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Famous Sayings Of President Jonathan, By Laila Stmd

Goodluck-jonathan2
President Goodluck Jonathan, who is seeking for a second-term on the platform of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the March 28 elections had made some famous remarks since he was first voted into power in 2011.
Here are a few of such remarks reproduced:

1.CNN has said our Economy is growing…The best Economists are at the World Bank. Now you have all these Nigerian Economists talking nonsense. Do they know better than CNN or World Bank..?
2. Nigeria is not poor. Come and see the amount of private jets Nigerians parked at Kenya Airport when we went to Nairobi for Conference. Kenyans were just looking at us with envy. How can you say Nigerians are poor.
3. Nigerians need jobs. Vote for me and I will create unemployment.
4′. We are giving special Scholarships to our First Class Graduates. In ten years time they are going to take us to the Moon.
5. How can you just say $20 billion is missing. If that kind of money is missing, the Americans will know. They know everything.
6. Corruption is not stealing. If you put yam where a goat is the goat will eat the yam
7. If you go to Lagos and shout “ole ole” they will stone you well well.. But if you shout “corruption” people will just be looking at you…
8.Why should I declare my assets? I don’t give a damn..!
9. People are just raising false alarm… How can 200 children go missing just like that? It is our enemies trying to cause confusion. But we are investigating the matter…
10. We are going to rebuild the Chibok school and we are going to build high fences round the school to protect them next time. Yes, Yes
11. People keep saying why don’t we go to Chibok..why don’t we go to Chibok.. Aaah we can’t go to Chibok just like that. The Boko Haram people will fire at us…
12. This Abuja bombing is not by MEND. We know it is by Boko Haram. They are everywhere. Boko Haram is even in my Government.
13. Boko Haram are our siblings. You can’t set the Army to go and wipe out your family.
13. Mend tried to kill me. They came to bomb me in Abuja. That is why we jailed Henry Okah in South Africa.
14. I did not plan the Election postponement even my Service Chiefs did not consult me.
15. If I knew Election was going to be postponed why will I waste my time and Federal Government money to go and campaign in Bayelsa.
16. I am the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces. You don’t expect me to go and be fighting in Sambisa forest. People jus talk anyhow…
17. We are going to buy Guns and give good Pensions to our Brave Soldiers so that when they are killed their families will not suffer.
18. Some people just call themselves Statesman for nothing. They jump about and talk like motor park touts.
19. After God and my Parents the third person I thank most for my life is President Olusegun Obasanjo.
20. I want to apologise to the people of Rivers State for not bringing any Projects here…It is because I don’t want people to say I am doing favouritism. Vote for me and in the next four years you will see my hand…
21. I am the sitting President…If there is any trouble it is me that the United Nations secretary General calls… Everything is on my head…
22. May 29 Swearing-in Day is sacrosanct. Definitely a new President will be sworn in on that day… [myad]

The Transfiguration Of General Buhari, By Dele Momodu

Dele Momodu 1
Fellow Nigerians, miracles shall never end. That is the only way to describe the incredible story of Major General Muhammadu Buhari at this auspicious moment. No one could have envisaged or foretold the huge drama being enacted before our very eyes.  It was not as if his popularity and cult-followership was ever in doubt but the general belief and assumption was that it was dominantly limited and restricted to a particular section or region of Nigeria. What was never expected was a cross-over appeal to all areas and segments of our nation.

