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Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Efik Ethnic Group Serves Notice to Become a Sovereign State

Efik ethnic group, the largest ethnic nationality in Cross River South senatorial district with a sprinkle of kinsmen in Akwa Ibom, Abia States and South America, has served the Federal Government of Nigeria a notice to pursue and become a sovereign state.

A statement issued yesterday in Calabar by the Efik Eburutu Royal Fraternity Forum and signed by its Chairman, Chief Eyo Bassey Eyo-Cobham and secretary, Ekpe Ekpenyong Essien (Jr), said the decision to secede had the overwhelming support of the  Efiks at home and in Diaspora after due consultations.

“We, the Efik ethnic nationality have resolved to pull out of the geographical expression called Nigeria which has, for over 100 years now, turned us to punching bags socially, economically and politically,’’ the statement distributed at a press conference addressed by the group said.
The Efik people explained that the resolve to pursue an independent state was caused by a series of unpleasant developments against them by the federal government and listed what prompted the secession option to include secret ceding of Bakassi Peninsula; undue government interference in Efik kingship and throne; and an attempt to cede more Efik territories to the Republic of Cameroun.
On Bakassi, the group said the peninsula “which was an integral part of Efik Eburutu Kingdom as shown in all available records, was secretly and heartlessly expunged from Nigerian map in October 1960, filed in United Nations and African Union (AU) secretariats and ceded in 1975 to Cameroun without the consent and knowledge of its owners-the kings and chiefs of Efiks of Calabar and Bakassi.’’

“This action has demonstrated that our people are not wanted in Nigeria, and as a people, we do not want to belong to Cameroun.
“The effect of this ceding has brought untold pain and sufferings to Efik Eburutu people. With this, the spirit of our ancestors who were, as it were, buried in the now ceded territory are roaming, refusing to be appeased.”
The aggrieved ethnic nationality also claimed that government, over the years, had interfered in the selection and enthronement of a new Obong of Calabar, a development which had bastardised the stool rendering the Obong of Calabar less influential in the Nigerian state as he was now seen as a king without a kingdom.

They alleged that the appointment of five paramount rulers in Efik kingdom without reference to the tradition of the people was unacceptable as “those installed have refused to be accountable to the Obong of Calabar and grand patriarch of the Efiks who is the embodiment of our ancestral institution.
“Today, the Efik monarch, the Obong of Calabar, has no traditional authority and domain due to the bastardisation of the throne and the entire Efik kingdom by Nigerian governments.”
Despite the ceding of Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroun, the forum said more Efik territories were being lined up for hand over to Cameroun as evident in the creation of New Bakassi Local Government Area out of the three wards of Akpabuyo Local Government Area and backed by Law N0. 7 of  April 12, 2007.

“It was said that the amalgamation of the southern and northern Nigeria protectorates in 1914 was meant to last for only 100 years unlike the French and German colonialists but ‘’the colonial Britain authorised the many ethnic groups therein to administer by their respective customary laws on the British indirect rule system’’.
“With such developments and other oppressive acts and tendencies of the Nigerian state, we the Efik Eburutu people say enough is enough and have decided to take in our destiny in our hands peaceably by pulling out of Nigeria. Our Bill of Rights in our Memorandum dated 16th June, 2014 is ready.
“Our peaceful aims and objectives of self determination for full autonomy are in tandem with Articles 1, 3-21 of the UN charter of which the Federal Government of Nigeria is a signatory,’’ the statement said.


THISDAY

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Breaking news: APGA expels Ufomba, uphold Umeh

APGA expels Ufomba. The appeal court in Abuja upholds Umeh appeal as APGA chairman. 

Consequently, Chief Regan Ufomba the party's former candidate in Abia who has been fighting Umeh, thejuristlaw gathered he has been expelled alongside others who are against Umeh's leadership. 

When we called Ufomba for reaction he angrily said that APGA is not the only party in Nigeria. 

Details later

Superintendent Of Police Slumps In Anambra Over Transfer To Borno

Borno state is now known to many as the centre for insurgents and even to a security agents it sends shivers to most of them as the terrorists terrorizing the state are not only said to be equipped, the motivation to kill is ideology driven.

Not surprising that an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) attached to the Central Police Station, Nnewi in the Anambra State Police Command, yesterday slumped after he heard of a directive from the Office of the Inspector General of Police (IG) posting him to Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State. Unconfirmed reports allege that some officers from other regions in Nigeria transferred to the troubled area had tendered their resignation from the force and others claim various degrees of illness for reasons not to be moved to the North.

The officer, of South-east extraction, according to reports, had less than a year left to retire from the service was among the 149 officers affected by the postings to different parts of the country.
The officer, however, was said to have been revived by doctors and other medical personnel at a private hospital in Nnewi where he was rushed to after he slumped. The transfer of almost 150 senior police officers serving in the state has cast a dark cloud on the entire command. Police officers are redeployed by the headquarters from time to time to the various stations nationwide but a transfer to Borno is now seen as death sentence to many who believe the north-east area is a no go.

Borno State is the epicentre of the Boko Haram insurgency, which has led to the death of over 12,000 Nigerians. Just 66 days ago, the terror sect abducted over 200 schoolgirls from a secondary school in Chibok, Borno State.

Blast rips through football viewing centre in Damaturu


KANO (AFP) – An explosion ripped through a football viewing centre in Damaturu, northern Nigeria, on Tuesday, residents said, as fans gathered to watch the World Cup.

The blast at the Crossfire venue, in the Nayi-Nawa area of the state capital of Yobe, happened at about 8:00 pm (1900 GMT), just as tournament hosts Brazil kicked off against Mexico.

There were no immediate reports of deaths but hospitals were reporting casualties being brought in, medical sources said.

Sanusi Ruf’ai, police commissioner for Yobe state, told AFP: “There was an explosion outside a soccer viewing centre here in Damaturu at around 8:15 pm.

“Our men have deployed to the scene but it’s too early for us to give details.”

One resident said the area had been cordoned off as police and soldiers were sent to the scene.

The blast comes after at least two states banned viewing centres on security grounds following previous attacks blamed on Boko Haram militants, whose five-year insurgency in northern Nigeria has claimed thousands of lives.

