Wednesday, 10 February 2016

PDP BOT Chairman: Bello Out Senator Jibril In

                                   Mohammed Haliru Bello, former PDP BOT Chairman

The members of the Board of Trustees of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) today announced the removal of its Acting Chairman, Mohammed Haliru Bello, according to SaharaReporter.

Mr. Bello is one of the most prominent members of the PDP alleged to have shared money from the $2.1 billion arms scandal known as Dasukigate, for its association with the former National Security Adviser (NSA) Sambo Dasuki.
It is alleged that Mr. Bello collected N300 million from Mr. Dasuki during the election period in 2015.

Secretary of the PDP BOT, Senator Walid Jibril, announced the removal of Mr. Bello during a meeting with journalists in Abuja on Wednesday.

Mr. Jibril, who will also act as Chairman in addition to his responsibilities as Party Secretary, argued that Mr. Bello’s removal was because his tenure as Chairman has expired.

He said Mr. Bello was elected to the position of PDP BOT Chairman for only three months and that he had overstayed the period given to him.

"The BOT unanimously appointed Mr. Jibril as the Acting Chairman while still remaining as the substantive BOT secretary," Jibril said.

How Senator Akpabio, Governor Emmanuel Procured Controversial Supreme Court Judgment



An inside source within Akwa Ibom State Government has spoken to SaharaReporters about a shady deal Governor Udom Emmanuel and his predecessor, former Governor Godswill Akpabio, struck with justices of the Supreme Court of Nigeria prior to the apex court’s judgment on Wednesday February 3, 2015 validating the state’s governorship election. inside source within Akwa Ibom State Government has spoken to SaharaReporters about a shady deal Governor Udom Emmanuel and his predecessor, former Governor Godswill Akpabio, struck with justices of the Supreme Court of Nigeria prior to the apex court’s judgment on Wednesday February 3, 2015 validating the state’s governorship election. 

