Wednesday, 04 December 2024

 

From Netherland to Germany, United Kingdom to United States; Nigerian youths in the Diaspora are gradually becoming receptive to the poisonous ideology of Islamic violent extremism and this is quite worrying.

In the United Kingdom, Nigerian parents are more affected than other ethnic minority groups in the community on the issue of gun and knife crime with Nigerian prisoners second highest next to the Jamaican prisoners in UK cells!

The reality of the adverse impact of low level crime in our community is only revealed when you consider the British-Nigerian concept; then it becomes clearer that we are closer to the tipping point than previously realised.

After the 7th July suicide bomber blast in the United Kingdom; most of the innovative and diabolical attacks in mainland Britain or terrorism threats could be linked to a Nigerian in the Diaspora from the pants bomber to the Woolwich killers and the Dare ISIS Advert promo . . . There is no doubt in my mind that the Diaspora community needs to wake up to the reality that we have the  good, the bad and the ugly knocking on the door of the community right now.

The ugly aspect is more likely to damage the Nigeria Plc brand and this is a wake-up call to Nigeria Diaspora community leaders to declare an emergency and seek help promptly.

Apart from this recent stabbing in Germany, a Nigerian was also arrested over is message about ISIS on social media and similar arrest happened in Manchester.

Nigerian youths are travelling to Syria from the UK, Netherland and other European countries. Do we have the capacity to handle the issue in our community?

We need to act fast!

•Temitope Olodo (shown in photo) is a Preventive Terrorism Expert and Author based in the United Kingdom. He is also the chairperson of Nigeria Diaspora Security Forum. He can be reached via This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.


 

The rescue of a two-year-old Nigerian child has attracted extensive social and online media coverage across the world. Abandoned by his family after being accused of being a witch, the boy was saved by an aid worker who found him in Uyo, southeast Nigeria. The boy, known as Hope, is said to have been riddled with worms and had to have daily blood transfusions to be revived.

The unfortunate truth is that Hope is one of only a lucky few who survive the neglect, abuse, and physical and mental health insults that arise from the stigma created by child witch hunting in Nigeria.

Belief in witchcraft is central in Nigeria society – particularly in the Niger Delta region. Researchers have especially focused on my people, the Ibibio of southeastern Nigeria.

Anthropological research has shown how most Ibibio believe that certain people are witches. They argue that, through various supernatural feats, these people impoverish, harm or kill their fellow human beings. Other research shows both urban and rural people in the Ibibio society are entrapped in the deep-rooted fear of witches. It is enshrined in communal consciousness.

Having spent most of my life among the Ibibio in both urban and rural settings, I can bear witness to the truth of these observations. I grew up in Uyo, the town in which Hope was rescued.

Religion and poverty play a role

Child health researchers, including psychologists, social workers and economists, believe that the stigmatisation of children as witches in Nigeria is a relatively recent phenomenon.

Some research notes the trend has become widespread since the early to mid-1990s. As a result thousands of children have been accused of being witches. Many have been tortured, or even killed.

Others are subjected to inhumane abuse. They suffer severe beatings, maiming, burns caused by fire, boiling water or acid, poisoning, attempts to bury them alive, abandonment, rape and trafficking. They are denied access to health care and vaccinations. And they are blamed when they become ill and their diseases spread to other members of the family and community.

There are two factors that play a role in child witchcraft being perpetuated in Nigeria: religion and poverty.

One researcher has argued that the religious discourse of the new Christian Pentecostal movement has heightened the belief that child witches exist. The movement generally attributes failure and misfortune to the devil.

Some argue that the religious discourse of the Pentecostal movement may fuel beliefs about child witches. Rhys Thom/flickr

For some religious leaders there is the lure of economic gain attached to child witchcraft accusations. The purported capacity to deliver people from the power of witches can generate huge earnings for pastor-prophets who engage in deliverance sessions. Research shows that those religious leaders encourage congregants to repeatedly attend church programmes, pay tithes regularly and give offerings and vows, all with the aim of generating more and more income from their followers.

Widespread poverty is another explanatory factor. In 2006 the United Nations Development Programme reported that within the Niger Delta region high rates of poverty and environmental degradation are especially prevalent.

