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Nnamdi Kanu’s, Lawyer, Ejiofor, Beneficiary Of South-east Crisis – Orji Kalu

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By Adesina Soyooye

Senate Chief Whip, Orji Uzor Kalu, has taken on Ifeanyi Ejiofor, lead Counsel to IPOB leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu.

Ejiofor had tackled Kalu for visiting Kanu in custody at the Department of State Services, DSS, in the absence of Kanu’s Counsels.

The Senator had visited Nnamdi Kanu where both of them had discussions. Kalu, in a statement after his visit, said he advised Kanu on the implications of his (Kanu’s) utterances and actions, disclosing that he has always been close to the Kanu family, having been the one, as Abia Governor, who appointed Kanu’s father a Traditional Ruler.

But Ejiofor had taken an exception to it, insisting that Kalu’s visit  to Kanu be investigated. Ejiofor said the visit breached the protocol for visits to Kanu, as ordered by the Court. The protocol, he said, is that Kanu should only receive visitors in the presence of his Counsels.

He said Kanu visited for political reasons and to attract publicity to himself.

And warned against people visiting his Client to put pressure  on him, intimidate him, or deceive him on the happenings outside his detention facility.

But in his reaction Senator Kanu berated Ejiofor, saying that Ejiofor seems to be a beneficiary of the crisis in the South-east. He, also, accused Ejiofor  of not caring about the fate of the economy of the South-east which is going down because of the sit-at-home order. Nor does he care about the suffering of the people.

Senator Kalu also said that he breached no protocol. It is Ejiofor, he said, who came by 4.00pm, for a 2.00pm appointment. He emphasized that he followed all protocols as ordered by the Court.

Following is the full text of Senator Kalu’s reaction.

Ifeanyi Ejiofor
Ifeanyi Ejiofor

“It has come to my notice,

the statement issued by one of the counsels to Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, Barrister Ifeanyi Ejiofor, in which I am  very disappointed in him. He rightly acknowledged that I was scheduled to visit his client and at the same time,  claimed that I violated the guidelines stipulated for visiting his client.

“According to him, he was supposed to be present at the 2pm meeting on Monday.

“Several people, including Barrister Ejiofor, have tried to misinterpret and misinform the public about my visit to my brother, Nnamdi.  I also read a report stating that I took pictures with Nnamdi and also tweeted same on my Twitter account.

“For the records,  the Department of State Services (DSS) did not break any protocol during my visit as I fulfilled all the requirements expected of me before I saw Nnamdi. The DSS affirmed that I cannot see Nnamdi without the application of his lawyers which I diligently did.

“Probably, Barrister Ejiofor may have expected me to arrive at 4pm for a scheduled 2pm visit. What many people refer to as “African time” is not my style. I strictly keep to time and it is a discipline I have upheld since my childhood.

“I arrived the DSS headquarters at 1:50  PM ;  went through the necessary protocols and met Nnamdi at 2:17 PM.  I stayed with him until 2: 57 PM.  Even though he asked that I stayed longer but I had to leave because of other engagements .

“During my visit to Nnamdi, I did not even take my mobile phone along and no photograph was taken. The photograph people are circulating was the one I took with him when I visited him at the Nigerian Correctional Service Medial Security Custodial Centre, Kuje in 2016 and later, his parents in 2017. My Twitter account has also been inactive .

“I don’t also know if Barrister Ejiofor is aware that Nnamdi is not under compulsion to see anyone. If he didn’t want to see me, he could have as well declined, but he was glad to see me and also expressed deep appreciations.

“Ejiofor’s anger seems to be borne out of vexation of not being around to listen to our conversations.  He sounds like someone who is a beneficiary of the crisis. People like him may not see the economic damage the Southeast is experiencing because of the weekly sit-at-home. He does not understand that people can protest in peace without disrupting economic activities and going violent.

“He does not understand that there are people whose livelihood solely depends on daily hustle.  If you have people’s interest at heart, you should as well consider their security, economic prosperity and peaceful livelihood.

“I call on Ejiofor to be patriotic, rise above primordial and pecuniary interest and put the interest of the people of the Southeast and the country first.”

At Last, Ondo Assembly Clears Commissioners

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Ondo State House of Assembly

By Ayodele Oni

Ondo State House of Assembly has ratified the appointment of fourteen new commissioners.

