Tag: #ENDBADGOVERNANCE

  • FINGERPRINTS By UGO ONUOHA

    ‘Where-ever law ends, tyranny begins,…’

     

    Captured hereunder are some thoughts of the British philosopher and political theorist John Locke in his enduring treatises in the 17th century. He wrote about the form of his world and power relations going back to almost 1000 years ago. Though he was a genius, he would still have been shocked, if he was to be alive today, to observe how his analysis about 800 years ago appears to still apply to many African countries including Nigeria. He was not a prophet in the classical understanding of that word. He was certainly not another Nostradamus who was said to have correctly predicted events that would happen centuries after his death. But Locke’s demonstration of future – thinking, for lack of any better description, was legendary.

     

    The Online Library of Liberty (OLL) in an entry about two years ago said of Locke: “Where-ever law ends, tyranny begins”. The thoughts continue by explaining that ‘The equality of all citizens under the law is a linch-pin of the modern notion of the rule of law in a democratic state. A revolutionary implication of this idea, well appreciated by Locke in the tumultuous 1680s, is that even rulers and their magistrates were also under the “sovereignty of the law”. Locke concludes that when any member of the state exceeds his legal authority or in any way violates the law, he ceases” to be a magistrate; and, acting without authority, may be opposed, as any other man, who by force invades the right of another’. Has Nigeria under the All Progressives Congress (APC) since 2015 not been ticking the boxes of descent to tyranny?

    “Not quite! Here’s a glimpse into the set up for 2027. Those who may dare to contest for the presidency will start with almost insurmountable handicaps. As we said the police chief will be Yoruba. The chief of army staff, Yoruba. Head of the secret police, Yoruba. The director – general of the national intelligence agency, Yoruba. Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Yoruba; customs comptroller-general, Yoruba; immigration, Yoruba; central bank governor, Yoruba, just to mention a few.”

     

    There was a viral post on WhatsApp recently which appeared to warn readers to worry about any society or country where any citizen who exposes crime is himself treated as a criminal. The post said that any country where that is the case, then the country can conveniently be said to be fully under State Capture. Yet, another recent viral WhatsApp message said something to the effect that nobody captures power and uses it for public good. Does that ring a bell? Does it not represent our unfolding reality?

     

    The process towards the capture of the Nigerian state by rogue rulers and their accomplices may have started since the beginning of this republic 25 years ago. But as it has become obvious today, the people who were at the helm of affairs earlier were benign rulers. In 2006, the eve of his term limit, the then president, Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, was alleged to be plotting to rig the Nigerian constitution so as to remain in office beyond 2007. He has repeatedly and vehemently denied the allegation.

    But his henchman who was deputy senate president, the late Ibrahim Mantu, confirmed the existence of the plot while he was alive. He should know because he was the chairman of the constitution amendment committee in 2006. He told Premium Times newspaper in 2016, years before he died in 2021, that he would have laid down his life for Obasanjo to continue as president if he knew that the country would be so badly governed. At the time Mantu was interviewed, the All Progressives Congress (APC’s) Muhammadu Buhari was in power. And at that time Nigeria was not half as bad as it is today. We will leave it to the imagination what Mantu would have said were he to still be alive.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo

     

    Buhari was an affliction on Nigeria. He was the person who led those who have turned out to be barbarians to seize power in 2015 through a democratic insurgency. But the preceding statement gives too much credit to Buhari. It has since been doubly confirmed that the man from Daura is incapable of doing anything well except for nepotism and sectarianism. He is a rabid Islamist. In 2014/2015, Buhari could be likened to an Igbo saying of imanye aka nwata na-oku (jar) ka ndi ozo nwe efe busasia ihe di n’ime oku. It will be a struggle to find an English language equivalent for the foregoing. So let me try an explanation. A group of adults convinces a child to take cookies from the jar at home. Then they would subsequently capitalise on that to empty the jar. When the woman of the house or head of the household returns, the adults would claim that it was the child that took and ate the cookies. You probably have conspired with others to do something like this in your past life.

     

    “In the wake of what Nigerians are now experiencing in terms of impunity, Buhari, despite being a former general in the army, could be classified as an apprentice or wannabe tyrant. Under Tinubu the gloves are off. He is the head of the executive arm of government, and the de facto head of the national legislature. There’s no evidence that he has purloined the judiciary, suspicions notwithstanding.”

