger-Delta region talking about it at a business summit in London the other day.

Lack of respect for the dignity of labour is a major issue that every reasonable person in northern Nigeria should be concerned about. People are happy to sit for ages under the shade of a tree gossiping for hours and dreaming to become millionaires, yet they are happy to laugh at a neighbour who used his energy in manual labour to earn a living. A university graduate is happy to sleep at home waiting for the job that suits his ego while his friend from the South has saved part of his NYSC allowance and has already started transporting food items produced in the same north to his home town without waiting for anybody to employ him.

Exploitation of religion has become the norm, religious leaders are happy to manipulate their followers to earn government favour or in extreme circumstances even extort the congregation to satisfy their personal needs. So why should the average person not acquire the basic literacy to become an Imam or a Pastor?  And finally, our leaders have to remember that the children of the poor are also human beings who deserve a decent life. If they fail to uplift their condition somebody will recruit them to make life unbearable for everyone.

 

Courtesy – Premium Times

The Fate of Azazi By Aliyu U. Tilde

The fate of Azazi is on the balance. The ruling PDP is turning the heat on the president to do something with the NSA

The indictment of the ruling party in Nigeria (PDP) by the National Security Adviser (NSA), General Andrew O. Azazi, was the misfortune President Jonathan least expected when he woke up from his bed last Friday, 27 April 2012.

