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Headquarters Of 7th Division Of Nigeria Army Narrowly Escapes Suicide Bomb

Maimalari barracks

Maimalari barracks, the Headquarters of 7th Division of the Nigerian Army along Baga road in Maiduguri, today, narrowly escaped suicide bomb as the bomber was shot and exploded before he gained entrance into the compound.

Military source hinted that the suspected Boko Haram suicide bomber was already entering the gate of the barracks but that the soldiers managed to shoot him before he detonated the bomb.

”Our gallant soldiers shot the suicide bomber in the legs and he blew himself up. None of our soldiers were affected by explosion,” the source confirmed.

‎The Maimalari barracks is the Headquarters and Control Center of military operations in the Northeast region. [myad]

I Took A Risk Campaigning For Buhari – Rotimi Amaechi

Amaechi campaigning
Former Governor of Rivers State, Chief Rotimi Amaechi has painted the picture of the risk he and other people from other parts of the country other than the North took in fully participating in the campaign for candidate Muhammadu Buhari before the 2015 Presidential election.
Amaechi, who spoke at The RED Summit Gala night celebration, the largest omni-media gathering in Lagos, gave the names of two other prominent persons that took similar risk as Adebola Williams and Chude Jideonwo, adding that they did a great job of the presidential campaign.
He was impressed with the roles which the two and himself played in the last presidential campaign that led to the election of President Muhammadu Buhari.
“I thank Adebola Williams and Chude Jideonwo for taking that responsibility of handling the presidential campaign. They sold our candidate to Nigerians against popular opinion. They got President Muhammadu Buhari to wear a suit, something he hadn’t done for over thirty years and that was one of the biggest highlights of the campaign. Those images broke barriers and sold the man.
“We always say God won the election but their role can’t be overemphasized. They created an impression that we had money, made the other people afraid and think we could match them money for money but we really couldn’t. It was their creativity. I thank them and wish them the very best.” [myad]

Boko Haram: We Dismissed General Kuti For His Failure To Perform Military Duties, Army

General Ransom Kuti

Nigerian Army has clarified the offence which Brigadier General Enitan Ransome-Kuti committed in the battle with Boko Haram that had led to his dismissal from the service.

In a statement titled: “A Response to Media Enquiry on Judgment of General Court Martial,”

the Acting Director of the Army public relations, Colonel Sani Usman said that the General was found guilty of failure to perform military duties and  was dismissed from the Nigerian Army.

The statement reads: “In reference to media enquiry on the judgement passed by a General Court Martial yesterday at Army Headquarters Garrison refers. I wish to confirm that one of the accused persons, Brigadier General EA Ransome-Kuti was awarded the following punishments on the various count charges against him as follows;

“The first count charge which was “Cowardly Behaviour” was struck out but he was found guilty on Count Charge Number Two which was “Failure to Perform Military Duties” and  was Dismissed from the Nigerian Army.

“He was equally found guilty on Count Charge Number 3 which was “Miscellaneous Offences Relating to Service Property” and was awarded 6 Months imprisonment.” [myad]

 

Eaglets In Good Start, Whip USA 2-0 In FIFA U-17 Opening Match

Eaglets and USA

The Golden Eaglets, yesterday evening, began the campaign to retain the U-17 World Cup when they thrash their opponent from the United States of America with 2-0 in the opening match of the FIFA U-17 World Cup in Chile.

The opening goal came during a scramble in their danger zone and Chukwudi Agor wasted no time in converting the ball into the net, leaving William Pulisic no chance. The opening goal did not diminish the Americans’ attacking spirit, but Richie Williams’ side could not create any clear-cut chances to find an equaliser.
The first 45 minutes however saw plenty of chances for both sides. USA’s Haji Wright came closest to opening the scoring 13 minutes after getting Christian Pulisic’s cross but the No7 could not make it as the ball went off across the bar.
Pulisic in particular tormented the Nigerian backline with skillful displays, launching attacks from the left flank. But the Super Eaglets held on and five minutes after the break took the lead.
With half an hour remaining, Victor Osimhen doubled Nigeria’s lead after cleverly beating two defenders and calmly ran pass Pulisic.
To make matters worse for USA, Auston Trusty was shown a red card three minutes from time, which will require coach Williams to make some changes in his backline ahead of the Americans’ next match against Croatia on Tuesday.
With a less than a man advantage, the Eaglets confidently controlled the tempo of the game until the final whistle. [myad]

Amaechi Accuses Wike Of Subverting The Law, Says He Is Out ‘To Smear Me’

Amaechi

Former Rivers State Governor, Chief Rotimi Amaechi, has accused his predecessor, Chief Nyeson Wike and the Rivers state government of trying to subvert the law and to smear his name all in attempt to stop the Senate from screening him for the ministerial position.

