Friday, 16 January 2015

Nigerians made homeless by Boko Haram seen losing vote too

Former vice-president and presidential aspirant of the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) Atiku Abubakar (L) casts his vote during the presidential primary of the party in Lagos. ~ PIUS UTOMI EKPEI
 
 
Malkohi - Nigerians fleeing a wave of killings by Boko Haram have already lost loved ones, livelihoods and most of their possessions. Now they seem likely to lose their vote.

A closely fought presidential election is to be held in a month's time and the law states people must go home if they want to participate, posing a risk to the credibility of the poll in Africa's biggest economy.

The electoral commission says it is rushing to distribute voter ID cards to the 1.5 million people who have been displaced, according to an Oxfam estimate, by the insurgents fighting for an Islamic state in religiously mixed Nigeria.

But for many voters the idea of going back to their home constituencies, as they legally must in order to cast their ballots, is too harrowing to contemplate.

President Goodluck Jonathan faces ex-military ruler Muhammadu Buhari in the Feb. 14 election, and there are grave doubts over whether voting can happen in swathes of the northeast overrun by rebels. As they are mostly opposition strongholds, Buhari stands to lose out the most.

ARMED MEN
The first time Boko Haram attacked Daniel Dunya's village, dozens of heavily armed men stole all the cattle and kidnapped several women. The second time they burned down churches and many houses. By the time they came back for a third go, abducting girls and killing the men, he was ready to leave.

"Most of my documents have been lost, including my voter's card, because I was running away," he told Reuters at Makholi displaced persons camp in Adamawa state, where chickens, goats and lizards darted among piles of trash.

Dunya's home lies near the town of Gwoza, in mountains controlled by Boko Haram near the Cameroon border, an area over which the militants have declared an Islamic state.

"As a Christian, they will kill me if I go back to my local government area. Boko Haram are still running around there," he said. He remains optimistic that somehow he will be able to vote.

"I'd vote for someone who will bring back peace," he says, perhaps unsurprisingly, when asked which candidate he prefers.

As he spoke, a boy also called Daniel ran around in the dirt, between rubbish and animal faeces, the large open wound on his right foot a testimony to his trauma: the motor-bike he and his mother used to escape Boko Haram crashed before they got here.

VOTER CARDS
The independent electoral commission (INEC) hopes it can find a away around the law, which parliament at the end of last year ruled out modifying. Giving out ID cards in refugee camps was itself a departure from the normal rules.

Nearly half of all registered voters nationwide have yet to receive new voter identification cards, the commission said on Tuesday, raising questions about preparations for the vote with just a month to go.

On Monday, INEC set up tents on a large sandy field just inside the entrance of Modibbo Adama University of Technology in Yola to hand out voter cards for the insurgent-controlled area of Madagali. Each tent represented a different ward. For another insurgent-controlled area, Michika, five schools were designated for card retrieval. The hand-out will last until Saturday night.

To illustrate the size of the problem, in Adamawa state, five Boko Haram-controlled local authorities account for 356,680 voters.

At a table piled up with voter cards bound together, volunteers sorted them and read out names to those waiting.

But INEC has yet to figure out what to do on polling day.
"I don't know how they will vote yet. We are waiting to hear," an electoral commissioner said bluntly.
Hajaratu Tumba, a farmer, looks puzzled when asked about the coming election. She hadn't given it much thought, she said.

"When they attacked my village, they killed the men and told the women they are going to convert us. I ran and ran and ran. I stayed in the bush for three days with no food or water," she told Reuters.
"I came here with nothing. Just myself."

Lagos justifies payment for screening test

2015-01-16 08:07
Abuja - The Lagos State Government said the contentious payment of N10 000 for the screening tests for admission of primary six pupils into Model Colleges and Upgraded Junior Secondary Schools was necessary.

The government said the payment for the 2015/2016 academic session was not a new initiative but an old practice.

It was reacting to objection raised against the fee by the Education Rights Campaign (ERC) and Muslim Students Society of Nigeria (MSSN).

The Ministry of Education, in a statement, said the payment for the screening test was meant for parents who desired to have their children and wards enrolled into Model Colleges/Upgraded Colleges with comfortable accommodation.

Placement tests into the 348 Junior Secondary Schools in the state were free, government stated.
It emphasized further that the payment was purely an administrative fee usually charged for external examinations and not for the pilot Computer Based Testing (CBT) as alleged.