The statement must be causing him enormous pain. It has placed him in a predicament, with the party on one hand requesting for the head of Azazi and his kinsmen on the other hand asking for his pardon. To understand the predicament of the president, we need to recast how the two once stood together as comrades in their lifelong ambition of emancipating the Niger Delta.
A Nigeria Army Intelligence Corps (NAIC) inquiry into the gunrunning activities of Sunny Okah at the Kaduna and Jaji military depots when Azazi was the GOC 1 DIV led to the sacking of the latter as Chief of Defence Staff and his premature retirement from the army in 2009. Azazi, as the Chief of Defence Staff, in collaboration with Lt. Col. L.K. Are (then and now DG, SSS) and Maj. General Adekhegba (then DMI), did all he could to cover up the theft and protect its perpetrators, particularly Sunny Okah.
The sacking of Azazi was definitely part of “punitive measures …against prominent figures involved in the theft” which the NAIC report recommended. To be more specific, the report advised “government to sanction Gen Azazi appropriately.” (Full text of the NAIC report can be accessed at: http://saharareporters.com/sites/default/files/uploads/Azazi.pdf.
For my full commentary on the report, read: http://fridaydiscourse.blogspot.com/2010/11/discourse-310-nigeria-cannot-trust.html)
If Azazi was punitively punished for his failure to stop the theft from the depots under his control, the people who the report referred to as “senior politicians in this issue” escaped because investigation into their involvement was overtaken by events. But who were these “senior politicians”, anyway?
The committee found out that Governors James Ibori and Dipriye Alamiyeseigha were purchasing weapons stolen from I DIV and handing them over to Niger Delta militants. Jonathan, which the report shied away from mentioning because he was already the vice-president by the time it was submitted, cannot escape implication since the theft and purchases continued during his tenure as the Governor of Bayelsa state. Also, when the report was submitted, we must remember, James Ibori was the most powerful adviser to late President Yar’adua. Which politician could have been more senior?
Now, we need to know why the NAIC report found it imperative to recommend the investigation of these politicians. Come with me:
“At least the names of two senior politicians… have been mentioned in this investigation. There may be many more. These two politicians are mentioned as the financiers for the arms acquisition project. Certainly, they would not have provided large sums of money without knowing the source of the weapons. Simply put, a serious breach of security of this magnitude deliberately masterminded by the state governors. This gives a serious political dimension to the case.
“It is therefore important that care is taken identifying all possible political linkages to this case with a view to uncovering all the politicians behind this project. Politicians can aspire to any position in Nigeria. One wonders what would happen if Nigeria ends up with a president who does not believe in the entity of the Nigerian nation, and a record of involvement in cases like this. Identifying politicians with complicity in this or similar case will help in ensuring that they are blacklisted and prevented from vying for or taking higher offices because of the implications that could arise.”
Too late.
One of the biggest misfortunes of Nigeria today is that the above warning from the NAIC was not heeded to or “Baba go slow” could not act fast enough. One of those senior politicians, Jonathan, became the acting president barely two years after the report was submitted. What he did after assuming office speaks volumes of his complicity.
Who did Jonathan pick as National Security Adviser after General Aliyu Gusau resigned in 2010? He returned General Andrew O. Azazi!
Who did Jonathan and Azazi find most befitting to run the SSS? They retired Col. LKK Are!
Where is Sunny Okah, the chief gunrunner? He is in the villa assisting the President, especially in the prosecution of his brother who masterminded the October 1 bombings in Abuja.
To whom has Jonathan and Azazi contracted the security of our maritme domain? Niger Delta militant, Tampolo.
From the above, it could easily be discerned that the relationship between the President and his chief security adviser is long standing and strong. How then could the adviser turn around now and blame the ruling party and the President for escalating violence in the country? Let us try and understand what Azazi said. His arrow was direct in its target:
“The issue of violence did not increase in Nigeria until when there was a declaration by the current president that he was going to contest. PDP got it wrong from the beginning. The party started by saying Mr. A can rule, and Mr. B cannot rule, according to PDP conventions, rules and regulations and not according to the constitution. Is it possible that somebody was thinking only Mr. A could win, and if he did not win, he could cause a problem in the society?”
In the above statements, which I quoted from nationalmirroronline.net, there is sufficient understanding on the motives of the security chief: Zoning is the culprit. Power was expected to reside in the North for two terms. But Jonathan, coming from the South, jettisoned that rule and declared his intention to contest. This, according to Azazi, is what increased violence to its present state in Nigeria.
Again, Azazi was not expecting the Northerners that lost to Jonathan – namely, Atiku Abubakar, Generals Ibrahim Babangida and Aliyu Mohammed Gusau – to let the contravention go Scot free. They must cause “problems”. Three things can be gathered from this:
One, had PDP not adopted zoning as a power-sharing principle, according to Azazi, the level of violence would not have reached this unmanageable level.
Two, had the President restrained himself from vying from contesting in 2011, the increase in violence would have been averted, still. Or had Buhari – the northern candidate – won, that too would have silenced the guns of the northerners.
Finally, “the (security) problem in the society”, according to Azazi, is caused by northerners who lost to Jonathan in the PDP, or put in another way, in reaction to Jonathan’s intransigence, Atiku, IBB and Gusau, in reaction, are using Boko Haram to get at Jonathan.
Nigerians are divided on the Azazi’s statement and person. The PDP and its supporters have made statements that portray the security chief as an ingrate, or one that bites the finger that fed him. PDP, they argue, rehabilitated him when it provided the platform on which he is currently serving as the NSA.
The opposition, this time, is raising its thumb for Azazi. He provided it with a powerful ballistic for deployment against the ruling party. And attacking they did, from all fronts. The ACN, CNPP, CPC, etc., are all over the waves enjoying their vindication.
The president must have felt embarrassed by Azazi’s statement though he tried typically to cover him initially by finding excuses in semantics. Azazi, claimed the President, might have had an idea but which he could not express clearly. He referred journalist to Azazi for clarification. That clarification, however, is not forthcoming, so far.
But honestly, could Azazi absolve himself of Jonathan’s violation of the PDP zoning principle? Not at all, in my opinion. He was in the best position, as the NSA, to advise the president on the security implication of his contest, if that is what he believed then. As far as I can recall, nobody reported that he did so then. Neither did he follow his conviction and support any northern candidate.
But granted that he advised the President accordingly, why did he continue as the NSA and even travel to Washington to lure the Americans into believing that Nigeria is under a serious terrorist siege beyond its capacity to contain? Happily, the Americans did not buy the dummy. They said, “Mumu. It is not terrorism. It is poverty. Simple.”
The fate of Azazi is on the balance. The ruling PDP is turning the heat on the president to do something with the NSA. It wants him dismissed. Of course, does the president have a third option, apart from sacking him or keeping him? The choice would not be as easy as Ringim’s. In this situation, the President will be torn among three things: fear, parochial strategy, and his not so much celebrated nerves.
If the President would listen to Niger Delta elders and militants whom he dreads so much, who have turned him into a hostage and who are milking the Nigerian cow dry with the support of Azazi, then he will move to protect the NSA and absolve him of any blame. Let PDP go to hell, he will say. This one has the strongest possibility.

Again, if the President would look at the strategic role of NSA Azazi in the Niger Delta Republic project or his importance to Jonathan 2015 presidency, he will be more inclined to pardon the NSA than to “Ring” him. This option has a good probability.