Buhari’s fate as a perennial contestant was supposed to have been sealed by many debilitating factors. The first and most crucial till this day is on account of his odoriferous reputation as a coup plotter and rabidly draconian dictator who appeared mercilessly vengeful. Depending on whom you talked to in the past, Buhari conjured different images to varied people. Some saw him as an Angel who represented a sword of Damocles to the wicked and reckless politicians who wreaked havoc on Nigeria’s economy and wrecked the collective future of our citizens. But to others, he was a Luciferous character who must have escaped from the pit of hell to haunt God’s creatures on planet earth.
I will not attempt to bore you with well-rehashed tales of his cardinal sins, both real and imagined. They are in the realm of fables and mythology and already in public domain courtesy of his opponents and unrelenting attackers. But one can never gloss over the allegations of religious bias and intolerance. If possible, many would want us to see and hold Buhari as Nigeria’s version of Osama bin Laden who was regarded as the world’s most notorious terrorist. Buhari would forever bear the cross of ever defending his personal faith and the interests of his Northern people like most of us would normally do. Many quotable quotes have been ascribed to him but most have never been properly validated by his accusers thus casting doubts on the veracity of those vituperations.
The last but not the least albatross against Buhari is the matter of old age. I must confess that I belong in the category of the vociferous proponents of sacking most of our ancient leaders and replacing them with young and vibrant whizzkids.
I must sincerely thank the media and publicity committee of the People’s Democratic Party for finding my past comments and stance on Buhari so important and worthy of sponsored countervailing advertorials in several newspapers and social media platforms. They were generous enough to put me in good company by attaching me to accomplished Nigerians such as Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Mallam Nasir El Rufai. On a serious note, it was such a great honour seeing all manner of caricatures about me including the one stuffing my brains with noodles.
The truth is that I, like many other Nigerians, was a veritable victim of the almost unprecedented propaganda against Buhari. In my purview, the definition of propaganda is not about telling lies but an attempt to magnify non-fiction until it becomes what the famous author Kole Omotoso called “faction”, when you mix facts with fiction. The demonization of Buhari was therefore a fait accompli emanating from the many years of ferocious regurgitation of his supposed misdemeanours. But, still, I would never have imagined that a day would come when I, and so many former antagonists of Buhari, would not only change my mind about this walking firebrand but actually plunge myself fully into his presidential campaign while not being a member of his political party. Strange are the ways of God indeed.

In my nearly 55 years on earth, this is the second time I would witness a complete transfiguration of a Nigerian from being most hated to most loved. My first recollection was in 1988 as I searched frantically for a job. My dream then had been to get a teaching appointment after concluding a Master’s degree in Literature-in-English at the great Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. I was already contributing articles on the opinion pages of The Guardian which was edited by Odia Ofeimun and The Sunday Tribune, edited by Folu Olamiti. I was then subsequently invited by my friend, Onukaba Adinoyi-Ojo, a prodigiously gifted journalist, to try my luck in Lagos. He tried to get me a job at the African Guardian, edited by Nduka Irabor, but wasn’t successful.
Onukaba then suggested that I should try the African Concord magazine, owned by Chief Moshood Abiola and edited by Lewis Obi but I was most reluctant. Just imagine that though I was desperately in need of a job, but I was not very keen about working in the Concord Group. You, like me, will laugh at my reasons now. I was discouraged by so many things I had read or heard about the fabulously wealthy ‘Money Kudi Owo’ Abiola, who was supposed to have been the biggest thief in Africa, courtesy of Fela’s album, ITT, International Thief Thief. That song had done incalculable damage to Chief Abiola as many self-righteous people, including myself, completely tuned off the man.
I remember very vividly how there was a war of words between the Awoists (who believed the support of Chief Abiola, a Yoruba, for the National Party of Nigeria was partly responsioble for robbing Chief Obafemi Awolowo of victory against Alhaji Shehu Shagari who won the Presidential election in 1979) and the Abiola supporters who felt there was nothing wrong in Yorubas belonging to opposing parties. The Nigerian Tribune had fiery writers led by Chief Olabisi Onabanjo, Ebenezer Babatope (aka Ebino Topsy) while The Concord Group assembled some of Nigeria’s finest journalists including Doyin Abiola, Dele Giwa, Ray Ekpu, Yakubu Muhammed, Duro Onabule, Sina Adedipe and so many others. The columnists of both rival papers tackled themselves endless and joined issues on various national and personal matters. Of particular interest to me was a columnist popularly known as Abiodun Aloba (also known as Ebenezer Williams) who wrote so brilliantly that I asked God for his kind of diction.

