Three persons including a fourteen year old boy were killed today at Igbotako, Oktitpupa Local Government Area of Ondo, following a riot by youths in the town. The police station in the town was vandalized and razed by the mob who were violently protesting the killing of the teenager and another person by a team of officers from the Okitikpupa Local Government Area, who were enforcing the no movement order of the monthly environmental sanitation exercise.
It was gathered that trouble started at the early hours of the day when the chairman of Okitipupa Local Government Council, Shola Piri, tried to stop a market session at Igbotako, a town under his council.
Eye witnesses account said that Piri’s intervention met with a stiff resistance from the people at the market even as he was bent on ensuring that the people complied with the exercise.
The council chairman was said to have sent his orderly to a nearby police station to secure reinforcement, but the situation at the market degenerated into a free for all fight.
It was further learnt that gunshots were fired by the team led by the chairman, killing two persons, one of them a 14-year old and the only son of his parents.
The death of the two persons became the reason for a mob action, but the reinforcement from the police rescued the chairman and his team, who were taken away from scene.
The people immediately turned their anger against the police and attacked the Igbotako police station, vandalising it and eventually torching it.
A source said that the clashes which spread across the town also resulted in the death of three other persons with a number of other people injured.
Soldiers were however called in to quell the mayhem which lasted for about six hours.
Ondo State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Issac Eke, confirmed the development and said that and that the situation was under control. [myad]
Hundreds of youths under the aegis of Northern Youth Forum, have donated N2 million to President Goodluck Jonathan as their contribution for the purchase of presidential nomination form.
The Coordinator of the Forum, Engineer Bello Gambo Bichi announced the donation at a rally in support of President Jonathan in Kano today.
He said the decision to donate the money was borne out of the forum’s resolve to support the re-election bid of the president on the platform of PDP in 2015.
Presenting the contribution to the Minister of Education, Malam Ibrahim Shekarau, the coordinator revealed that it was their total acceptance of the federal government’s achievements under Jonathan that informed their decision to support his re-election bid come 2015. [myad]
The South African Ambassador to Nigeria, Lulu Mnguni has said that the $15 Million earlier seized from some Nigerians by the South African Government has been released to Nigeria.
The South African Government had, on September 5, 2014, seized $9.3 million cash belonging to Nigeria and a month later seized another $5.7 million, claiming that both funds were to be used for illegal purchase of arms..
However, Nigeria’s National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, said the transactions were legal, urging the South African Government to stop actions that could degenerate to a diplomatic showdown.
The South African Government on October 14, 2014 said it would return the money to Nigeria.
Mnguni said while addressing newsmen that Nigeria and his country have come a long way and that the development would only make them remain stronger.
“South Africa’s relations with Nigeria has come a long way, so now this actually will make us much closer, to see how we can close some of these gaps that result in such accidents,” he said.
The South African ambassador added that the seizure of the funds was in no way related to the Synagogue collapse in Lgos, adding:“South Africa’s relation with Nigeria is priceless; it cannot be sold for $15 million.” [myad]
The Igbos are mercenaries; they are there for sale. If the devil were to come today to say, I am the devil about whom the Bible and the Quran have spoken, I am prepared to give money, the Igbo will take the money and vote for him. Quote me!
This is the verdict of a Kano State delegate to the just concluded National Conference and convener of the Coalition of Northern Politicians, Academics, Professionals and Businessmen, Dr. Junaid Mohammed when he spoke in an interview with The Punch’s JOHN ALECHENU. He spoke on other national issues. Excerpts
You were once arrested by the State Security Service for a statement you made which it considered inciting. What do you make of your arrest?
