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Kano Police: ‘We Recovered 18 Bombs from BUK’

By Ibrahim Shuaibu

“Kano State Police Command has disclosed that command’s bomb disposal unit recovered a number of improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and 14 other explosive canisters at the Bayero University, Kano premises which have been successfuly evacuated.

State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ibrahim Idris said that within the week, the command also discovered another bomb near the Faculty of Sociology at the same university.

Addressing reporters on Thursday, the police commissoner explained that ” the university authorities alerted us on suspicious packages at their premises, the anti bomb squad successfully defused three bomb at the university”.

Idris also met with the chief security officer of the university and other tertiary institutions inthe state to advise them to always be vigilant and to redouble their efforts in checkmating this new trend.

“The security officers attached to the institution have an important role to play by ensuring that all persons, carriages, vehicles and motorcycles entering the university are thoroughly searched,” he said.

The police commissioner also added that the command had in the past fortnight carried out raids at black spots and other identified criminal hideouts within the metropolis, arresting 98 persons in the process.

He said most of those arrested were in possession of dangerous weapons such as knives, cutlasses, sticks, dried leaves(suspected to be indian hemp), intoxicating substances, house breaking implements and other things.

The commissioner also called on the general public to be extra vigilant and report to the security agencies any suspicious person, vehicle or item for proper action, while assuring that security agencies are always ready to protect people and their properties.”

20120511-073754.jpg
State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ibrahim Idris

Source : Thisday Newspaper

Dozens killed in Damascus ‘suicide blasts’

“Twin suicide bombings killed at least 55 people and wounded nearly 400 in the Syrian capital Damascus, authorities said, in the deadliest attacks of the country’s 14-month uprising.

The government and the opposition traded blame, with Syria’s foreign ministry, in a letter to UN chief Ban Ki-moon hours after the attacks, saying they were the work of “terrorists” armed and funded by foreign organisations and media.

The blasts during morning rush hour left an apocalyptic scene of destruction and further put into question a UN-backed ceasefire that has failed to take hold since it went into effect on April 12.

Ban strongly condemned Thursday’s attacks and urged all sides to “distance themselves from indiscriminate bombings and other terrorist acts,” his spokesman Martin Nesirky said.

Washington called the attacks “reprehensible” while UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan, who brokered the truce, described them as “abhorrent”.

Russia and China, both supporters of President Bashar al-Assad’s embattled regime, called for a stop to the violence and urged all parties in Syria to cooperate with Annan’s peace plan.

State television aired gruesome footage of the aftermath of the twin explosions in the neighbourhood of Qazzaz, also blaming “terrorists”, a term used by authorities to refer to rebels seeking to topple Assad’s regime.

The television showed images of a woman’s charred hand on a steering wheel, her gold bracelets dangling from her blackened wrist.

Other burnt and mangled bodies lay in the street amid the carcasses of smouldering vehicles and rubble.

“Is that the freedom you want? Students from schools and employees going to work are dead,” shouted one man in the middle of the destruction.

The explosions took place on a main freeway in the south of Damascus, in front of a nine-storey security complex whose facade was heavily damaged while nearby residential buildings collapsed.

The interior ministry said the suicide attackers used a tonne of explosives, killing at least 55 people and wounding 372.

It added that emergency workers filled 15 bags with body parts, and that the blasts also destroyed around 200 cars.

“These crimes show that Syria is targeted by a terrorist attack launched by organisations armed and funded by parties who proclaim their backing to terrorist crimes,” state news agency SANA quoted the foreign ministry as saying.

At the United Nations, Syria’s ambassador said that recent bomb attacks in Syria “carried the stamp of Al-Qaeda methods,” adding that British, French and Belgian nationals were among foreign fighters killed in recent clashes.

But the opposition Syrian National Council accused Assad’s regime of staging the bombings in a bid to undermine the UN observer mission and to persuade the international community that Damascus was battling “terrorists.”

“This is the only way for the regime to claim that what is happening in Syria is the work of terrorist gangs and that Al-Qaeda is expanding its presence in Syria,” said Samir Nashar, of the exile group’s executive branch.

The SNC accused the regime of placing the bodies of people it had killed at the site of the bombings, to claim that they died in the blasts.

“Among the victims of the attacks are those whose names are on the lists of people imprisoned by the regime,” the group said in a statement.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group, said the Damascus bombings targeted an intelligence base and killed 59 people, including civilians and security personnel.

