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Relative calm returns to Jos

Relative calm returns to Jos

Relative calm
returned to Jos on Sunday after violence rocked some parts of the city
on Saturday. The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the streets were
once more busy after they were totally deserted by residents who
scurried to safety when reports of the fracas first broke out around
11.45am. NAN also reports that many christians went to church while
some petty traders displayed their wares.

Police Commissioner
Abdulrahman Akano confirmed that “only about three” people died during
the crisis which took place around Bauchi Road, but unconfirmed sources
put the figure at between 11 and 13. There were also reports of
midnight clashes in some parts of Ungwan-Maidoki and Bukuru in Jos
South Local Government Area after some youth began reprisal attacks
when the corpse of a youth was found near a school in Ungwan-Maidoki.
Security personnel patrolled the area throughout the night, NAN learnt.

The cause of
Saturday’s violence could not be ascertained, but Mr Akano blamed it on
a clash among members of the Congress for Progressive Change who wanted
to hold their state congress. He told journalists that the party sought
police permission to use a particular venue but later changed it
without informing the police, resulting in a clash between factions in
the political group. Another version also traced the violence to the
reported killing of about eight people who were travelling to attend a
wedding ceremony in Mangu.

The state
government, in a statement signed by James Mannok, director of press
affairs, confirmed the police version that the riot was caused by the
planned CPC congress, but also directed the police and the Special Task
Force to quickly unearth the cause of the violence.

“The state government has also directed that culprits be brought to justice,” Mr Mannok said.

Spokesperson for
the Special Task Force, Charles Ekeocha, who blamed the riot on the CPC
congress, confirmed that the party got police permission to hold the
congress in “one particular hotel, but later changed the venue.”

“That situation created some disagreements among the CPC members and resulted into attacks by political thugs,” he told NAN.

The latest violence is a continuation of the trouble that has brewed
in Plateau over the last few years as tribal, religious and community
groups have continued to attack one other in what is seen as a fight
over the control of Jos, the state capital. On Christmas Eve, bombs
exploded in several parts of the city, killing scores of people, while
many more were injured. The federal government last year set up a
presidential committee to investigate the cause of the riots and to
proffer solutions. The committee, led by Solomon Lar, submitted its
report to President Goodluck Jonathan in October.

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ABUJA HEARTBEAT: Secure yourself in the New Year

ABUJA HEARTBEAT: Secure yourself in the New Year

Security has always
been important; but now it has become very important, especially with
the advent of elements of Boko Haram, militants and kidnappers adding
to the previously known elements of armed robbery, assassins and
ritualists. So, apart from reliance on the police, State Security
Service, Civil Defence, Customs, Immigrations, Soldiers, Airforce, Navy
and other paramilitary agencies, people need to be more conscious of
their own security.

What happens when
your assailant is part of the supposed security outfit, whether at the
border, on the high seas, in the air, on the road, in your house, in
the church, mosque, park or in the market? The next few weeks will
unveil a series of personal experiences, that are quite traumatic,
regarding the way most of our so-called security officers treat their
fellow citizens in the line of duty.

It is now time to
tell the stories of your own ‘mai-guard’ that collaborated with robbers
to raid your house; a vehicle inspection officer who, against all odds,
looks for a fault in your vehicle in order to punish you; or a
policeman you invited to investigate a breaking and entry scene but
decides to steal the items that the burglars missed. Or soldiers who
take citizens to the barracks and torture them there for weeks because
the young man chased their oga’s girlfriend. I could go on.

Let me begin with a
story that is unfolding before we unveil others. I have told you before
that my late father was a police officer. I have inherited that police
instinct from him, such that my wife always starts by accusing me of
being too suspicious and then, later she would say, I should go and
become a prophet because things usually end up as I have predicted
them. That was partly why my father said I should become a lawyer and
others said I should join the security forces. But I never knew how I
could fit in for, as a friend used to say “put a uniform upon a goat in
Nigeria and you have created another tin god or local almighty.”

