Monday, 4 January 2016

IG Bans Police From Searching Phones Of Civilians Without Warrant

The Inspector General of Police has banned the rank and file of the Nigerian Police Force from illegally accessing the phones of Nigerians.

The ban was contained in a circular to Police Commands across the country.

The instruction form the Inspector General of Police became necessary

due to some police men who would flout privacy rights of law abiding citizens by stopping and searching their phones without recourse to legal processes.

Officer in Charge of Complaint Response Unit (CRU) of the Nigeria Police, Abayomi Shogunle tweeted:
With this order, the Police are unable to search phones of civilians under any pretext without first obtaining a search warrant from a competent court with jurisdiction.




Solomon-Arase-Police-acting-IG

IKPEAZU FILES APPEAL AT THE SUPREME COURT AGAINST THE APPELATE COURTS’ JUDGMENT


IKPEAZU FILES APPEAL AGAINST THE APPELATE COURTS’ JUDGMENT

EZIUCHE UBANI, ABARIBE AND WABARA ALLEGEDLY BOUGHT GUNS FOR ABIA APPEAL COURT PROTESTERS





Information just reaching us from an informant has it that some aggrieved elements want to turn the peaceful atmosphere in Abia State to that of war. This is coming shortly after the Appellate court in owerri declared Dr Alex Otti the winner of the last guber elections. Read the excerpt below.

Dear Sir, My name is xxx xxx, I am one of the people paid for protesting against Dr. Alex Otti appeal court victory. I was also one of those protesting during the IPOB Biafra protest. I was brought in by Chief Eziuche Ubani for a special assignment. They called me for an assignment to help mobilize guys from Abala Ngwa, Port Harcourt and Akwaibom to cause problems in the Abia State. They have bought more than 150 guns from Abala Ngwa and the guns are in the House of Chief Eziuche Ubani. To be prĂ©cised the guns are stockpiled in a covered pit near his water system septic tank. I couldn’t snap the guns for more proof because they asked that we should switch off our phones. Sir, help me give alert to the police because I do not want my state to turn to Book Haram state because of political ambition. Yes I am a member of IPOB but Nnamdi Kanu is against killing of any Igbo son or daughter and I do not support evil. Again I am also afraid of losing my life during this operation because I have children and wife. They want to use us the way they used Osisi Ka Nkwu and later abandoned him to be killed. Though Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe promised us that If Ikpeazu wins because of our protest that they will contribute 200 Million Naira for IPO Biafra but the task is very deadly because they asked us to kidnap some people in the state. This night they want to share these guns to three local governments, Obingwa/Osisioma/Ugwumagbo for their deadly missions and give out 5 Million to each local government to motivate us. Please sir, call on police, or Alex Otti or Army to go and search the House of Eziuche Ubani before 11 PM today. Please sir do not waste time, act fast, please act very fast. Do not disclose my face or identity for my own security.

 

Nigeria is too small for Igbo — Adamu Ciroma



Mallam Adamu Ciroma, journalist, administrator, politician, former minister of different portfolios and erstwhile governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, is one of Nigeria’s leading statesmen. Ciroma, who was third in the 1978 presidential primaries of the defunct National Party of Nigeria, NPN, subsequently turned out to become a

close confidant of President Shehu Shagari and served as minister in the Second Republic. He was also a close confidant of President Olusegun Obasanjo in the Fourth Republic and a rallying figure in the northern opposition to the 2011 presidential bid of President Goodluck Jonathan. Ciroma has largely kept out of the public eye despite the active participation of his wife, Hayiya Maryam Ciroma in the affairs of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.
In this interview with Vanguard, he speaks on issues in his party, the PDP, the polity and among others. Excerpts:

By Henry Umoru
You have been quiet for long on issues. Why?
There is no issue and I don’t have to talk to the media or anybody.

As a founding father of the PDP, a lot of things went wrong and the party lost after 16 years in government. What do you think really happened?
You are a reporter and you have been following events more than me. Some of the things which caused the downfall of the party, have already been reported by you, and some of them were the cause of controversy in the party, for example about the presidential candidate where he comes from.

Do you also agree that there were also issues of lack of respect, lack of internal democracy in the party?
Everything about Nigerian politics and the formation of PDP and the management of affairs during the PDP period are known by you and indeed by everybody and everyone is even tired of them.