The attacks came a day after UN observers monitoring the ceasefire escaped unharmed when a roadside bomb exploded as they were visiting the flashpoint southern city of Daraa. Ten Syrian troops escorting them were hurt.

In Geneva, Annan said through his spokesman Ahmad Fawzi that he “condemns in the strongest possible terms the attacks that took place earlier today in Damascus.”

“These abhorrent acts are unacceptable and the violence in Syria must stop,” he added.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in a statement: “Any and all violence that results in the indiscriminate killing and injury of civilians is reprehensible and cannot be justified.

Damascus has been the target of a number of bombs in the past few months.

Suicide bombers hit two security service bases in the capital on December 23, killing 44 people, in attacks the regime blamed on Al-Qaeda but which the opposition said were the work of the regime itself.

The UN leader had warned on Wednesday of a “brief window” to avoid civil war and indicated the future of the ceasefire monitoring mission was in doubt.

Highlighting an “alarming upsurge” of roadside bombs, alongside government attacks, Ban said that both sides “must realise that we have a brief window to stop the violence, a brief opportunity to create an opening for political engagement between the government and those seeking change.”

If the violence did not stop, Ban said he feared “a full-scale civil war with catastrophic effects within Syria and across the region.”

Elsewhere in the country on Thursday, at least 14 people died in violence, including a child killed by army shelling in northwestern Idlib province, the Observatory said.

The watchdog says that more than 12,000 people, mostly civilians, have been killed in Syria since the revolt broke out in March last year.”

Source : SBS News Australia

WHAT IS CONMESS? (CONSOLIDATED MEDICAL SALARY STRUCTURE)

Consolidated Salary Structure (CONMESS) is the salary scale for Medical and Dental practitioners in the federal public service of Nigeria which was approved by the Federal Government on the 29th of September ,2009.

The document is attached here for your perusal.CONMESS_2009

Buhari, Tinubu move to revive alliance

Written by Abbas Jimoh

A meeting on Sunday between Buhari and Tinubu in Lagos was meant to revive alliance moves between the Action Congress of Nigeria and the Congress for Progressive Change, party officials told Daily Trust in Abuja yesterday.

Retired General Muhammadu Buhari visited ACN leader Bola Tinubu at his residence in Lagos, where they met behind closed doors.

Sources close to the two leaders said they discussed the political future of the two leading opposition parties, especially how to restart consultations towards merger or alliance ahead of 2015.

The meeting came as, according to one source, some People’s Democratic Party leaders who are angry over the outcome of the party’s recent convention consider working with the opposition parties to confront the ruling party.

Sources in CPC and ACN said the Buhari-Tinubu meeting discussed a possible alliance that would include the other main opposition party, All Nigeria People’s Party (ANPP).

National secretary of CPC, Buba Galadima, told Daily Trust yesterday in Abuja that the two leaders had “fruitful discussions” on alliance and workable plans ahead of the next general elections. He said they also reviewed some of the issues that scuppered previous alliance moves before the 2011 elections.

For his part, CPC spokesman Rotimi Fashakin said, “The visit is part of the ongoing cooperation among progressives in breaking the primordial barriers of yore and ensuring that the yearnings of the people for a stable, virile and just nation are satisfied.”

Spokesman for the ACN, Lai Mohammed, was not available for comment yesterday.

But two top ACN officials told Daily Trust that there had been moves for Buhari and Tinubu to meet and that a birthday event both of them attended in Abuja last week was used to facilitate the Sunday meeting.

“We are starting early to avoid the pitfalls of previous meetings and talks,” one ACN official said. “We want to be sure we got it right this time around, dotting our i’s and crossing our t’s; moreover that we have some aggrieved PDP members giving us vital information on their parties internal wrangling and how we can overcome our own differences.”

ANPP’s spokesman Emma Eneukwu, was not available for comment; he had however told our reporter earlier in an interview that the party “is in serious talks with other opposition parties ahead of the 2015 elections.”

Source: Daily Trust

Security in Imo worsens as gunmen kill monarch

By CHIDI NKWOPARA
OWERRI—The security situation in Imo State worsened Monday night, following brutal murder of Eze Stanley Akuneto, traditional ruler of Umueze-Abazu, Ogwa, Mbaitoli local government area of the state.

Vanguard investigations revealed that the two gunmen, who were operating on a motorcycle, stormed the royal father’s palace at about 9pm when most people had gone to sleep.

It was further gathered from a villager, who did not want his name in print, that the gangsters did not betray their principal mission when they asked after the traditional ruler.

