Thursday, 8 December 2011

Former US Governor Blagojevich gets 14 years prison sentence



Rod Blagojevich



Former Illinois Governor, Rod Blagojevich has been sentenced to 14 years imprisonment for political corruption including attempting to sell the United States Senate seat vacated by then President-elect Barack Obama, Reuters reports.
Blagojevich, who turns 55 on Saturday, must serve at least 85 per cent of the sentence or about 12 years before being released under the sentencing guidelines.
He was convicted of seeking jobs and campaign contributions in exchange for state government action.
Blagojevich, a Democrat who was ousted from office in 2009, had asked U.S. District Judge James B. Zagel for mercy, saying he was ``unbelievably sorry.’’
Zagel said before sentencing that he accepted Blagojevich's apology, but ``it comes too late.’’ disputing the defence theory that Blagojevich was misled by his staff.
``The governor was not marched along the criminal path by his staff. He marched them and ruined a few of their careers,’’ he said
During the trial, prosecutors presented evidence suggesting Blagojevich sought 1.5 million dollars in campaign contributions from supporters of Representative Jesse Jackson, Jr., in exchange for appointing him to the Senate seat.
They also said Blagojevich sought a cabinet post or a high-paying Washington job in exchange for appointing Obama's choice to the Senate seat, Valerie Jarrett, now a White House aide.
He was also convicted of attempting to shake down the head of a children's hospital for campaign cash in exchange for authorizing an increase in doctor reimbursement fees, and shaking down the head of Illinois racetracks in exchange for approving legislation favourable to the industry.
Federal authorities, who had been taping Blagojevich's profanity-laced conversations with aides, arrested him in December 2008, before he could complete the crime, prosecutors have argued.
Blagojevich was tried twice, first in August 2010, when he was convicted of one charge of lying to investigators and jurors deadlocked on 23 other counts.
After a second trial this year, he was convicted of 17 of 20 counts. Blagojevich must report to prison on February 16.
His predecessor in the governor's office, Republican George Ryan, is currently in prison on corruption charges.

Wednesday, 7 December 2011

Israel ex-President goes to jail


Moshe Katsav



The disgraced former Israeli President, Moshe Katsav, has arrived at Maasiyahu prison near Tel Aviv to begin a seven-year sentence for rape, the BBC reports.
Leaving his home in the town of Kiryat Malachi, he insisted he was innocent and accused the state of "executing" him and "burying a man alive".
Katsav's case has entranced and horrified the Israeli nation.
He was convicted a year ago, but was allowed to remain free while he appealed against the conviction.
Katsav, who turned 66 on Monday, resigned from the largely ceremonial post of president two weeks before his seven-year term was to expire in 2007, under a plea bargain that would have allowed him to escape a prison sentence.
But he then rejected the deal he had struck with prosecutors, vowing to prove his innocence in court.
In November, the Supreme Court unanimously upheld his conviction for raping a former employee when he was a cabinet minister in the 1990s, and for sexually harassing two other women while president.
"Moshe Katsav will go to jail as planned and will receive the same conditions as other prisoners," Israel's minister for internal security, Yitzhak Aharonovich, told Israel Radio on Tuesday.
Suicide watch
Katsav will be placed in a wing at Maasiyahu that is reserved for observant Jews, and will share a cell with ex-government minister Shlomo Benizri in a move intended to ease his transition, reports say.

Monday, 5 December 2011

Fuel subsidy scam : Senate releases names of cabal



Oando Oil, CONOIL, African Petroleum and MRS Oil are among the powerful players in the petroleum sector that have shared over N3.655 trillion between 2006 and September 2011 in pursuit of importation of refined petroleum products.
This was revealed today in Abuja by the Nigerian Senate joint Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), Appropriation and Finance.
Senator Magnus Ibe, the chairman of the committee, also disclosed that some 100 companies in the downstream sector and in construction, shared over N1.426 trillion between January and August 2011 alone.
Oando Oil is owned by Wale Tinubu’s Oando; Mike Adenuga owns CONOIL, Femi Otedola owns AP, while MRS Oil is run by Aliko Dangote's brother, Sayyu Dantata. Other key players named today include Pinaccle Construction Ltd, as well as Integrated Oil and Gas, which is owned by a former Minister of the Interior, Capt. Emmanuel Iheanacho.
The full list, and their individual haul, as read out by Senator Abe, is as follows:
1. Oando Nigerian Plc. – N228.506 billion
2. MRS –N224.818 billion
3. Pinnacle Construction-N300 billion
4. Enak Oil & Gas –N19.684 billion
5. CONOIl – N37.960 billion
6. Bovas & Co. Nig. Ltd. – N5.685 billion,
7. Obat N85 billion and AP; N104.5billion.
8. Folawiyo Oil - N113.3 billion
9. IPMAN Investment Limited- N10.9billion
10. ACON - N24.1billion
11. Atio Oil-N64.4billion
12. AMP- N11.4billion
13. Honeywell-N12.2billion
14. Emac Oil- N19.2billion
15. D.Jones Oil-N14.8billion;
16. Capital Oil - N22.4 billion
17. AZ Oil- N18.613billion
18. Eterna oil- N5.57 billion
19. Dozil oil- N3.375 billion
20. Fort oil-N8.582 billion.
21. Integrated Oil and Gas- N30.777 billion
With reference to 2011, the companies named by the Senate and the amount of money they have received this year alone include Otedola's African Petroleum, N104.58 billion; A.A. Rano, N1.14 billion; A.S.B, N3.16 billion; Arcon Plc, N24.116 billion; Aminu Resources, N2.3 billion; Avante Guard, N1.14 billion; Avido, N3.64 billion; Boffas and Company, N3.67 billion; and Brilla Energy, N960.3 million.
Others also listed are: DownStream Energy, N789.648 million; Dosil Oil and Gas, N3.375 billion; Inco Ray, N1.988 billion; Eternal, N5.574 billion; Folawiyo Energy, N113.32 billion; Frado International, N2.63 billion; First Deepwater Oil, N257.396 million; Heden Petrol, N693 million; Honeywell Petrol, N12.2 billion; Integrated oil, N30.777billion; AMP, N11.417 billion; Ascon, N5.271 billion; Channel Oil, N1.308 billion; Fort Oil, N8.582 billion; Enak Oil & Gas, N19.684 billion; IPMAN Investment Limited, N10.9 billion; Atio Oil, N64.4billion; AMP, N11.4billion; and Emac Oil, N19.2billion.
Findings by SaharaReporters correspondent indicate that in 2006, only MRS, TOTAL and OANDO were officially listed as beneficiaries of the fuel subsidy recognised by the Federal Government. The three companies were said to have been listed as “major marketers.”