Now even the new government that has not been formed yet properly has not settled yet, has not done anything yet, why do you want to confuse us again about the PDP period? You know everything about PDP period; you know everything they are doing even now. I don’t want to be in the press because you have come to ask me questions.

How can we get to the end of the Boko Haram insurgency?
The President has asked the military to bring the insurgency to an end by the end of December, this is official, everybody has heard of it and everybody is praying for the success of the president and everybody wants to help. So we pray that what the President said comes true and we hope that this nation will be able to have peace.

Was setting a time line for it really feasible?
I am not a military personnel, I am not a member of the police force.

Worries about foreign exchange
I am not a member of any of the security agencies; so I am not the one to answer that question.

How would you assess the government of President Muhammadu Buhari?
I have just told you that the government that was elected after the elections has not yet been properly established; ministers have just been named and approved by the Senate, the ministers are still familiarizing themselves with their ministries; so it is too early to ask what they have done or how they are doing it.

In fact, a lot of the worries people have now, is about the economy and the foreign exchange and things of that nature. It is now for the president to look at what the people are saying and deal with the problems of which they are throwing up and it is his duty to do that.

How will you assess  the present economic team of Mr President and his economic blueprint? And if you are to proffer an economic advice, what would you recommend?
You go and ask Udo Udoma and the Minister of Finance to explain to you their positions on things as they have outlined their programme to the President.I am not governor of the CBN now; I have not been the governor of the CBN for a long time.

Even, I was the minister of finance a long time ago. So all I know is that people are worried about foreign exchange, about financial transactions, about banking and I know that the government knows about these problems; though I expect the government to deal with them.

Nigerians will want to share in your experience on how you succeeded as finance minister and as CBN governor.
I did not have the same problem with the present government. I am old fashioned. Our view was that finance must deal with funding government activities, paying government workers, paying for economic development and once you put an item in the budget, you may consider it already done because government must find the resources to do them; in fact they will not put anything in the budget if they cannot find the resources to do them.

So our own way of doing things was old fashioned and when we say things you know, they will be done. But the present government is just settling in. I don’t know their plans.

Part of their plans is to deregulate the price of petroleum which could see the price go up in future. Is there hope?
Udo Udoma laid out his views of what is likely going to happen to the economy. The Minister of Finance has said she expected there should be a lot of hard times next year.

Alleged arms deals
But I am sure that from now on, they are trying to ensure that only good things happen, that the problems they are afraid of will be avoided and I am sure that they are going to do their best.

Are you worried by the revelations on the alleged misuse of the security funds raised against the former National Security Adviser, Col. Samo Dasuki?
The issue of the alleged arms deals involving the former National Security Adviser is just something which is unfolding and you know that the matter is in court, the EFCC is trying to prosecute some of those involved and you can see the complication in public affairs where something begins with security adviser and ends up with the distribution of money at party level for the campaign.

So we are still in the middle of these things, we don’t know how it is going to end. You just for the time being take note that people are being arrested, some are being tried and some denying receiving money from the security adviser. So the issues are going to clarify themselves in due course when EFCC has finished trying those who are accused.

Col. Sambo Dasuki mentioned that some party leaders were involved and they used it as campaign funds for the party, was it right and during your time did it happen that money maybe from the NSA or so, will be directed to the party?
Anything in politics, no matter how you deal with it secretly, eventually becomes public, eventually people will get to know about it. What didn’t get exposed didn’t happen.

So the issues they are having now are issues that have happened. It didn’t happen before and that was why it was not exposed. And I don’t know the details of what they did.

The PDP recently organized a national conference supposedly to heal wounds? Did they get it right?
You know it more than myself, you were there, you reported the thing. I was not there, they said I would be there, but I was not there. Did they not say I would be there?

Why didn’t you attend?
I was not there because I wasn’t clear in my own mind what they were trying to do.

Meaning they didn’t come to explain, they didn’t visit you.
They visited me, they explained, but I was not convinced.

Immediately after the election, two prominent PDP leaders resigned their positions in the party Adamu Muazu and the next day the chairman BoT, Chief Tony Anenih, what is your take on this?
I will not. Adamu Muazu is alive and well, the former chairman of BoT is alive and well.

Winning and losing
It is more interesting to get them to talk than to ask me a retired person to talk about things which happened when I was not there.

Some people are still saying that PDP will bounce back. Do you think so?
Politics is a continuous event, whether you like or you don’t like it, there will always be politics. Even if the Army is there, there will still be politics, so politics will continue.