In the middle of all this confusion, I would have preferred to work in the less controversial and highly cerebral environment of The Guardian but here I was being asked to try my luck at the African Concord. I had imagined all sorts about having to work in a religious conclave, all the restrictions, prejudices, and so on, but the real fear of hunger was the beginning of wisdom for me. I approached Mr Lewis Obi as suggested by Onukaba who introduced us and was shocked that I got a job on the spot. I had to plead with him to let me resume in another two weeks as I needed to return to Ile-Ife for proper preparation for this journey of a lifetime.  The rest is history!
The meat of this story is that I resumed work on May 2, 1988, about fourteen days to my 28th birthday. But contrary to my mortal fears, The Concord Group was one of the most relaxed and pleasant companies I would ever work. It was by far the biggest media conglomerate in Nigeria. Chief Abiola rarely came around but he breezed in every now and then and everyone felt the tremor of his presence as well as the aftershocks after he’s been long gone. The Concord titles did not discriminate against any tribe or religion. I won’t be surprised if most of us were Christians. The most senior employees paraded a galaxy of more Christians than Moslems. We had a bush Canteen within the premises where we were allowed to eat or drink even alcohol as journalists love to do. Our Chairman avoided the News Room as much as possible because he was certain to be welcomed by some whiff of cigarette smoke.
Based on the much vaunted alleged prejudices of the owner, Chief MKO Abiola, I tried very hard to find out any shade of religious intolerance but never found one. He was not a saint but he towered above many of his peers. His love for the poor marked him apart from others. He lived for the needy and touched too many lives. He had attended a Christian school, Baptist Boys High School, Abeokuta, and could recite Biblical passages by rote. He attended church services when required to do so and even sang Christian hymns from memory at my wedding in 1992.  It was a great lesson for me that we can all misconstrue many things based on rumours and gossip without seeking to ascertain the factual reality.

Chief Abiola worked assiduously at turning around the wrong impressions about him. Not everyone ever gets that lucky. It takes a lot to change human misperceptions. Many are often too rigid and too set in their ways. As Abiola himself used to say, the deaf always repeats the last songs he heard before he lost his hearing. It was one of those miraculous occurrences that Abiola was eventually able to endear himself to Nigerians from all works of lives. The secret of his larger-than-life image was quite simple. He never disconnected himself totally from the poor even as he wined and dined with the rich and famous. It is a lesson I hold very dear. Abiola was ready to fight the cause of the common man despite belonging to the oppressor class himself. The ability to relate to both with equal competence was uncommon. The truth is he never forgot his humble beginnings and made sure that this reflected in the way he related with all manner of people.
I wasn’t surprised when he returned from his self-imposed political sabbatical and jumped into the fray in 1993. He had bided his time and knew when to make the right move. Ordinary Nigerians responded in kind and in sincere appreciation of his genuinely generous gestures. Even the elites who initially viewed him with suspicion and likely disdain finally embraced him warts and all as the most unlikely man became so radicalised that he became a symbol of our struggle for democracy and good governance. Ironically, Fela’s Brother, Beekololari Ransome-Kuti joined in that epic battle, and likewise many who were never fans of Abiola.
As I watch events unfold around Major General Buhari today, I just can’t help but draw some comparison and highlight the similarities between the People’s General and Abiola, the only difference being that Buhari cannot by any stretch of the imagination be called a wealthy man. Both men had powerful enemies. They were assumed to be religious bigots. Although, Abiola was a Yoruba man it was felt that he was too partial to the North as is the wrong perception of General Buhari’s parochial feelings for his home region. They derived their power from the poor. Their passion for Nigeria could never be in doubt. Abiola was rejected by the political class resoundingly just like Buhari has not been able to win the presidential election a record third time. However, like Abiola, Buhari seems to have gotten his groove finally and disabused the Nigerian public of these erroneous views and opinions.