It was true I was invited. That was the word they used. I was invited by the SSS to present myself at their Kano State office which is about one and half kilometres from my residence. Before I arrived Kano from Abuja, there were some shadowy characters who were following me. The order for my arrest came directly from the Director of Operations, an Igbo man. Apparently, he does not like anyone who says anything uncomplimentary about Igbo people and their greed. I think he was particularly very unhappy because I said Igbo have taken charge of the economy and that they have also grabbed most of the land especially for estates in Abuja; where they don’t have any historical claims or any other logical claim to even one square foot of land in Abuja. He was also unhappy because I said what was taken out of the North and converted into a national land holding is about two and half times the size of Lagos. I don’t see any Nigerian ethnic group, zone or region that could be prepared to cede that kind of virgin land in addition to the valuable mineral which is under the land. When I got there, some small boys started asking questions which I answered. I spent about half an hour and somehow; because of the many calls that were coming into my telephone from a number of media people and civil society groups, I think somehow they got a bit jittery and allowed me to go. That was what happened. I believe what was done was deliberate and it had the blessing of people in government at the highest level and those in the security services. It was done primarily with a lot of ethnic bias. I am aware that long before now, SSS had tried to get me arrested months before what happened. They even took my name to the office of the NSA and other people trying to frame me up for things I didn’t do because they said I was unhelpful and that I am a threat to the government of Goodluck Jonathan; I wish I were. Every patriotic Nigerian must do what he or she can do legally to constitute a threat to this government. This is the most irresponsible, most corrupt and the most incompetent government in the history of Nigeria. These are people who are not only tribalistic; they are also sectarian and they are very clannish. Their greed and stupidity is unprecedented in the history of Nigeria.
But people say you’re chronically tribalistic going by your statements on national issues.
I want them to tell me what makes me tribalistic, let them mention the statements they are referring to. If saying about 42 per cent of the key positions in the economic sector of Nigeria is dominated by Igbo, if that is what they call tribalism, then I stand by that tribalistic statement because these are verifiable facts and whenever I made that statement, I mentioned names and positions and institutions. For example, I said the most powerful person in this country is the Minister of Finance who is in fact, the de facto Prime Minister. What it means is that she is the de facto head of government. For a person who was not elected and the legitimacy of the government that appointed her still in doubt, anybody who thinks saying this is being tribalistic, so be it. They can burn to ashes and go to hell. Two, I said the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria is also an Igbo person, next I said the DG, Nigerian Economic Summit Group is an Igbo man, the DG, Sovereign Wealth Fund, is also an Igbo person, the DG, Securities and Exchange Commission is also an Igbo person, the DG, Manufacturers Association of Nigeria is also an Igbo person, other ministries which are very critical to the running of the economy like aviation, are also in the hands of Igbo people. So, what are we talking about? Igbo remains one ethnic group in Nigeria that is so devoid of any shame to show their greed, selfishness and contempt for other ethnic groups. I said and I will still say that the first time Igbo officers staged a coup and assassinated wholesale the political leaders of most other ethnic groups was when we had General Aguiyi Ironsi as the Supreme Commander of the Nigerian Armed Forces. He was involved in the coup where the entire political leadership, the military and economic leadership of other regions especially the North was decapitated under him and he was from Umuahia. The next time we had another Igbo man as Chief of Army Staff was at the height of the Boko Haram insurgency and that man was (Azubuike) Ihejirika, who also comes from the same Abia State, from the same Umuahia. So, if this is what they use to call me a tribalist, then they can go to hell.
Are you one of those who believe Northerners are born to rule and that a Northerner should be President in 2015?
I have never said a Northerner should rule Nigeria in 2015. There was never a time in my entire political career when I said a Northerner must govern or rule Nigeria under any circumstance. I will not dignify this question with an answer. Next question.
Why did you say that President Jonathan will not win a credible election in 2015?
Because he never won any election in the past. The election which brought him to power as number two to Umaru Yar’Adua was not a credible election. The election he was alleged to have won in 2011 was not credible and I don’t believe he could win any election if anybody is to vote rationally- by this I mean, if people are to vote for a man on the basis of his performance and that performance must tally with what he promised to do, there is no way-let me tell you, we have a saying in American English ‘at the end of the day, all politics is local.’ As far as I am concerned, if he is to be voted for without recourse to ethnicity and religious bias and people are to vote for him on the basis of performance, there is no reason why any part of this country should vote for him- apart from the mercenary Igbo and of course, the Ijaw who are opportunistic, they are the only people who will have occasion to vote for Jonathan. When I say Ijaw, I choose my words carefully because most of the people who got appointments in this government are Ijaw, not Kalabari, their cousins, not the people of Akwa Ibom whether they are Anang or Ibibio and not even the few other tribes who are not associated with Edwin Clark. None of them got anything. The Igbo are mercenaries; they are there for sale. If the devil were to come today to say, I am the devil about whom the Bible and the Quran have spoken, I am prepared to give money, the Igbo will take the money and vote for him. Quote me!
