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Saturday, December 15, 2012

A-list robbery kingpins, police serial killers meet Waterloo…after terrorising Lagos, Ogun, Ekiti for years


The Suspects
The long arm of the law has finally caught up with two men suspected to be the leaders of the armed gangs that attacked a branch of First Bank in Ekiti State and the World Oil Petrol Station in Ibafo, Ogun State, a few months ago.

Ejike Mbogu and Ayomide Oyebanji were said to have been arrested by the police in Lagos after an intensive search.

Also, eight other suspected robbers, Gbenga Oni, Taofeek Mumuni, Ogbonnaya Ekweye, Kundus Adetono, Yemi Ayodeji, Shola Ayodele, Gani Moshood and Seyi Aluko, all of who allegedly had participated in some major robbery attacks in the South-West, are currently in the custody of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, Ikeja, Lagos.

Another suspected robber, Seun Adegboyega, aka Dada, was shot dead during a raid in Ikotun.

Three policemen reportedly lost their lives in the robbery in Ekiti, which occurred sometime in May 2012 and lasted about an hour. An undisclosed amount of money was said to have been stolen by the robbers during the attack.

Also, the robbery at the petrol station in Ibafo claimed the lives of two policemen. Both of them were shot when a gang of daredevil robbers invaded the station.

CRIME DIGEST learnt that three other policemen were killed when the same gang of robbers struck in the Oke-Itoku area of Abeokuta.

On Sept. 10, the gang robbed several bureau de change operators in Agege, Anthony, Ojodu, Itire, Ikeja and Ilasamaja areas of Lagos, killing three policemen and a commercial bus driver.

The end came for Mbogu and Ayodeji about three weeks ago when a Honda car allegedly stolen in Akute, Ogun State, was traced to the former’s aged mother in Anambra State.

Assisted by Mbogu’s brother, a team of policemen from SARS in Lagos succeeded in apprehending the suspected gangster in a hotel in Ikotun. Led by Superintendent Abba Kyari, the team found Mbogu in company with five other members of his gang. In the ensuing stampede, three members of the gang managed to escape.

Mbogu was arrested, but not before he was shot while trying to disarm one of the policemen. Dada was killed as he tried to escape.

On his part, Ayodeji was allegedly responsible for organising most of the major robberies which occurred in the Ikotun/Igando areas of Lagos state this year. “Ayodele is my friend; he lives at Ikotun and usually brings information about thriving businesses in the area. I got to know him as a building developer when I came in the guise of an Omo oni ile (land speculator) to a site he was supervising. We robbed a Coca-Cola depot at Liasu Road; I got N120,000 as my share in that operation. We robbed a super mart at Igando and a turkey cold room at Liasu road. Most of the robberies at Liasu Road were carried out by our gang,” Ayodeji confessed.

On the other hand, Oyebanji’s gang is believed to be responsible for most of the robbery attacks that have taken place in Victoria Island, Lekki and Ajah.

Leading the attacks himself alongside four other members on the run, Oyebanji allegedly dispossessed residents of the island of their cars, money and other valuables. CRIME DIGEST gathered that in one of such incidents, two policemen on guard at a home in VI were killed in a shootout with the robbers.

In an interview with our correspondent, Mbogu confessed that he was lured into armed robbery four years after he moved to Lagos.

He said, “I moved to Lagos after my father’s death and started earning a living as an apprentice to my brother who sold refrigerator parts in Mushin. For a while, things were difficult. Then I met one Segun in Surulere. He claimed to be a soldier. I noticed that he lived on the fast lane and he was not alone. All the boys who moved with him also lived on the fast lane. Although I didn’t know it, Segun was an ex-convict.

“One day after we got talking, Segun invited me for a drink with his boys. He asked me if I had been involved in any crime of any sort. When I answered in the negative, he said I didn’t have the required experience for the kind of work he did. So, he assigned me to pick pockets alongside Opeyemi. For some weeks, I would steal wallets and other valuables during rush hours.

“Segun monitored my progress regularly. Later, I was allowed to drive them on a motorcycle whenever they wanted to snatch handbags. Most of our victims were sales girls going to the bank to deposit or withdraw money.

“Eventually, Segun relocated to Cotonou with some members of his gang when the police were on their trail. By then, I had established contacts with other robbers and one arms supplier known as Tochukwu.”

The Commissioner of Police in Lagos State, Mr. Umaru Manko, confirmed the arrests.

“Ever since his involvement in the Wema Bank robbery at Dopemu in 2008, Oyebanji has long been on the wanted list of the police. About 15 armed robbers participated in that robbery attack and 13 of them were arrested. Oyebanji and one other member of the group had been on the run since then.

“Oyebanji’s gang was responsible for the bullion van robbery in Badagry about five months ago. A police sergeant and three other civilians were killed during the attack.

“Oyebanji was arrested last week after he was sighted by a source around Iyana-Ipaja. A SARS team led by Kyari trailed him to Oshodi. He was shot while trying to escape arrest while a receiver of stolen goods, Muyiwa, who was with him at the time, was also arrested,” Manko said.

Oyebanji was said to have made confessional statements which led to the discovery of eight AK-47 rifles belonging to the policemen who were killed in the Ekiti, Badagry and Ibafo robbery attacks.

One English pump action, and 25 magazines loaded, with 30 rounds of ammunition, were also found hidden in a Nissan Almera car which was parked in a mechanic’s workshop at Apapa Road, Oyingbo.

One pump action an AK-47 rifle, two locally-made double-barrelled shotguns, two assault rifles and 10 AK-47 magazines (fully loaded), were also recovered from the gang’s former armoury at Ifo when Aluko led a SARS team to the hideout. Unfortunately, most of the guns and ammunition had been taken away to be used in a robbery attack the same day.







