Thursday 27 February 2014

Wife Murder: Evidence that sent Arowolo to hangman’s noose

Arowolo... the alleged killer
Arowolo… the alleged killer











EVERY June 24 will always ring a bell in the mind of  Akolade Arowolo, a 31 year old self acclaimed youth pastor, who was last Friday convicted for killing his banker wife, Titilayo Omozoje at their residence, 8, Akindeinde Street, Isolo, Lagos,.
This is because the day marks his birthday and the day he brutally murdered  his wife, which eventually earned him a death sentence last week Friday. Justice Lateefa Okunnu of a Lagos High Court sitting in Ikeja sentenced Akolade to death having found him guilty of a murder charge pressed against him.
The events that led to  the court’s judgment are almost becoming  history, however, the outcome of Akolade’s actions as presented during the trial of the case will continue to hunt him, as he awaits his appeal at the Court of Appeal and perhaps at the Supreme Court.
Immediately the police concluded its investigation, Akolade was initially  arraigned on July 8, 2011 before  a  Yaba magistrate court on one-count charge of murder. However, the DPP’s advice which indicated that there was a prima facie case against him led to his fresh arraignment before Justice Lateefa Okunnu of the state High Court on December 21, 2011.
The one count charge signed by the Directorate of Prosecution, Mrs Olabisi Ogungbesan, read: “Arowolo Akolade (M) on or about 24th day of June 2011 at 8, Akindele Street, Isolo, Lagos, in Ikeja division, murdered one Titilayo Omozoje Arowolo,” and that the offence contravenes Section 319(1) of the Criminal Code Law Cap 17 Vol 2 Laws of Lagos State.
After the preliminaries, trial began with 15 prosecution witnesses testified, including the father of the deceased, sisters, step-mother, the couple’s neighbour, security guard and  their landlord. In his testimony, George Oyakhire, the deceased’s father,  who was the first prosecution witness told the court that his daughter sounded tensed when he spoke with her on the day of the  incident.
The witnesses  also said that on a number of occasions, the deceased  had moved back home after quarrels with the husband, but he had constantly told his daughter to report to the police.
“She came back more than 10 times after quarrels with my daughter.” He also said he had witnessed the aggressiveness of the defendant, because he (Akolade) always beat her and threatened to throw her down from the top floor of their one-storey apartment someday.
Some of the prosecution witnesses, who forced the door of the couple’s apartment open the day after the incident, had said Titilayo’s lifeless body was found on the bed soaked in blood. Deceased sister testified next.
She said the younger sister, Folake and herself called their sister, but Akolade was the one that answered the calls on the deceased starcoms phone, after  they couldn’t  reach him again. Later it was said that a friend, Mr Tolu Oyesanya called to say that the convict had been seen with blood stains. They eventually went to the house the next day.
Mr Adewale Tajudeen , a neighbour was PW3. He said from his apartment, he could easily see some of the happenings in the couples’ apartment.
According to him, on the day of the incident, he saw a deep cut on Akolade’s palm from which blood was gushing, but he didn’t answer any inquiries and simply shouted on the gate man to open the gate. He added that he told other neighbours and the next day they went to the police, to give statements.
Another prosecution witness was one Mr Ogbonna, a member of the investigating team from the state CID, who told the court that they inspected Akolade’s car and took photos. He said he visited the scene twice and conducted a thorough investigation.
Another principal prosecution witness was the deceased’s stepmother, who also testified to the extent that the couple had never enjoy a jolly relationship as husband and wife. On her account of what she saw on the occasion the door was forced opened, she said,  “There was a knife on the floor, a gaping hole on her chest, and a hammer on the floor. One of her eyes was gorged out. When I saw it, I thought there was nothing in the socket.
“Something that looked like a lump of flesh must have been chopped off from the way the deceased was lying on the floor. They had a stormy marriage…shortly after they married, there was a quarrel, Kolade chased Omo (Omozoje)out with a knife. ” She added.
She testified that the deceased had complained that she was tired of the house and wanted to divorced him.  She disclosed that in another incident, a house help said she saw the convict in bed with another woman and reported to the deceased and she moved back to her father’s house. She said, her father also told her not to go back, but Akolade came back to beg and convinced the deceased and she eventually moved back.
The Police witnesses also narrated details of the bloodied crime scene and how the corpse was taken to the hospital.
The “expert” witness of Professor  John Obafunwa, a forensic pathologist and Chief Medical Examiner at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, according to the court provided ample evidence that the prosecution used to nail Arowolo.
Justice Okunnu described Obafunwa’s evidence as “completely professional,” noting that he was “objective, formal, and impassioned.”
After the pathologist conducted a five-and-a-half-hours postmortem examinations on the corpse on July 6, 2011, he said, during his testimony, that  he “discovered at least 76 stab wounds resulting from the use of  tremendous force on the chest, heart, lungs, liver, diaphragm, hands and other parts of the deceased’s body. There must have been many blows, stab wounds. It resulted in severe blood loss .
“The Stab wounds combined caused by sharp weapon , a single and double edged wound.  Injuries to the front of the hear and back of the heart and wall of the heart. You can actually see through to the inside of the chest wall which had collapsed. A particular stab went through the rib cavity to the heart, the stomach was completely torn open.
“All these injuries could not have been self-inflicted because, at a point, you would have dropped the knife,” said Obafunwa.
The defence called six witnesses which included the defendant, his parents, and one Efe Alexandra, who works with a non-government organisation that visited the prison.