You once described President Jonathan as a bad president. Is it because he’s not a Northerner?
I knew Jonathan before most of you. I employed him and Chief Horsefall is alive. I employed him (Jonathan) as Assistant Director when I was a Federal Commissioner in OMPADEC in Port Harcourt. To be fair to President Jonathan, he has never denied me nor has he ever denied circumstances surrounding my employing him. If I hated him, why should I be the one who was instrumental in his getting a job as Assistant Director in OMPADEC? Two, I said he was a bad President but I never said he was a bad director of ecology because that was what I recommended and insisted he should be employed as and he was employed. I did not say he was good enough to be president but I said he was good enough to be director of ecology because he comes from an educationally disadvantaged area and that to me is important. I come from the North which is also educationally disadvantaged and I believe people who are underrepresented in such circumstances especially in the Federal Government institutions should be employed. I believe every Nigerian has a right to be given a sense of belonging and I believe one of the good aspects of a government is how inclusive it is so that every Nigerian should have a sense of belonging. I have never hated him and he himself has never said I hated him.
Some people say that you hate Igbo people, is that the case?
I have an Igbo daughter. I don’t see how I can hate my daughter. My daughter speaks better Igbo than Hausa. Nobody can make me hate my daughter. I also have a Yoruba daughter and I have an Ijaw daughter who is doing her Master’s degree at the University of Ghana, Legon. I don’t hate Igbo but I see no reason why I should spare them when they have done more damage to the psyche, to the sovereignty and the existence of Nigeria. Some of my closest friends for life are Igbo and one of them is Uche. S.G Ikoku is someone I regard as my political mentor even more than the late Aminu Kano-as far as I am concerned, and he was an Igboman. I can tell you many more. I have never associated with other Nigerians (who are either majority or minorities) who have accused me of being a tribalist.
You have said a lot about the 1966 coup, where some northern leaders were killed. What about the killing of Igbo in the North, weren’t you bothered about that too?
I have always said that tit for tat killing is not a characteristic of human beings. I have always said that an eye for an eye is not a way of running a society. If you continue an eye for an eye, at the end of the day, the world will be blind. I am not a believer in an eye for an eye and I never believed that what the Igbo did which was purely on tribal basis, politically motivated-it was also motivated by tribal hatred- was right. Even if what they did was deliberate; I believe it was deliberate. The frenzy which somehow took over the North was wrong because I believe there was a way in which that issue would have been handled differently in a much more humane and sensible manner. That is number one. Number two, when you look at what happened during and after the Igbo coup and the action of the Igbo, you don’t justify what happened, but you have to agree that the Igbo themselves contributed to the severity of what happened after their own tribal coup because I was alive and well and I knew what the Igbo were saying afterwards. They were showing photographs of the Sardauna and saying we killed your father. I saw that, in addition and if you look at the long term consequences of the Igbo coup and the civil war afterwards, you will notice that first and foremost, the North treated the Igbo much more humanely, much more honestly and as fellow citizens than the rest of the country. My first job in government in 1968/69 was as an abandoned properties officer in Sabon Gari, Kano. At that time and up till now, Sabon Gari is one of the most developed parts of Kano metropolis. When I finished my assignment and had to leave for the Soviet Union, I handed over to another person. The sum total of what I am saying is that not a single Igboman can claim that he came back to Kano and that his house or property was alienated. Every Igboman who came back got his property back and I challenge any Igboman to tell me that he came back to Kano or any part of the North for that matter and he found that his land had been taken from him or his house or his market stall or anything of that nature. I can give you an example of a good friend of mine, Prof. ABC Nwosu who was formerly Political Adviser to former President Olusegun Obasanjo and later Minister of Health during the first term of Obasanjo’s administration. He was the one telling me and he is alive- he said but for the houses his father left in Kano which he recovered completely when he came back, he and six of his brothers would never have gone to school. You can crosscheck this with ABC Nwosu. If I hate Igbo, he will not tell me that. He is a good friend of mine and Governor Sule Lamido; fact must be fact.
