Home Blog Page 1912

Rumbles In NFF: FIFA’s Sack Damocles Hangs On Nigeria

Giwa and PinnickWorld’s football governing body, FIFA, has threatened to sanction Nigeria again if the ruling of a Jos Federal High Court in Plateau State sacking the Amaju Pinnick as the President of the Nigeria Football Association is implemented.
Such sanctions, FIFA said, could include a ban on Nigeria from international football.
The position of FIFA was contained in a letter by its Acting Secretary General, Markus Kattner.
Kattner in the latter addressed to Pinnick and dated April 11, 2016, expressed surprise that Chris Giwa could resort to a court action after he had taken his case to the highest judicial sport authorities, the Court of Arbitration for Sport, and lost there.
FIFA said it was not pleased that football issues could be taken to normal courts when its law forbids such.
This is not the first time FIFA will threaten to sanction Nigeria over the face-off between Pinnick and Giwa.
The last time Giwa forcefully took over the NFF secretariat in Abuja, FIFA pronounced a ban on Nigeria.
It took the intervention of former President Goodluck Jonathan to resolve the face-off, with FIFA lifting the ban thereafter.
The letter by Kattner reads in full:

Mr. Amaju Melvin Pinnick
President
Nigeria Football Federation (NFF)
E-mail: nigeria_fa@yahoo.com
Zurich, 11 April 2016
ASG/pco

Verdict of the Jos Federal High Court

Dear President,
We acknowledge receipt of your correspondence dated 8 April 2016 with regard to the ruling of the Federal High Court in Jos which apparently nullified the elections of 30 September 2014 of the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF).
In this respect, and first of all, we would Iike to remind you that according to articles 13 and 17 of the FIFA Statutes, all members associations have to manage their affairs independently and with no influence from third parties In addition and according to article 68 of the FIFA Statutes, recourse to ordinary courts of Iaw is prohibited unless specifically provided for in the FIFA regulations.
Furthermore, it is the duty of each member association to ensure that these provisions are implemented by its members and possibly take sanctions against those which fail to respect these obligations.
In view of the above, the decision of the Federal High Court in Jos, if implemented, would likely be considered as interference in the internal affairs of the NFF and the case would be brought to the highest authorities of FIFA for consideration of sanctions, including the suspension of the NFF.
Lastly, we would like to Stress that the plaintiff in question already filed an appeal in relation to the same matter with the highest judicial Sport authorities, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), and that said appeal was dismissed by the CAS on 18 May 2015.
We thank you for taking note of the above and kindly ask you to keep us informed of any
development.

Yours sincerely,
FIFA
TI. (l Markus Kattner
Acting Secretary General. [myad]

2016 Budget: No Friction Between Buhari And Lawmakers – Ita Enang

Senator Ita EnangSenior Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters (Senate), Senator Ita Enang, has made it clear that there is no friction between President Muhammmadu Buhari  and members of the National Assembly regarding the 2016 national budget.

He insisted that the President did not reject the budget as being speculated, saying that such speculation was untrue.

Enang who spoke to newsmen in Abuja today, Monday said that what Buhari did before he travelled to China was to send the budget to ministries in order to get feedbacks that would inform his assent.

“The president received the budget and convened an emergency Federal Executive Council meeting.

“He gave each of the ministers, departments and agencies the opportunity to look at the details as submitted by the National Assembly.

“This is to enable him get opinion on the state of the budget to enable him take a decision. The exercise was conducted on Friday and it is ongoing by the different ministers and ministries.”

Enang said that currently, Buhari had not fouled the constitutional time frame to assent to the budget, adding that it should not be assumed that the budget had been rejected.

“The constitutional time frame for Mr. President’s receiving and considering the budget began on Friday last week. The question has not arisen as to returning or otherwise.

“But, I want to say the best way we as liaison officers are handling this matter is to speak less and work more, creating interactions.

“So, we will raise more interactions, consultations, engagements. There is nothing for the country to worry about, because we do not want to have crisis between the Executive and the Legislature, and it would not arise; this is one government.” [myad]

Channels Television Reporter Kidnapped In Imo

Kidnappers 2The correspondent of Channels Television in Imo state, Mr. Tope Kuteye has been kidnapped. He was reportedly kidnapped at his residence in Owerri at about 3am today, Monday.