If, however, he has the mental capacity to understand that the statement is the gross contempt for the President and the ruling party ever uttered by a beneficiary of PDP, then his nerves, if he has any, are likely to persuade him to bid his old comrade farewell. In that case, the Boko Haram missile that hit Ringim would have returned to hit Azazi. The security chief would have nobody to blame but his tongue, which betrayed him under the intense heat of Boko Haram. This one has a weak likelihood.

So, the chances, in my assessment, are strong two against a weak one. Whichever choice the president takes, Nigeria will remain the same – corrupt and insecure.

Source- The Premium Times Nigeria.

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‘How Boko Haram attacks have changed the Maiduguri where I grew up’

Security officials search a vehicle along the Gombe-Maiduguri (archive shot)ri expressway in Nigeria Maiduguri residents complain that soldiers do not treat them well

Jimeh Saleh from BBC Hausa returns to his home town of Maiduguri in the far north-east of Nigeria for the first time in almost a year – to find the city is a mere shell of its once lively self, following a spate of deadly attacks by the Boko Haram Islamist group.

As dusk falls in Maiduguri, and the bright afternoon sun gradually turns orange and slowly dips in the evening sky, a muezzin leads the call to pray.

His spirited voice echoes from a pair of loud speakers on a minaret atop one of the oldest mosques in town.

The faithful observe the evening Maghreb prayer – and then have to go straight on to the Isha, the late evening prayer, because Maiduguri has to live under a strict 19:00-06:00 curfew.

Today’s quiet nights – the uncertainty and the insecurity – are a far cry from the Maiduguri I grew up in.

Firmly padlocked houses

My home town, in the far north-east of Nigeria, is also the stronghold the country’s radical Islamist group, Boko Haram.

“We live in constant fear, and you are the only journalist I can talk to, because I know you personally”

And in the past few months, the group has carried out a number of violent and devastating attacks in many parts of Nigeria – including drive-by shootings and bombings in Maiduguri, even the central mosque in December.

Back from London in Maiduguri for the first time in almost a year, the town is as dusty as I left it – but it appears poorer – and so do its industrious and boisterous people.

No more do buses, taxis, beggars, vendors and shop keepers hustle for business late into the night.

Families are no longer able to afford three meals a day.

Property speculators are complaining that business is down, and some are suffering losses.

“Closing shops at 7pm is just like working half-day,” said an economist with the University of Maiduguri who, like most people I spoke to, asked to remain anonymous.

“The economy here is driven by the informal sector which has no closing hours,” he added.

Burnt out car in Maiduguri Boko Haram attacks have left Maiduguri a shell of its former self

“We live in constant fear,” one resident told me, ”and you are the only journalist I can talk to, because I know you personally, but please do not reveal my name.”

Many people fled Maiduguri months ago in the wake of the killings, leaving behind firmly padlocked houses.

Some of the town’s wealthy businessmen have relocated their enterprises to other states.

Soldiers accused

When bombs went off on Christmas Day 2011 in churches in Abuja and Jos killing at least 40 people, Maiduguri was placed under a state of emergency because of the many Boko Haram members who are based there.

Since then, gun-toting soldiers have set up countless checkpoints and taken up positions outside churches, police stations and other high-profile locations that have previously been Boko Haram’s targets.

The soldiers are there to protect the residents of Maiduguri – but people seem united in their condemnation of the curfew and the militarisation of the streets.

They accuse the soldiers of torture and other human rights violations.

Boko Haram squads target soldiers and security agents with explosives, either in their fortified positions or in their patrol vehicles.

After an attack, the soldiers go into neighbouring houses, and are said to indiscriminately beat up the male occupants.

The army denies this is happening – nevertheless, it is a recurring cry that is hard to ignore.

Shoppers’ paradise

Maiduguri’s age-old commercial centre used to be on Babban Layi, which simply means “a wide street”.

It used to be a shoppers’ paradise for textile, electronics, clothing, and household items.

Lebanese and Chadian merchants jostled alongside low-tech con men and pickpockets – all hoping to get a slice of the bulging sacks of money freely freighted around on wheelbarrows.

“Many in town are resigned to their fate and have resorted to prayers to try to rediscover the virtues of peace and hospitality”

Overloaded trucks, known locally as giwa-giwa, transported goods from Babban Layi to neighbouring countries such as Chad and Cameroon, and even to distant places like Sudan and the Central African Republic.

But this once thriving regional trading hub is now almost empty – brought to a virtual standstill not least because the borders were closed as a result of the state of emergency.