culled from Sahara Reporters

Gunmen kill bridegroom, guest at wedding ceremony



Unknown gunmen in Maiduguri stormed the venue of the wedding ceremony on Saturday of 30-year-old Maduga Borikmen and shot him dead.
It was gathered that stray bullets also hit one person and injured two others on the occasion.
According to an eye witness, who pleaded anonymity, three assailants arrived at the scene in a golf car.
The gunmen, suspected to be members of the Boko Haram, alighted from the car with AK47 riffles. They went straight to the bridegroom, opened fire on him and drove off.
Borikmen was a former councillor from Shehuri North under Lamisula ward in the state capital and currently the Chairman of Borno ex-councillors forum.
The state spokesman of the Joint Task Force (JTF) Lt.-Col. Hassan Mohammed, confirmed the incident, saying that the body of the victim had been evacuated.
“The two dead bodies recovered from the scene have been deposited at the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), while those injured are receiving treatment in the medical centre,” he added

culled from Sahara Reporters

85 priests were accused of abuse - Catholic Church reviews


Pope Benedict the 16th



Six reports published by the Catholic Church in Ireland have revealed there were child abuse allegations against 85 priests across the dioceses.
The audits of child protection practices - two of NI dioceses - were conducted by the Church's National Board for Safeguarding Children.
They covered the period from 1975 until the present.
The bishop of Raphoe apologised for "poor judgements" in managing priests accused of "horrific acts of abuse".
Bishop Philip Boyce was speaking as a review of the County Donegal diocese found "a significant level" of clerical abuse cases in past decades.
The case of Father Eugene Greene, the convicted paedophile, stood out.
Maeve Lewis, of the abuse victims' group One in Four, said: "The audits show that real progress has been made in putting in place child protection measures in the six dioceses."
However, she expressed concern "regarding the number of priests against whom allegations have been made who are still in ministry".
Patrick Corrigan, Northern Ireland programme director of Amnesty International, said: "What we can see today is barely a glimpse into the horror of abuse suffered by children in parishes in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.
"Clerical abuse survivors in Northern Ireland have been in touch with Amnesty and have told us they wish to see a proper, independent public inquiry into clerical child abuse in this jurisdiction."
Derry diocese
A report for the Derry diocese said it had dealt with allegations of sex abuse against 23 of its priests.
A total of 31 allegations had been reported to the police in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.
The report said 33 allegations had been made to social services.
A total of four priests against whom allegations were made had left the priesthood or were ''out of ministry".
The Derry report said: "Those who have suffered child abuse should receive a compassionate and just response and should be offered appropriate pastoral care to rebuild their lives.
"Those who have harmed others should be helped to face up to the reality of abuse, as well as being assisted in healing."
However, John Heaney, 53, who was abused by other children at a home run by the Catholic Church in Derry, said the review was "a PR exercise by the Church to get people back into Mass".
"It's a disgrace, this is only about saying 'look at what we've put in place, look how great we are now'. Well it's too late, not even a hint of an apology," he said.
"If you look at the report, there's not one mention of prior 1975 victims, there is no mention of any type of help or support for those people still suffering to this day due to the abuse."
Raphoe
Eugene Greene abused boys in the Diocese of Raphoe
The Raphoe report draws attention to "significant errors of judgement" by "successive bishops".
It said "judgements were clouded, due to the presenting problem being for example, alcohol abuse and an inability to hear the concerns about abuse of children".
The review said allegations were made against a total of 14 priests, including Greene, between 1975 and 2010.
Greene, the most notorious offender, was sentenced to 12 years in prison in 1999 for abusing 26 boys over 20 years.
The Irish police received 52 allegations concerning priests in the diocese during the period from 1975 to 2010.
Eight priests against whom an allegation was made are now "out of ministry" or have left the priesthood.
Four have been convicted of abuse. Six priests against whom an allegation was made are in ministry or had retired at the date of the review.
Bishop Boyce said the clergy were "truly sorry for the terrible deeds inflicted on so many by a small minority of priests".
"Insufficient emphasis was placed on the needs of victims, often in the misguided attempt to protect the reputation of the Church", he said.
"This review has concluded that the diocese now has a robust safeguarding policy and procedure in place for safeguarding children."
The bishop said the diocese intended to make renewed contact with survivors of sex abuse to ensure that their needs were met.
"The people of the Diocese of Raphoe have suffered much over the last 20 years with a proportionately high number of priests with complaints of child sexual abuse made against them," he said.
"The number of allegations was also high. It is to our shame that we admit this. But this fact makes us all the more determined to create a safe environment for our children."
The retired bishop of Derry, and former bishop of Raphoe, Seamus Hegarty said: "I now look back and know that my practice in the past was sometimes poor and I am deeply sorry that anyone was hurt through my management of allegations historically.
"I know that I made big efforts to improve as time went on and this is reflected in the Derry report."
Dromore
In Dromore in Northern Ireland, the audit revealed 35 allegations of abuse made against 10 priests since 1975.
Three of those are now dead and the remaining seven are out of ministry. It said there had been no convictions.
Twelve recommendations have been made, including that Bishop John McAreavey should consider writing to all complainants upon receipt of an allegation, offering them support and counselling.
The bishop said he would "continue to give my best energy to the work of safeguarding in the diocese and in support of all those involved in this crucial area".
The review in the Diocese of Kilmore, which comprises 36 parishes mainly in Counties Cavan and Leitrim - but also in Fermanagh, Meath and Sligo - found there were allegations of abuse against seven priests in the diocese, one of whom is currently in jail for abuse of a minor.
Bishop Leo O'Reilly said: "Each allegation represents a person who has suffered and my thoughts today are very much with survivors of abuse."
'Serious harm'
The audit on the archdioceses of Tuam was sharply critical of the way in which allegations of child abuse were handled in the past and said "serious harm was done to children by a few priests of the archdioceses".
Twenty-five allegations of child abuse were made against 18 priests of the dioceses since 1975. Two priests were brought before the courts and convicted; 10 of the 18 are now dead - including one of those who was convicted.
The remaining eight are not in ministry.
The report for the Diocese of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise found 14 allegations were made to Irish police concerning 13 priests in the diocese since January 1975 and of those only one is alive and he is no longer in ministry.
One priest was convicted of offences against a child during the period.
There are two other retired priests against whom allegations were made currently resident in the diocese.
'Marked improvement'
All six reports have been conducted by the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church.
In a summary of the findings, the Board for Safeguarding Children said a "marked improvement" had taken place in two key areas.
"Firstly, reporting allegations to the statutory authorities occurs promptly and comprehensively," it said.
"Secondly, the need to create and maintain a safe environment for children in the Church is comprehensively accepted and implemented."
The board helps to protect children in the Catholic Church from being abused by priests or anyone else. It was set up in the wake of various child abuse scandals.
The board is now reviewing every diocese in the country, examining what was done wrong in the past.

Zimbabwe women accused of raping men 'for rituals'



The women are accused of collecting the semen in condoms



Zimbabwean police believe there is a nationwide syndicate of women raping men, possibly to use their semen for use in rituals that claim to make people wealthy.

It has taken more than a year for any arrests to be made, and on Monday three women are to go on trial in the capital, Harare, over the allegations which have shocked the country.

One alleged victim, who wished to remain anonymous, gave an account on national television in July of his experience which happened after he was offered a lift by a group of three women in Harare.

Alleged male rape victim

"One of the women threw water in my face and they injected me with something that gave me a strong sexual desire," he said.

"They stopped the car and made me have sex with each of them several times, using condoms.

"When they had finished they left me in the bush totally naked.

"Some people gathering grass helped me by calling the police, who took me to hospital to deal with the effects of this drug that I had been given, as the urge to have sex was still there."

The women due in court have been charged on 17 counts of aggravated indecent assault - as Zimbabwean law does not recognise the act of a woman raping a man.

They were detained earlier this month in the central town of Gweru, 275km (170 miles) south-west of Harare, after officers found 31 used condoms in the car that they were travelling in.

Threatening crowds

The women deny the charges, saying they are prostitutes and were too busy at the time to dispose of the condoms.