You said that Gen. Buhari is not fit to rule Nigeria again. Do you have any other Northerner in mind who will offer good leadership to Nigeria?
Where and when did I say that? I never said that.
You said that the PDP cannot win the presidential election in 2015. What will you do if the party wins?
There will be mayhem. The party cannot win a free and fair election. It is not beyond it to connive with Attahiru Jega the way they did in 2011. And if they do that, there will be mayhem.
Why do you think that Abuja should go with the North if Nigeria divides? Is Abuja not central to the country?
Abuja has been and remains central to Nigeria but it is also central to the North. In creating Abuja, not one square foot of the other regions was incorporated into Abuja. In fact, 80 per cent of the whole land of Abuja came from Niger State. The remaining 20 per cent came from the northern states of Kaduna and a small fraction of Nasarawa when it was part of Plateau. How can you then say if Nigerians decide to go their separate ways, Abuja will remain central? I have said it before that if you draw a straight line from Abuja southwards, you will have to go over 351,000 kilometres before you reach the end of the North. That is where the border will be in case of a break-up. I invite you and the Igbo irredentists and all the historical revisionists to see what happened recently when the North and South Sudan split. The North retained Khartoum. The stretch from Khartoum to the border is more than the distance between Abuja and Okpila. Even Okpila where you have the cement factory is originally Igbira land and if we want to reacquire it, we will re-acquire it, it is Northern land. If Nigeria was to break up, Abuja will not only remain a northern territory, it will also remain the capital of a new Nigeria. It will be unfortunate, but there is no alternative. If Nigeria were to break up tomorrow, the North with Abuja as capital will acquire all the assets and liabilities of Abuja.
Many think if President Goodluck Jonathan wins in next year’s poll, the current Boko Haram crisis will not subside. Do you share this fear?
I believe that this government is involved with Boko Haram directly and indirectly with some of the terrorists in the Niger Delta. Anybody who believes that there is a direct connection knows that this Boko Haram insurgency is not coming out of the blues; it is being financed indirectly or directly by the government. If as they tried to do during the (Peter) Odili tenure in Rivers, to encourage people to unleash violence and after the election, they abandon them, those people will take up arms and unleash terror on them. The fact is this, government is irredeemably corrupt and incompetent.
Do you think that negotiation is the key to curtailing the Boko Haram crisis in the North-East?
Who are you going to negotiate with? Modu Ali Sheriff, Asari Dokubo, Edwin Clark or the President himself who are all implicated? How do you talk about stopping armed robbery with a confirmed armed robber?
You seem not to see many good things about the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan. What is your rating of his administration?
I am sorry to say and I hope that I don’t sound too negative, I challenge anyone who has anything positive to tell me. The first responsibility of any government is the maintenance of law and order, is there law and order in Nigeria today? No. One of the first promises made by this President was that he was going to get rid of corruption, has he done that? He promised he was going to get rid of poverty, the poverty level has risen beyond belief. Tell me what he has done about infrastructure? On a daily basis, I spend more on petrol than I pay on a monthly basis for my entire NEPA bill. I live in a small bungalow, my bill has been in excess of N2,000 for the past six months, I have not paid more than that. And there is no water, no major state in Nigeria has reliable water supply. And the Igbo who have been running the ministry of aviation have taken it upon themselves to deny other airports particularly Kano Airport of commercial venture. They want to destroy the airport as a commercial venture, they have refused other airlines who had expressed interest in coming to Kano. Starting with Stella Odua and now Osita Chidoka, I challenge those who say Jonathan has performed to tell me what he has done in terms of what he claims he would do. [myad]
A former federal permanent secretary in the ministry of defence, Mike Onoja has declared his intention to challenge the Senate President, David Mark in the next general election on the platform of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
Onoja, who once contested against Governor Gabriel Suswan in 2007 to rule Benue State but failed is now on Mark’s throat.
Mark is representing the people of Benue South Senatorial district (zone C) comprising nine Local Government Areas in the state with Idoma having seven and Igede two, respectively.
Despite the declaration by the PDP and Suswan that there is no vacancy in zone C, Onoja has apparently put aside such arrangement.
Addressing a crowd of supporters that gathered in his honor in Oturkpo, the headquarters of the Idoma people, Onoja said it was unacceptable and undemocratic that one man will be there since 1999 as he must have lost ideas as well as touch with the grassroots.
