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Ayade vs Jalingo: Who Blink’s First?

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By James Orji

Why is Governor Ben Ayade of Cross Rivers state, Ben Ayade after the life of Agba Jalingo, the publisher of Cross Rivers Watch, a Calabar based online newspaper. That is the poser for the cross Rivers state helmsman, who recently joined the APC from the opposition PDP.

The same question is being posed to the journalist who appears to have become a pain in the neck of Ayade who has severally denied being behind Jalingo’s predicament.

The tension between the duo has again reached a feverish level, after the Jalingo, accused the governor of trying to kill him yesterday. He made the allegation on the heels of his arrest, on Saturday, alongside four other persons during the protest by civil society groups in the state to mark this year’s Democracy Day.

Four persons, including Jalingo were tear gassed, blindfolded and arrested during the June 12 protest in Calabar on Saturday and later released, but the journalist-cum-activist said he was the main target.

Accusing the governor of trying to kill him, Jalingo who was detained for months for publishing a story against the state government said the governor had tried to frame him up on trump up charges some days earlier.

According to him “with a fake petition falsely accusing me of gun and bomb running on Friday, two ammunition planted by Ayade’s special forces was to rope me and shoot indiscriminately at our office, Saturday.

Governor Ben Ayade
Ayade Denies He’s After Jalingo

“I have no doubt that Governor Ayade wanted to kill me and make it look like a mistake or see me behind bars until the end of his failed government. Whatever the content, we want Ayade and his Special Forces to explain.

“I don’t know what chemicals the Special Forces in Ayade’s convoy repeatedly spread into our noses after arresting and blindfolding us. All four of us are still choking.”

The state government had in a press statement by the governor’s Chief Press Secretary, Christian Ita warned that it would not allow any protest to take place, to forestall the breakdown of law and order.

Itah said “The Cross River state government wishes to remind the general public that the ban on public procession and gathering in the state is still very much in force.

“Due to the prevailing security situation in the country, the government will not permit any procession or gathering under any guise on June 12 which is designated as Democracy Day.”

Jalingo, was last week arrested by the state police command for questioning after police said it received a petition that he’s involved in arms dealings. The police had earlier told him that he was being invited to clear the air on his alleged plan to lead protesters to foment trouble on June 12.

“There was a petition against him that he is a member of drug dealers, so we called him to question him,” the police spokesperson in Cross River State, Irene Ugbo

This is not the first time that the journalist has clashed with the state government. After spending five months in detention Jalingo was released in February last year.

He was first arraigned on August 22, 2019 after he published a story on how Governor Ayade, allegedly approved and diverted N500 million meant for the state’s microfinance bank. He blamed the governor for his predicament.

The governor, however, denied he was after Jalingo following the public outburst that greeting his detention. Ayade had said that the federal government was behind the journalist’s case over his involvement in the #RevolutionNow protest led by Omoyele Sowore.

Jalingo was charged with conspiracy, terrorism, treasonable felony and an attempt to topple the state government.

He was denied bail on two occasions by Simon Amobeda, a judge, who was caught in a leaked audio saying the journalist’s life was in the court’s hands. The saga forced the judge to recuse himself from the case, and eventually the release of Jalingo from detention last year February.

TB Joshua’s Daughter Gives Birth On Her Father’s Birthday

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By Uche Mbah Reports indicate that TB Joshua's first daughter, Sarah, has given birth to a baby boy one week after the death of her father. The baby was said to have been delivered on her father's Posthumous birthday. Sarah, who, with her younger sister, Promise, were both also born on June 12, is said to be doing well with her baby. It will be recalled that the late televangelist and controversial healer died of alleged stroke related illness, which appeared to be a relapse after an alleged earlier treatment in Turkey two months ago. There has been mixed reactions from the leaders of the Christan community to his death. While some see him as the best thing to happen to Nigerian Christendom , others saw him as a devil incarnate. His burial arrangement is yet to be announced. It is not clear who succeeded him in his multi billion dollar Church empire as he was larger than life within the organisation he founded.

By Uche Mbah

Reports indicate that TB Joshua’s first daughter, Sarah, has given birth to a  baby boy one week after the death of her father.

The baby was said to have been delivered on her father’s Posthumous birthday.

Sarah, who, with her younger sister, Promise, were both also born on June 12, is said to be doing well with her baby.

It will be recalled that the late televangelist and controversial healer died of alleged stroke related illness, which appeared to be a relapse after an alleged earlier treatment in Turkey two months ago.

There has been mixed reactions from the leaders of the Christan community to his death. While some see him as the best thing to happen to Nigerian Christendom , others saw him as a devil incarnate.

His burial arrangement is yet to be announced.

It is not clear who succeeded him in his multi billion dollar Church empire as he was larger than life within the organisation he founded.

“Wike Versus Secondus as PDP headache”- A Fallacy – PDP; Says APC, Buhari, The Real Headache

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Wike and Secondus

By Adesina Soyooye

The rumour has been on for a long time. It has been strong too. The rumour of the no-love-lost between the National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Prince Uche Secondus, and the Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike.