For many months now, the labourers who load the trucks, the merchants, the truck drivers and many others have been “surviving by the grace of God”.

The authorities in Maiduguri remain hopeful that things will get better.

“We are not at all pleased by the state of insecurity in Maiduguri and very soon the situation will improve,” Borno state’s information commissioner, Inuwa Bwala, says.

The questions many Maiduguri residents want answered is: When will the borders reopen and when will the army leave the streets?

“Since the state of emergency the federal government has taken over security matters here and the announcement to close the borders was made from Abuja,” Mr Bwala said.

It is, however, not all a tale of gloom – despite the curfew and the explosions.

Among the lucky few are bicycle dealers and mechanics: There has been a boom in sales since the banning last year of motor bikes after a series of drive-by killings were committed by gunmen on the back of bikes.

Despite this glimmer of hope, the situation in Maiduguri seems pretty desperate.

There is a palpable sense of fear.

Many people are resigned to their fate and have resorted to prayer to try to rediscover the virtues of peace and hospitality – which, once upon a time, was the defining feature of my home town.

 

Boko Haram: Timeline of terror

Map locator
  • 2002: Founded
  • 2009: Hundreds killed when Maiduguri police stations stormed
  • 2009: Boko Haram leader Mohammed Yusuf captured by army, handed to police, later found dead
  • Sep 2010: Freed hundreds of prisoners from Maiduguri jail
  • 2010-2011: Dozens killed in Maiduguri shootings
  • June 2011: Police HQ bombed in Abuja
  • Aug 2011: UN HQ bombed in Abuja
  • Dec 2011: Multiple bomb attacks on Christmas Day kill dozens.

Source : BBC News

#Africa : ‘Counter coup’ gunfight in Mali’s capital Bamako

Troops in Mali who launched a coup in March have exchanged fire with the presidential guard in the capital Bamako, officials and witnesses say.

A junta spokesman said guardsmen loyal to ousted President Amadou Toumani Toure were trying to reverse the coup.

The junta later said the situation was back under control, amid reports that several people died in the gunfight.

While the junta has handed power to an interim government, it is still thought to wield considerable influence.

Message on TV

The gunfire followed an attempt by junta loyalists to arrest the former head of the presidential guard, journalist Martin Vogl in Bamako told the BBC.

He said clashes continued around the state broadcasting building and several other locations in the capital late into the night.

One eyewitness told the Reuters news agency that the streets were deserted. Electricity has been cut in several part of the city.

map

Members of the “Red Berets” presidential guards unit reportedly entered the broadcaster’s building, which has been controlled by pro-junta forces since the coup.

“These are elements of the presidential guard from the old regime and they’re trying to turn things around,” junta spokesman Bacary Mariko told the Reuters news agency.

He later said the airport in Bamako had come under attack from anti-coup forces, and that he was expecting an attack on a pro-coup base in Kati, north of Bamako, according to the Associated Press news agency.

But several hours later the junta aired a message on Mali’s TV, saying the airport, the state broadcasting building and the Kati base was under its control.

The 22 March coup, which ousted President Toure, was led by soldiers who accused Mr Toure of failing to combat an insurgency in the north.

Last week the leader of the coup, Cpt Amadou Sanago, rejected the decision of West African regional bloc Ecowas to send troops to the West African country.

Quit If You Can’t Lead, CAN Tells Jonathan

Dissatisfied with federal government’s style of handling the security challenge posed by the spate of bombings and killing of innocent citizens occasioned by the insurgencies of a terrorist gang, the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) yesterday pointedly told President Goodluck Jonathan to step aside if he couldn’t put a stop to the mindless killings in the country.

Specifically reacting to the attacks on Christian worshippers in Kano and Borno states, CAN said, “We are telling President Goodluck Jonathan, if he has not done anything to put an end to this madness, then, he should know that there is trouble in his hand.”

Meanwhile, Taraba State commissioner of police Mr. Maman Sule yesterday narrowly escaped death when a suicide bomber who laid ambush on the route to the commissioner’s office thrust an improvised explosive device (IED), at his convoy.

Although the commissioner escaped unhurt, many security operatives on his entourage were not spared: 11 persons lost their lives in the attack.

But speaking with journalists in Kaduna, the spokesman of the northern CAN, Elder Sunday Oibe, also accused northern traditional rulers of the mindless killings in the region.

He said: “We are telling the emirs, traditional rulers and the political chieftains in the north that they are behind these things and they must bring the perpetrators to book”

“To us, we feel that government is just playing games and politics with the church and the church is not going to take it anymore because anybody who kills is a murderer or arsonist.