Yobe is one of three northeastern states that has been under a state of emergency since last May.

The authorities in Adamawa, in northeast Nigeria, last week closed viewing centres, where large crowds gather to watch matches on the big screen, while the central state of Plateau followed suit days later.

Earlier this month, at least 40 people were killed when a bomb went off after a football match in the town of Mubi in Adamawa. The apparent target was fans trying to leave after the final whistle.

In May, three people were killed in a blast outside a viewing centre showing the European Champions League final between Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid in Jos, the capital of Plateau state.

In April, suspected Boko Haram gunmen stormed a packed venue in Potiskum, in northeast Yobe state, shooting dead two people as they watched Champions League quarter-final matches.



KANO (AFP) – An explosion ripped through a football viewing centre in Damaturu, northern Nigeria, on Tuesday, residents said, as fans gathered to watch the World Cup.
The blast at the Crossfire venue, in the Nayi-Nawa area of the state capital of Yobe, happened at about 8:00 pm (1900 GMT), just as tournament hosts Brazil kicked off against Mexico.
There were no immediate reports of deaths but hospitals were reporting casualties being brought in, medical sources said.
Sanusi Ruf’ai, police commissioner for Yobe state, told AFP: “There was an explosion outside a soccer viewing centre here in Damaturu at around 8:15 pm.
“Our men have deployed to the scene but it’s too early for us to give details.”
One resident said the area had been cordoned off as police and soldiers were sent to the scene.
The blast comes after at least two states banned viewing centres on security grounds following previous attacks blamed on Boko Haram militants, whose five-year insurgency in northern Nigeria has claimed thousands of lives.
Yobe is one of three northeastern states that has been under a state of emergency since last May.
The authorities in Adamawa, in northeast Nigeria, last week closed viewing centres, where large crowds gather to watch matches on the big screen, while the central state of Plateau followed suit days later.
Earlier this month, at least 40 people were killed when a bomb went off after a football match in the town of Mubi in Adamawa. The apparent target was fans trying to leave after the final whistle.
In May, three people were killed in a blast outside a viewing centre showing the European Champions League final between Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid in Jos, the capital of Plateau state.
In April, suspected Boko Haram gunmen stormed a packed venue in Potiskum, in northeast Yobe state, shooting dead two people as they watched Champions League quarter-final matches.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/06/breaking-news-blast-rips-football-viewing-centre-damaturu/#sthash.3wML46Lc.mdeiMNR1.dpuf
KANO (AFP) – An explosion ripped through a football viewing centre in Damaturu, northern Nigeria, on Tuesday, residents said, as fans gathered to watch the World Cup.
The blast at the Crossfire venue, in the Nayi-Nawa area of the state capital of Yobe, happened at about 8:00 pm (1900 GMT), just as tournament hosts Brazil kicked off against Mexico.
There were no immediate reports of deaths but hospitals were reporting casualties being brought in, medical sources said.
Sanusi Ruf’ai, police commissioner for Yobe state, told AFP: “There was an explosion outside a soccer viewing centre here in Damaturu at around 8:15 pm.
“Our men have deployed to the scene but it’s too early for us to give details.”
One resident said the area had been cordoned off as police and soldiers were sent to the scene.
The blast comes after at least two states banned viewing centres on security grounds following previous attacks blamed on Boko Haram militants, whose five-year insurgency in northern Nigeria has claimed thousands of lives.
Yobe is one of three northeastern states that has been under a state of emergency since last May.
The authorities in Adamawa, in northeast Nigeria, last week closed viewing centres, where large crowds gather to watch matches on the big screen, while the central state of Plateau followed suit days later.
Earlier this month, at least 40 people were killed when a bomb went off after a football match in the town of Mubi in Adamawa. The apparent target was fans trying to leave after the final whistle.
In May, three people were killed in a blast outside a viewing centre showing the European Champions League final between Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid in Jos, the capital of Plateau state.
In April, suspected Boko Haram gunmen stormed a packed venue in Potiskum, in northeast Yobe state, shooting dead two people as they watched Champions League quarter-final matches.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/06/breaking-news-blast-rips-football-viewing-centre-damaturu/#sthash.3wML46Lc.mdeiMNR1.dpuf

Monday, June 16, 2014

Borno Pastors Finally Reveal B’Haram’s Agenda For Nigeria, Claim Chibok Girls’ Abduction Is A Distraction – Shocking Details!




Against the background of denials by high-ranking functionaries of the Muslim establishment in Nigeria that the Boko Haram insurgency is not a Muslim agenda, we owe it to ourselves and the world to set the record straight. In 2012, in a widely publicized video recording that is easily accessible on the internet, Abubakar Shekau, the late erstwhile leader of Boko Haram announced the mission statement of his sect. Among other things, he said “this war is not political. It is religious. It is between Muslims and unbelievers (arna). It will stop when Islamic religion is the determinant in governance in Nigeria or, in the alternative, when all fighters are annihilated and no one is left to continue the fight. I warn all Muslims at this juncture that any Muslim who assists an unbeliever in this war should consider himself dead.”