A letter of request for the confirmation of the fourteen Commissioners, signed by the Secretary to the State Government, Princess Catherine Oladunni Odu, had earlier been forwarded to the House.

The nominees later appeared before the Selection Committee of the House for screening.

While presenting the report of the Selection Committee at plenary on Thursday, the Deputy Speaker, Mr Aderoboye Samuel observed that the fourteen nominees had been screened and found competent to serve as Commissioners in Ondo State.

Aderoboye requested that the nominees be called to step forward for confirmation of their appointments.

The nominees were thereafter invited inside for ratification of their appointments through a voice vote by majority of Lawmakers at the plenary.

Speaking after confirmation of the nominees, the Speaker, Bamidele Oleyelogun,  congratulated the newly confirmed Commissioners who he said were appointed on the basis of their track records.

The Speaker urged the new Commissioners to work with Mr Governor to enhance the delivery of democracy dividends to the people of Ondo State.

In their vote of thanks Pastor Femi Agagu who spoke on behalf of Commissioners from the Southern Senatorial District pledged to join hands with the Governor to impact positively on the lives of the people.

Mr Aribo Oyato, who spoke on behalf of Commissioners from the Northern Senatorial District pledged to work with Mr Governor to add value to the instrumentality of governance in Ondo State.

In the same vein, Engineer  Razak Obe who spoke for  Commissioners from the Central Senatorial District, pledged not to disappoint the House, the governor and the entire people of Ondo State.

Mrs Omolola Fagbemi, a one time Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, who spoke for the Commissioners, thanked members of the House for the support for the administration, a development, she said has positively translated to noticeable development of Ondo State.

The screening of the Commissioners was stalled earlier in the week due to the absence of the Speaker, who was arraigned for fraud by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, (EFCC).

Parents Demand N1Billion For Death Of Ward In Elizade University Health Centre

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Elizade University

By Ayodele Oni

Parents of a deceased student of a private University in Ondo state, Elizade, have written to the institution, asking for compensation and apology over the demise of their ward.

In a letter to the Vice Chancellor and Registrar of Elizade University by Barrister Femi Emmanuel, the deceased’s parents  demanded for a compensation of one billion Naira for the death of Miss Temitayo Owodolu.

Temitayo, at the time of her death, a 300 level  student of the Private university, was said to have died of heart related ailment.

Part of the letter reads : “The late Miss Owodolu Temitayo reportedly suffered the asthmatic attack in your University Hostel on 16th November, 2021, as a result of which she called her sister, Opeyemi Owodolu, who is also a student of your University in the same Female Hall of Residence.

“They latter came to attend to her and confirmed that she had used her inhaler, a common first-aid medication for the treatment of asthma.

“Your University porter and security officers were later contacted, for the deceased to be moved to the University medical facility for observation and better treatment, as she still was experiencing visible breathing difficulties and coughing intermittently.

“According to our brief, the deceased was moved into the University Medical Centre at about 5:11 am. Unfortunately, the University usually turns its Generator off at 1:00 am, so the entire University, including the Medical Centre, was in total blackout at the time of her admission, according to Our Clients.

“The medical personnel in the Medical Centre reportedly attended to the deceased during the blackout, and reportedly lamented that they would be unable to treat the patient using the necessary electrically powered equipment, including the Nebuliser, which is essential for the treatment of acute exacerbation of severe asthma.

“Consequently, according to our brief, the medical personnel asked the deceased to continue using the same Ventolin inhaler she had been applying before her presentation in the Medical Centre.

“Although the deceased was reportedly placed on a drip upon her admission, the nurse attendant thereafter abandoned her for one and half hours, during which there was a backflow of blood into the drip from her body.

“Within the same period, she was coughing consistently, indicating that her respiratory tract was infected. She also vomited and it was her sister who cleaned up the vomit and alerted the Doctor, in the absence of the nurse attendant.

“Strangely, the Doctor was said to be sleeping. Eventually, the same patient that was still healthy enough to engage her sister in humorous and intelligent conversation after the commencement of treatment at the Medical Centre, died in the hand of your Medical personnel.

“If the University Medical personnel could not effectively treat or manage the deceased patient, why was she not referred to another facility?

“The University Medical personnel never referred the deceased for proper treatment, apparently because they were not even on ground to observe her properly, to know the point at which on-going treatment was no longer producing the desired clinical improvements.

“It is a notorious fact that asthma is a preventable, treatable and reversible medical condition. You would, therefore, agree with us that it is quite unusual in medical practice for an asthmatic patient who walked into the hospital herself to die in the hands of a Medical Doctor.