     

    Buhari was a failed military ruler between December 1983 – August 1985 when he was ousted by his colleagues in a palace coup. He failed again under the regime of the former head of state, the late Gen. Sani Abacha, who appointed him to head the defunct petroleum trust fund (PTF). That agency under Buhari was turned into a cesspit of fraud and corruption. Projects funded by the agency, which was created to equitably use proceeds from the removal of petrol subsidy for infrastructural development in all parts of the country, was disproportionately cited in one part of Nigeria- the north. The PTF stank so much so that Obasanjo initiated steps to probe the agency when he was elected president in 1999, but dropped the idea apparently in furtherance of esprit de corp. Like Buhari, Obasanjo was a retired army general. Buhari was not indicted. PTF was not probed. No sleaze was linked to Buhari. But it still speaks to what Nigeria was (and still is) that a man with such baggage was even considered, and then elected as president.

     

    In the wake of what Nigerians are now experiencing in terms of impunity, Buhari, despite being a former general in the army, could be classified as an apprentice or wannabe tyrant. Under Tinubu the gloves are off. He is the head of the executive arm of government, and the de facto head of the national legislature. There’s no evidence that he has purloined the judiciary, suspicions notwithstanding. Though it was no fault of his, what else would be the reasonable thing to believe in a situation where Tinubu was positioned to appoint about 50% of the serving 21 justices of the Supreme Court. The president recently performed an absurdity of administering the oath of office on a non-substantive chief justice of Nigeria. She may need to swear a fresh oath when and if she’s confirmed by the spineless senate. A recent study found that judges, the judiciary and sundry officers of our courts housed the highest number of bribe takers in Nigeria. So, the judiciary is there for the taking, if it has not already been captured.

    READ THIS: https://newdiplomatng.com/falana-writes-tinubu-wants/

    A democrat does not act in a manner Nigeria’s president does. Tinubu has no regards for Nigerians. He is contemptuous and disdainful of the people. He is a pseudo democrat. And this aspect of his life has been in the public domain for at least 25 years. A casual examination of his political trajectory in the last 30 years, and his stranglehold on the politics and the economy of Lagos state which he ruled between 1999-2007 will more than adequately tell the story. A Nigerian of Yoruba stock warned in the lead up to the 2023 presidential election that any ambition that was premised on emi lo Kan (Yoruba for it is my turn) was fraught with danger. He said that the concept was an open expression of the determination of the advocate to corrupt the system and purloin the outcome of the election. Though Tinubu was the exponent of emi lo kan in Nigeria’s political lexicon, he cannot be said to have stolen the presidency. All the courts in the country absolved him of any wrongdoing, and affirmed that the ‘Independent’ National Electoral Commission (INEC) correctly called the results of the presidential election. The only sore point is that the judgments happened during the period that the study we referenced earlier found that judges and other officers of Nigerian courts were the highest takers of bribe money.

    Tyranny is not an event, it’s a process. And the process as it concerns Nigeria was substantially set in motion during the eight years of Buhari. It is gradually becoming suffocating in this dispensation. Tinubu is at the head of it, and those working with him have become fast learners. The fact that the heads of the three arms of the Nigerian national government carry their share of baggage is not coincidental. Even the chairman of the ruling party is mired in corruption issues. It is not also a happenstance that the leadership of the three significant opposition parties – Labour Party, People’s Democratic Party, and the New Nigerian Political Party – are mired in problems and so unstable. APC is already firmly in the grips of Tinubu. For tyranny to get rooted and to fester, there’s a need to destabilise leading opposition parties. And that’s on course.

