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HURIWA Slams Tambuwal Over Silence, Delayed Justice For Murdered Deborah Samuel; Alleges Cover Up

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By Akinwale Kasali

Rights Group, Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria, HURIWA, has alleged a plot by the Governor Aminu Waziri led- Sokoto State Government to circumvent justice and cover up the gruesome murder of Deborah Samuel, a student of Shehu Shagari College of Education, Sokoto State by Islamic extremists.

The Group said it is shocked and disappointed that in this 21st century, the Sokoto State Government under constitutional democracy can cover up a crime of broad day murder of an innocent lady, with the State Government playing lip service instead of ensuring quick dispensation of justice.

Condemning the hierarchies of the Nigeria Police Force and the Department of State Services (DSS) whose operatives reportedly witnessed the lynch mob action meted out to the defenseless Christian girl from Niger State, HURIWA said it is vexed by what appears like sweeping under the carpets of impunity of this heinous crime of murder and extra legal execution by armed non- state actors witnessed by armed security forces which was instigated by Muslim classmates following unproven allegation of blasphemy of Islam. The  Rights group warned of the profound implication of letting murderers walk freely in the streets of Nigeria by a democratically elected Sokoto State government.

“The loud silence by Governor Aminu Tambuwal on this despicable, primitive, irrational, vexations crime against humanity and the deliberate lack of information to the general public on this matter, is a severe blight on the public image of the Sokoto State governor who for many years was a senior national legislator and even became a speaker of the federal House of Representatives”.

“Deborah Samuel was a Christian who went to find knowledge in Sokoto the citadel of learning but was killed over purported blasphemy by an unruly mob in the presence of law enforcement agents.The Sokoto State governor even put up a flimsy excuse for the armed security operatives’ inability or unwillingness to disperse the killer mob that killed Deborah and thereby watched until the young innocent Northern Christian girl was lynched to her death and her remains set alight.

“Her broad daylight execution will forever be a very dangerous incident that shows that Nigeria is primitive, uncaring, and the political rulers are heartless and lawless. Why on earth are the killers not yet sanctioned in accordance with the law? why is no single police or DSS Chief punished for dereliction of duty? And why the loud silence from Sokoto State government or is mob action a part of the modus operandi of the Sokoto State government.

“The Government of Sokoto needs to adequately inform Nigerians on the steps it has institutionally taken to punish the perpetrators or it would be assumed that this despicable and reprehensible crime has the imprimatur of Sokoto State government in the year 2022.

“HURIWA as a non-religious body committed to the advancement of human rights including FREEDOM OF SPEECH, RELIGION AND ASSOCIATION, is scandalized that Sokoto State administration led by a very senior lawyer who rose to become National publicity secretary of Nigerian Bar Association, Speaker of Nigerian parliament and now the governor, has not successfully prosecuted mass killers captured on video or is he making effort to inform Nigerians and the World on what his government has done to bring the killers to the long arm of the law.”

The Rights group recalled that one of Deborah’s coursemates, identified simply as Rakia, said that the last word of the deceased was ‘what do you hope to achieve with this?’

Narrating the incident, she said Deborah was flogged, killed, and burnt and it was the most horrible thing she has ever witnessed.

“Deborah was my course mate. I just stepped into the class when the uproar on her voice note started.”

HURIWA further recalled the eye witness testified thus: ”It was her own coursemates that started it. One of them said Deborah dared them by refusing to apologise when she was asked to. It all started with a debate on the upcoming examination on a general WhatsApp platform created for our coursemates. One of the students asked her how she passed the last semester’s examination and in response, she said it was ‘Jesus o.’

“Immediately, about three other chats came in from two Muslims and one Christian, telling her to retract the statement. Two students from other departments who overheard some Muslim boys discussing the matter told Deborah’s close friends to prevail on her to retract the statement. But she replied via a voice note on the platform ‘Holy Ghost fire. Nothing will happen to me. ”Is it by force that you guys will always be sending this religious stuff in this group? The group wasn’t created for that but rather as a notice on tests, assignments, exams, etc, not these ‘nonsense’ posts’. “We were made to understand that some young men were brought from outside before the outrage. I was in class when some of our coursemates rushed in, saying ‘there is fire on the mountain o’.

HURIWA recalled that Rakia further stated that the Muslim students led the strangers to the class to look for her, adding that some classmates tried to help Deborah escape as they had gotten a cab waiting outside to drive her straight to the police station but unfortunately, the mob overpowered everyone who tried to save her.