“Her death is an irredeemable loss to the entire Owodolu Family. She was a brilliant, visionary, focused and disciplined person, the joy of her parents, and the pride of her extended family.

“She was determined to be the best in life and succour to humanity and the distressed; that explains why she chose to become a Nurse. Ironically she died as a result of the worst imaginable kind of medical negligence.

“While money cannot buy or repay life, you would agree that damages are claimable to compensate and assuage loss of life due to negligence, as in the instant case.

Consequently, Our Clients are demanding the following from your University:

“A formal acceptance and apology for the medical negligence that caused the death of Miss Owodolu Temitayo;

Damages of One Billion Naira (N1,000,000 000), only, for the negligence;

“Immortalization of the late Miss Owodolu Temitayo, preferably by properly equipping the University Medical Centre and naming it after the deceased;

“An undertaking by the University to not harass, intimidate or persecute Miss Opeyemi Owodolu, the sister of the deceased in your University, in any way whatsoever, either as a result of her observation on the treatment of her late sister, or the instant actions and demands by the Owodolu family.

“You are to comply with the above demands of Our Clients within seven (7) days from the receipt of this letter.

Take Notice that if your University fails to comply with the above demands, we shall be compelled to activate Our Clients’ further instruction to institute an action against the University and her necessary officials in a court of law.”

Governor Ayade Mourns Joseph Wayas

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Joseph Wayas

By Akinwale Kasali and Uche Mbah

The nation has been thrown into mourning following the passing of former Senate President, Joseph Wayas.

The Second Republic Senate President passed away in a London Hospital where he had been receiving medical attention for some time.

Announcing his passing, Cross River State Governor, Prof. Ben Ayade,  in a statement on Thursday, December 2, 2021

lamented the passing of Wayas, describing his death as a monumental loss to Cross River State in particular and Nigeria in general.

In the statement signed by Governor Ayade’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Christian Ita, he said Wayas left indelible footprints on the sands of time.

“As a State, Cross River is in pains as we mourn the passing of our illustrious son. He was a rare gem. Dr. Wayas’ demise is indeed a monumental loss to our dear State and Nigeria.”

According to the Governor: “As Senate President, Dr. Wayas contributed to the deepening of Nigeria’s democratic ethos through his robust and vibrant leadership of the upper legislative chamber.

“And since his retirement from active politics, the former Senate President had been playing a fatherly and stabilising role in the politics and affairs of our state.”

He consoled the family of the former Senate President, assuring that his demise is a collective loss and the pains a shared one.

Wayas was born in Basang, Obudu, Cross River State on 21 May 1941 and attended the Dennis Memorial Grammar School, Onitsha. He went to the United Kingdom where he studied at the Higher Tottenham Technical College, London, the West Bronwich College of Commerce, Science and Technology, Birmingham and Aston University, Birmingham. Returning to Nigeria, he worked as a Manager or Controller from 1960-1969 for several companies in Nigeria and the United Kingdom.

Wayas was a member of the Society of International Affairs at the Lincoln University, United States.

He joined the Federal Government in 1969-72. He was Commissioner for Transport, South-Eastern State, now broken into Akwa Ibom and Cross River states from 1972-74. He was a member of the Constituent Assembly, 1977-78.

When General Olusegun Obasanjo terminated military rule in 1979, Wayas was elected to the Senate on the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) platform and appointed Senate President.

He represented the Ogoja Senatorial District.

Wayas had an excellent relationship with president Shehu Shagari, ensuring that bills were generally discussed and agreed before being introduced.

The late Senate President  used to play tennis with the US ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Thomas R. Pickering, afterwards taking Pickering to the State House at Ribadu Road to visit with President Shagari, a breach of protocol.

Under Wayas’s leadership the Senate summoned Tony Momoh, editor of the Daily Times, for contempt. This caused a major legal battle in which Momoh successfully argued that as a journalist he was empowered by the constitution to hold government accountable at all times.

While visiting the United States in September 1981, Wayas was entertained by boxer Muhammad Ali, who threw a spectacular party in his honor. Ali had previously visited Nigeria and received red-carpet treatment.

In the lead-up to the 1983 elections, Wayas was the leader of the NPN party’s “Lagos Group” that supported a change of Governor in Cross River State, in opposition to the “Home Front” led by the incumbent Governor Clement Isong.

