Wednesday 31 August 2016

John Kerry’s Advise Nigeria On Handling Of Extremists

Image result for Kerry Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/kerrys-caution-handling-extremists/?
United States of America’s Secretary of State, John Kerry, made a two-day whistle-stop in Nigeria penultimate Monday and Tuesday. His itinerary included a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari, Northern governors and the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Abubakar Sa’ad III. 

Many Northern governors who had eagerly looked forward to his visit were hoping he would unfold some goodies that could increase American investment, especially in agriculture and mining in their respective states, and some military and humanitarian assistance in the fight against the Boko Haram Islamist insurgency. But at a media briefing in Sokoto, Kerry chose to advise Nigeria not to use strong-arm tactics in dealing with Boko Haram and other extremist groups disturbing the peace and stability of the country. 

The AFP quoted him as saying: “In the wake of terrorist activity, some are tempted to crack down on anyone and everyone. But extremism can’t be defeated through repression or fear. Fear instilled through repression invites not confidence but contempt, it creates terrorists.” 

Many commentators descended on the top diplomat, accusing America of being up to its old diplomatic hypocrisy. They pointed out America’s adventures in terror-stricken Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Syria, Libya and other countries where America employed severe force in pursuit of Islamist terrorists, which culminated in the dethronement of several regimes and the death of Saddam Hussein, Muamar Gadhaffi, and Osama bin Laden. 

They pointed to America’s refusal to assist Nigeria when the Boko Haram insurgency went out of hand and they started acquiring territories for their “Islamic caliphate” and the bad international image that Amnesty International (AI) tried to portray of our country. AI seemed more interested in alleged violations of the human rights of the terrorists than the heinous crimes the latter were perpetrating. 

As much as we agree that America has not demonstrated genuine friendship with Nigeria since the Boko Haram phenomenon started in 2009, we still believe that Kerry’s message was useful. It is especially more so in the face of an established track record of harassment of civilian populations by our troops in areas where they are involved in military operations. When you treat every young man as a terrorist or extremist, it does not help the search for peace. 

It only worsens situations. The military must take more care to sift the wheat from chaff and ensure that innocent Nigerians are protected, not victimised. That way, they will be more willing to cooperate and abandon their sympathy for the enemies of the country. 

It is important for the armed forces and the local population in operational zones to work together. Our gallant forces are here to defend us and the nation, so it pays to cooperate with them.

SOURCE: Vanguardngr

Boko Haram ready for peace, will announce Chibok girls’ whereabouts in 24hours – Aisha Wakili

Aisha-Wakil
One of the trio declared wanted by the Nigerian Army for concealing information on the whereabouts of the Chibok girls, Aisha Alkali Wakil, has revealed that the Boko Haram terrorist group is now ready for peace.
According to her, the group may make a big announcement about the kidnapped Chibok school girls within the next 24 hours.
The lawyer with the National Human Rights Commission told the Nation that, “Since I came back, I have been on their neck.
“They have now agreed to come out and discuss with the government and bring back the girls.
“I am for the Chibok girls and all the captives. They are ready for peace. This is what they told me.
“I think they might post some information on YouTube within 24 hours,” Aisha stated.
This is coming barely one week after President Muhammadu Buhari said his government was ready to negotiate with genuine Boko Haram leaders to release the missing school girls.
SOURCE: Dailypostng

Tuesday 30 August 2016

130 STILL MISSING IN CAMEROON AFTER CRACKDOWN, SAYS AMNESTY

One hundred thirty men and boys remain missing in Cameroon nearly two years after a government crackdown on suspected members of the Nigeria-based Boko Haram extremists, Amnesty International said Tuesday, calling on the government to provide answers.

Authorities on Dec. 27, 2014 arrested more than 200 people in Magdeme and Double villages in Cameroon's Far North region, Amnesty said. The arrests were part of a push by the government to combat Boko Haram. They came within days of Cameroon's first airstrikes against the Islamic extremists to dislodge about 1,000 fighters who had seized a military base and attacked several villages along the border with Nigeria, according to reports at the time.