A friend’s younger
brother, who has been trying to relocate to Nigeria, recently decided
to rent an apartment in Lagos early in the year. He comes in once every
three months to transact business, so he finally decided to buy a car
instead of depending on taxis. He bought the car about six months ago
in Lagos, registered it and has been driving it there. At the end of
every year, like my family, they all gather in their father’s house in
Benin. But on the way to Benin, on the 29th of last December, he was
stopped by Customs officers at Ore junction and his vehicle taken to
their Akure office.

His offence was
that he did not travel with his ‘custom duty’ papers. The man’s
explanation that he has been driving in Lagos and nobody has requested
for this particular document was unheeded. When we called some friends
to wade in and try to salvage the situation, the officers said he was
rude to them on the road, so they decided to punish him.

Masters of the game

They off-loaded his
property from the car and drove it to their Akure office. The helpful
officer said my friend’s brother could have saved himself the trouble
if he had handed out at least N1,500 and that now that the Comptroller
in the area is aware of the case, the young man risked having his car
impounded or vandalized, even if he produced the said original custom
duty papers that he had in his house in Lagos. Take note, the officers
were not peeved because he did not have the papers. They were merely
peeved because he stated that nobody ever asked for custom papers from
him in all his years of driving in Lagos, especially when he was not
driving a new car and he was not traveling outside our borders.

It is the same
scenario with a VIO officer, who stopped my car some years ago in
Gwagwalada. The young officer asked for everything, from vehicle
papers, C-caution sign and fire extinguisher. He even asked me to
“press your horn, trafficate to the left, to the right, put on the
hazard lights, match your brakes, put on the full light, dim the
light”. Then he told his colleague, “e think say we nor go catch am”.
They actually tried to stick ‘off road’ on my car for my light that
does not dim; but I resisted and we finally went into their compound in
Gwagwalada, where they proceeded to deflate my tyres. I eventually had
to part with money before I was let off the hook. The most interesting
part was the lies the four VIO officers concocted in the office and
stuck to, which left me dumbfounded.

So like the bible said, settle with your accusers before they take
you before the judges; some of whom we have discovered, with all the
recent electoral judgement, are also not clean. Secure yourself by
making sure all your vehicle papers are up to date, try to be polite to
these men and women who stand under the sun 24/7 and, worst of all, are
armed and not well remunerated. They are masters of the game. Happy new
year.

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Eleweomo’s murder changes Oyo politics

Eleweomo’s murder changes Oyo politics

Teslim Folarin,
Senate majority leader, will not forget his experience last week in a
hurry. What started like a mere routine at the Oyo State police command
headquarters, Ibadan, on Monday is reverberating across the country,
promising a major bang on the ever- volatile politics of Oyo state.

Oblivious of the
fate that awaited him in the week, Mr Folarin went to the command
headquarters to honour the police invitation requesting him to tell his
side of the story on the murder of Lateef Salako (aka Eleweomo),
factional leader of the National Union of Road Transport Workers
(NURTW) in Oyo State.

The deceased met
his untimely death penultimate Thursday shortly after the local
government congress of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) of the
Ona-Ara local government area of the state.

Following the
sustained battle within the PDP fold in the state, the National Working
Committee (NWC) of the party called for fresh congresses to elect its
officers in the wards, local governments and the state. But rather than
douse the tension, the congresses stirred fresh conflagration, among
which was the death of Mr Salako, an ally of the Oyo State governor,
Adebayo Alao -Akala.

Mr Folarin, who was said to be at the scene of the incident, was invited by the police, but has not returned home ever since.

He passed a night
at the state’s Criminal Investigation Department (CID) office, before
being ordered to be remanded in prison. After his arraignment alongside
three other people, by an Oyo State Chief Magistrate, Shakirat
Badrudeen.

Together with
Ramoni Jayeoba Bankole Olaide Raji and Raimi Ismaila, the senate leader
was, on Tuesday, docked on a two-count charge of felony (conspiracy to
murder) and murder of Eleweomo.