Wayas left office along with other members of the Shagari administration when the Military staged  a coup d’etat on New Year’s eve, 1983, which ushered in Major-General General Muhammadu Buhari. He went into exile.

He returned in 1987 and was held in political detention, 1987-1988. Wayas was popular for his ability to speak Hausa, Yoruba and Igbo.

Surviving him are his wife, children and grandchildren.

Cost Of Gas: NLPGA Tackles FG

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By Uche Mbah

The Nigeria Liquified Petroleum Gas Association, NLPGA, has taken the issue of the the cost of cooking gas head on with the Federal government.

The President, NLPGA, Mr Nuhu Yakubu, who spoke at the 11th NLPGA International Conference and Exhibition, with the theme, ‘Market growth and fiscal regulations – Rethinking the LPG supply gaps amid the challenging regulatory environment’, said that they are currently engaging with respective government agencies “in addressing issues around LPG supply, particularly access to foreign exchange, value-added tax, levies, etc. We believe our efforts will yield positive results in good time.”

“Also, it is not far-fetched to state, therefore, that sustaining the growing adoption of LPG through sector-friendly policies and programmes will support economic growth that will yield jobs and wealth creation.”

This came two days after the Minister of State for Petroleum, Timipre Sylva, expressed Government’s  helplessness over the skyrocketing gas price.

Currently, the 6kg gas cylinder now costs more than N4,000, up from N1,800 it was a few months ago.

“You all are aware that in Europe today, gas prices have gone up. There was even crisis in Europe relating to gas prices. The pricing of gas internationally now affects also the price of gas in the country” Sylva told state house correspondents Tuesday.

“Apart from that, there are some issues around VAT charges on imported gas, and of course, taxes on imported gas, which we are handling. But of course, quite frankly, these taxes on imported gas, you must also juxtapose it with the local producers of gas.”

But in a communiqué, stakeholders at the NLPGA event urged Government to implement the Petroleum Industry Act to fastrack investments, stimulate sustainable growth and create jobs for Nigerians.

“That such new investments are required to reduce Nigeria’s current dependence on imported LPG as well as meet rising future demand, based on increased population. That the government should be consistent in the conceptualisation and implementation of policies needed to ensure stability in the LPG sector”, it said.

The group also said that relevant stakeholders “need to be involved and carried along in the process of taking new decisions to ensure successful implementation. That the imposition of the Value Added Tax has negatively affected the sector in many unintended ways and should be eliminated.”

With the high prices of LPG, emphasis has been shifted to firewood, especially in the rural areas. Tree felling has become rampant and this goes against the global warming, and increases desertification and erosion.

The group said that new incentives should be introduced to foster investment.

OPINION: Seductive VAT Data Raises More Questions Than Answers

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Azu Ishiekwene

By Azu Ishiekwene

In the last two Mondays two newspapers – Daily Trust and Nigerian Tribune – have published data on the collection of Value Added Tax (VAT) in the first eight months of 2021. The reports have shed more heat than light.

On Monday, November 22, Daily Trust published an exclusive story entitled, “Kano beats entire five South East in VAT collection.” In the tradition of the newspaper, the story was a serious attempt to explain, in numbers, the tangled mess that VAT sharing has become in recent times.

The newspaper said that in the first eight months of 2021, Kano State collected more in VAT than the five states of the South East – Anambra, Imo, Enugu, Ebonyi and Abia – combined. In other words, the data obtained suggests that the bogey about Northern states leeching off VAT revenue from the South, is just what it is – a bogey.

It reported, for example, that according to the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) data cited, Kano raked in N24.4 billion in eight months, compared to the five South-eastern states which collected N20 billion – a repudiation, if you like, of the widely held caricature of some Northern states as parasites.

To drive home the point, the report also cited higher VAT collections by states which had been significantly impacted by banditry, like Kaduna and Yobe, compared with Southern states such as Abia, Cross River, Osun, Ekiti, Ondo and Imo, for example, as evidence that the VAT debate championed mainly by two Southern governors – Nyesom Wike of Rivers and BabajideSanwo-Olu of Lagos – is wrong-headed.

According to the report in the first eight months of this year, and I’m now quoting the exact figures published, Abia collected N2.25 billion; Anambra, N5.56 billion; Ebonyi, N17.21 billion; Enugu, N5.19 billion; and Imo, N 1.01 billion. That adds up to N31.22 billion, and not N20 billion, as the newspaper mistakenly reported.