     

    The other day, Alhaji Sule Lamido, former governor of Jigawa state and a political gerontocrat, alerted the country that Tinubu is increasingly entrenching himself to make it impossible to remove him through the ballot in 2027. He was right. Unless something drastic happens, the chairman of the national assembly will be in office during the election in 2027. He is a Kept Man. Two helms men of secret security agencies were recently removed and replaced. One of the newcomers is of the ethnic stock of the president. The tenure of the in-coming substantive chief justice of the federation, Kudirat Kekere-Ekun, the president’s kinswoman, will run through 2027. If there’s any dispute from the presidential election, she will constitute the apex election tribunal, and probably head it. Whoever will be the INEC chairman in 2027 will be Tinubu’s lapdog. He will superintend another mago mago and wuru wuru election. The same can be said of the service chiefs. For certain, the police inspector – general will still be around given recent shenanigans with his tenure. Ordinarily and statutorily the police inspector – general should be out of office this month. He is also the president’s kinsman and was Tinubu’s aide-de-camp when he was the governor of Lagos state. Then add the issue of incumbency for a man who has no scruples in using state power for personal gain, then the picture of 2027 will be complete.

     

    Not quite! Here’s a glimpse into the set up for 2027. Those who may dare to contest for the presidency will start with almost insurmountable handicaps. As we said the police chief will be Yoruba. The chief of army staff, Yoruba. Head of the secret police, Yoruba. The director – general of the national intelligence agency, Yoruba. Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Yoruba; customs comptroller-general, Yoruba; immigration, Yoruba; central bank governor, Yoruba, just to mention a few. Many of these agencies are effectively in control of manipulating elections in Nigeria. For instance, the central bank warehouses sensitive election materials. The army and police escort materials and election staff. So everything is fixed. Only the God factor cannot be factored in at this time, or at any time for that matter.

     

    Tinubu is Nigeria’s usu biara orji ntagbu – locust, cankerworm and caterpillar. How ironic that Usu in Igbo is bat. Even usu will shrug at being batified. The president’s wife had boasted last year that their family was so blessed materially that they would have no need to be parasites on the country. The story is different. The truth is that previous presidents of the country who never laid claim to riches and stupendous wealth did not assault the commonwealth as the Tinubu family is doing. The president buys an aircraft which Nigerians do not know the cost. He hops into the craft and travels abroad while the country is reeling from energy crisis, acute petrol scarcity, and pangs of hunger of citizens. He buys an upscale bomb-resistant American Escalade Sport Utility Vehicle. It was procured from the public till but Nigerians do not know for how much. The regime spends money with little or no accountability, as if money is going out of fashion. And the money is borrowed. The lavish lifestyle of Tinubu underpinned by the concept of emi lo kan is happening at the same time millions of people are slipping below the poverty line. Despondency and despair have straddled the land.

     

    In this dispensation we operate many national budgets concurrently making tracking and accountability nearly impossible. The budgets on their own are problematic. Everyday we are assailed with budget provisions in strange places. It’s no longer abnormal to find allocations for the construction of culverts in the budget of the country’s space exploration agency. Nothing makes sense, and the president does not care. If he cares, there’s no evidence. Under Gen. Abacha, the then Anglican Bishop of Akure Diocese, in Ondo state, the Right Reverend Emmanuel Bolanle Gbonigi, described the former head of state as ‘thoroughly wicked’. But Abacha was a military ruler. What do we say of the country today?

     

    *It’s almost impossible to exhaust the perfidious activities of this regime but we will sign off here as the third leg of the trilogy which started two weeks ago.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • NBA condemns recent increase in pump price of fuel

    NBA condemns recent increase in pump price of fuel

    The President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Afam Osigwe, SAN, has condemned the recent increase in the pump price of fuel by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC).

    The Association said that significant and abrupt hike from 617 Naira to about 900 Naira has imposed an unbearable burden on the already overstretched finances of ordinary Nigerians and further aggravate the economic challenges faced by

    In a press statement issued by the president of the association, Afam Osigwe, the NBA acknowledges the necessity of economic reforms and recognizes the government’s responsibility to make difficult decisions, these decisions must be made with the utmost consideration for their impact on the welfare of the citizens.

    The Association which says the sudden price hike as not only harsh but also unjustified at this time calls on the Federal Government to immediately halt the implementation of this policy and engage in meaningful dialogue with all relevant keyholders, including civil society organizations, labor unions, and economic experts, to explore more sustainable and less punitive alternatives.

    He also urge the government to prioritize the welfare of its citizens, particularly the most vulnerable, and to pursue policies that alleviate rather than exacerbate the hardships faced by the Nigerian people.

    The president however assured Nigerians that the NBA will engage constructively with the government to find a more equitable solution that ensures economic stability while safeguarding the interests of all Nigerians.