This deal was finally saved and delivered at The Chatham House, London on February 26, 2015. At a public lecture which he delivered at that world renowned venue, Buhari mesmerised the world with his presence, carriage, and childlike innocence. He did not pretend to be who he wasn’t. It was such a glorious moment as he introduced himself as a former dictator turned reformed democrat. He spoke calmly and firmly in front of a distinguished audience. He answered the questions fired at him with candour, sincerity and common-sense. Many were shocked to see a Buhari they thought they knew but didn’t know. Standing before the world was a man whose image was falsely that of a Muslim fundamentalist, stark illiterate, aged and tired soldier, wicked and miserable soul, hypnotising everyone with his carefully chosen but intelligent words coupled with great wit and humour. This was a truly transfigured Buhari, who certainly has a date with history and it is certainly only a matter of time before he gets his well-deserved apotheosis. [myad]

 

1 Billion People May Go Deaf Playing Music In High Volume – WHO

president of who

World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that no fewer than one billion young people across the world stand the risk of damaging their hearing or becoming deaf as a result of listening to music in high volume.

The WHO estimates today that about half of those between the ages of 12 and 35 in middle- and high-income countries are at risk due to unsafe levels of sound on personal audio devices or smartphones.

Another 40 percent are at risk from damaging audio levels at concert venues and night clubs.

“More and more young people are exposed to unsafe levels of sounds. Young people should be aware that once you lose your hearing, it won’t come back,” said Shelley Chadha, a WHO specialist on hearing impairment.

The UN health agency considers a volume above 85 decibels for eight hours or 100 decibels for 15 minutes as unsafe.

Exposure to traffic noise at peak hours can reach 85 decibels.

The vuvuzela, a popular wind instrument used in stadiums during the football World Cup in South Africa in 2010, has a sound intensity of 120 decibels and over nine seconds of exposure could result in irreversible hearing damage.

“It is something we can live without,” Chadha said referring to the vuvuzela.

To counter the risks, the WHO recommends that personal audio devices should not be used for more than an hour a day, at reduced sound levels.

The use of ear plugs in loud conditions and regular check ups were part of the recommendations as well.

The WHO also wants governments to play a role by imposing strict regulations on noise in public places.

The UN agency estimates that 360 million people suffer from hearing loss worldwide. In addition to noise related causes and ageing, it is also brought on by infectious diseases, genetic conditions, complications at birth, and use of certain drugs. [myad]

Governor Fayose Is Afraid Of Buhari Because He Cannot Survive Where Law Works – APC

Ekiti state Governor, Ayodele Fayose
Ekiti state Governor, Ayodele Fayose

The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has said Governor Ayodele Fayose’s blackmail of its candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari is borne out of his fear that Buhari will ensure that law operates fully when he becomes President and that Fayose knows that he cannot survive under such environment.

This is even as the party made it clear that Fayose’s continued attacks on General Buhari cannot stop him from winning the Presidential election, saying that the governor is fighting the battle of his life that runs contrary to the general mood of the nation.

In a statement by the state APC Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatubosun, APC said: “the battle Fayose is fighting is for self-preservation and not because he wants a younger Nigerian to take the mantle of leadership to avoid the repeat of President Yar’Adua’s scenario. He is convinced that Buhari is the preferred candidate and that is why he is talking about Buhari as old-man-President.

“He doesn’t want a honest and disciplined President that will not tolerate impunity and lawlessness because he (Fayose) knows he can’t survive in any system where the law works‎. He is also haunted by his past and the fraud through which he was declared the governor in the June 21, 2014 election.

“Fayose is still facing criminal trial in Justice Adamu Hobon’s court at the Federal High Court, Ado-Ekiti, over alleged N1.3billion poultry project fraud. There are several unresolved murder cases during his first stint. Ekiti election fraud on tape and video being watched across the world is also there. He knows he can only survive these if his preferred candidate is the president.”

