Saturday, 17 October 2015

Policemen Brutalize NBA Secretary In Osun (Photo).

2969011_olayinkasokoya

The police at the ‘B’ Division of the Nigeria Police, Ilesa, Osun State on Tuesday, physically assaulted the secretary of the Nigerian Bar Association, Ilesa branch, Mr. Olayinka Sokoya.
Our correspondent gathered on Thursday that the NBA scribe had gone to the police station to secure the release of one of his clients, who was allegedly detained by the police for a traffic offence.

Sokoya, on getting to the police station was said to have told the Divisional Traffic Officer, Joel Bode, that the offence which his client was being detained for was unknown to the law but this was said to have infuriated the police officer.

The insistence of the NBA secretary to see his client was said to have further annoyed the policeman who ordered the lawyer to leave the station.
The lawyer was said to have refused to obey the policeman’s order, saying the police station was a public place and the officer had no right to chase him out.
The angry officer allegedly attacked Sokoya and later asked some of his subordinates to bundle him out of the station.

When contacted on the telephone by our correspondent, Sokoya confirmed the assault, saying he was treated in a hospital after the attack.
He said he was beaten and bundled out of the station on the order of the police officer and suffered injuries and also lost his wedding ring during the attack.

He said, “I went to B division of the Nigeria Police Ijamo, Ilesa to bail my client who was accused of committing the offence of hiring a fake driver. The divisional traffic officer, one Joel Bode, said I could not teach him his job when I told him that there was no offence known under our law as offence of hiring a fake driver particularly when the driver has a valid driver’s licence.

“He ordered me to leave his office when I told him I needed to see my client. He became angry and held my neck to the wall. He asked his men including one Corporal Osobu Oluwaseun, to bundle me out of the station like a common criminal and my neck was broken in the process.”
Efforts to find out what happened through the Police Public Relations Officer in the state, Mrs. Folasade Odoro, proved abortive.

The call put across to the PPRO’s telephone was not picked and the text sent to her had yet to be responded to as of the time of filing this report.

Sunday, 11 October 2015

Defiant Blatter says “I’m a fighter”

Blatter
                                            Blatter

Geneva – FIFA’s Sepp Blatter, who is appealing a 90-day suspension from the scandal-tainted world football body, said Sunday he would fight to defend his reputation. 

“I’m a fighter,” he told the Swiss weekly Schweizer am Sonntag. “They can destroy me, but they can’t destroy my life’s work.”  


The beleaguered football chief’s lawyers lodged an appeal against his suspension on Friday.

At the same time, Blatter asked for further hearings with FIFA’s ethics committee, claiming that he was not allowed to give evidence before he was banned.

But ethics committee spokesman Andreas Bantel said Blatter, 79, had been given the chance to put his case on October 1.

FIFA has been in crisis since May, when US authorities announced charges against 14 officials and sports marketing executives over bribery allegations amounting to more than $150 million. 

The president of the European football body UEFA, Michel Platini, was also suspended for 90 days, and has also appealed.

Neither Blatter nor Platini are implicated in the wider scandal however.

If their appeals are rejected, they would still have the right to take their cases before the final-instance Court of Arbritation for Sport, based in Lausanne.

The 60-year-old Platini, a frontrunner to succeed Blatter as FIFA chief, denies any wrongdoing in taking a $2 million (1.8 million euros) payment from the world football body in 2011.

Blatter told Schweizer am Sonntag he has quit his office at FIFA’s headquarters in Zurich and that his daughter Corinne and his girlfriend Linda Gabrielian visited him at his apartment in the Swiss city.

Issa Hayatou of Cameroon, the 69-year-old head of the Confederation of African Football, was named FIFA’s acting president on Thursday.  

Treasury Single Account: FG to relax policy for security agencies.


President of Nigeria Muhammadu Buhari addresses the 70th session of the United Nations General Assembly September 28, 2015 at the United Nations in New York. AFP
President Muhammadu Buhari
The Federal Government has said that it would relax its rule on the Treasury Single Account (TSA) implementation to give special attention to security agencies.

Speaking in Abuja on Friday, when he received the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Solomon Arase, in his office, Accountant General of the Federation (AGF), Ahmed Idris, explained that special attention would be given to security agencies in the implementation of the policy in view of the recognition of security of lives and property as one of the cardinal agenda of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.

Recall that since the commencement of implementation of the policy, the Accountant General of the Federation (AGF), Idris, had insisted that there was no exemption for any government ministry, department and agency (MDA).

President of Nigeria Muhammadu Buhari addresses the 70th session of the United Nations General Assembly September 28, 2015 at the United Nations in New York. AFP
President of Nigeria Muhammadu Buhari
Idris has restated on several occasions that compliance with the policy directive was compulsory.

All government MDAs are expected to ensure that all revenues realised from their operations were remitted in the Consolidated Funds Account with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

Although some revenue generating agencies have made cases for the policy to be relaxed to accommodate their peculiar needs towards discharging their responsibilities, the AGF had refused to buckle.

However, the AGF, who although did not give details of what the special attention would entail, identified the security institutions that would benefit from the concession.

They include the Police and the Armed Forces to enable them continue to successfully deliver on their respective mandates of securing the country.

The AGF said his office was aware of the enormous responsibility the security agencies were facing in the fight to contend with armed robbery, insurgency, kidnapping and other societal vices.

Idris said: “Government will ensure that the release of monies required for the execution of all special operations aimed at overcoming these evils were not in any way affected by the implementation of the TSA.”

He reassured the MDAs that the policy on the TSA was not meant to hamper their activities, but to entrench a more transparent, efficient and robust management of public funds towards the speedy realization of government plans and programmes.

While commending the Police for complying with the directive on the TSA, the AGF urged the agency to embrace more scientific and electronic means of carrying its transactions and businesses.

He explained that the era of carrying money in sacks to payment points were gone, adding that the TSA would compliment the existing electronic payment platforms.

Earlier, the IGP, Mr. Arase, commended the Office of the AGF for its support to the MDAs, particularly the Nigeria Police in the implementation of the TSA.

He however solicited the support of the AGF in the sustaining their special operations on counter-terrorism and other crimes as well as early settlement of staff salaries.

See face of fake Army General who sponsors Boko Haram



The fake Army General, Aliyu Hussaini
The fake Army General, Aliyu Hussaini
Another suspected Boko Haram sponsor, Aliyu Hussaini, who has also been parading himself as a military brigadier general has been arrested.

The Nigerian Army in a statement on Tuesday said that Hussaini was arrested by soldiers of the 33rd Artillery Brigade in Bauchi State during a raid.

The statement read, “The 33 Artillery Brigade, Nigerian Army, has recorded another landmark success in the ongoing Operation Zaman Lafiyah as troops of the brigade recently arrested one Aliyu Hussaini, popularly known as Colonel, a suspected Boko Haram terrorist and an Impostor who has been parading himself as a Brigadier-General in the Nigerian Army.