Researchers argue that poverty and other misfortunes are in many parts of Nigeria attributed to metaphysical causes. As a result, child witches are simply an easy target to blame for the economic misfortunes that befall families and communities in this region.

Interestingly, research notes that the belief in child witchcraft is also considered to be reflected in and perpetuated by Nigerian popular media. Nollywood, the Nigerian movie industry, has been blamed for making films that have played a role in popularising and disseminating the belief in child witches. Many of the older movies were produced by Pentecostal churches.

A glimmer of hope

Fortunately there has been a turnaround in the past few years. Nigerian Pentecostal churches have started to join the fight against child witchcraft stigmatisation. After a series of meetings promoted by concerned government agencies, several religious and civil liberty organisations are working together to end the trend.

Some are actively helping to create awareness of the issue and mobilise people through sermons, in print media and even through Nollywood. Churches have started to produce movies that highlight the ills of witchcraft accusations, offering hope to victims and their families.

But the case of Hope indicates that there is more to be done.

There is an urgent need for legislative reform to deter future incidents of abuse due to child witchcraft stigmatisation. Nigeria needs laws that prohibit discrimination based on witchcraft beliefs. Even more importantly, the laws need to be effectively enforced so that religious leaders and community members who choose to continue down this treacherous path are brought to book.

Ultimately, it comes down to revitalising the Nigerian economy and bringing people out of poverty. As long as people find it impossible to make ends meet they will continue to look for solutions in the supernatural.

 

Author:Utibe Effiong: Resident Physician at St Mary Mercy Hospital and Research Scientist for the Exposure Research Laboratory, University of Michigan    

credit link:  http://theconversation.com/whats-behind-children-being-cast-as-witches-in-nigeria-57021

 

The article was originally published on The Conversation (www.conversation.com) and is republished with permission granted to www.oasesnews.com

 

 

 


 


The Police in Imo have on Tuesday rescued a female staff of the Alvan Ikoku Federal College of Education, Owerri, from committing suicide.

An eye witness told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the woman in her early 40s climbed a water tank stanchion, about the height of a three- storey building, from where she threatened to jump down.

The eye witness told NAN in Owerri that the woman was shouting at the top of the stanchion before people in the neighbourhood noticed her.

He said the neighbours then alerted two policemen who climbed the facility and pleaded with the woman before she came down at about 6.30 a.m.

 

The Public Relations Officer of the Imo Police Command, DSP Andrew Enwerem, confirmed the incident.
Enwerem said that the woman attempted to take her life but was rescued unhurt by policemen who were invited by her neighbours.

According to the police spokesman, preliminary information obtained from the woman showed that she was a Staff of the Alvan Ikoku Federal College of Education, Owerri.

“The woman climbed a high water tank stanchion as early as 6 a.m. and was shouting on top of her voice that she was frustrated and tired of life,’’ he said.(NAN)


A bill for a law which prescribes five-year jail term for lecturers who engage in sexual relationship with students was passed for first reading in the Senate on Wednesday.

 

The bill, sponsored by Sen. Ovie Omo-Agege (Labour-Delta Central) and co-sponsored by 46 other senators, seeks to completely prohibit any form of sexual relationship between lecturers and their students.

Briefing newsmen after plenary, Omo-Agege said that the nation’s institutions of higher learning must be sanitised to rid them of lecturers who saw female students as “prize’’.

According to him, when the bill is passed and signed into law, any lecturer found guilty will be liable to a jail term of up to five years but not less than two years with no option of fine.

“When passed into law, it makes it a criminal offence for any educator in a university, polytechnic or any other tertiary educational institution to violate or exploit the student-lecturer fiduciary relationship for sexual pleasures.

“The bill imposes stiff penalties on offenders in its overall objective of providing tighter statutory protection for students against sexual hostility and all forms of sexual harassment in tertiary schools.

“The bill provides a compulsory five-year jail term for lecturers who sexually harass students.

“When passed into law, vice chancellors of universities, rectors of polytechnics and other chief executives of institutions of higher learning will go to jail for two years if they fail to act within a week on complaints of sexual harassment made by students.

“The bill expressly allows sexually harassed students, their parents or guardians to seek civil remedies in damages against sexual predator lecturers before or after their successful criminal prosecution by the State.