Nobody has been able to confirm anything. Any inkling of any spat between them is only gleaned from a number of utterances by Wike, which not a few people interpreted as both  untidy, and a dig at  Secondus and the National Working Committee, NWC, of the Party which he leads.

Incidentally, aside from the fact that both men are from the same State, it was Wike who, allegedly, lorded it on everybody, and installed Secondus as the Chairman of the Party.

Nobody knows exactly from where the rumour of a misunderstanding between the two men started, but sources told the Magazine that Secondus was beginning to get uncomfortable and tired of Wike’s alleged overbearing attitude in the affairs of the party.

The claim is that the feeling is not just the exclusive of Secondus, but that of a number of PDP bigwigs, including Governors.

For instance, it is said that it was the overbearing attitude  that led to the defection of the Cross Rivers State Governor, Professor Ben Ayade to the All Progressives Congres, APC, and could lead to that of Zamfara Governor, Bello Matallawe, soon.

However, Secondus has flatly denied any such rift between him and his Governor. The denial came from his Media Office which was reacting to a story in the ThisDay of Sunday, June 13.

The  newspaper had cited the alleged rift between Secondus and Wike as a headache for the Party.

But in a statement signed on his behalf by Ike Abonyi, his Special Assistant on Media, Secondus said there was no such rift, and so no such headache for the party.

The statement, instead, located the headache at the corner of the APC and President Muhammadu Buhari who he said had  killed democracy and free speech in the country.

Following is the full statement from the Chairman’s Media Office.

“Thisday newspaper on Sunday published a story in its political notes column with the above headline insinuating a non-existent issue  within the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, trying to make their large reading public misread the situation in the party.

“The story claimed among others that there is a disagreement between the National Chairman of PDP, Prince Uche Secondus and the Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike such that could affect the party’s operations.

“This is not true, and since the premise is wrong the conclusion cannot also be right. It’s a faulty reasoning that renders argument invalid.

“The media office of the National Chairman therefore wishes to state categorically and unequivocally that PDP is a political party of Nigerians that cannot be in control or direction of one individual or group.

“And history is a witness that those who tried to control the party in the past failed woefully because it derives its existence from the people and indeed Nigerians, hence its name and motto, ‘power to the people’

“The story is, therefore, not true as the National Chairman, Prince Secondus along with members of the National Working Committee, NWC, are effectively piloting the affairs of the party to the satisfaction of majority of its members and leaders across the country.

“And Governor Wike as one of the effective PDP state Governors is also delivering democracy dividends to the good people of Rivers State.

“For records, the office of the National Chairman of PDP wants to put it on record that the real headache of the party is the steady destruction of democracy tenets by the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC and in particular the refusal of President Muhammadu Buhari to put into action the speedy Electoral reform so that votes of Nigerians can count.

“Also as a huge headache to PDP today is the insecurity situation in the country that has not only remained a threat to democracy but to the corporate existence of the country.

“The office of the PDP National Chairman therefore desires that innuendos of any kind aimed at injecting bad blood in the party should be disregarded and seen as a distraction from the real focus of getting APC out of the way to save Nigeria.”

There has been no response  from Wike to the story.

Opinion: Buhari’s Excessive Hate For Nigerians

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By Festus Adedayo

Buhari has morphed dangerously and can use his obsessive hate for others and malicious Fulani clannishness to set Nigeria on fire. Yoruba always ask that elders should wade in, at a critical moment like this, lest a loony make barbecue of the remains of his deceased mother. The Buhari government is in the autumn of its relevance. Symbolism of the end is all we see – leaves are falling and it is haunted by literal death.

Was it better that President Muhammadu Buhari remained unapologetically deaf to all entreaties to address Nigerians or open a window into his mind and reveal a cesspit of foul-smelling hate? Peradventure there were still nationalistic remnants among his coterie of admirers, after last Thursday’s interview that the president granted Arise TV, they would be at the crossroads. Their dilemma may jolly well be addressed by a famous Maurice Switzer quote, whose authorship had before now been a subject of controversies.

Was it authored by Abraham Lincoln or celebrated humourist, Mark Twain? Anyway, Switzer, in a book written in 1907, had said ( which I tinker with for the purpose of this discussion) that, “It is better to remain silent at the risk of being thought an ethnic bigot (inflection mine), than to talk and remove all doubt of it.”

If anyone was undecided whether Buhari was at the roots of Nigeria’s worsening ethnic crises in the last six years or so, that Arise TV interview removed all doubts. It revealed a president whose mind is a fertile breeding ground for viral ethnic divisiveness, an infection that is without any possible hope of redemption.

The interview brings an urgent need to conduct a psychoanalysis on the man in the Villa. I did and the result was prim, grim and unsavoury. That perhaps was one good the Arise TV interview did for Nigerians. It ventilated the innermost recess of the mind of one of the most reticent presidents in Nigerian history. With the interview, we were obliged the opportunity to scrutinise the hidden crevices of President Buhari’s mind. The white apparel he wore was apparently a deliberate ploy to associate purity of mind with him.

It attempted to hide the disgusting sewers his inner being harbours. Presently, the maggots began to wriggle out, in the form of huge bile and rank hatred for the Igbo ethnic stock and crass disregard for the myriad other nationalities that make up the geographical expression called Nigeria. The disgust sipped out of every pore of his gangly frame.