Then on Monday, November 29, ostensibly from the same set of figures, Nigerian Tribune launched a counter VAT data war.

In its headline, “Oyo’s VAT revenue higher than total collection of 17 Northern states,” the newspaper reported that Oyo State, its home base, collected N64.646 billion from VAT in the first eight months of this year, beating 17 Northern states (excluding Kano and Kaduna), which collected N61.174 billion.

Again, although the newspaper said this sum is N3.472 billion more than the collection by the 17 Northern states, my addition showed that even by their own reported figures, Tribune under-estimated the collection of the Northern states by N81 million.

But addition is not the only problem with the data by Trust and Tribune. In the current politically charged climate, chances are that some would be inclined to interpret the referenced Trust-Tribune data skirmish as a continuation of the now familiar North-v-South brickbat. I won’t be drawn into such potentially distractive side talk.

According to a September 11, 2021 report by PwC, the top contributing sectors to VAT in 2020 (which was N1.53 trillion) were professional services and telecoms 10.6 percent; manufacturing 10.07 percent; commercial and trading 5.06 percent; brewing bottling and beverages 3.90 percent; transport and haulage, 2.84 percent.

The first question that the data by the newspapers raises is which sectors delivered the sterling performance in the total VAT collection of approximately N1 trillion in eight months in 2021?

It would be interesting to know how FIRS surpassed the one trillion naira mark in the first eight months of this year when key sectors responsible for significant revenues have taken an incredible beating.

State revenues have witnessed nearly 60 percent fall and apart from corporates in ICT/telecoms and perhaps the pharmaceuticals, virtually all sectors have taken a big blow.

It’s also difficult to understand the whole point about the weaponisation of the data when the states supposed to be the new VAT champions have traditionally been the largest centres of VAT collection.

Lagos, Kano, Oyo, Rivers and FCT traditionally get a higher percentage of VAT largely for historical and demographic reasons. Any data that seeks to compare collections on a state-by-state basiscan hardly make sense without stating clearly which sectors are responsible for the performance. That important detail is absent in both reports.

The second question is timing. In the last three years, the South-east has been under a siege. But that siege devolved into a state of anarchy in the first six months of this year, claiming scores of lives, including those of innocent persons caught in the crossfire. Apart from the burial of Obi Cubana’s mother, I’m not sure there was any other viable economic activity in the region for months.

As for the Northern states, except if bandits who have significantly disrupted telecoms and other normal business activities in swathes of the area are now paying VAT, I wonder what is to be gained by comparing performance there with elsewhere.

Comparative VAT data targeting a period of abysmal economic activities, worsened by insecurity, the fallouts of COVID-19 and declining oil revenues does not help anyone.

Not only was the timing bound to yield a tendentious narrative, the decision to focus on a few outliers instead of looking at the trend over a period was also sure to produce a misleading picture.

And that brings us to the third question. Do the figures quoted tally with those submitted at the Federation Account Allocation Committee over the same period or were they taken from data that has not been officially reported?

This is important since only reported figures are relevant in computing what was collected or what can be shared among the component units. Usually, each state takes 50 percent, and the principle of derivation accounts for not less than 20 percent.

And then the fourth. Why does the FIRS which stands to gain a lot from letting the facts speak for the agency prefer leaking a report, when openness and clarity are required? It’s hard to resist the temptation that the agency has an agenda.

Yet, even if the data could answer all these questions, it would still be irrelevant in dealing with the most fundamental point in the VAT debate: the illegality, under the present Constitution, of the Federal Government collecting for the last 27 years, revenue which it is not authorised to collect under the law.

The real point of the VAT debate is not how much Kano is getting from beer even though the hisbah routinely crushes beer bottles. It is not whether Kaduna is collecting more than all the South-south states combined or whether the South-east could have posted higher collections with better Federal presence or greater peace and security, too. Nor is it about whether or not Oyo is the new VAT champion.

It’s simply that the Federal Government has been appropriating income that the Constitution does not authorise it to. No data can defend this illegality.

When the FIRS was created in 1994 – and this has been said publicly by Emmanuel Ijewere, a key member of the Committee that set it up – states were supposed to keep 100 percent of the revenue. The FIRS was to retain five percent as administrative cost. That plan was discarded.