Though, a team of
lawyers, headed by Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, former President of the
Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), has been raised to defend him, and
possibly argue for and secure his bail this week, his incarceration is
generating furore, particularly as the Oyo State politics is concerned.

Battle for governor’s office

The root of the
crisis in Oyo State politics is said to be the battle for the
governorship seat for the 2011 elections. More than any other forum,
the battle has become fiercer in the PDP as the party is divided into
two, with one side favouring the return of Governor Adebayo Alao-Akala,
while other want him out at all cost.

The dissolved state
executive council of the party has ceded the slot to the governor, even
before the primaries but another group led by Lekan Balogun, former
Senator and Ibadan high chief, is insisting that the governor must not
return. Mr Balogun also felt the governor and the state police
leadership have, for too long, pampered Mr Salako and some political thugs who surrounded him.

“The death of
Eleweomo is one death among several others before it and if the CP had
been alive to his responsibilities as earlier said, it could have been
averted and what is more, unless he changes his style, it is as if all
of us are not safe in the state. When a government decides to be
lawless, the CP is not expected to collaborate with such government,”
Mr Balogun added.

Apart from many
other verbal and violent efforts to discredit one another over the
battle, not a few consider the arrest and detention of the senate
leader as a direct effect of the PDP internal crisis.

Interestingly, the
battle for the soul of the state is crossing the boundary of party
politics to other interest areas. For instance, the Ibadan elite, who
have taken on Governor Adebayo Alao-Akala on several issues ranging
from politics to tradition, are looking at the unfolding situation from
another angle. The Olubadan-In-Council and the Central Council of
Ibadan Indigenes (CCII) hurriedly summoned separate emergency meetings
last week to discuss the travail of Mr Folarin.

They reportedly
view the prosecution of the senate leader as a direct assault on the
people of Ibadan, where he hails from. The belief among those who
display bias for this argument is that Governor Alao-Akala is putting
the senate leader in trouble to take his pound of flesh on the Ibadan
people, who were generally seen to be against his second term ambition.

As much as the
state’s commissioner of police, Baba Adisa Bolanta, struggled to show
the public the command’s fair intent, by stressing on the criminal
implication of the matter, only few got to reason with him.

Mr Balogun was particularly irritated by the CP’s argument that he promised to lead a rally for his redeployment from the state.

He accused Mr
Bolanta of corruption, adding that he had turned himself to a tool in
the hand of the state government by allowing pecuniary consideration to
becloud his professional callings.

Bickering children of Adedibu

In truth, before
Eleweomo’s death, Mr Balogun and some other politicians have cried out
over alleged attempt on their lives, citing the deceased and his gang
as the main suspects.

But, the police
have not really done any open investigation to prove its fairness in
those allegations. That alone raised a lot of questions of its
‘efficiency’ when the drivers’ union leader was killed.

It has also been
argued that the crisis was escalating because of the death of Lamidi
Adedibu, acclaimed strongman of Oyo State politics.

Most of the
dramatis personae in the battle were direct political children of the
politicians, who came to office through his manipulations in 2007.

Many eminent
Nigerians who visited Mr Folarin said he was in high spirit. But, that
represents an exact opposite of the situation with the state’s politics.

Already, the
killing and other forms of desperation exhibited by politicians in the
state is instilling fears on the people over the next elections.

The experience of
the 2007 polls, where open rigging, through the use of thugs, was the
order of the day, still remains fresh in the people’s memory.

However, other parties are working on how to benefit politically in the ongoing crisis within the PDP in the state.

The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), for instance, is said to be
considering a process that will bring a candidate that will give a
tough challenge to the PDP even through undemocratic means. Other
parties are also looking at how they could gain from the crisis.

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A vote of no confidence on Fashola’s party

A vote of no confidence on Fashola’s party

Two bye-elections
have been held in Lagos since 2007, and the Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP) won both; first against the Alliance for Democracy (AD) in 2009,
and then, against the Action Congress of Nigeria in 2010.