Vice President of the South East Zone of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Comrade Chris Isiguzo who announced the kidnap in a statement, called on his abductors to release him unconditionally as he is neither a politician or  money bag.

Part of the statement reads: “Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) Zone C (South East) has received with shock, the report of the kidnap of Channels Television Correspondent in Owerri, Imo State, Mr. Tope Kuteye by 3am Monday April 11, 2016.

Kuteye is neither a politician nor a money-bag business man. It therefore baffles the Union as to why he should be the target of this dastardly act.

We therefore appeal to the abductors of Mr. Kuteye to release him unconditionally without delay.We similarly call on law enforcement agencies to leave no stone unturned to secure the release of Kuteye soonest should his abductors hedge.

We regret that journalists, who are always at the forefront in the battle for social change, accountability, transparency in governance and social justice should be made the victim of the vices they stood against.

Please, and please, we plead with abductors of our colleague to release him without further day!

Signed: 1. Comrade Christopher Isiguzo, Vice President, NUJ Zone C.2. Comrade Kenneth Ofoma, Secretary NUJ Zone C. [myad]

How Police Inspector Initiated Me Into Armed Robbery, Young Man Alleges

Police robbersA 21-year-old suspected robber, Akeem Popoola, has narrated how he was initiated into armed robbery by a police inspector attached to the Special Anti-Robbery Squad of the Lagos State Police Command, Ikeja..

Popoola who is a carpenter before he switched over to his new trade, said that he had worked for the policeman, identified as Inspector Festus, aka Ijaya, for about four months before he was arrested.

The carpenter, who is currently in police custody at the Agbado divison, Ogun State, was arrested for robbery and burglary.

A mattress and speakers of a sound system were reportedly recovered from him in the Giwa area of Agbado on April 6.

Popoola said that apart from burglary, he used to collect phones from the police inspector and he would later sell them. He added that Ijaya and two others – Abbey and Aluko – would get the buyers arrested minutes later for buying stolen items.

Akeem said their victims paid Ijaya between N120,000 and N150,000 before they were released, adding that he got N5,000 as his share on each ‘deal’.

He said that it all started in November 2015, when one of his father’s tenants and him fought. “When my daddy came back home on that day, she reported me to him and he handed me over to Inspector Festus at the state police command headquarters, Ikeja. He told him I was too troublesome and wanted him to discipline me. But he (Ijaya) did not. He took me to a beer parlor at Alakuko and gave me N5,000. I was very surprised.

“Two days after, we met at another beer parlour around Agbado, where I was made to swear an oath. He brought out a gun and put some gin inside the barrel. He drank from it and gave me the gun to do same. He said he would be sending me on some errands. He gave me a mobile phone and drove me in his Toyota Camry to POWA complex in Ikeja.

“He told me to sell the phone inside the complex which I did for N20,000. After an hour, he handcuffed me and took me in his car with his boys – Abbey and Aluko – to the man that bought the phone. He arrested the man and told him to pay N200,000 if he did not want to be taken to the station. The man raised N150,000 among his friends in that complex and gave him.

“When we left there, he removed the handcuffs and gave me N5,000 and we departed.”

The Oke Ona, Abeokuta indigene said the second deal he had with Ijaya was an iPad he sold to another unsuspecting victim around Ikeja. He said he got a N5,000 share from the N150,000 bribe the inspector allegedly collected from the buyer, who was also accused of acquiring stolen property.

He added that when he decided to quit, Ijaya refused and threatened that since they had sworn an oath, he would die if he backed out from the deal or revealed it to his father.

“Sometime in February, the inspector gave me a Techo phone which I sold to a guy at Agbado. The guy gave me N7,000 and a small phone. Thirty minutes later, we went back with my hands handcuffed. And as he normally did, he collected about N120,000 from him before he was released. I also got my N5,000 share. I can say all this in his presence.”

Akeem said he had stolen a plasma television at Oke Aro area of Agbado on the order of Ijaya, insisting that the item was still with the policeman.