“Why is the government becoming helpless to bring these people to book? Is the government telling us that a particular tribe or religion is superior to every other person in this country?

“We are feeling serious pains and disappointment at the entire system called Nigeria. It is highly condemnable in the strongest term because these are innocent students who were sent to school by their parents to acquire education.

“They went to worship their God only for some people to come and sniff lives out of them. It is highly condemnable, it is not just condemnable, but we will not sit down and fold our arms to accept this madness any more.

“This country belongs to all of us, and if truly it is one Nigeria, one indivisible country that has a government to protect lives and property, then, government must do something about it because it is the systematic approach of these murderers which tends to the fact that it is only Christians that are the major targets.

“They do it on Sundays and attack only places of worship owned by Christians. We have mosques scattered all over BUK, nobody has heard any attack on them. They said it is the issue of poverty, but they have not attacked any government infrastructure. If it is the issue of power, then, they should go and fight government. Why is it that it is Christians that they are fighting?

“The irony of this thing is that the people have carefully put a plan in place to eliminate Christians. Total annihilation of Christianity from the surface of this country – that is the target.

“And it seems that the government of this country led by Goodluck Jonathan is helplessly looking on, always telling us that security men are on top of the situation.

“We want to use this medium to tell the world that he has not stepped up to arrest and bring to book the people who carry out this heinous crime, who are behind these things. The country is on the verge of collapse, and no country has ever survived two wars.

“We had survived a civil war, but no country has survived a religious war. Let it be made known that Christians are not taught to retaliate, but Christians have been given the right to defend themselves, and we will do it with all manner of defence we know within ourselves.

“We cannot produce legitimate children, God-given children, beautiful children, sent to school, then people who have no value for life will continue to kill them.

“Christians cannot fold their arms anymore, and we are telling President Goodluck Jonathan if he has not done anything to put an end to this madness, then, he should know that there is trouble in his hand.”

Taraba Attack: I saw bombers force their way into my convoy — CP

A Red Cross information coordinator, M. Umar Waziri, who confirmed that 11 people died in the Taraba State commissioner of police convoy bomb attack, said: “We can confirm that 11 people were killed; 10 people died on the spot, while one person died at the Federal Medical Centre in Jalingo.’’

Waziri also disclosed that 20 others injured by the blast were taken to various medical centres in the city.

The Taraba State commissioner of police, however, told newsmen that the police only confirmed the death of three persons, saying that he escaped death by a whisker.

Explaining the circumstances that led to the attack, he said he was on his way to the office and the bombers struck just when he entered the premises of the state Ministry of Finance which was adjacent to the Taraba police headquarters.

The police boss, who said that investigation had begun towards apprehending the bombers, added:

“The explosives actually hit the official car I was riding in and shattered the windscreen and front bumpers but I escaped unhurt.”

Police sources in Taraba told LEADERSHIP that the bomb which exploded at the premises of the Taraba Ministry of Finance, at about 8.45am when workers were resuming for work after the weekend break, destroyed parts of the building and damaged valuable items.

Police sources said the bombers had the police commissioner as their target, as the explosive was thrown directly at his convoy. One of the explosives hit the rider leading the commissioner’s convoy.

The police headquarters in Taraba is 40 metres away from the main entrance into the finance ministry with the ministry’s premises forming part of the entrance into the building leading to the police commissioner’s office.

“The police commissioner usually has to go through the ministry of finance to enter his office. He was passing by that usual route when the explosives were thrown. So the police commissioner’s convoy was clearly the target,’’ a top police source who preferred anonymity said.

An eye-witness, Mr. Francis Dominic, who also confirmed the attack on the CP, told LEADERSHIP at the scene of the incident that “the suicide bomber, riding a JINCHENG motorcycle with registration number QB 928 LAU, forced his way into the commissioner’s convoy while trying to detonate the explosive device suspected to be a bomb.

“The outrider on the CP’s convoy who noticed how the suicide bomber was trying to force himself into the convoy used his power bike to displace him but, by then, the bomber had already released the explosive with intention to damage the commissioner’s car, but unfortunately, the bomb exploded before he could get to the commissioner’s car.”

