Archive for newstoday

Kenya’s shilling slips versus dollar

Kenya’s shilling eased against the dollar on Thursday but stayed within its recent range that traders expect to hold for longer.

The shilling closed at 76.70/80 against the dollar compared with Wednesday’s close of 76.60/70.

“In the days ahead
holding other factors constant, we expect the local unit to trade in
the range of between 76.50/77.00 with the CBK buying interest acting as
a barrier for more aggressive rises,” Bank of Africa said in a market
report.

MTN seeks to add 20m new users in 2010

MTN, Africa’s
biggest mobile operator by subscribers, aims to add another 20 million
in 2010 after strong growth last year in Nigeria, Iran and Ghana in
2009 was offset by currency movements.

The South
African-based group said on Thursday adjusted headline earnings per
share for the year to end-December dropped 16.6 percent to 754.3 cents,
but would have risen 8.5 percent but for currency-related losses.

MTN recorded a 28
percent rise in group subscribers to 116 million. Nigerian users
increased 34 percent to 30.8 million and the company expects it to grow
by 6 million new users in 2010. Iranian customers grew by 45 percent to
23.3 million and it expects 5 million more this year, while South
Africa had a 6.4 percent drop in subscribers.

Police arrest fake Speaker

A
man claiming to be the Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly has
been arrested by officials of the Ogun State Police Command over
alleged armed robbery.

The suspect, identified as Idris Apena,
was on Thursday paraded at the Eleweran Police Headquarters, Abeokuta,
where the Commissioner of Police, Musa Daura, informed journalists
about the alleged misdeeds of the suspect.

The police boss said Mr. Apena
disguised himself as Speaker of the Lagos House of Assembly and sent
one of his ‘aides’ to go and find out if the Divisional Police Officer
(DPO) of Sagamu was in his office. He said the police later discovered
this to be a ploy to establish the location of the police officer to
pave way for his (the suspect’s) gang to operate.

Mr. Daura explained further that the
action of the self-acclaimed speaker arose suspicion, and the
divisional officer ordered his men to visit the suspect where he was
and subsequently bring him to the station.

The audacity of pomp

However, the ‘Speaker’s’ audacity took
a dramatic turn when, on further interrogation at the police station, a
fake assembly identity card was found on him. He later confessed to be
a fake speaker, but explained that he had contested for the Lagos State
House of Assembly seat in Lagos State on the platform of the Democratic
Peoples Alliance at Epe but lost.

“He sent an ‘okada’ rider to find out
if the DPO Sagamu was on seat and his action aroused suspicion and the
DPO mobilised team for his arrest,” Mr. Daura said. “Eventually, the
suspect confessed to be a member of an armed robbery syndicate and that
they wanted to know if the DPO was on seat so that they could operate.”

The ‘Honourable’

But the suspect, while speaking with
journalists, admitted to disguising himself as speaker of the assembly
because “after I lost the election to Action Congress (AC), people
still addressed me as ‘Honourable’ because of my popularity.”

He said what led to his arrest was that
he had gone to seek money being owed him by a debtor, and, in an
attempt to use his political influence and get the man arrested, he
sought to know whether the DPO was around to help him effect the arrest
of his debtor.

The suspect, who claimed to be a
graduate of Mechanical Engineering from Lagos State University (LASU),
however, said luck ran against him when the police discovered that he
was not an authentic Speaker.

“The DPO saw it as an insult for me to have asked to know if he was on seat, and effected my arrest,” he said.

Lawmakers want corps members out of Plateau

The House of
Representatives on Thursday passed an order suspending further drafting
of fresh graduates to Plateau State to participate in the National
Youth Service Corps (NYSC) scheme in the state.

This order came in
the wake of the devastating violence that claimed hundreds of lives in
a neighbourhood of Jos, the state capital, last Sunday.

The legislative
resolution, the second in the week after the massacre, also called on
the management of the NYSC to re-deploy serving corps members in
Plateau to neighbouring states, even as the government attempts to
restore peace to the area.

Saving the people

“I am not a
pessimist,” said Ekperikpe Ekpo, a member from Akwa Ibom state, who
sponsored the resolution. “But we cannot say as of now, total peace has
returned to Jos. We have to find a way to save these people in the
event of reprisal attacks.”

The resolution will empower calls from Nigerians who have asked that youth corps members be re-assigned from Plateau state.