”The last word in her mouth was ‘what do you hope to achieve with this?’ By then some of our coursemates were making calls to some of our lecturers to save the situation. It was when I got home that I heard she was set ablaze. Since the incident, I have been having a flash of her pleading expression. She pleaded for mercy and called out for help but it was far from her. What a cruel way to die,” she said.

HURIWA said if the Sokoto State Governor is unable to resolve this unique but disturbing case of murder as soon as possible, CSOs will definitely approach the international community to take steps to compel the governor to fish out the killers for appropriate justice in line with the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Oshoala Makes History, Wins CAF Footballer Of The Year Award For The Fifth Time

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By Akinwale Kasali

Super Falcons of Nigeria and Barcelona Football Club of Spain Striker, Asisat Oshoala has been crowned the 2022 African Female Footballer of the Year, following her superlative performance for both Club and country.

Oshoala becomes the first African to achieve the feat of winning Five African Footballer of the Year Award, surpassing former Super Falcons midfielder, Perpetual Nkwocha who had won the award Four times.

The CAF Award Ceremony held in Rabat, Morocco saw Oshoala picking the coveted award ahead of Indomitable Lioness of Cameroon Striker, Ajara Nchout Njoya, who plays her Club Football in Italy with Inter Milan Football Club and Zambia international, Grace Chanda, who plays her Club football in Kazakhstan with BIIK Kazygurt Football Club.

The 2021-22 campaign was arguably Oshoala’s best yet as she played a key role in her Spanish side’s treble charge – the Spanish Women’s Super Cup, Copa de la Reina and the Primera Division.

Although, she missed a couple of matches due to injury, that did not stop her from emerging as league joint-top scorer after netting 20 goals in 19 league appearances to share the award with Brazilian Geyse Ferreira, who managed the same number of goals in 27 appearances for Madrid CFF.

Impressively, she scored a hat-trick against Real Betis and a double versus Real Sociedad, Valencia, Villarreal, and Real Betis.

In the Copa de la Reina, she scored in her only appearance in the tournament against Real Madrid.

Her side could have won a quadruple, but Barcelona lost 3-1 to Olympique Lyonnais at the Juventus Stadium in Turin.

Internationally, she contributed little as she did not score a single goal for the Super Falcons in the period under review.

To make things worse, she was ruled out of Women’s Africa Cup of Nations 2022 with Nigeria through injury after suffering a medial collateral ligament strain in the West African’s 2-1 defeat to South Africa in Rabat.

Oshoala is the fourth Nigerian to land the women’s version of the award, following in the footsteps of Mercy Akide (2001), Nkwocha (2004, 2005, 2010 & 2011) and Cynthia Uwak (2006 & 2007).

Senegal and Bayern Munchen Forward, Sadio Mane was crowned the CAF Male African Footballer of the Year, ahead of Senegalese Compatriot, Edouard Mendy and former Liverpool Football Club of England teammate, Mohammed Salah.

Singer David ‘Davido’ Adeleke and Austin ‘Jayjay’ Okocha were some of the leading Africans in sport and music to present an award at the 2022 CAF awards.

While Davido, alongside Emmanuel Adebayor, presented the award for young female footballer of the year to Ghana’s Evelyn Badu, Okocha presented the award for goal of the year to Papa Ousma Sacho.

Davido joined eminent sports personalities and dignitaries in Rabat, Morocco for the 2022 edition of the major African sporting event.

The winners of others awards are;

Club of the Year (Women) – Mamelodi Sundowns

Interclub Player of the Year (Women) – Evelyn Badu (Ghana & Sekondi Hasaacas Ladies/Alvaldsnes)

Young Player of the Year (Women) – Evelyn Badu (Ghana & Sekondi Hasaacas Ladies/Alvaldsnes)

Coach of the Year (Women) – Desiree Ellis (South Africa)