This mission statement explains why Muslim communities have been viciously attacked for having within them persons who served as informants to the authorities. While we appreciate the concern of well-meaning persons in Nigeria and world-wide over the fate of more than three hundred female students abducted from Government Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State, by the Boko Haram sect, we want to draw the attention of the world to the fact that the abduction saga has become a distraction that has left our communities to free-pillaging and rampaging by Boko Haram.
These are the facts that happened in the past four weeks:
In Ataggara, Southern Senatorial Zone of Borno State, Boko Haram attacked and were repelled by the community. Community leaders went to Pulka, where a military formation exists, to report the attack and were assured that a unit would be drafted to the town to protect the people. The following day some people appeared in Nigeria Army issue in nine armoured personnel carriers bearing the colours and insignia of the Nigerian Army. They announced to the villagers that they had come to assess the security situation. When the people gathered to hear them, the men that came in armoured personnel carriers, and in Army uniform, opened fire and killed over two hundred and fifty men, women and children. Those who were able to take to their heels were pursued by the marauders into the bush and when they were caught up with, were either butchered with knives or shot to death. The survivors have taken refuge in Cameroun, or in friendly communities;
In Bokko Wizhe, four people died when Boko Haram terrorists opened fire indiscriminately in the predominantly Christian community. About two thousand survivors have fled to Cameroun and neighbouring states;
In Bokko Timta, about 1,500 Christians had to flee to Cameroun and other states in Nigeria after Boko Haram attacked their community;
In Kugyly, about 2,500 fled the village to Cameroun and other states in Nigeria after they were visited by Boko Haram;
In Ngoshe, 46 persons were killed by Boko Haram and more than 3,000 had to flee to Cameroun and other states in Nigeria. None of the houses and churches in the community escaped being torched;
In Gava, 26 persons were killed by Boko Haram. About 2,000 people fled to Cameroun and other states in Nigeria. All the houses and churches were burnt down;
In Amuda, 17 persons were murdered by Boko Haram and more than four thousand people fled to other places. The Village Head is, at present taking refuge in Nasarawa State;
In Halaghwa after an undetermined number of persons were killed by Boko Haram, about 500 persons from the community fled to Cameroun and another 2,000 fled to other states in Nigeria;
In Agapalawa, 15 persons were killed by Boko Haram and more than 4,000 had to flee to Cameroun;
In Ganjara, 46 persons were killed by Boko Haram and more than 2,500 fled to Cameroun;
In Jibrili, an undetermined number of people were killed by Boko Haram and Christian houses and churches burnt to the ground. The remnant of the people have fled to Cameroun;
In Zamgba, Boko Haram attacked and killed 13 people, and about 1,700 were forced to flee to Cameroun;
In Ashigashita, Boko Haram attacked and killed 10 people. The remnant of the community fled to Cameroun;
In Vale, Christians were completely chased out. Their belongings were looted by Boko Haram and their sympathizers;
In Kwadale, an undetermined number of persons were killed by Boko Haram and about 2,000 fled to Cameroun;
In Pulka, 30 persons were killed by Boko Haram, including the Village Head Mallam Ali Pulka. Many members of the community have fled to Cameroun leaving about 4,500;
In Kirawa, all the Christians fled to Cameroun after the village was taken over by Boko Haram;
In Chinene, Boko Haram killed 14 persons, more than 500 fled to Cameroun, about 1,000 fled to other states in Nigeria, while about 1,000 are still in the mountains as all motorable roads have been blocked by the sect;
In Arboko, more than 10 persons were killed by Boko Haram, all houses and churches razed to the ground, and about 2,000 have fled to Cameroun;
In Chikide, 2 persons were killed by Boko Haram, and about 1,500 have fled to Cameroun and other states in Nigeria;
In Barawa, more than 20 persons were killed by Boko Haram, and the community’s houses and churches burnt down. Survivors have fled to Cameroun, other states and the hills;
In Pege, Boko Haram killed five persons by Boko Haram, and about 1,000 members of the community have fled to Cameroun and other states in Nigeria;
In Kaghum, Boko Haram killed more than 20 persons by Boko Haram, and more than 3,000 members of the community have been forced to flee to Cameroun, other states in Nigeria and the hills;
In Angurva, an undetermined number of persons were killed by Boko Haram, and some 4,000 persons have fled to Cameroun;
In Baladigavuraza, Boko Haram killed 3 persons, about 2,000 persons fled to Cameroun and another 500 fled to other states in Nigeria;
In Kunde, some 7 persons were killed and the community’s houses and churches burnt. About 2,500 fled to Cameroun and the hills;
In the past fourteen days the following communities in Damboa Local Government area have been over-run by Boko Haram: Kwapchi; Shawa; Daku; Kwamjilari; Blakat 1; Blakat 2; Blakat 3; Mulgwe 1; Mulgwe 2; Mulgwe 3; Katsalabulari; Kulali 1; Kulali 2; Kuburuvhu; Kautivha; Izghe 1; Izghe 2; Izghe 3; Kaya 1; Kaya 2; Konchi;
Mbulakuduga (Alagamo) in Askira Uba Local Government Area was over-run within the same time frame;
Takulashi of Chibok Local Government Area was also over-run in the past few days.
In all the communities it has over-run, Boko Haram has removed the Nigerian national flag and hoisted its own flag, the flag of jihad. If the Federal Government of Nigeria would not arm our communities to defend ourselves, the least it can do is not to stand in the way of other Nigerians and members of the international community who are so inclined to help arm our communities.
Boko Haram, as its mission statement as espoused by the late Abubakar Shekau states, the only time it would be mollified is “….when Islamic religion is the determinant in governance in Nigeria or, in the alternative, when all fighters are annihilated and no one is left to continue the fight.”

Our people refuse to be forcibly Islamized. We, also, insist on making our own free choices. It is our belief that it is only on the basis of mutual respect that nations can be built. We would like to contribute our quota to building the Nigerian Federation into a nation and call on others to follow our peaceful path. But if the forces of evil insist on pursuing their present murderous course, our people will be forced to respond in kind and to meet force with force. The present path of violence by Boko Haram can only lead to destruction, Boko Haram’s destruction as well as others.

We thank you for giving us an ear.

Dr. Pogu Bitrus (of Chibok), Rev. Ibrahim Dauwa (of Gwoza) and Rev. James Yaga, JP (of Gwoza)

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Endless lamentations of Kalu

Kalu’s lamentations will never end. His message read by a very disillusive aide at a retreat in Port Harcourt recently says much about the torments Kalu is passing through. He is in deep melancholy in spite of his stolen riches. We are used to Kalu’s jibes and innuendos but this time, he spoke from the subconscious. I am not surprised at Kalu’s moans. It is his typical refrain. Who are the wolves in sheep’s clothing and animals in human form if not Kalu?

In this same gathering Rochas Okorocha came out with a powerful postulation that suits Kalu like a second skin. According to Rochas ‘who you are before office means a lot. If we elect a criminal into office he will simply become excellent criminal.’ Kalu was simply a fraudster, remember when he donated papers cut into sizes of money, remember his forged certificate that bedeviled him in the first year of his tenure. His enlisting in Abia State University and the retrieval of his unfortunate degree clearly shows that he had no certificates before becoming a governor.