His father, Mr. Ahmed Popoola, who regretted handing him over to the policeman, said his son was a thief before he took him to Ijaya for discipline.

He said that he strove to meet Akeem’s needs and had counselled him on several occasions to no avail.

“He had been stealing before I took him to a police friend, Yekini, who handed him over to Ijaya with a belief that he (Akeem) will change if he sees the way thieves are being punished. He had been embarrassing me. He still has a case in the Sango-Ota division. I was arrested and detained because of him.

“When he finished his secondary school, he told me he did not want to proceed to a higher institution. I enrolled him as an apprentice in my carpentry workshop and constructed a wooden shop for him when he graduated. He removed all the planks I used to construct the shop and sold them. Let the law take its course.”

The spokesperson for the Ogun State Police Command, DSP Muyiwa Adejobi, said the police were on the trail of Ijaya and his accomplices, adding that the case had been transferred to the command’s Special Anti-Robbery Squad.

“The suspect was arrested for robbery and burglary. He mentioned Ijaya and some others and we have commenced investigation. If any of them is actually a policeman, we are going to send a signal to the command he is attached to and he will be arrested.”

But the Lagos State Police spokesperson, SP Dolapo Badmos, disowned Ijaya, saying that he is not a serving cop in the command.

 

Source: Punch. [myad]

Chibok Girls: US Special squad In Nigeria To Fight For Their Release

US Mark TonerThe United States of America has announced the arrival of a special squad in Nigeria for the purpose of retrieving the over 200 female students of the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok in Borno state, who were abducted by members of Boko Haram in April 2014.

The US said that the squad consists of “specialists on temporary assignment from a variety of US government agencies who are trying to work on assisting the Nigerian government on this particular case.”

Deputy Spokesman of the US Department of State, Mark Toner, who spoke to journalists in in Washington , warned members of Boko Haram to release the girls unconditionally before it is too late for them, stressing that America will continue to work and provide any assistance it can to obtain their eventual release.

Toner said: “we call for all hostages, including these young women and girls who’ve been held by Boko Haram, to be released immediately without preconditions. We support Nigerian efforts to bring about the safe recovery of those kidnapped and we continue to advise them on their response to this, as well as on general counter-terrorism and counter-Boko Haram efforts.”

“And that assistance takes a number of forms. One is intelligence; training, advice on strategic communications, but also victim support services and assistance to those who have suffered under Boko Haram.

“I think we’ve given upwards of $198 million in humanitarian assistance to the populations in Nigeria that have been affected by Boko Haram’s continued attacks, terrorist activity.

“So, we’re looking at ways that we can ramp up our support for Nigeria’s security services and any assistance that we can provide to help the victims of these attacks, whether they’re from the terrorist attacks or kidnap victims as well.” [myad]

Nigerian Pirates Kidnap 6 Turkish Crew With Their Ship

KidnappersSix Turkish crew members on board a private Turkish tanker have been kidnapped by Nigerian pirates in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State.

Turkey’s ambassador to Nigeria, Hakan Cakil, confirmed in Abuja that the private Turkish tanker Puli, a merchant vessel designed to transport liquids or gases in bulk, was seized by Nigerian pirate gangs early Monday.

Cakil added that the Turkish crew members, working for Turkish Kaptanoglu Navigation, are in good health and the tanker is now offshore, 90 miles south of Nigeria.

The ambassador said he is in contact with Turkey’s Foreign Ministry, the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, and the company.

“This area is extremely unsafe and the issue of piracy is very prevalent. We will do our best to secure the release [of the crew members] as soon as possible through legal channels.”

Cakil added that in previous instances of piracy seen in the same area, the criminals generally demand a ransom. [myad]

2019 Presidency: Carry Go, Taraba APC Tells Buhari

BUHARI campaign 2The Taraba State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has already endorsed President Muhammadu Buhari for a second term despite that he has spent less than 11 months in office.

This was part of the 11 resolutions unanimously reached by the party leaders at a meeting convened at the weekend in Taraba.

Reading the communiqué of the meeting to journalists, the state chairman of the party, Hassan Ardo, said out that APC members in the state “unanimously declared a vote of confidence on the leadership of both the state and national executives of the party.”