“For what Fayose is, he will spare nothing in his campaign for self-preservation in a nation of 170 million people who want a reversal of what Fayose represents in private and public life,” APC said. [myad]

 

Fani-Kayode Confesses: I Knew Nothing About General Buhari’s Health Status

Fani Kayode in court
Director of media and publicity for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Presidential Campaign Organization, Femi Fani-Kayode has confessed that he did not know anything about the health status of the Presidential candidate of All Progressives Congress (APC), General Muhammadu Buhari.
Fani-Kayode and Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti state have been in the forefront in PDP, campaigning vigorously about the ill-health of General Buhari, to the extent that they allegedly forged a medical certificate from Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital in Zaria, Kaduna to buttress their point.
Addressing newsmen today in Abuja, Fani-Kayode declared: “we do not know how true this (General Buhari’s health status) is, or what the nature of his illness is and neither are we interested.
“All these allegations of ill-health, to the cabal, provide the justification for their evil plan.”
The PDP Presidential Campaign Organisation spokesman confessed that
no sane or rationale person would wish evil for another person just so as to actualize political ambition.
He said that he heard some cabal within the APC said in hushed tones that General Buhari has prostate cancer, acute asthma and that he suffers from dementia.
“This is their assessment and not ours.” Fani-Kayode said, adding that on their (PDP) part: “we wish General Buhari long life.” [myad]

Jonathan Describes Late Abubakar Gimba As Distinguished Writer

Abubakar Gimba
President Goodluck Jonathan has said that he received the news of the death of Alhaji Abubakar Gimba with sadness, describing him as very distinguished writer and former President of the Association of Nigerian Authors.
President Jonathan said that Gimba, a literary icon, left behind a legacy of notable works such as Witness to Tears, Sunset for a Mandarin, Trails of Sacrifice and Innocent Victims.
The President believed that the late Gimba, who also had a successful career as an administrator, banker and public servant, will be long remembered for his humility, diligence, dedication to excellence and the profound understanding of human affairs exhibited in his writings.
He asked members of his family, his fellow authors and all who mourn him to take solace in the knowledge that the much admired writer’s beliefs, views and insights will live forever through the body of works he has left behind for present and future generations.

Abubakar Gimba died yesterday at the Minna General Hospital, at about 11:50pm, after a prolonged illness. Aged 63, Gimba was born on March 10, 1952 in Nasarawa town of Lapai Emirate and obtained his first degree at the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria with a BSc in Economics in 1974.

He then went to the University of Cincinnati, Ohio, in the USA 1976 for a Masters degree, where he obtained an MA in Economics. He subsequently attended the University of Bradford for a UK’s Project Planning Course on Infrastructure in 1982.

Gimba was previously executive director of United Bank of Africa (UBA) and Union Bank of Nigeria and permanent secretary of Finance and Economic Planning during David Mark’s time as governor of Niger State and was one-time special adviser of Mark at the Senate.

He was once the national president of the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), ABU Alumni Association and chairman of the Concern Foundation and Savannah Publications Ltd and was the pioneer chairman of IBB University.

In the year 2000, he attended the University of Iowa’s writing programme sponsored by US Embassy in Nigeria at the behest of the State Department and was an election observer in Washington DC during the election of George Bush Jr. He was University of Iowa’s Honourary Fellow in writing.

He holds a master’s degree in economics from the University of Cincinnati, and has travelled extensively throughout Europe, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East. He took part in the IWP on a grant from the US Department of State.

He is the author of several novels, including Witness to Tears; Trail of Sacrifice; Innocent Victims; Sunset for a Mandarin, and Golden Apples.

Abubakar Gimba is a recipient of the Order of the Federal Republic (OFR), a prestigious merit award from the federal government. He is survived by three wives and many children.