The retired technocrat said that Mark had all the while been using Apa state creation to deceive the Idoma people in other to find his way to the red chambers.
“Deceiving our people is unacceptable and with your support we can stop that through the ballots.
“The zone C senate seat is not a birthright neither it is a traditional stool that one man will lay claims to.
“In the same vein, we most change the baton else it is breeding dictatorship, feudalism which end product is backwardness.”
Onoja also inaugurated a committee to mobilise grassroots support for his campaign. [myad]
National Chairman of All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief John Oyegun and APC presidential aspirants; Major General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd.) and Atiku Abubakar at the 7th anniversary celebration of Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State in Port Harcourt on Saturday.
Presidential aspirants of All Progressives Congress (APC), Atiku Abubakar and Major General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd.) in a tet-a-tet at the 7th anniversary celebration of Governor Rotimi Amaechi, of Rivers State in Port Harcourt.
Former Vice President and presidential aspirant of All Progressives Congress (APC), Atiku Abubakar cracks joke with Senator Chris Ngige at the 7th anniversary celebration of Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State.
Nigeria’s Minister of Power, Professor Chinedu Nebo has identified the contract awarded for the Zungeru Hydro Electricity Power Plant which has been on the drawing board in the last 30 years as one of the 15 landmark achievements of his ministry under the power sector roadmap. The minister spoke on the topic: Nigeria’s Power Sector Transformation Story– Federal Government Commitment to Address Post-Privatization Challenges at the 4th Worldstage National Electricity Power Conference, through his Special Assistant on Investment and Finance, Olajuywon Olaleye in Lagos. Professor Nebo said that Nigerians that have been following the developments in the power sector would know that the ministry has made great strides and recorded major successes in the reform journey. Some of these achievements, he said, include the re-constitution of the Board of National Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), thus enabling the regulator to become more responsive to the demands of the emerging market; the reconstituted NERC successfully launched the Multi-Year Tariff Order 2 (MYTO2) and this became operational on 01 June 2012. “In line with the power reform roadmap, the Nigeria Bulk Electricity Trading Company plc (Bulk Trader) and Nigeria Electricity Liability Management Company Ltd (NELMCO) were incorporated and are now fully operational.” Acording to Professor Nebo, other achievements are as follows: A management contract is in place for the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) to bring global best practices in revamping and expanding the national grid. The TCN Board was inaugurated and the Schedule of Delegated Authority (SODA) was issued to Manitoba Hydro of Canada. Establishment of the Electricity Management Service PL (EMS) to take over the responsibilities of some non-core operational and subsidiary assets of the defunct PHCN and provide some ancillary service. Establishment of National Power Training Institute (NAPTIN) to serve as the premiere training institute for the power sector. It is noteworthy that for over ten years, no formal training was provided to the engineering or technical cadre in the defunct institution. The preferred bidders for ten (10) GenCos and five (5) DisCo have successfully concluded the purchase of the assets and have taken over full operations. The official handover ceremony was held on November 1, 2013 Preferred bidders have been chosen for the 10 NIPP plants through a competitive bid process and the 25% initial payments have been made. The NIPP plants are expected to contribute an additional 4000 MWs to the grid. The contract for the Zungeru Hydro Electricity Power Plant was awarded after staying some 30 years on the drawing board. The Ministry has repositioned itself towards providing effective overall leadership for the sector and facilitating investments with special attention to National Grid, green-field IPPs, renewable and rural access to electricity. Fifty-five (55) IPPs have applied to NBET for PPAs. Including three (3) renewable energy IPPs, one coal generating IPP, and the rest gas fuelled IPPs The market Operator inaugurated an automated Power Collect Command Centre meant to ensure transparent revenue collection and payment in the electricity value chain. An Emergency Gas Plan was created to provide relief, in the short term, to the challenges of delivering enough gas to the power plants. The recently announced increase in the price of gas to power has provided a key impetus for the medium to long solution of the problems of gas supply shortfalls. A CBN Intervention fund has been approved to pay off the legacy gas debt owed to some of the IOC’s The draft Renewable Energy Efficiency Policy is due for review at the Federal Executive Council in the near future for adoption. The minister said that the privatization of the Nigerian power sector has been internationally acclaimed as one of the most ambitious reform programs ever of any public utility embarked by any nation. He admitted, however, that it has not always been a bed of roses, saying that the reform has had its challenges along the way and slippages due to the size and scope of the reforms. “We are now marching towards the declaration of the Transitional Electricity Market (TEM) when the power sector will fully function as a market with full contractual obligations for all market participants. The protocols for market initiation are being finalized in readiness for the TEM and most conditions-precedent have been met.”