Remember Hon. Ubani’s many articles on Orji. Orji was a dupe that took on many people to the extent that a law court in Lagos seized all his property. It is on record how he got entangled into a drug scam in London and Alex Mbakwe who was surety with his property lost out as Kalu jumped bail.

He never had The Sun Newspapers, Slok Air and other things he is boasting with and all that he claims now. They were all bought with looted money from Abia State coffers. In that same gathering Prof. Jinadu came with another apt situation faced by past governors, those who cannot separate the office and self mostly due to overzealous love for lucre.

That gathering is a good one and Kalu fell into a trap making it clearly obvious that he is still brooding over his loss. We know those who will survive psychologically. Abiola Ajumobi wants to be A PREACHER, Nyako is in a hurry to go back to his farms. kalu wanted to continue ruling by proxy. Kalu is the real animal who did not know that his time in office is gone. He has refused to forget issues in Abia and continue as the evil Godfather. Let him continue. He will get more shocks and embarrassment. Abia people are wiser and have sworn that never again will they elect a no-name howler like Kalu.

Ibe wrote in from Umuahia, Abia State

Monday, June 9, 2014

Chibok: Terrorism’s new face

THE 21st century is a period of the novel and unexpected. It is also a period of new risks delivered with new means and potentially more devastating consequences.

For example, the greatest international event of the new century and, of course, the one that bookmarks its first phase was the attack on America’s symbol of prestige by the terrorist group known as al-Qaeda on September 11, 2001. Terrorism is the use of random violence, especially killing force, with the intent of creating fear in a population (especially civilians) with the devout hope that the fear so created will advance a political objective.

The aim of the terrorist is to coerce or instill fear through the use of propaganda. The attack on America, for example, was clearly motivated not just by the desire to kill civilians but also by the drive to maximise the propaganda value of the attack. Besides, globalisation has also significantly transformed armed groups and terrorists into a major strategic security threat because it has heightened their organisational effectiveness, their lethality and ability to operate on a truly world-wide scale.

But historically speaking, terrorism operates and thrives in three basic contexts namely: (a) as a tool to crush populations into submission ( as used by the dictatorship under Robespierre(1793-1794) during the French Revolution ), (b) as a tool for extremist outsiders against representative regimes( this was al-Qaeda’s major reason for attacking America on 9/11/2001), and (c) as a tool of guerilla warfare(consider the on-going insurgency between the guerillas and American troops in Iraq).

The obvious implication of all these examples is that the abduction of innocent and harmless teenage girls in a government secondary school by the Boko Haram sect in Nigeria is completely out of the context of terrorism and is an addition of the novel to the tactics of terrorism. This dastardly act raises a number of questions: What are the motives of the Boko Haram sect?

Is the abduction of the weaker sex an act brave enough to advance its objective? Does the group intend to add gender issues to its own tactics or it simply wants to extend its long line of human rights abuses with sexual violence and abuse? All these issues constitute the new face and tactics of terrorism in Nigeria.

In the world in which we inhabit today, religion is no longer the purview of theologians and misguided adherents but a major contributor to the lethality of armed groups and terrorists because members of armed groups use religious power to achieve their goals.

The Boko Haram sect in Nigeria based in the North Eastern part of the country was founded in 2002 and the group seeks primarily to establish a strict Islamic law in most of the semi-desert areas of West and Central Africa with spiritual headquarters in Maiduguri. Its leader, Mohammed Yusuf, was captured and killed some time ago but the group has become more powerful and vicious under the leadership of its new leader Abubakar Shekau.

In very broad terms, the sect forbids Western education and it has a strong habit of attacking and bombing churches, government institutions, mosques, police and army formations.

Before his death, the erstwhile leader of the group, Yusuf, had stated emphatically (in a BBC interview) that ‘ anything contrary to Islamic teaching on earth should be rejected’ and that the group was going to leave no stone unturned in ensuring that it changes the current education system in Africa and uproot democracy in the continent. Although, one can identify the objectives of the group, it is left to be said that in pursuing its objectives the group’s actions sharply contrast the teachings of Islam.

The principle of Peace (Salam) which is of primary centrality in Islam, and from which the religion largely derives its name, has been denigrated to cynicism, hate, violence, human suffering and genocide. In other words, in its attempt to purify Islam of Western influences the sect has only succeeded in employing Islam not to support life but death; not to support peace but to perpetuate war. The consolation is that the Muslim faithful, including the Sultan of Sokoto, have unambiguously condemned and criticised the activities of the sect in ringing tones.

While the abduction of the young school girls has become an issue of international concern it, has at the same time, drawn attention to the plight of the African woman in conflict situations. For one thing, the majority of those affected by armed conflict (including refugees and internally displaced persons, IDPs), are usually women and children.

For another, in Nigeria, our country, the Boko Haram sect has successfully exploited the nation’s already-weakened security to its advantage .Perhaps, the truth may be that the Nigerian Army cannot combat terrorism either because the last time the country purchased military hardware was in 1983, or the Army chiefs have become conflict entrepreneurs.

This line of thinking is anchored on the fact that, recently, there has been symptoms of mutiny and gross insubordination within the ranks of the Nigerian Army, including allegations of its complicity with the Boko Haram sect. Yet, in the usual Nigerian style, no arrests have been made or culprits publicly named or punished to serve as deterrence. The irony here is that in the 21st century, the Nigerian Air Force cannot boast of one reconnaissance aircraft.

But more worrisome is the fact that the abduction of the young girls is a method that is not only cruel but also intrinsically awful. In the same vein, the abduction of the girls is not just painful, it is also right-violating.

The act constitutes a disgusting disregard for the humanity of the girls abducted. The abduction also raises a number of moral questions: What about their bodily integrity? If the young girls could be converted to Islam ( and there is every reason to believe so) is it not possible that they could also have been defiled?

Is it not a violation of their rights and entitlements, even as young girls, to choose their own sex partner(s)? Many more difficult questions could be asked. What is clear for now is that a whole generation is being eroded away in our country because the young girls are equally mothers, not to their future children alone but to their entire communities and the nation at large. In a recent video tape, Shekau threatened that he will sell the abducted girls into slavery.