And parties in government will eventually lose; every party in government will have to lose, so there is nothing new really about the party losing election, it is nothing new. So losing elections, people get worried about this, what is there in losing election; what is new about losing election. If you are talking about democracy you are talking of winning and losing and anybody can lose, anybody can win; events of today can change tomorrow.

One of the problems of the party now is after Adamu Mu’azu resigned, stakeholders from the Northeast claimed that he should have been succeeded by someone from the region. What is your take on this?
I don’t know what you are talking about, I don’t know about it. I cannot comment on what I don’t know. Is it a new thing for PDP to change their position? In 2011 when Yar‘adua died, wasn’t it still the time of the north to continue with the presidency? Was it not changed?

So there is nothing new about these things. But everything you do have consequences and you must remember that you are going to pay for the consequences of your action.

In other words PDP paid the price for not allowing the north to continue
This is your own saying; we have already done the political side in 2011.

So, do you think the NWC did a good thing now by zoning the presidency in 2019 to the north? Where exactly in the north do you think it should go now because at least the North West has had its own share?
If you do the right thing you will reap good result; if you don’t do the right thing you pay.

What is your take on the intrigues that threw up an opposition party senator as Deputy President of the Senate and an APC Senate President that was opposed by his party?
All these things are happening in front of your eyes and the people who are doing it are still there, what is the need for a retired person like me to answer.

Nigerians will be happy to hear your views on this
No, it doesn’t follow that way. Just because I say I am right or just because I say something they are doing is wrong, it doesn’t follow that way.

Deal with the current events and the current event is that the National Assembly; they are just settling in; they have just finished appointing the chairmen of their committees and they have disputes between themselves. There is nothing new about that, it is normal.

How do you react to raging issues in the polity such as the agitation for Biafra, the faceoff with followers of Sheik Ibrahim El-Zakzaky to the call for separation by the Afenifere following the kidnap of former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Chief Olu Falae?
The education process up to University enables you appreciate how life unfolds and especially with your literature. You will read about how people think, how they create plays and things like that; a lot of it is drawn from real life.

Prescribed way of living
So you are talking about Nigeria, you are talking about people, living people, you are talking about people who are Muslims; you are talking about people who are Christians, you are talking about people who are pagans; you are talking about people who speak different languages, about Kanuris, about Fulanis in the Northeast; so life is dealing with all these complicated things, of people who are actually living.

There is no single prescribed way of how they are going to live. We are just Nigerians, we are not even called Nigerians, we are just black people living in this part. The British came and put us together and said we are Nigerians and eventually we all agreed with the British that we are Nigerians. And when we are unhappy, we say we are Biafrans or when we are not happy we will say we are Yorubas, but we say we are Nigerians.

So we are learning to live with one another, we accorded each other, so the way things will unfold, you cannot predict and you have to learn how to live with other people. Sometimes I wonder you Nigerians, are you real people? Don’t you know that we are coming together only a hundred years ago and we are still learning how to live with one another.

Economic development
By the time the Europeans came, even the Yoruba people, did not even learn how to live with each other, they were fighting and all over the north, they were fighting everywhere, there were tribal wars.

Now we are at peace because of economic development, social contacts and things like that are happening, they are changing our ways of thinking, they are changing our ways of life, education is changing us. And sometimes when you ask questions you seem to be unaware that Nigeria is a complicated place, but not only Nigeria, Britain is a complicated place.

Look at how a lot of people from all over the world now are going to Europe, they want to go and live and enjoy, the Europeans are resisting. So you Nigerians,    you must learn how to live with one another in such a way that you will understand that you have life that is you relate with each other in a friendly way, in a stable way, in an understanding way.

Biafra, this Biafra, I tell my Igbo friends, Biafra, for what? This Nigeria is too small for you Igbos. All over Nigeria you will see Igbos everywhere. If you go to Ghana, Igbos everywhere. If you go to Niger, Igbos everywhere. If you go to South Africa, Igbo everywhere; this Nigeria is too small for you. But now you want something smaller, what does it mean?

It means that people sometimes do things without thinking very deeply. But education is to enable you to think and to solve problems.

What the Igbos are saying is that they want Biafra; I just remember only recently the Yoruba leaders said they want to break, break from where. The Yoruba are probably the people who economically enjoy Nigeria more than anybody, economically. So why are they going? So my own problem with Nigeria is that many people say things without thinking.