Source - Punch news

Minister’s mother rescued, reunites with family • Kidnap mastermind allegedly shot dead in Asaba


Prof. Kamene Okonjo and Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
The mother of the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who was abducted from her home in Ogwashi-Ukwu in Delta State on Dec. 9, 2012, has been released.

Saturday PUNCH gathered that the kidnap victim, 82-year-old Prof. Kamene Okonjo, was dropped off near her home at about 10 am on Friday after spending five days in the kidnappers’ den.

A few hours after Okonjo reunited with her family at the palace of the Obi of Ogwashi-Ukwu, the police in Delta State shed light on the circumstances that led to her release.

The Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ikechukwu Aduba, said there had been a bloody shootout between his men and the kidnappers in Asaba, the state capital, which had resulted in the rescue of the kidnap victim.

During the encounter, a suspected kidnap kingpin, Mr. Nwazor Nwose, aka Bolaji, believed to have masterminded the abduction, was shot dead by security agents.

In a meeting with journalists in Asaba, Aduba described Nwose as a notorious kidnapper who had been arraigned in court on a previous kidnap charge in Delta State and granted bail.

The CP said, “Nwose was arrested a few months ago, investigated and arraigned in court for kidnapping and was released on bail by the court. But he returned to Asaba and continued his nefarious activities.

“This time, he met his Waterloo. Combined detectives from the IGP taskforce and that of the State Police Command swung into action and invaded his hideout. Immediately he sighted the police he jumped a very high fence. Our men had no option; we had to obey the rule of engagement and opened fire on him.

“He continued, but eventually we got him by trailing the blood stain. We rushed him to Federal Medical Centre, Asaba where he gave up the ghost.

“Notwithstanding, four members of the gang were picked up. Two have been indicted so far. Another notorious criminal called Bright is in our custody. The names of the other gang members are Hard Rock, Tse-tse fly, and Tipper Boy.”

Saturday PUNCH learnt that Nwose had previously been involved in the abduction and murder of an oil magnate in Asaba in 2011.

Aduba said the operation to rescue the queen began on Dec. 13, stressing that it was concluded in the early hours of Dec. 14.

He said the police refrained from attacking the hideout of the kidnappers in Kwale, Ndokwa West LGA on account of the frail and advanced age of the victim.

Aduba said Prof. Okonjo was brought to the palace on a motorcycle early yesterday morning hale and hearty.

“We knew the victim was in Kwale, but we were very cautious not to invade the town so that she would not be harmed. We waited patiently and continued to monitor the area. Mama was brought in this morning by a motorcycle,” he said, adding that the two vehicles used in the abduction of Okonjo, a Toyota minibus with registration number KPP 64 XA and a grey Volkswagen Golf car registration number ASB 697 AA, had been impounded.

The residents of Ogwashi-Uku jubilated as the news of Okonjo’s release reached them on Friday.

Earlier, in an interview with the British Broadcasting Corporation, Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan said the government had refused to negotiate with the kidnappers.

In the report, which was published online, Uduaghan claimed that the kidnappers might have yielded to pressure to let Prof. Okonjo go.

Still, speculation was rife across the country that the N200m ransom demanded by the kidnappers might have been paid before the minister’s mother was released.










Source - Punch news

Five siblings die in Lagos fire


A house on fire
Five children between the ages of four and 12 were killed in an inferno in the Kirikiri area of Lagos State on Thursday.

Saturday PUNCH learnt that the five children, Emeka 12, Ifeanyi 10, Chinasa eight, Joy six, and Bright four, who are of the same parents, were burnt alive at their home located at 29 Comfort Oboh Street, Kirikiri.

The parents of the victims were identified as Ogbonna and Margaret Igwuagwu.

Our correspondent learnt that although over 30 people live in the compound, which was completely consumed by the fire, only the five children died.

Sympathisers were said to have surrounded the premises crying and wailing over the incident, while charred remains of the victims were being evacuated.

According to residents, the fire started at about 11.30 pm in the room where the five children were sleeping and later spread to other rooms all made of wood.

The parents of the children were said to have locked them inside the room and lit a candle for them as there was no electricity supply.

Neighbours said it was the usual habit of the parents to lock the children inside the room whenever they were going to their shop in the evening.

It was learnt that the children slept off while the candle fell, thereby spreading the fire to other parts of the room. Woken by the heat, they were said to have shouted for help while the fire raged, but neighbours were too busy saving themselves.

One of the neighbours said the eldest son, Emeka, had begged his parents not to lock them in but allow them to spend sometime outside but their mother refused.

“I can vividly remember when Mama Emeka ordered her children to go and sleep, saying that she needed to go back to attend to customers who were waiting for her. Emeka, the eldest, pleaded that they should be allowed to stay outside for a while.

“She insisted that they should go to bed since they were to travel the following day. I believe that it was in a bid to prevent them from running out of the house that she locked them inside and went away with the key,” she said.

Some neighbours told journalists that they heard the wailing of the children when the fire was raging, but could not break through to rescue them due to a hard burglar proof that was used at the entrance of the room.

According to residents who witnessed the incident, firefighters were informed but could not get to the scene due to bad roads in Kirirkiri.

A resident, who wished to remain anonymous, said, “The road is not passable and there is always traffic congestion in that area. Men of the Naval Fire Service got here first, but they could not help the situation because the damage had already been done.”

One of the tenants, Udoh Bassey, whose room was also burnt, told journalists that no one could say exactly what caused the fire.

“It started at about 11.30 pm when some of us were still awake. It was the cry from that room that attracted my attention. The entire compound was razed down before help could come our way. I was able to save a few of my property because my room was located far away from the source of the fire.

“The children died because their parents locked them inside the house and went back to their shops close by. We tried but before we could reach them, there was an explosion from one room to the other as all the other rooms were razed down.”

When contacted, spokesperson for the state police command, Ngozi Braide, said the parents of the victims had suffered shock and were rushed to hospital.