“When they were taken to where the traditional ruler was relaxing, they quickly shot him at close range and sped away on their motorbike into the dark night,” the villager recounted with grief.

Another woman, who could not hold her emotion as she spoke, described the late royal father as “a lover of his people, soft spoken, sincere to a fault, unassuming and a fine gentleman”.

She wondered why anybody or group of persons would have conspired to snuff life out of the man, even as she denied that there was any form of crisis in the autonomous community.

Efforts made by Vanguard to get in touch with the community’s President General, Engr. George Obinna Asi, failed as he was said to be “out of town on a business trip.”

When Vanguard called the Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, Mr. Sam Oodee, for his comments, the fellow that picked his phone claimed the gadget had a problem which he was fixing and urged our correspondent to call in the next 30 minutes.

Source: The Vanguard Newspaper

Four bombs uncovered at BUK

by Salihu Mustapha, Kano

Bayero University

Four unexploded bombs were uncovered at the old campus of Bayero University, Kano, on Tuesday morning.

The bombs were believed to have been planted by members of the terrorist Islamic sect, Boko Haram.

Security sources told our correspondent that the bombs were discovered in front of the faculties of Law, Sciences, sports complex and the lecture theatre.

It was learnt that curious attendees at the lecture theatre sighted a black bag in a corner of the hall and raised the alarm.

As a result, the anti-bomb squad was invited to prevent the bombs from detonating.

However, the bomb at the sports complex exploded on its own before the arrival of the anti-bomb unit.

No casualty was however recorded as most of the affected areas were immediately condoned off.

Kano State Police Public Relations Officer, Musa Majiya, said the police were on top of the situation.

Majiya said, “The command has taken care of it. It has swiftly dispatched the anti-bomb unit to handle the situation. The police are on top the situation.

“Residents should please go about their normal duties. The police however appeal that any suspicious movements should be promptly reported to authorities for proper action to be taken. The command also thanks the people of the state for their cooperation so far.”

In a video posted on the Internet last week, Boko Haram threatened to attack the media and universities.

Gunmen attacked a lecture theatre at the BUK which was being used for Christian Sunday services on April 29, killing 15 people.

Source :The Punch Newspapers

Four injured in Bauchi explosion

by Jude Owuamanam, Jos

Four people were injured on Monday night when a bomb exploded at Peoples Hotel in Bayan Gari area of Bauchi metropolis.

The hotel located behind the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa Stadium, is always busy due to the activities of sex workers.

It was learnt that a man threw a bomb.

The explosion created panic as people scampered to safety.

The state Commissioner of Police, Mr. Mohammed Ladan, who confirmed the incident, said the bomb exploded at about 9pm and that one woman and three men were injured.

He said the injured persons were taken to the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University Teaching Hospital for treatment. Three of them were discharged on Tuesday morning.

Ladan said, “We are suspecting that the remaining person who is currently on admission is the one that carried out the act because of the degree of injury on his body, but we are still investigating the matter. Part of the building was partially blown off.

Source: The Punch Newspaper

Telecoms: Broadband services to contribute N29.6bn to GDP

Minister of Communications Technology, Mrs. Omobola JohnsonMinister of Communications Technology, Mrs. Omobola Johnson
| credits: File

The telecommunications sector is expected to contribute about $190m (N29.6bn) to Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product through broadband services by 2015.

The Director, Regulatory Affairs, Airtel Nigeria, Mr. Osondu Nwokoro, said telecoms companies had provided nothing less than three million jobs and invested well over $16bn in the country since the liberalisation of the sector in 1999.

He said the telecoms sector remained a key driving force for the economy, adding that broadband services would boost the country’s GDP portfolio by $190m in the next three years.

Nwokoro said this in a paper he presented at the fourth West African Information and Communications Technology Congress in Lagos on Tuesday.

He argued that multiple taxation posed a great challenge to telecoms operators, insisting that the government was the loser at the end of the day as most of the taxes ended up in private pockets.

Besides, he explained that multiple taxation, alongside other hindrances such as vandalism, could discourage operators and make them withhold investment meant for the Nigerian market.

Nwokoro stressed that the telecoms operators might be forced to slow down investment in the country if there were constant threats to infrastructure in the face of multiple taxation and generally unfriendly business environment.

This, he said, was done by Econet in Zimbabwe when the telecoms company was frustrated by the Robert Mugabe government.

He, therefore, warned that care must be taken by relevant government agencies so as not to push the telecoms operators out of the Nigerian market.

