Tag: Ogun State

  • James Bamidele, 65, 2 others docked in Abeokuta for forging CBN document

    James Bamidele, 65, 2 others docked in Abeokuta for forging CBN document

    Three men were on Friday arraigned before an Abeokuta Magistrates’ Court, Isabo for allegedly forging a Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) document.

    The documents were those for recording enrollment and employment details.

    The defendants, James Bamidele, 65, Joseph Awolope, 29, and Sesan Adebayo, whose addresses were not provided, are facing a two-count  charge of conspiracy and forgery.

    The prosecutor, SP Henry Obiaze, told the court that the defendants conspired and committed the offences sometime between July 2024 and March.

    Obiaze alleged that the defendants forged a CBN enrollment letter dated March 1, with reference numbers 005/1529 and 005/1429, with which he used to defraud several job seekers.

    He also said the defendants allegedly forged an appointment letter dated July 22, 2024, with reference number 009/CBN/Vol.2/GDS, to defraud several job seekers.

    According to him, the offences contravene Sections 516, and 467 of the Criminal Code, Laws of Ogun State, 2006.

    The defendants pleaded not guilty to the charges.

    The Magistrate, Mrs Olubanke Odumosu-Akeba, granted bail to the defendants in the sum of N2.5 million each with two sureties each in like sum.

    She ordered that one of sureties must be a traditional ruler, who must reside within the court’s jurisdiction.

    The Magistrate added that the defendants must submit their international passports and passport photographs to the court

    She, however, held that the defendants be remanded in a correctional centre, pending the perfection of their bail, and adjourned the case until April 24 for hearing

  • 25-year-old man hangs self in Ogun forest

    25-year-old man hangs self in Ogun forest

    The Nigeria Police, Ogun state is investigating the death of a man, Toye Dominic, 25, who allegedly took his own life by hanging himself.

    The incident occurred in a forest in Alagbodagbo Village., Ijebu Igbo area of the state.

    CSP Omolola Odutola, the command’s spokesperson, disclosed this in a statement in Abeokuta on Thursday.

    She explained that the body of the deceased was found at the scene of the incident at about 4:30p.m.

    She said that the incident was reported at the Ijebu Igbo Divisional Headquarters by a local hunter named Kareem Olawalose who discovered the deceased body while on a hunting expedition.

    Odutola disclosed that after making the discovery, Oluwalose sought help from a nearby village, where he met Joseph Dominic, the elder brother of the deceased.

    She stated that the elder brother revealed that his brother had left for the farm earlier that morning but failed to return, prompting a search by family members, which was fruitless.

    “Police officers and villagers on arrival at the scene, observed that the deceased had set aside his farm tools before proceeding further into the forest, where he was found hanging from a tree.
    “No suicide note was found, and family members expressed shock and disbelief over the incident.

    “The police have documented the scene with photographic evidence, and the body has been transferred to General Hospital, Ijebu Ode, for further examination,” she said.

    Odutola pledged that the command would conduct a thorough investigation to ascertain the circumstances surrounding the tragic event.

    She urged the public to remain vigilant and sought support for individuals experiencing distress or emotional struggle.

    She added that mental health awareness and timely intervention remained crucial in preventing such unfortunate incidents.