“At about 11.20pm, police received a call that a house in Kirikiri was on fire. The house was made of wood and corrugated iron sheets and the fire engulfed it. Five children died in the fire,” she said.










Source - Punch news

Controversial Record


Lionel Messi
Lionel Messi’s record of the most goal scored in a calendar year is generating a global interest, writes OLUFEMI ATOYEBI

Lionel Messi has been a regular feature in the past one week, having set a new record for the number of goals scored in a calendar year, but that record is being put to the test with new revelations.

Two left foot strikes against Real Betis was all Barcelona striker Messi needed last Sunday to strike Gerd Mueller’s name off the record book for the most goals in calendar year.

The first was the Argentine’s 85th goal of the year, which tied Mueller’s record, but nine minutes later, he scored again, his 86th of the year, to replace the German legend’s name with his own. On Wednesday, he extended it to 88 goals with two goals against Cordoba in the Copa del Rey

Muller scored 85 goals in 60 games for Bayern Munich and Germany in 1972, while Messi has scored 76 times for Barcelona and 12 goals for Argentina in 67 games to date.

In May, Messi first broke one of Mueller’s records as his 68th goal of the 2011-12 season passed the German’s record for goals scored in a single season, which was set in 1972-73.

But the global excitement for the record was thrown into controversy after Flamengoes claimed that Brazil legend, Zico, was the real record owner of the most goals scored in a calendar year. The club said Zico scored 89 goals in 1979.

“We are upset. Messi still hasn’t passed the milestone,” Bruno Lucena, head of Flamengo’s research and statistics department, told Brazilian sports daily Lance.

The club said Zico scored 81 goals for Flamengo, seven for Brazil and one in a friendly between Argentina and a Rest of the World XI in 1989, adding that the player would have scored more than 10 goals if he had not missed two months of action due to injury within the time frame.

If the claim of the Brazilian club was true, Messi must score one more goal to equal the record and one or more to put the controversy to rest in his last two games of the year.

On Sunday (tomorrow) Barca play host to Atletico Madrid in a match that will feature two most celebrated strikers in the world. Radamel Falcao is the driving force in Atletico, who has netted 19 times in all competitions this season.

He had his name imprinted on football hall of fame to rival Messi in magical year for two South American stars after scoring five times against Deportivo La Coruna in 6-0 win on a day Messi broke Mueller’s record. Falcao is now La Liga’s first player in 10 years to score five goals in a match.

But even if Messi is able to break Zico’s 89 goal record, he has to be super-human to break the record that suddenly emanated from Zambia.

On Wednesday, Zambia FA claimed Godfrey Chitalu holds the record for most goals scored in a calendar year. The FA insists former Kabwe Warriors star scored an impressive 107 goals in 1972.

“We have this record, which has been recorded in Zambian football, but unfortunately it has not been recorded in world football,” a spokesperson told NewsDay Zimbabwe.

“Even as the world has been looking at Lionel Messi’s record, breaking Gerd Mueller’s, the debate and discussion back here has been why Godfrey’s goals are not being recognised.

“We have commissioned an independent team locally to go back into the archives and record minute-by-minute each of those goals. The team that we have put together is going to calculate all of those goals, recording whichever game or tournament they were scored in.

“We will then send that to CAF and FIFA so that we can show that, while Messi’s record is there, while Muller’s record is there, the actual record holder in terms of goals per calendar year is actually an African, it’s actually Godfrey Chitalu.”

Chitalu died in 1993 when a plane carrying Zambia’s national team crashed.

It’s a whole new twist to a measure of individual excellence but while Messi is at the centre of it all, his club and country are the biggest beneficiaries. With Messi’s goals, Barcelona are favourites for the La Liga and the Champions League, while Argentina are enjoying a prime place in the World Cup qualifying table for the South American zone.










Source - Punch news

US based firm to offer free medicare in Uvwie, Warri

WARRI — About 1000 Nigerians living in Uvwie and Warri South local government areas will benefit from a one-day free medical service sponsored by a US based medical firm, Boro Audiology Clinic.

The programme which holds today at Garden of Life Assembly along All Saints Lane, off Okere Ogborikoko road in Uvwie local government is expected to gulp N3.9 million.

Addressing newsmen in Effurun, the programme sponsor and Medical Director of Boro Audiology Clinic, Dr. John Oyiborhoro, explained that unlike in the past when only free hearing services were offered by his firm, arrangements have been put in place to give out free hearing aids and vision services like free eye vision glasses and eye examination.

The New York State license Audiologist and former University teacher, enjoined all those who are impaired in hearing and seeing, particularly those living in Warri and Effurun to take advantage of the programme.

Dr. Oyiborhoro who was 2004 – 2005 Chairman, Board of Trustees, Urhobo National Association of North America disclosed that about 350 persons have so far benefited from the programme since its commencement in 2009.







Source - Vanguard news

FG drops planned refinery projects •Jonathan must tackle fuel subsidy corruption–Labour


President Goodluck Jonathan
Eleven months after promising to build three new refineries for the country, the Federal Government may have dumped the plan.

Saturday PUNCH investigations showed that the FG may have dropped the idea because of the unresolved issue of deregulation of the downstream sector of the petroleum industry.

This development came to the fore as organised labour expressed surprise at President Goodluck Jonathan’s N161bn supplementary budget on fuel subsidy for 2012.

The labour body advised the President to tackle corruption in the oil sector.

The President had in a letter to the National Assembly on Tuesday, said the N888bn budgeted for fuel subsidy this year would not be enough.

But as Jonathan is seeking an additional N161bn, the FG has yet to begin moves to build the three refineries it promised during the fuel subsidy protests last January.

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation had in 2010 unfolded plans to build three new refineries.

The refineries are to be sited in Kogi, Lagos and Bayelsa states.

