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Bayelsa Court Convicts A Professor Over N285 Million Contract Fraud

The Bayelsa State High Court has convicted Professor Saviour Nathan Agoro, former Provost of the Isaac Jasper College of Education, Sagbama in Bayelsa State, over contract fraud amounting to N285 million.

The Professor was convicted alongside the former accountant of the institution, Perez Friday Lakemfa, and were charged under section 12 and 19 of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act 2000 for having interest in and coffering corrupt advantage on themselves and relations as a result of contracts that were awarded by the College.

A statement today, November 23 by the spokesperson of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), Mrs. Azuka Ogugua, said that one of the charges read: “That you, Professor Saviour Nathan Agoro (M), on or about the 28th day of November, 2014, in Sagbama, while being a Public Officer to wit: the Provost and Chief Executive of Isaac Jasper Boro College of Education, Sagbama, knowingly acquired direct private interest in a contract otherwise than as a member of a registered joint stock company consisting of more than twenty (20) persons when he awarded a contract for the Furnishing of One Storey Lecturers’ Offices to Neatmosa Integrated Services Limited, a company in which he is a Director for the sum of N47,115,915.00 under the 2013 and 2014 merged Tetfund Normal Intervention program, and which emanated from Isaac Jasper Boro College of Education, Sagbama, where he is the Provost and Chief Executive Officer.”

The statement said that in the twelve-count charge against the defendants, the judge, Justice D.E Adekeme found Professor Agoro guilty on count 1, 5 to 12 while the second defendant, Perez Lakemfa was found guilty on count 2 to 4 of the charges.

Justice Adekeme thereafter pronounced non-custodian sentences on the two defendants based on the charges. The first defendant, (Professor Agoro) was given an option of fine of One Million Naira while the second defendant, (Lakemfa) was given an option of fine of One Hundred Thousand Naira.

ICPC’s prosecutors, Mrs. Peace Arocha and Dr. Agada Akogu had told the court in the course of the trial that the Commission had in May 2017, received a petition alleging that Professor Agoro personalized Tetfund funds by awarding contracts to his company and companies owned by his relatives between the year 2012 and 2014 with flagrant abuse of due process and public procurement rules.

The statement said that in the course of investigation, ICPC discovered that the contract for the construction of language laboratory and music studio was awarded to Nancydor Ekperi & Sons Co. Ltd., owned by a friend of the former Provost and former Accountant, Mr. Lakemfa. 

“Other contracts for constructions and supplies were also found to have been awarded to companies owned by family members of the convicts.”

President Tinubu Is Still Nursing Knee Surgery He Did In 2021 – Presidency 

The Presidency has said that President Bola Tinubu “is still nursing” the knee surgery he underwent in the United Kingdom in 2021 before he became President.

“He is still nursing it up till now because it was a major surgery. It is not that he has any other ailment.”

Special Adviser to the President on information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, in a recent interview with the Nigerian Tribune, said: “when you do knee surgery, you cannot be walking like a 25-year-old man.”

Onanuga recalled that prior to the declaration of his presidential ambition and flag off of campaign in 2022, Tinubu had made a medical trip to London for the knee surgery.

According to Onanuga, Tinubu has no other ailment but is still nursing the knee surgery.

“No, he was not sick. We made this clear to Nigerians. Tinubu was as fit as a fiddle in the run-up to that election.

“Before that campaign began, I think a year before, he went for knee surgery, which was not a secret, as President Muhammadu Buhari even went to see him in London when he was recuperating.

“So, that was what he went to do, knee surgery. “That was why he could not walk properly.”

Angry Kogi Gov. Yahaya Bello, Shuts Down State, Local Government Accounts 

Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello has directed that all the state and local government accounts be frozen effective from today, November 23, 2023.

The Commissioner for Finance, Asiwaju Asiru Idris, conveyed the Governor’s directive in a memo copied to the Clerk of the State House of Assembly, all Commissioners and heads of MDAs.

The memo reads:

“His Excellency, Alhaji Yahaya Bello, CON, the executive Governor of Kogi State, has directed that No imprest or any form of payment should be made to anyone from Government Account henceforth.

“All Standing Orders and Instructions are hereby canceled forthwith.

”All Kogi State and Local Government Accounts are hereby FROZEN with effect from today, Thursday 22nd November 2003.”

Governor Yahaya Bello, who complained recently bitterly about betrayal, is due to leave office on completion of his second term by 2024 January ending.

Tinubu Signs Bill For Establishment Of Defence Industry Technology

President Bola Tinubu has assented to the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria (DICON) Bill, 2023.