Another witness to the bomb blast, Shehu Umar, who spoke with LEADERSHIP in Hausa language, said:

“We saw him as he kicked his bike from the other side of the road when he discovered that the commissioner’s siren was blaring, but we never knew he was that kind of person. All of us that used to stay here are used to seeing the commissioner passing, so we never expected anything new; only to discover a heavy explosion with noise from where the man was heading into the commissioner’s convoy.

“The explosion of the bomb wounded the outrider of the commissioner’s convoy, leaving his left leg broken and one of his eyes badly damaged while several others on the convoy were either killed or severely injured,” he said. A staff of the ministry, Nuhu Titus, was not lucky as he came out at about the time the CP’s convoy was arriving. While he was waiting for it to pass, the blast went off and he was crushed into the nearby drainage.

Meanwhile, the inspector-general of police, Mohammed Abubakar, who had a meeting with the vice president, Namadi Sambo, at the presidential villa yesterday refuted claims that the bomb attack that killed over 10 persons and left many civil servants in the Ministry of Finance building injured was targeted at the state commissioner of police.

Fielding questions from State House correspondents after the meeting with the vice president, the IGP said, “My CP was not the target. It was placed on the road and it exploded; nothing happened to the commissioner and we have made arrests.”

President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday condemned the bomb attack in Jalingo by terrorists, with an appeal to affected communities and Nigerians as a whole to report suspicious persons to security agencies.

Speaking through his special adviser on media and publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, the president once again reassured Nigerians and foreigners resident in the country that his administration was taking every necessary action to end the spate of terrorist atrocities in the country.

Abati said, “Noting, however, that success in the war against terrorism will be more speedily achieved with greater support and assistance from affected communities, President Jonathan calls on all patriotic Nigerians, once again, to promptly report all suspicious persons to national security agencies.

“Against the background of the recent upsurge in terrorist attacks, the latest of which occurred in Jalingo earlier today, President Jonathan urges Nigerians and foreigners living in the country not to be discouraged or deterred from going about their regular affairs by the persistence of the mindless bombings and gun attacks.

Attack on media, BUK are ploys to destroy nigeria — Jonathan

Similarly, President Jonathan said that last Thursday’s attacks on three newspaper houses and the Sunday attack on Bayero University Kano chaplaincy by suspected terrorists were indicative of the fact that the objective of the terrorist group was to destabilise the country by destroying its sensitive institutions.

He, however, implored Nigerians “not to succumb to despair over the persistence of the terrorist attacks, but to remain assured that the federal government is doing everything possible to ensure that Nigeria overcomes the scourge of mindless terrorism”.

Dr. Abati in another statement noted: “The president urges Nigerians to remain united in their condemnation and rejection of the terrorists, who have shown even more clearly by their latest attacks on the media and the academic community, that their objective is to destabilise the nation and its vital institutions.

“The president deeply regrets this utterly heinous descent to new depths of calumny by the perpetrators of the attack on one of the nation’s citadels of academic endeavour and its members.

“The president conveys his deepest sympathy and condolences to the families of members of the Bayero University community who lost their lives in the attack.”

US, JNI, ACF decry attacks

In a related development, the United States government has stated that Boko Haram and other terrorist groups in Africa were the major sources of instability and underdevelopment in the continent.

This was contained in the reports presented to the United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs by Ambassador Don Yamamoto, the principal deputy assistant secretary for African affairs, on Monday.

Apart from Boko Haram that was largely indicted in the testimony made by the United States official, al-Shabaab, Al-Qaeda (AQIM) and the The Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) were also said to be part of the reasons the African continent is not stable.

Also, the Jama’atu Nasril Islam (JNI) National Headquarters has expressed shock over the multiple bomb blasts on some media houses in Kaduna and Abuja, and the similar attacks in Yola, Gombe State University and Bayero University, Kano.

JNI however called for restraint on the part of the government, especially on the arrest of innocent people as a way of stemming the tide of insecurity in the country.

In a press release signed by the religious group’s public relations officer (PRO), Alhaji Umar Ahmad Zaria, which was made available to LEADERSHIP in Kaduna yesterday, it noted that human life is sacred and it must be treated as such by all, stressing that “these incidents call for sober reflection of our actions and inactions as a nation”.

It said JNI commiserated with the families of the bereaved and wished their loved ones the fortitude to bear the loss. “In the same vein, we wish all those who sustained injuries from the blast quick recovery and their respective families, the patience and perseverance in managing the patients.”

The JNI, which also called on Nigerians to be security-conscious, stated: “We call on the federal government not to handle with levity the issue of security upheaval the nation is passing through. It is now apparent that there is serious disconnect between security personnel and the citizenry on leading information, hence the need to bridge the gap so that trust and confidence will be restored.”

The Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), meanwhile, noted that the perpetrators of violence that killed innocent citizens in Bayero University, Kano should embrace constructive dialogue as the only viable path to peaceful coexistence and national security for collective good.

The Forum which condemned the attacks on Christian worshippers said: “The attacks on innocent people in places of worship in Bayero University is worrisome because it conveys some aimlessness on the part of the perpetrators, considering that those affected are not part of causes of any perceived grievances.”

A statement signed by the ACF’s spokesman, Anthony Sani, stated: “ACF submits that time for sheathing of the sword is long overdue and that whatever may be the nature of any perceived grievances, violence resulting in mindless killing of innocent people can never be the solution.

“This is because, however long any conflict may take, it would still be resolved at peace talks.

“ACF also condoles and commiserates with all those who lost their lives and properties and prays to God to provide them with the fortitude to endure what happened and in the hope that they will replace the losses many folds.”

Stop wasting human lives for political motives, Tambuwal warns

The speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, has asked perpetrators of bomb blast attacks in some states of the country, including that of Bayero University, Kano, and that which occurred in Taraba State to halt their activities, saying no innocent life must be wasted on the altar of political motives.

The speaker, who made the statement yesterday in a press release issued by his special adviser on media and public affairs, Mallam Imam Imam, was reacting to the twin bomb blasts that rocked Bayero University, Kano, and the Ministry of Finance building in Jalingo, Taraba State, on Sunday and Monday respectively.

The speaker equally urged the victims of the attacks and other Nigerians not to despair over the security challenges facing the nation, recalling that many countries of the world had at one time or the other faced various security challenges, but the important thing was that the collective determination of the people of such countries saw them through the dark periods.

“Nigeria is today experiencing its tough challenge. I am however confident that what we are facing will soon be a thing of the past. Our collective resolve as Nigerians who desire peace and stability will triumph over all dark forces in our country,” Tambuwal added.

While commiserating with the families of those who died or suffered injuries in the blasts, Speaker Tambuwal urged the security agencies to unmask those behind the blasts and bring them to justice.

Academics, students now endangered species — Don

A university don and professor of veterinary parasitology, Prof. Barineme Fakae, said yesterday that last weekend’s attack on a university campus which claimed about 17 lives, including those of two professors, was unnecessary.

Concluding that academics and their students were now endangered species, Prof. Fakae, who is the vice chancellor of Rivers State University of Science and Technology (RSUST), said that the university was a centre of knowledge that prepares people that will help the country. He therefore wondered why anybody or group would carry out such act of wickedness on a place that was expected to produce people of integrity and character.

“This type of incident is really unfortunate, unnecessary and uncalled for. If we now attack the centres where we are expecting people who can help the country, then himself it means our future is being threatened.

“Anybody who has respect for the future would not involve in this kind of act. When you attack and kill teachers, students, it is really unfortunate, I must say. And what it means for the university environment is that academics and students are engendered species,” the vice chancellor said.

Police defuse bomb at BUK as gunmen kill ward head

Anti Bomb squad of the Kano State Command of the Nigeria Police,  yesterday defused a bomb suspected to be planted closed to the mosque of the new site of the Bayero University, Kano (BUK).

The bomb, according to the police, was found inside a polythene bag at about 6pm and was left by the side of the mosque at the university.

“It remained few minutes for the bomb to explode when the specialists of the anti-bomb department successfully defused it,” the police said.

According to the police account, the bomb timing had 25 minutes left before explosion, but was defused successfully.

State Police spokesman, Musa Magaji Majiya (ASP) confirmed to LEADERSHIP that the planted bomb was successfully defused by the anti -bomb unit of the state police command. “Thank God, the bomb was diffused before it exploded,” Majiya said.

Meanwhile, the police have confirmed the killing of a Ward Head in Hotoro Quarters of Kano Municipality, yesterday night.

According to the police, the deceased, late Yusuf Ali, was killed by unknown gunmen at about 7.30 pm yesterday.

An eye witness said the gunmen came to the house of the deceased, identified him from among some people, and shot him.

His brother, Ado Umar confirmed the attack and said the matter had been reported to the police.

Spokesman of the police, ASP Magaji Musa Majiya confirmed the incident and said that investigation was ongoing.

Gunmen kill 3 in Yobe 

Gunmen yesterday killed three persons around T-Junction in Potiskum Local Government area of Yobe State.