Government stressed that the CBT is a pilot scheme introduced to further enhance the screening process and optional for only candidates willing to participate in the pilot scheme.

The statement further stated that the regular Pencil Based Test (PBT), which is the usual pencil and computer answer sheet test, was however still available for candidates who did not wish to participate in the pilot CBT exercise.

Army dismisses US reports doubting capacity against terror

2015-01-16 08:07
Abuja - The military slammed reports by a leading United States news agency suggesting the army was disorganised and under-equipped to thwart terror.

In a statement, the military said the orchestrated blackmail propaganda by entrenched interests as illustrated by the ultra-biased report would not deter it.

“The Federal Government and the Military Leadership are concerned, committed and focused on the ongoing fight against terror," Director of Defense Information, Major General Chris Olukolade, said in a statement.

He said the alleged orchestrated blackmail propaganda by entrenched interests as clearly illustrated by the ultra-biased report would not deter the military.

"If it is true that a Nigerian soldier will willfully go against the rules by speaking without due authorization and misinform the foreign media, then it indicates how deeply committed and how far the interest of these enemies of Nigeria and humanity have gone in trying to undermine and destroy the Military,” the statement read.

It added that the motive of the report should be of concern to all patriots and Nigeria’s well wishers.
“The motive of this satanic CNN report should be of concern to all patriots and Nigeria’s well wishers. We believe that appropriate security agencies will also work on the root of this blackmail against the nation. The fight is not for the Military alone.”

It has been reported previously the army lacked motivation and under-equipped hence the ongoing attacks by the Boko Haram sect.

Thousands have died from the terror and scores more displaced.

Rivers trio nabbed for defrauding bank

2015-01-16 09:06
Lagos - Three suspects have been arrested in Port Harcourt for alleged involvement in fraudulent activities including the scamming of a new generation bank of more than N800 000.

Okpekereke Timothy, Stanley Odjighere and Teminor Karo were arrested in the Rivers State capital city as part of a syndicate involved in alleged conspiracy, internet scam and stealing from one of the new generation banks to the tune of N806 208.

The alleged theft was perpetrated through a system glitch linked to the fraudsters, in which the bank suffered the loss.

A petitioner, who works in one of the new generation banks, alleged that a review of transactions involving the bank with Interswitch Nigeria Limited revealed that the bank was not reimbursed for the transactions consummated on ATM terminals.

He observed that while many of the transactions involved were failed transactions, the amounts involved were not reversed, and all the customers were seen to have withdrawn the cash amounting to the sum, on each day of the occasion it happened.

The suspects would be arraigned in court as soon as investigations are completed.

Lagos candidate undettered by global oil problems

Lagos - Lagos governorship election hopeful, Akinwunmi Ambode, is confident of shielding the area from the turmoil characterising the global oil industry if elected into power during the upcoming poll.

He said his administration would cope with the harsh economic realities occasioned by the problems in the international oil market likely to stem strong headwinds against the economies of oil dependent countries.
Speaking in Ikeja, Ambode said he had worked closely with the administration of outgoing premier, Babatunde Raji Fashola in fashioning pragmatic economic programmes that had seen the internally generated revenue profile of Lagos grow.
Revenues had grown reasonably to a level that the state could sustain its enviable strides in delivery of dividends of democracy and development to Lagosians irrespective of what the global oil market throws at Nigeria.

“Our efforts would be to convince the 4 million taxable Lagosians that are not currently in the tax system. Lagos State has 8 million taxable adults who should be in tax system," said Ambode.

"The efforts that my administration would make would be to convince those who are not currently paying taxes to start doing so to boost internally generated revenue.”
- CAJ News

Prince Ali: FIFA presidency bid not my plan

2015-01-16 10:07
Jan 16 - FIFA presidential candidate Prince Ali bin Al Hussein had no intention of running for soccer's top job but felt compelled to stand by fellow officials keen for change at the world governing body.

The 39-year-old Jordanian royal announced his candidacy earlier this month and told Australia's SBS that it was his love of the sport that will lead to him standing against incumbent Sepp Blatter, seeking a fifth term in office, and Frenchman Jerome Champagne in the May election.

"It's not ideally something that I wanted to do, but I got a lot of encouragement from many people around the world who really care about the sport, not just from officials but also from players," Ali said on Friday.