The high point of the bill, according to a statement today, November 23, from the Presidency, is the establishment of Defence Industry Technology Research, and Development Institute (DITRDI).

Another high point is the empowerment of the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria (DICON) to operate, maintain and control subsidiaries and ordnance factories to manufacture, store, and dispose of ordnance and ancillary stores and material.

The establishment of the Defence Industry Technology, Research, and Development Institute is aimed at creating an elaborate scientific and research-based technological foundation for Nigeria’s defence industry through the leveraging of combined, multi-disciplinary research from multiple military research institutes for application that will lead to commercialization and the development of new military technology and capacity in Nigeria.

It is also to provide a comprehensive regulatory framework for the regulation of the manufacturing, distribution, storage, and disposal of defence articles in Nigeria.

The Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria Act, 2023, which repealed the previous iteration of the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria Act, also empowers the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria to incentivize the development of a nuanced financing architecture that will enable private capital to facilitate research, development and production in the defence sector in a transparent and predictable fashion.

The Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria was established on August 1, 1964, by an Act of Parliament and was revised as the DICON Act in Chapter 94 of the Laws of the Federation, 2004.

The new  Bill was sponsored by the Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Defence, Babajimi Benson (APC — Ikorodu Federal Constituency).

Appeal Court Reverses The Sack Of Abdullahi Sule As Nasarawa Gov.

The Court of Appeal has reversed the sack of the Nasarawa State Governor, Abdullahi Sule by the State Election Petitions Tribunal in its judgment delivered on October 2.
Delivering the judgment today, November 23, in Abuja, the three-member panel, led by Justice Uchechukwu Onyemenam, held that the Tribunal was legally bound to act on witness statements filed along with the petition or front-loaded within 21 days stipulated by law.
The Court held that the Tribunal, led by Ezekiel Ajayi, acted in grave error by using witness statements on oath not front-loaded as required by law to arrive at the unjust conclusion of nullifying the election of the governor.
The Court held that no petition can lawfully be amended outside the 21 days allowed by law as wrongly done by the Tribunal.
According to the Court of Appeal, the Tribunal denied the governor a fair hearing by not considering and making findings on the issues of jurisdiction raised at the hearing of the petition.
The court further held that since the statements used by the Tribunal to sack the Governor were not front-loaded in compliance with the law, such statements were the product of illegality with no probate value for a law Court to act upon.
The Court dismissed the over-voting issues used to annul the election, adding that allegations were not established by law.
Justice Onyemenam held that the petition by the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), David Ombugadu, was null and invalid on the ground that the jurisdictional issues raised by the governor were unlawfully ignored by the Tribunal.
Justice Onyemenam agreed that the denial of a fair hearing against the governor was fatal and tendered all decisions of the Tribunal invalid.
The Court subsequently reversed all orders made against the governor and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and affirmed Abdullahi Sule as the lawfully elected governor of the state.
INEC had declared Abdullahi Sule the winner of the governorship election on the grounds that he polled a total of 347,209 votes to defeat his closest opponent, David Emmanuel Ombugadu who secured 283,016 votes.
And in a split decision on October 2, the tribunal nullified Abdullahi Sule’s election and upheld Ombugadu as the winner.
Source: Channelstv.

