Again, CACOL Petitions EFCC to Investigate Lagos State Government

20 Mar 2015

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Babatunde Fashola, Governor of Lagos

Chiemelie Ezeobi

A civil-society and non-governmental organisations group, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), on Thursday said it had again petitioned the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to investigate the activities of the Lagos State Government.

CACOL’s Executive Chairman, Debo Adeniran, made this disclosure as the group staged a peaceful protest that kicked off from Ikeja under bridge, with a detour to the government house and then ended up at EFCC.

He said they decided to involve the commission again because the objective of the group was targeted at fighting corruption and corrupt persons by any means possible at all levels in Nigeria.

In the petition made available to THISDAY, the group said their grouse was the failure of the Lagos State Government to provide answers to various questions raised by the coalition since 2010.

He said the questions raised were over the detailed budgetary reports of income and expenditure for the period of 2007 to 2011.

Adeniran said so far, the state government was yet to accede to this demand, as it allegedly kept hiding under one legal technicality or another since 2010.

In the petition, the coalition said it had in reaction to an advertorial placed in one of the national dailies on Thursday, January 28, 2010 under the title: ‘The True Face of Lagos,’ petitioned the EFCC on February 3, 2014, requesting for thorough investigation and necessary actions.

He said the publication had contained several allegations bordering on financial recklessness and misappropriation against the state government.

Adediran said the protest was because answers were not forthcoming even after another petition on February, 2011, addressed to the Lagos State House of Assembly, demanding that they investigate itself and perform its oversight functions’ on the allegations of financial impropriety leveled against the state governor.

He said house however replied vide its letter dated February 24, 2011 stating its inability to accede to CACOL’s demand, citing an earlier court injunction which stopped further deliberation on the matter until the case was disposed of.

Again, he said they forwarded a reminder to its earlier petition to the EFCC on August 6, 2013, to express their displeasure at the alleged utter neglect and the slow pace of investigation.

The coalition said based on facts at their disposal, they had placed different advertorials titled Alpha Beta Consulting (ABC) Deductions: Take a stand now.

He said: “The advertorials unveiled the facts surrounding the process of tax collection, remittance and deductions to the aforementioned consulting firm which is rumoured to belong to a former governor of Lagos State, Senator Bola Tinubu.

“Facts have it that the ABC is contracted to deduct from source a regular 15 per cent of all monies collected as taxes in the state at any given time or period.
“As a matter of verifiable fact, a total sum of N27,743,310,520.93 was paid to ABC between January 25, 2012 and October 26, 2014 through Skye Bank Plc account.

“These unfolding revelations are not only mind-boggling, but embarrassing as they have once again opened up the Pandora’s Box of the rots and high level of impunity in governance in Lagos State, with particular emphasis on the abuse of office, unguided recklessness and profligacy at the state level.
“Against this backdrop, CACOL is calling on the EFCC to make public your findings on the allegations of the ‘True Face of Lagos’ as contained in our previous petitions.

“We urge you to prevail on your personnel to expedite actions on the request made that the allegations raised in our petition are diligently investigated, its report made public, and whoever is indicted be prosecuted and punished appropriately.”

SOURCE: Thisday Newspaper

 

CACOL Seeks Probe of Tinubu, Fashola

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL) on Tuesday took on the Lagos State Government headed by Governor Babatunde Fashola as the group demanded for a probe of the activities of his government so far.

CACOL, through its leader, Debo Adeniran, also demanded the probe of Fashola’s predecessor and former governor of the State, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, saying despite being cleared by the Code of Conduct Bureau, there were still some issues hanging about some of his activities, especially on the role of a company, AlphaBeta Consulting, allegedly linked to him and which takes 15 percent of whatever the state derives as internally-generated revenue.

At a press conference with selected journalists, Adeniran said his organisation was being frustrated by several bodies including the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) and the Lagos Government. Continue reading “CACOL Seeks Probe of Tinubu, Fashola”

CACOL Condemns Slash Of Ministry Of Works Allocation In Proposed Budget

 

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL) has condemned the action of the Federal Government over the proposed Works Ministry’s budget of N100 Billion naira that was slashed to N11 Billion naira, which amounted to 89 percent slashes leaving the ministry with peanut to work with.