“The troops, who were acting on a tip-off, said Aliyu Hussaini was a sponsor and also a member of the Boko Haram terrorist organisation. (They) carried out a raid operation, which led to the successful arrest of Aliyu and another suspected Boko Haram member, one Ibrahim Mohammed, who is also known as Yuram.

“It was later gathered that Aliyu had been defrauding innocent citizens (with the claim) that he was a general in the Nigerian Army.”

The military had earlier today announced the arrest a financier of the terror group in Bama, Borno State. It was reported that the sum of one million naira and other items were found on the suspect.

Jonathan knows about Boko Haram financier in CBN – Soyinka.

Soyinka
Soyinka

The controversy over alleged sponsors of Boko Haram took a twist yesterday when Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka said information about a suspected financier of the terror group within the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) was passed to President Goodluck Jonathan.

Soyinka also said he worked “in the background” with Australian negotiator Stephen Davis during the Niger Delta militancy crisis, and warned against  dismissing his claims on those allegedly sponsoring Boko Haram.

The Nobel Laureate spoke on a day a source familiar with Boko Haram revealed that  some of the school girls captured by the Islamist group in Chibok, Borno State, in April, might have been raped to death.

In a statement by Soyinka titled, The wages of impunity, he was appalled by government’s treatment of people linked with the Islamist group with kid gloves.

Soyinka
Soyinka
Soyinka said: “Finally, Stephen Davis also mentioned a Boko Haram financier within the Nigerian Central Bank. Independently we are able to give backing to that claim, even to the extent of naming the individual. In the process of our enquiries, we solicited the help of a foreign embassy whose government, we learnt, was actually on the same trail, thanks to its independent investigation into some money laundering that involved the Central Bank.

“That name, we confidently learnt, has also been passed on to President Jonathan. When he is ready to abandon his accommodating policy towards the implicated, even the criminalized, an attitude that owes so much to re-election desperation, when he moves from a passive `letting the law to take its course’ to galvanizing the law to take its course, we shall gladly supply that name”.

Routine raping?

Meanwhile, a  source involved in efforts to free the abducted Chibok girls  told Sunday Vanguard, in an exclusive interview, yesterday, that some of the victims, who could not withstand routine raping by the terrorists, passed on in the early days of their capture.

The source explained that it was unfortunate that many of the girls would never be reunited with their parents and  loved ones because they were no more, contrary to the belief that they were being held up in Sambisa Forest.

He said that the insurgents had also taken more boys and girls than was being estimated, saying that most of the captives were seized unannounced by the terrorists.

The source, a  negotiator, said that contrary to the claim in some quarters  that President Jonathan had not done enough to secure the release of the surviving girls, it was actually Nigerians who were frustrating the release of the girls.

The source accused some Nigerian middlemen, who were using their proximity to some of the insurgents, to trade with government over the release of the girls.

According to the source, many of the negotiators were more interested in making quick gains from  government than seeing to the freedom of the children.

“Throughout our effort to free the girls, many of the middlemen were simply playing games for their pecuniary interests. They would come now and tell you that they have some of the girls and, when you fix a date and time for them, they would never show up again,” the negotiator revealed.

“The main problem in the rescue effort is that most of the middlemen involved are not sincere and are just looking for money.

“What is happening to the girls is painful because efforts to get them out have not yielded any positive result five months after they were abducted by their captors.

“As a father, I really feel bad about the children and their parents but we still hope that those who are still  alive would eventually be freed, no matter their health conditions and reunited with their parents.”

Read Soyinka’s statement titled, Wages of Impunity.

My church is aware I’m member of Ogboni Confraternity —Ogunfuwa, 75-yr-old Remo chief

Ogunfuwa
Otunba Joseph Adedayo Ogunfuwa,
Otunba Joseph Adedayo Ogunfuwa,   the Babalaje of Remoland, celebrated his 75th birthday, penultimate Saturday. In an  interview, shortly after the birthday lecture, Ogunfuwa said he is a devoted  Christian, a member of the Anglican Communion and a strong member of   the Reformed Ogboni Fraternity. This, he claimed, his church is aware.

 What inspired your celebrating your birthday with a lecture?

I conceived   the idea of a birthday lecture 15 years ago when I clocked 60 years because I thought I would die before 60.   My late father died at 62 and, to me, when  you  clock 60 and die, it is not   a premature death. Initially, the birthday lecture was restricted to my immediate family and close friends. But when I clocked 65, people, mostly friends, advised me to extend the invitation beyond my immediate family so that it could be a legacy   that will not only benefit my immediate family but should be   passed on to generations   because of my experiences on knotty issues like world peace, religion as well as other issues that will always give people food for thought.

I also want to say that none of the fraternities that I belong to is against any religion or government. They all affirm the supremacy of God and oppose  discrimination of any kind.   The  world needs peace and not insurgency and the battle for God among different religions  must stop if the world must know peace.

So, this year, I changed the pattern of the lecture. I saw the need to invite  knowledgeable persons to deliver it. Professor Dayo Adekole  talked about  religion and fraternities and explored the notion of a conflict. Professor Rom Kalilu talked about religious intolerance –The Muslim point of view. I     spoke on religion intolerance =The Christian view point and religion and world peace. The whole essence of  this was to see how we can all bring about world peace. Without peace, nothing meaningful can be done, either as an individual or as a nation.

What exactly is your philosophy of life?

Do my best in all circumstances for everybody and without doing wrong to anybody.

 Your   dad died at 62. Did you envisage you will live this long?

Nobody knows how long he or she   will live. People die through many causes. You cannot predict also what manner of death you will have. One can have the best of health and still die young.   When you live and abstain from what  is not necessary, you can live long. For instance, I gave up smoking over 30 years ago, and I was a bad drinker. My elder  sister kept warning me and weeping because of these habits because of the fear that I might die young. But, today, she is alive and I am also  alive. I had to stop smoking because I had medical challenge. As a child,  I was always ill. My mother died of  asthma at 32.   The doctor advised me to stop smoking, but I didn’t stop immediately.   I, however, gave up the habit when I realised that  I was pushing myself to the grave. One does not need much education to know that smoking is dangerous to health. And  it is not right, but it took me long time to be convinced that I needed to stop the habit.

 At 75, would you say you are fulfilled?

I have been a fulfilled man as far back as when I clocked   60. Death did not matter to me after that. People tend to associate  fulfillment with wealth or monetary worth. It is whatever you set out to achieve in life that makes you fulfilled. I set out to be what I am, to be kind to people, to be generous to live according to my conscience. I listen to advice but I don’t take every piece of  advice. I am not rich and I don’t have to be rich to be a fulfilled man.   I have 14 children and 23 grandchildren. I have always told my children, ‘what I have done for you, go and improve on it   yourselves’.

 Being the Babalaje of Remoland, what are the factors that shaped you to make you who you are today?