Reps Speaker Abbas, Gives NNPCL Marching Order

The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Abbas Tajudeen has asked the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) to come up with creative ways for optimal performance to stemmed years of non-performing public assets in the oil sector.
The Speaker, who spoke today, November 23, when he received the management of the NNPCL, Mele Kyari in his office in Abuja, commended the NNPCL for taking full advantage of the Petroleum Industry Act to maximise its commercial potentials.
He however, decried the state of Nigeria’s refineries such as the one in Kaduna, which he said, has been moribund for over 20 years, even though the staff are being maintained, paid and promoted.
He described the situation as inefficiency and waste of human resources that need to be addressed.
“I am from Kaduna, and the Kaduna refinery has been moribund for more than 20 years. I know of people working there who have been idle all these years receiving salaries and promotions. “This is inefficiency of a worrisome proportion. The company needs to seek creative ways to repurpose staff strength in such facilities to areas where they can remain productive even in the absence of crude oil at the refineries.”
Speaker Abbas called for measures to turn around the losses suffered by the economy, owing to the non-productive state of the refineries, by privatising them for better management and productivity.
The Speaker congratulated the company for redirecting gains of subsidy removal to other productive areas of enhancement that are now adding value to the system as shown by the quantum leap being reported in its revenue profile as presented by the Chief Executive.
He said that the 10th House, and by extension the National Assembly, would fully be behind the company in its fight against oil theft, disclosing that the House has taken the lead in creating a Special Committee on Oil Theft and Pipeline Vandalism, which was inaugurated yesterday, November 22.
Speaker Abbas, who received the NNPC management in company of the Minority Whip of the House, Ali Isa and the chairmen of relevant committees in the oil and gas sector, assured the company of the willingness of the House to always partner with it in repositioning the nation’s economy.
Earlier, the Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO) of the NNPC Limited, highlighted the areas of improvement in the company, using the instrument of the Petroleum Industry Act.
The company’s chief reiterated that the entity has fully gone commercial with the new law, adding that it was hitherto operating at a loss, recording a negative of N803 billion in 2018.
Kyari said that the changes that happened in the company after the PIA have led to the realisation of N674 billion profit after tax in 2021, and over N2trillion income in 2022.
Kyari said that the company has a projected revenue to the tune of N4.5 trillion as expected income in 2023, adding that having gone fully commercial, the company controls over 30% of the market share in the downstream sector.
“This company is operating just like any other private company providing dividends to its shareholders. We have over 30% of the market share in the downstream sector, which is why no single player can hold this country to random in terms of making products available to Nigerians.
“So when you see queue, it’s really not as a result of scarcity but internal events arising from the actions of marketers, and people can always go to our stations and be served. They are guaranteed quality and accurate quantity of dispensed products.”

Senate Summons FCT Minister, IGP, Over High Rate Of Kidnapping In Abuja

The Senate has resolved to summon the Minister of Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike and the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Kayode Egbetokun, over the growing rate of kidnappings in Abuja, the FCT.

The Senate also called for the probe of the contract for installation of close circuit television (CCTV) in Abuja where $500 million was spent, but the contract was not executed.

The Senate’s resolution was based on Senator Ned Nwoko’s motion on “Urgent need to stop the Galadimawa kidnappings: need for security agents to act.”

Coming under matter of urgent national importance, Nwoko said that the rate of kidnappings in the country has entered the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja,  “undermining the very essence of safety and security.”

He said that 19 persons, including his Senior Legislative Aide, Barrister Chris Agidi were kidnapped in Galadimawa area of Abuja, adding that information from security agencies had confirmed that 12 of them have lost their lives.

In his contribution, Senator Enyinaya Abaribe (APGA, Abia South) said that it is not only Galadimawa, but many parts of Abuja are under siege, adding: “this is the FCT of Nigeria; if anything, it should be the safest.”

According to him the kidnappers ask for ransom using their cell phones, and they are not traced.”

Senator Adamu Aliero (Kebbi Central), a former Minister of the FCT, lending his support to the motion said “many people are no longer sleeping in their houses.”

Aliero said that when he was FCT minister, contract of $500 million for CCT was awarded, adding: “the contractor installed useless cameras and the citizens are left at the mercy of criminals. 

“This contract must be investigated because it is national embarrassment and shame.”

According to him, the sum of N1.5 trillion was approved for security agents nationwide and the National Assembly must go on oversight to see how the money was utilised.

The Senate President, Godswill Akpabio said that Nwoko’s motion was supported by all the lawmakers and that “it is worrisome that they are turning the FCT upside.”

Therefore, the Senate approved the prayers of motion to call for “joint operations involving the Army, the Air force, the Police, the DSS, to intensify the search efforts for the kidnap victims.

“Urge the FCT Minister to revisit the contract for the installation of CCT cameras within and around Abuja for which 500 million dollars has been paid” and highways and other capital cities to bolster surveillance and detect criminal activities.

“Call on the IGP to urgently increase security patrols and surveillance within Abuja and within the nation to proactively turn back and prevent further criminality.

“Mandate the Committees in Defence and Police Affairs to conduct a thorough investigation into this present kidnapping and other similar incidence in and around Abuja.

“Mandate the aforementioned committees to recommend robust strategies to prevent future kidnapping within the FCT.”

Akpabio assured the senators that Senate Committees on National Security, Intelligence; ICT & Cyber Crime were having a public hearing and will propose amendment to the relevant laws.

He thanked Senator Ned Nwoko for raising the motion and wished that all those who have been kidnapped, including his aide will regain their freedom and return safely.

