Column Left

Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts

Friday, 21 April 2017

Release Deji Adeyanju Now or Face the Consequence, Civil Society Groups Warn Police

Release Deji Adeyanju Now or Face the Consequence, Civil Society Groups Warn Police

The arrest of Prince Deji Adeyanju by the police over his mobilization of Nigerians to rally against the secret trial and freedom of Nnamdi Kanu, the IPOB leader, will spell doom for the nation. This much was contained in a statement signed by the Convener of the Movement for the Advancement of National Transformation (MANTRA), Comrade Jude Ndukwe on behalf of other civil society groups.
Deji Adeyanju, the Convener of Concerned Nigerians, a Pro-Democracy group, had organized the Pro-Nnamdi Kanu rally scheduled to take off at the Unity Fountain, Abuja, today, to call the attention of the world to what it called “the serial injustices and acts of brutality meted out to the leader of the IPOB group by the tyrannical government of the day”.
The statement reads in full below:
Following the urgent nature of the issue on ground, I have the mandate of over 50 civil society groups to make the following statement.
We have just heard of the arrest of Prince Deji Adeyanju, Convener of Concerned Nigerians, over his organization of a peaceful rally tagged #FreeNnamdiKanu which was meant to, once again, bring the attention of the world to the many inhuman treatments which the despotic government of Muhammadu Buhari has subjected the IPOB leader to including the secret trial he is forced to pass through.
Without much ado, we urgently and strongly demand that Mr Adeyanju be released immediately or this government which has so shamelessly descended into brazen fascism and tyranny in a supposed democratic dispensation will have the wrath of a resolute coalition of civil society organizations to contend with. This nonsense has got to stop!
The wanton arrests, detention and or even killing of journalists, bloggers, human rights and political activists and opponents, religious adherents etc, by this government has got to its height and we have to put an end to it now. We can no longer afford to continue to fold our arms while a very tiny fraction of our society as represented by the police and the military stifles us and deny us our inalienable rights. Enough is enough!
This government should be ready to face a flurry of furious protests capable of shutting government activities down if Deji Adeyanju and all those arrested with him are not released immediately.
The cause for which Deji was arrested is a just one. Nnamdi Kanu has no reason to be subjected to any secret trial and other deliberate humiliations from Muhammadu Buhari and his whimsical servants while notorious and murderous Boko Haram and Fulani herdsmen terrorists are given kingly treatments and even paid compensations for murdering fellow Nigerians who do not share the same religion and ethnicity with those in power.
We have been in the trenches with Deji for some time now. We organized the Anti-Social Media Bill rally. It was peaceful. We organized the #IstandWithNigeria rally. It was peaceful. We organized the pro-Amnesty International Rally. It was peaceful. We organized a rally to warn the executive to stop undermining the legislative arm of government. It was also peaceful, and many more.
Deji Adeyanju is a peaceful activist. None of the rallies he called or participated in has ever gone violent. So why arrest such a man if not that this government is deliberately on the path of incurring the wrath of civil society groups?
We are watching and warning. The keg of gunpowder upon which this nation has been sitting since the inglorious second coming of Buhari is about to go off. Free Prince Deji Adeyanju now or face the consequences.
Signed:
Jude Chijioke Ndukwe
Convener, Movement for the Advancement of National Transfomation (MANTRA)
For and on behalf of Coalition of Civil Society Organisations