A source close to the Attorney General of Akwa Ibom State told SaharaReporters that the “negotiations” on how to “capture the Supreme Court” started in late December of 2015, shortly after the Nigerian Court of Appeal made an omnibus nullification of elections held throughout Akwa Ibom State.
The source, who sought anonymity, disclosed that the state’s immediate past governor, Mr. Akpabio, who is the minority leader at the Nigerian Senate, had reached out to Justice John Inyang Okoro of the Supreme Court to help broker a deal with Chief Justice Mahmud Mohammed and other justices of the Supreme Court to overturn the Appeal Court's judgment.
“Akpabio was instrumental to the elevation of Justice Okoro to the Supreme Court by former President [Goodluck] Jonathan in 2013. As such, it was payback time,” said the source, adding, “Initially, we thought that it would not be possible to penetrate the Supreme Court, but Justice Okoro and other powerful forces made it possible.”
The source revealed that Mr. Akpabio and Governor Udom directed the state’s Attorney General to work closely with Justice Okoro to ensure that the judgment favored the PDP.
“A pre-hearing conference was held in Abuja between the AG, Justice Okoro, Justice Chima Centus Nweze [another Supreme Court justice], some PDP members and the governor's legal,” our source said. According to him, Justice Nweze actually coached the governor's team on the issues they should emphasize in their briefs, so that the Supreme Court would depend on those briefs to overturn the Appeal Court's judgment.”
Our source disclosed that Justice Nweze instructed the lawyers representing the state government to argue that, since the maker of the card reader accreditation report did not tender the document, no “probative value” should be attached to it. The government’s lawyers were asked to stress the point that the other parties had no opportunity for cross-examination.
In addition, the lawyers were told to argue that the petitioners’ case was contradictory. “Justice Nweze asked our lawyers to emphasize that, even though the petition contended that there was no election in the state, they went ahead to tender the card reader accreditation report, voters register, ballot papers and other documents used during the election,” said our source.
“Another technical point the justices told the lawyers to use was that the Appeal Court's judgment did not overturn the decision of the electoral tribunal which had rejected the evidence of forensic experts called by the petitioners. Yet the petitioners went ahead to rely on the evidence of forensic experts on the total number of persons accredited based on the voters register during the election.” 
Regarding the petitioners’ argument that there was no collation of results, Justices Okoro and Nweze coached Mr. Nwoko and the PDP lawyers to argue that the petitioners had failed to provide sufficient evidence to prove their case. They were also told to argue that even the court could collate election results, where the need arises. The Supreme Court justices taught Mr. Nwoko and his legal team to argue that non-compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act must be proved polling unit by polling unit.
A senior lawyer familiar with the state government’s arguments told SaharaReporters that they were mere technicalities that should not have been used to settle the legal dispute. He said, for example, that it was not legally mandatory for the maker of a duly certified public document, like the card reader accreditation report, to personally tender the document.
Said the lawyer: “In the case of Akwa Ibom, the report was duly certified by INEC which conducted the election. All the parties, including INEC, relied on this same report in their pleadings. They even said they would produce it at the trial. So the issue of cross-examination of the maker of the report does not arise because the authenticity of the document was never disputed by any of the parties.” He asked, “What contradictions are they talking about? The argument that the petitioners cannot say that there was no election and still go ahead to tender ballot papers, voter register and other documents is ridiculous. What the petitioners said was that no election known to law was conducted in Akwa Ibom State. Election is only election if it complies substantially with the provisions of the Electoral Act. In any event, the said ballot papers were mangled and destroyed by corrupt INEC officials. Why should anyone who said he conducted [an] election destroy ballot papers purportedly used for the said election? The voters register also showed that only 448, 307 people were accredited, as opposed to the more than 1.2 million votes declared. What other demonstration did they expect when the petitioners had used the voters register during trial to cross-examine witnesses called by the respondents which showed that most of the witnesses called by the respondents were not accredited?”
The lawyer described as “nonsensical” the argument that the Court of Appeal did not overturn the tribunal’s rejection of the evidence of the forensic experts. He remarked that the petitioners had specifically appealed against the rejection and the Appeal Court upheld the appeal. “The law does not require the court to use a particular language to express its positions. It is also untenable for anyone to ask the petitioners, in a case like this, to call witnesses in all the polling units in the State. If that were so, then the trial would not have been concluded in one year,” he said, adding that the card reader report and the voters register proved there was over voting in all the 2982 polling units of the State. 
The lawyer further contended that the petitioners had established numerous cases of multiple signing, mutilation and alteration of results and collation forms in 27 out of the 31 local government areas of the state.
“It is rather strange for the Supreme Court to just throw away all the evidence of non-compliance and corrupt practices,” the lawyer stated. He added that the verdict left the impression of an attempt to justify a pre-determined outcome. “Does it mean that the judges who sat over this case at the tribunal and the Appeal Court were not sound in law? How can the Supreme Court just reject the very card reader that brought sanity into our electoral process? Is INEC not empowered by the Constitution and the Electoral Act to issue binding guidelines for elections? Where in the Electoral Act is ticking of names of voters as evidence of accreditation provided for?” 
According to the lawyer, the respondents had contended that card readers worked effectively, claiming that they used incident forms where the readers failed. “The question is: where are the Incident Forms?” he asked.
Decrying the decline in the reputation of the Supreme Court, the lawyer noted that the petitioners had submitted 350 pieces of documentary evidence, including videos, accusing the Supreme Court of deciding to look the other way.
Our source in Akwa Ibom claimed that Justice Okoro held a series of clandestine meetings with Senator Akpabio, Mr. Nwoko and Governor Emmanuel before the February 3rd Supreme Court judgment. He said one of the meetings took place on Tuesday January 19, 2016, around 2 a.m. in the Reiz Continental Hotel in Abuja Central Business District.
The Supreme Court justices read their controversial verdict at night on February 3, 2015. Mr. Akpabio arrived at the court with great fanfare, after the Chief Justice of Nigeria and other members of the seven-judge panel had retired to finalize their judgment.
A retinue of journalists and policemen accompanied Mr. Akpabio to court. Once the former governor entered the courtroom, security agents at the Supreme Court blocked other people from entering or leaving the courtroom. Even before the judgment was read, Mr. Akpabio was heard stating that “it is all over.” He counseled the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Umana Okon Umana, and other APC officials to return to Akwa Ibom and “begin reconciliation.” 
Shortly after Mr. Akpabio’s arrival in court, Nigeria’s Chief Justice and six other members of his panel returned into the court and upheld Mr. Udom Emmanuel as the elected governor of Akwa Ibom State. Justice Chima Nweze read the judgment. 
The Supreme Court is scheduled to give reasons for its judgment on February 15, 2016.
In a fierce reaction to the judgment, Nigeria’s top election observer group, Transition Monitoring Group (TMG), accused the Supreme Court of “legalizing electoral robberies,” adding that the court was “aiding poll robbers” and “ridiculing Nigeria before the global community.” 
The United States Embassy in Nigeria, the European Union, and Nigerian Election Situation Room described the April 11, 2015 governorship election in Akwa Ibom State as a sham.