In a brief comment on his death, president, Gamji Members’ Association, Malam Abdullahi Bala Isa said; “Gimba was a leader who is always willing to encourage the younger generation. We will continue to cherish his exemplary leadership attributes, which Nigeria will sure miss and I pray Allah grant him Aljannatul Firdausi.” [myad]

Why I’m Seeking Re-Election, President Jonathan Tells Asaba Monarch

Jonathan in Asaba
President Goodluck Jonathan has said that one of the major reason he is seeking re-election for the second term is to renew his commitment towards re-positioning the country positively amongst the comity of nations.
President Jonathan, who paid a courtesy visit on the Asagba of Asaba, Obi, Professor Chike Edozien at his palace in Asaba, Delta State today said that he will use his second term too to restore peace and security in all parts of the country.
Dr Jonathan, who was accompanied on the visit by the Governor of Delta State, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan and other prominent Nigerians, said that his administration has always done what is best for Nigeria.
“I want to re-assure you that as a party (PDP), we will do our best to bring peace and security to the country, and fast-track economic development in all parts of the country.”
He recalled that on assumption of office, it was discovered that of the thirty six states of the country, twelve states had no Federal University which his administration has corrected within the past four years.
“We have tarred over twenty-five thousand kilometres of the thirty six thousand  kilometres (36, 000 km) Federal Roads and we promise to complete the remaining ones and open up more arterial roads when re-elected.”
According to the President, over 90 per cent of narrow gauge rails have been completed throughout the country, even as he said that implementation of the Nigerian content law in the oil industry has improved the participation of Nigerians in the industry and the implementation of our cabotage law with Nigerians now owning ships and more Nigerians have been employed in the shipping industry.
“We also saw the need to establish Maritime University for high-powered man-power development in the Maritime Sector; we are moving the country forward.
“We are not resting on our oars in concluding the privatisation of the power sector as we believe that to improve the small and medium enterprise sector, power is very important. We believe that by next year, we would have concluded 100 per cent privatization of the power sector, it will take a life of its own with epileptic power supply becoming a thing of the past.”
The President thanked the Asagba of Asaba and other royal fathers for the support they accorded his administration, assuring that he would not disappoint them.
Earlier, Governor Uduaghan had said that President Jonathan has been delivering on his promises to Nigerians nd that Delta State is a great beneficiary of the restructuring of the power sector by Jonathan’s administration.
He said that the President was in Delta State a few weeks ago for the Presidential Campaign rally of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and as a man who loves Deltans, he was in the state for another official ceremony.
The Asagba of Asaba, Obi Chike Edozien who prayed for the President, observed that President Jonathan deserves re-election to enable him in particular, implement the recommendations of the report of the National Conference which he constituted.
“We are delighted with the good work you are doing. We appreciate you and wish you the best,” the Asagba said. [myad]

Our Soldiers Will Soon Recover More Territories Seized By Boko Haram – Jonathan

Goodluck-jonathan2
President Goodluck Jonathan has assured Nigerians and international community that Nigerian soldiers will maintain the momentum they have built up in ongoing operations against Boko Haram and will soon recover more occupied territory from the terrorist group.
Speaking at an audience with the outgoing French Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Jacques Champagne De Labriolle, President Jonathan said that the officers and men of the Nigerian Army he met on the frontlines in Borno and Adamawa states yesterday were in very high spirits, well prepared and determined to successfully complete their operations against Boko Haram.
“We have already recovered much territory and very soon our troops will  clear the terrorists out of other areas not presently under our control,’’ the President assured the French Ambassador.
Jonathan acknowledged a congratulatory message from President Francois Hollande to Nigeria for recent successes of its armed forces against Boko Haram, and said that Nigeria appreciates France’s unwavering support in the fight against terrorism.
President Jonathan commended his French counterpart for organising the Paris Summit of Heads of State of Nigeria, Benin Republic, Cameroon, Niger and Chad in May 2014 to foster greater regional cooperation against terrorism and insurgency.
The President pledged that beyond the ongoing military campaign in the North East, Nigeria will continue to implement all agreements reached at the summit to ensure lasting peace and security within its borders and in neighbouring countries.
President Jonathan also seized the opportunity of the audience with Mr. Labriolle to reassure the international community of his firm commitment to free, fair and credible polls in Nigeria next month.
The President wished the outgoing ambassador well in his future endeavours and urged him to always be a “good ambassador of Nigeria’’.
In his remarks, Ambassador Labriolle said that France was “confident in the future of Nigeria and its ability to continue playing a huge role in Africa and world affairs.”
The ambassador also expressed delight at improved trade and economic ties between Nigeria and France in the last three years, noting that over 250 French companies are currently operating in Nigeria. [myad]