Mudashiru Arowolo, the convict’s father, said his son’s marriage to Titilayo had been characterized by undue interference by her father and stepmother.
Mudashiru accused the deceased’s stepmother of attempting to take away the placenta of the couple’s new baby, as well as introducing fetish things into their home.
He also accused the stepmother of assisting the deceased to “abort a baby and tie her womb as a form of family planning,” without informing his son. He further said his son had been a youth pastor at the Foursquare Gospel Church in FESTAC town before they moved to Isolo and he started attending RCCG,Gbagada, where he was a youth pastor. He also denied claims that his son was suspended by the church for womanising and wife-snatching.
During her testimony, the second defence witness, Bolanle Arowolo, had described her son as a well-behaved child who had never showed traits of violence.
In his own testimony, Akolade,  told the court that the whole incident happened on his birthday, 24th of June, 2011, and that his wife woke him up with a kiss,  and that the disagreement started over their baby’s shopping.
He denied ever being aggressive against his wife.
He said he only slapped her once, because she valued her ex-boyfriend more than him. He told the court that she (Titilayo) confessed that her step mum took her out for an abortion and he reported to her mother, but he denied ever chasing his wife with a Knife.
He said the only time she had bruises was when she had a fall from a bike. He however said she was temperamental and the family called her ‘Thatcher’.  He therefore denied killing his wife, saying, “I love her. I never thought of it and I am not that kind of person.”
The Court:
Justice Okunnu said the defendant’s (Akolade) own testimony served to tighten the noose around his neck as it was riddled with contradictions. The Judge said the evidence was disjointed statements, and “faux pas”.
“In his statements to the police after he submitted himself for arrest,  Arowolo, had claimed that he was forced by the police to write that his wife’s stab wounds were self-inflicted. However, while giving evidence, Arowolo had insisted that his wife had only sustained cuts on her hands before he left her to seek for help.
“In a statement, he wrote that she persistently stabbed herself, that something went wrong either mentally or spiritually. I have not ignored this piece of evidence that he was guided to write the statements. The statements were disjointed and contradictory during testimony.
“I note that he proffered excuses for the strange behaviour of his wife. This explanation obviously came from him and not from anyone guiding him. The defendant in the box was trying hard to renege from his earlier statements,” said the court.
The judge also said that Mr Arowolo’s claim that his late wife had attacked him with a knife was inconsistent with the pathologist’s revelations that the deceased received multiple stab wounds resulting to a “blunt force trauma.”
She held,  “I have carefully considered all the evidence. The issue is a simple one. It is the issue as to whether the defendant kills his wife.”
The court stated it needs to consider three  ingredients to determine the case of murder.
These are whether the victim of the alleged act is indeed dead, whether it  was the act of commission or omission of the defendant  that caused the death and whether the defendant  carried out the act intentionally.
“From the evidence put before the court by the prosecution and the defence, the victim is indeed dead. It stands without rebuttal.
The prosecution  showed acts of characteristic violence in the marriage and showed that the defendant was capable of committing this heinous act. This was contained in the evidence of all four  witnesses for the family, which showed an act of serial act of domestic violence on the part of the defendant.
“I am convinced that the deceased died from a repeated stabbing on that day because the testimony of the prosecution is heavy and also that of the expert. The defendant  also testified to this.  Almost two years later, he attempted changing his statement that it was the police who told him to write that she stabbed herself.”
She said Akolade’s  words were fluid like someone writing from the top of his head as what he personally knew.
“This is very weighty and very significant because  he was the only other person in the room with her and it corroborates the evidence of the pathologist that she died of stab wounds.”
The court now raised the question of who killed her?
Pathologist expert witness
She added, “This is where the evidence of the  pathologist expert witness becomes useful. I found him to be very professional.” Justice Okunnu gave detail account of the testimony presented by Prof Obafunwa and concluded thus- “This is very damaging to the defendant. He testifies as to loads of wounds on the victim.
The postmortem gives more details. The deceased stomach was torn open. It details wounds to the body as well as her clothing.  He rules out the possibility of fresh wounds after death or a case of tampering with the body.”
She said the line of defence that there was another person who may have committed the offence was defeated by the defence.
The court latter brought the doctrine of ‘last seen’. It held that the person, who saw the victim  last, bears the responsibility for the cause of death. She said, “It supports the proof already before the court and adds probative value to the prosecutions’ case, that it was the defendant  who killed his wife.”
“It is my findings that it is none other than the defendant himself who stabbed the deceased to death. After eliminating all other options, I find that it was the defendant  who stabbed his wife.”
The court said, “I studied him and found him intelligent. He admitted that he did study logic and so he knew full well that grievous bodily harm was the consequence of his action. Her resultant death then turned to unlawful killing.  His parents tried to debunk that domestic violence characterized the marriage, his mother tries to cover up his act and his father avoided questions put to him. The prosecution succeeded in proving its case. The defendant  is guilty and he is hereby sentenced to death.”