A more recent video tape showed the girls clad in jilbab chanting Arabic verses from the Koran, a sure sign that they are converts to the Islamic faith. At the same time Shekau is insisting that he will not release the girls until the FGN freed all Boko Haram members detained by the Nigerian government.

The attacks by the armed group are so frighteningly many and the sect has killed more than 9000 Nigerian citizens since 2009. There is this fear that the sect may even truncate our 15 years old democracy. This argument is borne out of the fact that if the Army Generals cannot overcome the sect they may turn their guns in anger to mow down the politicians just to save their faces.

The sect has visited Nigeria with a terribly new face because terrorists as we know them don’t abduct harmless,innocent girls. We hope the international community will help to bring back our girls. Nothing less than that will be adequate.

Dr. DOKI JEFFis a senior lecturer with the University of Jos.


VANGUARD
THE 21st century is a period of the novel and unexpected. It is also a period of new risks delivered with new means and potentially more devastating consequences.
For example, the greatest international event of the new century and, of course, the one that bookmarks its first phase was the attack on America’s symbol of prestige by the terrorist group known as al-Qaeda on September 11, 2001. Terrorism is the use of random violence, especially killing force, with the intent of creating fear in a population (especially civilians) with the devout hope that the fear so created will advance a political objective.
The aim of the terrorist is to coerce or instill fear through the use of propaganda. The attack on America, for example, was clearly motivated not just by the desire to kill civilians but also by the drive to maximise the propaganda value of the attack. Besides, globalisation has also significantly transformed armed groups and terrorists into a major strategic security threat because it has heightened their organisational effectiveness, their lethality and ability to operate on a truly world-wide scale.
But historically speaking, terrorism operates and thrives in three basic contexts namely: (a) as a tool to crush populations into submission ( as used by the dictatorship under Robespierre(1793-1794) during the French Revolution ), (b) as a tool for extremist outsiders against representative regimes( this was al-Qaeda’s major reason for attacking America on 9/11/2001), and (c) as a tool of guerilla warfare(consider the on-going insurgency between the guerillas and American troops in Iraq).
The obvious implication of all these examples is that the abduction of innocent and harmless teenage girls in a government secondary school by the Boko Haram sect in Nigeria is completely out of the context of terrorism and is an addition of the novel to the tactics of terrorism. This dastardly act raises a number of questions: What are the motives of the Boko Haram sect?
Is the abduction of the weaker sex an act brave enough to advance its objective? Does the group intend to add gender issues to its own tactics or it simply wants to extend its long line of human rights abuses with sexual violence and abuse? All these issues constitute the new face and tactics of terrorism in Nigeria.
In the world in which we inhabit today, religion is no longer the purview of theologians and misguided adherents but a major contributor to the lethality of armed groups and terrorists because members of armed groups use religious power to achieve their goals.
The Boko Haram sect in Nigeria based in the North Eastern part of the country was founded in 2002 and the group seeks primarily to establish a strict Islamic law in most of the semi-desert areas of West and Central Africa with spiritual headquarters in Maiduguri. Its leader, Mohammed Yusuf, was captured and killed some time ago but the group has become more powerful and vicious under the leadership of its new leader Abubakar Shekau.
In very broad terms, the sect forbids Western education and it has a strong habit of attacking and bombing churches, government institutions, mosques, police and army formations.
Before his death, the erstwhile leader of the group, Yusuf, had stated emphatically (in a BBC interview) that ‘ anything contrary to Islamic teaching on earth should be rejected’ and that the group was going to leave no stone unturned in ensuring that it changes the current education system in Africa and uproot democracy in the continent. Although, one can identify the objectives of the group, it is left to be said that in pursuing its objectives the group’s actions sharply contrast the teachings of Islam.
The principle of Peace (Salam) which is of primary centrality in Islam, and from which the religion largely derives its name, has been denigrated to cynicism, hate, violence, human suffering and genocide. In other words, in its attempt to purify Islam of Western influences the sect has only succeeded in employing Islam not to support life but death; not to support peace but to perpetuate war. The consolation is that the Muslim faithful, including the Sultan of Sokoto, have unambiguously condemned and criticised the activities of the sect in ringing tones.
While the abduction of the young school girls has become an issue of international concern it, has at the same time, drawn attention to the plight of the African woman in conflict situations. For one thing, the majority of those affected by armed conflict (including refugees and internally displaced persons, IDPs), are usually women and children.
For another, in Nigeria, our country, the Boko Haram sect has successfully exploited the nation’s already-weakened security to its advantage .Perhaps, the truth may be that the Nigerian Army cannot combat terrorism either because the last time the country purchased military hardware was in 1983, or the Army chiefs have become conflict entrepreneurs.
This line of thinking is anchored on the fact that, recently, there has been symptoms of mutiny and gross insubordination within the ranks of the Nigerian Army, including allegations of its complicity with the Boko Haram sect. Yet, in the usual Nigerian style, no arrests have been made or culprits publicly named or punished to serve as deterrence. The irony here is that in the 21st century, the Nigerian Air Force cannot boast of one reconnaissance aircraft.
But more worrisome is the fact that the abduction of the young girls is a method that is not only cruel but also intrinsically awful. In the same vein, the abduction of the girls is not just painful, it is also right-violating.
The act constitutes a disgusting disregard for the humanity of the girls abducted. The abduction also raises a number of moral questions: What about their bodily integrity? If the young girls could be converted to Islam ( and there is every reason to believe so) is it not possible that they could also have been defiled?
Is it not a violation of their rights and entitlements, even as young girls, to choose their own sex partner(s)? Many more difficult questions could be asked. What is clear for now is that a whole generation is being eroded away in our country because the young girls are equally mothers, not to their future children alone but to their entire communities and the nation at large. In a recent video tape, Shekau threatened that he will sell the abducted girls into slavery.
A more recent video tape showed the girls clad in jilbab chanting Arabic verses from the Koran, a sure sign that they are converts to the Islamic faith. At the same time Shekau is insisting that he will not release the girls until the FGN freed all Boko Haram members detained by the Nigerian government.
The attacks by the armed group are so frighteningly many and the sect has killed more than 9000 Nigerian citizens since 2009. There is this fear that the sect may even truncate our 15 years old democracy. This argument is borne out of the fact that if the Army Generals cannot overcome the sect they may turn their guns in anger to mow down the politicians just to save their faces.