The NNPC Group Executive Director, Engineering and Technology, Mr. Billy Agha, who stood in then for the Group Managing Director in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, had said 7,000 job opportunities would be created by the Greenfield Refinery that would be built in the state by the corporation in partnership with the China State Construction Engineering Corporation.

Again in 2012, at the height of the fuel subsidy protests, the Federal Government said it would build three refineries.

The Minister of Works, Mr. Mike Onolememen, who spoke to douse the tension associated with the protests, had said, “I want Nigerians to know that when these new refineries are completed, we will be a net exporter of petroleum products and prices will begin to come down, just as we are witnessing in the telecommunications sector with the GSM regime.

“That is my message to Nigerians. Let us support the government. Let us join hands with the government because it cannot and will not take any decision with the aim of punishing fellow Nigerians. It is impossible. So, Nigerians should have this at the back of their minds.

“The one in Lagos is with the capacity of 200,000 barrels per day, while the ones in Kogi and Bayelsa have the capacity to produce 100,000 barrels per day.”

Investigations at the NNPC showed that 11 months after the government promised to build the three refineries, not much has been done to that effect.

A top official of the corporation told one of our correspondents that the three refineries were supposed to be part of the government’s effort to stop fuel importation.

He said, “The three refineries are to be built by the government in partnership with the private sector. They do not include the six that are solely private sector driven.

“But from all indications, the government has developed cold feet and the six by the private sector seem to be still-birth. There are various stakeholders who prefer fuel importation. These are the people that will not allow the plan to build refineries to succeed.”

President Goodluck Jonathan had said that private investors were not interested in building refineries in the country because of the fuel subsidy regime.

He had said, “Why is it that people are not building refineries in Nigeria despite the fact that it is big business? It is because of the policy of subsidy, and that is why we want to get out of it. Who will build refineries and end importation of petroleum products? Subsidy must go.”

The President had spoken in Abuja when he received the report of the graduating participants of the Senior Executive Course 34, 2012 of the National Institute of Policy and Strategic Studies.

Efforts to get NNPC’s comment on the status of the three refineries did not succeed.

Attempts to speak with the acting General Manager, Public Affairs at NNPC, Mr. Fidel Pepple, proved abortive as calls to his cell-phone did not go through. It was learnt that he was out of the country.

Similarly, attempts to speak with the General Manager, Media, Dr. Ibrahim Umar, were unsuccessful. He neither picked calls to his cell-phone nor replied a text on the status of the refineries.

Commenting on the failure of the government to build the three refineries, the President of the Trade Union Congress, Mr. Peter Esele, said the President should fulfil his promise.

He stated, “The people involved are just waiting for some form of assurance to take off. The President should take that step to commence action on it.

“He has made a promise, those people want to do it, but they want a guarantee from the government. It is important for the President to give them this before they start. It is incumbent on the President to break the ground for those refineries to be built. This thing has to do with credibility.”

He expressed surprise over the N161bn supplementary budget on fuel subsidy the President submitted to the National Assembly.

Esele said that there was the need to address the corruption in the fuel subsidy regime.

According to him, based on the increase in the pump price of fuel by 60 per cent in January, the amount spent on fuel subsidy should have reduced.

He said, “The thing came to me as a surprise because the pump price was increased by 60 per cent in January. When we had N1.7trn, there was so much corruption in the system. And now that we are getting the corruption out of the system, the subsidy should come down drastically.

“At least, it should reduce by over N500bn. It is expected that pump price would have reduced. With this additional demand, there is the impression that there is still corruption in the management of the subsidy.”

On her part, the president of the Campaign for Democracy, Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin, described the present government as profligate.

She said, “To spend N1trn on subsidy in a year at N32 per litre tax, which was imposed on petroleum, is the height of fiscal recklessness.

“No country that runs on this template can make a progress.”

The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria has also urged the FG to repair existing refineries and build new ones.

The group warned that import-driven deregulation would ruin the nation’s petroleum industry.

President of the association, Babatunde Ogun, said, “We call on the government to ensure that the existing refineries perform optimally and new ones are built within a specified time frame. It does not have to be giant refineries, but pockets of refineries across the country, especially in the oil-producing states.

“Similarly, operators in the upstream sector must be made to refine a specific percentage of their allocations locally.”








Source - Punch news

Ex-Anglican primate, Rev Adetiloye, dies at 82


Rev. Abiodun Adetiloye
The retired Primate and Archbishop of the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), Most Rev. Joseph Abiodun Adetiloye, is dead.

Adetiloye died around 1.30 am on Friday at his residence in Odo-Owa-Ekiti, Ijero Local Government Area, Ekiti State.

According to his son, Adeola, who is a lecturer in the Faculty of Engineering, Federal Polytechnic, Ado-Ekiti, the cleric was not sick before he died.

He said he was shocked when he was informed of his father’s death.

The deceased’s younger brother, Chief Sunday Adetiloye, said that his elder brother would have been 83 on Dec. 25.

Sympathisers began to troop to the residence of the deceased as soon as the news of his death was announced.

Traditional rulers, including the Orangun of Oke-Ila, Oba Adedokun Abolarin, and the monarch of his town, paid condolence visits to the family.

The Bishop of Ekiti West Diocese, Most Rev. Samuel Oke, described Adetiloye as a man who loved God and served humanity to the last.

Ekiti governor, Kayode Fayemi, who paid a condolence visit to the family at Odo-Owa, described the late cleric as a very humble man despite his achievements.

The governor recalled that Adetiloye, when he was the Bishop of Ekiti, served as a father to all pupils of Christ’s School, Ado-Ekiti, when he (Fayemi) was studying there.

The governor, who was a prodemocracy activist, recalled the roles played by the late bishop during the long struggle against military dictators for the enthronement of democracy.

He said that Adetiloye stood on the side of the masses during the Sani Abacha-led junta, which earned him the sobriquet, ‘NADECO Bishop.’