Coach of the Year (Male) – Aliou Cisse

Interclub Player of the Year (Male) – Mohammed El-Shenawy

Opinion: Osun: Buhari Does It Again

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By Femi Adesina
Let me start with some clarifications. I’m from Osun State, and my homestead is Ipetumodu, in Ife North Local Government Area. And I am not Osun in Diaspora. I was born in Osogbo, capital of the State, when my father was Principal of St Charles Grammar School in the 1960s.
When he retired home, after moving from Osogbo to Notre Dame College, Usi-Ekiti, I continued my education, primary and secondary, in our hometown. For tertiary, I went to the then University of Ife, now Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. So, I’m a homeboy. Osun ni mi tokan tokan (I’m a thoroughbred Osun man).
I’m also a Buharist, a firm believer in the ideals of that honest man, the Mai Gaskiya from Daura, in Katsina State, though I am not a registered member of the All Progressives Congress (APC).
It was, therefore, laughable for some people to try and rope me into Osun State politics, as the gubernatorial election held last Saturday. First, they came up with the news that Femi Adesina had lost his ward to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). Which Femi Adesina. Me? Or another one? Do you lose what you don’t participate in?
Out of curiosity, I checked. The APC had, indeed, won my ward, in the Post Office area of Ipetumodu by 176 to PDP’s 130 votes. But it didn’t matter. It just shows how heinous and petty some people can be.
Again, this post later began to circulate on WhatsApp and other social media platforms: “The former Interim National Chairman of APC, Chief Bisi Akande, is from Osun State.
“The current National Secretary of APC, Sen Iyiola Omisore, is from Osun State.
“Bola Tinubu is from Osun State.
“Femi Fani-Kayode is from Osun State.
“Femi Adesina is from Osun State.
“The Deputy National Chairman of APC is from Osun State.
“The current Governor of Osun State is Tinubu’s cousin.
“These are the structures APC have in Osun State and they still lost the election.
“APC should expect more Wahala 2023. Indeed, people’s voice and votes do count.”
Yes, I agree that people’s voice and votes do count, and we will talk more about that, courtesy President Muhammadu Buhari.
My position is this. I work for an APC government, and it is my preferred party. But member? Not so. I have always rooted for good APC candidates and I would have loved if Governor Gboyega Oyetola had won in Osun last weekend. I’d known him since he was Chief of Staff to the former Governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola. They were both at the reception held for me in my town by the then Kabiyesi, when I was appointed media adviser to the President in 2015. Gov Oyetola had been focused, sure-footed.
But I’d also known Governor-elect, Ademola Adeleke, since he was a Senator. He had even paid me a brotherly visit at the Presidential Villa in 2017. So, I was a stakeholder in the Osun election in many ways, but it would be fickle for anybody to call me a part of the APC structure in the State. Not by any stretch of the imagination. Yes, APC is my preferred party, but I’m not a member, and won’t likely be, with my eyes set on farming and media work after leaving government service.
Without prejudice to whatever decision Gov Oyetola and the party would eventually take on the outcome, the election has held, and a winner has emerged. I would have preferred that the Governor be re-elected to continue with the steady, unobtrusive job he is doing for the State, but the people have decided otherwise. That was also the position of the President, a fair and just man, if ever there was one.
By Sunday morning when ‘come had come to become,’ the President did not waste time in causing me to issue a statement congratulating Senator Adeleke on his electoral victory. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had declared him winner, and so it must be.
He had his preference for Osun. I did too, as a political observer. But once the race was run and won, the President congratulated the winner. Fair and just thing to do. He said the will of the people must matter in a democracy, and that the will must always be respected. Is that not a radical departure from the past, particularly under PDP, in which all elections in States must be won willy-nilly by the party at the center?
I remember what happened in Ondo State. Olusegun Mimiko had wanted the ticket of the PDP to serve as Governor. He was wangled out. So he went to Labour Party, and won the election. But while the results were being announced, the then government at the center caused another candidate to be announced as the winner. When the people trooped out in protest, an order was given that they be gunned down. When Mimiko heard of it, he appealed to his supporters to stay calm, and went to court instead. It took almost three years, but he eventually regained the purloined mandate.
How many PDP Governors were eventually kicked out of office by the courts, simply because the party won the positions by artifice and sleight of hands? But count Buhari out of such. Even the Osun Governor-elect has this to say:
“When I saw the congratulatory message from the President, I said this is great for our country and democracy is at play here and I’m sure after I received my Certificate of Return from INEC, I would plan to visit him and thank him for the message because most of the times, the opposition don’t congratulate the winners. Maybe the President is trying to leave a legacy and the Electoral Act that he signed into law. I have to give the President the credit because if he didn’t sign the Electoral Act, there would be room for rigging because they did it in 2018. But this election is great because everything is coming out as expected.”
This election is great, because everything is coming out as expected. And thanks to President Buhari. Whereas, one election was always worse than the previous one in the past, with the do-or-die attitude of PDP, Buhari came with a new attitude since 2015. How many elections has APC lost? Many. If Federal might had been deployed, as it used to be, those elections would have been ‘won’ by force.
In fact, it has become very difficult to rig elections in Nigeria of today. And that is perhaps why vote buying is now so commonplace. But to just snatch and stuff ballot boxes? To alter winner on result sheets? Difficult, almost impossible. And it flows from President Buhari’s resolve. INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmoud Yakubu, can now beat his chest and say that the 2023 general elections would be the nation’s best. Yes, when you have a President like the one we have, you can go all out for fairness, probity, transparency, and you would be backed to the hilt.
President Buhari had always said if bequeathing free and fair polls to the country was the only thing he would succeed in doing (and he has succeeded in many other fronts), then he would do so. We see it happening, and our hearts are gladdened.
When the man from Daura finishes, and goes to take his deserved retirement, those who are fair minded would always remember him as the man who made a difference on many fronts, particularly in the area of free and fair elections. We will never forget him.
Adesina is Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity

Kuje: FG Had Pre-knowledge Of Attack By Terrorists – Aregbesola, Minister For Interior

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By Ayodele Oni

The Nigerian Government knew about the attack on Kuje Correctional Centre, Abuja, by terrorists before it took place. This was confirmed on Thursday by Rauf Aregbesola, Minister for Interior, whose Ministry supervises Correctional Centres.

Terrorists, in their numbers, last month,  brazenly stormed the prison in an attack that, at once, shocked and shook the nation. A number of high profile prisoners, including dangerous terrorists, are inmates

During the attack which lasted for almost three hours, their operations went unchallenged. They freely used explosives and superior gunfire. At the end, tragedy was wrought on the country.

Over 800 inmates were released by the terrorists, including 65 Boko Haram fighters who were in custody. Weeks after the attack, over 300 inmates are still at large. Five people were killed, including a Security personnel and four inmates.

It has always been strongly suspected that the Federal Government was in the know before the attack but inexplicably did nothing to stop it, fuelling a ridiculous but strong allegation that it must have been an arranged mission to release detained Boko Haram elements at the Centre.

A former Minister for Aviation, Femi Fani-Kayode, had in a video recording which went viral, revealed that the Department of State Services, DSS, duly informed  the Military of the would-be attack. He regretted that the Military did nothing until the tragic incident.

And, even though the leadership of the Military denied Fani-Kayode’s allegations, Aregbesola on Thursday confirmed that yes, the Federal Government  had pre-knowledge of the attack.

Speaking to the State House Press Corp after a meeting of Security Chiefs, the Minister admitted to what has now become obvious: that there was an intelligence report available to Government before the attack. Aregbesola regretted that there was no will to act on the information.  He did not reveal those who failed to act on it.

He, however, disclosed that the report of preliminary investigation into the incident is ready, and has been handed over to the President, Muhammadu Buhari. Those who went deaf and dumb in their responsibilities will be punished, he said.

Fani-Kayode had heaped praises on the DSS for giving intelligence information before the attack, as well as before the attack on the Abuja-Kaduna bound train about three months ago, but indicted the leadership of the Military for alleged dereliction in their duties. He asked for their sack.

FG Mulls To  Ban Okada Business In A Move To Cripple Bandits

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By Ayodele Oni

The end may be near for those that use motorcycles as means of survival as the Federal Government is mulling an idea to put an end to the use of motorcycles in the country.

Motorcycles became means of transportation in the country to fill the gap created by buses, especially in the remote areas where there are no motorable roads.

Also, following a surge in unemployment, some graduates resort to the use of motorcycles for commercial purposes to eke out a living.

But, Nigeria’s Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, SAN,  said the use of motorcycles has gone beyond that.

According to him, bandits now use motorcycles to raise funds for their activities, as well as a means of transport during their activities.

Rising from a meeting of Security Chiefs on Thursday, the Attorney General announced that the Federal Government is considering placing a ban on the use of motorcycles, popularly known as okada.

Briefing State House reporters after a meeting of National Security Council (NSC) presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, Malami explained that motorcycles are used for mining activities across the country and the ban could cut off sources of funds of terrorists and bandits.

The Minister, who was flanked by his Interior and Police Affairs counterparts, Rauf Aregbesola and Mohammed Dingyadi, said the meeting deliberated on the logistics used by the terrorists in a bid to stop their activities.

He said the Government needed to act because terrorists have moved from the conventional ways of funding their activities to mining and ransom taking.

Malami said the motorcycles were used by the bandits for movement, while mining provides them the money to fund their arms supply.

The Minister pointed out that Government is not unmindful of implications of the ban of motorcycles and mining activities on ordinary Nigerians and the economy, but that national interest should be above that of individuals.

While speaking, Aregbesola confirmed that Government had intelligence report before the recent attack on Kuje Correctional Centre but regretted that there was the absence of will to act on it.