  • Food Security: Ogun bans levies in markets, to introduce price control

    Ogun State Governor, Dapo Abiodun, has disclosed plans by his administration to introduce a price control mechanism in the state.
    Governor Abiodun also disclosed that henceforth, all forms of market levies have been suspended, noting that only development and environmental levies will be allowed, as they are meant for the development of markets in the state.
    The governor disclosed these during a meeting with market leaders led by the Iyaloja General, Chief (Mrs.) Yemisi Abass, at the Governor’s Office, Oke-Mosan, Abeokuta.
    Abiodun said as part of measures to control the uptick in the prices of food items, the state government will soon commence the operation of its Bulk Purchasing Company, which has now been rebranded as Gateway Trading Company, to ensure that the cost of food items is much more affordable for the people.
    Governor Abiodun also noted that the Gateway Trading Company would, in the first instance, begin operations in the four zones of the state.
    “We’ve also resolved that we will begin the implementation of bulk purchase and selling in the state. To that extent, the state government has rebranded our bulk purchase company. It is now called Gateway Trading Board.
    “Gateway Trading will now assist in bringing food items to our teeming public at prices that will be significantly below what they can obtain when they go to the market themselves.
    “So, we are going to aggressively implement our Gateway Trading objectives. They will first start in the four zones; they will buy in bulk and resell at prices that will be more affordable to our people,” he said.
    Governor Abiodun also announced the ban on all forms of levies in the markets in the state.
  • Beyond the seizure of presidential aircraft

    “…what is currently happening to Nigeria through the tardiness of Ogun state in handling an agreement could be replicated at the local government level with what appears to be our misguided approach to make council areas part of the country’s federating units.”

     

    By
    UGO ONUOHA

    GRACIOUS and humane creditors? Or how else can we describe the gesture of Zhongshan
    Fucheng Industrial Investment Co. Limited who are on the winning side, at least for now, of an arbitration dispute with Nigeria. The company has a standing Paris court order with which it impounded three of Nigeria’s presidential jets.

     

    They were grounded in France where two of the aircraft had gone for servicing. The third, a
    recently acquired Airbus, Nigerian president, Alhaji Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s latest luxury toy, was reportedly flown to France for retrofitting and sundry luxury upgrades to suit the status and taste of the ruler of the country which since 2019 has been designated as the global capital for the abject poor.

     

    There’s no evidence yet that our ruler who is reported by one of his array of official
    spokespersons, Chief Ajuri Ngelale, as denying himself of sleep and working his socks out since his accession to the presidency on May 29, 2023, to make Nigeria great had even taken a ride inside the Airbus before it was seized. What an insult! What temerity by the Chinese. Sorry.

     

    They are our creditors with sizeable credits in their favour and the disposition to lend us more, given our insatiable appetite for foreign loans.
    In their contests with some other countries, the Chinese are known to adopt the fearsome style of wolf warrior diplomacy. Somehow this Chinese company is adopting the stick and the carrot approach in its dispute with Nigeria. This is surprising because in China, companies that are big enough to play in the international arena enjoy subtle or glaring Chinese state backing. Indeed some of such firms are actually owned by the state.

     

    So it was interesting and curious when on Friday last week Zhongshan issued a public
    statement saying that it would grant a waiver by releasing the new presidential toy, the Airbus, to be flown to Nigeria to pick up Tinubu for a prior scheduled trip to Paris to meet with the French president, Emmanuel Macron this week. The statement was silent on whether it would be a short or long lease. And whether it would be a dry or wet lease. If it is a wet lease then the Chinese will provide the captain, the co-pilot and the crew. They will fly the bird into Abuja, pick up the president and his entourage, fly them to Paris, wait for them to finish the meeting with Macron and his team, and then ferry them back to Nigeria.

    “Furthermore, it should be concerning that a foreign, and probably a low level Chinese company, has fore knowledge of the travelling plans of the ruler of the ‘giant of Africa’. And to imagine that they knew about it well ahead of Nigerians, and I dare say, the kitchen cabinet and cabal in the Presidential Villa. This is staggering in its
    enormity. “

    The Chinese may not be that generous to indulge Tinubu with globe-trotting as he’s usually wont to during his frequent foreign trips in search of investors. By the way, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) which attendance is a jamboree for Nigerian government officials is afoot. Hopefully, Zhongshan will grant us the indulgence of using the Airbus to New York next month.