YOBE MASSACRE: How my mates were killed – Survivor

“I was shot on my left leg, while I was sleeping.  When I woke up, I could not walk and was later taken to the girls hostel where the insurgents gathered us with the female students. They selected some of the female students and went away with them, while they left some of us groaning in pain from gun shot”.
Those were the words of 14-year-old Ibrahim Musa Lampo, a JSS 2 student of Federal Government College, FGC, Bunu Yadi, Yobe State who was one of the lucky survivors of the Boko Haram massacre on Tuesday, which claimed the lives of 43 students. The insurgents also burnt the hostels, classrooms and more than 40 houses during the attack.
A survivor of the Yobe massacre. Courtesy: Sahara Reporters.
A survivor of the Yobe massacre.
Ibrahim who recounted his experience while groaning in pains was receiving treatment for gunshot injuries at the General Sani Abacha Specialist Hospital, Damaturu.
His mother, Hajiya Hauwa Lampo, who was sitting beside him on the hospital bed lamented the inability of government to protect the lives of the innocent students. The mother passionately appealed to the Federal Government to “provide adequate security for all unity schools in Nigeria, particularly in the north eastern region of the country by constructing a fence that will shield the students from intruders. And if the government can not deploy adequate security personnel, they should despatch sniffer dogs into the schools to patrol every nook and corner and this will go a long way in curbing the insurgency.”
Ibrahim’s father, Mallam Musa Lampo, an immigration officer was still in shock over the incident and simply said: “I have committed everything into the hands of God.”
Boko Haram attacks
Thousands of Nigerians from the troubled North eastern states are fleeing into Niger Republic as the Boko Haram attacks heightens fears in the region.
A source in the North-East, yesterday, said tens of thousands of people have gone to Niger Republic to escape a wave of attacks and bombings by Islamist sect Boko Haram, which is fighting to carve out an Islamic country from the northern states.
The government in Niamey has granted them refugee status, but United Nations workers say it has also banned the construction of formal camps, fearing any structures could encourage an even bigger influx — or even bring fighters over the border.
“We’re living on the charity and hospitality of locals and aid organizations,” said 28-year-old Umara. “It’s difficult to feed my family. We eat once a day, twice at best.”
A spokesman for Niger’s Interior Ministry was not immediately available for comment. But Hassane Ardo Ido, General-Secretary of Diffa province, said authorities feared militants might infiltrate the camps and use them as bases. “We are trying to handle the situation and stop any act that could hurt our security,” he said.
The United Nations High Commission for Refugees, UNHCR, country representative in Niger, Karl Steinacker, said Niamey was particularly worried because most of the refugees came from the Kanuri ethnic group, a stronghold of Boko Haram.
“The authorities are worried the Nigerian insurgency might spill over into Niger,” he said.
Meanwhile, condemnations have continued to trail the massacre of the students.
Perpetrators should be swiftly brought to justice —UN Scribe
United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-Moon in a statement issued, yesterday, in New York, strongly condemned the brutal killing of students in Yobe. He expressed “sincere condolences to the bereaved families and hoped that the perpetrators would be “swiftly brought to justice”.
It’s declaration of war—Mark
Senate President, David Mark in his reaction described last Tuesday’s slaughter of over 40 students by Boko Haram insurgents as an open declaration of war on Nigerians.
Senator Mark who condemned the killing in a statement issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Paul Mumeh said that the insurgents had no justification to kill students who neither offended them nor committed any crime, saying “even in war situations, children and women were always spared.”