The Minister of Works, Mike Onolememen, said the ministry’s N100bn proposed budget for 2015 was slashed by the Ministry of Finance to N11bn, representing an 89 per cent reduction. Onolememen, who was in the Senate to defend his ministry’s estimates for the fiscal year, added that no sum was approved for   the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency’s capital projects and the Office of the Surveyor -General of the Federation. He said the Finance ministry predicated its action on the economic realities on the ground. Continue reading “CACOL Condemns Slash Of Ministry Of Works Allocation In Proposed Budget”

Who is afraid of the Card Reader?

Mar 13 2015 – 7:58pm

Debo Adeniran

The forthcoming 2015 general elections have recently been throwing up series of interesting scenario which, by all estimation, marks it the most controversial, most contentious and in fact, the most chaotic in the history of electioneering in this country. The two prominent gladiators i.e. the ruling Peoples Democratic Party and the opposition All Progressives Congress have since been at other’s jugular, trading accusations and brickbats.

Party campaigns, which should have been an issue-based exercise, have so far been reduced to mere mud-slinging, brickbats, name calling, hate campaigns, innuendoes and in many cases, outright blackmailing. However, we cannot but allow all these to go on, on the excuse that, as some are quick to remind us, that ours is still a nascent democracy; “we are still growing; we shall certainly get there someday”.

Granted that our over 50 years democratic experience is still considered young and that mistakes made are meant to serve as tools for getting better as we advance towards perfection, we cannot however help asking the question: can we ever get any better in the face of apparent retrogression in our attitudes generally especially with the way we operate under our own peculiar, but absurd form of democracy? One would naturally have expected that an over 50 year old person should be able to display some appreciable degree of maturity but when such person now behaves like a toddler, something fundamentally nay pathologically is wrong and as such, a major, comprehensive surgical operation, cannot be substituted.

Excuse-makers, for series of abnormalities displayed by the major players in our political turf, are always quick to remind us of how the likes of the United States of America had had to grow steadily through decades and centuries before getting to where they are today. But the basic question these excuse-makers should have to provide answers to is; could America have been able to get to this enviable stage today if it had been a case of one-step-forward, five-steps-backward, as is seemed to be the case with Nigeria? Can growth be synonymous with retrogression?

Well, it is generally agreed that the very foundational bane of our society, has always been the issue of poor leadership. This being the case therefore, the only option left for Nigerians to effect the desired change is no other than to elect leaders of their choice and this could only be made possible through a free, fair and credible elections.

The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission Professor Attahiru Jega, today, has had placed squarely on his shoulder, that onerous task of organizing elections that would be acceptable to Nigerians in particular and the international community that has expressed so much interest in what becomes of the world’s largest black nation as it files out to choose its leaders for the next four years.

Since making public his commission’s time-table for the election, the afore-mentioned two leading gladiators have been having one issue after the other to contend with. Most pronounced of these contentious issues have centreed on the appropriateness or otherwise of amendment in the set time-table, allegation of lopsidedness in the distribution method of the PVCs by INEC, the competence of the INEC as presently composed particularly the Chairman, Professor Atahiru Jega, as a section of agitators, mainly from the ruling party, the PDP, now calls for his removal and substitution ahead of the elections and most recently the issue of the appropriateness or otherwise of the use of the CARD READER in the process of voting at the polls.

Whilst all other issues have been considerably addressed, that of the Card Reader has remained intractable. It has, of late, being heating up the polity almost to a boiling point. INEC, on its part, has insisted on using the card reader as, according to it, it remains the only device capable of curtailing several manners of malpractice during the exercise and has even gone ahead to carry out a test-run in many states of the federation. But if Professor Jega and his commission had thought that the appreciable success (put at 90 per cent) recorded during the demonstration of the device, would put to rest any reservation that anybody or group might have had over the issue, recent developments have so far proved they must have been mistaken as opposing voices have remained unabated and so the attendant controversy have become more intense. Electorates as well as political parties have now been polarized along pro and anti card reader. In particular, leading members of the ruling party, the PDP, has been the more vocal in opposing the use of the device. A powerful section of the party has even been calling for the sack or resignation of the commission’s chairman, Professor Attahiru Jega whom they score low on performance.