While the world, in that interview, saw a feeble Muhammadu Buhari, what a deeper scrutiny would reveal is a re-sprouting Milton Obote, a notorious Ugandan despot and a Buhari who sees anyone but Fulani the same way the British saw Mau Mau fighters in colonial Kenya. Obote was a two-time Ugandan leader who led his country to independence from the British in 1962 and served, first as Prime Minister from 1962 to 1966; as President, from 1966 to 1971; and after his Idi Amin ouster in 1979, Obote ruled Uganda again from 1980 to 1985.

In 1983, Obote of the Oyima clan of the Northern Ugandan Lango ethnic group, exacerbated ethnic tensions in Uganda and launched a bloodcurdling military expedition called Operation Bonanza, which resulted in the death of approximately 100,000 to 500,000 Ugandans.

Asked about separationist agitations in Nigeria’s South-East, Buhari beamed that cynical smile of his, laced with a hidden serpentine venom and said arrogantly, “That IPOB is just like a dot in a circle. Even if they want to exit, they’ll have no access to anywhere. And the way they are spread all over the country, having businesses and properties. I don’t think IPOB knows what they are talking about. In any case, we say we’ll talk to them in the language that they understand. We’ll organise the Police and the military to pursue them.”

In the president’s manifestly narrow reading of the South-East geopolitical zone, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) approximates the Igbo nation which owns assets all over Nigeria. This reminds me of the gory narrative of the Kenyan Mau Mau war. The Mau Mau uprising raged from 1952 to 1960. It was waged in the British Kenya colony between the Kenya Land and Freedom Army (KLFA), populated by the Kikuyu, Meru and Empu people of Kenya, against the white European settler overlords. Just like Buhari, to the British, every Kenyan was a Mau Mau who merited being mowed down mercilessly.

Headed by a guerilla fighter called Field Marshal Dedan Kimathi, the moment Kimathi was captured on October 21, 1956, it was obvious Britain had extinguished the Mau Mau uprising. In that spiteful summation of the Igbo uprising, Buhari was further alienating a people who only needed a sense of belonging and equity in Nigeria.

One other slant of Buhari’s Arise TV interview, which revealed the darkeness enveloping his mind is his obsession with Niger Republic, the Fulani herders’ grazing routes, and his narrow reading of the serious security concern in the land. These three issues are a continuation of his dogged and relentless defence of h

How else can a president, whose mind is this poisoned with venomous hatred, be told that just as there are criminals among his Fulani stock, so also are there outlaws in Igbo land, who believe that violence opens the trough of peace? The sad thing is that, as Buhari exhibits this crude hatred for Nnamdi Kanu and his Igbo people, his baseless venom grooms a generation of dangerous sympathisers for the IPOB cause, just like the killing of Mohammed Yusuf was the precursor to the subsisting Boko Haram insurgency. In Buhari’s unguarded ire, the Igbo have come to see his selective criminalisation of the South-East as manifestation and continuation of the First Republic Hausa-Fulani hatred and pogrom against their people. Buhari is, through this hatred, promoting Kanu beyond his relevance.

With the benefit of hindsight, President Buhari’s dot-in-a-circle theory is a product of a lazy mind and a narrow reading of the historical trajectory of secessionism in Nigeria. First, he forgot that a sentence, like a whole, is not complete without a full stop, which is a dot. By that very fact, Nigeria needs his so-called dot-in-a-circle to turn full circle. Again, what he and his commissars hounding the Igbo out of Nigeria should know is that a separatist agenda is lawful and not criminal. Indeed, the United Nations recognises it as a fundamental human right. Overtime, that mantra of Nigeria’s unity being non-negotiable has been dissected to be void and a refrain only on the lips of suppressors of people’s rights.

Northern Nigeria is historically known to be the region that first threatened to secede from Nigeria when the Northern delegation to the 1950 Ibadan Constitutional Conference warned that “unless the Northern region is allotted 50 per cent of the seats in the Central Legislature” it would ask for separation from the rest of Nigeria on the arrangements existing before 1914.  Again in 1966, it attempted to secede from Nigeria through its Operation Araba. It is obvious that, due to the manifold injustice, inequity and oppression of the Buhari government in the last six years, separatist calls have risen to a proportion that is unprecedented in history.

At the core of those calls is this administration’s equivocation of seeking peace, when it actually dishes a broth of injustice to the other partners in the Nigerian federation. In the South-West today, separatism is gaining traction. If Buhari hounds that dot-in-a-circle South-East out of Nigeria, he will do well to know that this petulance will open similar doors of secession to other ethnic groups that have been reduced to slaving partners in Nigeria’s pseudo-federalism. This was perhaps the sense in that statement attributed to immortal Obafemi Awolowo when he allegedly said that if Odumegwu Ojukwu’s Biafra was allowed to secede, the Yoruba would have no other option than to follow suit.