The Senate President said: “This open declaration of war on everybody especially defenceless students cannot be justified. This is inhuman, it is animalistic and barbaric. It is unthinkable that this is happening in Nigeria. It is also curious that under an emergency rule when security operatives should be on red alert, this mayhem still persists. Honestly, this calls for soul searching and I believe the security authorities must rise to this challenge.”
Killings wicked, horrendous —Tambuwal
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, also described the killings as ignoble, wicked and horrendous. In a statement issued in Abuja by his Special Adviser on Media and Public Affairs, Malam Imam Imam, Tambuwal tasked security agencies to redouble their efforts and change their tactics, especially now that those engaged in the killings had increased their attacks on softer targets. He said the only way to console the families of the victims and Nigerians was to fish out perpetrators of the dastardly act  and bring them to justice.
Sultan condemns Yobe killings
The Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Saad Abubakar condemned the killing, saying it was a senseless killing perpetrated by criminals. “The barbaric and heinous attack is utterly condemnable in its totality,” the Sultan said.
He recalled similar attacks in the past and called on the Federal Government to wake up to its responsibility of protecting lives and property of Nigerians, especially the North East.
“Human lives are sacred and must be treated as so,” he said.
Killings extremely shocking — PDP
National leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, on its part described as extremely shocking the massacre of the students of Federal Government College, Bunu in Yadi, Yobe.
In a statement, yesterday, PDP National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, said that as a party, it has been grief-stricken since it received the news of the gruesome killing of the students.
Metuh who described the attack and killing of the harmless students as “monstrous and extremely shocking, said, “The massacre of these harmless students cannot be justified under any guise.”
President should visit Yobe State —APC
The All Progressives Congress (APC) on its part unreservedly condemned the horrific attack on the Federal Government College in Yobe state.
In a statement issued in Lagos yesterday by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said the attacks, which were extremely gory even by the scorched-earth tactics of the terrorists, plumbs the depth of horror.”
APC called on President Jonathan to immediately visit the state to offer succour to the families of the victims and the state government.
Senate asks COAS to relocate to Maiduguri
The Senate on Wednesday directed the Chief of Army Staff, COAS, Lt-Gen. Kenneth Minimah to relocate his office to the 7th Division in Maiduguri and take urgent and appropriate steps to quell the killings by the Islamic sect, Boko Haram in Borno and other states in the North East.
The Senator George Sekibo-led Senate Committee on Defence and Army which said it regretted the Yobe slaughter  advised the COAS to re-strategize on possible new ways of curbing the excesses of the terrorist group and also mobilise all available military resources and face the insurgents.
The Committee said, “We heard of your planned relocation to Maiduguri, we hereby as the Committee overseeing your activities, direct that your office relocate temporarily to the 7th Division in Maiduguri and that you take urgent and appropriate steps to quell the situation.
“From today, all schools and health institutions should be provided with special security, as we do not want a repeat of these killings of our innocent citizens.
Clerics condemn attack
Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN in the North East, Rev. Shuaibu M. Byal, called on President Jonathan to do something decisive to arrest the current madness, asking “or how many more innocent persons must be killed before the government comes to our aid?
In a similar development, the Prelate Methodist Church Nigeria, His Eminence Samuel Uche also expressed great shock and sadness over the gruesome attacks by gunmen suspected to be Boko Haram sect members.

INVESTIGATION: Nigeria’s Accountant-General, NAICOM in alleged record-breaking N3.54 billion scandal

Minister of Finance, Okonjo-Iweala (left), Accountant General of the Federation, Jonas Otunla (middle)