The governor urged the family of the deceased and Ekiti people at large not to mourn the demise of the cleric but to celebrate him for living a fulfilled life and living for the people he served.

According to him, Ekiti State Government will participate fully in the burial ceremony of the cleric, adding he was a citizen of the world.

“I was lost for words when I heard the news as all of us who are Baba’s children have every reason to grieve,” Fayemi said. “He was always on the side of the truth and he was always supporting us when we were battling to restore democracy as the Abachas of this world didn’t like him for speaking truth to power.

“We’re not mourning him (Adetiloye) but celebrating him because Baba did not belong to Nigeria alone, but his place in the annals of faith is important and secured.

“He was a global man and we owe him a duty of following the values he stood for.

“Despite his pedigree, he was very humble to have returned to his country home although the government of Lagos State wanted him to stay in Lagos.”

The eldest son of the deceased, Adeola, expressed gratitude to the governor for commiserating with the family. He promised that the state would be carried along in the burial arrangements.










Source - Punch news

Lawyer offers police N.7m bribe – Delta CP

DELTA State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ikechukwu Aduba said that his men have arrested a human rights lawyer for allegedly attempting to offer N.7m bribe to police so as to release a kidnap suspect.

Addressing a press conference in Asaba yesterday, the CP said “a Warri-based self acclaimed human rights activist Barrister Omo Irabor has been arrested for attempting to bribe SARS (State Anti Robbery Squad) operatives to pervert the course of justice by releasing one Vincent Akpokona, male, a self confessed suspect involved in the kidnap of one Jerry Okolowa, a company worker at Ekete Owian on 3rd December 2012.

“The suspect was arrested on 6th of December at Army barracks Effurun with the Sim card of the victim while trying to collect the demanded ransom for the release of the victim.

“As investigation was on to arrest the fleeing gang members”, the CP went on, “the Barrister well abreast with the facts of the high profile matter allegedly approached SARS team based in Warri and promised to offer the team the sum of N0.7m to secure the release of the notorious suspect whose gang has been terrorizing Warri and environs.

The team played along and on 13th December 2012 the barrister true to his promised went to the team with the said N0.7m in company of the relations of the suspect and he was subsequently placed under arrest.

“To achieve his ignoble ambition, he had advised the team cruelly to lie to the CP that the suspect died in custody while the suspect will be released to the family through him”.










Source - Vanguard news

Jonathan may not rule beyond 2015 – Dokubo-Asari …says quarrel with Obasanjo unnecessary


Dokubo-Asari
Leader of the Niger Delta Peoples Volunteers Force, Alhaji Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, has declared that President Goodluck Jonathan may not rule beyond 2015.

Dokubo-Asari based his statement on the facts that the President had lost the support of his political stronghold-South/East and South/South, going by the result of the 2011 presidential election.

The Ijaw activist had in March this year declared that Jonathan would occupy the Presidential Villa for eight years from 2011.

But at a news briefing on Friday in Abuja, he made a U-turn and declared that it would be difficult for Jonathan to go beyond 2015 because of the ‘greedy’ people around him.

He said these people were responsible for the current rift between Jonathan and ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo.

He said, “We have continued as Ijaw people and the entire Niger Delta and South-South to support President (Goodluck) Jonathan, but the time has come when silent cannot be golden. We must speak out on issues that are very critical for the survival of our people, the survival of the people of the South-South and the South-East, which is the political base Jonathan.

“Jonathan is surrounded by very greedy people who are only in the Presidency to enrich themselves at the expense of the President himself.

“This brings us to another Kalabari proverb which says: ‘Where there are elders, a goat cannot be allowed to deliver while tied to a stick.’ If we don’t talk and we continue to brush it aside, tomorrow we will be blamed and people will say: ‘Mujahid Dokubo-Asari was around when Jonathan was President, and he didn’t talk;’ then I will be an accomplice and accessory after the fact.”

Asari, who said he had benefited from Jonathan, stressed that whatever benefit he had gained from the President was not enough to silence him.







Source - Punch news

CAF Award fall-out: Work harder, Ladipo charges Nigerian football players

Nigerian football players in Europe and other parts of the world have been enjoined to work harder this season to ensure that they compete for the 2013 edition of the GLO-CAF Awards.

The President General of Nigerian football Supporters Club, Dr. Rafiu Ladipo made this remark in Lagos over the weekend in view of Nigerian players missing out of the shortlisted names for the 2012 of the award holding in Ghana.

He said that “it is only hard work and dedication that can make any Nigerian player to be a strong contender of the prestigious Glo-CAF Awards.

He therefore advised Nigerian players to put in their best and ensure that they emerge among the best in their various clubs so as to ensure that they are short-listed among the top three for GLO-CAF Awards next year.

“Let’s regenerate the good old days when our players not only dominated the list of short-listed candidates, but went ahead to win the Awards,” he pleaded.

Dr. Ladipo also exhorted the players to work hard ahead of the 2013 African Cup of Nations and 2014 World Cup qualifiers next year, adding that successful outings in the two competitions will boost the chances of Nigerian players in the 2013 Glo-Caf Awards.

Mikel Obi of Chelsea was the only Nigerian player that was short-listed for top ten of 2012 Glo-Caf Awards. But he was eventually dropped when the list of top Five was announced.

CAF also released the final list of three African players last week for the awards. They are Ivorian Didier Drogba who currently plays in China League, Manchester City Midfielder, Yaya Toure and Camerounian midfielder, Alexander Song who ply his trade with Barcelona Football Club in Spain.










Source - Vanguard news

Abe gives free Jamb forms to 378 students in Rivers

In continuation of his education support initiative, Senator Magnus Abe, representing Rivers South-East in the National Assembly, has commenced the procurement of the 2012/2013 Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, JAMB, forms for indigent students in the district.