  • Governor Bago Declares 3-Day Public Holiday To Distribute FG Palliatives 

    Governor Bago Declares 3-Day Public Holiday To Distribute FG Palliatives 

    Niger State Governor, Mohammed Bago has declared Wednesday, Thursday and Friday next week as public holidays to allow for the effective distribution of palliatives to residents across all the 25 Local Government Areas of the State.
    Speaking at a press conference at Government House, Minna, the governor announced that the state had supplemented the N5 billion palliative fund from the federal government with an additional N250 million.
    Below are the highlights of the modalities adopted for distribution:
    All the Wards in Suleja, Chanchaga, Bida and Kontagora Local Governments are to have N20 million per ward.
    All the Wards in the remaining 21 Local Government Areas of the State will get 10 million Naira each.
    Traditional Institutions to get N80 million.
    Internally Displaced Persons to get N75 million.
    Logistics and Organized Labour, to gulp N110 million
    Political parties to get N150 million.
    All the money is to hit the Local Government council Account by Monday next week.
    The cash will be injected into the local markets in the state.
    Five trucks of Rice will be distributed to each Ward of the 25 Local Government Areas.
    40,000 bags of Maize is still anticipated from the Federal government and the state government will add 10,000 bags to make it 50,000 bags for distribution to all the polling units across the state.
    The governor said the state and local governments will repay 58 per cent of the N5 billion in 20 months, while the federal government covers the remaining 42 per cent. Local committees, including former and current public office holders, will oversee the distribution process.
    Local Government and Ward Committees are to decide what food items to buy depending on the needs of their people.
    Standing Committees comprising Former and serving public office holders are to ensure effective and efficient distribution of the palliatives in their respective Constituencies.
    Also to cushion the effect of fuel subsidy removal, Governor Umaru Bago disclosed some steps taken by the state government to ease movement of goods and services .
    200 CNG Luxurious Buses will be made available to provide free public transportation to all students and pupils in public schools.
    Civil Servants will also benefit at a discounted rate .
    100 of the Buses are to ply the Suleja to Abuja axis.
    50 Buses to ply Minna and 50 to other Local Government Areas.
    Directives have been given to the Ministries of Lands and Agriculture to provide 10,000 hectares of arable land in every Local Government.
    By December 2023, 250,000 arable lands should be cleared to boost national policy on food security.
    Farm Machinery to be provided
    500,000 youths are to be employed in the pilot scheme in Agricultural activities.
    400,000 women are to be employed as pickers of Shea nuts.
    On Education;
    Payment of bursary to students is to be revived.
    Governor Umaru Bago used the medium to appeal to Nigerlites to be patient as his administration remains committed to serving them better.
    He however warned that anyone who is found wanting in the distribution of the palliatives will be jailed to serve as a deterrent to others.
  • We feel Betrayed, Joe Ajaero, NLC President

    We feel Betrayed, Joe Ajaero, NLC President

     

    Joe Ajaero

    JOE AJAERO

    We are filled with a deep sense of betrayal as the federal government clandestinely increases the pump price of premium motor spirit (PMS). One of the reasons for accepting N70,000 as national minimum wage was the understanding that the pump price of PMS would not be increased even as we knew that N70,000 was not sufficient.

    We recall vividly when Mr. President gave us the devil’s alternatives to choose from: either N250,000 as minimum wage (subject to the rise of the pump price between N1,500 and N2,000) and N70,000 (at old PMS rates), we opted for the latter because we could not bring ourselves to accept further punishment on Nigerians.

    But here we are, barely one month after and with government yet to commence payment of the new national minimum wage, confronted by a reality we cannot explain.

    It is both traumatic and nightmarish.

    Yet, when we told government that it’s approach to resolving the fuel subsidy contradictions was patently faulty and would not last, it’s front row cheer leaders sneered at us, saying we did not understand basic economics .

    But if truth be told, this act of betrayal is consistent with the character of this government. We recall the assurances we were given by the leadership of the National Assembly on the 250% tariff hike, that it had been dealt with and there was no need to openly engage the Minister of Power who was at that meeting.

    Instead of the promised reversal, the rate has since been jerked up further putting more Nigerians and businesses in jeopardy.