In a letter to the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, the former governor drew Saraki’s attention to the Supreme Court pronouncements concerning the constitution of a judicial commission of enquiry and the fact that such pronouncements do not have the effect of a court verdict, and asked the Senate to take note of how the Rivers State government was trying to subvert the law.

Amaechi stressed that while he would not be forced to speak on a matter that is already before a court of competent jurisdiction, the petitioner, Livingstone Wechie and Governor Wike’s White paper were deliberately intended to smear him and expose him to ridicule before the public and should therefore be discarded.

The former chief executive who channeled the letter through his lawyer, Edward E. Pepple of Edward and Williams and Co, asked the Senate president not to take any action on the White Paper issued by governor Wike against him and his administration and the petition sent to the Senate by Livingstone Wechie accusing him of corruption.

Amaechi insisted that the entirety of the so-called petition and white paper ran foul of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and should not be acted upon pending the hearing and determination of the suits on the matters.

Quoting copiously from decided cases, the former governor said: “This position of the law has been upheld and reaffirmed severally by the Supreme Court of Nigeria. In the case of DOHERTY V. BALEWA (1961-1962) NSCC (page 248) at 257, lines 35-50, the Supreme Court in a similar situation with the instant case held as follows:

“The power of the commission to impose imprisonment is clearly contrary to the provisions of Section 20, and this was not disputed by the Attorney-General. This must also apply to the power to impose a fine, which is enforceable by imprisonment.

“In these circumstances we would hold that Sections 8, 15 and 18 are invalid to the extent that they purport to empower a Commissioner to inflict a punishment of a fine or imprisonment that the Sections should be “read down” accordingly.”

“Similarly, in the celebrated case in which our client was declared the elected Governor of Rivers State [AMAECHI vs. INEC & ORS (2008) 5 NWLR (PT 1080), page 227, at 306, para E-F], some political interests acting with the intention of preventing our client from pursuing his Governorship mandate which was in dispute at the time, did set up an Administrative Panel of Inquiry and purported to have indicted him, as is been repeated at the moment, the Supreme Court held that:

“A Judicial Commission of Inquiry or an Administrative Panel is not the same thing as a Court of law or its equivalent. Because a Court of Law operates within a judicial hierarchy any person wrongly convicted is enabled to contest his conviction to the Supreme Court of Nigeria. This is a right granted by the Constitution of Nigeria.

“In the case of EGBUNIWE V. FGN (2010), 2 NWLR (PT 1178), page 348, at 368, para C-D, the Court held that:

“The Constitution is clear as to who should perform judicial acts.  And since it is the exclusive function of the judiciary to exercise judicial function, any member of the executive who interferes with those functions must be prepared to face the consequences of such interloping conduct by way of an action by a person aggrieved.”

Amaechi, who is a ministerial nominee from Rivers State, has been having a running battle with the State government and its lawmakers, who are opposed to his nomination and appointment by President Muhamadu Buhari.

The state and the lawmakers want Amaechi to be dropped, accusing him of having made the state to lose huge revenue when he was governor for eight years. The opposition against him informed the postponement of his screening twice last week when 18 other nominees were cleared by the upper legislative chamber. [myad]

 

 

 

 

 

U.S. Troops’ Proposed Battle With Boko Haram’s Child Soldiers in Cameroon, By Philip Obaji Jr.