“The APC members declared their total and unconditional support for all the policies and programmes of the Federal Government and endorsed President Muhammadu Buhari for second tenure if he is interested in contesting in 2019.

”It urged all APC members to remain loyal to the Federal Government to enable it to successfully deliver on all its campaign promises.

“The meeting noted with great concern the continued victimization of APC members in the state especially civil servants on their perceived sympathy to the APC.

“The meeting condemns in strong terms the politics of religion, ethnicity and other divisive sentiments by the PDP led government and calls on all Tarabans to remain united.

“The APC has resolved to engage the Taraba State Government constructively on all its policies and programs.”

The meeting had in attendance leaders of the party in the state as well as state and federal lawmakers elected on the party’s platform. [myad]

Another Desperate Memo To President Buhari, By Dele Momodu

Dele Momodu 1Your Excellency, Assalam Alaikum. It has been over six months since you graciously invited me to your office in Abuja. I must note once again that I was truly honoured and humbled by our one-on-one meeting. We spoke and interacted like two old buddies. What was more, I was all alone with you without a third party in the room. We spoke candidly and cracked jokes freely. I remember presenting you with an advance copy of my forthcoming book and you even requested me to autograph it for you which I did with such pride and gratitude in me. We took loads of pictures before and after the meeting. I left you reassured in my belief that Nigeria is in safe hands.

Sir, a lot has happened since that meeting took place. In fact, so much water has passed under the bridge. Let me take you down memory lane a bit. You started contesting the Presidential election as far back as 2003. For three consecutive times, you lost and it seemed all hope had evaporated. In 2011, we were co-contestants. I was driven to your house one night by Prince Lanre Tejuoso (now a Senator) who wanted me to tone down my criticism of you and opposition to your candidacy. I was totally disarmed by your humility and simplicity. You spoke softly and candidly. I felt you were too old to return to a post you left nearly 30 years ago but you were certain you still have so much in you to offer Nigeria. The Jonathan government that won the election at that time was ushered in with so much hope and promise. After that election, you said that you would never seek elective office again. After three arduous attempts, you must have felt it was all a bloody waste of time seeking an opportunity to rebuild an irredeemable country that seemed determined to be plunged into the abyss by those you were convinced did not mean well for the country. But the government that promised us fresh air soon lost its sail and floundered aimlessly.

It wobbled and fumbled till it became obvious that something had to be done to avert a monumental catastrophe, the kind that you had foreseen. The situation became so bad that most of us were left with no choice but to see you as our only God-sent redeemer. This was how the stone previously and repeatedly rejected by the builders suddenly transfigured into the much needed cornerstone. Your most caustic critics soon became your ardent fanatics. We were hypnotized and mesmerized by your new look. You were repackaged as a reformed and born again democrat. We studiously ignored your military credentials and dictatorial proclivity. The young and old screamed your name from the rooftops. Many youths were ready to march for you and even die in the process. The last time we witnessed such a phenomenon was in 1993 when Chief Moshood Abiola contested and won the June 12 Presidential election which was later annulled by your former colleagues in the army. You and your political party enjoyed a whirlwind romance with Nigerians. The covenant was based on mutual trust and the hope that you had robust knowledge of Nigerian history as well as vast experience in governance. Your avowed integrity was the icing on the cake. We expected you to inspire us as a veritable example of honesty personified. The election came and you won almost effortlessly. What mattered to us was for someone to liberate and remove us from the suffocating yoke of the PDP. You looked the perfect man to do it. Of course, to whom much is given much is expected.