I don’t know why they conferred the title of Babalaje on me because I told them I didn’t want it. Babalaje is given to people who are rich. I am not.

 What is that thing that your parents inculcated in you while growing up that you have also passed to your children?

That is a secret. When my father was about to die, he compelled me to love all my siblings because he was a polygamist. Today, I am successful and my siblings are also successful and my children too.

 So when   you die, how do you want to be buried?

I have given my children instructions on what to do when I die. Not only that, I have consistently openly said it. Nobody should say after my death that I renounced any of the fraternities I belong to.   I am a Christian of Anglican Communion; when I die, my fraternities’ members should come in their full regalia and, if the church will not permit that, let the fraternities bury me.

LEADERSHIP TUSSLE: Soyinka resigns as CBCIU Chair.

Image result for image of prof. wole soyinka
                       Soyinka-Oyinlola

Following the rift with former Governor of Osun State, Olagunsoye Oyinlola, over who chairs board of the Centre for Black Culture and International Understanding (CBCIU), Nobel laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, yesterday, said he has resigned as the CBCIU Chairman.

In a statement, Soyinka said that he was frustrated and embarrassed at the continued reference of a court suit involving Oyinlola and the CBCIU as a leadership tussle.


“This is painful reductionism,” Mr. Soyinka, a professor of Comparative Literature, said in the letter dated July 14, 2015.

“In any case, I am left with no choice but to openly demand of the governor of Osun State, the immediate and formal acceptance of my resignation letter from CBCIU chairmanship.”

Soyinka and Oyinlola had been engaged in a war of words over the headship of the Oshogbo-based CBCIU, a category 2 facility under the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, established in 2009.

Last month, Mr. Soyinka had stated that Mr. Oyinlola’s parading of himself as the head of CBCIU was “unlawful and unethical.”
‎In 2008, as governor of Osun State, Mr. Oyinlola signed into law the CBCIU Act which stipulated that he would be the Chairman of the Board for life.

However, four years later, the Osun State House of Assembly amended the law to state that the Chairman of the Board shall be ‎”the Governor or anyone appointed by him for that purpose.

Governor Rauf Aregbesola appointed Mr. Soyinka as Chairman of the Board in August 2012.

Mr. Oyinlola headed to court to challenge the decision.

In ‎his letter of resignation, Soyinka noted that his decision to head the CBCIU Board was out of self-service.

“I undertook this assignment on principle – quite apart from my sentimental attachment to the political constituency of my late friend, Bola Ige, assassinated by those very forces against which CBCIU must remain resolutely embattled,” Mr. Soyinka stated in the letter.

“More relevant however is that I have always found it despicable conduct when an elected individual diverts the resources of the people over whom he presides to carving out for himself a sinecure. Self-service should not be read in the vocabulary of anyone fortunate enough to be called to serve his or her people.”

Professor Soyinka in his statement insisted that the “legal tussle” is between Mr. Oyinlola and Osun state authorities.
‎”Let me repeat this: I have not instituted any case against either governor, nor have I been issued with any summons to appear either as plaintiff or respondent,” he said.

“The CBCIU is of course the object of contention, but the CBCIU is not listed among my personal possessions or creations. To play a variation on the late MKO Abiola’s favorite sayings: while I do occasionally loan out my head to crack a coconut, I deplore any attempt to have it shaved it in my absence. I am not a party to this case.”

Soyinka also said that the state’s lawyers decision to leave him out of the court hearings was an affirmation of his irrelevance in the matter.

“I am totally in the dark, except through the concern of colleagues who have forwarded media reports on the notice of resumption. I am out of the country at present and, for all I know, may be cited for contempt for failure to put in appearance etc.

“I must not end this brief position statement without commending Prince Oyinlola yet again for pursuing his quest for justice the civil way – submitting himself to the authority of the law courts. This is what has been constantly urged on him – wait. Do not pre-empt the court and do not concoct, distort or embellish its pronouncements.”

The latest verbal exchange between Soyinka and Oyinlola was sparked by the latter’s announcement of his Board’s intention to host the second Global Conference of Black Nationalities in Bahia, Brazil, in November.


“Equally praiseworthy is Prince Oyinlola’s formal notice to would-be participants of the ‘postponement’ of the much touted conference on globalization, originally destined for Brazil this November,” said Mr. Soyinka.

“This ‘postponement’ by a full year should provide more than enough time for Oyinlola to put his entire tenure within the CBCIU – both the disputed and the undisputed – in fiscal order, and thus be seen as a shining example of the virtue of accountability.

“When the legal air has been cleared and the corpse of impunity firmly interred in this instance, there shall be a public inquest over this avoidable penkelemes. The saga is not yet over. There is still much to be shared in the cause of public enlightenment, including the hidden hand of ‘godfathers’ who still obsess over cultural possessions to which they have neither legal nor moral entitlements.”‎

Security operatives vacate Abuja multiple bomb blast scenes

Security operatives vacate Abuja multiple bomb blast scenes

After one week of keeping vigil at the scenes of the recent bomb blast in Kuje and Nyanya in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja that killed several people and left others injured, life has returned in the two areas with residents going about their daily business activities.

Security operatives, who have been keeping vigil at the bomb blast scenes, have left after being stationed at the spots for one week in order to ensuring peace around the area.

When our correspondent visited the scenes in Kuje, it was discovered that motorists have been going through the area, but with caution and trepidation.

The Nation gathered that FCT Permanent Secretary, John Chukwu, had a few days ago, summoned an emergency security meeting to brainstorm on the multiple bomb attacks to take proactive measures against future security breach in the city.

Chukwu, it was gathered, has also ordered for increased surveillance in and around the 8,000 square kilometers of the FCT in order to nip in the bud any plan by insurgents to cause havoc in the city.
 
In a statement issued on his behalf by the ministry’s Deputy Director/Chief Press Secretary, Muhammad Sule, the Permanent Secretary said: “Such intensified surveillance all over the place would ensure that we are not taken unawares, because the security of lives and property remains on the front burner for the government.”

While pledging the support of the FCT Administration for security agencies to ease their operations, Chukwu further directed the Area Council Chairmen to resuscitate and strengthen their security committees, while community leaders must keep tabs on new comers into their domains.

The emergency meeting was attended by all the heads of military formation in the FCT, including the Commissioner of Police, Director, Department of State Security (DSS), Commandant of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDS), representatives of Customs, Immigration and Prisons, amongst others.

Alams’ last interview: ‘Sometimes I ask why I am still alive!’


alamieyeseigha5

The late Diepreye Solomon Peter Alamieyeseigha spoke on former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo  and Goodluck Jonathan in his last interview with Vanguard.

Excerpts:

Let’s start by asking what informed your choice of former President Jonathan as your deputy governor in 1999.