No fewer than 378 eligible candidates drawn from the seven local government areas of the district comprising Andoni, Eleme, Gokana, Opobo/Nkoro, Oyigbo and Tai, are to benefit from the scheme.

Beneficiaries of the programme, which started in 2011/2012 with 189 students benefiting, will increase to 567 when the process for 2012/2013 is completed.

The move is geared toward assisting less privileged students across the district aspire for higher education to guarantee a secured future for them.










Source - Vanguard news

Now, smartphones diagnose cancer

Researchers at the Massachusetts General Hospital Center for Systems Biology have developed a smartphone-enabled Diagnostic Magnetic Resonance, DMR, device described as the world’s smallest cancer diagnostic system which has an accuracy rate of 96 percent compared to 84 percent for biopsy.

Presenting the device last week at the mHealth Summit in Washington, D.C., Dr. Roderick Pettigrew Director of the National Institute of Health’s National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, said the handheld DMR device was evaluated in a clinical trial of 70 patients with suspected abdominal malignancy.

In a presentation entitled “State of the Science in Research on Mobile Health Technologies”

Pettigrew recalled that in a recent clinical study, the mobile-enabled diagnostic magnetic resonance had an accuracy that was more than 12 percentage points higher than the conventional “gold standard” of biopsy.

“We were driven to develop this device by two factors – the exquisite sensitivity of magnetic resonance techniques like MRI and the desire to detect cancer in very small cell samples,” he stated.

Patients in the study underwent a biopsy in addition to a minimally invasive procedure known as fine needle aspiration, a mini biopsy that collects cells rather than tissue.

Specimens collected from biopsies were sent to a lab for standard diagnostic testing, while the aspirates were run through the DMR system in what Pettigrew described as a “chemistry lab on a chip.”

Not only did the DMR provide more accurate cancer diagnosis, but it arrived at its results quicker by enabling quantification of multiple protein markers within an hour instead of three days.

“This smartphone-enabled technology is superior technology (to standard diagnostic procedures) and is an example of the type of rigorous evaluation that we need to establish the real value for these mobile and wireless tools,” Pettigrew said.







Source - Vanguard news

Husseini faults NSC on absence coaches in sports zones

Tennis veteran, Bulus Husseini,has faulted the National Sports Commission,NSC structure for sports development in the country, saying the existence of zones without coaches was the reason sports have failed to make the desired impact at grassroots level.

Speaking in Lagos during the just concluded 18th National Sports Festival, he said “For years we have had six sports zones headed by a zonal coordinator and a sports officer. Now, I I’m made to understand that in addition, NSC has created sub-zones as part of reaching the grassroots.

Still, coaches are not in the equation for these zones. I think coaches should be engaged and sent to work in all zones. They (coaches) are actually the staff who should get involved in talent hunting in schools and local governments all over the country. A situation where you don’t have coaches in the zones is a sad omission in our sports policy.

Coaches, like I said should be part of all levels of sports development. They, in my opinion, are the personnel that should dominate the sports zones. You may not want them heading the zones but employ them as core personnel working with the professionals there to carry out any form of developing the young ones at the grassroots. Without the coaches efforts will continue to be in vain.

Husseini, who recalled that it was a coach that recognised his yearning for tennis at a much younger age and brought him to limelight in the 1970’s with the likes of Nduka Odizor, Abubakar Sadiq and others, also revealed he is fully into coaching youths to start with tennis early in life.

“I like coaching young boys and girls under five years of age to play tennis. Catching them young fortifies my belief that this has bigger impact on sports development and I’m devoted to doing just that,” he said.







Source - Vanguard news

Appropriate intake of palm oil protects against chronic diseases

Palm oil has a balanced composition of both saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. Coupled with nature’s gift of high vitamin E content, the oil is naturally very stable.

Palm oil contains an equal proportion of saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. It’s particularly rich in the saturated palmitic acid (44 per cent), with substantial amounts of the monounsaturated oleic acid (40 per cent), and smaller amounts of polyunsaturated fatty acids (10 per cent).

Palm oil is nature’s richest source of carotenoids as compared to the other vegetable oils –15 times more than carrots, and 30 times more than tomatoes. Carotenoids are natural chemical compounds that give crude palm oil its orange-red colour and that make palm oil red in colour.

The most active and important form of carotenoids found in palm oil is beta-carotene. Many carotenoids contain Vitamin A which is an effective antioxidant that helps strengthens the body’s immune system and reduces the risk of cancer, heart disease and cataract. Vitamin A is a very essential vitamin for our eyesight. Talking about vitamin E, palm oil is rich in Vitamin E (tocopherols & tocotrienols).

In fact, no other vegetable oil has as much Vitamin E compared to Palm Oil. Vitamin E is a powerful anti-oxidant, capable of reducing the harmful types of oxygen molecules (free radicals) in the body.

This means they may help to protect you from certain chronic diseases, while delaying the body’s ageing process. Solid fats made from palm oil are trans-fatty acid (TFA) free as they do not have to go through hydrogenation. Hydrogenation of oils produces trans-fatty acids along with saturated fatty acids. TFAs increase the amount of bad (LDL) cholesterol and reduce the amount of good (HDL) cholesterol in the body which in turn poses a lot of health risks especially cardiovascular diseases.

Fats have been getting a lot of bad publicity but we still need fats in our diet. Palm oil is very rich in calories. One gram of palm oil supplies 9 Kcal of energy. Energy should come from all groups of f 30 per cent of the total calories derived from our food should be obtained from fats and oils. Fatty acids are raw materials for building the membranes of every cell in your body, including your bones, nerves and brain!

The micronutrients keep your body cells healthy and functioning properly. Malnutrition can set in and you can become sickly or prone to infections if you do not have fats and oils in your diet. Palm oil also supplies other important fat-soluble vitamins D, E and K.