The burden of proof and expectation hung around your neck like an albatross. Soon, it seemed Nigerians thought and assumed that they had voted for a magician and so expected miracles to happen instantaneously. Trouble started very early. You inherited a government with plummeting revenues as the crude oil which greased the economy had suffered a massive collapse in price thus emasculating our country’s fortune and reserves. In addition, just before you returned to power the outgoing government had twice devalued the Naira leaving you with a currency that was set for free fall. In short the Government that you assumed control of was one which was like a disaster waiting to happen. Nigerians are generally impatient. We are action-packed and expect talismanic results. Unfortunately that has not happened and is not likely to happen soon no matter how hard you try. Sir, let me stop the introduction and go straight to the crux of the matter. While I do not want to sound like a doomsday prophet, I wish to alert you that there is fire on the mountain. This is not a subtle or covert attempt to create any panic. As a war General, I’m certain you have enough liver to withstand shock. But what I wish to say without mincing words is that we are yielding grounds to the enemies. Hard core supporters of your campaign like me are being derided by those who feel you are not living up to expectations. I know your handlers are likely to dismiss this as crying wolf where there is none but please, don’t listen to them.

The situation is very critical and may even get out of hand if not carefully and delicately managed. You are going to be against corruption is wonderful, it pales into irrelevance and insignificance where hunger, deprivation, poverty, unemployment, poor education, ignorance, diseases, insecurity of lives and properties and other complications are concerned. Many people are going to hail you for arresting the thieves but the same people will soon turn around to attack you when they can’t feel the effect of the war positively on their bodies and souls. In case you are shielded from reading the comments making the rounds, let me inform you Sir, that people are already saying they would rather have corruption back, out of the desperation and suffering they are going through. And these are not the so-called looters but the ordinary Nigerians. Nothing illustrates this more poignantly than the video posted by Instablog9ja on Instagram and other social media platforms yesterday showing a man that looks like a taxi driver being interviewed. The man said he is so frustrated that he wants Nigeria to perish and all of us with it instantaneously. He wished that we all die simultaneously, at once and suddenly. The clip has already gone viral globally. Therefore, if anyone tells you only the elites are grumbling, they are telling you a blatant lie, Sir. The poor who were your best friends and biggest supporters appear totally confused, disillusioned and ostensibly tired of the endless excuses coming out of your Administrations spokespeople.

I read somewhere that your foot-soldiers will soon embark on town hall meetings but I can assure you it won’t achieve anything. Why do you want to engage in campaign after election? Some expert scammers would just collect money for these jamborees. Nigerians want positive change and not a cacophony of lies bandied at stage managed, hurriedly assembled meetings populated by sycophants and glory hunters. They are ready to sacrifice but not when they think things are going from bad to worse. There is so much to do but without an agile economy nothing tangible can be achieved. The economy itself cannot be fixed in an atmosphere of permanent strife. One year will soon pass by next month and a second year shall begin. It is time to bite the bullet and take the economy head on. Forget about all distractions and concentrate on what really matters to the generality of our people. You will find out that once the economy is tamed all else will follow suit and the successes that you crave in your corruption crusade will start being manifested. I pray you will hearken to my humble advice and concentrate your energy on resurrecting the economy instead of embarking on a war of attrition.

You will be judged ultimately by the comfort you bring to your people and not the self-immolating pain you inflict on real and imaginary enemies. May Allah grant you the wisdom of Nelson Mandela who chose the path of reconciliation and national rebirth above the tempting choice of prolonging the horror of racial segregation. My warmest regards to you and yours always. I remain yours sincerely. told the usual tales and rigmarole of how corruption is fighting back. Yes, perhaps corruption is fighting back truly but it is because you did not prepare adequately for the backlash. The style and manner of the war you are waging has not been novel. The approach has been a rehash of the Obasanjo era with Nuhu Ribadu in charge. What would I have done differently if I were you? I would have traced and located the loot as much as possible before launching my attack. Surprise is one of the most effective weapons of war. And you are without doubt an accomplished General. It is only in Nigeria that investigators announce in advance who the next set of villains they are coming after will be. I would have gone to the courts to seek permission to freeze the looted funds. Thereafter, I would have asked my operatives to show evidence of the identified perpetrators and located the looters and ask for their cooperation in gently signing the purloined money back to the State without hullabaloo. I will then exchange a grudging handshake and tell them to sin no more. Those who wish to be difficult would be treated like hardened criminals and the full weight of the law would descend powerfully on such recalcitrant fellows. I would have kept the promise you made prior to assumption of office of drawing the line after being sworn in on May 29 and punish any fresh acts of rascality and irresponsibility. I will ensure there is a uniform treatment for all Nigerians, rich or poor, members of my party and others.