Since the reports of male rapes, some men say they no longer hitch hike and prefer to use buses After being released on bail last month, they were confronted and threatened by a crowd. They say they have been forced to remain at home since then, to avoid unwanted attention.

Police spokesperson Superintendent Andrew Phiri told the BBC that they believe that there is a syndicate operating nationwide.

"We have received reports from around the country from different towns and provinces, it's been happening on the highways," he said.

"We are yet to find out the real reason why this is happening. We have heard speculation that it's linked to rituals."

He appealed for witnesses to come forward.

"We need to hear from people who are prepared to tell," the superintendent said.

The semen is believed to be used in rituals to bring success in business, and there are suggestions that the semen is being taken outside the country for sale.

But cultural expert and sociology lecturer Claude Mararikei told the BBC that it was not clear how the semen would be used.

"It's in the area of rituals and magic, which border on secret societies," he said.

"Even researchers don't want to go into that area because you may not come out alive to publish whatever you find out."

'Wife left me'

While the first accounts of men alleging that they had been raped by women were generally met with incredulity, men who spoke to the BBC say that they are now taking the issue very seriously.

Nakai Nengomasha

Counsellor
"When I travel I only use buses where people are travelling in numbers now, I won't get a lift in private cars, especially if there are women inside," said a man called Witness.

"You must exercise caution, women are raping men, it's happening."

Some women in Harare, like Sibongile, worry it is giving their gender a bad image.

"I wish that people could be encouraged to work for their money in a good way. It's evil that's gone into women's heads to cause them to be that greedy, that they want easy money," she told the BBC in the city centre.

The police have not given a figure for the number of cases reported.

Nakai Nengomasha, a counsellor who is working with three men who say that they are victims of female rapists, believes that there could be more cases who have not come forward.

"I think there has been a lot of under-reporting because the victims will feel not man enough to talk about such issues and that will hinder them from speaking out," he said.

"They need to deal with denial which comes from a deeply rooted mistaken belief that men are immune to being victimised and that they should be able to fight back if they are truly a real man.

"Some have to deal with the issue of seeing the assault as a loss of manhood and feel disgusted with themselves."

That is how the man who spoke about his alleged ordeal on television feels, saying he even contemplated suicide.

"I feel violated and disappointed, because when I told my wife what happened, she left me, together with one of our three children. I'm hoping that she will come back."

How retired Brigadier General was killed in Badagry

Police officers attached to the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) Panti Yaba have begun investigation into the gruesome murder of a retired Brigadier General Umar Jabil Unigbe. Unigbe was killed in his home at Igboroso at Badagry town about 5pm on September 20, by persons he gave a parcel of land to manage for him.

It was gathered that his killers used machetes to hack him to death after they scaled the fence of his apartment and gained forceful entry into his compound.

Police sources said the victim gave one Sosu Samuel, a citizen of Niger, seven acres of his land at Badagry for farming, Unfortunately, Sosu would go on to mastermind the General's death.

Mrs. Unigbe who was also attacked is in critical condition at an undisclosed hospital.

The police source said that Sosu engaged the services of one Abiodun and two others who are now at large to kill General Unigbe, after the late army officer asked him to hand over the parcel of land by December.

One of the officers who requested anonymity narrated how the victim was hacked to death.

"Abiodun and the others now at large went to the victim's house to lay ambush in the evening. There was power blackout when the suspects got to the victim’s house and the man stepped out immediately to put on his generator. Then Abiodun and the assistants swooped on him and macheted him to death. His cries for help were not heard by anyone due to the noise of the generating set."

The officer added that Mrs. Unigbe was caught unaware by the killers who swooped on her when she came out to find out why her husband was staying outside for so long.

"The wife also stepped out to see what was taking her husband a long time to return to the house. Unfortunately, she met the men cutting her husband into pieces with machetes and she recognized them as her menial workers.

"The assailants noticed that they were in trouble and they decided to kill the woman and they cut of her ears, hands and other parts of her body; the woman collapsed and became unconscious and thinking that the woman had given up the ghost the assailants fled the scene. By divine intervention, the woman did not die and she was rushed to the hospital by neighours who came calling at their home; she is recuperating in an undisclosed hospital."

Investigations by the police following a statement given by the injured woman led officers to arrest Sosu. Abiodun was arrested in a hideout at Kojola village in Ogun State a month after committing the crime.


Brigadier General Umar Jabil Unigbe. Unigbe



In his statement to the police, Abiodun confessed that Sosu recruited him and two others to kill the victim.

"Sosu told me that there was millions of naira kept in the army officers’s room and if we could gain entry into his home we would see a lot of money to steal. So that was how we went there and killed the army officer, it was Sosu that gave us all the information on how to carry out the crime," Abiodun said.

Lagos State Police Spokesman Samuel Jinadu said the police is on the trail of the other suspects "we are investigating the case and as soon as we are through the suspects will be charged to court."

culled from dailytimes

Doctor, 2 nurses kidnapped in Imo


Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha


The Chief Medical Director of Owerri Specialist Hospital, Umuguma in Owerri Local Government Area of Imo State, Dr. Moses Amako has been reportedly kidnapped by gunmen. Daily Sun gathered that Dr. Amako was abducted in company with his wife last week Thursday at about 7pm on his way to his home town, Ohii also in Owerri West LGA.

It was gathered that the couple was travelling in a Honda city car, when the abductors waylaid the car with a white coloured Sport Utility vehicle (SUV).
The kidnappers were said to have shot the Medical Director on his leg and took him to unknown destination after dropping his wife.

A press statement by one Chief Christe Oby Ndukwe on behalf of the family and copy sent to Daily Sun through SMS, urged his captors to release their victim to his family considering his contributions towards saving the lives of people in the society. According to Ndukwe, the identity of the abductors had not been established as no contact had been made with the family.

The family alleged that those, who masterminded his kidnap might be responsible for his sudden removal from his position without due process. Daily Sun also gathered that Dr. Amako was due for retirement from state civil service in February 2012

Similar attempt was made last year to kidnap him but was unsuccessful as he exchanged gunfire with the suspects.
Also kidnapped last week included a staff nurse attached to the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) Owerri, Mrs Ursula Ohagwa, which sparked off protest by her colleagues demanding her immediate release.

A sitting magistrate at the Ihiagwa Magisterial Court in Owerri West LGA adjourned a case indefinitely last week following the kidnap of his son by gunmen. Similarly a woman, who pleaded anonimity was also kidnapped at the Aladima area of Owerri but has since been released after her family paid a ransom.

The police spokesman, Samuel Oodee (DSP), who confirmed the reports said efforts were being made to track down the hoodlums.