Isiaq Olawale of
the Action Congress (now renamed Action Congress of Nigeria) had won
the Ibeju-Lekki Federal Constituency election in 2007 but was
disqualified after being convicted for perjury. The bye-election in
June 2009, was between PDP’s Okanlawon Soniyi and AD’s Jamiu Eletu.

However, in
reality, the contest was between PDP and AC, which lent its political
apparatus to campaign for the AD’s candidate. In fact, campaign rallies
for Mr Eletu were always dominated by AC’s members including former
Lagos State Governor, Bola Ahmed Tinubu. But the PDP won the election
which was visibly marred with violence. The AC accepted the result, but
blamed the loss on the incompetence of the Alliance for Democracy.

About 18 months
later, the ACN tasted another defeat at the polls in Ikorodu where it
lost the bye-election for the Ikorodu II constituency to PDP’s flag
bearer, Olugbenga Akinwale Oshin. In contrast to the party’s acceptance
of the 2009 bye-election result,ACN is challenging the outcome of the
Ikorodu election, claiming the election was marred with violence.

For the record,
however, the election was largely peaceful, though not devoid of
financial inducement. Only one case of snatching of ballot box was
reported in Ginti village and the result from the village was rejected
as INEC cancelled the election.

Voters Register

Ikorodu II
constituency has eight wards with about 49,000 registered voters
according to the 2007 national register which was used for the
election. It is even difficult for INEC to say the number of registered
voters in the constituency. For instance, in Ijede I Ward, the list
shown to NEXT by INEC’s spokesman had 4,245 registered voters but the
list with the collation officer, Autin Ituedo, had 3,960 voters. Only
two wards, Igbogbo II and Bayeku/Oretan had the same number of voters.

In addition,
several people could not vote because they did not find their names on
the register. At Methodist Primary School, Igbogbo Ward 1’s polling
unit 3, NEXT counted about 40 intending voters who suffered this
fate.”This is the place where I registered and voted in 2007 but now I
can’t find my name here,” said Kafayat Akanmu, who spoke to NEXT in
Yoruba.

Few determined
voters had to check at several wards before finding their names but
many, after a search at about two or three units, went back home
without voting because the pasted registers are being torn in some
polling units.”This will cause problem in 2011. Imagine if there is no
movement of okada, how will I be able to move round the units to locate
my name,” said a voter, who identified herself as Sekilola, who finally
found her name after checking the fourth polling unit.

A percentage of
total votes cast against the total number of registered voters showed
that less than 20 percent of potential voters turned out to vote.

Disgruntled electorate

It is not clear if
the anomalies occasioned by INEC’s imperfect voters register swayed the
result of the election in favour of any of the candidates. What is
clear, is that the PDP won five out of the eight wards, all of which
are rural areas. The result, largely reflect the indignation of the
rural dwellers against the ACN.

“We hear of so
many wonderful things that Fashola is doing. We even see it ourselves
anytime we travel to Lagos,” said Kareem Alabi, a resident of Imota,
who agreed to speak to NEXT after so many others would not even want to
talk about ACN. “But we don’t see any of that here or can you see
anything that ACN has done here?” he asked.

From
investigation, the people’s decision to cast their votes for the PDP
was not so much about a deep affection for the party but a way of
expressing their resentment at what they termed selective development
in the state.

The ACN would have
scored a huge point if the government had listened to the plea of Sanai
Agunbiade (Ikorodu I Constituency), which he made when the deceased
lawmaker, Rotimi Sotomiwa, was about to be buried.

Mr Agunbiade
appealed that the deplorable Bola Ahmed Tinubu road, the repair of
which Mr Sotomiwa fought for, should be done before his burial.”We also
want to benefit from good things but all our appeal have gone
unrecognised,” said an Ijede resident, Johnson Olaiya. “None of the
projects that Fashola started in Ikorodu have been completed.” The
projects being referred are: the ongoing Jetty project from where
vehicles, goods and passengers can be ferried across to Lagos Island,
thereby reducing congestion on the road; the construction of a
Magistrate Court and Palace. The completion of the Jetty is earnestly
being expected by the people as this will directly affect their
economic activities.