One is that I came from Southern Ijaw Local Government, the largest in the Bayelsa State and may be in the whole country. My political calculation was to pick somebody from the Ogbia axis, that is the Eastern part of the state to balance the political equation. So, I needed Ogbia votes. Number two, I wanted a deputy governor  who had high level of intelligence and stable character like Jonathan.

I also needed an establishment person and somebody who was not too ambitious that if I was out, he could stand in for me and could run the state. I needed somebody, who would not attempt to cause trouble if I travelled out of the state so that I could sleep well. It was a combination of these factors that made me to choose Jonathan as my deputy then. I set out an objective criteria on the qualities I needed and when the late Chief judge of Bayelsa State recommended him, (I did not know him before), I readily accepted him. In fact, I had to drive in my car to his residence and asked him to resign from the then OMPADEC, where he was working at the time.

Within the period Jonathan worked under you, did you at any point imagine that he would one day become a vice president or president and what were those leadership qualities you identified in him?

Leadership comes from above. No matter how you try, if God almighty does not destine you to lead, you will not be a leader. For Goodluck, I knew that he was going to be vice president of Nigeria as far back as August 25, 2005.  Former President Olusegun Obasanjo had once told me that since his former vice, Atiku Abubakar and I wanted to take his job that it would be over his dead body and that unless he died, Atiku would not be president of Nigeria. He told me that since Atiku had picked me as his running mate, he would disgrace us. He said that he was going to use my deputy to rubbish me before everybody. So, I knew.

But some say, like Balarabe Musa observed recently, that Jonathan was not prepared for leadership and that accounted for the loss of power by the South.

alamieyeseigha5It is not right because Jonathan is more experienced than any president that has ruled this country in the past. How can you say that somebody who has been in office for 16 years is not qualified? If I may ask, which former president of this country was in power for 16 years? He was in office as deputy governor and was overseeing administration of local governments and was very conversant with the administration of local governments at that level. He was also performing the role of a deputy governor. He became a governor and is also familiar with governance at that level. He became a vice president and later acting president and a president. Which Nigerian has that pedigree? None. So, Balarabe Musa goofed. I am not aware of any special school that people go to become president. Academically, he is more qualified than any of them, and in our local environment at the University of Port Harcourt, he has street knowledge because he is locally bred.

Not everybody will like his style but I can tell you that if you sit down and catalogue what he has done for this country, no other president has done that. But it is his life style; he is a very quiet man, unassuming but with very high intellectual content. If Goodluck believes in something, the house can collapse but he will do what he believes in. He has a very strong character. It depends on who is looking at him and from which angle. From the beginning, people’s mindset were fixed for him to fail and to manage that perception was another problem. But he did well. All these things that the APC is claiming to have done in 100 days are just claims; you cannot fix the refinery in three months. Somebody must have done very serious work before. To do turnaround maintenance takes 18 months and not three months.

Some argue that Jonathan’s defeat in the election and the role played by the elite may create bad blood in Nigerian politics. Do you agree and what do you see in the future for Nigeria?

I have very radical views about that and I do not want to share them now. We are watching out what will play out at the national level. Will Nigeria or the ruling party still take us as part of Nigeria? Of course, they know that we are still feeding this nation. So, I think that they are conscious of that and they should also know that even the British could not conquer the Ijaw people.

We have the capacity to defend what belongs to us. So far, so good, the appointments that they have made, none has come to Bayelsa. The Special Adviser to the President on the Amnesty Programme, Brig-Gen. Boroh, is just coordinating the programme and I do not consider that as an appointment. Is that what we deserve? The Amnesty programme, we do not know whether it will end in December. We are watching.

Let’s take you to former President Obasanjo under whose leadership you were impeached as governor. Have you have forgiven him?

Let me make it clear here that I have forgiven all the people who worked against me. It is not only Obasanjo but everybody. This is because everything that happened, who did what, I know? I cannot be living in the past because it does not help. It pains quite well but again, if it was not permitted by God, it would not have happened. And for me to be alive, I thank God. Sometimes when I reflect on where I am coming from, I even at times ask why I am still alive, having passed through what I have passed through. It reminds me of Psalm 23, somebody passing through the valley of the shadow of death. I passed through it several times. For me to be alive, I do not need to have anything in mind.

Have you interacted with Obasanjo since that saga and what was the closest you have been with him since then?

I have been at a very close quarters with Obasanjo twice. The first encounter was at the Katsina Airport during the wedding of the daughter of late President Yar’Adua. I did not even know that he was in the VIP lounge. I wanted to use the rest room and here was Obasanjo directly sitting inside. I was even scared because he almost passed out.

I held his hand and he said DSP what have I done to deserve a handshake from you? There were other people; Kenny Martins and one of his political friends present. I said I was shaking him for two reasons. One was because of the Almighty God who created us. Number two is that tradition demands that we should welcome our visitors. Then Kenny got up and said, great leader, great leader and he came to hug me. The second encounter was when I was going to Dubai and if Obasanjo had known that I was in that aircraft, he would not have entered but I was already seated. We were very few in the aircraft. Because of fear, Obasanjo saw me and hysterically called me Fayose, Fayose and I told him that I was not Fayose. I said former president, Olusegun Matheew Kikiola Aremu Obasanjo, you are a devil incarnate. I said when we were small, our lesson teachers always talked about this devil and this devil and I never knew that the devil is a human being. I told him that you are a direct descendant of the devil. I told him that if you talk, I will throw you out of this aircraft.

I knew of truth that he did not sleep throughout the flight. The only thing he said was DSP, is it only you that entered prison. I too entered prison. He said you entered prison and I entered prison. He kept quiet and I left. But I have forgiven him and I can even go to Otta. He is an elder. One thing I know of Obasanjo is that you can say anything against Obasanjo but he is a leader. If he says he is going to do this, he will do it. You can call Obasanjo any time of the day or night and he will pick the phone himself. He will be ready to sit down with you to solve any problem even though he will not allow you to talk. He has invited you to seek your opinion on how to solve the problem but he would not allow you to talk and at the end of the day, you begin to wonder why he called you when he already had the solution to the issue. That is the type of character that he is.

I know him. For me to say he is devil incarnate, he is.

What do you think that Jonathan did well and did not do well?

Well, I was not in government and cannot say what he did well and didn’t do well. As far as I am concerned I didn’t lift oil, I did not have oil wells and I didn’t get any contract from anybody.

But you must have received some presidential gifts like cash and other tangible things more valuable than contracts and oil blocks?

Yes, I had unlimited access to Jonathan and I used to have free access to his home. If I met him eating, I would join him and so on. Jonathan has no money. So, if Buhari is looking to extract money from him, he won’t find.

What if the money is hidden somewhere offshore?

That cannot happen anymore in this world.

Are you saying he is a poor man?

No, he is a quiet and highly contented Nigerian but not a rich man.

Looted Billions:Buhari tightens noose on Jonathan’s men.