I will avoid anything that would suggest I’m principally after my perceived enemies and opponents. I will not create tension and confusion within my own party and accept the verdict of the people in their collective wisdom or stupidity. A house divided against itself cannot stand, I read in the Holy Bible. I would also make sure that as much as possible I would internalise the process and not wash the country’s dirty linen in public. Such tactics only tends to frighten away those who would assist us and make life unbearable for our citizens abroad. If we require assistance from other countries to repatriate our looted resources I would have engaged the leaders of those countries privately and sought their co-operation surreptitiously. I would have realised that even if they desired to assist my government they would be hampered by the rule of law enshrined in their respective jurisdictions and recourse would be required to the judicial process in those countries. My silent approach to the recovery of the looted funds would also ensure that the expectations of the people of this country would not be unnecessarily heightened. The money Abacha pillaged is still being recovered in staccato and stuttering fashion almost 20 years after his death. It is important for you to realise that corruption will fester and even explode when it is incubated in an economy approaching a comatose state as people seek to survive by all means possible. I will therefore make the economy my utmost priority. Trust me Sir, as important as the war. [myad]

FCT Council Polls: APC Wins Chairmanship Of 4 Councils, As INEC Declares 2 Inconclusive

FCT electionThe results of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Area Council elections held yesterday, Saturday have shown that the All Progressives Congress (APC) has won the chairmanship position in four out of the six Area Councils, even as the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has declared the elections in the remaining two Councils inconclusive.

The results brought into the INEC’s collation centre at Area 3 Primary School and which the APC won are those of Abaji, Kwali, Gwagwalada and Bwari while that of Kuje and the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC) were declared inconclusive.

Detailed of the results as at 9 p.m. today, Sunday showed that the APC won in Abaji with 9,840 votes as against the PDP’s 8,799; Kwali, APC 14,645, PDP’s 13,610, and Gwagwalada APC 25,476 and PDP 20,475. APC in Bwari polled 18,066 votes to defeat PDP which polled 13,279 votes
The Returning Officer for the election in Kuje, Nicholas Belikatu, who declared the exercise inconclusive, said none of the three candidates leading in the contest met the criteria to be declared winner.
According to Belikatu, a party must win with a simple majority of the votes cast, must score two-third spread across the 10 wards and number of cancelled votes should not exceed the difference between winner’s votes and runner-up’s.
He said: “The election results did not meet the three INEC criteria in some polling units.
“Therefore the results sheets and other materials will be moved to the INEC office at Area 10 for review, but the chairmanship election remains inconclusive.”
Belikatu had announced that the All Progressives Congress candidate scored 13,549 votes, with the Peoples Democratic Party scoring 11,478 votes and the All Progressives Grand Alliance polling 5,516 votes.
Agents of political parties that contested the elections, in their reactions, told the News Agency of Nigeria that they had no problem with the outcome of the exercise.
They, however, warned that INEC must ensure that elections would be repeated in the affected polling units.
In Karu, headquarters of AMAC, the Returning Officer, Prof. Sunday Ododo, said the 15,560 cancelled votes were more than the margin between the two leading political parties in the contest.
According to Ododo, while Abdullahi Halilu of the APC scored 26,602 votes, Bitrus Tanko of the PDP polled 21,230 votes, giving a margin of 5,372 votes.
He added: “However for a winner to emerge, the margin should be in excess of the number of votes cancelled.
“If you compare the margin between the winning party and the runner-up party, it is lower than the number of voters who could not cast their vote.
“For this reason, the AMAC chairmanship election is hereby declared inconclusive until election is conducted in affected pulling units.”
Ododo, from the University of Maiduguri, said the election was cancelled in 14 polling units, covering six registration areas and affected 15,360 registered voters.
The breakdown of the polling units affected, according to him, are one polling unit in Garki with 2,343 registered voters; Gwarinpa, three units with 1,675 registered voters; and one polling unit in Gui, with 2,628 registered voters.
Others, he said, were three polling units in Karishi, with 653 registered voters; four units in Karu, with 8,044 registered voters; and 17 units in Yanyan with 17 registered voters.
Breakdown of votes scored by the parties is Accord Party, 44; AA,14; ACD, 117; APC, 26,602; APGA, 812; CPP, 29.
Others are DPC, 19 votes; DPP, 33; NPPP, 80; PDP, 21,230; PPA, 191; DDP, 38; and UPP, 21 votes.
The APC agent for the election, Sani Bawa, expressed satisfaction with the election process, adding that the party was ready for the re-run. [myad]