More than 25 of the arrested men died in custody and 45 were transferred to a prison the next day, with three more dying due to dire conditions, Amnesty said. Nine civilians were killed, and 70 homes destroyed in the operations in the two villages by the military, it said.
"The country must stop using its fight against Boko Haram to justify its blatant violations of human rights,"said Alioune Tine, Amnesty's regional director for West and Central Africa.

The rights organization said it considers the 130 people victims of enforced disappearance, a crime under international law. The group called on Cameroon's government to reveal the locations of those arrested, launch an independent investigation into the disappearances and hold fair trials for those who may be responsible.

The rights group said it has noted 17 other cases of suspected enforced disappearance in Cameroon between June 2014 and June 2016.

Cameroon has joined neighboring countries, including Niger, Nigeria and Chad, in a multinational force to combat the seven-year Boko Haram insurgency that has killed more than 20,000 people and displaced some 2.6 million others in the region.


SOURCE: AP.org

Not knowing the history of your country or family is to lose memory – Obasanjo

Olusegun-Obasanjo
Former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, says it is unfortunate that history is no longer taught in schools, warning that people can lose their memory and even what they ate the previous night when they do not know the history of their country, family or locality.
Speaking as the special guest of honour at the launch of educational toys designed to teach Nigerian and by extension African history, the former president decried the poor level of awareness of the nation’s history and cultural heritage amongst Nigerians.
While expressing disappointment that many children do not know enough about their states of origin let alone the country, he called on Nigerians to imbibe cultural values and norms so as to promote the nation’s heritage.
Obasanjo said, “I have understood that history is no longer thought in school, which is unfortunate. Not knowing the history of your country, family or locality is to lose memory and if you lose your memory, you won’t remember even what you ate last night. You can see that it is a disaster.”
He then stressed that Nigerians must “go back to make our children know what matters about our country and ourselves so they can be inspired for tomorrow.”
SOURCE: DailypostNG

Thursday 25 August 2016

Usman
The Kwara State Police Command has arrested a Fulani herdsman, identified as, Abubakar Usman, for allegedly killing his 65-year-old mother, Khadijat, and his brother’s wife, Ramatu Shagari, 35.
The 25-year old, who resides in Patigi area of the state, was paraded at the state police command’s headquaters in Ilorin, the state capital on Wednesday.
Usman, while speaking with Punch, however, regretted his action, saying he may have been charmed by his father.
According to Usman, “I am into cattle rearing. On that day when I woke up, I took N1,000 from my room and took my cows out for grazing.
“Suddenly, I discovered that the cattle were running away and I followed them. On getting back home, something came over me and I used a knife to stab my mother. I also stabbed my brother’s wife. I believe that my father charmed me. I do not have mental disorder.”
SOURCE: Dailypostng

Boko Haram violence taking “devastating toll” on children

FILE PHOTO: A woman and her child in an IPD camp in Gombe. Children, especially those without parents are targeted.
Years of violence by Islamist Boko Haram militants have taken a “devastating toll” on children living in the Lake Chad basin, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said on Thursday.
The insurgency displaced 1.4 million children in Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger and left at least another one million trapped in areas that are hard to reach or under the control of Boko Haram, the agency said.
An estimated 475,000 children across Lake Chad are expected to suffer from severe acute malnutrition this year, up from 175,000 at the beginning of the year, according to the report.
“Humanitarian needs are outpacing the response,” warned UNICEF regional director for West and Central Africa Manuel Fontaine.
In north-eastern Nigeria alone, where Boko Haram has its strongholds, an estimated 20,000 children have been separated from their families.
About 38 children have been used to carry out suicide attacks in the Lake Chad basin so far this year, the UN said, bringing to 86 the number of children used as suicide bombers since 2014.
Earlier this week, the World Food Programme warned that the number of people who need food aid in north-eastern Nigeria has almost doubled to 4.5 million between March and August.
Boko Haram poses a steady threat to communities in the north-east of Nigeria and has also launched offensives in neighbouring Chad, Niger and Cameroon.
SOURCE: Premiumtimesng

Wednesday 24 August 2016

Senator Leila de Lima Becomes First Female United Nations Secretary General



The WORLD is about to CHANGE forever as this is the first time a woman is holding the leading role as the United Nations Secretary General since its formation in 1945.