However, it is not
entirely the fault of the state government as it is that of the local
governments and the ministry of rural developments who neglected
Ikorodu constituency.

“Sotomiwa fought
for the police station they now have in Ijede and that is why ACN has
more supporters there now,” said Mr Olaiya, adding that if the
government will just implement people-oriented projects in the
division, the ACN may well win back the peoples’ hearts.

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Africa gets a nation today

Africa gets a nation today

Sub-Sahara Africa’s largest nation in terms of land mass could
split into two today as expected. The south’s independence referendum was
guaranteed in a 2005 peace deal ending a civil war fuelled by oil, religion and
ethnicity between the north and south, which killed at least two million people
and destabilised much of the region. The north is predominantly dominated by
black Arabs while the south has Christians and animists as its indigenes.

Nearly four million southerners have registered to take part in
the vote to with more emigrating from the North as the vote for separation is
seen as a foregone conclusion. The expected secession takes effect on July 9.

The Sudanese President, Omar Hassan al-Bashir last week on his
final trip to Juba-the capital of the new country offered a hand of peace to
the southerners.

Mr Al Bashir seemed to accept that his nation will split in two
after the referendum and his visit was seen as allaying fears that the northern
government will refuse to let go of the south — which has 70 percent of
Sudan’s oil output. With fears that the referendum could lead to another war,
the leader said he will join in the south’s independence celebrations.

“The preferred choice for us is unity but in the end we will
respect the choice of the southern citizens,” Mr Al Bashir said in a speech to
southern officials. “One would be sad that Sudan has split but also pleased
because we witnessed peace.” Accepting that the result is likely to be
secession,

Mr Al Bashir said he would come and join in the celebrations
after the vote. “Even after the southern state is born, we are ready in the
Khartoum government to offer any technical or logistical support and training
or advice — we are ready to help.” The president was greeted by hundreds of
southerners who chanted “no to unity” and waved signs that read “respect our
decision.” The north’s dominant National Congress Party (NCP) and the Sudan
People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM), the biggest party in the south,
strengthened their already strong grips on their respective halves of the
country with overwhelming victories in April elections. Mr Al Bashir is the
only sitting head of state to be wanted by the International Criminal Court,
which accuses him of masterminding war crimes and genocide in a separate
conflict in Darfur.

New confrontations

Key issues remain unresolved as fierce rounds of negotiations
are expected to follow on post referendum arrangements, with oil sharing, a
disputed border and citizenship at the top of the agenda with fears that if
mishandled, this vote could destabilise the whole region.

But many fear conflict may still ignite around the fate of the
disputed oil-rich Abyei region, claimed by both sides and with its own
referendum on whether to join the south or north unlikely to happen at all.
Anti-northern sentiment runs deep in the south where the oils from the Abyei
fields are refined.

Also fighting between the government and rebels from the western
Darfur region has picked up and spread to neighbouring Kordofan region,
spilling over into the south. Khartoum declared the only Darfur rebel group it
signed a peace deal with, a military target and began fighting it alongside
other insurgents. Peace talks in Qatar did not yield good results and Mr Bashir
says the government will not be negotiating in 2011 other than with those
inside Darfur itself, warning that anyone carrying arms will be dealt with
decisively. Tensions are rising between the two militaries as the Darfur’s
fighting moves closer to the south and it has the potential to disrupt the
referendum.

South Sudan, a state of
emergency

Despite the optimism on the birth of the new nation, relief
groups have warned that South Sudan’s weak fledgling administration could be
overwhelmed by people returning home to the newly independent state,
threatening to cause conflict unless more aid is provided.

Millions of southerners fled north to escape fighting during the
decades of conflict. Ahead of the vote, tens of thousands have already sold up
in the north and made the difficult return journey south, drawn by promises of
a better life and driven by fears about their citizenship rights in a divided
Sudan. Hundreds of thousands more are expected to join them before the expected
secession in July. U.S.-based International Relief and Development agency has
warned that they will arrive in a war-scarred south without infrastructure,
healthcare, housing, jobs and often even food. The newcomers, who speak Arabic
rather than southern languages, will lack farming knowledge and will want land
allocated to them.