Petroleum Minister Happy With Waltersmith Refinery, NCDMB Over Improved Domestic Refining Capacity

The Minister of State for Petroleum (Oil), Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, has expressed satisfaction with Waltersmith Group and the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) for supporting the Federal Government agenda of improving domestic refining capacity.
The minister, who spoke during a facility tour of Waltersmith Petroman Oil Limited, Ibigwe, Ohaji-Egbema Local Government Area of Imo State, commended the company and NCDMB for taking the bull by the horn vy commencing local refining of crude, partially meeting the demand of the local.
“The quickest way to fix our energy challenge in the country should be through modular refineries, while we await the total rehabilitation of the big refineries.”
The 5,000-barrel per stream day Waltersmith Petroman, which has been a stable source of diesel, kerosene, naphta, and high fuel oil to the domestic market since its commissioning in 2020, was for him, a proof of how beneficial such smaller processing plants could be.
Lokpobiri expressed his commendation on the Board for taking up equity in Waltersmith Refinery which quickly facilitated the completion of the modular refinery.
He praised Waltersmith Group, even as he charged companies which had been given the license for modular refineries and marginal field licenses, to take cues from Waltersmith and make deliberate investments.
“If you have a marginal field, an allocation, it is a paper given to you, it doesn’t add value to you or to Nigeria, unless you take it to the next level by making the requisite investment and then adding the value that is expected.
“What I am seeing is that out of the numerous marginal fields that were allocated, only Waltersmith and a few of them have been successfully driven.”
The minister recalled his warning at the recent Nigeria Economic Summit Group (NESG) event in Abuja that marginal field allocations without the requisite investments stand the risk of being cancelled.
“It is important that we make this point so that we can retrieve some of those fields to the basket, so as to reallocate such assets to those able and prepared to develop and exploit them to the benefit of the industry and the nation.”
He said that he had obtained presidential approval to conduct a fresh round of bidding, which would take place soon, promising that “marginal fields would [henceforth] be prioritised in terms of their location to those who have modular refineries, so that they will be able to produce.”
Commending the remarkable success story of Waltersmith, whose Management has announced plans for further expansion, he said: “I can assure you that this Government will do whatever we can to support you so that you can continue to grow.” He had similar words of praise for the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), whose direct involvement through equity participation, greatly facilitated the take-off and operations of the Refinery.
In his own remarks, the Executive Secretary of NCDMB, Engr. Simbi Kesiye Wabote, said the decision of the Board to participate as equity holder in Waltersmith was informed by its sense of mission and the impressive organisational arrangement within the company.
According to him, NCDMB had no hesitation to partner with Waltersmith, “given the very clear corporate governance that is required and exists within the company. Part of our mandate is to enhance development and we see ourselves as catalysts for the industrialisation of Nigeria.
“At NCDMB, we are proud of what we have achieved here (at Waltersmith).”
In an interview at the conclusion of the tour, the President and Group Chief Executive Officer of Waltersmith Petroman Oil Limited, Abdulrasaq Isa, said that part of the expansion plans of the company is to raise the capacity of the processing plant from the present 5,000 to 40,000 barrels per stream day, and to be able to produce two million tonnes of petroleum products per annum.
The refinery has so far supplied a total of 600 million litres of petroleum products into the Nigerian market since its commissioning in 2020.

The Heroes Of November 11 Kogi Guber Election, By Yusuf Ozi-Usman

Obviously, by design or by accident, heroes have emerged from the off-season election conducted in Kogi State, in particular, on November 11, 2023.
Recall my piece, published on this news medium platform on September 14; about 57 days to the off-season election. I had narrowed down the election to what I described as the tribal warlords, parading themselves as Governorship candidates. I said then that the Igala and Egbira in particular, had taken a clear and dangerous position of open tribal or ethnic battle when Usman Ahmed Ododo emerged as the candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), and Alhaji Muritala Ajaka took the ticket of virtually none-descript Social Democratic Party (SDP) with a message from his group that had the signature of “we and them.” Senator Dino Melaye went on to pick the ticket of the major opposition party at the federal level: the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).
From the body language of these three major actors, it was obvious that they were representing the three major tribes in the State: Dino Melaye of the PDP for the Yoruba speaking Okun; Usman Ahmed Ododo for the Egbira speaking area and Muritala Ajaka for the Igala speaking area.
The election, which had since been concluded with Usman Ododo emerging as the Governor-elect, has proved some bookmakers wrong on certain calculations, which is reserved for another time.
However, suffice to say that while the majority of votes in Kogi East and Central could be predicted with some measures of accuracy, that of the Kogi West (the Okun land, plus Lokoja axis) was uncertain. Indeed, what was certain was that Dino Melaye would not win much in the West which is supposed to be his stronghold, but the uncertainty was where the votes from this Kogi West would swing.
The calculation was that if somehow, the West overwhelmingly vote for their brother, Dino Melaye as East and Central were programmed to vote majorly for their own, Ajaka and Ododo respectively, there might be a run-off election. This picture was ignored by the leaders in the East, who strongly believed that they could win the election on the first ballot with or without the Central and the West put together.
On the basis of such overconfidence against the background of the conjured enormous population, Ajaka dreamt big.
Yes, at the end of the day, Ajaka was able to neatly capture majority of his Easterners’ votes and Ododo, his Central votes, while the votes from the West decided the winner, to the surprise or shock of Igala people.
What the votes from the three Senatorial Districts, with different distinctive tribes (Igala for East, Egbira for Central and mainly Yoruba for the West) proved was the unofficial but true population of the State along these tribal lines. The election had proved Igala wrong on the issue of being the largest in the State, to the extent of thinking that they can beat both the Central and the West put together, in anything that had to do with population.
Above all, the election in Kogi State had brought out a very salient issue about rotation, which has for long, been the crux of the matter between the Igala people in the State and the rest others they considered to be minority.
With the pattern of the votes in the November 11 election, the West appears to have fully laid the parameter to producing the next governor after Ododo on the basis of the rotation.