The recent ruling of the Federal High Court in Port Harcourt only reaffirmed what was known all along: that the Federal Government is only authorised to make tax laws and impose and collect taxes that relate to stamp duties, income tax, profits and capital gains tax, as contained in items 58 and 59 of Part 1, Second Schedule of the 1999 Constitution (Exclusive Legislative list). This means that the imposition of VAT/sales taxes is a residual matter, which falls squarely within the legislative and administrative domain of states. This is the real issue.

The Court of Appeal ruled that the status quo before the dispute be maintained, which some could interpret as “maintaining the long-standing practice”.

However, there is also a strong legal opinion on whether the Court of Appeal can legally give a mandatory ruling, suspending a judgment of the Federal High Court, before considering the case and delivering its own judgement.

The overriding view is that it can only urge or advise both parties to maintain the status quo pending its own decision, in order to avoid chaos in case the lower court’s decision is eventually overturned by a superior court.

I understand that those who have benefited from the current illegality, knowing that VAT has become the crown jewel of the seven main taxes, would feel obliged to defend and maintain the status quo.

It is also perfectly understandable that an increasingly cash-strapped Federal Government would be desperate to grab all the revenue it can find. But the way to redemption is not paved by dubious facts.

If the Federal Government genuinely thinks that a mistake has been made in the past, it can reach out to all the parties involved and agree on a way to amend the law. After all, the APC has a majority in the National Assembly.

But until the law is amended or perhaps the Supreme Court rules otherwise, the Federal Government must let states collect VAT, as provided by the law.


Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

Nnamdi Kanu’s Absent In Court, Hope Dashed As Trial Is Still January 2022

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By Uche Mbah

Enthusiasm and hope raised among supporters and associates of the Leader of the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, that the motion for his bail would be moved in Court on Thursday, December 2, 2021, have been dashed.

Circumstances did not give room for  Kanu’s Counsels to move any applications as the Counsel for the Federal Government, Shuaib Labaran, who stood in for the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister for Justice, Abubakar Malami, SAN, informed the Court that a counter affidavit, opposing the abridgement of the adjourned period as requested by Kanu’s Counsels has been filed.

Kanu, himself, was not brought to Court. And Security was not tight at all. His Special Counsel, Alloy Ejimakor explained in a brief  that the Department of State Services must have concluded that Kanu’s presence was not necessary in Court for the sort of applications scheduled to be moved.

On November 10, the trial Judge, Binta Nyako, had adjourned the case to January 19, on noticing, when he entered the Court, that Kanu’s Counsels had walked out of the Court in protest that some members of his legal team were not allowed into the Court by Security Agents. She, therefore, adjourned the case to January 19, 2022.

But Kanu’s Counsels protested the adjournment and applied to Court for an abridged hearing date. It was granted and scheduled for Thursday, December 2.

Nyako ruled that she couldn’t rule on the abridgement since the Federal Government has sworn to an affidavit opposing the abridgement, and already served Kanu’s Counsels. “There is no judicial time for such an issue”, she said.

The pleas by Kanu’s Counsels for a shorter adjourned date did not work  as the Judge’s case diary, read in Court, was already full.

The case was, therefore, adjourned to January, 18, 2022,  instead of 19, and would run through 18, 19 and 20.

However, the Judge took notice of the complaints made recently about Kanu’s situation at the DSS custody by Ejimakor. He had complained that Kanu has not had change of clothes, is not allowed to practice his Jewish religion, and is also not allowed to mingle with other people.

Nyako ordered that he be granted all those.

Following is a summary of what happened in Court as put out in a Press Statement by Ejimakor.

Summary of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu’s Court proceedings of today, 2nd December

First, there was total absence of security operatives in court and around the outer perimeters as was the case during previous proceedings.

Second, Mazi Kanu was not in court and there was no officer from the DSS to explain why. But from what I surmised, both the court and the DSS might’ve concluded that his presence in court was not strictly required in the sort of application that was moved in court today.

Third, the court did not grant Kanu’s Legal Team the leave to move our application challenging the jurisdiction of the court to continue the trial. Recall that we had filed such application, arguing that the extraordinary rendition of Kanu constitutes a constitutional barrier to his trial. The court ruled that the application was not calendared for hearing today. That it will be heard at the next adjourned date.

Fourth, the court, after going through what it said is a tight judicial calendar, moved the date of the next hearing backwards from 19th to 18th January, 2022.