The Minister, who revealed that preliminary report of investigation on the attack had been submitted to the President, assured that detailed report would be made available at the end of the probe.

He said those found to have abandoned their responsibilities would be punished.

Imo: Uzodimma Dissolves Imo Interim Management Committee Chairmen

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Hope Uzodimma

Governor Hope Uzodimma has dissolved the 27-man Interim Management Committee Chairmen of Imo State.

He did so on Thursday after a closed door meeting with them at the Sam Mbakwe Executive Chambers, Government House Owerri.

At the meeting, Governor Uzodimma thanked them for the services they rendered in their different  Local Government Areas since their appointment about two and half years ago and for their loyalty.

He also reminded them of his resolve to hold the Local Government Area election in Imo State any moment from now and the need for him to appoint Sole Administrators who will oversee the coming election.

Governor Uzodimma also told the dissolved IMC Chairmen that his Government will not hesitate to engage their services in other areas they are found capable as APC members.

In their response,  Chairman of ALGON in Imo State,  Mr Willie Okoliogo, who is also the Chairman of Oru West Council, the IMC Chairmen promised to remain loyal to the Governor and the APC.

Ogun: APC Governorship Aspirant, Paseda Dumps Party

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Otunba Rotimi Paseda

By Akinwale Kasali

The gale of defection rocking the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC, has continued, as two-time governorship candidate in Ogun State, Otunba Rotimi Paseda has dumped the party.

In a letter addressed to the National Chairman of the party, Senator Abdullahi Adamu, Paseda, cited the decision of the party to chose Prince Dapo Abiodun, the incumbent Governor as its  governorship candidate, for his action.

Paseda, the 2015 Unity Party of Nigeria, UPN, governorship candidate in the state, said he has lost interest in the party, which he claimed has abandoned its core democratic values.

He added that the choice of Governor Abiodun as APC governorship candidate   for the 2023 election will cost the party dearly.

“Sir, the decision to terminate my membership of this great party was borne out of my personal conviction, having x-rayed the event that led me into joining the party, and having worked for the party, particularly with our collective efforts that lead to the winning of for the 2019 governorship election in the state,” he said.

According to him, “I am of the strong opinion that it would be unwise, in my usual character, to remain in the party with a faulty, faulted and erroneous choice of the party governorship candidate that will not earn the party the needed electoral victory at the 2023 poll.

“Though, it is a painful decision, considering the vacuum which my exit will create with my various groups of APC card carrying members in the state, 6000 Reformed OPC members, 2000 Ijebu Youth Association members and thousands of various Paseda Movement loyalists, as the National resuscitator, sole financier and 2015 Governorship candidate of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) and the 2019 Governorship Candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP). Having made extensive consultations it has become necessary that I make this move.

“Mr. Chairman sir, no doubt, I’ll be missing some of my colleagues with whom we have worked together within the period of my stay in the party. I’m however left with no option than taking the decision which I have just done.

“I, however, want to believe and hope that we all will surely meet again at a better and more rewarding platform that will catapult us towards achieving our political goal.”

The exit of Paseda from the APC is coming days after former APC Chairman in Rivers State, Magnus Abe left the Party.

Earlier this week, Theodore Georgewill,  the Campaign Director General to APC’s Governorship Candidate in the 2019 Election, Tonye Cole  tendered his resignation letter to the party.

Georgewill in a letter dated July 18, 2022, formally resigned from the party citing  Personal reasons.

Ibim Semenitari, the former Commissioner for Information and Communication of Rivers State had also left the APC.

Others, who announced resignation  from the APC in their letters to their respective wards chairmen were Dawari George,

Marvin Yobana (former Africa’s Representative at the World Youth Assembly), Nkemka Amadi and Robinson Elechi.

Cross Rivers: Ayade Tackles Igini Over Senatorial Ticket

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Mike Igni

By Stanley Ekpenyong

Cross River state Governor, Prof. Ben Ayade has described as personal opinion, comments by the Akwa Ibom State Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Mike Igini, on the recently conducted Senate primary for Cross River Northern Senatorial Zone.

Ayade who spoke through his Deputy Chief Press Secretary, Linus Obogo, insists that Igini’s comments do not represent the position of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC.

According to him, Igini’s attempt at interpreting Section 115(D) of the Electoral Act 2022 as amended, amounts to a perverse and unwholesome meddlesomeness and a cheap usurpation of responsibility assigned only to a spokesperson.