Wednesday, 8 June 2016

Kaduna: Christian Man Accused Of Blasphemy And Stabbed For Eating During Ramadan


Kaduna: Christian Man Accused Of Blasphemy And Stabbed For Eating During Ramadan
Barely 10 days after a mob killed an Igbo woman for allegedly committing blasphemy in Kano, a 41- year old carpenter, Francis Emmanuel, was stabbed on Tuesday, June 7, 2016,afternoon by unknown youths for eating during the Ramadan fast in Kaduna State.
Kaduna’s Governor Nasir El-Rufai visited the victim of the assault earlier this morning at St. Gerard Catholic Hospital where he ordered the police to fish out the perpetrators for prosecution.
The incident occurred at 2:30pm on Tuesday when Emmanuel was eating in his workshop when the youths suddenly appeared from nowhere and started attacking him for eating on the afternoon of Ramadan.
Speaking with journalists from his hospital bed, the carpenter spoke of his terrifying ordeal.
“It happened around 2:30pm at Sokoto Road, Kakuri, on Tuesday, when I went to the market to buy wood to do some work,” Emmanuel said. “So, when I came back, I bought food to eat. As I was eating, about six Hausa boys came to ask me if I am a Muslim or a Christian, but I did not answer them.”
“They asked why I was not fasting, then, I told them that I am not a Muslim. Before I know it, one of them slapped me. As I stood up, the rest came and surrounded me and started attacking me with knives.”
Emmanuel then told the gathered journalists he did not know the identity of the vicious and bigoted attackers.
“Nobody could come to my aid because of the type of knives the boys were carrying. They used cutlasses scissors and knives, I became unconscious, I don’t even know who brought me to the hospital,” he added.

Friday, 20 May 2016

FG TO REMOVE FERTILIZER SUBSIDY


  • No plan by FG to remove subsidy on fertiliser, says Official

  • Abuja – Prof. Victor Chude, the Chairman, National Fertiliser Technical Committee, Ministry of Agriculture, says the Federal Government has no plan of removing fertiliser subsidy now as alleged in some media reports.

  • Chude said this in an interview with on the sidelines of the 2nd Annual West African Fertiliser Stakeholders Forum in Abuja on Friday.

  • Some media reports had quoted Chief Audu Ogbeh, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, as saying that the government had removed subsidy on fertiliser.

  • He said the subsidy would only be removed after the government had met farmers` conditions of prompt availability and affordability of the commodity.

  • “Government is not removing subsidy now.

  • “It would be removed at a fixed period on a condition that farmers get the right fertiliser such as crop and soil specific fertiliser at the right time, early enough before the rains and at a good price.

  • “Farmers must also have access to credit at single digit interest rate at five per cent and the value to the produce, which is what the Federal Government is working to achieve.

  • “Once these conditions are met, the subsidy will be removed.

  • “Farmers would not need the subsidy by then because they will have access to the credit at affordable interest rate of five per cent compared to 20-25 per cent that banks are currently giving.

  • “It is only when they have achieved this that subsidy can be removed, “ the chairman said.

Brent back above $49 as oil prices resume uptick


Brent back above $49 as oil prices resume uptick

Brent crude powered back above $49 a barrel in Asia Friday as oil prices resumed their rise after the dollar eased and militants blew up another pipeline in African producer Nigeria.



A rally that pushed oil prices to a series of 2016 highs since last week had taken a breather over the past two days after minutes of an April meeting showed that the US Fed kept the door open to raising interest rates in June, sending the dollar higher.

A stronger greenback puts downward pressure on oil, as it makes the dollar-priced commodity more expensive, curtailing demand and depressing prices.

At around 0615 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in June was up 48 cents, or 1.00 percent, at $48.64 and Brent crude for July gained 39 cents, or 0.80 percent, to $49.20.

Analysts said prices resumed their uptick after the dollar eased and threats of supply disruptions returned to the fore following the bombing of a gas pipeline owned by the Nigerian subsidiary of Italy’s Eni in the latest attack on the country’s oil facilities.

Earlier, a new militant group called the Niger Delta Avengers(NDA) carried out several attacks on key pipelines and facilities operated by oil majors Shell and Chevron, hurting output in Africa’s biggest economy and major crude producer.

Officials said Nigeria’s output had slumped to 1.4 million barrels per day from 2.2 million because of the unrest.

The Nigeria disruptions come on top of a reduction in Canada’s output due to wildfires threatening the country’s oil sands region.

“The pause in the dollar rally and continued concerns over supply disruptions in Nigeria are supportive of oil prices,” said Bernard Aw, an analyst with IG Markets in Singapore.

“In addition, Anas Al-Saleh, Kuwait’s acting oil minister… expects the oil market to rebalance in the second half of this year as demand increases. Therefore, it could be only a matter of time before crude pushes beyond $50,” he told AFP.

US Federal Reserve policymakers meet from June 14-15, with investors watching their decision on interest rates.

The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries also meets on June 2 in Vienna, with the market fixed on whether they will take action to

Saturday, 7 May 2016

Test Post



General label test