A source told our state correspondent that the victims were  shot at about  8.30pm by the gunmen in their house at the Residence of Alhaji Shehu Degree around T- Junction area

Confirming the incident, the Acting Area Commander (AC) of the state police command, Nuradeen Sabo, said investigation had begun over the matter. He added that no arrest had been made, saying that  the remains  of the victims had been deposited  at the General Hospital,  Potiskum.

 

-Leadership

World’s biggest meat-eaters

Kings of the carnivores

Apr 30th 2012, 15:40 by The Economist online

Who eats most meat? Vegetarians should look away

THE world has a burgeoning appetite for meat. Fifty years ago global consumption was 70m tonnes. By 2007—the latest year for which comparable data are available—it had risen to 268m tonnes. In a similar vein, the amount of meat eaten by each person has leapt from around 22kg in 1961 to 40kg in 2007. Tastes have changed at the same time. Cow (beef and veal) was top of the menu in the early 1960s, accounting for 40% of meat consumption, but by 2007 its share had fallen to 23%. Pig is now the animal of choice, with around 99m tonnes consumed. Meanwhile advances in battery farming and health-related changes in Western diets have helped propel poultry from 12% to 31% of the global total. Although populous middle-income countries such as China are driving the worldwide demand for meat, it is mainly Western countries who still eat most per person. Luxembourgers, who top this chart, are second only to Argentinians in beef consumption. Austrians are the keenest pig-eaters, wolfing down 66kg every year—just more than Serbians, Spaniards and even neighbouring Germans. At the other end of the scale, cow-revering Indians eat only 2.6kg of meat each, the least of the 177 countries assessed. See the full data.

 

I held no meeting with Jonathan, says Tinubu By Kelvin Osa-Okunbor

Tinubu

•Calls for solution to insecurity

 

Former Lagos State Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu yesterday said he did not hold any meeting with President Goodluck Jonathan.

He said he was not even in town when the supposed meeting took place.

The frontline politician said there was no meeting between Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fasshola (SAN), the Oba of Lagos, Oba Rilwan Akiolu, and Jonathan.

Asiwaju Tinubu spoke against the backdrop of a report that the trio met in Lagos when the President visited last weekend.

He said he would meet Dr Jonathan, if their discussion would centre on proffering solutions to the lingering insecurity and other national challenges. But he insisted that this should be at the President’s request.

The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) National Leader said much as any of such meetings are called by the President without politicising issues, it would enable stakeholders in the Nigerian project to solve the nation’s problems.

Tinubu addressed reporters at the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Ikeja, Lagos, on his way to visit Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole on the Saturday road crash involving the governor’s convoy.

He was accompanied by ACN National Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande; former Ekiti State Governor Niyi Adebayo; and ACN National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed.

Tinubu said: “That report is not correct. To tell you categorically, I did not attend any meeting with the President in company of the Oba of Lagos. I wasn’t even aware that the President was coming to Lagos until after the visit of the Oba at night. So, there was no meeting between myself, the President and the Oba of Lagos. I am very sure that the governor did not attend any such meeting with the President.

“We have all been meeting on national issues. We have met several times. So, if the party leadership across board is invited to a meeting to solve the problems of the country, why not?

“This is a critical time when all hands must be on deck to help solve the security problems of the country. This is the time to get together to develop ideas. All necessary steps that can help the nation’s security should be less politicised. Advice should be solicited in good faith. If ideas are solicited in good faith, we must offer them. Those in authority should not reject the ideas outright. But these have to come through the political parties’ leadership.”

On Boko Haram and insecurity, the ACN leader said: “You have touched on a critical issue confronting the nation. It is reaching a phenomenal dimension that we all cannot afford to sleep with our eyes open or ignore the national security.

“The President, as the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, is the first person who probably should begin consultations with the people and must not politicise this problem.

“Since 1999, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has been ruling this country. It claims to have the wisdom and the apparatus, but each time it reacts to this question of national security, the tragedy confronting the country, it has not gone without blaming one political party or the other. That is passing the buck.

“Those in the PDP are the ones saying they are in government; they are in power. So, if they cannot solve the problem of security, why blame it on others?

“Now, there is a clear line and ideological difference between us. But Nigeria belongs to all of us. The best is the PDP-led Federal Government should do is to cry for help and, if they do, they will get it, instead of putting blames or categorising one party as one-man party. They are running around like headless chickens,” Asiwaju Tinubu added.

TheNation

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