President Goodluck Jonathan and Gen. Muhammadu Buhari
President Goodluck Jonathan and Gen. Muhammadu Buhari

There were indications over the weekend that President Muhammadu buhari’s anti-corruption war is being revved up as investigations closed-in on another confidant of President Goodluck Jona-than.

The on-going investig-ations border on some scandalous deals in the petroleum industry regarding  Offshore Processing Agreements, OPAs, whereby crude oil, worth billions of naira, was given to traders in exchange for refined imported products – specifically, Premium Motor Spirit, PMS, also known as petrol, as well as the illegal use of diplomatic passports by some individuals to engage in illegal foreign exchange movements.


Sunday Vanguard investigations also revealed that the presidential directive issued last month, instructing the Nigeria Immigration Service, NIS, to withdraw diplomatic passports from some individuals, who are no longer in service, was a swift move by the Buhari Presidency to forestall what a source described as the “the continued use of the passports by some dirty individuals to smuggle foreign exchange out of the country”.

Meanwhile, the trial of some of “those believed to have illegally benefited from petroleum subsidy would resume with Buhari determined to ensure that monies stolen from the treasury of the Federal Government of Nigeria, FGN, would be recovered”, a Presidency source disclosed to Sunday Vanguard.

We were also made to understand that the outcry by the immediate past Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, who now occupies the position of Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, regarding tens of billions of dollars that were missing, can be linked to some powerful individuals who walked Aso Rock Presidential Villa freely.

Oil deals

Some documents sighted by Sunday Vanguard, regarding the activities of some persons known to have enjoyed the confidence of the Villa, showed the intricate web of conspiracy for the purpose of milking the Nigerian state.

Two companies (names withheld), used principally for some of the deals which saw Nigeria losing billions of dollars through oil deals and whose addresses are the same, located in Victoria Island, were directly linked to the Presidency.

Presidency officials during the Jonathan administration had argued that the selection of one of the companies was based purely on merit and that it was not fronting for anyone.

But one of the promoters of one of the companies, who featured prominently in the “SWISS TRADERS’ OPAQUE DEALS IN NIGERIA,” is said to have had familial links with one  of the confidants of the former President who got him appointed into one of the Multi-National Commissions/Joint Development Authorities, JDAs, that Nigeria had with one of its neighbours.

It was learnt that some of the directors of the Commissions/JDAs carry diplomatic passports.

The companies were, according to a source, used “to engage in all manner of oil deals some of which did not enjoy the benefit of due process but were anchored and driven from the Presidency”.

Sunday Vanguard gathered that the CBN’s directive on the deposit of foreign currencies into domiciliary accounts in Nigeria was a function of the realisation by the Buhari Presidency that huge sums of  forex were being warehoused by some individuals who had direct access to the Villa in the last dispensation.

Indeed, a few of those who were said to have been intercepted while trying to take millions of dollars abroad were described by a Presidency source as “having direct links to Aso Rock in the last administration”.

This is a different leg of the investigation into the corruption allegedly allowed to fester by the Jonathan Presidency, totally different from the former Petroleum Minister, Diezani Allison-Madueke.

Acting on a petition before it, Sunday Vanguard was informed by the Presidency source that “a lot of terrible things were discovered to have happened, especially in the last days of the last administration, but Mr. President is acting on some of the information while investigations are on-going; also”.

The source added: “Those close to the Villa in the last dispensation and known to be involved are being zeroed-in on.”

Most troublesome Nigerian entertainers(1)

Davido and Wizkid
Davido and Wizkid
Celebrities are always in the news. It’s ideally supposed to be about their exploits in their different spheres of human endeavour, be it acting, music, or comedy. However, we have a lot of entertainers who grace the front-page of magazines, gossip columms in newspapers and TV screens because of their penchant for flirting with, and courting controversy.
In this piece, we bring to you some of Nigeria’s most troublesome celebrities, who have adopted scandals as their second nature. Enjoy…

He is the son of a very wealthy  businessman and philanthropist, and from the onset, David Adeleka, aka Davido, was never pretentious about it. He even sang a song, ‘Dami Duro’ to clear any doubts from people’s minds that he comes from a well-to-do family.

Shortly after his break-out hit, Davido began swimming in pools of controversy like an Olympic-grade athlete.

He was reported to have fought with bouncers and security men at a show he was invited to. Weeks after that, he allegedly beat up a taxi-driver who committed the ‘offence’ of bringing his girlfriend to a hotel when he was already there with another girl. All these happened in Lagos, but he took the drama to the Federal Capital Territory when he was beaten blue-black by a team of mobile policemen for his perceived rudeness and arrogance.

His incessant skirmishes hurt his public profile, and this perhaps explains why his former young manager, Asa Asika, was sacked at the instance of his father.

Davido has grown considerably calmer, as we haven’t read much scandal about him lately, except that he recently welcomed a baby with his lover, while another girl is waiting in the wings, claiming that she’s also carrying his baby.

 

WIZKID

Wizkid came into the industry as a very young boy. In a way, he was like the industry’s baby, and the world attached so much innocence to him.

But years down the line, it seems the talented singer is hell-bent on creating an opposite impression in the minds of people.

He has ‘fought’ with many of the people he came up with, such as Samklef, Banky W, and Skales. He also once threatened to beat up a female artiste, Saeon, who featured him on a track.

As if that’s not enough, he also has a bad record with his fans. He was reported to have poured his drink in the face of a fan who wanted to greet him in a club. This is just as he allegedly asked a female fan to bare her boobs before he would grant her request for an autograph. In addition, he has been involved in countless spats with fans on social media, even as some show promoters accused him of collecting money for a show, and refusing to show up.

Tonto-Dikeh
Tonto Dikeh
Tonto Dikeh is an actress, but she is more popular for her controversies and scandals than any role she has ever played.

She has allegedly fought with many of her colleagues including Van Vicker, Halima Abubakar, Mercy Johnson, among others.

She is known not to suffer fools gladly, and she doesn’t tolerate any form of criticism, whether constructive or otherwise. When she released two songs in 2012 and many of her fans expressed displeasure about the poor standard of the songs, she took time to reply every one of them with insults and even threats.

Her Twitter handle is the destination of choice of many journalists because she never fails to generate one drama or the other. For Tonto Dikeh, controversy is like air which she can’t do without.

JIM IYKE

Self-acclaimed bad boy of Nigerian movie industry, James Ikechukwu Esomugha, aka, Jim Iyke, is an alleged karate expert, and he never hesitates to display his skills.

He has reportedly gotten into spats with so many colleagues in the industry such as Emeka Ike, AY the comedian, Uti Nwachukwu and countless others.

Jim has also had issues with journalists on several occasions.

He has been in the news for beating up the women he dates. This is even as he is trailed by allegations of defrauding his lovers, both emotionally and financially.

The internet and several other media are replete with stories of Jim’s escapades both in Nigeria and other African countries.