One other slant of Buhari’s Arise TV interview, which revealed the darkeness enveloping his mind is his obsession with Niger Republic, the Fulani herders’ grazing routes, and his narrow reading of the serious security concern in the land. These three issues are a continuation of his dogged and relentless defence of his Fulani kin. His simplistic explanation of an incineration of billions of naira from Nigeria’s patrimony into the construction of a rail line from Lagos to Niger Republic is a sickening logic that bears every imprimatur of his Fulani ethnic group’s notorious disrespect for international boundaries. How vast can Niger Republic’s crude oil find be to constitute such a humongous threat to Nigeria’s economy, such that Nigeria had to now scamper to please this imaginary oil god with such monumental infrastructural project? So, because the president’s Fulani, Kanuri and Hausa cousins reside in Niger, Nigeria must abandon its suffering people to please Niger? If this reasoning is not otiose, I wonder what else is.

In the interview, Buhari merely regurgitated Abubakar Malami’s lazy thesis of constitutional human rights for cattle. He confirmed that he ordered the AGF to exhume the grazing routes gazette of the 1960s, just to find a legal justification for the rapacious quest of his Fulani kin to turn the whole of Nigeria into their cattle ranch. “What I did was ask him to go and dig the gazette of the First Republic when people were obeying laws. There were cattle routes and grazing areas. Cattle routes were for when they (herdsmen) are moving up country, north to south or east to west, they had to go through there,” he said. Then, he lapsed into the solipsism of a 20th century animal husbandry, where straying cattle herders were arrested and ordered to pay fine by the Khadi (judge). With that kind of reasoning, one shudders to discover that a human being could indeed live in the 21st century and remain anachronistic like a Stone Age provincial overlord!

To confirm that the president’s thinking is actually frozen in an Antarctic glacier, as against the norm in a supersonic 21st century, Buhari is still fascinated with that antiquated cattle rearing model he was born into. He does not give a hoot if the whole country become a propitiation to the gods of rampaging Fulani herdsmen. He romanticised his cattle-rearing model thus: “People were behaving themselves and in the grazing areas, they built dams, put windmills, in some places there were even veterinary departments so that the herders are limited. Their route is known, their grazing area is known.” Unapologetically, like a conquistador bent on acquiring territories and demanding vassals, Buhari magisterially proclaimed that “those who encroached on these cattle routes and grazing areas will be dispossessed in law and try to bring some order back into the cattle grazing.” The fact that countries like Brazil and Argentina, which have larger herds of cattle, practice modern ranching, which gives them humongous economic and environmental benefits, matter little to our President who proudly declares himself a herdsman in the ilk of his marauding brothers!

In the true sense of it, that apology should have come from Buhari as the man who failed woefully to protect the people. Not only didn’t he show any remorse, no word of apology came from him to Igangan. It was as if in Buhari’s mean veins, no blood but cow milk flows. That is why his attempt to shift responsibility above is sadistically lame and laughable.

The pertinent question to ask is, what part of the world still retains a leader like Nigeria’s, whose mind reeks this disgustingly of ethnic ordure? Why is Buhari this stubbornly and illogically obsessed with this antiquated grazing model, in a world that has since left this Acheulian cultural mindset? If Buhari was this much in love with an exhumation of the past, how come he didn’t ask that the 1963 constitution be dug up?

The other leg of Buhari’s tripodal assault on logic in that Arise TV interview was how he simplistically dismissed the raging Fulani herders’ killings that rocks Nigeria. To Governor Samuel Ortom, whose State Fulani herdsmen have turned into a mobile mortuary, he had this doggerel to say: “The governor of Benue said I cannot discipline the cattle rearers because I am one of them. I cannot deny that I am one of them.” No solution, no apologies. He then went further to tell the story of how two governors of the South-West visited him: “Two governors from the South-West came to tell me that the cattle rearers in some of the forests are killing farmers, while their cattle are eating their crops. I told them you campaigned to be elected and you are elected. I told them (to) go back and sort out themselves,” he announced, pretending to forget that in the kind of obtuse federalism we practice in Nigeria, governors neither control the Police nor the Army! There were insinuations that he was referring to Governors Seyi Makinde of Oyo and Rotimi Akeredolu of Ondo States.

Last week, Oyo State literally went up in flames, and became drenched in tears. Igangan, a town in the Ibarapa area of the State, was visited by one of the most visceral carnages ever by Fulani herders who had apparently come for a reprisal against their eviction from the land. Properties, including the palace of the town’s monarch, were set ablaze by these sons of perdition. When the quake settled, about 15 people lay dead.

Governor Makinde, amid weeping, wailing and gnashing of teeth of the natives, visited and soberly accepted responsibility for the killings. “We failed you,” he said, his voice soaked in melancholy. Though the counterfeit federalism practiced by Nigeria has castrated state governors security-wise, reducing them to window-dressing sissies, Makinde’s acceptance of responsibility was seen as a mark of leadership.

In the true sense of it, that apology should have come from Buhari as the man who failed woefully to protect the people. Not only didn’t he show any remorse, no word of apology came from him to Igangan. It was as if in Buhari’s mean veins, no blood but cow milk flows. That is why his attempt to shift responsibility above is sadistically lame and laughable. Igangan people and all victims of herdsmen are no less man than Buhari’s Fulani killers. They are only hamstrung by the legally blocked access to AK-47, which the killers wield.