However, President Jonathan has, at various fora, denied any plan to remove Jega or force him to proceed on terminal leave. Nigerians generally are clamouring for a free, fair and credible election and the use of the card reader has been proved to be near perfect in curtailing electoral fraud to an appreciable level, why again are all the noise on its propriety? Who really is afraid of the card reader?

It is on record that apart from the ‘Option A4’ experiment of 1993 which eventually produced an undisputable winner in the person of Chief MKO Abiola on the ticket of the Social Democratic Party (SDP): an election that was so faultless that it was generally adjudged to be the freest in the history of this country, every subsequent election had had most of the offices contested for ending up in the law courts, following allegations of massive malpractices. The card reader has been tested and found to be capable of checking such malpractices as multiple registration and voting; presenting fake voter card for voting, voting by proxy, among others. Majority of Nigerians today have welcomed the card reader and are ready to vote, come March 28, 2015. But then, who is afraid of the card reader?

Reports just reaching us from the grapevine has it that, some leaders of a leading particular party, in a particular community within Lagos, has, of recent, been going round, meeting those people considered to be sympathizers of their party but who, for one reason or the other are ineligible to vote in the coming elections as they do not possess their PVCs and assuring them that they could help them secure their PVCs through the back-door.

The requirement is simply that such person produces his/her passport-sized photograph with his/her name written on a piece of paper and his/her PVC would in turn be made available to him/her. Grapevine has it that the perpetrators of this act most likely have their accomplices within the INEC circle, who help to produce the PVCs. It’s as simple as that. Such a person does not have to be at the INEC registration centre in person as demanded by law. Perpetrators of this fraud had calculated initially, that since such PVCs must have truly emanated from the INEC and bearing all the symbols of the electoral commission, the bearers would be free to vote with them without any hitch whatsoever.

However, with INEC insisting on using the card reader, they now have their plan ‘b’. These disgruntled elements are well aware that such cards are most unlikely to scale through the screening of the card reader because they would not carry the biometrics (i.e. fingerprints etc) of the bearers, what they and their highly influential godfathers and collaborators are ultimately set out to do is to resort to blackmail; fault the device’s supposed infallibility and fool-proof technology and therefore press for its rejection.

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL owes it an obligation to the general public to bring this alleged plot by enemies of democracy and good governance in our nation and to implore every lover of this country to stand against any group or quarters opposing the use of the Card Reader in the forth-coming elections. We must all join hands together to ensure that, for the first time in the history of electioneering in this country, winners emerge through a free, fair and credible election. Nigerians desire no less.

SOURCE: The News

AIG Mbu: Hatchet man or professional?

 When the police high command announced the deployment of Mbu Joseph Mbu from zone 7 Abuja to Zone 2, Lagos, those of us who have keen interest in police activities knew that the Assistant Inspector General of Police was in for a battle.
We were not disappointed. Shortly after the announcement, APC Spokesman in Lagos, Mr. Joe Igbokwe, told the press that Mbu was on a mission to deliver Lagos State to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). From Abuja, Mbu replied that he would respond to the APC allegation at the appropriate time. We are waiting.
As expected, Mbu was greeted with an avalanche of insinuations at Lagos. Less than 10 days after assuming office, he was in the news for picking and detaining policemen and a toll gate at Lekki.
The screaming headlines reported that the victims were detained for five days because they asked Mbu to pay toll fees and he refused.
This incident did not escape the notice of the Oba of Lagos, Oba Akinlolu, a retired Assistant Inspector General of Police. He was quoted as saying that nobody will intimidate Lagosians.

Continue reading “AIG Mbu: Hatchet man or professional?”