According to Richard Owens of International Relief and
Development agency “those issues will continue to build causes of conflict that
we want to avoid out there.” “There aren’t enough resources and the
institutional capacity of the Government of South Sudan at the state, county
and below level is not there and we think there needs to be a lot of emphasis
put on assistance at the village level and tribal leadership level to help
them.” Relief advocacy group, Refugees International said in a report that
South Sudan was “already in a state of emergency due to extreme flooding,
ongoing inter-tribal conflicts, and overall low state capacity.”

“Some returnees may ultimately migrate back to city centres,
since communities in the south and border areas are ill-equipped to accommodate
new arrivals and provide basic services,” it said. “It is important that
humanitarian organisations establish a presence in remote areas of south Sudan
and maintain a critical mass in staffing.” South Sudan’s government —
dominated by former guerrilla fighters — faces a task building a country and
extending its authority over rural areas plagued by deadly tribal clashes, food
shortages and devastating floods.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Johnnie Carson, the Obama
administration’s top diplomat for Africa, has said that Washington would help
the new nation “succeed, get on its feet and move forward successfully,
economically and politically.” “We think that it will reflect the will of the
people, that it will occur on time, peacefully and in a well organised manner,”
Mr Carson told reporters. He said the United States is ready to help south
Sudan to achieve full independence, a tantalising prospect for an impoverished
and landlocked region that is one of Africa’s budding oil producers.

The United States has led pressure on the Khartoum government of
President Al-Bashir not to impede the secession vote. Mr Carson said Washington
was “extraordinarily pleased” by Mr Al Bashir’s statements on a trip to the
south Sudan capital of Juba that Khartoum is ready to let the south go.

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Four feared dead as gunmen attack Alaibe’s country home

Four feared dead as gunmen attack Alaibe’s country home

Four persons are feared dead in an attack at the country home of
former presidential adviser on Niger Delta affairs, Timi Alaibe, in Opokuma,
Bayelsa, on Friday. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) gathered that unknown
gunmen attacked the former NDDC managing director’s home while he was
addressing some of his followers shortly after he returned from Abuja.

A source close to Mr Alaibe said the gunmen shot
indiscriminately, killing four persons in the process. Mr Alaibe picked up a
Labour Party governorship form in Abuja two weeks ago to contest the number one
seat in Bayelsa.

Since Mr. Alaibe indicated his interest for the governorship
race, the Labour Party has become the new political bride in the state with
many PDP strong members defecting to the party. This is the first time Mr
Alaibe, described as the ‘Bayelsa strong man’, is coming to the state after
showing interest in the Bayelsa governorship race for the third time.

The chairman of the Labour Party in the state, Bobou Adou,
confirmed the incident, saying that Mr Alaibe arrived to the waiting arms of
some 6,000 supporters which almost turned into a rally. When contacted on
telephone, the Bayelsa commissioner of police, Aliyu Musa, told NAN that he was
on national duty but confirmed hearing about the attack.

“You know I am on national duty. I am not there but I heard of
it,” he said.

An unconfirmed report said that 14 persons had been arrested by
officers of the Joint Military Taskforce (JTF) in the Niger Delta in connection
with the incident. When NAN called the spokesman of the JTF, Timothy Antigha,
on telephone, he said he was at a meeting and promised to call back.

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No politics with roads

No politics with roads

The Lagos State
government has embarked on various road rehabilitation across the
state, with the state’s Public Works Corporation taking advantage of
the dry season.

However, the
rehabilitation efforts are mostly measures designed to temporarily
soothe commuters’ woes, which raises the question – ‘Why not embark on
outright reconstruction?’ Virtually all the respondents interviewed
said they were grateful to the government for remembering that they
were still in existence. Yet, they are the same people that have been
made to bear the brunt of all manner of taxes and levies from both the
state and local governments.