“The bill also seeks to protect, from sexual harassment, prospective students seeking admissions into institutions of learning, students of generally low mental capacity and physically challenged students,’’ he stated.

The lawmaker said that it was practicable in other climes as “honour codes’’ but stressed that it should be domesticated in Nigeria in the Penal form.

The bill reads: “an educator shall be guilty of committing an offence of sexual harassment against a student if he/she has sexual intercourse with a student.

 

“He or she shall be guilty if he has sexual intercourse with a student or demands for sex from a student or a prospective student as a condition to study in an institution.

“He or she shall be guilty if he has sexual intercourse with a student or demands for sex from a student or a prospective student as a condition to the giving of a passing grade.

“ He or she shall be guilty if he solicits sex from or makes sexual advances at a student when the sexual solicitation or sexual advances result in an intimidating, hostile or offensive environment for the student.

“He or she shall be guilty if he directs or induces another person to commit any act of sexual harassment under this Act, or cooperates in the commission of sexual harassment by another person.

“He or she shall be guilty if he grabs, hugs, rubs or strokes or touches or pinches the breasts or hair or lips or hips or buttocks or any other sensual part of the body of a student.

“He or she shall be guilty if he displays, gives or sends by hand or courier or electronic or any other means naked or sexually explicit pictures or videos or sex related objects to a student.

“He or she shall be guilty if he whistles or winks at a student or screams or exclaims or jokes or makes sexually complimentary or uncomplimentary remarks about a student’s physique.’’

The bill also has provisions to sanction students who falsely accuse lecturers of sexual harassment. Such students could face dismissal from the school but no jail term was prescribed.

According to the bill, the only exemption is where the student is legally married to the lecturer before admission in the school as a student.

It states that the consent of the student shall not serve, in anyway, as a defence as the bill seeks to completely ban lecturer-student relationships.

The bill also imposes on institutions the responsibility to protect students who initiates a sexual harassment charge. (NAN)

 
 
 
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Diasporans, don’t isolate yourselves and say “I don’t like associating with Kenyans”, you might need them

 The decomposing body of a Kenyan woman was discovered in her house in Austell, Georgia, Friday after she did not report for work for four consecutive days, prompting her colleagues to raise the alarm.

Anne Wairimu Maina is believed to to have died on Tuesday last week, according to a source at the Cobb county coroner’s office who spoke on condition of anonymity.

“The body was in a bad shape by the time we arrived at the scene and must have been lying in the house for at least four days,” said the source.

Family sources told ksnmedia.com that Ms Maina came to the US in 1999 and was working at Cobb Hospital in the Hospice Department.

Anne Maina's house in Austell, Georgia where her dicomposing body was found. PHOTO|FILE

Anne Maina’s house in Austell, Georgia where her dicomposing body was found. PHOTO|FILE

Asked whether they suspected any foul play, she said: “All I can tell you is that she had medical issues.”

Cobb county authorities said that Ms Maina’s colleagues at work got worried when she did not show up for three days and they reported the matter to the police.

A neighbor who did not wish to be identified said that Ms Maina kept to herself and as a very private person.”

“Unlike other Kenyans I know, she did not associate herself with her community and kept to herself. She was very private,” she said.

“She has no relatives here other than her son who is in jail,” said one of her colleagues at the hospice.

According to Mrs Christine Muchene, a Community organizer based in Atlanta Georgia, few Kenyans knew the

The late Anne Wairimu Maina. He body was found in her house in Austell, Georgia on Friday. PHOTO|COURTESY

The late Anne Wairimu Maina. He body was found in her house in Austell, Georgia on Friday. PHOTO|COURTESY

deceased.

“It is clear she did not associate much with the Kenyan community here and she has no available kin. That is perhaps the reason  the police and the Coroner’s office were happy to see me volunteer,” said Mrs Muchene, who has been trying to help Ms Maina’s daughter get travel documents to enable her travel from Kenya to the US for her mother’s cremation.

” I am in communication with Anne Maina’s daughter back in Kenya. I got her documents from the medical examiner and the investigating officer to confirm her mother is dead,” wrote  Muchene in a Closed Facebook Group.

“She will take them to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Nairobi so  they can facilitate an early visa appointment with the American Embassy,” added the community organizer.