Finally, the court ruled that it will entertain all outstanding applications at the next hearing; and proceeded to make the following Orders:

1, That Mazi Kanu be given maximum comfort possible in the detention facility.

2, That he be allowed a change of clothing.

3, That he be allowed free practice of his Jewish faith including access to his Jewish religious materials.

4, That the DSS obey all previous orders granted in the matter, including allowing Kanu any visitor of his choice.

5, That Kanu be permitted, at his option, to mingle freely with other inmates or any other persons at the detention facility.

Signed:

Aloy Ejimakor

Special Counsel to Nnamdi Kanu/IPOB.

Abuja, 2nd December 2021.

Kano: APC Crisis Worsens, As Ganduje’s Supporters Set Shekarau’s Secretariat Ablaze

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Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje

By James Orji

The battle for the control of the soul of APC in Kano state between Governor AbdullahI Ganduje and an erstwhile Governor of the state, Ibrahim Shekarau shows no sign of abating after hoodlums set ablaze the party secretariat  controlled by the latter.

Two factions of the party led by the two politicians are at loggerheads over who is in control of the APC machinery in the state.  On Tuesday , a federal high court in Abuja, the nation’s  capital set aside the state congress held by the Ganduje faction and directed the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC to recognise candidates elected by the Shekarau-led  faction.
Recall that the Kano APC under the leadership of Ganduje had on July 31, 2021, returned all its candidates unopposed across the 44 local councils, unanimously electing the 13,068 ward executive members across the 484 wards.
The Shekarau  faction later went to court to challenge  the issue, praying the court to recognise the congress conducted by his own faction.

While ruling on the matter two days ago, Jusstice Hamzat Muazu subsequently declared that the congress conducted by the faction led by Shekarau is the authentic exercise. The incumbent governor faction,  has, however,  decided to challenge the lower court ruling at the Court of Appeal.

The Kano state Attorney-General and Commissioner of Justice, Mohammed Lawal, in a statement on Wednesday, expressed surprise over the judgments, adding that the state government will proceed to the higher court to challenge  the judgment.

Lawal said “we are very surprised about the judgments because our lawyers had filed all the relevant document challenging the jurisdiction of the court because the issue happened here in Kano. We are also very surprised that the people chose to go to an Abuja High Court because these issues happened here in Kano and the case ought to have been filed in Kano.

“Everybody is well aware of the issue of jurisdiction but in any case, our lawyers filed all the relevant documents.our lawyers are studying the judgments and we are going to appeal the decision,” the commissioner stated.

But barely 48 hours after the ruling, hoodlums believed to be working on the side of Governor Ganduje has responded fiercely by setting the opponents secretariat located along the Maiduguri road on fire.

The political criisis in the statd Kano APC started after the state congress, on October 18, produced two factional leaders.The Shekarau faction had elected Haruna Danzago as chairman while Ganduje’s camp elected Abdullahi Abbas.

The National Appeal Committee set up by the APC later recognised Mr Abbas as the chairman of the party in the state.

Endsars: Lagos Panel Declares War On Sanwo-Olu, Accuses Him Of Cover-Up

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By James Orji

Members of the judicial panel set up by the Lagos State government have declared war on the Governor  Babajide Sanwo- Olu led administration  barely 48 hours after the state government  released a white paper, on the Justice Doris Okuwobi- panel report that investigated the alleged killing of Endsars protesters at Lekki Toll gate on October 20 last year.

While responding to the white paper, a member of the panel, Ebun Adegboruwa, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria,   SAN said the state government was trying to cover up the event that transpired when hordes of youth protesting police  brutality gathered at the Lekki Toll gate last year. The white paper, Adegboruwa who represented the civil society at the panel, said is a false representation of the recommendations of the panel.

Adegboruwa, had, immediately  the panel submitted the report to the state government threatened to released the details if the state government failed to released the report to the public.

The rights activist said the state government had yet to avail members of the panel copies of the white paper since it was released on Tuesday. He said the allegation, by the state government  that the members of the panel involved in financial impropriety  for the one year that it seated.  

The panel submitted the report two weeks ago following which the state government has now issued a white paper.  Mixed reactions have trailed the report since it was submitted to Governor Sanwo-Olu.

According to the white paper issued on Tuesday, December 1, the state government  accepted 11 out of the 32 recommendations made by he panel, rejected one and accepted six with recommendations. The major highlight of the white paper is the government’s position that nine Endsars protesters were killed by soldiers who invaded Lekki Tollgate on October 20, 2020. The state government said in the white paper that no evidence was presented in the report to back up such claim.