“I beggars belief that Igini who is a staff of  INEC, an agency of the executive arm of government, would brazenly meddle in the duty of the judiciary as well as playing the role of a spokesman to INEC.”

“No doubt, Igini’s feverish attempt to offer judicial interpretations to Section 155(D) of the Electoral Act, is clearly a reckless exercise in executive rescality” Obogo said.

Further taking a swipe at the Akwa Ibom REC, Obogo stated:  “In Igini’s usual hysteria, “he sought to conflate the presidential and constituency primaries as one and the same, and in doing so, he attempted to set Governor Ayade up against the Electoral Act, by giving contrary interpretations to what the law says about double nomination forms.

“There is no doubt that Ayade bought a form and equally participated in the March 26 APC presidential primary, but at no time did he obtain a form to contest another political party’s presidential primary, which was what Igini would want the public to believe during his ill-tempered outing on one of the national television stations recently. The governor neither took part in multiple presidential nor constituency primaries.”

Obogo said further that  his boss’ participation in the July 14 primary was the outcome of the previous ticket holder withdrawing from contesting the 2023 senatorial election, culminating in the vacancy of the ticket and subsequent conduct of a fresh primary. He said the governor’s participation in the fresh primary held on July 14 was within the ambits of the Electoral Act.

He accused Igini of “trying to lay legal ambush against Ayade by seeking to disingenuously smuggle into the Electoral Act what the framers of the Act never intended.

“The Akwa Ibom REC cannot be allowed to go on brewing the storm everywhere he goes, especially as the sun is about to set on his turbulent reign as INEC Commissioner.”

Obogo wondered why Igini usually displays overly partisanship towards candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, who took part in similar fresh primaries, citing Bauchi State governor, Bala Mohammed and his Sokoto counterpart, Aminu Tambuwal who participated in a similar exercise a few days after losing the bid for the PDP presidential ticket.

He said, “In spite of his posturing as Mr. Integrityof INEC, Igini cannot hoodwink us that he is not sympathetic to the PDP, by maintaining tight lips when Governors Bala Mohammed and Aminu Tambuwal had  fresh primaries conducted for them barely a few days after losing out in their party’s presidential primaries.

“Besides, why is Igini pretending not to be aware that the electoral umpire, INEC, which he is a REC, monitored the fresh primaries, which was in any case a validation of the exercises he is dissipating energy to malign?”

Entreating Igini to leave his boss alone, Obogo said: “Please, Mr. REC, in your less than one month to your exit, leave Ayade alone and focus more on ending the confusion you have created in Akwa Ibom APC. You have enough on your hands already, even as you try to do the job of Mr. Festus Okoye, as the curtain draws on your chequered and troubled REC stewardship.”

Why The Opposition Is Celebrating The Awo Omamma Incident – Imo Govt

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Hope Uzodinma

The Imo State Government has accused the opposition of celebrating the Awo Omamma incident because of their mischievous vested interest in the security breaches in some parts of Orlu zone.  Their hasty conclusion on the incident, the Government said, has further exposed them as the  sponsors and perpetrators of violence in the area

It noted that the ferociousness with which they jumped to blame and condemn the Government , even when the Department of State Services, DSS, has admitted carrying out the operation, should leave no one in doubt as to those behind security breaches in the State.

In a statement he issued in Owerri, the Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Honourable Declan Emelumba, expressed surprise that those accusing the Government of killing wedding guests in Awo Omamma on Sunday, have refused to listen to the explanation of the DSS that those killed were bandits who were planning to attack innocent  citizens the next day to enforce their sit-at- home order.

He recalled that the same opposition elements who did not condemn the not-too- distant incident of random beheading of people, and the displaying of their heads in market squares as well as the discovery of a dungeon where hundreds were buried and cannibalism practiced, have suddenly become rabid crusaders against the shedding of blood as if the blood of those other people was ordinary water.

The Commissioner said the fact that these same elements could also not find the voice to condemn the burning of the country home of the Governor and that of members of his Government, in the same zone, equally comfirm their complicity  otherwise  “why should they condone blood letting and criminality in the same Orlu axis only to hurry to condemn the Government for a crime it did not commit in the same area?

He said both those arrested during the DSS operation and the Pionter who took the security agencies to the venue where the non-state actors were meeting have confessed that the shoot out occurred at the camp of criminals who were planning how to violently enforce a sit- at-home order the next day

Emelumba said  because these opposition elements have refused to interrogate the submission of the DSS, they failed to notice that  only young boys attended the traditional wedding in question, leaving out women and elders and even children, which is curious.