Tuesday, 29 November 2011

NDLEA intercepts 4.1kg of heroin in cooking pots



Officials of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have apprehended three suspected members of a drug syndicate in connection with unlawful importation of 4.1kg of heroin from India.
The drug, hidden inside cooking pots, was discovered at the arrival hall of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos, during a routine search.
It was allegedly imported by a suspected member of a drug cartel who was caught during the screening of passengers on Qatar Airline flight from Dubai.
According to the NDLEA Airport Commander, Hamza Umar, the suspect, Nwokeocha Bartholomew Chimezie(43), was apprehended by NDLEA officials when the drug was discovered.
Umar said: “The drug, which was hidden in cooking pots, was found during a search and the passenger, Bartholomew Nwokeocha, was arrested.
“Another suspect, Chidozie Alawoba (30), who was at the airport to receive Nwokeocha, was also apprehended.
“Also, in a follow-up operation, Akeem Iyanda (46), another suspected member of the syndicate believed to be the pointman of the drug cell in Nigeria was arrested.”
Chairman/Chief Executive of the Agency Ahmadu Giade described the operation as satisfactory.
He said: “This is a product of careful management of operational intelligence. This is very satisfactory and inspiring.
“The man who brought the drug from India was arrested together with two other members of the cell.
“Our target of arresting all persons connected to drug crime and bringing them to book was achieved. More arrests are in the offing.”
Nwokeocha is an auto parts dealer in Onitsha, Anambra State.
He travelled to India on October 26 and left India with the drug to Dubai on November 11.
The suspect is married with three children and his wife is expecting. He hails from Aro-Ndizuogu in Imo State.
He said: “I went to India for an eye surgery. In the process, I met a friend who gave me the cooking pots.
“He told me that it was a gift for his sister in Nigeria that just put to birth.”
Alawoba was deported from Libya in 2009. He is single, lives in Lagos and hails from Orlu in Imo State.
According to him, “while I was in Libya in 2007, one of my friends who lived in India called me on phone that I should assist him.
“He asked me to receive the luggage from Nwokeocha and give it to Iyanda.
“I do not know both men, I was only executing my brief.”
Further investigation led to the arrest of Iyanda, who is believed to be the final recipient of the drug.
He told investigators that his friend in Bombay called him that he had sent a luggage to him.
“My friend in India called me that he had sent a luggage to me. I met the man in 2008 when I travelled to India”. Akeem who lives on Lagos Island with his wife and child hails from Ibadan, Oyo State.
All suspects will be charged to court soon.

Thursday, 24 November 2011

Why Farida Waziri was fired


Farida Waziri



President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday unceremoniously relieved the chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission [EFCC], Mrs Farida Waziri, of her appointment, amid allegations of unethical conduct and procedural blunders in her prosecution of the anti-corruption war.

But beyond her alleged sundry ‘sins’, intense pressure from formidable political interests cutting across party lines especially at the National Assembly and the Governors’ Forum, were said to have influenced the decision of President Jonathan, who announced the development as he jetted out of the country on a three-day official visit to France.

Presidential spokesman, Reuben Abati, said in a statement that Waziri’s removal was with immediate effect, and named the commission’s Director of Operations, Ibrahim Lamorde, as acting chairman and chief executive officer. Lamorde, a deputy commissioner of police [DCP], is holding brief as helmsman of the commission for a second time, having acted in that capacity at the exit of the pioneer chairman, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu.

Expectedly, the announcement of her sack from office came as a shock to many Nigerians and foreign observers since she was yet to complete her five-year tenure. Waziri was appointed by the late President Musa Yar’Adua on May 18, 2008, and confirmed by the Senate on May 27, 2008.
However, her removal did not come as a surprise to some officials of the anti-graft agency who spoke to Daily Sun on condition of anonymity. Impeccable sources hinted that the move had been in the offing against the backdrop of heightened pressure mounted on the presidency by an influential click of National Assembly members and other top political chieftains since last year.

“We at the EFCC are not surprised about her removal. This is because there had been intense lobby especially from the House of Representatives and some highly influential politicians to get her out of office. The ex-Speaker Dimeji Bankole case actually gave her a lot of trouble and at a point, she was in a dilemma. About two weeks ago, a very powerful member of the House told me that we should wait and see what would happen soon. In fact, he was very definite on his timing, and said Waziri would be removed. So, there had been expectation that she would be removed, but the time was what we didn’t know”, a senior official of the agency said yesterday.

Daily Sun checks revealed that Waziri might have been in the bad books of most members of the National Assembly over some of her actions and utterances which were construed as a fall-out of her acclaimed closeness to President Jonathan, and the manner of Bankole’s arrest was said to have further irked the federal lawmakers.

While receiving a petition written by a group of lawmakers in the Sixth Assembly led by Hon. Dino Melaye, against ex-Speaker Bankole over an alleged N10 billion loan scam, Waziri dismissed the federal legislature as an embodiment of corruption. “For the National Assembly, the House of Representatives in particular, I have been worried, I think most Nigerians have been very concerned, because there have been scandals upon scandals in that House. And that is the bastion of democracy and the hope for the common man”, she had remarked.

Evidently, the manner of her removal gave credence to claims of a long-drawn plot to shove her out of the plum job, even as checks revealed that she might have also been betrayed by some of her erstwhile close subordinates who allegedly fell apart with her over the handling of some sensitive and ‘juicy’ cases believed to be the source of allegations of unethical conduct levelled against her.
Sources hinted that prior to the political pressure for her ouster, the presidency had been uncomfortable with serial reports of rising corruption among some operatives of the commission under her watch, a situation that was further compounded by reports of the discovery of a sum of N250 million from an operative at the Lagos office of the agency, among others.

It was further gathered that a bribe of N120 million allegedly offered by a suspect to pave way for his escape from prosecution, allegedly ignited a row between Waziri and leader of the team of investigators –a senior police officer who hails from the North-eastern part of the country, now re-deployed from the EFCC.
It could neither be ascertained whether the incidents which lingered for some time at the realm of speculations within and outside the EFCC formed part of the intelligence reports in possession of President Jonathan, nor was there a confirmation of formal security reports against her by the State Security Service (SSS), or other security agencies.

However, Waziri’s barely three-year sojourn at the commission started on a controversial note, when she engaged the then Director of Operations, DCP Tunde Ogunshakin, in a battle of wits over inexplicable differences . The cross-fire ended dramatically, with Ogunshakin’s removal on allegations of his involvement in examination fraud at the University of Abuja where he was undergoing a Law programme, but the university authorities later cleared him of complicity in the act.

While the drama lasted, the police chief also fired back at Waziri, accusing her of engaging in unethical conducts and creating a special team which she assigned certain cases supervised directly by her, contrary to the prevalent structure on ground before her appointment. Ogunshakin had expressed suspicion and displeasure over other emerging trends at the EFCC. With Ogunshakin out, another DCP, Stephen Otitoju, was drafted as his replacement. He did not also hold the office for long, though reasons for his removal could not be ascertained as at press time.

Waziri’s relationship with a certain Victor Uwajeh also cast her in very bad light. She first denied knowing Uwajeh, who claimed he was being used against her, until the man produced pictures showing him with Farida at a party. The agency also attracted sneer to the government’s anti-corruption crusade. For instance, United States Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton was lacerating in her assessment of the EFCC under Waziri.
The same also encouraged the London Metropolitan Police to announce a severance of ties with the EFCC over the handling of the case involving former governor of Delta State, James Onanefe Ibori. Other partners like the UK Serious Fraud Office also gave the agency a wide berth.

The shoddy handling of the Ibori case and the failure to challenge his acquittal by the High Court, Asaba also had negative impact some of EFCC’s efficiency. Furthermore, the anti-graft agency under Waziri was accused of having a penchant to arrest suspects before investigating allegations against them. It is the loss of credibility that was responsible for the doubts that trailed the recent arraignment of some governors by the EFCC.
Another likely reason for the removal of Waziri was her alleged inability to track funding for the operation of the dreaded Boko Haram sect The Presidency, it was learnt, had told the former anti-corruption boss to get the sponsors of Boko Haram in order to unveil those behind the dreaded sect.