Source - Vanguard news

People live longer but are not always healthier: study

PARIS (AFP) – People live more than a decade longer on average today than they did in 1970, but spend much of these boon years battling diseases like cancer, according to a global health review published Thursday.

By 2010, a man’s life expectancy at birth had risen 11.1 years from 1970 and that of a woman 12.1 years, said the bundle of seven studies published by The Lancet medical journal.

But as we live longer, bigger chunks of our lives are marred by illness, with non-infectious maladies like cancer and heart disease claiming ever more victims.

“Over the last 20 years, globally, we’ve added about five years to life expectancy, but only about four years to healthy life expectancy,” Josh Salomon from the Harvard School of Public Health, a study partner, told AFP by email.

“You can think about it as adding the equivalent of four years of good health and one year of bad health.”

Contributors to the study appealed for a shift in health policy focus from simply keeping people alive to keeping them healthy as well.

“Health is about more than avoiding death,” said Alan Lopez and Theo Vos of the University of Queensland’s School of Population Health in a joint statement.

The magnum opus is the work of nearly 500 authors from 50 countries, consolidating data from academic research papers, autopsy reports, hospital records and censuses, covering 291 types of disease and injury in 187 countries.

With the exception of sub-Saharan Africa, it shows a clear shift in the disease burden from traditional culprits like malnutrition, infectious diseases and birth complications that generally mow down younger people, to cancer, heart disease and diabetes that can linger for years.

The growing burden of disability “implies additional health care needs and costs in terms of both social costs, financial costs and the demands on health care delivery system,” Salomon said.

The study said non-communicable diseases like cancer, diabetes and heart disease accounted for nearly two out of every three deaths in 2010 — up from half in 1990.

Thirty-eight percent more people died of cancer in 2010 than in 1990 — eight million compared to 5.8 million.

The number of deaths from malnutrition and infectious, maternal and neonatal diseases declined from 15.9 million in 1990 to 13.2 million in 2010.

“The big issue here is the transformation from risks really related to poverty at the global level to risks that are more profoundly related to a series of non-communicable diseases and the way people live their lives,” study leader Christopher Murray of the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation told a recorded press conference.

In 2010, high blood pressure (9.4 million deaths) and tobacco smoking (6.3 million deaths) posed the biggest risks to health worldwide, followed by alcohol (five million deaths), the study said.

An unhealthy diet and physical inactivity were collectively responsible for an estimated 12.5 million deaths.

The study noted a sharp rise in chronic disability from causes like mental disorders, substance abuse, diabetes and muscular-skeletal ailments.

“These diseases that cause chronic disability, they tend to be related to age, so as populations get older and premature mortality rates go down, you have more people living into the age groups where these are quite common,” said Murray.

“This is one of the broader transformations we see globally, particularly outside of sub-Saharan Africa.”

In that part of the world, life expectancy of men decreased by 1.3 years over the four decades from 1970 and that of women by 0.9 years — mainly due to HIV/AIDS.

In Botswana, South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe, deaths in the 15-49 age group rose by more than 500 percent from 1970.

“Belarus and Ukraine in eastern Europe also underwent notable declines in life expectancy, thought to be due to high rates of alcohol-related deaths in these countries,” a statement said.

Globally, though, the study showed deaths in children younger than five dropping by almost 60 percent from 16.4 million deaths in 1970 to 6.8 million in 2010.

Japanese women had the world’s highest life expectancy at 85.9 years, followed by Icelandic men at 80 years.

The impoverished island of Haiti had the lowest life expectancy (32.5 years for men and 43.6 for women), mainly due to the devastating 2010 earthquake that killed at least 250,000 people.

Eko 2012: North blames insecurity for poor performance

Northern states’ poor performance in the just concluded 18th National Sports Festival held in Lagos has been blamed on the insecurity in the northern region for some time now.

Speaking with Saturday Vanguard sports after the festival, administrators, coaches and athletes from the northern part of the country blamed insecurity and the loss of thousands of people to the dreaded Boko Haram for the poor performances of all the states in the north.

Some of the sports administrator’s, coaches and athletes who pleaded anonymity said the fear of Boko Haram was the beginning of wisdom.

“We could not train properly for fear of being attacked by the sect that has turned northern Nigeria into a hell. The series of bombings, shooting and killings scared us stiff and so we could not muster the courage to train. We should be commended for even wining some medals,” a Borno official lamented.

A coach from Kano said they would have done better than they did but the incessant bombings, maiming and killing of innocent souls drove them from their training grounds. “We did our best but the security situations in the country should be blamed for Kano athletes’ poor performances.

We are human beings with blood flowing in our veins. We came to the festival because the south is very safe but if one of the northern States had hosted perhaps we may not have been here,” he stressed.

It was the same story across other northern States that did not place amongst the top ten on the medals table. Plateau athletes cited the case of Sam Choji, a cyclist who was killed during one of the crises in State. Many other athletes also lost their lives in similar circumstances.

They however, appealed to the federal government to find lasting solutions to the crises in the north so that athletes could train well ahead of Calaber 2014.







Source - Vanguard news

11-yr old girl gets pregnant for five boys

It was a shocking story to the parents and neighbours of an 11 year old girl and pupil of Ikorenim Primary School in Calabar, Cross River State, Ekamen Asuquo, when a pregnancy test that was conducted on her at the General Hospital, Calabar revealed that she was carrying a four-month pregnancy.

The mother of the primary five pupil, who resides at 2, Pipeline Road, Ikorenim had suspected pregnancy, going by the symptoms exhibited by the teenage girl, who was sick for a while as she decided to take her to the hospital after she failed to get well, despite long period of self medication.

The mother was rattled when it was discovered that the girl was pregnant after some tests.

A neighbour, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said “She has been at home for the past two months always complaining of one ailment or the other and the mother had to take her to the General Hospital after home medication could not heal her in the hope that she could be treated there.”