South Korean Court Legalizes Adultery

South Korean leader
South Korea’s Constitutional Court today, struck down a controversial adultery law, which for more than 60 years had criminalised extra-marital sex and jailed violators for up to two years.
The nine-member bench ruled by seven to two that the 1953 statute aimed at protecting traditional family values was unconstitutional.

The presiding justice Park Han-Chul said: “even if adultery should be condemned as immoral, state power should not intervene in individuals’ private lives.”

The decision saw shares in the South Korean firm Unidus Corp, one of the world’s largest condom manufacturers, soar by the daily limit of 15 percent on the local stock exchange.
It was the fifth time the apex court had considered the constitutional legality of the legislation, which had made South Korea one of the few non-Muslim countries to regard marital infidelity as a criminal act.

In the past six years, close to 5,500 people have been formerly arraigned on adultery charges — including nearly 900 in 2014.

But the numbers had been falling, with cases that ended in prison terms increasingly rare.

Whereas 216 people were jailed under the law in 2004, that figure had dropped to 42 by 2008, and since then only 22 have found themselves behind bars, according to figures from the state prosecution office.

The downward trend was partly a reflection of changing societal trends in a country where rapid modernisation has frequently clashed with traditionally conservative norms.

“Public conceptions of individuals’ rights in their sexual lives have undergone changes,” Park said, as he delivered the court’s decision.
Reading the dissenting opinion, Justice Ahn Chang-Ho insisted the 1953 statute was a key protector of family morals, and warned that its abolition would “spark a surge in debauchery.”

Under the law, adultery could only be prosecuted on complaint from an injured party, and any case was closed immediately if the plaintiff dropped the charge — a common occurrence that often involved a financial settlement. [myad]

Youth Corper Kills Self As Girl-Friend Jilts Him For Another Man

IGP ABBA

A 26-year-old National Youth Service Corp (NYSC) member, identified as Ernest has committed suicide because his girlfriend had found another man that will marry her after her service.

Reports indicated that the young man whose name was given simply as Ernest, was in love with the female corper , Chioma Okewuru but was violently shaken when Chioma returned from her village over the weekend with a ring from a man she had promised to marry.

Ernest, who is from Edo State and a graduate of the University of Benin, was posted to Cross River State in October, where he met and fell in love with Chioma, and both were serving in Redemption Secondary School, Ofombogha 1 in Obubra Local Government Area of Cross Rivers State.

Acting Divisional Police Officer for Obubra, Noah Ntuen said: “the girl had told the guy that she would not marry him, but that they could be friends. So when she came back from home last weekend and showed him the ring her husband-to-be gave her, the young man became furious.

“On Wednesday, the situation became worse and at about 7pm, he locked himself in the room and took some poisonous substances.”

One of the teachers in the school where both were teaching said: “they met at the NYSC Orientation Camp at Abrekpe-Ebokpo and as luck would have it, they were both posted to the same school where they had a relationship going.

“He had the hope the whole thing would end in marriage, but Chioma already had another person she wants to marry.”

Ntuen said the body of the deceased has been deposited in the mortuary of Obubra General Hospital, while Chioma is with the police, where investigations on the circumstances surrounding the tragic death are in progress. [myad]

 

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