    The combined effects of government’s ferocious right -wing market policies brought Nigerians and Nigeria to their all-time low and led to the End-Hunger/End Bad Governance protests.

    Rather than make amends, government arrested and hounded into detention some of those who took part and some of those who had nothing to do with these protests, charging them with criminal conspiracy, subversion, treasonable felony, terrorism financing and cyber crime with an intent to overthrow the government of President Tinubu.

    The police and other security agencies have since been on rampage terrorising the citizenry in pursuance of government’s agenda of muzzling lawful dissent.

    In brazen pursuit, they have defamed and libeled not a few individuals.

    They have gone as far as appropriating the statutory roles of the Ministry of Labour and Employment in resolving trade dispute matters and issues considered outside the jurisdiction of the security agencies.

    That the government is on rampage in the face of stifling conditions of living is an understatement but we promise Nigerians that we at the Nigeria Labour Congress will not be cowed into submission. Together with civil society, we brought about this democracy when some of the actors in power today were conspiring with the military on how to perpetuate their hold on political power.

    When the State and the security forces picked on us in a hybrid war, we had our suspicions. We knew they were up to something sinister and needed to distract/divert our attention or possibly frighten or weaken us before they came out with it so that we would not have a robust response.

    Now that they chickens have come to roost, we were right in our suspicions. However, we want to let Nigerians know that the clandestine/surreptitious increase in the pump price of PMS is the first among the equally sinister policies government has up its sleeve.

    On our part, we stand resolute with the people and will neither be distracted nor intimidated by the government or its security agencies.

    We insist that government cannot criminalise protests or basic rights in the domain of the citizenry.

    Accordingly, we demand the immediate:
    1). Reversal of the latest increase in the pump of PMS across the country;

    2). Release of all those incarcerated or being prosecuted on the assumption of having participated in the recent protests;

    3). Halt the indiscriminate arrest and detention of citizens on trumped up charges;

    4). Reversal of the 250% tariff hike in electricity;

    5). Stop to the hijack of the duties of the Ministry of Labour and Employment;

    6). End to policies that engender hunger and insecurity;

    7). Halt to government’s culture of terror, fear and lying.

    We are guided by our belief in our country and the need to secure and sustain its sovereignty, integrity and welfare of the people.

    In the coming days, the appropriate organs of the Congress will be meeting to take appropriate decisions which will be made public.

    Comrade Joe Ajaero is the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC)

     

  • #EndBadGovernance: 10 Protesters charged with attempt to overthrow President Tinubu, remand in prison

    #EndBadGovernance: 10 Protesters charged with attempt to overthrow President Tinubu, remand in prison

    Nigeria Police, Monday, arraigned ten #endbadgovernance# protesters before a Federal High Court in Abuja, on charges of attempt to overthrow President Bola Ahmed Tinubu between July 1 and August 4 this year.

     

    The accused persons were said to have committed the treason offence during their one week nationwide protests when they allegedly levied war against Nigeria.

     

    The offences were said to be contrary to sections 96, 410 and 413 of the Penal Code.

     

    Inspector General of Police (IGP) who brought the charges against them alleged that the accused persons broke into the Abacha Army Barracks and openly called on the military to take over the constitutional government of President Tinubu.

     

    According to the police, they attempted to force their way into the seat of power during which they allegedly burned down police station and injured police officers.

     

    They were also said to have incited the Nigerian public against the government and destroyed several public properties comprising Police station, High Court complex and National Communication Commission (NCC) facilities.

     

    Police also claimed that a 70- year old British citizen, Andrew Martin Wynne now at large was largely responsible for instigating mutiny against the Nigerian government.

     

    The alleged offences were said to have been committed in Abuja, Kano, Kaduna and Gombe among others.

     

    However, all the accused persons pleaded not guilty to the charges when read to them.

     

    The accused persons are Michael Tobiloba Adaramoye, Adeyemi Abiodun Abayomi, Suleiman Yakubu, Comrade Opaluwa Eleojo Simon, Angel Love Innocent, Buhari Lawal, Mosiu Sadiq, Bashir Bello Nurudeen Khamis and Abduldalam Zubair.

     

    Sequel to not their guilty plea, Counsel for the IGP, Simon Lough, SAN, asked the court to remand the accused persons in prison pending their trial.