It appears a new kind of fraud in Nigeria. A contract was duly awarded by government to some private firms.
But when it was time to make payment for job done, the N3.538billion contract sum was diverted to an entirely different set of companies.
The companies which received payment did not bid for the jobs, were not awarded the contract and are not known to have offered any service.
The firms which offered service but have now been deprived their legitimate earnings are now crying foul.
They are accusing the National Insurance Commission, NAICOM, and the office of the Accountant General of the Federation, OAGF, of masterminding what appears an unprecedented fraud — diverting the insurance premium due to them (42 insurance companies) to other entities.
Already, a legal firm representing the affected insurance firms, Alade Agbabiaka & Co., has petitioned the Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, and the Attorney-General/Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke, seeking their intervention in the matter.
Copies of the petition were also sent to the Director General, Bureau for Public Enterprises, BPP, Emeka Ezeh; Accountant General of the Federation, AGF, Jonas Otunla, and the National Commissioner of Insurance, National Insurance Commission, Fola Daniel.
The petition, obtained by Alade Agbabiaka & Co., described the action of NAICOM and OAGF officials as “completely astonishing, unlawful and absolutely out of order.”
Counsel to the aggrieved insurance firms indicated that the BPP subjected over 40 insurance brokers who bided for the job to a screening and selection process in line with stipulated guidelines.
At the end of the screening, AIICO Insurance PLC and Standard Insurance Consultants Limited were appointed lead insurer and broker respectively to provide Group Life Assurance for employees of the Nigeria Police Force, NPF.
The deal was approved by the office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation, HCSF, for the two firms to provide life cover for the police from January 1 to December 31, 2013.
In a letter, with  referenced number HCSF/SW/SS/GLA/B/1019/1/ and dated September 6, 2013, the HCSF conveyed government’s approval for the two firms  to serve as lead brokers, while a consortium of 40 other insurance firms were listed as underwriters.
Under the scheme, the Federal Government agreed to pay a total of N3.538billion as premium to the 42 companies listed as underwriters.
With the offer accepted and agreements and memorandum of understanding, MOU, signed by AIICO, the BPP issued a certificate of due process, following the approval of the deal by the Executive Council of the Federation, FEC.
After obtaining relevant approvals and certification, AIICO Insurance issued a policy cover and a debit note referenced: 252/2013/ABJ, to seal the contract.
However, while premiums for similar policies approved by the HCSF, in the Ministry of Police Affairs and Ministry Lands, Housing and Urban Development were paid when due, that of police formations and commands totaling N3.537billion were withheld by the OAGF.
On January 7, 2014, the insurance firm wrote to the AGF, reminding him of the pending premium to the affected insurance firms but the AGF never responded to the letter.
A source in AIICO, who pleaded anonymity, because he is not authorised to speak on the issue, confirmed that further enquiries at the AGF’s office revealed the premium was diverted and paid to Crusader Insurance/Custodian & Allied Insurance PLC along with Hogg Robinson, as the lead insurer.
The transaction, the source said, was based on a memo purportedly sent by NAICOM to the office of the AGF.
But the petitioners have insisted that Crusader/Custodian & Allied Insurance PLC and its ally, Hogg Robinson, neither bided for the contract, nor went through the due process clearance by BPP.
The law firm also noted that the certificate of no objection and requisite approval by FEC, never included Crusader/Custodian & Allied Insurance PLC and its ally.
When contacted, the Director-General, BPP, Emeka Ezeh, said the involvement of his agency in the transaction ended with its issuance of Certificate of Due Process.
He, however, noted that any unlawful diversion of entitlements to any entity outside the parties duly awarded the contract, constituted a criminal breach that should attract legal sanctions.
Mr. Ezeh, who confirmed receipt of a copy of the petition by the aggrieved insurance firms, said the document was forwarded to all relevant authorities, including the HCSF, for necessary action.
“It is only when the Head of Service has responded that we (BPP) would know what to do”, Mr. Ezeh said.
Officials at the Ministry of Police Affairs and the HCSF refused to speak on the issue.
A similar enquiry at the Crusader/ Custodian & Allied Insurance PLC, said to have been paid the alleged diverted premium, was rebuffed.
An official of the insurance firm, who received calls, noted that no staff of the company was authorised to respond to such enquiry, except the Public Relations Officer, PRO, who was said to be on vacation.
Also contacted, the National Commissioner of Insurance, Fola Daniel, denied knowledge of any letter from NAICOM directing the OAGF to divert the said premium to Crusader/Custodian & Allied Insurance.
Mr. Daniel, who spoke through the Assistant Director/Head, Corporate Affairs of NAICOM, Rasaq Salami, however confirmed receiving a copy of the petition on the issue, saying he has already invited all the parties involved to a meeting to amicably resolve the issues.
“No other agency is better placed to say why the alleged diversion was done than the Police themselves,” Mr. Salami said. “The Police always deal directly with the insurance companies, and they decide which company to use and how much premium to pay.
“NAICOM does not get involved at all, except where its advice is sought on the registered and viable companies for a particular transaction,” Mr. Daniel said.
The spokesperson at the OAGF, Charles Nwodo, said he would not respond to inquiries, until he sees “concrete evidence of the memo authorizing the alleged diversion.”
Long after a Freedom of Information, FOI, request was submitted to the OAGF, to formally react to the allegations raised in the petition, no reply was received as at the time of publishing this report.