“They also failed to confirm the fact that the shoot out occurred only at the meeting camp and that those caught in the cross fire were those at the meeting venue. Of course this is only because they are jaundiced with a mindset that finds the government guilty before the outcome of investigations” the statement declared.

The Commissioner argued that the refusal of those pillorying Government  of complicity, to listen to the explanation of the DSS suggests that they are collaborators in the security crisis in the area.

According to him, “why are they in a hurry to accuse the Government  of any killing even when the DSS claimed responsibility and gave reasons for their actions?”

He wondered why those who are rushing to condemn the operation never deemed it fit to speak out against the earlier killings by hoodlums in the State.

Said he,” we were here when hoodlums were beheading people, slaughtering traditional rulers and even eating the flesh of human beings, but these people never condemned the atrocities. We were here when hoodlums burnt the houses of the governor and government officials, there was no whimper from these latter day crusaders. But now that the war is being taken to the hoodlums, they have suddenly found their voices’

The Commissioner was saddened by the fact that now that the security agencies were succeeding in routing the criminals, there appear to be a coordinated campaign of calmuny against it.

He noted that for sometime, the State has been relatively peaceful as a result of the gallant efforts of Security agencies  and wondered why the outcry against their legitimate activities.

Emelumba reiterated Government’s position that the security challenges were politically motivated to make it appear that the Governor was not popular.

“Just take a look at the pattern of the insurrection and concentration of criminal activities. They are in Orlu zone, especially Orlu, Orsu, Oru East and Oru West, giving the false impression that the governor is not wanted even by his own people. Can’t you see that this is a well planned script of the opposition? ”

He, however, assured that there is no where that the Government will condone the killing of any innocent citizen in the state.

” It is absurd for anyone to accuse Government of killing its own youth. That is pure madness. Government is awaiting details of investigation from security agencies. But what has been established so far is that those who died were those at the camp. Once investigations are concluded and there is evidence of any innocent victim, government will take appropriate steps to mitigate the loss”, he submitted

Will Machines Replace Journalists, Too?

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Azu Ishiekwene

By Azu Ishiekwene

The advent of any significant changes in technology has often triggered concerns about the fate of journalism. Even at the infancy of social media, TIME covered one of its editions of February 5, 2009, with concern about the imminent death of journalism. To drive home the point, the graphic was illustrated with a copy of the New York Times wrapping a tilapia.

The profession went through similar bouts of self-doubt and anxiety, after the introduction of the movable type and printing press. This same thing happened following the introduction of the telephone, radio and television. In hindsight, it would seem that journalism’s death was slightly exaggerated.

But can the survival of journalism as we know it today be taken for granted in the midst of the extraordinary changes in technology and ICT? In 5, 10 or 20 years, will there be any dots to connect between technology and journalism or would the profession be submerged in a sea change?

In Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach, Stuart J Russell and Peter Norvig’s groundbreaking, expansive study on AI, first published in 1995 and released in its fourth edition in 2020, the computer scientists and scholars offer a sharp and comprehensive introduction to the foundations of artificial intelligence. The book covers a diverse range of fields from philosophy to mathematics, neuroscience and psychology, and linguistics.

In a particularly memorable passage, the authors said,“We don’t want machines that are intelligent in the sense of pursuing their objectives; we want them to pursue our objectives.”

The extent to which this goal is achievable, and whether it should be desirable in the first place, has, of course, been a subject of vigorous and prolonged debate.

There are those rightfully concerned that the oncoming waves of automation would exacerbate existing inequalities between workers whose backgrounds have afforded them education and other social privileges that put them at the higher ends of well-paying tech jobs and those who depend on jobs that would most likely be phased out by automated systems.

The stats may not amplify these fears but they do not allay them either. A report from Mckinsey studying skill shifts in the workforce in Europe and the United States says that between 2016 and 2030 the demand for technological skills would increase significantly compared with the demand for manual and basic cognitive skills. The prospects may be slower in Africa, but they are creeping up.

Mass media have long ceased to be the sole domain of professional journalists. That is, not only have established assumptions about the authority of the journalist to witness, record and disseminate news been severely undermined, established assumptions about audience’s expectations in journalists have also been challenged.

When I joined PUNCH in 1989 the dominant way of collecting the news from offices outside Lagos, the headquarters, was by radio. We had a few telephone lines alright, but they were congested and unreliable. Reporters filed in a few copies from the states by telex, but the bulk was by radio. The compugraphic machines, galleys and cow gum did the rest of the prepress job. That was over three decades ago.