Iresi Community: Sustenance through socio-cultural renaissance

Posted March 6, 2015 11:54 pm by with 0 comments

Iresi, a sleepy community in Osun State, boosts the morale of residents with the annual Iresi Socio-Cultural Festival,” reports GBOYEGA ADEOYE

Residential buildings, some of them built over a hundred years ago, line the lone road that snakes through the ancient city. Old men and women, some holding walking sticks taller than their frail, bending physiques, made quite a sight in the crowd that turned out for the annual Iresi Socio-Cultural Festival.

The three day event is packaged to showcase hidden talents, ranging from academics to natural arts, as a way of boosting the morale of residents of the sleepy community. Founded about 812 years ago, Iresi community that has suffered untold neglect in the past. Almost all the houses that dominate the community are ramshackle.

Their rusty roof assaults the sight as you move round the rocky town. When one observes the environment carefully, however, no one needs any conviction that this is a community where culture is already bidding farewell to the teeming youths who, apparently, have no place for it.

And this seems to be why the Oyeladeniran Foundation for Community Development, OFCOD, presented itself as a timely voice to salvage the rich culture that was once the symbol of the community. The OFCOD was established to celebrate Late Pa and Mrs. Adeniran Awoniyi who were said to have been role models in the various communities where they lived in the course of their sojourn on earth.

The sole aim of the foundation, according to the festival coordinator, Debo Adeniran, who is also the Executive Chairman of Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), is therefore, to reawaken the socio-cultural heritage of the Adeniran family, Iresi community, as well as that of the Yoruba nation, which it believed have propelled their forebears to utilize the value of self worth to engage in self help that galvanized them to became self reliant, without resorting to fraudulent practices and corruption that is now endemic and controls the sensibilities of the teeming youths of the town and the entire Yoruba race, as a whole.

The new trend has been a cause of worry to the traditional ruler of the town, His Royal Majesty, Oba Sikiru Ibiloye, the Oluresi of Iresi. He says, “This town was founded in 1200 AD and ever since, we have been living peacefully together. In the area of culture, Iresi is known to be a strict observer of laid down law and order. We have how we do our things and we have been following this until recently when civilization came in to erode many things.

This has not been a good experience because things are no longer working the way they used to. “I am particularly happy and my hope is raised with the concept being brought forward by the Oyeladeniran Foundation for Community Development, to revisit our culture with a view to aligning it with modern realities.”

According to the monarch, while it is true that the community has witnessed a dose of neglect in the past, hope abounds that there are better days ahead with the positive gesture towards development by some indigenes, as well as the incumbent government of Osun State, led by Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola.

These better days will not be completed without the king having a befitting palace to go with his title. Currently, the king dwells in an ancient palace with space not enough to contain the traditional artifacts expected in the abode of a renowned Yoruba Oba, like the Oluresi.

Though, the town has taken the initiative to build an ultra-modern palace for the king, development on the building is intermittently being stunted by lack of fund, making the completion of the palace fast becoming a mirage. However, the dull atmosphere that enveloped the ancient community came alive on the eve of the OFCOD event when local musicians were given the opportunity to display their talents by the organisers of the cultural fiesta at the Olowoye compound.

It was a night of fun as the youthful Fuji musicians took turns to display their talents. Children and teenagers gathered applauded their favourites in a show that also featured a superiority contest amongst a handful of the youthful Fuji musicians, who used their songs to assert their assumed class and even went ahead to condemn those they felt were challenging their status. The show had to be concluded early enough to give time for relaxation for the kick off proper in the morning of the following day. The kick off day was a carnival of sort.

The youths of the community gathered for a combined jog of about 6 kilometers. From the Olowoye compound, the crowd was a mish mash of the good, the bad and the ugly. While some trim youths dressed smartly in sports attires with sneakers to suit the athletic exercise, some middle aged men donned various shades unsuitable attires and were bent on participating in the event even when they did not comply with the mandatory free registration that preceded the contest.

Okanlawon, 43, clad in Ankara sewn into a “buba and sokoto” was one of this set of people who out of desperation to contest at the eleventh hour provided the needed comic relief to the hectic exercise.