"And so after a lot of thinking and so on I decided, 'OK, let's go. Let's do it'. It's not something that I want to do for a long time but I really think it's a duty to all football lovers around the world to bring this organisation back."

The FIFA vice-president and head of the Jordanian and West Asian football Federations, who has the support of UEFA President Michel Platini, did not reveal any specific election pledges but stressed the need for greater transparency.

He again called for Michael Garcia's report into the bidding processes for the 2018 and 2022 World Cup hosting rights to be made public and hoped it would be done so before the election date.

"We made a big deal out of having this investigation in the first place but you cannot do that and then shut the door," he said.

"Again, with Mark Pieth, for example, we brought him in to look at how to reform the organisation (in 2011). He made these recommendations and they were not implemented and I think that's extremely wrong. Why would we do that in the first place?"

The British and American educated Prince, who acknowledged the support of his wife and two young children in standing, said he thought FIFA's recovery after a scandal-hit period where several members had been punished for corruption would be far swifter under his guidance.

"I think that change is inevitable but I'm here to work for a positive change and to really get back to the basics and to use FIFA in a positive way.

"If I'm elected I'm going to have a real program where we really roll our sleeves up -- a 10-year program for the organisation where everybody is a part of it and ourselves, as the executive, we're there to implement that program.

"I'm looking for an outcome where everybody can have confidence, from our players to our fans and all the way to sponsors and we deserve it. All football fans across the world deserve that as well."

UN: At least 50 Ebola hotspots remain

2015-01-16 10:07
New York - At least 50 Ebola hotspots remain in the three hardest-hit West African countries but new cases are declining and the deadly disease will be defeated, the UN's Ebola chief said on Thursday.
The latest report from the World Health Organisation showing reductions in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone "is very good news," Dr David Nabarro said in an interview with The Associated Press.

In the week ending 11 January, WHO said Guinea reported its lowest weekly total of new Ebola cases since mid-August.

Liberia had its lowest total since the first week of June and no confirmed new cases for the final two days of the week. And new cases in Sierra Leone declined for a second week to the lowest level since the end of August.

But Nabarro cautioned that "there are still numbers of new cases that are alarming, and there are hotspots that are emerging in new places that make me believe there is still quite a lot of the disease that we're not seeing."

There are "at least 50 micro-outbreaks" underway, and the chains of transmission of the virus "have still got to be understood", he said.

The Ebola outbreak has been the worst in world history. According to the latest WHO report released on Wednesday, there have been more than 21 000 cases and 8 300 deaths. The death toll in Liberia as of Sunday was 3 538, followed by Sierra Leone with 3 062 deaths and Guinea with 1 814.

The key, Nabarro said, is getting local communities to change their traditional healing rituals and funeral and burial practices which involve a lot of contact with body fluids that spread Ebola.

Healing and burial practices
In some cases, evidence suggests that as many as 50 people have become infected at a single funeral, he said.

Nabarro said the national and international campaign for safe healing and burial practices, isolation of suspected cases, and quick treatment for Ebola victims is working.

But he appealed for greater global support including "virus detectives" who can identify where there are cases, "anthropologists who can tell us how the communities are reacting," and managers to make sure treatment centres are adequately equipped.

"We saw a big shift in behaviours in Liberia in November and December," he said. "We're now seeing a big shift of behaviours in much of Sierra Leone, though there are still one or two communities that are reluctant to change behaviour. And we're beginning to see a big shift in behaviours in Guinea as well."

Safe burials
However, the goal of isolating and treating 100% of patients and conducting 100% of burials safely by 1 January was missed. That's "a sign of the task still to be done", Nabarro said.

"Of course, 100% of safe burials and 100% of everybody quickly under treatment are still the directions that we're aiming at," Nabarro said.

"And I do really anticipate that in much of the region, we will be there in a very short distance in the future, and that's why the number of cases is coming down and will continue to come down, and we will before long see an end to this outbreak."

Sierra Leone's president Ernest Bai Koroma predicted this week that his country would be Ebola-free by WHO standards by May, which means zero new cases for a period of time.

Nabarro said Koroma's judgment "is based on the way the local communities are embracing the response."
"I personally would respect his judgment and his prediction," said Nabarro, who just returned from a 10-day visit to West Africa including all three hard-hit countries. "I'm very wary myself to make predictions because I just don't have the information."