The neighbour, said when the teenage girl was confronted by her mother, who allegedly sells hot drinks and illicit drugs over who was responsible for the pregnancy, she mentioned one Tony, one of the boys that patronises her mother’s hot drinking joint.

However, the source hinted that when Tony was confronted, he said “He was the one who dated the teenage girl first but another customer, Jones snatched her from him and when Jones was confronted, he said he had since stopped dating the girl and mentioned another person, who when also confronted, mentioned another boy and at the last count, the number was five.”

It was gathered that the mother was infuriated when her daughter confirmed that she slept with all the boys mentioned and could not actually tell who was responsible. It was also gathered that two of the boys mentioned were tenants living in the woman’s house.

Out of annoyance, “She has since asked the two young men living in her house to quit but they are asking for time to secure another accommodation before they can vacate the house.”

When the distraught mother was asked what she was going to do with the daughter’s predicament, tears rolled down her cheek, as she said “I leave everything to God.”

When the state Police Public Relations Officer, Mr John Umoh, was contacted, he said the incident had not been reported to the police.







Source - Vanguard news

Court admits fresh evidence linking Ndume to Boko Haram

Justice Gabriel Kolawole of the Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, yesterday, admitted fresh sets of evidence, showing that Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume, allegedly made seventy-three contacts with the Boko Haram Islamic sect.
Senator Ali Ndume at the High Court Abuja.
The evidence was tendered before the court by a forensic expert with the States Security Service, SSS, Mr Aliyu Usman, who testified against the lawmaker yesterday as the third prosecution witness.

The witness, had in his examination-in-chief, maintained that the contacts took place between October 3 and November 3, 2011, adding that most of the communication was between Ndume and the self confessed spokesman of the Boko Haram sect, Ali Sanda Umar Konduga.

t would be recalled that the high court had on October 24, admitted into evidence, two phones comprising of Nokia E-7 and Nokia 27100, which the SSS confiscated from both Senator Ndume and Konduga, shortly after they were arrested.

Trial Justice Kolawole marked the two phones as exhibits P5 and P5 (a).

Meanwhile, Konduga who willingly submitted himself to the security agency had since been convicted by an Abuja Chief Magistrate Court.

However, Ndume who is answering to a 4-count criminal charge, had in his statements before the high court, maintained that the reason the sect approached him was as a result of his being a member of the Presidential Committee that was inaugurated on August 2, 2011, with a view to addressing the security challenges in the North Eastern part of the nation. He said the first telephone exchange between him and the sect was on October 4, 2011, two months into the Committee’s work.

In a 24 paragraph affidavit he deposed before the court, Ndume said after the sect approached him, “he promptly informed one Usman, who represented the SSS before the Presidential Committee of his contact with the said Jammatul Sunnah Walid Jihad (otherwise known as‘Boko Haram’ sect) and also other members of the committee.

“He also informed the Director of State Security Service of his interaction with the said “Boko Haram” sect and forwarded a copy of the DVD he obtained from the sect to the Director of SSS for review.

“The Vice President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, His Excellency Namadi Sambo, is also aware that he was in contact with the Jammatul Sunnah Walid Jihad (otherwise known as ‘Boko Haram’).”

Nevertheless, in his testimony, Aliyu, who told the court that he is a member of Digital Forensic examiners in a sister agency from the United States of America and a certified member of advance forensic examiners in Israel, said he was the person that personally extracted all the calls, and text messages that were exchanged between Ndume and the Boko Haram spokesman.

He said the information was stored in three different Call Data Record (CDR) and Mobile Phone Exploitation (MPE) record from the Nokia E7.

Aliyu told the court that after the data were analyzed and confirmed as a genuine communication channel between the sect and Ndume who is currently representing Borno South in the Senate, he handed the extracted information alongside the IMEI of the phones to the chairman of the investigative panel that was set-up by the SSS to look into the alleged conviviality between the lawmaker and the terrorist organization.

Moves by the prosecuting counsel, Mr Thompson Olatigbe, to tender the three exhibits as evidence before the court met stiff opposition from the defence counsel Chief Ricky Tarfa, SAN, who relied on the provision of section 85 and 86 of the Evidence Act to contend that it constituted a “Secondary Evidence.”

Tarfa had argued that the exhibit were computer generated, saying its authenticity could not be easily ascertained, a submission that was countered by the prosecution who urged the court to go ahead and admit the CD’s as part of the proof of evidence in the matter.

In his ruling yesterday, Justice Kolawole, said he found no merit in Tarfa’s objections, noting that it would be in the interest of justice to admit the exhibits into evidence.

Marking the CD’s as exhibit P8, P8(a) and (b) yesterday, the trial judge, however stressed that its contents will be ascertained in the cause of the trial, adding that contrary to argument of the defence counsel that they are in the category of public documents, the judge maintained that in-line with section 43 (1) (a-b) of the 1999 constitution, the call logs are not such that any network provider can reveal to individuals except in relation to an investigation of criminal allegation.

The judge said it would have been different assuming the witness was not the maker of the evidence, even as he adjourned the case till February 7 and 11, 2013, to enable the defence counsel to cross-examine the witness.

Specifically, Ndume is being prosecuted by the Federal Government on allegation that he furnished the Boko Haram sect with classified information that aided their terrorist operations in the country.

He was arrested by the State Security Service, SSS, on November 21, 2011 and docked before the high court on December 12, sequel to his indictment by Konduga, who fingered him as one of their major sponsors.

According to the federal government, the offence he committed was contrary to section 7(1) (b) of the Terrorism (Prevention) Act, 2011 and punishable under Section 7(1) of the same Act.

Though the security agency said its investigations revealed that it was Ndume that submitted phone numbers of top government officials, including that of the Attorney General of the Federation, to the Boko Haram sect, however, the lawmaker who spent 26 days in detention before he was eventually granted bail by the court, has since denied the allegation, describing it as baseless.







Source - Vanguard news