The AK-47 request made by Makinde is a direct test of statesmanship for Buhari who holds the knife and the yam on the control of violence. If he is not for the aggressor in the fight against terror, he should grant the request of the Oyo State governor then watch if Igangan will ever happen again. Those who accuse the governors of failing to provide security for their people, a tame and puerile route which Buhari also trod by that his hypocritical comment, are not being fair to them.

If Makinde, Akeredolu or Ortom, for instance, acceded to the request of arming their people with AK-47, this Fulani presidency will give them the Zamani Lekwot treatment. You remember how that General was almost executed for allegedly arming his people in the Zangon Kataf war?

Thank God, elders of the land like Olusegun Obasanjo, Abdusalami Abubakar and others are said to be meeting and will visit Buhari presently. Buhari has morphed dangerously and can use his obsessive hate for others and malicious Fulani clannishness to set Nigeria on fire. Yoruba always ask that elders should wade in, at a critical moment like this, lest a loony make barbecue of the remains of his deceased mother.

The Buhari government is in the autumn of its relevance. Symbolism of the end is all we see – leaves are falling and it is haunted by literal death. As the Yoruba will also say, the Buhari market is at the edge of its tethers, winding up and leaving only remnants of those who display their wares – oja ti tu, o ku pa’te pa’te

Adedayo is a veteran journalist and former Media aide to ex-Governor Chimaroke Nnamani of Enugu state

UFC Middleweight Champion, Israel Adesanya Retains Title, Defeat Vettori

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By Akinwale Kasali

Nigeria’s Ultimate  Fighting sensation, Israel Adesanya has retained his UFC middleweight belt after defeating Italian contender, Marvin Vettori, at the Gila River Arena in Arizona early Sunday morning of June 13, 2021.

The Ogun State  born, Nigerian UFC Champion won the fight via a unanimous decision of 50-45, 50-45, 50-45 scorecard from the three umpires.

This is his third title defence after losing to Jan Blachowicz in a bid to add the light heavyweight title to his laurels.

The Iron Bender, as he is fondly called by fans, showed improvements on his groundwork as he expertly untangled himself from all of Vettori’s takedowns.

Renowned as one of the best strikers in the division, the 31-year-old landed several leg shots and jabs as he dimmed Vettori’s dream of becoming the first Italian UFC champion.

It is the second time both fighters faced each other in the UFC with Adesanya running out victorious via split decision in their first meeting in April 2018, which was the Nigerian’s second outing in the UFC franchise.

Both fighters have had heated conversations on social media and during press conferences but Adesanya had said he was ready to defend his title and rule the middleweight division after failing to secure the light heavyweight title from Poland’s Jan Blachowicz last March.

He earlier promised to send the Italian to the floor in the second round but the fight ended at Round five.

Vettori attempted to make history early Sunday morning as he looked to dethrone Nigerian Israel Adesanya to become Italy’s first UFC titleholder.

Vettori, ranked third in the division, has won five straight bouts leading into this championship tussle.

Vettori is unofficially nicknamed “Angry Marvin” appropriately as he brings an aggressive, bar-room-brawling stand-up style to his fights. His footwork and movement are choppy, forcing him to rely on his power and belligerent forward pressure as opposed to any fluidity of movement or defensive evasiveness.

Vettori had only a few successful moments in the fight, scoring with a handful of takedowns, but Adesanya showcased improved grappling skills as he escaped back to his feet every time, including spinning out of a rear-naked choke attempt to end up in top position. Outside of those fleeting moments for Vettori, the fight was all Adesanya’s as he worked Vettori over with a steady diet of leg kicks.

In the end, Adesanya took every round on all three official scorecards, winning by scores of 50-45 across the board.

Adesanya will be looking forward to add the Light Heavyweight Championship belt to his Laurel after failing few months back against Polish fighter, Jan Blachowicz.

FG Stops Salaries Of Workers Not Enrolled In IPPIS

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Folasade Yemi-Esan

By Ayodele Oni

Some categories of workers on the Federal Government payroll may not receive salaries henceforth, following their refusal to abide by laid down guidelines on payment of salaries.

The Federal Government has decided to suspend the payment of salaries of 331 civil servants cutting across all ministries, departments and agencies over their failure to update their records on the Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information System, (IPPIS).

The Federal Government explained that it decided to stop salaries of the affected workers due to their failure to enrol into the IPPIS, despite repeated directives to do so.

The Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Dr Folasade Yemi-Esan, announced the suspension order in a circular signed on her behalf by the Permanent Secretary (Career Management Officer), Mamman Mahmuda.

The circular dated June 10, 2021 was addressed to all Permanent Secretaries, the Accountant-General of the Federation and the Auditor-General of the Federation.

It was titled, ‘Suspension of salaries of employees of core Ministries, Departments and Agencies that have not been verified on the Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information System’s Human Resource Module Platform.’

It read “You may wish to note that the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation had issued various circulars requesting employees of MDAs to carry out an online records update on the IPPIS verification portal as a pre-condition for the roll-out of the Human Resource module.