Filipino Senator Leila de Lima has been elected as the new United Nations Secretary-General as Ban Ki-moon brings his term to an end.
Having defeated 10 others( six men and five women), Leila de Lima emerged the position following Ban Ki-moon’s plea for the next person to take his office after his departure should be a woman. 
Ban said he feels that after eight men have led, “it’s high time now” for a female secretary-general, stating he strongly believes women should be “given equal opportunities.”












Leila de Lima is a Filipino lawyer and senator. She was appointed by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo as Chairperson of the Philippine Commission on Human Rights in May 2008. She served the commission until June 30, 2010, after resigning from its chairmanship to accept her appointment by President Benigno S. Aquino III as the Philippines’ new Secretary of the Department of Justice.







She resigned from this office five years later, on October 12, 2015, to focus on her candidacy for a seat in the Senate of the Philippines in what was then an oncoming 2016 Philippine general election. She eventually won one of the twelve contested seats and will serve as a Philippine senator in the Philippines’ 17th Congress.









UN Endorses Campaign to Lower Age Criteria for Political Office


The United Nations (UN) has thrown its weight behind the campaign to lower the age criteria for running for political office in Nigeria.
The endorsement was made by UN Secretary General’s Envoy on Youth, Mr. Ahmed Alhendawi, who spoke Wednesday at an interactive session with young people at the Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports in Abuja.
The #NotTooYoungToRun campaign was launched to drum support for passage of a Bill in the National Assembly to reduce the age limit for contesting into certain elective offices in the country.
Mr. Ahmed Alhendawi said the bill is important considering not only the age of the continent but also the overwhelming youth demographic in Nigeria, noting that “interventions for youth without the youth are not for youth.”
A statement by Samson Itodo of the Youth Initiative for Advancement, Growth and Advocacy (YIAGA) said the UN envoy noted further that “working with and for young people is one of the priority areas for the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, saying his office specifically focuses on strengthening the position of young people across government, civil society, academia, media, and the agencies of the United Nations.”
According to the statement, “the #NotTooYoungToRun campaign welcomes this endorsement with gratitude and commends the UN Youth Envoy for his dedication and support to the advancement of youth issues across the globe. This endorsement will in no small measure boost the campaign and mount pressure on the National and State Assemblies to pass the #NotTooYoungToRun bill which is currently under consideration by the Constitution review committee in the House of Representatives having passed first and second reading.
“The #NotTooYoungToRun bill seeks to alter Sections 65, 106, 131, and 177 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended) to reduce the age of qualification for the office of the President, Governor, and House of Representatives from 40 to 30, 35 to 30, and 30 to 25 respectively. The reduction will take the age of candidacy for Senate from 35 to 30, and that of State Houses of Assembly from 30 to 25.  The Bill sponsored by Hon. Tony Nwulu, member representing Oshodi/Isolo constituency also seeks to mainstream independent candidacy into Nigeria’s electoral process.”
SOURCE: OrderPaperToday 