     

    Responding, counsel to four defendants, Marshall Abubakar, however, moved an oral applications for bail of the accused persons.

     

    He cited authorities to justify his oral application for his bail adding that the Federal High Court in the treasonable charges against a politician, MKO Abiola allowed oral application and admitted him to bail.

     

    He continued that his clients were presumed innocent in law until proved otherwise by the IGP adding also that bail is Constitutional rights of the defendants.

     

    He submitted that the defendants had been held in custody for close to a month by police who he said, have completed investigation into the allegations against his clients before bringing them to court.

     

    Concluding, he assured the Judge that the defendants would not jump bail if granted and that they will also not tamper with witnesses in the matter.

     

    Another lawyer, Deji Adeyanju who appeared for three of the defendants faulted the treason charges against the defendants insisting that they only participated in a lawful and legitimate protests against hardships facing them.

     

    Adeyanju argued that police ought to have entered the locations of bandits, kidnappers and terrorists, arrest and charge them with treason offence instead of innocent protesters.

     

    He drew the attention of the court to the proof of evidence attached to the charges adding that no evidence pointed to the direction of treason, mutiny and incitement as alleged by police.

     

    Insisting that bail is discretionary, Adeyanju pleaded with the Judge to exercise his discretion in favor of the defendants by admitting them to bail in liberal terms.

     

    However, counsel to Police, Simon Lough SAN vehemently objected to the bail requests on the ground of gravity of alleged offences the accused persons were charged with.

     

    He specifically cited mutiny aimed at changing democratic government by force through incitement and involvement of a British national against the Nigerian nation.

     

    In a brief reaction, Justice Nwite ordered that the defendants be remanded at Kuje prison in Abuja and Suleja prison in Niger State and

    adjourned ruling in their bail applications till September 11

     

    The Judge ordered that the nine males defendants are to remain in Kuje prison while the only female defendant said to be pregnant, Angel Love Innocent was ordered to be taken to Suleja prison.

     

    Justice Nwite said that he needed time to consult the retinue of authorities cited by lawyers to back up bail applications.

     

    Although lawyers to the accused persons led by Marshall Abubakar had requested

     

    Also Justice Emeka Nwite rejected the request for police custody for four defendants made by Abubakar.

     

    He instead ordered that they be taken to prisons.

  • Police summons Ajaero again

    Police summons Ajaero again

    A little over 24 hours after his return from an earlier invite, the President of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Joe Ajaero has again been summoned by the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) for questioning.

    This time he is to report in company of Comrade Emmanuel Ugboaja the General Secretary of NLC.

    Both leaders of the Congress are scheduled to turn up at Force Headquarters on September 5, 2024.

    Recall that on August 29, the NLC President complied with a previous summons to appear before the police on allegations of criminal conspiracy, financing of terrorism, treasonable felony, subversion, and cybercrime.

    In the latest summons, the police is demanding that the NLC President and the General Secretary answer to questions on allegations bordering on criminal intimidation, conducts likely to cause a breach of the public peace and malicious damage to properties.

     

     

  • Hunger Protests: Court strikes out suit against protesters, IGP, DSS, others

    Hunger Protests: Court strikes out suit against protesters, IGP, DSS, others

    Justice Peter Lifu of the Federal High Court in Abuja, Thursday, struck out a suit instituted against the anti-hunger protesters and Attorney General of the Federation, (AGF) for want of diligent prosecution.

     

    The court action followed the absence of the 17 plaintiffs and 26 defendants in court and without legal representation from the two parties.

     

    Other Respondents in the suit instituted by 17 Nigerians are Inspector General of Police, Department of the State Service, DSS, and the Chiefs of Army and Defence Staff.

     

    Although the suit was fixed for hearing, Justice Lifu was however shocked that none of the 17 plaintiffs showed up neither were they represented by any legal practitioner.

     

    To worsen the matter, the defendants comprising Take it back movement, Nigerians against hunger, DSS, IGP, Chiefs of Army and Defence Staff had no legal representation while no excuses or explanations were offered for boycott of the proceedings.

     

    Justice Lifu concluded that it had become apparent that the plaintiffs were no longer interested in the matter and subsequently struck it out.