Yusuf Ozi-Usman

In fact, by practically turning their back even on their own, Dino Melaye, who of course, they reckoned would not go far enough to win the election, and by voting overwhelmingly for the candidate of the Central, the possibility of them producing the next governor of the State in the near future, is assured. With the possible 80 percent votes from the Central added to their own, as the reality now stands, the West looks good to produce a chance to win the next governorship contest in the State.
The reality also is that Igala, from the East, will continue to reel in nightmare about the outdated figure of being in super majority, using such nightmare to render themselves irrelevant in the State’s political equation, long after the team-work between the Central and the West would have taken a big flight to the height, in the context of newly found and refreshing friendship.
Therefore, from what appeared to be a deft political calculations and actions, the Okuns in the Kogi West can beat their chests and claim the trophy as the heroes of the November 11 political chess game and battle for the Lugard House in Lokoja.
It will only be a matter of time for them to begin to reap the fruit of brotherliness they have sown; the brotherliess which Ajaka and the multitude of his Igala supporters would prefer to view from the prism of “common enemies.”
From the point of the November 11 election, it would not be out of place to offer unsolicited but vital advise to the Igala people and their leaders to go back to the drawing board over their bloated ego and self deception. And more importantly, their leaders need to come down from their utopian hight, apologize to the section of the State they called common enemies for the purpose of restarting the needed togetherness.
Like Governor Yahaya Bello said, apolitical Igala people are nice and friendly, but being misled by their overambitious leaders. But how such arrogance of the leaders would help the entire Igala people to return to reality is a thing that only them can sit down to resolve.

Osun Procures 19 Buses Worth N25.2 Million As Palliatives

The Osun state government has procured 19 buses at the cost of over N25.2 Million as part of the effort to cushion the harsh effects of the petroleum subsidy removal by the Federal Government of Nigeria.

A statement today, November 22, by the State Commissioner of Information and Public Enlightenment, Oluomo Kolapo Alimi, said that all the buses are due to their almost grounded status and off the road conditions, and cost a total sum of 25,274,288.00. It is to ensure their road worthiness so as to be able to carry out the new services of conveyance of people.

The commissioner said that the 19 buses, christened “Imole Bus,” are to convey civil servants, students and the poorest of the poor residents of the state to their various destinations at a token amount.

According to him, the money charged would be used by the government from time to time for the smooth running and maintenance of the buses. 

He said that the state capital had five of the buses officially assigned to it for commuting people to already earmarked routes.

He said that Ede, Iwo and Ikirun had two each while the people of Ife/Modakeke and Ilesha had three each. 

The commissioner said that the remaining two of the buses are kept on a standby for other contingencies that may come up from time to time. 

“With Osogbo, the capital of Osun state, used as a pilot scheme for the official commencement of Imole bus palliatives shuttle services, the government wishes to announce, with all sense of responsibility, that the bus services will be made to go round other towns and cities of the state very soon.”

He said that the buses are to work on two shifts daily as they ply all the officially designated routes, morning and afternoon of Mondays through Fridays.

“According to the arrangements, the morning services will be between 6:45 am and 9:00 am while the afternoon shuttles will be between 3pm and 5 pm daily. 

“The government of Osun state wishes to reaffirm its commitment to never let the public down by always keeping to our campaign promises of putting smiles on their faces.”

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