The panel had described that event at the Lekki Tollgate as a massacre, noting that at leaSt nine protesters were killed.

According to the senior lawyer, “the impression was also created that the panel mismanaged funds released to it. It has become necessary therefore for me and all other members of the panel to study the white papers and make appropriate responses thereto.

“There will be no holds barred, since the government itself has opened the doors for public scrutiny of the report and the white papers. For the records, the panel relied upon the evidence of witnesses, documents tendered before it and the goodwill of the people of Nigeria, throughout its assignment.

“It is painful for me and the panel that the government is creating the wrong impression of financial impropriety as a tool of distraction when the panel had a secretariat that managed all its funds, through the ministry of justice.

“Although I served on the panel free of charge without collecting a dime, I know as a fact that other members served sacrificially, giving up their time, families and careers for a whole year,” Adegboruwa said.

Adegboruwa “the white paper is riddled with cover ups and contradictions, he said, adding that the panel report only confirmed what many Nigerians already knew on what happen during the Endsars protest.

“At the appropriate time, we will respond to all the inaccuracies, the coverups and the inconsistencies contained in the white papers released by the government.

“Assuredly, nothing can ever cover the truth. What happened at the Lekki tollgate on October 20, 2020, was already in the public domain. Those who received the bullets knew what happened and the doctors that treated them knew what happened. The panel reports only confirmed what most Nigerians already knew”.

Mewnahwile, the magazine learnt that the state government will still go ahead with the planned “peace walk” by the Governor Sanwo-Olu despite the decision of some Endsars youth leaders not to participate in the yet to be scheduled  event. The Governor had on Monday in item prominent youths leaders such as singer Falz, Mc Marcaroni, an popular social media comedian  and a host of others, to join him in the peace walk.  Virtually all the invitees have turned down the invitation.

Peace March: You Are Dancing On The Blood Of The Dead, Group Tells Sanwolu

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By Uche Mbah

The Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa, CAPPA, has described the Lagos State Government’s Peace Walk as dancing on the blood of victims of “Lekki Massacre” of October 2020.

The group, also, described the White Paper on the report of the Judicial Panel on Restitution for Victims of SARS Related Abuses and Other Matters as a veritable insult to the dead and the sensibilities of victims.

This was their reaction to Tuesday’s release of the 41-page Whitepaper.

The report was initially leaked to the Press, which brought opprobrium against the Government who had insisted no one was killed.

In the leaked version, names of several people were listed as killed. President Buhari said the Federal Government would wait for the statement of the State government to take action and submit the report officially to it before reacting.

Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed, called a press conference condemning the report as fiction, thereby putting a stamp of doubt on the report.

In the Whitepaper, Lagos State Government accepted 11 out of 32 recommendations made by the panel while rejecting one.

It modified six, and said the Federal Government only has jurisdiction to act on 14 others.

It also rejected claims that nine people died at the Lekki toll plaza.

But CAPPA in a statement said the Whitepaper did not take into account the most important recommendations  –  the killing of protesters.

The Executive Director, Akinbode Oluwafemi said:

“The Whitepaper is not only disappointing, but also exposes how far the Lagos Government and its Federal collaborators will go to deny a known truth.

“But Nigerians are not deceived.” Continuing, he said:

“The Panel report mentioned names of the dead and victims that Sanwo-Olu did not even acknowledge.

“Last week, Kamsiyochukwu was attacked with matchetes and Dabira Oluwa threatened by so-called unknown persons. Some of the panelists have also be threatened.

“Shockingly, Sanwo-Olu turned a golden moment into a joke by proposing a Peace Walk to mark his own commemoration of the shameful events of last year.”

Governor Sanwolu had invited some celebrities and #EndSARS protesters to join the march. They all declined.

“We refuse such a march. The real date we mark the fallen victims of the State’s mishandling of a peaceful protest is October 20, 2020.

“We align with the recommendations of the panel and reiterate our demands that criminal prosecution should be instituted against individuals found to have committed the massacre that happened on October 20, 2020, at the Lekki Tollgate in Lagos.

“Until the Federal and Lagos State Governments find the courage to own up to their failures and the murders during the EndSARS protests, genuine peace and justice will be elusive.

“No so-called peace walk will erase the events that happened on October 20, 2020,” Oluwafemi said.