Okanlawon, it was learnt, got wind of the fact that OFCOD would be giving cash rewards to winners in the activities lined up for the festival around 10pm the previous day. Not minding the fact that he did not have suitable clothes for a sporting event, he rushed out of his room the following morning and headed straight for the venue of the event. But Mrs. Adeniran-Adigun, secretary of the organising NGO, thought allowing Okanlawon to participate in the event was dangerous, considering his age and physique. Okanlawon who looked haggard and malnourished.

So, politely, she told him, “We are through with registration and I don’t think you can even be registered if there were chances considering your age and the fact that you don’t look like somebody that is prepared for the contest, judging by your mode of dressing.” If Okanlawon would agree that his dressing did not conform to the ones adorned by the youths around him, he was certainly not going to accept that he was spent and could not compete with the youths.

The opportunity to prove this presented itself as the ambulance and other vehicles to aid the racers proceeded from the Olowoye compound to the take off point at Orita Igbajo, with the officials. Knowing that the officials were already seated and were heading for the take off point, which is a distance of about 4 kilometers, Okanlawon began a race with the vehicles in a show of prove that he was still agile and fit for the contest. He actually made it to the point ahead of the vehicles, but fatigue soon set in. Okanlawon fell like a log of wood. It took the frantic efforts of participants who were at the point ahead of the officials to revive him.

By the take off time, he was still gasping for breath under a shade in a bid to gain full recovery. The Marathon race went well with no casualty. At the end of the contest, Ismaila Oladapo came top while Bode Odewale and Akinrinade Michael came second and third respectively.

It was Akinrinade Michael that came top in the mountaineering race. According to some of Oladapo’s peers who spoke to our correspondent, he has been a rare talent in sports. From football to athletics, he was said to have carved a niche for himself.

The entire community spoke of him as an exemplary sportsman with natural talents. “You don’t need to push him before he puts in his best when it comes to sporting activities. At the start of the Marathon race, it was clear that Ismaila would come out tops because he had been engaging himself in tasks harder than this even when there was no competition.

This is just a past time to him,” said one of the competitors in the early morning Marathon race. The sports events gave way for an interlineal cultural competition which commenced around 5:00 pm and continued well into the night.

At the cultural event, the Iresi people in their different lineages and groups displayed their interests, knowledge, talents and skills in dressing, music, dance, drama, poetry, speech making, trade, foods, arts and crafts. In all, eight groups featured in the display of oral poetry and dance.

The local hunters group was first to take the stage and was followed by the ancient Agbe group, Ifelodun group, Ajegunle group, Solabomi group, Omolere group and Orebe group. Ogundele Olusegun, an Ewi (Yoruba poetry) exponent was also on hand to display his poetic talent.

The groups were in their best and the crowd in the Ebekun Town Hall where the event took place were spell bound throughout the session. At the end of the day, the Agbe group came tops as a result of its unrivaled coordination and unique dance steps to match their Agbe output. The group was followed by the Ajegunle Group, which came second while the local hunters group came third.

The last day’s event was attended by the Osun State governor, Rauf Aregbesola as is the tradition. A paper tagged “Reinventing socio-cultural practices as means of sustaining individual and communal economy,” delivered by Prof. Samuel Ayodele of the Joseph Ayo Babalola University, Ikeji- Arakeji, in Osun State was an eye opener for a people whose youths are already becoming oblivious of the rich and protective customs that have been guiding the community over the years.

If OFCOD’s aim is to impact discipline to the youths of Iresi and re-oxygenate the dying rich culture of the people, then it is achieving this faster than anticipated. Many of the youths who spoke to Saturday Mirror after the event could not hide their joy and satisfaction since the commencement of the festival in 2011.

According to them, OFCOD has brought hope to them where they thought only despair exists. Oladapo who won the Marathon race said he now knows that his talent can push him to limelight if more hard work is put into it. “Nobody ever thought that a day would come when one of our indigenes will deem it fit to come and do a talent search such as this. We shall for ever be grateful to Comrade Debo Adeniran for this initiative and shall for ever remain ardent supporters of OFCOD through which this landmark discovery is being made.”