“Consequently, the verification portal was opened from April 20, 2017 to May 23, 2018 in order to enable employees carry out the online records update.

“Arising from this, the HR module of IPPS is fully implemented and all the core MDAs are now live on the IPPIS platform.

“However, despite all the circulars issued, some employees in the core-MDAs did not comply with the directives, and therefore could not participate in the physical verification exercise that was caried out between June 2018 and December, 2020 due to the fact that their records were not found on the verification portal.”

Also affected by the salaries stoppage are defaulters at the Federal Civil Service Commission, National Sports Commission, and Police Service Commission.

Others are the Federal Government Colleges in Kwali, Abuja; Odogbolu; Benin and Shagamu.

PDP Condemns Disruption Of Democracy Day Protests By Security Agents

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By Ayodele Oni

The People’s Democratic Party, (PDP), has threatened to report the ruling All Progressives Congress, (APC) to international democratic institutions over some of its anti democratic practices.

The opposition PDP, in its reaction to disruption of Saturday’s peaceful protests by Nigerians, said it was unfortunate that a party that was championing demonstrations before it came to power, has now turned its back.

The statement, signed by the spokesman of PDP, Mr Kola Ologbodiyan, stated that “Our party is cataloging all the infringements which the APC and President Buhari are rudely imposing on Nigerians and we urge all global democratic institutions to take note of the violent infringements and clampdown on democracy in Nigeria by the APC.

“The Peoples Democratic Party condemns, in the strongest term ever, the violent clampdown by agents of the All Progressives Congress and President Muhammadu Buhari on Nigerians who are peacefully protesting on Democracy Day.

“The party describes the brutal clampdown on citizens on Democracy Day as a sacrilegious demonstration of APC’s aversion to democracy as well as its barefaced repugnance towards Nigerians, particularly in their demands for their rights.

“It is awkward that the APC and President Buhari, who were allowed their freedom when they protested in 2014, would turn around to subject Nigerians to actions of inhumanity including the use of firearms against the people, as being witnessed on Saturday.”

Reports had it that some protesters in Lagos and Abuja were tear-gassed by armed policemen while trying to make their grievances against policies of Government known through public protests during the democracy day celebration.

Apart from Lagos, Abuja and Oyo state capital, Ibadan, it was gathered that things went on smoothly with people going about their normal duties in other parts of the country.

Boko Haram: Foreign Powers Trying To Destroy Nigeria-Al-Mustapha

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By James Orji

Maj. Hamza Al Mustapha says Boko Haram insurgency is part of a grand plan by foreign actors to destroy Nigeria. He, therefore, urged the new Chief of Army Staff, Maj. Gen. Farouk Yahaya to identify the source of weapons of the deadly group with the aim of destroying it totally.

He said the insurgency has been allowed to drag for too long.

Al Mustapha, a former Chief Security Officer, CSO to late Gen. Sani Abacha, disclosed this to the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN in Abuja on Sunday.

According to him, “Delaying the fight against Boko Haram will be a great disservice to Nigeria. The earlier we crush them, the better.

“Speed is very vital, because we are not fighting a conventional war, speed matters a lot because Nigeria should recover from this speedily as much as possible.

“I know this is possible because I have done some homework,” Al Mustapha said.
The former CSO congratulated the new COAS on his appointment.
“He is our younger brother, I have prayed for him and wished him well on the appointment.
“I spoke with him and what I sent to him in a text message were prayers for him to succeed.
“There are different ways for him to succeed in overcoming the numerous security challenges bedevilling the country, ” he said.
Al Mustapha advised the new army chief to work in synergy with other security agencies to ensure success.
“My advice is that the army should not be alone because it is not a military affair alone.
“Boko Haram for example has been on for more than 20 years from my account, that is from conception to its maturity.
“If you want to contain an insurgency, every single detail of its activities should be on your palm, that is when you can say am on top of the situation.
“You have to get their sources of logistics, their electronic support and capabilities, what they do on daily basis and how they get information among others, ” he said.

Al Mustapha said the army chief must also trace the sources of arms getting into Nigeria resulting in arms proliferation.

He said “Our security challenge also has its root in the grand design by some powerful countries as far back as 1972 to retard Nigeria’s development.

“That’s why the country is facing security challenges from all facets at the same time.
“Our past mistakes have to do with viewing issues from narrow perspectives and that is why we must be very wide and open now.”

He said the military has stayed out of the barracks for too long, adding that there is the need to finish up the insurgents so that the police can again take up it’s civil role of providing internal security.

“We need to end all these challenges as quickly as possible, so that the military can go back to the barracks to face its primary role of protecting the territorial integrity of Nigeria.
“Internal security operation has reduced the value of the military because they are taking over the role of the police, which is a disservice.
“We have to end these crises so that the police can effectively take over their function, train and expand their capacity, ” he said.

Uzodimma: Implementation Of Whitepaper On Land And Properties Worsened Insecurity In Imo; To Set Up A Judicial Commission Into Killings

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Hope Uzodimma

Imo State Governor, Senator Hope Uzodinma, on Saturday, June 12, gave an inkling into why insecurity worsened in the State.