Here's what Beyoncé haters get wrong

Beyoncé’s show was rich in symbolism that haters and the wrong-headed willfully misunderstood.
                                                                         JEFF KRAVITZ/FILMMAGIC

Beyoncé’s show was rich in symbolism that haters and the wrong-headed willfully misunderstood.


It may be time for America to tweak its fundamental tagline because "The land of the free, the home of the brave," no longer fits.

In the face of the mounting criticism of Beyoncé's Super Bowl performance on Sunday, it sure seems like America has become "The land of the Amnesia Patients."

On the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense (its original name), Beyoncé crashed Coldplay's rainbow-lit stage to deliver a message:

People of color are tired of being killed; tired of being shortchanged; tired of having their feelings being mocked by the very demographic that continues to hold them back.

The picked-out afros, the all-black attire, the militant garb (and song to match) had some viewers asking why the NFL allowed Beyoncé to make the radical chic.

How quickly we all have forgotten the pain this country has inflicted on people of color and continues to do so today.

The land of the shortened memories empowered police to sic dogs on innocent people and spray them down with powerful water hoses simply for being in the wrong place at the wrong time.The land of the shortened memories empowered police to sic dogs on innocent people and spray them down with powerful water hoses simply for being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

This great America barred its deep-complexioned citizens from riding in the front of the bus and using the same water fountain as others — among countless other outlandish inequities and indecencies.

FIVE CLUES THAT BEYONCE'S NEW ALBUM IS DROPPING ANY MINUTE

The revolutionary group born in Oakland, Calif., in 1966 by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale, provided demands for the improvement of life for black people, a “radical” list that included:

1. Freedom
2. Full employment for black people
3. Decent housing
4. Education
5. End police brutality
Beyoncé and other public figures have remained silent on this issue for far too long. But now that she has a child who could easily become the next hashtag victim, Mrs. Carter has chosen to speak up.

And for that, she’s being called a racist and anti-police. But ignoring the points of her halftime show and the video for her new song, “Formation,” is its own form of racism. And racism comes from fear of the unknown — which should be expected in a country where even something as simple as Black History Month lessons in schools is under fire.

People fear what they don’t know. And they don’t want to learn, so the fear grows.

It is a grave misconception that Black Panthers promoted the killings of police, just as it is so that Black Lives Matter means every other life doesn't.

Black pride — the message Beyoncé was trying to convey — means being proud of who your are, what you look like and where you come from.

Black people — with our full lips, kinky hair, and dark skin — have been called ugly, ignorant and uneducated for so long, that there wasn’t a better stage for this type of moment.

The symbolism of Queen Bey’s efforts missed some people — and that’s because the message wasn’t for them.