BREAKING!!! GOV. ELECT DR. ALEX OTTI TO BE SWORN IN ANYTIME FROM NOW




A new spin to the Court of Appeal declaration of Dr. Alex Otti as Abia State Governor and the demand for his immediate swearing in is emerging now.

AFN reporter in Owerri gathered that the lawyers of Dr. Alex Otti are right now in the Court of Appeal working towards obtaining a certified copy of the judgement that nailed Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu on
31st December, 2015.

One of the lawyers of Dr. Alex Otti interviewed in Owerri this morning has this to say ” We are here to get a copy of the judgement as you can see, once We get it, We are heading immediately to Umuahia for Dr. Alex Otti ‘s swearing in as Abia State Governor”.


Our reporter further asked “Is the judgement not suppose to wait till after the supreme court decision?”

Response :-
“No, the Court of Appeal decision must be respected, the Court mandated he takes over immediately. Once We get this judgement now, We are heading to CJ Abia State for immediate swearing in, if he refuses, any senior judge can do that also. Moreover, Sen. T. A Orji was sworn in by a senior judge as governor and not the chief judge.

Niger Deltans embrace Biafra, open liaison offices

People of Niger Delta have embraced Biafran Republic saying they are working in tandem with Chief Ralph Uwazurike led Movement for the Actualization of Sovereign States of Biafra (MASSOB), on the sensitization mission.


Disclosing the stand of the Niger Delta people, the leader of the MASSOB, Chief Solomon Chukwu, during interview with Vanguard Newspaper, weekend, said that they had embarked on sensitization visit to all cities in the Biafra territories where they had also opened liaison offices.

Chukwu who commended the support of the people of Niger Delta to the struggle to actualize an Independent State of Biafra also dismissed the insinuations that the people of the Niger Delta betrayed Igbos during the Nigerian Civil war saying the major betrayers of Biafra were even people from the South East.
“People like Ojukwu’s second in command, Gen. Philip Effiong, fought for Biafra till the end. My father and many strong men of Niger Delta also fought for Biafra. I’m a Biafran from Ikwerre extraction in Obio/Akpor Local Government Area of Rivers State.

He however, declared himself a true son of Niger Delta, even as he urged people to forget about the role of people like Ken Saro Wiwa adding that in the mainstream of Biafra, many Niger Deltans such as Asari Dokubo, Kalada George, Uche Okwukwu among others stood to be counted.

“Before now, everybody was saying Biafra is for Ndigbo and South East, but today the story has changed, the entire people of Niger Delta have realised the need to actualize Biafra. Again, with what Uwazurike has done in shifting the leadership of MASSOB to the Niger Delta, everybody has also seen that Biafra is not the business of the South East alone. People have embraced Biafra and it keeps expanding more than what they knew,” he said.

The Niger Delta MASSOB leader also said that contrary to what was generally believed, today, people from all over the former Eastern region and Niger Delta now attend MASSOB meetings.

“Recently, we were in Warri, Delta State where the people received us with a rousing welcome. They were jubilating that this time; there will be no dichotomy again.

“There will be no divide and rule; that Ikwerre is not Biafra or Niger Delta is not Biafra. The former Eastern region and Niger Delta are working in unison to actualize an independent Biafra,” he added.

DEVELOPING STORY!!! Ikpeazu Condemns Move to Swear-in Otti as Abia Governor Today

otti n ikpeazu
Abia State government has alerted the public to an alleged plan to swear in Dr. Alex Otti of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) as the new governor on today based on last Thursday’s Appeal Court verdict that declared him as the winner of the governorship held in the state.

In the verdict, the court order the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to issue Otti with his certificate of return.

The Information Commissioner, Comrade Bonnie Iwuoha, in a statement, warned those he said were “planning to have the APGA governorship candidate, Otti, sworn-in illegally today to desist from such dastardly act as the state government will not condone it”.

The commissioner, who said the government’s warning was sequel to rumours about plans to swear in Otti, stressed that Abia and her citizens believe strongly in democracy and the rule of law.

According to him, “anything outside the rule of law will be calling for anarchy and government would not want a breach of the peace in the state.

“No one will be allowed to take steps to disrupt the peace in the state. Those planning the illegal swearing in should desist as such an act will be stoutly resisted by the people.”

Meanwhile, the state Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chairman, Senator Emma Nwaka, has described the Appeal Court verdict as a perverse judgment “that will certainly be upturned by the Supreme Court”.