Nwokoro, who asked the government to protect telecoms infrastructure, said, “The Federal Government has a key role to play where it comes to telecoms infrastructure. These should be seen as critical equipment just like the oil pipelines, as well as PHCN and NITEL facilities.

“Once it is seen as such, no ministry, department or agency will shut down base stations at will, which in most cases; have adverse effects on the quality of service.”

The Executive Vice-Chairman, Nigerian Communications Commission, Dr. Eugene Juwah, in a keynote address, said the commission had concluded plans to engage reputable international consultants to drive the strategy and design the processes for achieving broadband goals.

He added that the regulatory environment in the country had remained stable and attractive to the global investment community, hence the need to attract more broadband investors.

The NCC helmsman further said that Code Division Multiple Access operators such as Starcomms, Multilinks, Visafone, and ZOOMmobile, might soon be relocated to a new frequency spectrum band.

This, Juwah said, would assist in freeing up already scare resources for more telecoms operators without requisite spectrum allocation to deploy innovative and reasonably priced broadband services to the generality of the Nigerian population.

He said, “It is a well know fact the spectrum band between 790 – 862MHz is been occupied mostly by the CDMA players. Normally, the CDMA frequencies are not efficiently planned as is the case with Long Term Evolution frequencies.

“We have asked the CDMA players, who have tiny frequencies, which cannot do much on LTE, to upgrade. We have said if they are prepared to upgrade, the commission will re-farm these frequencies and give them a higher slot in terms of capacity to provide value services, but they must do LTE. A lot of them are already considering it. Very soon, CDMAs will have difficulty finding appropriate handsets because technology is changing. As they begin to realise this, CDMAs will begin to plan for LTE.”

The CDMA operators have been battling for survival in the face of multiple challenges such as subscriber preference for GSM technology, corporate governance issues, low capitalisation and poor promotion of CDMA technology, among others.

Meanwhile, the Editor-in-Chief, IT & Telecom Digest, organisers of WAFICT, Mr. Mkpe Abang, has called on the Federal Government to declare a state of emergency for broadband deployment.

Abang argued that the country had conquered voice telephony and there was the urgent need to accelerate broadband deployment for the next phase of the country’s telecoms revolution.

Source: The Punch Newspapers

 

Akin Omoboriowo: The man, the myth Akin Omoboriowo: The man, the myth

By Deji Fasuan

Chief Akin Omoboriowo, one of the most colourful and discussed politicians in the last three to four decades has passed on.  But his reputation – in whatever form you view it, lingers.  By far the most demonised of Southwest politicians (apart Garrison Commander Adedibu),  Omoboriowo bowed out, still a controversial figure.  Beside the label of betrayal which his trauducers have stubbornly attached to him, Omoboriowo was a bundle of humanity.  His trait as a party loyalist (indeed fanatics), was the sources of his seeming double personality, hence odious perception.  Infact Omoboriowo was a decent, forthright and considerate human specie.  His fault, if it was, lay in his origins and beliefs.

Let me start with some fundamentals.  The man grew up in an environment and among associates who elevated loyalty to a course or a boss to the level of religion.  See through the list.   Oga Sam  (Aluko), Agunbiade Bamise, Prof David Oke, Prof Banji Akintoye, Ayo Fasanmi, Chief Joel Babatola, Chief Falodun, Ade Akilaya.  All these great faithful are of Ekiti Origin.  In the discipleships (not hierarchy) of the Action Group – and its successor political organisations, only Wunmi   Adegbonmire (Omo Ekun) from Akure can match the level of religions devotion and commitment these Ekiti men had for Chief Obafemi Awolowo.  These eight men and of course Akin Omoboriowo are miles ahead of the Ajayis, the Adebanjos, the Onabanjos, the Otebanjos of this world in relation of their followership or discipleship, but not necessarily in hierarchy as has been noted above.  Let us admit one fact.  Omoboriowo did not earn public opprobrium until the events of 1980-83 in Ondo State.  When the UPN big wigs in their wisdom gave the impression that Ajasin would run one term as governor to be succeeded by Omoboriowo for the second stanze, it was an unfair treatment for Ajasin who was being denied his right.  Curiously, nobody in the UPN hierarchy believed in this concoction – except Awolowo and Omoboriowo.  As Wole  Soyinka would say, this was ‘pathetic naivety’.

As from the second year of the Ajasin administration, the ‘Omoboriowo Group’ began to emerge – both in the Assembly and the state as a whole.  This was an unnecessary distraction to the government, but it was doubtful whether Awolowo or Omoboriowo perceived it that way.