President Goodluck Jonathan has demonstrated on a number of occasions that he has imbibed good lessons about Nigerian politics from his faltering beginning, especially as a leader. He has demonstrated the art of patience; of waiting to size up the opinions of the citizens, especially on major national issues, though, history has shown that not all majority opinions are right. President Jonathan demonstrated his understanding of the rope, during the removal of subsidy on fuel which led to national uprising. And or he was taught a lesson by it. Since the calls have been coming from various quarters, on him to contest the next year’s Presidential election for another term of four years in office, he has maintained a dignified aloofness and some measure of silence. We in Greenbarge Reporters were particularly impressed by a statement he personally made recently, to the effect that he would consider certain factors before he declares his position publicly. He had said: “in deciding on an appropriate response to such calls (on him to run for the Presidency in 2015), I will place the greater interests of national harmony, cohesion, unity, security, political stability, progress, equity, justice and fairness above any personal ambition or sectional agenda.” The President, never the less, thanked “the many individuals, stakeholders, groups, associations, non-governmental organizations, unions and political leaders from across the country who have, in recognition and appreciation of our efforts and commitment to repositioning our dear nation for more rapid growth and development, urged me to seek a second term in office.” Jonathan did not only talk about himself and his love for the unity of and peace in the country, but also called on all political leaders to place the overriding interest of the well-being and progress of the fatherland above all other considerations in the coming campaigns and elections, even as he asked them to rise above unedifying, unpatriotic and selfish personal interests and divisive sectional agenda. “Let us also commit ourselves more to the sustenance of democracy and political stability which are essential prerequisites for the advancement of good governance, inclusive economic growth and rapid development.” These thoughtful, well-articulated Presidential statements dazzled a lot of citizens who believed that the President would factor himself into it in the face of the deluge of calls on him to run. It is on record that such calls have in the past never been in short supply, particularly on sitting leaders. Remember the deafening calls all over the country, on the late Head of State, General Sani Abacha to run for the Presidency and succeed himself in office. Bizarre as such calls looked, General Abacha was enjoying all of them and obviously preparing to honour them. The lure of power has always made leaders to kowtow and pander to such calls, most of which are promoted and oiled by the beneficiaries or would-be beneficiaries of the sitting leaders. A few of them are even engineered by the leaders themselves. However, if President Jonathan would match word with action, he would also listen to the tiny and seemingly unpopular voice that has been saying otherwise about his right to run in 2015. This has been the voice that has been dwarfed by the din. This is where he would be able to make a balanced decision on November 11 when, as his declaration committee chairman, Dr. Haliru Bello said, he will speak to the nation on this matter. Of course, it would not be a surprise if on November 11, Jonathan announces his acceptance of the calls “by the good people” of this country for him to run. On the other hand, he may come out as a living legend for a long time to come if he declines the calls, which will also, confirms his policy, in the earlier days of his government “of doing things differently.” Anybody that wants to judge the matter with objective mind would give it to President Jonathan that he has done a lot of good and progressive things to the socio-economic and political structure of this country. However, the fact remains that if Jonathan remains in office as President for the next 20 years, there is no way he would be able to complete all such good things he has started on Nigeria. That means that there would still be the necessity for him to continue, possibly ad infinitum. That is why we in Greenbarge Reporters believe in him and volunteer an honest, unbiased advice to him to honestly and sincerely apply this statement he made, to himself now before November 11: “in deciding on an appropriate response to such calls (on him to run for the Presidency in 2015), I will place the greater interests of national harmony, cohesion, unity, security, political stability, progress, equity, justice and fairness above any personal ambition or sectional agenda.”