Some of the roads
have degenerated into death traps due to lack of maintenance, like the
handler of the rehabilitation works on the Ayobo-Ipaja Road rightly
said. The entire stretch of the road becomes a whirlwind of dust
particles, with no rains to moisten the ground. Anybody with some kind
of respiratory ailment journeying through that route during this dry
season could easiliy choke to death from inhaling the dust.

For some residents,
the ongoing road works are some sort of “eye service”, intended to woo
the electorate, since the elections are just around the corner. The
suspension of the tolling on the Lekki-Epe expressway quickly comes to
mind. As it is now, the Lagos State governor, Babatunde Fashola, needs
to do much more than putting a temporary stop to the tolling plan if he
wants to bag an appreciable number of votes from Eti-Osa and Epe local
governments in the next elections.

And a recent
revelation by Ganiyu Johnson, the special adviser to the governor on
works and housing, that more roads within the state are going to be
concessioned has not helped matters. Incidentally, some of the roads
Mr. Johnson mentioned that would be considered for concessioning to
private firms – the Berger-Isawo, Ajegunle-Agboyi-Ogudu, and
Mende-Opebi Roads – are already existing roads that the concessionaire
would, at most, rebuild and upgrade; a move that may result in another
Lekki-Epe Road tussle. More has to be done to convince a people who had
been driving on a road free of charge to start paying over a N100 on
the same road. What had become of their taxes?

Proponents of the
concession arrangement have argued that it is now the way to go,
especially as the government cannot bear the cost of infrastructure
provision and maintenance alone. True enough. As a matter of fact, the
private sector plays an integral role in the physical and economic
development of any city. But something seems to be wrong in the way the
state is integrating the sector into road matters.

The government may
be justified in tolling roads if it has fully developed alternative
means of transportation – rail, water, ground, and even underground.
This will afford those who cannot afford a particular means to go for
cheaper alternatives.

Many places in the
city are in urgent need of alternative access routes. For instance, a
concessionaire could construct a new highway which can serve as
alternative to the ever congested road to Ikorodu town. Given the
population of the area and considering the number of people intent on
moving into such area because of the land space available there, any
concessionaire is bound to make profit from such road.

Commuters from
places like Lagos Island would then be left with the single choice of
spending four hours or more between Anthony and Ikorodu on the
free-of-charge Ikorodu Road or paying their way through an alternate
route and getting home in far less.

In all, the poor
state of many roads, coupled with the blocked drains, arguably
constitute a dark patch on an otherwise commendable administration in
Lagos. This needs to be tackled as a matter of urgency and not
political convenience, in the current dry season.

The people do not only deserve a change, they need to see the change and benefit from it.

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Ribadu faults slow democratic advancement of Nigeria

Ribadu faults slow democratic advancement of Nigeria

A presidential
aspirant, of the Action Congress of Nigeria, Nuhu Ribadu, has described
as shameful the level of the nation’s advancement a decade after the
restoration of democracy and expressed urgency for its recovery.

Mr Ribadu, who made
this statement in Abuja while receiving delegates from Team Ribadu
China who paid him a solidarity visit at his office, urged the citizens
to use the opportunity of the coming elections to vote for candidates
that exude competence, integrity, and the vision of a greater Nigeria.

He also lamented
the decades of lost opportunities that have dragged the nation back
from growth and development; saying if given the mandate to run the
state of the nation’s affair, he will work with Nigerians to build a
society of opportunity that Nigerians will be proud to call their true
homeland.

“It is simply
inexcusable, it is squarely a matter of wasted opportunities, we must
stop the bleeding, we need to move ahead, the world is not waiting for
us, we have to be on a turbo-charge,” Ribadu said, blaming the problem
on poor leadership, limited vision and mediocrity in many aspects of
our nation’s life.

He also expressed
his opinion that the Nigerian youth will be at the head of. The leader
of the Team Ribadu China, Charles Ezugha disclosed that each member of
the team in China have taken a responsibility to convince 100 friends
and families in Nigeria to register and vote for Nuhu Ribadu in the
forth-coming elections. He also promised to provide a truck for Team
Ribadu Lagos to use for the campaign from his Lagos warehouse

“We look forward to contributing more to support the Team Ribadu Nigeria,” he said.