Economist Urges Federal Government to Invest On ICT To Boost Economy

Children ICT training class (Photo: Internet)
                                      Children ICT training class (Photo: Internet)
A U.S-based economist, Ms Munat Roberts, urged the Federal Government to invest on Information Communication Technologies (ICTs), especially in the education sector to boost the economy.
Roberts made the call in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Monday.
She said that children between the ages of 8 and 17 had not been given priority in government’s programmes to explore the benefits of ICTs.
The economist, who is also the Chairperson, West Coast Economic Summit (WCES), said the organisation would soon organise a junior technology innovation camp for children abroad.
She said they children will be trained for two weeks in ICTs related programmes such as a Robotic Engineering, Apples Programme and development of Apples for their phones.
She added that It is going to be a campus-based experience and with that they will start a foundation for young children training in the area of technology.
Roberts lamented on lack of such programmes in Nigeria for that age bracket. The focus has been on older people and no space for the younger ones.
She urged the government to support the Small Medium Enterprise as drivers of the economy, and also educate prospective investors on the requirements of investing in the country.
She, however, called on the Nigeria Investment Promotion Council to educate investors on “One-Stop-Shop’’ to provide them with information on modalities of doing business in the country.
Meanwhile, Roberts has commended the Federal Government for the implementation of the new electricity tariff.

With NTA

Minister of Information And Culture Hails Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption

Lai Muhammed ANd Presidential Advisory Committee
                Lai Muhammed And Presidential Advisory Committee
The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has hailed the role being played by the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption, led by renowned Professor of Law and civil rights Activist Itse Sagay, in the country’s anti-corruption battle.
”Bodies like yours, the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption, are critical to the success of the fight,” the Minister said while receiving members of the Committee at his office in Abuja on Tuesday. ”We have no doubt that you will continue to advise the administration on the prosecution of the war against corruption and the implementation of required reforms in Nigeria’s criminal justice system.”
Alhaji Mohammed said the visit by members of the Committee could not have come at a better time, ”considering that we are presently running a National Sensitization Campaign Against Corruption”.
He acknowledged the huge support that the ministry had received – and has continued to receive – from the committee since the launch of the campaign, saying it had gone a long way in contributing to the modest achievement we have made since the launch.
”I can say, without equivocating, that since the launch of the sensitization campaign against corruption, we have succeeded in getting more and more Nigerians talking about corruption. Not everyone has joined the campaign, but we see the increased national debate on corruption as a positive development, because the more people are aware of the evils of corruption, the more the likelihood for them to support the government’s battle against corruption,” the Minister said
He said a recent poll by the Governance Accountability Initiative for Nigeria (GAIN) has shown that the support among Nigerians for the anti-corruption war is very high, with 76% of respondents expressing support for the initiative, while also showing that in terms of areas of concern among Nigerians, the anti-corruption fight is next only to insecurity.
”These results tally with what we have found out in our various engagements since we launched the National Sensitization Campaign,” Alhaji Mohammed said, while commending the media for the major role they have played in disseminating necessary information about the campaign to the people, and also for providing feedback to the government.
He said while some of those who have picked issues with the strategy adopted by the government to sensitize Nigerians may have done so genuinely, perhaps because they have not taken the time to understand the strategy, others are only criticising the anti-graft campaign just to shoot it down.
”A key strategy we have adopted in our campaign is to strip corruption of its previous abstract status by putting a face to it. In other words, we are emphasizing and highlighting the cost of corruption to the lives of Nigerians.
”When we revealed that 55 people allegedly stole a total of 1.34 trillion Naira between 2006 and 2013 – a figure that has been independently confirmed by a Civil Society Organization, Media Rights Agenda (even though with an extended timeline), our intention was not to villify anyone but to show to Nigerians how funds that could have been used to provide infrastructure and upgrade educational and health facilities, for example, have been looted,” the Minister explained.
He assured that the government would continue to vigorously pursue the anti-corruption fight in accordance with the rule of law, adding: ”We will not relent, not now that the fight has gained momentum among Nigerians and attracted global support.”
Earlier, Prof. Sagay said the visit was to give the Committee the opportunity to dialogue with the Minister, whom he described as proactive, courageous, intelligent and knowledgeable, and his team, especially because the parastatals under the Ministry of Information and Culture have a vital role to play in the fight against corruption.
”Parastatals like the NTA, FRCN, NOA and VON are critical in educating the public and increasing the level of consciousness (about the evils of corruption),” he said.
The Committee head urged Nigerians to buy into the anti-corruption struggle, saying by doing so, they are laying the groundwork for their children to live in an atmosphere of stability and to have the opportunity to achieve their God-given potentials.