The EFCC also allegedly failed to also track illegal money transfers as well as money laundering activities perpetrated through Nigerian banks. But perhaps, the most challenging of Waziri’s administrative and operational battles, was her face-off with the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adokie, which eventually culminated into covert mudslinging, as various groups suspected to be sponsored by both parties sprang up with allegations and counter-allegations that impinged on the integrity of the two personalities.

The battle line was drawn when the AGF moved to assert his supervisory authority over the EFCC, particularly with regards to the arrest and prosecution of suspects, an action which was met with stiff resistance from Waziri, before the presidency intervened following the embarrassing dimension the matter had assumed.
Daily Sun however, recalled that before President Jonathan’s intervention, Waziri had been splashed with sundry allegations bordering on corruption, just as she was accused of a false claim to the rank of an Assistant Inspector-General of Police (AIG) as against the rank of commissioner of police on which she allegedly retired.

Shortly thereafter, a self-acclaimed group of anti-corruption whistle blower, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), stormed the offices of the EFCC and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission [ICPC], with a request to probe Adoke over a sum of 26 million US Dollars which he allegedly collected as bribe to withdraw corruption charges against 10 multi-national companies under investigation over the Siemens and Halliburton bribery scam. The development, Daily Sun learnt, highly embarrassed President Jonathan, and he promptly summoned Waziri for caution.

Meanwhile, suspense and anxiety pervaded the EFCC headquarters in Abuja yesterday, as personnel kept sealed lips on the development.

‘Dead’ man wakes up after three days in mortuary




Residents of Oremeji in Aradagun near Badagry, Lagos State, were on Sunday shocked when a man they had presumed dead regained consciousness after three days in the mortuary.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) learnt that the man, simply identified as Mr Agosu, died at a hospital of an undisclosed illness last Friday and his remains were deposited at the morgue of the Badagry General Hospital.
The news of his regaining consciousness broke out on Sunday evening as members of his Mountain of Fire and Miracle (MFM) Church were preparing tents for his wake.

It was learnt that a worker at the morgue heard that a dead man was coughing from inside the morgue and contacted the hospital management who ordered a doctor to test the man.

Following the test, the man was said to be breathing. The hospital management directed that he should be admitted for treatment.
Dr Tunji Olabuntu, Deputy Medical Director, Badagry General Hospital, confirmed the incident.
He said: “It is true that the man regained consciousness after three days in the mortuary. But he was not originally admitted in our hospital.”
Olabuntu said the body of the man was brought to the hospital morgue from outside, adding that he was not a patient of the hospital.

Man 80 docked for raping 4year old




An 80-year-old man, Alhaji Shu ‘aibu Jibrin, has been arrested by the Kano State Police Command in connection with the rape of a four-year-old girl, Shafa’atu Mansur, in his residence at Dakata Quarters of Kano State.

Kano State Police Commissioner, Ibrahim K Idris, who disclosed this at a press briefing at the Bompai headquarters of Command on Wednesday, said the suspect lured the victim into his house on November 20, 2011 and assaulted her, adding that the suspect had since confessed to the crime while medical examination had confirmed the incident.

He further revealed that the Command had dismissed a Police Corporal F/No. 255835 (name giving by the police) for raping a 3-year-old girl at Bebeji Dakatasalle, adding that the suspect was tried in an orderly room and dismissed while adding that the case would soon be charged to court.

According to him, four cases of rape were reported to the police during this period, adding that these cases include the rape committed by 65-year-old Ado Sule of Zango Dakata, who raped a four-year-old Fatima in his house on November 20, 2011 as well as that of Alhaji Sule Abubakar, aged 20, who on November 13 , 2011, lured Hussaina Tasiu into his quarters in Rijar Remo and raped her.

The commissioner expressed deep worry over the alarming incidents of rape of minors in Kano State, saying that it was sharply on the rise even as he appealed to both government and non government organizations, especially women groups, to step into the matter and help enlighten the society over the mischievous and wicked act.

He said statistics had revealed that most of these incidents of rape of young girls were committed by relatives and neighbours who shared some familiarity with their victims, cautioning parents to be wary of the people around them at all time.

The commissioner said 21 suspects had been arrested for armed robbery and criminal conspiracy while four suspects had been taken into custody for motorcycle and motor vehicle theft.

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Senator behind Boko Haram – Suspect




An acclaimed Islamic fundamentalist, Ali Sanda Umar Konduga, currently detained by the State Security Service (SSS), said yesterday that a certain Senator and some politicians in the North are behind Boko Haram.

The alleged sect’s spokesman was paraded by the SSS in Abuja. He said that he was named Usman Al-Zawahiri to conceal his identity for security reasons.

The Islamist sect had claimed responsibility for the bombing of the United Nations (UN) building in Abuja which killed 24 people and injured several staffers of the world body. It also claimed that it had a hand in last Sallah (Eid-el-kabir)terror attacks on Yobe State which claimed over 150 lives.

In his confession, Konduga said that he was a student under the late leader of Boko Haram, the late Mohammed Yusuf, averring that they were political thugs, recruited by some northern politicians, and that they were faring well before things fell apart between them and they resorted to attacking the state.
Alleging also that the sect was enjoying great sponsorship and patronage from these politicians, the alleged spokesman of the sect who, said that he was recently suspended by the Islamic terror group, which suspected him of giving information to security agencies, disclosed that the sect now has three official spokespersons, Abu Kaka, Abu Darda and Abu Zaid.

However, in her address, the Deputy Director, Press of the SSS, Marilyn Ogar, who told correspondents that security agencies never enjoyed any privileged information from Konduga before his arrest, said that he was picked up on November 3, at about 2030 hours at Gwange area of Maiduguri, Borno State, by a joint security operation.

Stating that he had made several revealing confessions, Ogar, who said that Konduga also confessed to being a former political thug operating under a group widely known as ECOMOG, said that his arrest, “further confirms the Service’s position that some of the Boko Haram extremists have political patronage and sponsorship. This is more as Al-Zawahiri has so far made valuable confessions in this regard.”
Ogar further said that Konduga confessed that, “he was recruited by a political party stalwart in Maiduguri, Borno State, that following the compulsory registration of all SIMs nationwide, he was asked to steal a SIM which he used in sending threat text messages.

“That the pseudo name, Usman Al-Zawahiri, was given to him by the said politician to portray him as an extremist as well as conceal his true identity.
“That one of his benefactors promised to pay him N10 million to work for his party, but by stint of fate, he sponsor died on his way to deliver the part payment of N5 million to Al-Zawahiri.
“That consequent upon this, suspect claimed a serving member of the National Assembly took over the running of his activities.

“That he (Senator) was behind the threat text messages sent to the justice of the Election Petition Tribunal in Maiduguri. His objective was to ensure that the tribunal sacks the present government in Borno State.
“That he was also behind other threat messages sent to Governor Sule Lamido of Jigawa State, Governor Babangida Aliyu (Niger), Ambassador Dalhatu Sarki Tafida, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo and Justice Sabo Adamu (Chairman of the Election Petition Tribunal in Borno State).
“That most of the threat messages he sent to Justice Adamu, were scripted and relayed to him by the National Assembly member.

“That the same legislator promised to send him some telephone numbers of members of the Galtimari Committee on Security in the North-East, before he (Al-Zawahiri) was apprehended.
“That the telephone number and content of the text messages sent to the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice were also given to him by the legislator to compel him (AGF) to influence the judgment of the tribunal against the government in Borno State.”
Meanwhile, Ogar said that analysis on Al-Zawahiri’s phone had confirmed constant communication between him and the legislator.