EMEKA IKE

Controversial actor, Emeka Ike  was a regular staple in home videos some years ago when he was usually cast as a lover-boy, but these days, he is more popular for his battles with the Actors Guild of Nigeria (AGN).

He went to court against the election that brought in Ibinabo Fiberesima in, as president of the guild, and his prayers were finally answered in March 2015 when a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos nullified the election.

Before that, Emeka got into trouble with the owners of the building in which his St. Nicholas College was sited, who went to court to kick him out. He was accused of not paying for the property, not taking care of the school building, and also owing his largely unqualified teachers a backlog of salaries.

This is in addition to the fight between him and his wife, who reportedly went to court to file for divorce from the actor on the allegations that he had willy-nilly turned her into a punching bag.

‘Koni Koni Love’ changed my life — Klever Jay

klever

Seven years after the release of the hit-track ‘Koni Koni Love,’ the singer, Klever Jay is still counting the blessings the song brought his way.
In a recent chat with Potpourri, the Agege, Lagos-born singer confessed, ‘I won’t lie to you, ‘Koni Koni Love’ remains my most memorable song. The track was a turning point in my life; it turned everything around for me, and till date, I can proudly say that the song did a lot for me.’
On what he has been up to recently, Klever Jay said, ‘I’ve been working underground. And I’ve been able to drop some couple of videos this year like ‘Peperempe,’ feat May D, ‘No Go There Rmx’ featuring Dammy Krane, and I just dropped another tune titled, ‘Baba No Regret,’ coming from the stables of Orange Records.’
He also debunked reports that he has fallen out with his one-time buddy, Danny Young. In his words, ‘No, there’s nothing like that. Danny Young is my real G, and we’ll always be friends. He’s one of those dudes that really helped me when I came into the music industry. I met him in the game, and I always give him that respect. He believed in me from the onset, and he used to take me around then; I gained a whole lot from him. And till today, I still thank him for giving me that opportunity. It’s always a privilege to roll with him.’

Nigerian Air Force jet crashes, killing pilot.

Image result for image of nigerian airforce airplane

A Nigerian Air Force fighter jet returning from a mission to its base in Yola, capital of northeast Adamawa state, crashed Saturday due to bad weather, killing its pilot, the Air Force said in an official statement.

The jet “returning to the base from an interdicted mission crashed due to bad weather and not under enemy fire around Hong, Adamawa State at about 1623hrs (1523 GMT). There was no survival as the pilot of the aircraft lost his life in the unfortunate incident,” the statement said.

The statement neither said how many passengers were aboard the jet nor its precise mission in Adamawa, one of the three states in the region where Boko Haram militants have launched deadly attacks that have killed hundreds over its six-year insurgency.

The Air Force authorities are investigating the cause of the crash, the statement added

MINISTERIAL LIST: ‘Lack of cabinet takes heavy toll on the economy’

Johnson Chukwu
The delay by President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration to make key appointments since assumption of office has continued to cause anxiety in the economy particularly with unprecedented  decline in foreign and domestic investments. 

  However, the government, after a long wait, has  sent a  21-man list of ministerial nominees to the Senate for screening, maintaining that it  set out to do things methodically  to  bring about probity in public financing.

Mr. Johnson Chukwu is the Managing Director/CEO, Cowry Assets Management Limited, an investment bank and key player in the capital market with specialisation in oil and gas, bonds and equity and other financial instruments. In this interview, he speaks on the cost of the  vacuum created by the absence of an economic team as well as  the fundamental things to be done in order to rescue the economy from  collapse. Excerpts:

By Akoma Chinweoke

How do you assess the performance of the country’s economy so far under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari?

What I think is that Mr. President has been focusing more on the issue of corruption and insurgency and, if one has to fairly assess him, it has to be on these areas. We have seen some progress in the security situation in the North- East. On the anti-corruption fight, so far, we have seen some reduction in reckless impunity with people trying to avoid any fragrant action that could make them the first culprits of the anti-corruption war.

On the effectiveness of the anti-corruption fight, we are yet to see any effective prosecution. For the fight to be successful, we need a legal system that makes it difficult for corrupt people to walk away free. We also need to eliminate the avenues for corruption in our system which corrupt people exploit to achieve their nefarious acts.

On the economy, there is presently no economic clear cut economic policy. In the absence of defined policies, we have seen a lot of turns and twist in the economic space with several changes in Central Bank’s policies. The CBN has moved beyond monetary policies into the realm of fiscal policies because of the vacuum created by absence of a substantive Finance Minister and  an economic management team

Although some of the challenges in the economy are exogenous like the issue of falling price of crude oil but with an economic management team in place, they would probably have developed an appropriate response which could have stabilized the economy. The cost of this vacuum is already manifesting in our macroeconomic variables such as inflation rate which recorded an up-tick to 9.3 percent in August, GDP growth of 2.35percent which is one of the lowest in recent times.

Although the exchange rate seem to have moderated, it was at a cost of fencing off a lot of legitimate demands.  I believe that certain fundamental things need to be done such as defining the economic policy orientation of the government, eliminating unproductive subsidies, and selling off moribund government assets.

We have heard sound bites of a socialist economic orientation. We heard the vice President talk about feeding of school children, which in itself is not bad but is basically a socialist policy. We have also heard that the government is not ready to remove subsidy, government wants to build new refineries, rebuild Nigerian Airways, etc. These are indicative of a socialist economic policy orientation.

What do you think about the introduction of the single treasury account system by this government particularly as some agencies are now jittery over its enforcement?

The Treasury Single Account is an efficient cash management tool that the government can use for effective management of its finances, banking and cash position. Prior to the implementation of the TSA what used to obtain was that different agencies of government would have different balance, some may be positive and others negative.

While those with positive balancing were receiving peanuts as interest income, those with negative balancing were paying great cost in form of interest charge to the banks. So, with the single treasury account, at the end of the day, It would be a very efficient way of managing the cash position of the government. Embedded in the efficient cash management is the additional benefit of reducing corruption tendencies in the management of government financial resources.

Many investors have continued to express serious concerns over JP Moran’s recent de-listing of Nigeria from its Government Bond Index Emerging Market, GBI-EM. How in your view would this impact on the country’s economy?

Well, it all depends on our policy response. What JP Morgan has done was that they have de-listed Nigeria from the government bond emerging market which means they took Nigeria out from the list of Emerging market government bonds that they track. In effect, fund managers who use the JP Morgan GBI-EM as criteria for inclusion of any particular government’s bond into their portfolio would no longer be interested in buying Nigerian government bonds.

The economic implication is that the level of fund that are pursing Nigerian bond instruments will go down . That should have a direct impact on yield because if the demand is slows down while the supply is still on at the same time, the price would go down and the yield would go up. I however, believe that the exit has already being priced into the yield hence the 15 percent range.