Monday 22 August 2016

Police Rescue 13 Children, 15 Adults Chained in House in Lagos

The Lagos State Police Command at the weekend rescued 13 children and 15 adults chained and locked up by one Emmanuel Adeyemi at the Oke-ira area of Ojodu, Lagos.
The Commissioner of Police, Lagos State Police Command, CP Fatai Owoseni, acting on a tip-off, had deployed operatives from the Area G Command Headquarters to the scene.
Although the initial intelligence report was that a teenager was chained in the house at Oyinbo Unity Estate, Olamidun Close, Yakoyo, Oke-Ira, Ojodu, subsequent search of the residence by the police revealed 27 others apart from the 17-year-old Toba Adedoyin the Police had gone to rescue.
Confirming the incident, the state Police Public Relations Officer, Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent of Police, said, “The command received a report through Area ‘G’ Command Headquarters, Ogba, that a child was chained in a house at Oyinbo Unity Estate, Olamidun Close, Yakoyo, Oke-Ira, Ojodu.
“Consequently, a team of policemen was mobilized to the location where a teenager named Toba Adedoyin ‘m’, aged 17, was found in a room with a chain on his legs.
“The victim was allegedly chained by one Emmanuel Adeyemi ‘m’ who claimed to be his father, in order to restrain him from going out.
” Further search of the premises led to the discovery of other people chained by the suspect.
“A total number of 28 persons, comprising six adult males, nine adult females, seven female children and six male children were rescued and taken to protective custody.
“A suspect has been arrested and is currently undergoing interrogation as the command is working assiduously to get to the root of the occurrence.”
SOURCE: Thisdaylive

Boko Haram insurgents burnt down Borno village, open fire on fleeing residents

WHAT REMAINS OF GAMBORU MARKET IN BORNO2
Degraded Boko Haram insurgents, on Sunday, burnt down the whole of Shawa village, in Askira Local Government Area of Borno State.
Members of the Islamic sect were said to have invaded the village on bicycles at about 4am on Sunday.
Leader of the Civilian JTF in Mussa district, Istifanus Apagu, on Monday, said the insurgents burnt down the entire village and injured many residents, adding that nothing was left, Punch reports.
According to Apagu, “They (insurgents) came on bicycle around 4am on Sunday morning while people were sleeping and started opening fire on the helpless civilian as the villagers fled into bushes but many were critical injured.
“No lives were lost but the whole village was set ablaze and nothing was left standing. In fact, they went away with the six bicycles.”
SOURCE: Dailypostng

Friday 19 August 2016

12 Killed in Ebonyi Jail Break Attempt



Abakaliki — Two prison warders and 10 inmates are feared dead following an attempted jail break at the Abakaliki federal prison yesterday.
Our reporter gathered that the incident occurred early on Thursday.
An official, who craved anonymity, told Daily Trust that some of the inmates protested over the poor breakfast served to them by prison officials.
Another insider, a warder, said a warder was killed and about 10 wounded by the inmates who tried to escape.
The prison warder said the situation was brought under control by soldiers and mobile policemen, who arrived the scene in 2 Hilux vans.
He said "the report that I am hearing from the prison is that over 12 persons lost their lives and many others injured, one is a warder and rest were inmates."
When contacted, the Controller of Abakaliki Prison, Mrs. Adaobi Oputa confirmed the incident but declined to give the casualty figure.
Meanwhile, Governor David Umahi of Ebonyi State has declared a state of emergency on Abakaliki Prisons.
He spoke when he visited the prisons after returned from Port Harcourt, Rivers State where he attended the Peoples Democratic Party national convention.
SOURCE: DailytrustNg

Nigeria

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry Visits Nigeria
The U.S. Secretary of State, John Kerry, is expected in Nigeria on Aug. 23 to discuss U.S. cooperation with Nigeria over… Read more »

Boko Haram: International media group condemns Nigerian Military for threatening Salkida