Thus, she reiterated the Service’s commitment to address the current threats posed by the Boko Haram and other forms of fundamentalism in the country, including the dimensions of political patronage and sponsorship of extremist and violent groups.
It would be recalled that security agencies had fingered some Northern lawmakers as being behind the terror group. They described their alleged conspiracy as sabotage as carried by Daily Sun in our yesterday’s edition.

culled from SUN




THE State Security Service (SSS) has confirmed the arrest of a suspected member of the Boko Haram, the sect accused of using high calibre bombs and other weapons of mass destruction to terrorise residents of Borno and Gombe states in the north eastern part of the country and Abuja. .
The security agency said that the suspect, Ali Sanda Umar Konduga, the spokesman of the sect, also known as Al-Zawahiri, was arrested three weeks ago by a joint security operation at Gwange area of Borno State. .
Parading the suspect at its headquarters in Abuja yesterday, the SSS Deputy Director of Public Relations, Marilyn Ogar, said that the agency, in the course of its investigations, established that some of the Boko Haram extremists allegedly enjoyed patronage from some high networth individuals, including members of the National Assembly. .
Ogar, however, declined to mention the name of the lawmaker said to hail from Borno State. She also parried questions on whether the Service had begun move to invite the parliamentarian for interrogations.
Her words: “His (Al-Zawahiri) further confirms the Service position that some of the Boko Haram extremists have political patronage and sponsorship. This is more so as Al-Zawahiri has so far made valuable confessions in this regard.”
The SSS spokeswoman said an analysis of Al- Zawahiri spokesman’s phone has confirmed constant communication between him and the legislator.
According to her, the suspect was behind the threat text messages sent to Governor Sule Lamido, Governor Babangida Aliyu, Ambassador Dalhatu Sarki Tafida, former President Olusegun Obasanjo and Justice Sabo Adamu (Chairman of the election petition tribunal in Borno State).
Other confessional statements made by the suspect, according to Ogar, were “that he was behind the threat text messages sent to the judges of the Election Petition Tribunal in Maiduguri. His objective was to ensure that the tribunal sacks the present government in Borno State.
“That most of the threat messages he sent to Justice Sabo Adamu were scripted and relayed to him by the National Assembly member.
“That the threat messages eventually led to the relocation of the election petition tribunal from Maiduguri to Abuja.
“That the same legislator promised to send him some telephone numbers of members of the Galtimari committee on security in the North-East, before he (Konduga) was apprehended.
“That the telephone number and content of the text message sent to the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice were also given to him by the legislator in order to compel him (AGF) to influence the judgment of the tribunal against the government of Borno State.
“That one of his benefactors promised to pay him N10 million to work for his party but by stint of fate, he died on his way to deliver the part-payment of N5 million to Al-Zawahiri.”
Ogar disclosed that consequent upon this, the suspect claimed that the political party stalwart and member of the National Assembly from Maiduguri took over the running of his activities.
“That the pseudo name, Usman Al-Zawahiri, was given to him by the said politician to portray him as an extremist as well as conceal his true identity.
The suspect (Al-Zawahiri), while fielding questions from journalists at the SSS headquarters said though the group was not an affiliate of the PDP, it does not welcome the All Nigerian Peoples Party (ANPP) government in Borno State.
He said that the group will only welcome and jaw-jaw with other political parties, including the CPC, APGA and PDP in any reconciliatory move by the authorities.
He claimed to be the lone spokesman for Boko Haram at inception before the members were dislodged and scattered. But when they regrouped, three persons, Abu Kaka, Abu Zaid and Abu Dada, emerged as the legitimate members of the Boko Haram sect recognised to speak on behalf of the group.
He told journalists through an interpreter that he was placed on suspension by the sect on suspicion of divulging information on the activities of the sect to security agencies.
He was arrested on November 3, 2011 at about 8.30 p.m. at Gwange area of Maiduguri, Borno State in a joint security operation.
And an alleged deliberate failure by prominent political leaders from the North to condemn the terror being unleashed on Nigeria by Boko Haram has sent a signal to the Federal Government that it was an act of sabotage and an affront on national unity.
The Federal Government is said to be worried that since the outbreak of the violence by Boko Haram over a year now, there has not been a strong condemnation of the group, which is allegedly being used by a powerful political interest in the North to undermine the Dr. Goodluck Jonathan presidency and possibly bring it to its knees.
This conclusion was drawn at the end of a recent meeting of the top operatives of the nation’s security agencies, where it was allegedly resolved that a former governor of Borno State (names withheld) should be investigated for allegedly “setting up a militant group as a political thuggery enterprise, and nurtured it through adequate funding until it metamorphosed into a terror group.”
Also to be investigated in the fresh security directive are prominent politicians who have held high political offices in past but became attracted to the deadly group and chose to invest in it, “through sympathy and funds,” ostensibly to assuage for the loss of political control by the North recently.
To this end, the report of the security meeting, which is billed to be submitted to President Jonathan for possible consideration and action, has advised him to initiate swift moves to engage key northern politicians politically or otherwise, as it was discovered that “Boko Haram is a political weapon in the hands of embittered political investors”. .
A top security source, who preferred anonymity, said “the meeting was taken aback to year 1999 when Chief Olusegun Obasanjo emerged as President, and some governors from the North were used to launch a political Sharia, which led to the gruesome murder of several hundreds of Nigerians, particularly southerners”.
The source added that the “Sharia law code which was politically deployed by prominent but selfish northerners to recruit young Islamic adherents from the region, was successfully used to destabilise the early and better part of Obasanjo’s first term in office, until it became clear that proponents of the Islamic law lacked the morale right to proclaim it as they were identified to be worst violators and offenders”.
According to the source, who was present at the meeting, in his capacity as a head of one of the related agencies, said the meeting endorsed one of the reports at its disposal that Boko Haram became handy to some northern politicians as a replacement for the failed political Sharia to tackle the Jonathan’s government and ultimately bring it to public and international ridicule”.
The source continued: “The disgruntled political group from the North has chosen to fight every southerner-led presidency so as to make the North relevant to the rest of the country politically”, insisting that “we were told that anytime a non-northerner emerged as the president of the country, Nigerians should be prepared to face one form of disruptive and destablising tendency or the other”.
Speaking further on the planned investigation of the former governor of Borno State, the source hinted that there were concrete evidences that three state contractors during his time as helmsman have been providing lifeline for unidentified individuals and groups believed to be sympathisers of Boko Haram in the recent past. .
“Our interest in this fact is the suspicion and allegations that the affected firms were acting on a script handed over to them by the former governor to assist the Boko Haram financiers. So, we want to find out the bond between the accused and the donees on one hand and the donor on the other hand, even when he has vacated office many years ago”, the source said. .
In the meantime, no fewer than seven people were hacked to death on Sunday night by hoodlums in Razat village of Barkin-Ladi Local Council of Plateau State. .
The attack, which took place at about 7.00 p.m., witnesses said it was carried out by suspected armed Fulani herdsmen, killing three men who were said to have been returning from Barkin-Ladi town.
The attackers, eyewitnesses added, created an illegal roadblock and laid an ambush on the villagers who were coming on two motorcycles, gunned them down and inflicted machete cuts on several parts of their bodies.
It was gathered that one of the victims who was on the motorcycle survived the attack but efforts to speak with him was not successful as members of the Special Task Force (STF) in charge of internal security in Jos were said to have picked him for further investigation.
The villagers identified the deceased persons to include Jacob Davou, aged 32, married with a child; Ezekiel Ishaku, aged 28, married with one child and Ishaya Bulus, aged 25.
Meanwhile, two Fulani men were said to have been arrested in connection with the attack by men of the Divisional Police headquarters, Barkin-Ladi.
Parading the suspects, a Police officer, Daspan Dariyem, said the suspects were arrested in the early hours of the day.
Reacting to the incident, Governor Jonah David Jang through his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Pam Ayuba, who addressed journalists at the scene, said the governor received the news with shock following the efforts being put in place by government at all levels for lasting peace in the state.
Meanwhile, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has said that the provision of adequate security for lives and property was a key factor that would spur economic growth and development of the country.
Speaking against the backdrop of rising wave of insecurity in the country, he contended that it was counter-productive to treat security as though it was disconnected from economic and political development, when in fact, they were inter-related.
Speaking at the Founder’s Day celebration of the American University of Nigeria (AUN), Yola at the weekend, Abubakar said that for the country to enthrone a new regime of security, it must move quickly to address the socio-economic challenges facing it.
He listed the challenges to include high levels of unemployment and illiteracy as well as poor and unaccountable governance.