Addressing Stakeholders on Democracy Day, Uzodinma said that his Government’s resolve to implement the Whitepaper on the findings of the Judicial Panel of Inquiry on Lands and Other Related Matters sparked it off.

He said:”The resolve of my Administration to implement the Whitepaper on recovery of Lands and properties in Imo was the turning point in the State of insecurity in Imo.”

The Judicial Panel was set up by former Governor Emeka Ihedioha, but was inherited and sustained by Uzodinma. He came under heavy pressure to disband the Judicial Commissions and Panels, but he resisted, insisting the people had a right to know the truth.

The Governor has, however,  pledged to probe the circumstances surrounding the death of some people in Imo during the period the state was gripped by insecurity.

Aside from the killings of the alleged Unknown Gunmen who perpetrated the violence a number of innocent people were killed.

To that effect, the Governor has promised to set up a Commission of Inquiry to look into the cases of killings in Imo State occasioned by the recent security challenges.

He dropped the hint on Saturday when he met with leaders from Imo State at the Banquet Hall, Government House Owerri as part of activities to mark the 2021 Democracy Day.

Earlier in the day, Governor Uzodimma had a statewide broadcast followed by his appearanece at the Imo State Broadcasting Corporation (IBC) for a phone-in programmme that lasted for an hour where he told his listeners that a Commission of Inquiry had become necessary so that Imo people will have a clearer picture of what happened few weeks ago when some lives were lost as a result of fight against insecurity in the state.

Governor Uzodimma told the Imo stakeholders that in the next two weeks, the Commission would be set up and the members inaugurated with the task of establishing the immediate and remote causes of the lives lost in the state and what should be done by government.

The Governor took time to explain to the leaders of Imo state made up of politicians, traditional leaders, church leaders, youths, market men and women, among others what his Government  has been able to do in the state in the past one year of coming into office and how suddenly, insecurity was instigated by enemies of the state who thought his administration was getting popular based on his people-oriented programmes.

Governor Uzodimma noted that the resolve of his administration to implement the Whitepaper on Recovery of Lands and Property in Imo was the turning point in the state of insecurity in Imo but promised that his Government  has risen to the challenge.

He said it was regrettable that lives were lost in an attempt to secure Imo and the people, but promised that those who lost their lives will not die in vain as they would be immortalised.

“Imo people must know those behind the killings and insecurity in the state and in two weeks time we would have set up a Commission of Inquiry on the killings of innocent people in Imo state,” Governor Uzodimma explained.

He urged Ndi Imo to relegate their selfish interest for the interest of Imo, noting that only those who are ready to key into his vision of sacrifice for Imo will continue to earn his trust, either as friends or as appointees of government.

Governor Uzodimma reminded the Imo leaders that democracy has provide the opportunity for the people to participate actively in the way they are governed, and appealed to them not to show just passing interest in the affairs of their locality since democracy is government of the people, by the people and for the people.

He told Imo people to join hands with the government to secure the state, noting that from reports available to him, “Imo is now safe for normal activities both in the day and at night.”

The governor reiterated that Imo has always been a peaceful state and that it must be the responsibility of all Imolites to ensure that the peace that the state is noted for is sustained.

He urged them to continue to assist the law enforcement agencies in the state in their quest to work top ensure that peace reigns in Imo.

Earlier at the phone-in programme, Governor Uzodimma said that his administration had taken steps to visit and commiserate with the families of policemen who lost their lives in Imo and that through the Commissioner of Police,N5million was handed over to each of the families of the policemen who lost their lives. “There is no compensation that can equate the life lost, but we owe it a duty to identify with the families of the deceased policemen as a responsible government. We are also looking forward to immortalising those who lost their lives during this period in Imo.”

Governor Uzodimma also took time to explain that those who claim they were contractors that worked for the Imo State Universal Basic Education Board (IMSUBEB), and that the government is owing them are simply being deceived.

He noted that many people went to forge IMSUBEB contract letter and that the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) had long dismissed the documents being paraded by such persons as forged. “People went and forged contract award letters of IMSUBEB. There was no contract agreement.And BPP  has said there was no such thing. Any contractor who claims there was a contract should come with the agreement so that we can go and verify/identify the contract site,” he said.

Speaking on behalf of the Imo stakeholders who honoured the invitation for the democracy day lunch at the Government House, former Governor Ikedi Ohakim who proposed the toast said that Governor Uzodimma’s government is not only on the track, but that the Governor has surpassed the expectation of many Imolites. Chief Ohakim urged Imo people to lend their support to Governor Uzodimma, noting that he has demonstrated capacity for good governance and ability to relate well with all Imo people.

Highlights of the event was the cutting of Democracy Day cake by the Governor assisted by his Deputy, Prof. Placid Njoku and other former governors, deputies and critical stakeholders in Imo, including those from security agencies.

OPINION: Mr President, Please, Lead Us Forward

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Dike Chukwumerije

By Dike Chukwumerije

“Mr President, for a believer in One Nigeria, one should not be left wondering if your loyalty to your trans-regional ethnic group is equal to, or greater than your loyalty to your own Nation. Do you consider yourself Nigerian first, or do you consider yourself Fulani first?