Such high yield may however not last for long as local fund managers, particularly the Pension Funds Administrators with their assets under management of about N4.6trillion would likely take up the oversold position left by foreign portfolio investors. The major impact of this exit would be on foreign exchange inflows as well as the constrain it will impose on the Monetary Policy’s ability to use yield on local currency debt instruments to stabilize the exchange rate.

Your company,Cowry Asset Management Limited paid N3bn in fulfilment of its underwriting commitment under the N7bn Zamfara State Government Bond. How did this happened?

Well, basically we underwrote Zamfara State Government to the tune of N3bn. As the underwriter, our obligations was to take up whatever investors fail to buy. So, what we did was basically to buy that portion of the bond that was not taken up by investors. Fundamentally, we support any state government that wants to develop its state and if anybody approaches us with the intention of raising fund and we are convinced that it is for the development of that state, we would support that person to raise funds from the capital market particularly if the borrowing is for capital development .

What the state government has done is to fast track development that would now catalyse economic growth in that state. If you look at what happened in Dubai, the government borrowed to build infrastructure and as the whole world is coming to invest in Dubai, they are now recovering the cost of their investment.

They are also able to pay off the debt and at the same time create full employment for their citizens. So, that is the beauty of borrowing. The key thing is that you should be able to borrow wisely and invest wisely particularly in those projects that would generate economic returns which would not only pay off the cost of borrowing but also help in expanding economic space.

How best do you think the government can tackle the alarming rate of unemployment in the country?

I think one of the things the government must do is to give priority to employment creation. If that becomes the number one priority of the government, then issues of maintaining exchange rate stability and inflation will be secondary. So, if our objective is to grow the economy, then we need to bring down the interest rate. We need to review downwards the Monetary policy ratio and the cash reserve ratio to the extent that it would allow banks lend to invest in these sectors to the real sector of the economy.

As the the sector begins to access funding, they would be able to go into productive activities. At the current cash reserve ratio for banks to recover their cost of funds, they must lend at above 20 percent interest rate but there are very few productive activities that would borrow at 20 percent and still be able to service the interest, make profit and pay back the loan.

But if we have lower interest rates like other countries who are driving economic recovery such as USA which have maintained zero interest rate for almost ten years and with that they have been able to grow their economy. The American economy has been able to grow at more than 2.9 percent per annum and we are seeing a drop in unemployment by about 250,000 every month. I think that’s the direction the government should follow . Lets drop the cash reserve ratio and monetary policy, the inflationary impact would moderate as productivity improves.

Buhari: “My people are useless, my people are senseless, my people are indiscipline”

Buhari
Muhamadu Buhari
A wise man once told me: “Nigerians are mules, everyone who can, kicks at them.” The thing is, the more things change, the more they feel the same. In 1984, Major-General Muhamadu Buhari as military tyrant diagnosed “indiscipline” as Nigeria’s national malaise.
The sexy power word in those days was “summarily.” Buhari promised that the military government of which he was head would “summarily” deal with any Nigerian who was found wanting in “discipline.” He quickly launched a “War Against Indiscipline.” It caught on fire.
Nigerians were pressed to “behave.” They began to queue for buses and other services in places like Lagos, notorious for jumping queues. That was the greatest achievement of WAI: Nigerians learnt to queue. Military governors sometimes arrived the gates of government secretariats very early, and waited for government workers who arrived late.
Late-coming civil servants were humiliated, made to kneel down irrespective of their office or positions, or age, and frog-jumped as punishment for coming late to work. In some cases, they were “summarily dismissed.” Buhari’s government authorized armed soldiers to raid warehouses, and seize the goods of traders accused of “hoarding essential commodities.” That was in a period, of course, when “ESSENCO”was very scarce. Buhari’s War Against Indiscipline, stemmed from his genuine convictions that Nigerians were an undisciplined lot, and had to be forced to obey the simple laws of the land, and of courtesy.
Recent evidence suggests that Buhari continues to believe this as a fundamental problem with the Nigerian character. Last week, our friends, Dr. Barry and Claire Mauer had us all over for a party for Claire’s birthday at their College Park, Orlando, home. We were all going at it, with a little wine and sherry, and that good stuff, when Shanti, another friend of ours said, “I hear your president say all you Nigerians are unruly, and you need to stop being unruly!” I too had heard that the previous day on the BBC.
It was big news for the BBC that president Buhari’s Independence Day message to Nigerians was that Nigerians were “unruly.” It triggered their fancy so much that they made such an event of it. They brought a Nigerian, whose name I do not now recall, and Ghana’s Elizabeth Ohene, to talk about the “unruliness” of Nigerians as claimed by a president who increasingly seems really disconnected from the Nigerian reality. In the symbolic moment of Nigeria’s 55th anniversary as an Independent nation, more sober considerations should have been made regarding the trajectory of Nigeria’s journey, the transitions that have been made, and the true reasons for the failures of Nigeria.
We should rather celebrate the hardiness and resilience of Nigerians in the face of a terribly confused administration as Buhari’s is turning out to be.Ordinary Nigerians must not be made to carry the can for failed political leadership this past fifty-five years, of which Buhari has been a distinct part. The President had not much to say to Nigerians except that Nigerians are unruly and discourteous, and must change, in order to achieve development. Actually, this is the worst Independence Day speech I have heard of any Nigerian president. It had no concrete facts. It simply was high on the weed of self-indulgence. On such a symbolic day, President Buhari should have celebrated Nigeria, and offered it hope.
There are ordinary Nigerians laboring heroically to turn the disadvantages of being Nigerian into something hopeful, and meaningful. Nigerians are not unruly. The Nigerian child I know is taught, right from the home, to be courteous, and respectful of people, especially, older people. Nigerians know to “throway salute” when they meet you. They say, “Afternoon, sir!” “Enlee ma!” “I boola chi e!” and so on. Nigerians are not, by their very nature, or even by acculturation, unruly or discourteous.
Our political leaders have been unruly and discourteous. Those are the real culprits and makers of our national malaise. They have very little regard or respect for the civil and economic rights of Nigerians. Anyone who suddenly arrives at political office, begins immediately to see the rest Nigerians as adversaries and enemies; people who must be contained and repressed, and garrisoned.
Nigerians are constantly infantilized in the minds of the men and women who arrive at power. That is the true meaning of unruliness: to ride rough-shod on your county men because you have the privilege of the protections of public office.
It is unruly of public office holders to capture the road on a hot, uncomfortable, tropical day, with sirens and a long convoy, and horse-whip people to the sideways, and travel freely while the rest must deal with congested traffic. It is unruly to shield political power holders behind the barricade of high walls inside government buildings, while the rest of Nigerians are left to the vagaries of crime. I think President Buhari must first, look inward.
As president, propriety demands that he be accompanied by no more than his police orderly in public, while the secret service organize his security with unseen and invisible agents, who mingle with the crowd, without harassing Nigerians with an overwhelming image of armed power. It is the image of overwhelming force, especially modeled by the military that has created the psychological crisis that has reduced Nigerians to its current social miasma. Nigerians, subjected to force rather than governance, since 1966, are suffering from the trauma of social violence, and are reproducing that violence. They know nothing else but the unruliness modeled by the makers of the public system: the government, and political leadership. It will not do merely to preach order, curtsey in society, when the conditions in which Nigerians live make it possible.
If there was a well-organized public transport system, Nigerians would have no need to “rush.” But in a city like Lagos, with a population over fifteen million, to have only one means of moving that population is madness in itself. It is nightmarish, and the social pressure of moving about in Lagos which ought to, like cities even half its size, have an underground system, a surface metro system, a water transport system, as well as well-kept roads that do not clog up movement, makes courtesy difficult, and unruliness only a means of survival.
A man who has no access to clean public toilets, must defecate, and if he cannot find any will be forced to the indignity of relieving himself in public. To prevent that, it is incumbent on governments to provide clean public toilets in strategic places, to prevent such unruliness. The government itself must model the meaning of courtesy, by treating the public with the highest respect in public.
A government officer, like a policeman or soldier or tax collector, who harasses any member of the public is modeling unruliness; a government who keeps armed soldiers and police on the highways and streets where they harass Nigerians, is an unruly administration, and will reproduce an unruly nation.
A government that offers, not work, but whips to Nigerians, will create the kind of social pressure that will make civilized conduct impossible. So, President Buhari should for a moment, get off the back of Nigerians. Nigerians did not elect him merely to preach, they elected him to act. So, to make Nigerians more courteous, the government should begin a work program, strengthen internal regulations and enforcement codes in the public service, provide public infrastructure, enough to make an aggressive search for it redundant. That will reduce the kind of social pressures that make Nigerians unruly.