culled from GUARDIAN

Thursday, 17 November 2011

California marijuana sellers fear federal clampdown



Dozens of medical marijuana dispensaries in California have been ordered to close from Saturday, as a federal crackdown looms.Distributors and their landlords were told in late September to shut down in 45 days or face prosecution.Some marijuana distributors filed for a temporary restraining order earlier this month.California legalised medical marijuana in 1996, but use of the drug remains illegal under federal law.US attorneys have said they are targeting large dispensary operators and growers, instead of individuals. For-profit sales are in violation of California's state law.The BBC's Peter Bowes, in Los Angeles, reports that some outlets appear to have been targeted because they are near schools and parks.Federal prosecutors say they are focusing on towns and cities that have already banned marijuana shops.
'Breaking point'
Matthew Kumin, a lawyer for the pro-marijuana group NORML, told reporters earlier this week that the federal government's marijuana policies were not consistent."The government's irrational policy has reached a breaking point," he said. "The federal government said it will not prosecute patients, and yet they want to shut off their supply. This doesn't make sense."The complaint, filed in four US district courts in California, says a federal crackdown contradicts an agreement from a previous court case.In that case, the federal government said it would not use its own power against marijuana patients who were acting within the guidelines of state law.Medical marijuana advocates also contend threatening to close down dispensaries is a violation of the 10th amendment to the US constitution,

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

Day-old baby boy dissappears from a private hospital in Abia State.



Nigerian Inspector General of Police, Hafitz Rigim



Umuahia—Abia State Police Command has launched an investigation into how a day-old baby boy got missing from a private hospital, Analechi Hospital, located at 5 Ngbaronye/Udi Street, Amuzuku, Umuahia, Abia State.
The police said yesterday that all the staff of the hospital were being interrogated on the matter, even as it ponders on the where- abouts of the missing baby.
Accounts from the hospital said the incident, which took place last Friday threw the hospital into confusion as patients and visitors as well as passers-bye attracted to the place by the alarm raised by the mother of the missing baby converged to confirm the ugly story.
Mother of the stolen baby, Mrs. Uchemma Augustine, 30, was said to have gone to have her bath only to return and find that her baby had been stolen.
An account of the incident given by some nurses in the hospital which sounded very vague, had it that an unidentified woman, who allegedly claimed to be a sister of the baby’s mother, came to the hospital as early as 6.30am to visit her and the baby and allegedly made away with the baby.
However, Mrs. Uchemma, who hails from Isiugwu-Ohafia but married to Mr. Augustine, a native of Umuovom-Nkata Ibeku in Umuahia North council area, was said to have denied that the stranger was her sister.
The proprietor of the hospital, Dr. Kalu Ibe, was said to have reported the incident himself to the Umuahia Central Police Station.
The Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, Mr. Geoffrey Ogbonna, confirmed the incident, saying investigation was still going.
He said: “All the staff of the hospital are facing interrogation but no clue yet as to the whereabouts of the missing baby.”


Umuahia—Abia State Police Command has launched an investigation into how a day-old baby boy got missing from a private hospital, Analechi Hospital, located at 5 Ngbaronye/Udi Street, Amuzuku, Umuahia, Abia State.
The police said yesterday that all the staff of the hospital were being interrogated on the matter, even as it ponders on the where- abouts of the missing baby.
Accounts from the hospital said the incident, which took place last Friday threw the hospital into confusion as patients and visitors as well as passers-bye attracted to the place by the alarm raised by the mother of the missing baby converged to confirm the ugly story.
Mother of the stolen baby, Mrs. Uchemma Augustine, 30, was said to have gone to have her bath only to return and find that her baby had been stolen.
An account of the incident given by some nurses in the hospital which sounded very vague, had it that an unidentified woman, who allegedly claimed to be a sister of the baby’s mother, came to the hospital as early as 6.30am to visit her and the baby and allegedly made away with the baby.
However, Mrs. Uchemma, who hails from Isiugwu-Ohafia but married to Mr. Augustine, a native of Umuovom-Nkata Ibeku in Umuahia North council area, was said to have denied that the stranger was her sister.
The proprietor of the hospital, Dr. Kalu Ibe, was said to have reported the incident himself to the Umuahia Central Police Station.
The Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, Mr. Geoffrey Ogbonna, confirmed the incident, saying investigation was still going.
He said: “All the staff of the hospital are facing interrogation but no clue yet as to the whereabouts of the missing baby.”

Monday, 14 November 2011

Naval personnel kills girlfriend in Lagos




A Naval officer allegedly stabbed his girlfriend to death, over the weekend, at the Nigerian Navy Base, Ojo, Lagos State.
The officer, Harry, stabbed his girlfriend, who was also a naval personnel called Itoya, over claims of infidelity.
Itoya met her death when her boyfriend, who had just returned from a Joint Task Force mission in Jos, Plateau State, stabbed her severally while she was asleep in their apartment.
After stabbing her, Harry stabbed himself. Neighbours who heard screams from the apartment rushed in and found Itoya lying in a pool of blood.
While neighbours were taking her to a Naval hospital in the base, she died. Sources at the NNS Wey, Ojo Naval Base said that Harry, who sustained injuries, has been placed under arrest at the Nigerian Naval Reference Hospital, Ojo.

Norway mass killer in open court hearing


Breikik





The man who confessed to killing 77 people in Norway in July has made his first public appearance in court, the BBC reports.
Anders Behring Breivik, dressed in a dark suit, appeared in court in Oslo before survivors of the attacks, relatives of his victims and reporters.
The 32-year-old right-wing extremist has been in custody since the July 22 attacks in Oslo and at a youth camp on the island of Utoeya.
Previous hearings on his continued detention have been held in private.

The BBC says the atmosphere in the courtroom had been tense and strange.
According to the BBC, about 30 survivors and relatives of the victims attended the hearing, and the defendant looked them straight in the eye when he entered.
Breivik appeared very calm and professional, but was stopped by the judge as he attempted to read out a prepared statement.
Breivik has admitted to the July killings but denies criminal responsibility - saying the massacre was "necessary" to save Norway and Europe from Muslims and multiculturalism.
In the days after the attacks, in which 151 people were also injured, he had reportedly been hoping to explain his actions at a court hearing.
But although an open hearing was initially ordered, the decision was later overruled by a higher court after police appealed against it.
A police request that Breivik address his remand hearings via a video link from prison was rejected by Norway's Supreme Court on Friday, allowing his court appearances to be held in public.
The judge in Monday's hearing remanded Breivik in custody for a further 12 weeks but relaxed the conditions of his solitary confinement.