The event closed with a traditional night out, where only traditional dresses were allowed. Members of the community were encouraged to come with lineal traditional food. They danced themselves to daylight in an event they wished should have a rewind. But since everything that has a beginning must surely end, the band stopped the music and the curtain for the socio-cultural festival was drawn. All eyes are again fixed for yet another of such festival.

SOURCE: National Mirror.

 

 

Lagos Lawmakers Introduce Bill to Give Speaker, Deputy Life Pension, Lavish Benefits

600x376xIkuforiji-e1361299160181.jpg.pagespeed.ic.mWTvEsq2Y-The Lagos State House of Assembly has introduced a bill seeking to provide lavish post-retirement benefits to the Speaker and Deputy Speaker, with proposals for extravagant life pension, accommodation, security and medical cover for the two officials and their families.

The bill is seeking to amend the state’s Public Office Holder Law of 2007 which already provides those benefits to past governors and their deputies.

The existing law was pushed through by Ahmed Tinubu who was governor between 1999 and 2007.

The lawmakers now want to extend the largesse to themselves, and the amendment seeks to insert the words “and includes the Speaker (and) the Deputy Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly” after “State” in the interpretation of “Public Office Holder”.

The move is coming as the All Progressives Congress, APC, the ruling party in the state, rallies widespread support as it seeks to defeat the Peoples Democratic Party at the federal level, with a pledge to drastically cut down the cost of governance.

According to the bill “A Law to Amend the Law to Provide For the Payment of Pensions and Other Benefits to Public Office Holders in Lagos State and For Connected Purposes,” a copy of which was made available to PREMIUM TIMES, the Speaker, as well as his Deputy, will be receiving 100 percent of their annual basic salary as pension.

The sum is to be reviewed every five years or when there is salary review of the political office holders by the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission.

The bill also aims to provide both officers with one car each and one residential house each at any location of their choice in Lagos as well as free medical treatment.

The law holds that any person who held office as an elected governor or deputy governor is entitled to an annual basic salary equal to 100 per cent of the annual salary of the incumbent governor or deputy-governor of Lagos State, subject to review every five years or salary review by the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission in line with section 210 (3) of the constitution as amended in 2011.

According to the law: “Any person duly elected as public office holder shall upon the successful completion of his term be entitled to a grant of pension for life by the state; Provided that such a person shall not be entitled to a grant of pension under this law if he was removed from office by the process of impeachment or for breach of any provision of the constitution.’’

The bill also follows a recent amendment to the Nigerian Constitution allowing the Senate President and deputy, Speaker of the House of Representatives and his deputy, to enjoy life pensions and other premium perks.

Those benefits were only available to past presidents and Chief Justices of the Federation.
The amendment to the Constitution emanated from the two chambers, and has been approved by more than 24 states assembly, effectively making it law.

Several Nigerian governors have also perfected secret laws in their respective states, granting billions of naira worth of benefits for themselves and their families when they leave office.

Nigerians reacts

A Lagos based Constitutional lawyer, Jiti Ogunye, described the move by the Lagos State House of Assembly as “insensitive and irresponsible”.

“They are not taking into account the vast issue of the prohibitive cost of governance that the political party in charge of Lagos State claims it want to prune down,” Mr. Ogunye said.

“The legislature in this political environment can claim they want to follow what is practised elsewhere, I mean the issue of congressmen being on life pension. But that is still a controversial issue in America.

“However, the argument against that is that political officers are not career public servants, like civil servants who gain employment and work for their entire life before they retire.

“How could politicians who begged the electorates for votes get into that office and start dreaming of how to pay themselves for life?”

Mr. Ogunye said that Lagosians have a duty to stop this kind of “legislative rascality”, noting that the legislature ought to have revisited the Public Office Holder Law introduced by the executive and scrap it.

“If they are not able to curtail the excesses of the executive, they should not add salt to injury by saying that what is good for the goose is good for the gander

“What they are doing is engaging in statutory stealing, using the law to sanctify official stealing. That is not why they are there. And what are they doing to be entitled to life salary?”