Mister President, I listened very closely to your last interview, and would respectfully like to respond to the parts that stung me the most.

You are famous for saying a lot with a little. And, in that interview, you did not disappoint. It is an ability every good poet strives to have. But, forgive me, this letter is rather long. Let us begin.

Your solution to the farmer/herder crisis is not the correct one. You have asked us to understand that open grazing is part of the culture of the nomadic Fulani. And you have also suggested that the way forward is to dispossess all who have encroached on those grazing routes and reserves marked out in the 1960s.

I know, Sir, that as a Fulani man, your heart will always tilt towards the Fulani. Indeed, as Nigerians, we all wrestle with this instinct – to speak in the interests of our own ethnic groups, even when so doing would, clearly, not be the right thing. But I appeal to you to consider the fact, easily verifiable, that open grazing by nomadic Fulani herdsmen is the cause of conflicts resulting in more deaths, year on year, in Nigeria today than any other.

President Muhammadu Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari

Please think about it.

That a successful attack, even by the dreaded Boko Haram, does not, immediately, lead to a palpable heightening of ethno-religious tensions across the country. But each attack by armed herdsmen, not only puts more of your citizens – on average, per attack – in body bags, but feeds these tensions as directly as pouring kerosene on fire.

It cannot be that all affected farmers, from Zamfara to Bayelsa, different tribes, different tongues, all have this problem of not ‘understanding the culture of the Fulani’. It can only be that this aspect of the culture of the nomadic Fulani – like the killing of twins, or the abandonment of babies in evil forests, like mutilation of the genitals of little girls, or the disinheritance of women – is one that needs to evolve with the times. Because Abuja, as it is today, did not exist in the 1960s.

How can we go back?

Our population has more than doubled since the 1960s. How can we go back? Attempting to force the country back to the days when a vast country and a relatively small and dispersed population made open grazing sustainable is as futile as banning Twitter. That train has left the station.

Already, under your watch, the historic Hausa-Fulani classification has, for the first time in living memory, been broken. If you keep trying to send us back in time, with a policy position that considers the root cause of Nigeria’s most lethal crisis – the herder/farmer crisis – as the inability of all other ethnic groups to ‘understand’ the Fulani, your only success will be in further isolating the Fulani as targets of popular discontent in public imagination.

Two. We know you have kith and kin on the other side of the border with Niger – because you have told us so. We know that the Fulani from Mauritania (the ones you say are adept with the AK-47) cannot be distinguished from the Fulani in Nigeria (the ones you say only carry matchets and sticks). But for a believer in One Nigeria, one should not be left wondering if your loyalty to your trans-regional ethnic group is equal to, or greater than, your loyalty to your own nation. Do you consider yourself Nigerian first, or do you consider yourself Fulani first?

If armed Fulani from across the West African region mobilize to carry out a struggle within Nigeria, on which side would you fight? If your honest answer would be, ‘on the side of the Fulani’, then you have more in common with today’s secessionists than you realize.

And this is not uncommon. For we live in a country where the average citizen struggles with this internal sense of divided loyalties – between their ethnicity and their nationality. And it is precisely for this reason that our founding fathers made it a cardinal principle of the Nigerian state – to run an inclusive system of government. It is why section 15 of our Constitution mandates the State “to foster a feeling of belonging and of involvement among the various peoples of the Federation, TO THE END THAT LOYALTY TO THE NATION SHALL OVERRIDE SECTIONAL LOYALTIES”.

You see? Our founders, and our current Constitution, recognize that One Nigeria is a construct that has to be proactively invested in and built, if it is to be realized. And that one of the most important tools for doing this is running an inclusive government. That is a government that listens. That is a government that engages with different points of view. That is a government that carries everyone along. That is a government that, according to Sir Ahmadu Bello, does not pretend that we do not have differences but, instead, commits to understanding these differences and accommodating them. This is the cardinal principle that your government has so visibly violated, particularly in the area of your body language towards the South East (that infamous 5% comment) and your appointments into sensitive positions. And it is this that is the root cause of the unrest in the region. For, as you very rightly said in your interview, if you give people what they want – the infrastructural development and sense of belonging they crave – they will leave you alone.

In truth, Nigeria is a country that only works when it is being led by someone who has resolved the inner struggle between tribe and nation within himself or herself in favour of nation. By someone who is truly committed to the National Interest. By someone who, in ethos and orientation, is Nigerian. For ‘One Nigeria’ is not a mantra. It is an outlook of tolerance, a willingness to accommodate, a commitment to building a diverse society where the rights of one are fairly balanced against the rights of the other, so that everyone has a healthy stake in the Union.

It is just like Wole Soyinka said in his poignant rejoinder to that famous Civil War jingle. The Poet Laureate said: The attitude should not be, ‘To keep Nigeria one is a task that must be done’, rather it should be, ‘To make Nigeria one, Justice must be done’. For, ultimately, it is a just Nigeria that is One Nigeria – nothing else.

With this in mind, Mr President, please, lead us forward.


Chukwmereije, an accomplished Poet, a role model for youths, is a scion of the late Senator Uche Chukwumereije