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Minister commends peaceful PDP primaries in FCT

Minister commends peaceful PDP primaries in FCT

FCT minister, Bala
Abdulkadir Mohammed who did the rounds along with other senior
officials of the administration to witness and assess the People’s
Democratic Party primaries on Thursday in Abuja, expressed his
satisfaction with what he described as a transparent conduct of the
voting process.

Mr Mohammed
therefore called on other political parties to emulate the conduct of
the primaries in the FCT, stating that justice and equity was the only
process that will culminate in the emergence of the desired leaders in
the country.

“I am happy that
the security men are having a hitch-free exercise, they are not
overstretched because of the transparency. This will facilitate the
development of veritable institutional framework for our democracy to
grow and develop,” he said.

He disclosed that
the peaceful atmosphere during the exercise was an indication that
Nigerians were ready to play politics without bitterness and create a
level playing field that would entrench fairness and justice in the
country’s polity.

Tight security
prevailed at Area 10, as well as the Kwali Area Council Hall, venues
where the primaries for the election of flag bearers of the PDP ticket
for the Federal House of Representatives took place in Abuja yesterday.

Fielding questions
from reporters in Kwali, the aspirants, including the incumbent seeking
re-election into the House of Representatives, Isa Dobi, as well as
former chairman of Abaji Area Council, Hassan Usman Sokodabo, expressed
their readiness to accept the outcome of the results at the end of the
primaries “in good faith.”

For the AMAC/Bwari
federal constituency, former chairman of Abuja Municipal Area Council,
Zephaniah Jisalo won with 135 votes. He was closely followed by Yahaya
Alhassan Gwagwa with 127 votes and former chairman of Bwari Area
Council, Isah Dara, who got 96 votes.

In Abaji/ Kuje/ Gwagwalada/Kwali federal constituency, Mr Dobi defeated Mr Sokodabo to emerge the PDP candidate.

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ANPP demands probe into governors’ alleged donation

ANPP demands probe into governors’ alleged donation

The national
leadership of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) yesterday demanded a
full scale investigation into the alleged donation of N3 billion to the
campaign organization of President Goodluck Jonathan by governors of
six states. The ANPP national chairman, Ogbonnaya Onu, said at a press
conference in Abuja that the report of the donation by the governors of
Ebonyi, Cross River, Benue, Katsina, Bauchi and Ogun State of N500
million each is not only worrisome but a disturbing development. The
presidency on Wednesday denied the report, saying the letter, allegedly
written by a presidential aide, was forged.

“We are worried by
a recent news report credited to the BBC that six state governors
elected on the platform of one of the political parties contributed the
sum of N500 million each to the re-election campaign of the President,”
Mr Onu said.

“This is a disturbing development which we find objectionable, if it is true.

Our great party is
desirous of getting to the root of this matter. We are inclined to do
so because the very foundation of our democracy is in danger. We will
like to know whether such huge sums of money were appropriated in the
budget estimates of the affected states. The ANPP will want Nigerians
to demand to be told the whole truth about this latest attempt to erode
the democratic process. This will serve as a deterrent to ensure that
this will never happen again.”

Probe the allegation

The ANPP boss asked
the attorney general of the federation and minister of justice,
Mohammed Adoke, to urgently constitute an independent investigation
committee “to unravel the truth about this national embarrassment.”

He said it was
important that the attorney general realize that his loyalty was to the
country and not the government in power and therefore should rise to
the patriotic challenges of the moment and seek for people of honour
and integrity who would tell the nation the whole truth about the
matter.

Mr Onu also called
on the National Assembly to take serious interest in the matter, noting
that “as custodians of the democratic conscience of the Nigerian
people, they have a responsibility to ensure that our laws are obeyed
by all.”

“We demand to know the truth for the sake of our democracy, for the
sake of equity and for the sake of due respect for the laws of our dear
country,” he said.

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