According to the daughter, it was Anne’s wish that her body be given for research in one of the US universities. However, she did not ‘meet’ their time frame of 24 hrs and authorities at the university said they could not take the decomposing body.


 

The story of the enslavement of Africans is well known. But most of it is known from the perspective of the enslavers.

Africans themselves have been slow in writing about this historic and historical tragedy that robbed Africa of its people — men, women and children — many of them the best of the available labour

then.

There is enough research that shows that slave trade contributed to economic development of the continent.

Joe Khamisi adds a very significant voice to such stories in his new book, The Wretched Africans: A Study of Rabai and Freretown Slave Settlements (Jodey Book Publishers, 2016).

This is Khamisi’s third book afterPolitics of Betrayal: Diary of a Kenyan Legislator and Dash Before Dusk: A Slave Descendant’s Journey in Freedom.

Khamisi calls his book “A tribute to slaves and descendants of the 19th century slave trade in Eastern Africa.” And this is pretty much what the book is about. Following several sources, Khamisi

weaves a tale of his own origins as a descendant of slaves, showing how the trade in Africans by Arabs and Europeans shattered lives in the interior of what is today central Africa (Malawi, Zambia

and Zimbabwe) and the coastal regions of eastern Africa.

So, to a large extent the history he invokes in this book is an account of the unmaking and remaking of Africa in the 19th century.

Khamisi leaves no doubts in the mind of the reader that this book is as much about him as it is about his ancestors – strewn across Africa and the African diaspora — his community today in Kilifi County, and about Kenya.

He says this of himself in the preface: “I am a third generation slave descendant, a great grandson of freed slaves of the 19th Century slavery in eastern Africa. I was born in 1944 — thirty seven

years after Britain abolished slavery in Kenya in 1907.

My roots are at Rabai, a historical rustic village 25 kilometres north-west of the coastal town of Mombasa. It is also the home of the largest ex-slaves’ settlement in East Africa.

It was at Rabai that Ludwig Krapf and Johannes Rebman, the two German missionaries of the London-based Church Missionary Society (CMS) built the first Christian Church in Kenya in 1846.”

As the preface note above suggests, Khamisi’s book is quite interested in the role that the European Christian missionaries played in stopping the slave trade and how they subsequently dealt with the

freed Africans. Consequently a fair amount of the narration is dedicated to showing how trade in African slaves began and grew; why it became big business along the coast of eastern Africa, India,

the Middle East, Europe, all the way to America; its major consequences — the deaths of thousands of Africans in captivity, shipment of more thousands to foreign lands; depopulation of large parts

of Africa; the establishment of an African diaspora all over the world; its abolition; and the eventual settlement of thousands of Africans in ‘other’ lands away from their native homes.

TALE TOLD FRESHLY

Indeed Khamisi retells the slave trade tale freshly, often debunking myths that have circulated for so long, such as the presumed goodness of the European Christians, showing — from sources that

are rarely discussed in Africa — how even some of the celebrated abolitionists were racist.

He also does a good job of reminding the reader of the complicity of Africans


The Chairman of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in Ipokia local government area of Ogun State, Alhaji Saruku Suraju, popularly known as “Aro Meta” has died in a hotel after an alleged marathon sex with a woman believed to be a commercial sex worker.

PM News reports that Suraj died at the De Lover Hotel, located at Aseko area, Ibatefin in Ipokia on Friday night while his mistress fled the scene of the incident immediately.

The 68-year old until his death was the PDP Chairman in Ipokia local government area.    

A family source said that the man died in a hotel while his mistress, who no one knows fled without any trace.

“The incident happened around 9:00pm on Friday and we have buried him yesterday according to Islamic rite.

“Yes, he died at De Lover hotel. What I know was that, his party, PDP is to have the final meeting of those to be elected as officers of the party in their forthcoming Congress”.







- PM News

 

In the next few months, precisely in November 2016, a new government will be elected to steer the ship of the sunshine state for another four (4) years. The incumbent is strategizing to install his stooge and trusted ally while close to thirty (30) people are aspiring to contest the primaries of the All Progressive Congress (APC), the main opposition party in the state. Ondo state is peculiar, with very distinct characteristics. The citizens are independent minded and can not be pushed around. The incumbent governor, Dr. Segun Mimiko is acclaimed to have the joker to sway the people to his favour at every point as he pleases. It is therefore pertinent for the APC and its leaders to show more seriousness, determination and commitment to win the next election.