Presidency under fire for cooking up document linking Sanusi to Boko Haram insurgency



Reno Omokiri, a close aide of Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan, is wound up in a massive scandal after the digital footprint of a slanderous write-up against the recently suspended governor of the Central Bank, Sanusi Lamido, was traced to his computer.
Mr. Omokri, Special Assistant to the President on New Media, is believed to have used a pseudonym, Wendell Simlin, to circulate an article that tried to link the recent spike in Boko Haram attack to the suspension of the CBN governor, Lamido Sanusi.
The article tried to use a purported historical framework to draw contextual relationship between the suspended CBN governor and Boko Haram attacks.
“Given the quantum of funds that were appropriated by the Sanusi-led CBN on non banking related activities and donations, and the strong desire that he and Alhaji Umaru Abdul Mutallab have for proselytizing Islam as well as their circumstantial links to terror (Sanusi via Gideon Akaluka and Mutallab via his son) it is not such a leap for them to facilitate the activities of terrorists,” the article read in part.
The article was circulated to bloggers and journalists on Wednesday with the third party email address, wendellsimlin@yahoo.com, but an analysis of the document’s metadata revealed that Reno Omokri authored it.
The document’s digital signature shared a 100 percent resemblance with that of others who had received from Mr. Omokri in the past.
The document was created by Mr. Omokri or someone else who used his Hewlett Packard computer at 10:01 on Wednesday. Sixteen minutes after it was created, the document was printed and revised once before it was sent out at 11:54 using the Wendell Simlin’s email address.
The email was sent out using the Nigerian government’s official internet service provider, Galaxy Backbone, from Abuja, Feyi Fawehimi who first investigated the mail.
The revelation of the potential scandal angered Nigerians on social media with many calling for his sack.
Mr. Omokri who claims to be a pastor, often posting gospel tips on twitter, is criticized for failing morally and acting criminally by
trying to blame Mr. Sanusi for terrorist killing less than 48 hours after members of the Boko Haram sect murdered young students in their  hostels.
“If it is true that this guy tried to capitalize on this tragedy by forging documents to implicate somebody else, pressure should be
placed on the presidency to fire him,” Pius Adesanmi, a professor of english and respected social critic said on his Facebook page.
Mr. Omokri has the reputation of being government’s online marksman. He is believed to be President Jonathan’s coordinator of internet trolls and  leads the government’s social media onslaught on opposition parties and critics of the administration.
“Some of us who know him know he establishes spurious online accounts to malign opposition,” Tolu Ogunlesi, a journalist, said.
“It is something we know he does,” another blogger said.
The “grave” attitudinal deficiency exposed by Mr. Reno’s email shows a great danger ahead of Nigeria’s 2015 elections, critics say, arguing that it is an indication that the President Goodluck Jonathan-led administration would rather reap politically from the killing than put an end to it.
“Rather than solving the Boko Haram problem, he is using it for political gains,” Mr. Fawehimi said. “It is quite low and depressing.”
Mr. Omokri is yet to respond to the request for comments as at the time of publishing this report.
Aso Rock spokespersons, Reuben Abati and Doyin Okupe, also did not answer or return calls made to them repeatedly by our reporter.

Killing Of Children By Boko Haram: Government Not Doing Enough, Say Groups


Two child’s right organizations, Africans Unite Against Child Abuse (AFRUCA-UK) and the Centre  for Children’s Health Education, Orientation and Protection (CEE-HOPE Nigeria) have strongly criticized the Federal Government for what they describe as ‘negligence and indifference’ in the growing number of cases of killings, especially of children and young students in Northern Nigeria in recent times.
Citing the examples of the killings of an estimated 50 students of the Federal Government College in Buni Yadi, Yobe State in the early hours of February 25 by suspected members of the extremist Boko Haram, the organizations said it was unacceptable that under a sovereign state such atrocities could be going on unabated.
‘The killings of young, innocent and completely hapless students have reached not only an alarming but also an unacceptable level. If we agree that we have a government then the government should be able to protect its people particularly the young and vulnerable.  Unfortunately that is not what we are seeing under this administration,’ said Betty Abah, Executive Director of CEE-HOPE Nigeria.
She added that it was high time both government and individuals shelved ethnic bias and religious sentiments and face the common enemy which is terrorism.
‘We cannot continue as if all is well. A nation where children are unsecured and cannot look to any future, either arising from potential-stifling corruption at the highest level or the fear of being slaughtered like mere chickens shouldn’t exist in the first place, let’s face the raw fact,’ Mrs Abah added.
Debbie Ariyo of the UK-based AFRUCA described the situation as disheartening. “It is the role of government to help secure lives and property. It is not right that our children are exposed to harm and danger at the hands of terrorists this way. Government needs to act to ensure better protection for the citizens, especially children. In the same vein children and families who have been displaced through the evil acts of terrorism need to be offered protection and accommodation,” she said.
 The groups specifically lamented the series of recent killings of students and children by Boko Haram ranging from the July 6 2013 attack at Mamudo Government Secondary School in Yobe where at least 41 children and one teacher were killed; the  29 September 2013 Gujiba College massacre where suspected gunmen entered the male dormitory in the College of Agriculture in Gujiba, Yobe State, killing at least 44 students and teachers;  the Baga massacre of April 19 to 20, 2013 in Borno State where over 228 people were murdered as well as the first major onslaught on March 8, 2010 in the Dogo Nahawa in Plateau State where more than 500 villagers including several children were killed in cold blood. There were also other attacks carried out in churches, markets with high children casualty.
‘The entire world is watching the gross human rights abuses and outright slaughter of children with hardly any forms of reprisal action by the government, and we urge the government to end  this evil trend henceforth.  The rights of children to adequate protection even in conflict and war situations are protected under national and international laws and edicts and Nigeria cannot be an exception,’ the statement added.