Child soldiers of Boko Haram
The U.S. military has announced it is sending as many as 300 troops to the African nation of Cameroon, now threatened by the infamous Boko Haram group that originated in neighboring Nigeria. The aim of the Americans on what’s described as a temporary mission is to gather intelligence, operate drones, and train units of the Cameroon military to hunt down and kill Boko Haram fighters.
In concrete terms, what that means is that the Americans will be helping to hunt down and kill children who’ve been kidnapped, terrorized and turned into soldiers by a group that claims a connection to the so-called Islamic State in distant Syria and Iraq.
One such child is Patrick, who is 14 years old.
On a cold Thursday morning in February, he and about 10 other children were playing soccer in a slum in Fotokol, in Cameroon’s far north region on the border with Nigeria.
But as the kids were enjoying their game, Boko Haram militants armed with machine guns and machetes surrounded their playing field. Patrick remembers being crippled with fear as the insurgents took him and the rest of his playmates to be the latest recruits in Boko Haram’s growing army of kids.
The phenomenon is not unique to Cameroon. At least since last year, Boko Haram has abducted, recruited and deployed child soldiers in Nigeria, Chad and Niger, according to J. Peter Pham, director of the Africa Center at the Washington-based Atlantic Council. But the expansion of Boko Haram’s activities in Cameroon has been especially striking.
By June, according to the United Nations, Boko Haram had kidnapped more than 1,000—perhaps as many as 1,500—children. Mostly they were used as servants, carrying tents and fetching water. But in February some of them as young as 8 were deployed on the front lines, apparently as human shields.
I met 14-year-old Patrick at the southern Nigeria village of Abonorok, close to the border with Cameroon, where he has lived since he escaped Boko Haram, and now survives by shining shoes.
Patrick said after he was abducted he was taken along with dozens of other children into a relatively peaceful part of the country where they “were locked in cells and taught to cock and fire AK-47s.”
The abducted children had nearly two weeks of shooting practice, during which a couple of them were killed by smaller colleagues who were unable to control their weapons.
“The militants kept telling us that they wanted us to be generals, commanding different groups of fighters,” Patrick said. “They said we were going to train and lead other children to war.”
On one rare occasion where questions could be asked with regard to training methods, one boy asked the militants why they were targeting only children.
“We want you to take over from us,” came the reply.
When Patrick and four of his colleagues were sent to fetch water at a nearby stream, they escaped, walking for days without food and water.
Whenever night fell, they tied themselves to the branches of trees to sleep, for fear of being found by anyone looking for them.
Eventually they came across a truck loaded with pigs, heading to Bodam in the south. They climbed aboard and traveled for hours with the livestock until they arrived at the town bordering southern Nigeria.
The boys were too scared to remain in Cameroon, as they feared they could one day be spotted by militants and punished as deserters, so they journeyed by foot through the border with Nigeria, and eventually ended up in Abonorok, a village in Nigeria’s southern Cross River State that is home to hundreds of migrants from Cameroon.
Not all child recruits to the Boko Haram ranks have been kidnapped. Local authorities say thousands of young people in northern Cameroon, who lack access to school and employment, are fighting alongside Boko Haram.
“We don’t doubt that Boko Haram is recruiting in Cameroon,” Col. Joseph Nouma, commander of Operation ALPHA, a special military operation set up by Cameroon’s government to fight the Nigerian terrorist group, told CNN this year.
“Many of them are found across the border in Nigeria, training with the terrorists.”
With the help of these kids, the Islamist group has now stepped up its attacks in the far north. In July, less than three weeks after Patrick told me Boko Haram was planning suicide attacks in the region to be carried out by children, a 12-year-old girl blew herself up in a bar, killing 20 people and injuring at least 79 in the regional capital city of Maroua, in what so far has been the most deadly suicide attack in Cameroon.
Four days before that, two girls detonated their suicide belts, killing 11 people and injuring 32 in twin attacks in the same city.
The girls, who were “under 15,” attacked the city’s central market as well as the adjoining Hausa neighborhood, regional governor Midjiyawa Bakari said.
Two young female suicide bombers wearing the full Islamic veil blew themselves up in Fotokol, killing 10 civilians and a soldier from neighboring Chad, leading regional authorities to impose a ban on full-face veils.
Boko Haram’s most recent attack was carried out on Sunday when twin suicide blasts killed at least nine people and injured 29 in the far north, at a tiny milk and doughnut restaurant in the village of Kangaleri. The bombers were believed to be teenage girls.
That incident may have helped precipitate the U.S. government announcement that it would deploy up to 300 military personnel to Cameroon for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance operations against the insurgents.
Cameroon’s own elite force, the Rapid Response Brigade, known by its French acronym as the BIR, has recently moved north in response to Boko Haram’s activities. But the group that trained heavily for amphibious assaults is operating in a part of the country with little water, and was never trained for a longstanding battle against a ferocious terror group. “We are not dealing with a battle-hardened military,” says Pham at the Atlantic Council
Boko Haram attacks in Cameroon have so far been restricted to the far north, a predominantly Muslim region which analysts say has historically been marginalized. About 20 percent of the 22 million people living in Cameroon are Muslim.”
Patrick, who is Christian, said Boko Haram does not take religion into consideration when it carries out its recruitment, but forces non-Muslims to convert to Islam, and punishes girls who do not wear full-face veils.
Although the boys who talked to The Daily Beast were forcibly recruited into Boko Haram’s fold, there are other factors that drive children into the group.
The sect is using economic incentives to persuade unemployed young people and former students to join its ranks. Underemployment in Cameroon is at least 75 percent. In the far north region, 60 percent of the population lives in poverty, according to the government’s 2010 National Population and Housing Census.
“Boko Haram men came and told us to stop wasting our lives here and join them in the holy battle to save our faith and the lives of our families, who are living in abject poverty here,” 21-year-old Moustapha Alidu, who used to live in a border village outside of Kolofata, recently told the humanitarian news agency IRIN.
Alidu, who fled his home after declining Boko Haram’s offer, said he believes that those who willingly join the group are “ignorant,” but that the propositions made by the sect are tempting.
He said Boko Haram promised to pay him between 300,000 and 400,000 CFA (US$600-US$800) each month to become a fighter. By contrast, for those lucky enough to be employed at all, the monthly minimum wage is just 36,000 CFA (US$72).
As the insurgency continues, the demand for military manpower increases, and children are often targeted in a country where nearly half the population is under 18.
And the humanitarian fear is that both Boko Haram and the military, with a long record of human-rights violations, will claim more of Cameroon’s young lives.