Salkida
The Nigerian military should cease threatening freelance journalist Ahmad Salkida with prosecution for not acting as an informer, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.
The military has said the journalist could face terrorism charges if he does not provide it with information he gained in the course of his reporting on the militant group Boko Haram.
In a statement carried by Nigerian news websites on August 14, military spokesman Col. Sani Kukasheka Usman declared Salkida and two civil-society workers – Aisha Wakil and Ahmed Bolori – “wanted for interrogation” regarding the location of over two hundred school girls Boko Haram abductedin April 2014.
In the statement, Col. Usman invoked the 2011 Terrorism Prevention Act, under which “Nigerians could be punished for failure to disclose information about terrorists or terrorists’ activities.” He said, “We are also liaising with other security agencies for their arrest if they [fail] to turn up.” Salkida has lived in the United Arab Emirates since August 2013.
“Journalists must sometimes rely on the trust of dangerous people. Coercing them to become informants risks putting all journalists under suspicion and in danger,” CPJ West Africa Representative Peter Nkanga said. “Nigeria’s military should not threaten Ahmad Salkida and instead ensure that he is free to work.”
On August 16, Nigerian Director of Defence Information Brig. Gen. Rabe Abubakar said that the military was only inviting Salkida and the two civil-society workers for questioning. “We are only inviting them to shed light on pending issues that will support current military efforts, and not to arrest them,” Abubakar said in remarks quoted by the broadcaster Channels Television.
Salkida wrote on his personal blog on August 15 that he would accept the military’s invitation. The journalist told CPJ that he believed the military was trying to punish him for his persistent reporting on Boko Haram since 2006. He said that he had returned to Nigeria three times since May 2015 at the invitation of various federal government agencies.
Salkida told CPJ that he feared for his life, and that anonymous callers had threatened him about his articles and posts to social media websites and his contacts with Boko Haram. Salkida has received similar threats in the past, CPJ reported at the time
Salkida has been covering Boko Haram since mid-2006. Police detained him in 2009 over his reports on the activities of the militant group when he was a reporter for the independent Daily Trust newspaper.
He fled his home in the northern Nigerian city of Maiduguri in July 2011 after callers identifying themselves as Boko Haram members threatened him with death, following the publication of his profile of Boko Haram’s first suicide bomber.
Boko Haram has claimed responsibility for attacks that have killed thousands of people, including Nigerian television journalist Zakariya Isa, who the organization claimed was a spy for the government.
SOURCE:PremiumTimesNg

Wednesday 17 August 2016

Former PDP chairman refunds N6m to EFCC

EFCC
Chairman of Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in Bagoro Local Government Area of Bauchi State, Andrew Adamu, has refunded N5 million out of the N12 million received.
Adamu was said to have received the said amount ahead of the 2015 presidential poll from the office of former petroleum minister, Diezani Alison-Madueke.
The PDP chieftain had earlier refunded N1 million to the anti-graft agency in order to avoid prosecution.
The former chairman reportedly made the refund via bank draft to the EFCC North East Zonal Office in Gombe State.
EFCC spokesman, Wilson Uwujaren, who confirmed the payment, said embattled Adamu admitted to the zonal office of the commission during an interrogation that he signed and collected the said amount in the presence of Marcus Bulus Makama, a current member of Bauchi State House of Assembly and former caretaker chairman of the local government, Mrs. Hasanna Arkila, who signed as witnesses for the collection of the amount.
Adamu told EFCC operatives that the former Commissioner for Rural Development, Mr. Bukata Bayero Bukar, was the chairman of the stakeholders while Mr. Moses Hankali was the secretary.
SOURCE: Dailypost

Churches destroyed, Bibles burned: Nigerian church leader on Christians returning home after Boko Haram