Wednesday, 19 August 2015

JAMB to re-distribute candidates with lower scores to other universities.

File Photo: JAMB examination in a centre in Abuja

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, JAMB, has said it will re-distribute candidates who scored above 280 but whose scores are less than cut-off-marks of their first choice universities to needy institutions .
This is contained in a statement signed by the Head, Media and Publicity of the board, Fabian Benjamin, and made available to journalists on Sunday in Lagos.
It said that the recent admission policy witnessed at the University of Lagos was aimed at ensuring that Nigerian universities admit only the top-best as was done globally.
It would be recalled that candidates and their parents had on Wednesday, July 22, staged a peaceful protest at the University of Lagos gate over the high cut-off marks for 2015/2016 post-UTME screening.
“Sequel to this development, the board has redistributed the other candidates with cut-off marks less than what their first choice required to needy institutions.
“The board, equally, urges candidates and their parents to check its website from Friday, July 31, 2015 for their names and institutions they are placed in,’’ the statement said.
According to the statement, universities are centres of excellence anywhere in the world and that of Nigeria should not be an exception.
It said that JAMB was working round the clock to ensure that Nigerian universities were among the best in Africa and perhaps the world in the next ranking.
The statement explained that the board was also cautious about utilizing the available spaces in admitting more candidates bearing in mind the admission criteria of various needy institutions.
“The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has reiterated that the national cut-off marks of 180 for universities.
“We also have 150 for Polytechnics, Colleges of Education and Innovative Enterprise institutions in the 2015 UTME as a bench mark to set the tone for 2015 admission exercise.
“The decision to have a national accepted cut-off mark at the policy meeting was to serve as a guide and pruning mechanism.
“It will also give the tertiary institutions qualitative and manageable candidates to choose from a pool of candidates desirous of tertiary education.
“However, universities and other levels of tertiary institutions are at liberty to go higher, but not lower, depending on their peculiarities and the performance of candidates that choose them,’’ it explained.
The statement added that the board wished to state that no candidate would be denied any right to aspire to tertiary education.
According to the statement, the board is equally aware that some universities have their own admission cut-off marks acceptable by the board for the various courses they offered.
“Please be informed that the board will always ensure that these institutions apply this cut-off marks uniformly across all candidates without discrimination.
“The decision of the board on the print-out for this year exercise was done in good faith and not to jeopardize the right of candidates due to individual cut-off set by some Nigerian tertiary institutions.
“Those candidates who do not meet the cut-off marks of such institutions will be placed in needy institutions within their geo-political zone depending on available spaces in such institutions.
“The board’s aim is to accommodate as many candidates as possible instead of just pushing them to schools we know abinitio does not have the carrying capacity to admit all,’’ the statement said
The statement asked that if UNILAG, with a carrying capacity of about 9,000 candidates, has over 60,000 applying to it, what happens to the over 50,000 others?
It said that in such occasion, the board would ensure that there was balance by ensuring that those remaining candidates who were not too fortunate to meet the cut-off marks were also placed in other needy institutions.
According to the statement, candidates are to note that the policy is only meant to ensure that every candidate with a reasonable score of 180 and above is placed somewhere.
It added that Nigerians were also urged to believe in the board as it continually strives to give the entire education system the best.
“We are not comfortable with the large number of candidates that sits for the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), year in year out without gaining admission.
“It is the belief of the board that this policy will address the shortfall and accommodate more,” the statement said.
(NAN)

Indecently dressed candidates barred from Unilorin post-UTME exams.

Unilorin

The University of Ilorin says 65, 000 candidates seeking admission into the school for the 2015/2016 academic session have been cleared to appear for post UTME screening which begins on Monday, August 17.
The Deputy Director, Corporate Affairs of the institution, Kunle Akogun, who made this known in a statement in Ilorin on Sunday, said the week long exercise would hold simultaneously in Ilorin and Lagos.

Mr. Akogun said only candidates who scored a minimum of 180 marks in the 2015 UTME and made the University their first choice would take part in the computer-based test.
He advised candidates to bring along to their respective centres printed copies of their examination schedules indicating that they were slated to write the examination at a particular date and time.

Mr. Akogun said this became necessary as there were many batches for the examination daily.
He also advised prospective candidates to bring along with them payment receipts generated from the students’ portal of the University’s website.

He warned that the accreditation team would insist on the receipt from the varsity’s website to verify candidate’s identity– through pictures that tally with the face of each candidate.
He said that only registered candidates for the screening exercise would be allowed into the screening premises.
Mr. Akogun cautioned the candidates against indecent dressing and bringing of cell phones or any electronic appliance into the examination hall.

“Candidates for the pre-admission screening exercise are also advised to be decently dressed, as candidates with indecent dressing will not be allowed into the screening premises.
“Also, phones and all other forms of mobile communication, electronic devices, bags and luggage are not allowed within the screening premises,” he said.

73, 250 of the over 107,000 candidates that applied for admission into the University this year scored 180 marks and above at the UTME.
By the close of the portal on Sunday, only 65, 000 out of the 73, 250 qualified candidates registered for the post UMTE. (NAN)