Yobe bloodbath: Massive outrage across Nigeria over Boko Haram slaughter of 59 students

Boko Haram members

Anger and frustration reverberated across Nigeria Wednesday, a day after the extremist Boko Haram sect slaughtered nearly 50 students in Yobe State, in a bloody assault that stirred a nation fatigued by Boko Haram killings, and ridiculed President Goodluck Jonathan’s claim of success against the sect.
Politicians, civil society groups, political parties, individuals issued statements Wednesday condemning the attack, mourning the victims, and criticizing the government for failing to foil an attack that seemed predictable since school children had previously been murdered that way in the same state.
“This will not be the first time in recent times that school children are being attacked, and it is particularly disheartening that the Federal Government is yet to devise a strategy of keeping our schools safe from terror attacks,” former Vice President Atiku Abubakar said in a statement.
“When you attack students, you are attacking the foundation of the country’s future. So this attack to me, is to plunge the nation into a bleak and blank future,” said Senate Leader, Victor Ndoma-Egba. “It is obvious that we are now dealing with a bunch of animals to whom human life is now totally meaningless and worthless.”
Armed assailants descended on Federal Government College, Buni Yadi in Yobe in the dead of night Tuesday, setting the hostels alight as the pupils slept in their dormitories, before shooting and hacking to death those who attempted to flee.
One of the bereaved parents was quoted by activist Ibrahim Wala as narrating how his son narrowly escaped death by jumping into a ditch where he witnessed his school mates being slaughtered.
According to the boy’s father, for the hours the attack lasted, and despite the presence of security operatives in Buni-Yadi town, no security personnel or rescue team showed up at the school.
“The murder of innocent school children by some psychopaths is most barbaric, inhuman and criminal,” said Governor Rauf Aregbesola of the State of Osun.
“What could drive people to do such mad thing is unimaginable. What for and in the name of what could anyone murder innocent school children in such cold blood?”
The attack occurred less than 12 hours after President Jonathan assured Nigerians his administration was making gains rooting the insurgents from Yobe, Borno and Adamawa States.
In a televised interview, Mr. Jonathan rebuked a suggestion by the governor of the worst-hit state of Borno, Kashim Shettima, that government forces were under-motivated and ill-equipped to fight the deadly and protracted war.
The comments were “unfortunate”, and untrue, the president said.
But as if to give weight to Mr. Shettima’s concerns, army chief, Major General Kenneth Minimah, on Wednesday told a Senate committee the force was underfunded, according to the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN.
Major-General Minimah was later directed by the Senate Committee on Defence and Army to relocate temporarily to Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.
Mr. Minimah said the Army was up to the task and that it was just a matter of time before it would bring the insurgents to their knees, the NAN reported.
That pledge would barely reassure a nation that has witnessed multiple Boko Haram attacks in 2014 alone, with as much as 250 people killed.
As the attacks escalated, Mr. Jonathan has drawn increased criticisms over his handling of the crisis. The killings have continued despite the president’s repeated pledges to rein in the insurgents.
On Wednesday, activists rallied support online for a protest billed for Thursday to demand a firmer action from the federal government against the insurgents. The protest is to hold 10 a.m from the Unity Fountain, in Abuja.
“It truly hurts that children whom we sent to school as symbols of our unity as a country have become sacrificial offerings in some people’s project towards disunity,”said Bem Angwe, Executive Secretary of the National Human Rights Commission. “This must not be allowed,”

Wednesday 26 February 2014

Nigeria Governors attack Jonathan over Sanusi’s suspension, demand accountability on missing $20 billion

Presiding Officer, Asishana Okauru, announcing the result of the controversial NGF election