For years a key state in Islamist terror group Boko Haram's attempt to create a caliphate, parts of Adamawa state in northeastern Nigeria have now been liberated by government forces. However, as civilians begin returning home, they are finding it difficult to adjust to life after the insurgency.
"Sporadic attacks by Boko Haram continued, but the Christians I met returned home despite the dangers. Worse still, Boko Haram had all but destroyed their villages," church worker Isaac (name has been changed) told World Watch Monitor.
"The first thing I noticed after arriving was the great emotional strain on the returnees. A lucky few were able to reunite with family members, but many widows and orphans experienced afresh what life without their lost loved ones really means."
Isaac said that many Christians were keen to return home after living in camps for displaced people, because some had "faced pressure to convert to Islam just to get food".
"An estimated two million people were displaced by Boko Haram in northern Nigeria and the government wants people to return home because it's unable to provide for so many," he said.
However, the return home has not been easy.
"To have fled violence and returned to ghost-towns was hard on them," Isaac said. "Boko Haram destroyed whole communities – homes, schools, health centers and churches were not spared. They systematically destroyed water pumps and polluted wells by dumping corpses in them.
"Farms that were deserted have led to a shortage of food, and malnutrition – especially among children – is common."
In July, the UN's children's agency, Unicef, warned that nearly a quarter of a million children were suffering from life-threatening malnourishment in Boko Haram's home state of Borno, which neighbours Adamawa, and one in five are at risk of dying.
Furthermore, Adamawa has a large Christian population, and Boko Haram has systematically targeted churches and Christians since its uprising in 2009.
"Church buildings suffered," Isaac said. "One pastor told me there wasn't a single Bible left – all were burned."
"This is one of the most painful things for us to deal with – not having the word of God in our hands" the pastor told him.
However, despite the difficulties, Nigerians are trying to move forward, Isaac added.
"These Christians refuse to let the challenges stop them from taking back their homes," he said.
Families are rebuilding temporary houses out of wood, grass and mud, and churches have begun holding services again.
"Some were rebuilt, but many others couldn't afford the costs, so gathered under trees or met in the ruins of their former church building," Isaac said.
"One church was little more than a skeleton, with no roof or walls. The congregation placed anything resembling a seat on the ground so they could hold a service without having to sit in the dirt.
"[Their] desperation was matched by determination."
SOURCE: Christiantoday

Wednesday 10 August 2016

Alleged injurious comments: Okah brothers to sue Jonathan in Nigeria, S/Africa

The Okah brothers, Henry and Charles, both leaders of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger-Delta, MEND, undergoing trials in South Africa and Nigerian courts respectively, have vowed to institute legal actions against former President Goodluck Jonathan in the two countries over his purported scornful and damaging statements regarding them.
Spokesperson of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, MEND, Jomo Gbomo, disclosed this in an online statement while reacting to Jonathan's response to the accusation by the Reformed Niger Delta Avengers, RNDA, that he (Jonathan) was the grand patron of Niger Delta Avengers, NDA.
MEND asserted: "A substantial portion of Mr. Jonathan's statement unfortunately dwelt on judicial matters, which are pending in various courts in Nigeria and South Africa. For instance, Mr. Henry Okah's appeal in South Africa's Constitutional Court is due for hearing this August; while his brother, Charles' ongoing trial in Nigeria is pending before Hon. Justice Gabriel Kolawole of the Federal High Court in Abuja."
"The former President's statement was, therefore, contemptuous and prejudicial to the success of the ongoing trials of Henry and Charles Okah in South African and Nigerian courts, respectively. Consequently, both brothers shall, because of the former President's prejudicial statement, institute legal action against him in South Africa and Nigeria within 60 days, commencing from today, August 8, 2016.
"Accordingly, they have briefed their respective solicitors to formally engage the former President in litigation," Jomo Gbomo stated.
Commenting on Jonathan's attempt to dissociate himself from the RNDA allegation, MEND said: "With all due respect, the entire statement was deeply provocative and embarrassingly misconceived as it woefully failed to address the core issue of whether or not the former President was, indeed, the grand patron of NDA."
"Rather, the statement employed diversionary tactics which dwelt extensively on sour grapes! Any follower of events in Nigeria and the Niger Delta privileged to read the statement released by Mr. Jonathan, would immediately observe that the former President had a score to settle with the Okah brothers as well as MEND, which have since May 30, 2014 stopped attacks on Nigeria's oil and gas assets.
"And are currently engaged in dialogue with the Federal Government to find sustainable ways and means of ending the festering Niger Delta crises, which was exacerbated by the former President's ineptitude, incompetence and corruption during the six (6) years he governed the country, " it added.