A mob today stormed a police station in Taraba state where a lecturer at the Taraba College of Education, Zing, Alhaji Kassimu Umar had ran to, after knocking down and killing five primary school pupils with a vehicle he was driving. The mob burnt the lecturer to death instantly in the station. The Police Public Relations officer in the Taraba state Police Command Joseph Kwaji, confirmed the incident and said that the mob forcefully removed Umar from the Pupule Police Outpost, where he went to report the incident, and burnt him to death. “In the early hours of today, Friday, one Kassimu Umar, who is believed to be a lecturer with COE, Zing, had knocked down five primary school pupils who all died on the spot. “After he reported the incident to the Pupule Police station, irate youths in their hundreds, stormed the station, dragged him out and lynched him. “Our investigation revealed that the lecturer was trying to dodge a trailer, when he ran over the pupils whose ages ranged between eight and 11 years.” Kwaji said that the matter is under investigation, adding that no arrest had so far been made.
A Mexican governor, Angel Aguirre, 58, has resigned following increasingly violent protests over the fate of 43 students who vanished in his state after being allegedly abducted by police last month.
Angel Aguirre, governor of Guerrero state, said he requested an indefinite leave of absence—the usual way that governors in Mexico resign—to facilitate the search for the missing students.
“I am convinced this is the most responsible decision,” said Mr. Aguirre..
The governor has been under pressure since police in the Guerrero city of Iguala killed six people and detained 43 college students last month before allegedly delivering them to a local drug cartel, prosecutors say. The missing students are widely believed to be dead.
Mr. Aguirre, a member of the leftist Party of the Democratic Revolution, is the second Mexican governor driven from office recently by public fury against gangland violence and the alleged connivance of local and state officials with gangsters.
In June, the governor of next-door Michoacán state also stepped down, following 16 months of armed insurrection by so-called self-defense groups fighting to oust the Knights Templar cartel.
Both are signs that while Mexico’s government has pushed through ambitious economic and political overhauls, it hasn’t been equally successful in tackling the country’s deep-seated security problems.
Mr. Aguirre is a political ally of Iguala’s fugitive Mayor José Luis Abarca, whom federal officials say ordered city police to detain the students. Officials also accuse the mayor’s wife of belonging to the local drug cartel, called the Guerreros Unidos, or United Warriors.
Mexico’s ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party and conservative National Action Party had both called on the governor to step down, a call echoed by many members of his own party.
Protesters demanding Mr. Aguirre’s resignation and the safe return of the missing students set fire Wednesday to the city hall in Iguala, Guerrero’s third largest city. Last week, protesters gutted government offices at Guerrero’s state capital of Chilpancingo. Tens of thousands protested peacefully across Mexico on Wednesday, including an estimated 50,000 who marched in Mexico City, for the students’ safe return and Mr. Aguirre’s resignation.
Mexican officials have blamed the Iguala shootings and abductions on Mr. Abarca, the fugitive mayor, and his wife. Attorney General Jesús Murillo Karam this week said Mr. Abarca ordered the police to detain the students who he believed were on the way to disrupt an outdoor event hosted by his wife, who townspeople say was running to replace him as Iguala’s mayor in elections set for July.
Mr. Murillo Karam said the mayor and his wife were in the pay of Guerreros Unidos, a local criminal gang which paid them up to $230,000 a month, and the Iguala police department another $50,000. He said Mr. Abarca’s wife had close family ties to the Guerreros Unidos.
Mr. Aguirre had spent most of this political career with Mr. Peña Nieto’s Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which ruled Mexico for most of the 20th century and returned to national power in 2012 after a 12-year hiatus.
He was named interim governor of Guerrero in 1996, when the massacre by state police of 17 protesting farmers forced his predecessor from office. Two years later, with Mr. Aguirre in the statehouse, Mexican soldiers killed 11 community activists meeting in a schoolhouse in a Guerrero mountain village.
Mr. Aguirre changed parties in 2010 after failing to win the PRI’s gubernatorial nomination and won the governorship the next year.
“When he split from the PRI he took a whole bunch of local operatives with him to the PRD,” said Dwight Dyer, senior Latin America analyst for Control Risks, the London based security consultancy, referring to the leftist party by its initials. Should they change party loyalties again, those operatives and the voters they influence could return the state to PRI control in July’s election, Mr. Dyer said. [myad]
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