Philip Obaji Jr. is the founder of 1 GAME, an advocacy and campaigning organization that fights for the right to education for disadvantaged children in Nigeria, especially in northeastern Nigeria, where Boko Haram forbids western education.  Follow him @PhilipObaji

Culled from The Daily Beast. [myad]

University Student Caught In Lagos With 108 ATM Cards On His Way To China

Student with ATM Cards

A 34-year old Pascal Udeh, who claimed to be a 300-level student of Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka, Anambra State studying History and International Relations has been arrested trying to board a flight to China with 108 Automated Teller Machine debit cards.

Pascal was arrested by the officers of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, while he was attempting to board a Qatar Airline flight to China.

According to the NDLEA Commander at the Lagos airport, Ahmadu Garba the debit cards were made up of 58 of the First City Monument Bank (FCMB); 23 OF THE Stanbic IBTC; 19 of the Zenith Bank; six of Fidelity Bank and two of Diamond Bank.

He said that the suspect was arrested in connection with suspected money laundering and was immediately transferred to the Assets and Financial Investigation Directorate of the Agency for investigation.

Victoria Egbase, the Director of Assets and Financial Investigation, said the Agency had established a prima facie case of financial crime against the suspect and that the Chairman had ordered the transfer of the case to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for further investigation.

The NDLEA quoted the suspect as saying that he was asked to take the cards to China, saying: “I am not the owner of the cards. I was told to take them to China and that somebody will collect them from me when I get there. I have a shop where I sell clothes at Onitsha main market.

“I am also a 300-level student of Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka, Anambra State studying History and International Relations. I never knew it would lead to my arrest.”

NDLEA said that the suspect hails from Obibi in Orlu Local Government Area of Imo even as the NDLEA Chairman, Ahmadu Giade said that the case should be transferred to the EFCC.

“This is a suspected money laundering case involving cash transfer with debit cards. The EFCC will carry out further investigation on the case. We must continue to work together as a united force against criminal syndicates.” [myad]

 

 

Eagles Show Class, Bully Burkina Faso’s Stallions 2-0 In Port Harcourt

Super Eagles play

Nigeria’s Super Eagles, today, displayed their superiority as they defeated hard-fighting Burkina Faso 2-0 in the first leg of Rwanda 2016 CHAN qualifier at the Adokie Amasiemaka Stadium, Port Harcourt, Rivers State on Saturday.

Bature Yaro put Nigeria in the early lead with a clean strike from an acute ankle after 24 minutes.

The home-based Eagles doubled their lead in the 76th minute through a penalty taken by Gbolahan Salami after Ezekiel Bassey was fouled inside the box.

It was a deserved lead as Nigeria had threatened before then, with Nasarawa United midfielder Yaro, Osas Ooro and Ezekiel Bassey carved out chances.

But Burkina Faso did not sit back in their defence as they too continued to chase the game.

The return leg will be played in Ouagadougou next weekend with the overall winners advancing to the final tournament in Rwanda next year. [myad]

Buhari Represents Integrity, Love – Federal Government Scribe

Babachir David Lawal

Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Engineer Babachir David Lawal has described President Muhammadu Buhari as a symbol of integrity and love through whom one could learn the value of loyalty.

The SGF who spoke in his testimony during his thanksgiving service of his appointment at the ECWA Church in Wuse II, Abuja, said that the President could be extremely emotional, especially if people are suffering as he hated the idea of people suffering.

He said that he had been a long time friend of the president, but was not expecting that he would be appointed SGF.

He also described All Progressives Congress (APC) national leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu as generous to a fault and selfless, saying that both Buhari and Tinubu had similar character as the duo could offer the last thing they had for humanity.

On Tinubu, the SGF said: “Tinubu made an impression on me, he is generous, he will give you what you require and even more.” [myad]

Watch It, Storm Looms, Meteorological Agency Warns

Stormy weather

The Nigeria Meteorological Agency (NIMET), has predicted impending stormy rains mainly around the Southern, Central and the Middle belt zones of the country in December.

The stormy weather, it warned, may cause severe damage to the environment and public infrastructure.

A statement signed by the agency’s Head of Corporate and Public Affairs, Ms. Eva Azinge, in Abuja, said the rains will dominate greater parts of coastal region towards the end of December.

“The general public is advised to avoid outdoor activities during these stormy weather as the strong winds may in some occasions
uproot trees, damage electric poles and affect building rooftops.”

Details later. [myad]

 

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