The group noted: "Indeed, the problem in the Niger Delta today has nothing to do with the current administration of President Muhammadu Buhari. Far from it, the problem is simply the failure of Mr. Jonathan to address the root issues confronting the region when he was at the helm. "
"Even though he was from the impoverished region and had by his own admission in numerous electioneering campaigns, experienced the utter poverty and abject neglect of the region foisted by successive Nigerian Governments and the International Oil Companies since the discovery of oil in 1958 at Oloibiri (a few meters away from his native Otuoke) in Bayelsa state. Mr. Jonathan disappointingly frittered away the opportunity to rescue his people when the Nigerian Presidency fortuitously landed on his laps virtually on a platter of gold.
"For six whole years, Mr. Jonathan was busy drinking, making merry and generally chasing shadows at the State House. Such a fellow deserves to be ostracized from the assembly of reasonable men because the Nigerian Presidency might never come back to the region as cheap as it came to Mr. Jonathan; perhaps in the next 100 years," the group stated.
It said: "Lest we forget, MEND was at the forefront of the armed struggle back in 2006/2007, which forced President Olusegun Obasanjo to consider the option of drafting an Ijaw man into the mainstream of Nigerian politics. That was how the perpetually timid and naïve Goodluck Jonathan became Vice President and later, President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria."
"When he assumed therein as President, he did the unthinkable; he tracked down perceived MEND leaders and promptly got them imprisoned on a trumped-up charge of attempt to assassinate him. Up until today, Mr. Jonathan is still suffering from an Assassination Paranoia Complex (APC).
"Back to the core issue, MEND cannot hold brief for the RNDA, which pointedly accused the former President of complicity in fuelling the ongoing Niger Delta crisis and patronizing the NDA, apparently for political reasons. We are, however, quick to point out the fact that the RNDA has merely vindicated MEND's belief and conviction that the former President and his cronies, who lost the 2015 Presidential election were using the NDA platform to destabilize President Buhari's government," the repentant militant group asserted.
It reiterated that MEND was committed to working with the current administration to bring peace, stability and development to the Niger Delta region and the process had since commenced with the constitution of the Federal Government/MEND Aaron Team 2 Dialogue, Peace and Development Initiative.
"Between August 22, 2016 and October 07, 2016, the Aaron Team shall embark on a tour of the Niger Delta region. The proposed tour is code-named "Operation Moses" and the key focus of the tour is to persuade militants to ceasefire and support President Muhammadu Buhari in his determined and sincere effort to develop the region.
"The tour shall also help to boost Nigeria's oil production capacity as well as improve host community relations with oil and gas companies in the country," it added.
SOURCE: Vanguardng

No Plan to Increase Fuel Price - Nigerian Govt


The federal government has denied reports of an imminent increase in pump price of fuel.
There had been speculations of a fresh raise, two months after the government increased the price of petrol from N86.50 to N145 a litre.
Reports said the government was considering new rates as Nigeria's foreign exchange crisis continues to hamper importation of products.
But speaking to journalists on Tuesday after a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari, the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Maikanti Baru, said the government had no such plans.
"I have not been directed to increase pump price, even the other price was based on recommendation from the regulated body," he said.
"I'm not aware that they are planning to do any increase; you know there are several factors that necessitated that especially the issue of exchange rate that has moved and we don't expect any serious changes.
"So far the request for forex for importation of gasoline popularly called petrol has been met, and our own supply situation is robust, we are meeting demands. We have over 1.4 billion liters on ground.
"So I don't see any basis for increase. However, the review could be done by the right body, you should contact PPPRA; that is the regulatory body as far as petrol pricing is concern."
SOURCE: Premiumtimesng