     

    The plaintiffs drawn from the six geo political zones of the country had approached the court seeking order to terminate the protest on the ground that their fundamental rights to freedom of movement, human dignity, right to own property, economic, social and cultural development and right to national peace and security were been breached.

     

    They asked the court to compel the Director General of the DSS, Inspector General of Police, Chiefs of Army and Defence Staff as well as the AGF to enforce their fundamental rights for them by bringing the protesters to order.

     

    The plaintiffs cited Kaduna, Kano, Jigawa among others where great destructions were allegedly done to public and private properties.

     

    The suit was however terminated by Justice Lifu as a result of lack of diligent prosecution on the part of the plaintiffs.

     

    Some of the plaintiffs are Danladi Goje, Buky Abayomi, Adiza Abbo, Ocholi Aduku, Francis John, Nnamdi Eze, Chibuzor Ifeanyi, Fesco Olatunde and Ishaya Istifanus among others.

    Also, Omoyele Somore, AGF, National Security Adviser IGP Chief of Army Staff and Chief of Defence Staff among others

  • EndBadGovernance: FG Releases six Polish students

    EndBadGovernance: FG Releases six Polish students

    A group of Polish students and their teacher arrested in Nigeria during protests against government policies and soaring living costs have been released, Poland’s foreign minister said on Wednesday.
    The seven Polish citizens were detained earlier this month in the northwestern state of Kano “over their suspicious role in the protest and flying of Russian flags”, according to the Nigerian national security agency.
    The Polish authorities, however, said they were University of Warsaw students and a teacher, who found themselves “in the wrong place at the wrong time”.
    Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said the group had now been released.
    “I would like to confirm that the young people are already free, back in Kano, on campus, with passports,” Sikorski said in a video posted on X, formerly Twitter.
    “I think the young people received an accelerated lesson in African studies… I hope they will be back in the country soon,” he added.
    Nigeria is struggling with its worst cost-of-living crisis in years after President Bola Ahmed Tinubu introduced reforms to help revive the economy and foreign investment
  • Court Acquits 6 EndSARS Protesters 

    A Chief Magistrates’ Court in Ikeja has released six men who had been detained since 2020 in connection with the #EndSARS protests.

     

    The men—Daniel Joyinbo (31), Adigun Sodiq (28), Kehinde Shola (32), Salaudeen Kamilu (29), Sodiq Usseni (33), and Azeez Isiaka (34)—were initially charged with disturbing the public peace during the protests.

     

    In a plea bargain, the men admitted to breaching public peace, leading to their conviction.

     

    Despite the conviction, Magistrate Bola Osunsanmi decided to discharge them, noting their nearly four years in custody.

     

    The court heard that the offense occurred on November 23, 2020, in Ebute Metta, Lagos, and was in violation of Section 168(d) of the Lagos State Criminal Law, 2015.

     

    Dr. Babajide Martins, Director for Public Prosecutions, presented the revised charges and urged for sentencing based on their plea.

     

    Defense attorney Mr. T.D. Ojeshino requested leniency, emphasizing that the defendants are first-time offenders, some of whom support their families and have demonstrated remorse.

     

  • #EndBadGovernance: Over 2,000 protesters languish in Police detention

    #EndBadGovernance: Over 2,000 protesters languish in Police detention

    Following a merciless clampdown, some of the protesters during 10-day #Endbadgovernance protest were killed, while others were arrested and clamped into police detention.
    According to Femi Falana, SAN, human rights activist, and the Chair, Alliance on Surviving Covid-19 and Beyond, ASCAB, no fewer than 2,111 protesters were arrested in connection with the 10-day #Endbadgovernance action across the country that was held from August 1st to 10th.
    He added that 1,403 were brought to court, and then sent to prison custody.
    Below are the number of protesters arrested in states across the country, and the Federal Capital Territory.
    1. Kano — 873
    2. Jigawa — 403
    3. Katsina–120
    4. Gombe — 111
    5. Sokoto — 110
    6. Borno — 99
    7. Yobe — 90
    8. Bauchi-60
    9. Plateau — 51
    10. Kaduna — 50
    11. FCT — 50
    12. Nasarawa — 40
    13. Niger — 25
    14. Zamfara — 19
    15. Cross Rivers — 10