It is a known fact that the electorate in Ondo state identifies more with one of their own than with the elites. Adekunle Ajasin, Adebayo Adefarati and OlusegunMimiko rose to power through mass movement and support of civil servants and the middle class. Each of them was seen and considered as regular and /or everyday people that can be accessed in and out office. Olusegun Agagu on his part was a beneficiary of the PDP tsunami that swept the entire South-West except Lagos in the 2003 general elections. He performed well in office and governed the state with best intentions. He lost out in the power play due to his elitist nature and lifestyle. It was easier for some beneficiaries of his large heart to gang-up and conspire to work against him because he was not from the grassroots.  One can therefore conclude that the fear of the civil servants and the middle-class of Ondo state is the beginning of wisdom for any serious minded politician.

Governor Mimiko in his characteristic manner is already strategizing for the November gubernatorial election, with over one hundred (100) newly appointedaides and the already selected and soon to be sworn-in local government chairmenand councilors. The man is busy empowering and positioning his foot soldiers for the battle ahead. Mimiko may not be the best manager of men and resources but there is one thing we can not deny him or take away from him, he understand the politics and psyche of the Ondo state electorate more than anything else. Even more than the medicine, he studied. He was quoted to have boasted that he will defeat APC any day the election is conducted.

Many of the APC co-travelers may not believe him or take his threat serious but with the present disorganized and segmented Ondo state APC, Mimiko will win the next gubernatorial election unless the APC put its house in order. The APC aspirants must put the party before themselves so as not to rock the boat after the primaries. The party leaders for the very first time has come out with pronouncement that there will be no imposition. That’s a cheering news and positive development. However deliberate efforts should be made to downsize the number of aspirants, either through zoning or whatever means. The APC today is the bride of all with endless “jumpology” (decamping) across many states. It’s a good thing that the APC today can boast of almost thirty (30) aspirants. This seeming blessing can be counterproductive if not well managed.

All the aspirants are fine gentlemen and lady. The unfortunate thing is that some of them can not win their unit or ward at the gubernatorial election if picked as the APC candidate for the November election. Beyond money and affluence the electorate in Ondo state easily identify with whom they know. The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) lost to the Labour Party (LP) and came a distant third in 2012 because the people couldn’t identify with the ACN’s flag bearer. Deliberate effort should be made this time for bad history not to repeat itself. As aforementioned all the APC aspirants are fine and eminently qualified to aspire. On the list are high profile aspirants like Senator Borrofice, Senator Alasoadura, Hon Ayorinde (who are current members of the National Assembly) and seasoned administrators and legal luminaries like Jamiu Ekungba, Victor Olabimtan, OlusolaOke, Segun Abraham, Rotimi Akeredolu, Akin Akingbade, Derin Adesida, e.t.c.However, of all of them a name stoutly stands out! That’s Rt. Hon. Victor Adekanye Olabimtan.

Olabimtan, besides being a rallying point in Ondo State politics and a grassroots’ mobilizer, has consistently used the privileged positions he has occupied in life for the comfort and wellbeing of the masses. This is a man who has spent 90% of his years on earth in Ondo state, living among the people. He knows and understandsOndo state and the people can easily access him. He left the civil service as a secondary school principal to join politics. He was elected into the Ondo State House of Assembly as a law maker and became the fisrt among equals as speakerunder whose leadership good laws were enacted. His next appointment was as the Chairman of Ondo State Teaching Service Commission (TESCOM).  Olabimtan’sunflinching uprightness, trustworthiness and loyalty to the party earned him another appointment as the Commissioner to represent Ondo, Ekiti and Edo states at the Federal Civil Service Commission. In all of these exalted positions God has consistently used him to touch and transform many lives in Ondo state and these are attested to by many.