The Nigeria Governors’ Forum, NGF, on Tuesday lambasted President Goodluck Jonathan for suspending Central Bank Governor, Sanusi Lamido, weeks after he blew the whistle on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, for allegedly diverting not less than $20billion of the country’s oil revenues.
The apparently angry governors said at the end of their meeting in Abuja, which ended in the early hours of Tuesday, that the president’s action was meant to divert attention from the ongoing national discourse on the missing millions.
They faulted Mr. Jonathan for the action, saying he lacked the power to unilaterally send the CBN governor on suspension.
The President had insisted during a televised media chat on Monday that he had oversight powers over the CBN and therefore had absolute power to suspend Mr. Sanusi.
But the governors disagreed, saying the President’s action was a clear breach of the CBN Act 2007, which demands the president to consult the Nigerian senate before activating any process that might lead to the removal of the bank’s governor.
“The suspension of the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, by Mr. President is in clear breach of the Nigerian Constitution and the CBN Act, 2007,” the governors said in a communique read to journalists by their chairman, Rotimi Amaechi.
“The suspension is aimed at diverting attention from the current national discourse on the missing $20billion from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Account, allegations of corruption and questionable accountability.”
The governors demanded accountability on the missing billions, and backed “the call of the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, and the Senate Committee on Finance for a forensic audit of the NNPC Account”.
The governors also condemned the Federal Government for failing to convene the meeting of  the National Economic Council, NEC, in the last seven months, an action they believe was hindering the constitutional opportunity to discuss the state of the nation’s economy.
They appealed to the judiciary, particularly the Supreme Court, to accelerate hearing on constitutional cases such as those on the Excess Crude Account and illegal deduction of oil subsidy.
The Forum also deliberated on the deadly insurgency in the North-East geopolitical zone and urged the Federal Government to be more responsive to its responsibility of protecting lives and tackle the spate of terrorism attacks in Borno State.
“We expect that the Federal Government should wake up to its responsibility of protecting lives and property in the country, especially in the North-East,” they said.
The Forum, however, commended the Federal Government’s efforts at curbing Boko Haram insurgents in the North and urged the government to up their strategies.
While condemning the current spate of killings in the North- East, it applauded the effort of the Nigerian military and other security agencies, which were tackling the insurgents.
The governors also accused the Federal Government of illegally plotting to impeach Governor Tanko Al- Makura of Nasarawa, describing the action as a renewed assault on constitutional democracy.
The NGF is an umbrella association of the 36 elected state governors of the federation, irrespective of party affiliation.
Tuesday’s meeting was attended by governors of Rivers, Nasarawa, Sokoto, Adamawa, Kano, Lagos and Imo, while Osun, Borno and Edo were represented by their deputies.
A former Governor of Kwara, Bukola Saraki, now a senator, also made a brief appearance at the meeting. Mr. Saraki was Mr. Amaechi’s immediate predecessor as chairman of the Forum.
Read full communique below.
ISSUED AT THE END OF THE 3RD MEETING OF THE NIGERIA GOVERNORS’ FORUM HELD ON MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24  2014, AT THE RIVERS STATE GOVERNOR’S LODGE, ASOKORO, ABUJA
We, members of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF), at our meeting today, at the Rivers State Governor’s Lodge, Abuja deliberated on a number of issues and resolved as follows:
1.     The suspension of the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, by Mr. President is in clear breach of the Nigerian Constitution and the CBN Act, 2007. The suspension is aimed at diverting attention from the current national discourse on the missing $20billion from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Account, allegations of corruption and questionable accountability. We support the call of the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, and the Senate Committee on Finance for a forensic audit of the NNPC Account.
2.     Forum reiterates its concern about the deliberate refusal of the presidency to convene the National Economic Council (NEC) meeting for seven months. This has emasculated the constitutional opportunity to discuss the perilous state of the Nigerian economy thus plunging the nation into an economic and political crisis. In addition, members appeal to the Judiciary particularly the Supreme Court to accelerate the hearing on the constitutional cases especially the case of the Excess Crude Account (ECA) and illegal deductions on oil subsidy.
3.     Members condemn in totality the current spate of killings in the North East. We commend the Nigerian military and other security agencies in their effort to quell this. However, we expect that the federal government should wake up to its responsibility of protecting lives and property in the country especially in the North East.
4.     It has come to our notice that the presidency is plotting to illegally impeach the Governor of  Nasarawa State, Mr. Umaru Tanko Al-Makura. We condemn this renewed assault on constitutional democracy.
Rt. Hon. Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi
Chairman, Nigeria Governors’ Forum
February 24th, 2014