Friday, 11 November 2011

Police apologise over murders of Diane and Holly Fallon


Fallon and her mother Diane





Strathclyde Police have apologised for their handling of sex offender Thomas Smith, who murdered a mother and her 10-year-old daughter in Ayrshire.
Smith killed Diane Fallon and daughter Holly in Cronberry in March 2009.
An independent review was commissioned after it emerged the killer was a registered sex offender who was living next door to the family.
The force said it was sorry he was able to murder Diane and Holly "while we had responsibility for managing him".
The independent case review said "more robust" management of Smith could have identified his "increasing risk".
Residents of the tiny East Ayrshire village, which has just 30 homes, were not told that Smith, a former soldier, had been jailed for six months in 2006 for sexually assaulting a 10-year-old girl on Teeside.
Strathclyde Police did know that Smith was a registered sex offender but the report said they failed to assess whether his address was suitable and struggled to monitor him.
In particular officers missed opportunities to uncover violence against young women and contact with children which may have led to Smith's arrest before the murders.
The Serious Case Review report, by Robert Thomson of the Lothian and Borders Community Justice Authority, said: "I cannot say that it would have prevented the murders of Diane and Holly Fallon, but potentially he may not have been in a position to commit these murders at that point in time.
"There were several missed investigative opportunities that should have resulted in Smith being subjected to greater police scrutiny, which may have resulted in a return to custody."

In response, Assistant Chief Constable George Hamilton, of Strathclyde Police, said he accepted the recommendations of the Significant Case Review.
He said: "It is our job to keep people safe. Doing this means that we have to manage people like Smith in our communities.
"I am sorry that he was able to murder Diane and Holly while we had responsibility for managing him.

Thomas Smith


Thomas Smith must serve a minimum of 32 years in prison
"I have met with the family of Diane and Holly Fallon, shared the findings of the report with them and I have made that apology directly to them.
"There are undoubtedly things that we could and should have done better."
Mr Hamilton said, as a result of the review process, "lessons have been learned and major improvements have been made".
The Significant Case Review noted that Smith's earlier conviction had shown he had "perpetrated two sexual assaults on different stranger children in different episodes on the same day".
The report said this was "very rare" and Strathclyde Police correctly identified Smith as "high risk".
Officers are... less likely to push the boundaries of their police powers in the established climate of litigation and complaint”
End Quote Significant Case Review
The review called for the police to be more "objective and informed" in risk assessments of sex offenders.
It also claimed that the "plausibility" given to Smith's denials of the first sex offence by the risk assessment may have "distracted" the officers who had the task of managing him.
The review said repeating the offender's version of events in the risk assessment was "not helpful or necessarily good practice".
The case review concluded that the police's offender management unit was "struggling to proactively manage" offenders with little managerial direction.
It also said it was "great concern" that key information was not added to the Scottish Intelligence Database.
In the report's conclusion, it said that registered sex offenders were "increasingly aware of their rights and the limited powers the police have in relation to their management".
It said: "Officers are personally discouraged from taking innovative action and are less likely to push the boundaries of their police powers in the established climate of litigation and complaint."
The review called on the Scottish government to boost police powers over sex offenders.
'Benchmark of depravity'
In total, the report made 34 recommendations.
It said more resources should be dedicated to monitoring convicted criminals; there should be a better system for sharing intelligence; and wider powers should be considered: perhaps allowing police to search sex offenders' properties without a warrant and examine their mobile phones.
Smith had been a neighbour of Ms Fallon and her daughter for just over a year when he murdered them.
Ms Fallon, 43, was brutally sexually assaulted and her daughter raped before having their necks compressed and being strangled with a ligature.
The victims' bodies were then dumped by Smith.
Jailing Smith, who is now 28, for life at the High Court in Glasgow, Judge Lord Turnbull told him: "You have set a benchmark of depravity below which it is difficult to imagine any other human being sinking."
The judge said he should serve at least 32 years before being eligible for parole.

Uganda man jailed for killing gay activist David Kato


David Kato


Sidney Nsubunga Enoch admitted in court that he had bludgeoned Mr Kato to death with a hammer, but alleged he had been provoked by sexual advances from him.
The murder sparked outrage, with Western governments calling on Uganda to legalise homosexuality.
Most Ugandans believe homosexuality is un-Christian and un-African.
School teacher
Mr Kato was killed after a newspaper published the names and addresses of people they said were gay or lesbian under the headline "Hang them".
David Kato took on the Rolling Stone which was publishing photos of men it identified as gay
He was a school teacher and gay rights activist who had led a campaign against a controversial bill which included the introduction of the death penalty for some homosexual acts.
After the murder, Uganda's parliament adjourned without debating it.
US President Barack Obama condemned the bill and donors have urged Uganda's government to ensure it never become law.
Last month, UK Prime Minister David Cameron said the UK would reduce aid to countries that refused to legalise homosexuality.
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni adviser, John Nagenda, accused Mr Cameron of adopting a "bullying mentality" and of treating Ugandans like "children".
Homosexuality is illegal in most African countries.

Woman jailed for force-feding her baby to death

Gloria

A mother who force-fed her baby girl who later died has been jailed.
Gloria Dwomoh, a 31-year-old nurse from Walthamstow, London, was sent to prison for three years after being convicted of allowing or causing the death.
The 10-month-old, named in court as Diamond, was forced to take solid foods from the age of six months. She died in March 2010.
The Old Bailey heard Diamond died from pneumonia caused by food in her lungs that had blocked her airways.
Dwomoh, who was convicted last month, had denied the charge.
The trial heard the defendant, who worked at St Thomas's Hospital near Waterloo, was obsessed with Diamond's weight and as she was weaning her on to solid food, used a jug to feed her liquidised food, including meat and cereals.
During the trial, Andrew Edis QC, prosecuting, said the food went down the "wrong way" for months and the spout of the jug was placed into the girl's mouth to "prevent her closing it".
"If you have a child who is distressed and choking, you do not carry on," he said.
During her trial, Dwomoh told the court she and her siblings had been fed the same way by her mother in Ghana.
"I didn't do anything to her," she told the jury. "I didn't do anything at all to hurt her."
However, the Common Serjeant of London, Judge Brian Barker, said forcing her daughter was against "her natural instincts" causing her "daily distress".
"At best it was a misguided obsession - but a determined obsession - which must have caused daily prolonged distress to your daughter," he said.
"It cannot be described as an act of kindness.
"It took away her life and that is something you must live with."
Mercy petition
Trevor Burke QC, for Dwomoh, told the court she had been "punished enough".
"She has endured the loss of her child for over a year," he said.
He presented the court with a 1,000-signature petition from family and friends pleading for mercy, and asked the judge to impose a suspended sentence.
Her supporters had demonstrated outside the the Old Bailey.
A serious case review found "weaknesses and shortcomings" in the actions of some agencies involved with the family, said Laura Eades, chair of Waltham Forest Safeguarding Children's Board.
"Had best practice had been followed, the risk to Diamond of force-feeding would have been better recognised and the family would have been offered further support and intervention," she said.
"This should have reduced the probability of Diamond being subject to behaviour that proved, in this case, to be fatal."
However, the report concluded Diamond's death "was not predictable".