 

The incumbent Governor, Olusegun Mikiko, is working hard to neutralize the soaring popularity of the APC in the state with the sole aim of installing a puppet as succsessor. We need a well-rooted politician like Olabimtan to outsmart the self-acclaimed master-strategist at his own game. The defunct ACN lost the last governorship election to LP in 2012 not because the candidate was not good or brilliant but simply because he was not a grassroots politician. Therefore for negative history not to repeat itself in Ondo state, Olabimtan is the best option for APC. If election is organized in Ondo state today more than sixty percent (60%) of the electorate will vote for Olabimtan. This is common knowledge and verifiable fact across the length and breadth of the state. Olabimtan has invested so much in the people over the years and naturally the people trust and believe him.

Olabimtan, at the risk of sounding immodest, is the aspirant that can guarantee victory for the APC at the next governorship election, no matter what trick or magic the incumbent intends to employ. You only need to move across Ondo state to listen to what people are saying about him. The civil servants and teachers are all yearning for him because he was one of them. He was a renowned labour leader that was punished several times while fighting for the right of his colleagues. As the Chairman of Teaching Service Commission (TESCOM), he employed over three thousand (3,000) teaching and non-teaching staff. All through the years he spent as Commissioner in the Federal Civil Service Commission, there was no ward in Ondo state that was not assisted through employment. There are two hundred and three (203) wards in Ondo state. More than half (50%) of the inhabitants of each of these wards know at least ten (10) civil servants (state or federal) that gained employment through Olabimtan. Instead of amassing wealth for himself or building castles he chose to build people by securing the future of our youths.

Olabimtan over the years has continued to show unparalleled kind-heartedness to people around him and humanity in general. Youths who have been gainfully employed by his rare commitment to human development and benevolence are countless across Ondo State. He is widely respected as a sincere party man with unwavering loyalty. It is common knowledge among all politicians in Ondo state now that the greatest threat to Mimiko in APC is Olabimtan because more than half (50%)  of the present members of PDP will actively work for and support Olabimtan should he emerge as the APC candidate. The reason for this is not far-fetched considering his commitment and passion for the development of his people. Simply put, Olabimtan is today the candidate to beat in Ondo state!

Ondo state like other states in the South-West except Lagos, is a civil service state.With due respect to Dr. Kayode Fayemi the former governor of Ekiti state, he lost to Fayose not because the latter was better but because the civil servants (mostly teachers) turned against him. In Ondo state if there is any aspirant that can guarantee and garner the support of at least seventy percent (70%) of the civil servant that person is Olabimtan because they considered him as one of them. If there is any aspirant in Ondo state who can secure the support of the youths and the middle class, that man is Olabimtan because he is accessible to them. If there is any aspirant that can secure clear and unquestionable victory for the APC in Ondo state today, that man is Olabimtan because half (50%) of the present members of the PDP will naturally vote for him. They know him better than the rest of us that pride ourselves as aborigine APC.

The GOOD thing about the present fortune of the APC in Ondo state is the presence of the likes of Olabimtan in our folds. I pray the APC delegates look beyond their personal and immediate gains and put the party’s interest first. The moment Olabimtan emerges as the candidate of the APC, marks the beginning of the APC reign in Ondo state. The BAD thing about the present fortune of the APC in Ondo state is the fact that most of the electorate who are seriously yearning for the emergence of Olabimtan have no say on who becomes the APC flag bearer. The UGLY part of the story is the fact that most of our delegates might be thinking of financial inducement instead of supporting someone that can guarantee victory for our party. This is a clarion call on all the APC delegates to look beyond personal gains and do the needful by supporting Olabimtan for the good of our party. I am convinced that Olabimtan is the personality among the crop of APC aspirants that can champion the course of making sure that the much desired change in the affairs of Ondo State manifest through electoral victories for the APC. As earlier mentioned, all other aspirants are eminently qualified but Olabimtan is the one that can guarantee easy, clear, unambiguous and unquestionable victory for the APC, come November 2016. This is our best chance and Olabimtan is our best choice!

 

Jaiye Toriola writes from Supare-Akoko, Ondo State

 

 

Editor: Opinion expressed on this page are strictly those of the author


 

The on-going trial of Senate President Bukola Saraki at the Code of Conduct Tribunal is not without political orchestration of some big wigs within the political terrain in the country. Little wonder how a bonafide of a party in person of the number three citizen in the country could be facing trial without show of solidarity from the leadership of the party. It is no surprise that the ball game is turning into a battle of supremacy between a former Lagos state Governor, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and Saraki. The events leading to the discord between the duo is not far to seek.