Panama Papers: Protesters Want British PM To Resign: Group Want Nigerians Culprits Probed

British want PM to resignProtesters in London today, Saturday, called on Prime Minister David Cameron to resign after his family’s financial affairs were included in the so-called Panama Papers. This is even as the Nigeria’s Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) called on the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) to investigate current and past high-ranking public officers in Nigeria named in the Panama Papers.
Protesters who gathered on Downing Street, where the prime minister’s residence is located, held placards, some of which have inscriptions such as: “Time to go, chum” and “Defy Tori Rule” among others and chanting “What do we want? Cameron out!” and “Get the Tories out!”.
Speaking at his Conservative Party’s spring forum earlier yesterday, Saturday, Cameron said he should have handled scrutiny of his family’s tax arrangements better and promised to learn the lessons. He said it was his responsibility and that Downing Street staff should not be blamed.
“I know that I should have handled this better; I could have handled this better. I know there are lessons to learn, and I will learn them. And don’t blame Number 10 Downing Street, or nameless advisers, blame me,” he said.
Cameron’s admission came several days after negative media coverage and calls for his resignation.
The opposition Labour Party has also demanded Cameron make a statement to Parliament tomorrow, Monday regarding his financial affairs linked to off shore investments.
Leaked documents revealed that Cameron’s late father, Ian, owned part of the Bahamas-based Blairmore Holdings, one of the firms involved, in which the prime minister himself had an active interest until just before taking office.
Downing Street had issued several statements about the offshore companies without mentioning Cameron’s interest.
Thursday, Cameron admitted he had a stake in the fund and sold it for around $42,000 four months before he became prime minister in 2010.
The Panama Papers have also exposed the fact that more than half of the offshore companies implicated in the leak from Panama-based law firm Mossack-Fonseca are registered in British overseas territories.
And in Nigeria, SERAP, in a statement by the Executive Director, Adetokunbo Mumuni, gave the CCB 14 days to carry out the investigation, adding that anyone one found culpable should be sent to the tribunal for prosecution.
It added that if the bureau failed to investigate the cases, the group would not hesitate to use legal means to compel it to discharge that constitutional responsibility.
“SERAP believes that the Panama Papers have shown the extent to which public officers in the country are concealing their stolen wealth in safe havens and secrecy jurisdictions.
“This is contrary to the code of conduct for public officers, which prohibits public officers from maintaining and operating foreign accounts.
“We request Mr. Sam Saba, Chairman, Code of Conduct Bureau, to use his good office and leadership to urgently investigate current and immediate past high-ranking public officers named in the Panama Papers.
“They should also investigate others that are maintaining and operating or have maintained and operated foreign accounts in other safe havens and secrecy jurisdictions, and where appropriate, refer such to Code of Conduct Tribunal for prosecution.”
According to the statement, SERAP hopes that the bureau will learn from the lessons of the Panama Papers to combat the abuse of the asset declaration requirements even as it insisted that high-ranking public officers who use safe havens and secrecy jurisdictions to breach the fundamental requirements of asset declaration must be sanctioned, named and shamed.
According to it, if this is not done, the credibility of the asset declaration regime as a tool of preventing and combating corruption will continue to be doubted.
“SERAP believes that bodies like the Code of Conduct Bureau should now seize the opportunity and use its mandate to react to this international scandal.
“They should take concrete and proactive steps to address increasing breaches of constitutional provisions by high-ranking public officers.
“This action will be entirely consistent with the 1999 Nigerian Constitution (as amended), the law establishing the Bureau, and will meet demands by Nigerians for improvement in transparency regarding asset declarations and sanctions of public officers for breaches.” [myad]

Advertisement ADVERTORIAL
WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com