The sect has visited Nigeria with a terribly new face because terrorists as we know them don’t abduct harmless,innocent girls. We hope the international community will help to bring back our girls. Nothing less than that will be adequate.
Dr. DOKI JEFFis a senior lecturer with the University of Jos.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/06/chibok-terrorisms-new-face/#sthash.xie8wIRY.dpuf
THE 21st century is a period of the novel and unexpected. It is also a period of new risks delivered with new means and potentially more devastating consequences.
For example, the greatest international event of the new century and, of course, the one that bookmarks its first phase was the attack on America’s symbol of prestige by the terrorist group known as al-Qaeda on September 11, 2001. Terrorism is the use of random violence, especially killing force, with the intent of creating fear in a population (especially civilians) with the devout hope that the fear so created will advance a political objective.
The aim of the terrorist is to coerce or instill fear through the use of propaganda. The attack on America, for example, was clearly motivated not just by the desire to kill civilians but also by the drive to maximise the propaganda value of the attack. Besides, globalisation has also significantly transformed armed groups and terrorists into a major strategic security threat because it has heightened their organisational effectiveness, their lethality and ability to operate on a truly world-wide scale.
But historically speaking, terrorism operates and thrives in three basic contexts namely: (a) as a tool to crush populations into submission ( as used by the dictatorship under Robespierre(1793-1794) during the French Revolution ), (b) as a tool for extremist outsiders against representative regimes( this was al-Qaeda’s major reason for attacking America on 9/11/2001), and (c) as a tool of guerilla warfare(consider the on-going insurgency between the guerillas and American troops in Iraq).
The obvious implication of all these examples is that the abduction of innocent and harmless teenage girls in a government secondary school by the Boko Haram sect in Nigeria is completely out of the context of terrorism and is an addition of the novel to the tactics of terrorism. This dastardly act raises a number of questions: What are the motives of the Boko Haram sect?
Is the abduction of the weaker sex an act brave enough to advance its objective? Does the group intend to add gender issues to its own tactics or it simply wants to extend its long line of human rights abuses with sexual violence and abuse? All these issues constitute the new face and tactics of terrorism in Nigeria.
In the world in which we inhabit today, religion is no longer the purview of theologians and misguided adherents but a major contributor to the lethality of armed groups and terrorists because members of armed groups use religious power to achieve their goals.
The Boko Haram sect in Nigeria based in the North Eastern part of the country was founded in 2002 and the group seeks primarily to establish a strict Islamic law in most of the semi-desert areas of West and Central Africa with spiritual headquarters in Maiduguri. Its leader, Mohammed Yusuf, was captured and killed some time ago but the group has become more powerful and vicious under the leadership of its new leader Abubakar Shekau.
In very broad terms, the sect forbids Western education and it has a strong habit of attacking and bombing churches, government institutions, mosques, police and army formations.
Before his death, the erstwhile leader of the group, Yusuf, had stated emphatically (in a BBC interview) that ‘ anything contrary to Islamic teaching on earth should be rejected’ and that the group was going to leave no stone unturned in ensuring that it changes the current education system in Africa and uproot democracy in the continent. Although, one can identify the objectives of the group, it is left to be said that in pursuing its objectives the group’s actions sharply contrast the teachings of Islam.
The principle of Peace (Salam) which is of primary centrality in Islam, and from which the religion largely derives its name, has been denigrated to cynicism, hate, violence, human suffering and genocide. In other words, in its attempt to purify Islam of Western influences the sect has only succeeded in employing Islam not to support life but death; not to support peace but to perpetuate war. The consolation is that the Muslim faithful, including the Sultan of Sokoto, have unambiguously condemned and criticised the activities of the sect in ringing tones.
While the abduction of the young school girls has become an issue of international concern it, has at the same time, drawn attention to the plight of the African woman in conflict situations. For one thing, the majority of those affected by armed conflict (including refugees and internally displaced persons, IDPs), are usually women and children.
For another, in Nigeria, our country, the Boko Haram sect has successfully exploited the nation’s already-weakened security to its advantage .Perhaps, the truth may be that the Nigerian Army cannot combat terrorism either because the last time the country purchased military hardware was in 1983, or the Army chiefs have become conflict entrepreneurs.
This line of thinking is anchored on the fact that, recently, there has been symptoms of mutiny and gross insubordination within the ranks of the Nigerian Army, including allegations of its complicity with the Boko Haram sect. Yet, in the usual Nigerian style, no arrests have been made or culprits publicly named or punished to serve as deterrence. The irony here is that in the 21st century, the Nigerian Air Force cannot boast of one reconnaissance aircraft.
But more worrisome is the fact that the abduction of the young girls is a method that is not only cruel but also intrinsically awful. In the same vein, the abduction of the girls is not just painful, it is also right-violating.
The act constitutes a disgusting disregard for the humanity of the girls abducted. The abduction also raises a number of moral questions: What about their bodily integrity? If the young girls could be converted to Islam ( and there is every reason to believe so) is it not possible that they could also have been defiled?
Is it not a violation of their rights and entitlements, even as young girls, to choose their own sex partner(s)? Many more difficult questions could be asked. What is clear for now is that a whole generation is being eroded away in our country because the young girls are equally mothers, not to their future children alone but to their entire communities and the nation at large. In a recent video tape, Shekau threatened that he will sell the abducted girls into slavery.
A more recent video tape showed the girls clad in jilbab chanting Arabic verses from the Koran, a sure sign that they are converts to the Islamic faith. At the same time Shekau is insisting that he will not release the girls until the FGN freed all Boko Haram members detained by the Nigerian government.
The attacks by the armed group are so frighteningly many and the sect has killed more than 9000 Nigerian citizens since 2009. There is this fear that the sect may even truncate our 15 years old democracy. This argument is borne out of the fact that if the Army Generals cannot overcome the sect they may turn their guns in anger to mow down the politicians just to save their faces.
The sect has visited Nigeria with a terribly new face because terrorists as we know them don’t abduct harmless,innocent girls. We hope the international community will help to bring back our girls. Nothing less than that will be adequate.
Dr. DOKI JEFFis a senior lecturer with the University of Jos.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/06/chibok-terrorisms-new-face/#sthash.xie8wIRY.dpuf