However, a few
members of the House of Representatives, mostly from the affected
state, opposed the proposal. They complained that such an order will
imply a failure of the government and a total breakdown of law and
order in Plateau state.

Leo Dilkon, who
represents Pashkin, Kanke and Kanam Local government areas of the
state, said the crisis was concentrated around Jos, and it will be
undue punishment on the rest of the state if the youths are withdrawn.

Support for motion

But the motion
gathered rapid support after the mention of several cases of slain
corps members in several parts of the north including Grace Ushang,
whose murder in Borno State last year drew international condemnation,
and three members of the scheme who died during the December 2008
fighting in Plateau State.

In the aftermath of
such deaths, the government has been advised to reconsider the
continued relevance of the scheme and the NYSC has been urged to
restrict its posting to certain states.

After the killings
of last Sunday, the NYSC Director General, Maharazu Tsiga, reportedly
announced that his office will reassign serving members from the state
pending the restoration of normalcy.

Lawmakers said
although they are aware of the decision, they will push for a
legislative resolution to compel the director general to act fast.

“I will be
surprised if anyone will oppose the fact that the situation in Plateau
poses a clear and present danger, said Patrick Obahiagbon, who
represents Oredo in Edo state. “Whether there are newspaper reports
that they will be redeployed or not, we have to rise up and make it
known that this parliament says no. We cannot send our brothers and
sisters to go and pay the ultimate price.”

Women in black

Meanwhile, hundreds
of Plateau women clad in black dresses and placards showed up at the
premises of the National Assembly, where they held hands, singing
sombre songs to protest the latest killings.

The women, who said
they will seek the intervention of the United Nations (UN) if they fail
to get justice from the Nigerian government, called on the acting
president, Goodluck Jonathan, to remove the current General Officer
Commanding the 3rd Armoured Division of the Nigerian Army, located in
Jos, Plateau State, who has been accused of negligence as the crisis
erupted.

“We want a change
of the security chiefs in Plateau State, they have not guaranteed any
security on us, we have lost confidence in them,” the group’s
spokesperson and its secretary general, Zipporah Kpamor, said.

The women also
accused the Chief of Army Staff, Abdurahman Danbazzau, as well as the
Bauchi State government of complicity in the mayhem in Jos.

“If the FG cannot stop the premeditated genocide and ensure peace in
the state, then we will be compelled to go to the United Nations (UN)
for intervention on the matter,” Ms. Kpamor said.

Senate approves five new advisers for Jonathan

The Senate has approved the request of the acting president, Goodluck Jonathan, to appoint five new special advisers.

Mr. Jonathan had on Tuesday written the Senate seeking their approval for the appointment of five more advisers following his recent elevation from vice president and the attendant higher work load he has to shoulder.

Mr. Jonathan made the request less than 24 hours after he sacked Sarki Mukhtar and appointed Aliyu Gusau as the new National Security Adviser.

Needing help

In the letter to the Senate, Mr. Jonathan said the appointments are to compliment the exigencies of his new office. He however did not mention the names or offices for which he intends to deploy the new special advisers. The Senate did not also bother to ask for the names or offices because the law empowers the president to appoint and deploy advisers as he wishes.

Senate sources, however, say they believe the acting president will fix the nominees in key areas such as politics, economy, National Assembly and petroleum. The advisers are expected to hold the office as long as Mr. Jonathan is acting president.

What Uwais report?

The senators however denied reports that the acting president sent unedited copies of the report of the Mohammed Uwais-led Electoral Reform Committee to the Senate a fortnight ago.

Anthony Manzo, the deputy spokesman of the Senate, said the Senate had the unedited copies of the report since last year, before President Umaru Yar’Adua left the country.

He said the Senate got the report when it began to consider the six electoral reform bills sent to the National Assembly by President Yar’Adua.

“The various legislations that imply the amendment of the 1999 constitution accompanied the Uwais report and the Senate has already taken a lot of decisions on the various bills that are implied in the Uwais report,” Mr. Manzo said. “Already, some of these bills have been referred to the committee on the amendment of the 1999 constitution. If we got it from the acting president two weeks ago, there is no way we could act on it and pass the necessary legislations before the 2011 elections. It is not correct to say the acting president sent it two weeks ago.”

Court grants father’s request to free son’s kidnappers

Oyo killings are political, says police chief

Union faults oil minister over deregulation

Sanusi’s reforms get a boost

Anti terrorism bill passes second reading