We deployed reporters in Sheraton Hotels, Lagos, where they spun war stories from Baghdad by watching the TV at the reception over a bottle of coke taken for hours. Somehow, through improvisation and compelling designs, the paper became a hit.

What happened in PUNCH was emblematic of the crises that the industry faced after the prosperous seventies and eighties.

There were significant changes in the operating environment, partly as a result of ownership and politics, but fundamentally as a result of poor economics and the inability of the industry to forecast where changes in technology might lead and to leverage them.

As production costs increased and infrastructure deteriorated, however, the response of the press, in particular, was not necessarily to find smarter, more efficient ways of distributing content. Instead, media owners embarked on a binge of buying fleets of distribution vans and producing multiple editions, with very little returns on inventory.

This massive investment in a blackhole worsened their already precarious financial positions after General Ibrahim Babangida’s controversial “structural adjustment programme”.

With advertising naira shrinking, advertisers began to insist on data, forcing the opaque newspaper industry to begin to face its own demon. Adoption of new practices, improvements in internal methods to make them more efficient and customer-centric – including deployment of new technologies – became not a matter of choice, but of survival for the industry.

Today, a number of media houses (print and broadcast) have strong social media platforms and even web-first news policies, while strictly online brands such as Sahara Reporters, Premium Times, The Cable and Peoples Gazette, to name a few, have become significant players, using extensive degree of new technologies to collect, process and share content and earn revenue.

However, of all these developments, the arrival of citizen journalists on the one hand and the AI-powered robots on the other, are perhaps the most significant occurrences in journalism.

It seemed OK when technology led to mechanized farming, brought changes in the mode and speed of transportation and even transformed the textile and culinary industries. Journalists were happy to herald these changes.

As soon as technological changes arrived at the doorsteps of the profession, however, with the distinct possibilities that non-journalists could use and deploy them in everyday life, the alarm bells were set off, sounding like a tribal call against the invasion of aliens: AI was The Beast!

Yet, by focusing on more routine and menial tasks, it is believed that automation frees journalists up for more comprehensive, in-depth reporting, significantly improving the quality of journalistic work.

Sharing examples of how journalism and robots are connecting and finding common grounds elsewhere raises the natural question: where does that leave the Nigerian journalist?

Incursions by bloggers, influencers and corporates using non-traditional news channels to share valuable content have challenged the mainstream media. Also, the increased entry into the profession of persons with non-formal-media background has improved the profession both in its diversity and deepened its adoption rate of new technologies.

Through hackathons, collaboration of media and non-media persons, for example, robotics have been deployed in sourcing data that shine the light on community problems on access to healthcare, education and job-creation.

Media organisations either working collaboratively on independently also deploy drones in previously inaccessible communities, to gather content, especially in conflict situations. Although this practice is still not sufficiently widespread because of costs, inertia – and even grey regulatory areas sometimes – an increasing level of training and collaboration might see improvements in the years ahead.

It is true that the role of the journalist is changing, and I believe future developments in the field will give journalists more power and responsibility, not less.

Once, we suffered from not knowing nearly enough. Now, we may be entering an era in which we know too much. Even if we could guarantee responsible use of AI and similar technologies – which we can’t – we would still bear the heavy burden of knowledge in a world that has become more predictable but no less dangerous.

But what is also true is that there are more of us now than there have ever been, citizen and career journalists alike, with significant resources at our disposal, to decide not only what the news is, but what it should mean and what responsible actions it should spur.

A number of media houses in Nigeria are currently battling a range of problems from low, irregular pay to poor training, infrastructure and low trust rating as a result of poor ethics. My anecdotal experience does not suggest that displacement by bots is a serious concern in the face of these current existential crises.

The media is still a long way from where AI may be regarded as a clear and present danger to jobs. Yet, globalisation, which has narrowed boundaries, made travels cheaper and increased connections, has also exposed consumers of media content in Nigeria and across the continent to higher standards.

With greater penetration of smartphones and other home devices (embedded with such bots as Siri, Bixby, Alexa) at lower costs and the expansion of Internet services, my guess is that the demand for more AI services amongst Nigeria’s media consumers would also increase.

And hopefully journalists who are in this business for the long run would have little or no option but to raise their game. The question is not whether the dots are connecting, but how quickly, responsibly and efficiently journalists can connect them in the service of the craft of storytelling.

The future belongs to man and machines.


This is an abridged version of a paper on “Cybernetics, robotics and journalism: Connecting the dots”, by Ishiekwene presented at a seminar at the Department of Mass Communication, Bingham University, Abuja on July 14