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Obviously, Ufomba has not discovered himself



The piece published by Reagan Ufomba on Tuesday May 27, 2014 is at best ludicrous. It is very obvious that Ufomba has not discovered himself. He would not, because he had not spared the time to peer into his cosmic realm and so completely unaware of his comical potentials. If he did, Osuofia and Mr. Ibu would have been nonstarters in their comedy   field. Ufomba from all his acts and hollow motions make himself a big Joke. If Reagan stopped in his mendacious ways to ponder for a few seconds, he wouldn’t have allowed himself to be rapaciously dangled by a wily puppeteer benefactor.


The page that Reagan wrote in the Sun was donated to Reagan as far as it is used in running down Chief Orji  and put his fame to shame but they cannot because the world knows T A Orji and has acclaimed him through many sources. His donour   has sworn not to see any good in Abia as he has embarked on a war of attrition and total annihilation. For that phobic reason and more, any who whispers T A Orji becomes an instant buddy and a serious ally, profusely armed to insult the Abia helmsman. They may be adopting the Persian saying that ‘the enemy of my enemy is my friend.’


We in Abia are not bothered by the types of Reagan because as it was said in Julius Caesar, Act 5 scene 1, ‘the posture of your blows are yet unknown. But for your words, they rob the Hybla bees. And leave them honeyless.

Reagan is a persona non grata in his Umuogelle Village in Ntigha, Isiala Ngwa North LGA. It becomes very abhorrent when a man takes falsehood to his home. The Igbos have a saying that ‘you do not sell a crippled fowl at home,’ but that was what Reagan was alleged to have done as you read along. His credentials smirk of crime, calumny, unbridled duplicity and serial mendacity. Take these for samples:


In 1994, it was alleged that Reagan published an obituary of himself to dodge creditors he swindled. Some years later, he persuaded his people to pay a counterpart fund for a non-existent water project and churned out lies in defence until the youths of his community rolled out tanks against him and he made a plea to save his uninspiring life. What about the Health Centre at the express way near Ntigha Junction which Reagan took over from his town’s women and promised heaven on earth? It is now bushy, and a palace for reptiles and rodents. The story of an Owaza man Reagan was alleged to have collected over 4 million Naira from, with the promise to create an autonomous community for the victim while he was special assistant in the previous regime. Do I go on?

I wouldn’t have picked up my pen over Reagan, having profiled his misdeeds previously but for his quote where he refused to credit Edmund Burke, that Irish Man of note. ‘evil thrives where  good men do nothing.’
Reagan is a pretender and in his make-believe write up, made so many claims that should not be ignored. As it is said in journalism, ‘Facts are sacred and opinion is free.’
As Reagan wrote, ‘my team and I would not sleep until the great people of Abia State, who had been beaten to slumber as a result of unprecedented mass poverty and backwardness regain their consciousness and pride of place.’


This as you can see is complete falsehood. Ochendo’s Governance has breathed life into Abians if we work on available facts. The Agric sector has been given quantum push. The ambitious liberation farms slated for the 17 Local Government Areas have successfully taken off in most Local Government Areas. The donation of improved variety of cassava stems, palm seedling, cocoa and innumerable others are good examples. The one billion Agric loans have put Abians into being managers of their own resources. Have these happened before?


The youths in Abia have never ever been so empowered since the creation of the state. Abia youths have been taken through multiple  skills and empowered to thrive. Over one thousand vehicles have been given out free of charge. Bursaries have been paid to all Abians in the tertiary institutions and computers and other resourceful gadgets issued. Free Education at Primary and Secondary has been on since 2007. Civil Servants were enormously promoted and Abia pays the highest minimum wage in the country, so where is the poverty. Based on many of the above, our children at home and abroad have won laurels to unprecedented levels so we can say that Reagan is having a nightmare wishing evil for Abia.

He went to his usual refrain of Igbos who were transferred to their states. Yes! When the governor took that action, he made it clear to all and explained the reasons as the revenue and allocation of Abia were on the decline but Reagan cannot remember now that Abia has reabsorbed 2700 of these numbers.


Reagan shamelessly wrote ‘As a young man, I had rebelled against societal ills: I left the seminary school as a result of injustice. I left the APGA faction under Victor Umeh as a result of injustice. I refused to “negotiate” with T.A. Orji after the 2011 governorship election because that would amount to injustice to our people.’
For  where? Reagan did not leave these places on his own terms. What has he to negotiate with T.A. Orji? Is it as a party man, or statesman? Probably as a populist? How many votes did he get? A poor percentage of Ochendo’s landslide votes. His trademark lie means that Reagan cannot change. I am sure that Chief Victor Umeh has his dossier on Reagan and would release them at the right time. Do we need to bother with late sage Benjamin Franklin who predicted that ‘it is hard for an empty bag to stand erect.’


 Let me sound a note of warning to those who may fall prey to Reagan and his antics. Reagan has never done any good deed all his life. His claims are hollow. He boasted some years ago to establish a cement factory that will beat Dangote and he appointed distributors who gullibly registered. Your guess is as good as mine over what happened to the funds.  Where do these factories exist? What does Reagan do for a living? Are his businesses registered and functional? Are they quoted in the stock exchange and NASDAC? Where do these phantom businesses pay taxes?


Reagan after blowing hot air of going to do new things, grabbed the APGA ticket in 2011 but what did he get? A distant second to Ochendo’s first: 641,158 votes as against 49,421 votes. A ratio rating of 12: 1, 7.7 percent of Ochendo’s total votes and 6.6% of total votes cast for the best four contestants in Abia. As you can see, an abysmal mandatory spread of votes in all local governments in Abia.