According to Debo Adeniran, Executive Director of Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL, Lagosians should have risen up when the Public Office Holder Law was signed in 2007.

“The thing about bourgeoisie politics is the capacity of politicians to make more than enough money for themselves,” said Mr. Adeniran, whose organization kicked against the law in 2007.

“We have always advocated for part-time legislature and for politicians to leave all the requisites of office after their tenure.

“But if Lagosians had tolerated this at the level of the executive, then there is no moral standing to say that the law shouldn’t include other arms of government.”

Details of new bill

Highlights of the existing Lagos State Public Office Holder Law include:

Annual basic salary: 100 percent of annual basic salaries of the incumbent governor and deputy.

Accommodation: One residential house in Lagos and another in FCT for the former governor; one residential house in Lagos for the deputy.

Transport: Three cars, two back-up cars and one pilot car for the ex-governor, to be replaced every three years; two cars, one back-up car and one pilot car for the deputy, also to be replaced every three years.

Furniture: 300 percent of annual basic salary every two years.

House maintenance: 10 percent of annual basic salary.

Domestic staff: Cook, steward, gardener and other domestic staff who shall be pensionable.

Medical: Free medical treatment for ex-governor and deputy and members of their families.

Security: Two SSS operatives, one female officer, eight policemen (four each for house and personal security) for the ex-governor; one SSS operative and two policemen (one each for house and personal security) for the deputy.

Personal Assistant: 25 percent of annual basic salary.

Car maintenance: 30 percent of annual basic salary.

Entertainment: 10 percent of annual basic salary.

Utility: 20 percent of annual basic salary.

Drivers: Pensionable.

Continue reading “Lagos Lawmakers Introduce Bill to Give Speaker, Deputy Life Pension, Lavish Benefits”

BREAKING!!! Jonathan Under Attack …Over Plan To Sack Jega

BREAKING!!! Jonathan Under Attack …Over Plan To Sack Jega

Anthony Cardinal Okogie and other prominent Nigerians yesterday berated President Goodluck Jonathan over the alleged plan to force the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Professor Attahiru Jega, to go on terminal leave.

They warned that such a move would have a devastating effect on the nation’s democracy.

The warning comes on the heel of the alarm raised on Thursday by the All Progressives Congress (APC) Senate caucus about the alleged plot.

Cardinal Okogie said it would be wrong for government to get rid of Jega at this point in time.

His words: “If he is not due or not meant for terminal leave, which then would be an illegal move, then the court will have to look into it. Prof Jega has his fundamental human right. If he is not meant to be on terminal leave, then he can fight for his fundamental human right.”

Prominent jurist, Professor Itse Sagay ( SAN), said it would be rash and irresponsible of government to remove Jega.

He said it would not be in the best interest of the ruling party to allow this to happen. Continue reading “BREAKING!!! Jonathan Under Attack …Over Plan To Sack Jega”

Threat to drag Buhari before the ICC

By Chukwudi Nweje  / Acting Features Editor

 

The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP Presidential Campaign Organisation (PDPPCO) has said that the Federal Government has concluded arrangements and may soon drag General Muhammadu Buhari, Presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) before the International Criminal Court (ICC) over the 2011 Electoral violence in the country to face alleged charges of human rights abuses and criminality.

buhari-man-in-the--news-cartoonFemi Fani-Kayode PDPPCO spokesman said the government would first demystify Buhari by defeating him at the polls before dragging him to the ICC against the backdrop that it will be risky to arrest him now over the 2011 violence as it would raise dust. “After his rejection at the poll, General Buhari may have to prepare to face charges of human rights abuses and criminality filed against him before the International Criminal Court on account of the 2011 electoral violence in Nigeria,” he said.