The year 2011 marked the foremost time an external force arrayed resources to wrestle power from the Saraki Dynasty in Kwara. Then, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu sponsored Mohammed Dele Belgore SAN as a gubernatorial candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) against the ‘ever-winning’ Saraki camp of PDP. The triumph of the Saraki camp re-affirmed the aged-long perception that weeding off the Saraki influence in Kwara politics may continue be an exercise in futility. It was a confirmation of the firm grip of Saraki on Kwara politics.

With such defeat, it would be expected that the Tinubu camp will re-launch its political strategies ahead of the 2015 elections in a bid to re-present its candidate who continued brewing up as a floating opposition in Kwara state.

The shocking bewilderment however, was how the ACN embarked on a sudden journey of amalgamation with other political parties wooing every politician accessible to join them in forming a new party that would bring to an end, the corrupt-ridden PDP-led government under Goodluck Jonathan. Unfortunately this amalgamation would later saw the political demise of Belgore and make flourish Saraki political dexterity.

Still more, it was observed and rightly so, that the game of permanent interest –which is the dominant factor in politics –had prevailed over ‘permanent enmity’, contrary to the expectation of the Belgore fans who wanted liberty from the dominance of Saraki dynasty in Kwara politics. The august alliance between Saraki and his former rival, Tinubu, was therefore a big disappointment. Consequently, Saraki became a prominent figure to reckon with having defected along with his huge supporters from the PDP to the new party, the APC.

As the saying goes, once beaten twice shy. Saraki fell a victim of another opposition by throwing his hat in the ring for the Senate Presidency. By that singular action, Saraki unwittingly earned Tinubu’s vengeance. It is therefore not accidental that Saraki is facing trial at the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT). Moreso, the trial is overtly mishandled with the admission of the Chairman of the CCT, Justice Danladi Umar, that the tribunal took an erroneous decision in the earlier case of Tinubu to hold that the tribunal has jurisdiction in Saraki’s case.  That Danladi-led Tribunal affirmed the similitude between the Saraki and Tinubu cases but hold different verdicts has raised questionable marks on the judge and the integrity of the CCT and even the judiciary as institutions of government.

It is worrisome that a judge could rule differently on the same matter with same ingredients. It is clear now that the rivalry between Saraki and Tinubu will linger on. However, Saraki had won the sympathy of many who are demanding that the error of yesteryears should be corrected with the tribunal re-initiating the trial of Tinubu. This would be seen to be fair and just, and project the Tribunal in good light. 

 

Editor: Opinion expressed on this page are strictly those of the author

 

RIVERS State remains a hotbed of violence even after the ending of recent supplementary elections there with hoodlums stepping into the fray as yesterday police Sergeant Sunday Adoga was gunned down in cold blood in Port Harcourt.

 Over recent weeks, Rivers State has been wrecked with violence as Peoples Democratic Party and All Progressives Congress supporters have clashed during the elections. There have also been clashes with the security forces which have left soldiers dead and members of the National Youth Service Corps conducting the pools have also been killed by thugs.

 Yesterday, tension in the state rose further as unknown gunmen suspected to be armed robbers shot Sergeant Adoga, in the Waterlines area of Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital. This follows a similar incident when men suspected to be assassins killed an unidentified young man, near First Bank Bus Stop, along Aba Road in the Rumuomasi area of Port Harcourt.

 Sergeant Adoga was killed by the suspected armed robbers, who were shooting sporadically in an attempt to flee, after a failed robbery operation on banks located along Olu Obasanjo Road in the Rivers State capital. One eyewitness said that robbers had gone to the area to rob a particular bank but were resisted by policemen guarding it.

He added: “The armed robbers came to rob one of the banks located here in Olu Obasanjo Road, but they had a shootout with policemen guarding all the banks located on this road. So, it seemed the combined power of all the policemen working in all the banks was more than that of the armed robbers and they escaped through different directions."

According to the eyewitness, two policemen mat have actually been killed in the shootout.  Meanwhile, the unidentified young man killed in Rumuomasi, was said to have been trailed by his assailants to the area, where they shot him at close range and escaped.


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