Going by the above statistics, is Reagan worth all the troubles? What a huge rejection? What a poor showing for a man who pretended to covet the Abia top post? Reagan is bedeviled with so many curses. When the Ukwa na Ngwa publicly forbade their sons from running in 2011, Reagan disobeyed. He impersonated the bible and blasphemed God by his slogan of Isaiah 43 v. 18, ‘behold I will do a new thing!’
 Reagan is not a candidate and can never be. An African proverb once said, ‘never insult the crocodile until you cross the river.’ Reagan has bitten the political fingers that fed him. Mind you, he previously desecrated the altar that raised him. APGA cannot give Reagan a ticket except he runs from the numerous nondescript parties that are at the brink of extinction. Even when he tried in 2011, it was only a handful of votes. Now Ochendo in his magnanimity has thrown his weight behind power shift in the governorship race to Ukwa na Ngwa, so by being of Ngwa extraction, Reagan can run for the election in 2015 but who will support him? Senators Enyinnaya Abaribe, Nkechi Nworgu, Minister Emeka Wogu, Barrister Friday Nwosu all have some credible showing. Can Reagan stand with these heavyweights?  Would he measure up to their shoulders, waists or the knees? Reagan is a Jehu, recklessly cruising on the back of the tiger, unaware that he is a super component of the tiger’s next menu.


It sounds so unbelievable  and an aberration that this infamous Reagan shares nativity with Monsignor Nwachukwu, the popes nuncio, Hon Chinenye Ike, Eze Amara Nwabeke, an impeccable gentleman, Ginger Onwusibe, the twice appointed Transition Chairman of Isiala Ngwa North LGA and many other illustrious sons. Reagan is a huge joke and will continue to be one, quote me.

 Eddie Onuzuruike.


Monday, June 2, 2014

Chibok Girls Need Medical Attention - Reveals FG Secret Negotiator

An Australian negotiator, who was hired by the Nigerian government to broker the release of the over 200 Chibok girls being held captive by Boko Haram, has said that most of the girls are already outside the country.

Stephen Davis is said to have advised three Nigerian presidents on how to negotiate with militant groups and he has been involved in the struggle to free the girls for the past one month.
He said:

‘The vast majority of the Chibok girls are not being held in Nigeria. They are in camps across the Nigerian border in Cameroon, Chad and Niger. I say the “vast majority” as I know a small group was confirmed to me to be in Nigeria last week when we sought to have them released.’
Daily Mail <a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2644920/Hostage-schoolgirl-EXCLUSIVE-Mail-Sunday-hears-tape-desperate-pleas-kidnapped-Nigerian-pupils-held-jungle-one-saying-I-never-expected-suffer-like-life.html#ixzz33SShSj5N">reports:</a>
He described how fraught the negotiation process has been.
‘One of that small group of girls is ill and we had hoped we might convince the commander of the group holding her that she should be released so we could give her medical treatment,’ Dr Davis said.
‘There are other girls who are not well and we have come close to having them released but their captors fear a trap in which they will be captured in the handover process.
‘One girl has what I assume is a broken wrist as they demonstrate to me how she holds her hand. I have been told that others are sick and in need of medical attention.’

A military source said: ‘This has been a race against time from the minute they were captured. As soon as the girls left Nigerian soil it was always going to be more difficult.
‘The government made no attempt at a rescue until a month after they were taken. Now the situation gets more serious by the day.
‘Any sort of attempt to get to them would have to be cleared by the governments of the other nations.’

Scathing condemnations of Nigeria’s failure to address the menace of Boko Haram, ever since a proposed peace deal failed last August – leading to the extension of a state of emergency in three northern states – continued worldwide last week.
US Senator Robert Menendez, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said Nigeria had been ‘tragically and unacceptably slow’ to begin a search.
Others say the clock really being watched by Nigerian politicians is not the six weeks and counting since the kidnap but the 11 months to the country’s elections.
Opposition politician Nuhu Ribadu has accused the government of ‘total failure’.

Nigeria’s Top 10 Federal Revenue Receiving States

Finance Minister, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has listed Nigeria’s 10 highest
revenue receiving states based on the federal allocations in 2013.
The states, according to her, earn more than the annual budgets of some
neighboring countries.

The allocations are as follows:
Akwa Ibom N260 billion,
Rivers N230 billion,
Delta State N209 billion,
Bayelsa N173 billion,
Lagos N168 billion,
Kano N140 billion,
Katsina N103 billion,
Oyo N100 billion,
Kaduna N 97 billion
Borno N94 billion.

Okonjo-Iweala gave the breakdown of the allocations on Sunday at Babcock
University’s 12th Convocation at which she delivered a lecture with the theme:
‘Transforming Nigeria economy: Opportunities and Challenges
“These were the allocations that all these states got last year, so the question is
what did they do with it? Analysis shows that many Nigerian states receive
revenue allocation which are larger than budgetary allocation of neighbouring
countries such as Liberia which is $ 433 million, Gambia $210 million.
” So you see that our top 10 states receive more money than these countries
and therefore you should be asking what is this money being used for?”
Okonjo-Iweala said.

She noted that some states use their allocation better than others adding that
“that is why we can actually see what they are doing with their infrastructure,
education, while others do not”.

” We should also ask ourselves what is the role of our state government and
local government in supporting our transformation? We know from the
constitution that provision of public services such as health, education,
agricultural services and so on are all on a concurrent list and therefore are joint
responsibilities of the federal state and local governments.

“However it is not often that you hear people asking what has your state done?
Most of their attention is turned to the federal government so we also need to
ask what do our state and local government do with the resources they get?”
Okonjo-Iweala stated.

NIGERIA: 40 Killed In Adamawa Bomb Blast


No fewer than 40 people were yesterday killed in a bomb attack targeting fans watching a football match in Mubi, Adamawa State.

“There has been a bomb explosion at a football field this evening (yesterday) and so far more than 40 people have been killed,” an officer who requested anonymity told Vanguard.
State Police spokesperson, Mallam Othman Abubakar, confirmed that blast saying it occurred at about 6p.m. on Sunday. He however could not confirm the casualty figure.
According to him, the blast occurred at a popular relaxation centre, Kabang.

VANGUARD