The African Herald Express had earlier reported on its February 20, 2015 edition that Dutch lawyers– Prakken d’Oliveira, a Human Rights Law Firm based in Amsterdam has filed a criminal complaint against Buhari at the ICC. The firm is said to be acting on behalf of the Nigerian Northern Coalition for Democracy and Justice and two individual victims. It will be recalled that several hundreds of lives had been lost and property worth several millions of naira destroyed following violence that greeted the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) declaration of President Goodluck Jonathan winner of the presidential election of 2011. Many have attributed the violence to Buhari’s alleged statement to make the country ungovernable.

In fact, some argue that that post election violence was a pogrom specifically targeted at specific category of Nigerians. Articles 5, 6 and 7 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court which entered into force on 1 July 2002 gives the ICC jurisdiction over the most serious crimes of concern to the international community as a whole. These include the crime of genocide; crimes against humanity; war crimes; the crime of aggression among others. Specifically, Article 6 of the statute defined ‘genocide’ to mean “any acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.”

Under law, the passage of time does not in any way invalidate an alleged crime and some argue that the ICC probe would bring justice to the victims of the post 2011 election violence.  Nonetheless, the question remains why now? Why is the PDPPCO making the threat and why did the Federal Government have to wait four years before moving to action? Some analysts believe that the threat is meant to cow the opposition.

Joe Igbokwe, Publicity Secretary of the Lagos State Chapter of APC described the threat as blackmail. He said: “Buhari in 2015 is just too big for anybody to toy with.  He has become a firebrand, an avatar, a colossus and the rock of Gibraltar. Buhari is now a massive movement that cannot be stopped. Probe him if you can but I know they do not have the courage to do so.”

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), however sees nothing wrong in the probe but the timing makes it suspicious; adding that it could be used as an electioneering tool to witch hunt the opponent.

Debo Adeniran, the executive chairman queried: “2011 till now is about four years and so why should a government wait for four years if it is doing what it has to do with good intention. If it is an efficient government, must they just be looking while such heinous crime was committed and if it has enough proof to have suspected the APC Presidential Candidate, why haven’t they got him arrested and gone to court immediately the crime was committed, why waiting till now?”

He added: “One thing we do not believe is that, the probe at this time would be free and fair. All indications during the campaign have indicated that the regime is looking for every means of nailing Gen Muhammadu Buhari. It is evident in their Adverts, it is evident in their documentary and this shows that they want to carry out a hostile investigation and there is nothing to show us that all the evidences would not be contrived and witnesses tutored to give evidence against their victim.

Former President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Olisa Agbakoba has faulted the PDPPCO as he described Fani- Kayode’s statement as witty. He wondered how the PDPPCO spokesman can prosecute Buhari when he is not the Attorney-General of the Federation.

“I don’t think Fani- Kayode can say so because he doesn’t have any political power. He is not the Attorney-General of the federation.  We are tired of mudslinging. We are not babies. Let us face issues. We are interested in what President Jonathan or Buhari will do if elected, not these bitter campaigns of calumny against one another” he concluded.

 SOURCE: Daily Independent.

Politics Of 2015 Election: Why Fayose Is Up In Arms Against Buhari

By Jeremiah Adeosun

Governor Ayodele Fayose

Governor Ayodele Fayose

. He doesn’t want a repeat of the past – Aide
. We’ve lost our freedom in Ekiti State – Sen Adetunmbi
. ‘The Governor’s fate is tied to Jonathan’s presidency’
His invective and acid sarcasms targeted at the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) General Muhammadu Buhari may have left some Nigerians in consternation nay, bewilderment but to many others the Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose, is merely treading his familiar terrain of controversy. What political analysts and pundits are seeking answers to, however, is the question as to why the ‘rampaging’ governor appeared to have developed a pathological phobia for the APC presidential ticket bearer.
What seemed the most unkind salvo from Governor Fayose and carefully targeted at Buhari came in the form of newspaper adverts which graced the front page of The Punch and Daily Sun newspapers on January 19. The bizarre adverts, which had the pictures of some northern Nigerian leaders that died in office, suggested that the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), retired General Muhammadu Buhari, could also die in office, if elected president. Continue reading “Politics Of 2015 Election: Why Fayose Is Up In Arms Against Buhari”