The situation was almost balanced between the Awolowo/Omoboriwo forces and the Ajasin forces in terms of numbers and level of commitments.   Indeed it was doubtful whether Chief Awolowo saw any imminent turmoil.  He was free with and confident of his long life associate Governor Ajasin, while he was always reassured of the followership/discipleship of his Ondo State ‘Baba Kekere’ .  As it   turned out, the two perceptions were not ad idem.

Slowly the centrifugal forces were giving way.  In Ondo State, the two camps became distinct and apparent in all legislative and political matters.  Omoboriowo garnered his support from Ekiti and Ilaje – Eseodo mainly, with sprinkles from Akoko.  Of course Ajasin’s foot soldiers were strong,  determined, intellectually based and would give no quarters.  Remember Adegbonmire, Adegoke, Adedipe, Akintoye, David Oke et al?

Then the UPN primary.  Some primaries! The most charitable thing one could say is that it was inconclusive.  In today’s political lexicon, it was manipulated – and Omoboriowo was declared the looser. – And hell  broke.  Not the physical combat yet.  That was still months off.  Tragically, Akin Omoboriowo got paid back at the primaries when his trusted agent took his pound of flesh as a reprisal for an earlier political maneuvering between the two.

Then suddenly Omoboriowo became the beautiful bride who many political organisations courted.  He finally succumbed to the NPN – the arch – enemy of the ‘progressives’ of the West.  The subsequent election and the declaration of the results by FEDECO signaled the beginning of what the Ekitis in old Ondo State called the ‘Holocaust’.  Some Ekiti and Akure indigenes were killed, houses belonging to Ekiti public and private persons destroyed and most known  Ekitis chased out.  For us in Ekiti it was the beginning of the beginning.    First some people have not yet outlived the trauma, second, the job of convincing some doubting Ekiti indigenes of the need for a separate  political entity became easier.

Looking back  still baffles the imagination why Chief Awolowo deserted Omoboriowo and opted for his grand ally Chief Ajasin.  Also one wonders why Omoboriwo and his close political associates could not wait for Ajasin to complete two terms as chief executive of the state  after which he most probably would have been presented the prize on a platter.  In a haze of madness the Ekitis, Akures, and Akokos who are culturally connected took on themselves and almost succeeded in destroying centuries – old affinity.

Akin Omoboriowo in his twilight made his peace with men and his God.  He said often that he had forgiven his detractors – and I believed him. He had a stout heart.  He was affable to his friends and  preached peace, peace most of his later life.   May he rest in peace.

 

• Fasuan JP, Chairman Committee for the creation of Ekiti State.

Source: The Nation

Zamfara State Governor evicted

Gov Yari
Gov Yari

By Gbade Ogunwale

Zamfara State Governor Abdulaziz Yari has been thrown out of his Abuja home.

A High Court in the Federal Capital Territory declared that he had been occupying the house illegally. The property, a five- bedroom duplex with two- room boys’ quarter, is located on Number 1, Fatai Williams Street, Asokoro, Abuja.

The eviction order, signed by Justice Jude Okeke, also ordered Governor Yari to pay N8, 162, 028. 00, representing profit on two years’ rent; N10, 000 cost; and N10, 000 warrant fees.

The judgment, which was given on June 11, 2010, had ordered the governor to yield possession of the house to the owner of the property, Sir Ernest Elochukwu, but the order was not complied with.

Consequently, Justice Okeke approved Yari’s eviction on April 26. Officials of the Judgment Enforcement Unit of the Federal Capital Territory stormed the premises at about 11 am yesterday with about eight armed policemen to carry out the eviction.

The Governor’s personal effects were taken out of the house. They would be moved to the court.

Copies of the eviction order pasted on the walls of the building reads: “Whereas as at a court holden on 11thJune 2010, it was adjudged that the plaintiff was entitled to possession of the premises mentioned in the particulars annexed to the affidavit.”

On the personal effects being taken away, the document stated: “The goods and chattles are not to be sold until after the end of five days next, following the day of which they were seized, unless they are of a perishable nature or at the request of the defendant.”

The implication of the above is that the Governor’s personal effects may be sold after five days of eviction.

The owner of the property has been in a running battle with Yari over the said property since 2010. The Governor was said to have rented the property in 2008 when he was a member of the House of Representatives.

But he claimed to have bought the property from Obinna Kanu in 2010 without the knowledge of the owner. Kanu is on the run and the police have declared him wanted.

Source: The Nation

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