     

    The Chinese company had seized a Dassault Falcon 7X, a Boeing 737-7NG/BBJ, and an
    Airbus A330-243 belonging to Nigeria’s presidential fleet but were at the material time at Paris -Le Bourget and Basel-Mulhouse airports in France. If Tinubu actually travels this week to Paris in the Airbus aircraft it would mark yet another low in the life of this regime. It will be a humiliation no matter how much efforts his spin doctors will try to put a gloss to it as a diplomatic victory. Furthermore, it should be concerning that a foreign, and probably a low level Chinese company, has fore knowledge of the travelling plans of the ruler of the ‘giant of Africa’. And to imagine that they knew about it well ahead of Nigerians, and I dare say, the kitchen cabinet and cabal in the Presidential Villa. This is staggering in its
    enormity.

     

    Apparently determined to magnify its generosity and to leave no one in doubt about the gesture foreshadowing the release of the aircraft, the Chinese company wrote in part that it had “consistently sought to act reasonably and fairly in the course of a legal dispute with Nigeria which was not of its making”. In plain language the company was saying that Nigeria brought this predicament upon itself. It said that it has “now been made aware that an Airbus A330, currently detained in France as a result of a French court order obtained by Zhongshan, is needed by the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (Bola Ahmed Tinubu) to travel to a scheduled meeting with President Macron of France.
    “As a gesture of goodwill, Zhongshan has lifted the seizure of that aircraft immediately. This will allow it to be used for the President’s trip”. Nigerians would need to soak in this embarrassment of international dimension. A nondescript Chinese firm gloating over doing a favour to Nigeria’s president. This is choking. You will be in order if you feel like throwing up.

    How did we get here? And what are the deeper implications of what is currently playing out in the international arena in relation to the game we are playing with the status of Nigeria’s 774 local government areas. But first a rehash of how we got here will help us to understand how Nigeria as a country is setting itself up for future disasters and embarrassments in difficult contracts entered into by the sovereign or its sub nationals or the 774 councils which are being railroaded now as components of Nigeria’s federating units.

     

    The sequence of events that led to the seizure of the presidential jets started in 2001 when
    Nigeria and China signed a bilateral investment treaty. Nine years later Zhongshan, through its parent company Zhuhai Zhongfu Industrial Group, acquired rights to develop the Ogun
    Guangdong Free Trade Zone in Ogun state. In 2011 Zhongshan created Zhongfu International Investment (NIG) FZE to manage the development of the free trade zone. The Chinese subsidiary allegedly built roads, sewerage and power networks within the zone.

     

    In 2012, Ogun state appointed Zhongfu as the interim manager of the FTZ. Soon after, a joint venture agreement was signed between the state which reportedly gave Zhongfu majority shareholding and the status of permanent managers of the FTZ. But in 2016 things went awry and the state abruptly terminated the contract, got the federal government to revoke the immigration status of the Chinese, and then expelled them.
    Zhongshan claimed a breach of the bilateral investment treaty and triggered arbitration
    proceedings in 2017.

    Four years later, an arbitration tribunal found in favour of the Chinese, and awarded Zhongshan a total sum of about $70 million. Last year, after a fruitless effort to find an amicable resolution between the Ogun state government and the Chinese firm, Nigeria sought to use state immunity to shield itself from liability, but it was denied because Nigeria acted out of time. Nigeria lost again on appeal to a higher court in the UK.
    Then Zhongshan moved fast to secure charging and interim orders of forfeiture in various
    jurisdictions including the UK, the US and France, among other places. As in the UK, the US
    court of appeals for the District of Columbia this year affirmed the enforceability of the arbitration award. So Nigeria is entangled in a web. But it could get worse in the future given how we are structuring our federation.

    It could be dismissed as an exaggeration, but what is currently happening to Nigeria through the tardiness of Ogun state in handling an agreement could be replicated at the local government level with what appears to be our misguided approach to make council areas part of the country’s federating units. Apart from a few sane heads, many Nigerians appear to be giddy about the recent Supreme Court opinion on local government autonomy and direct funding from the federation account.

     

    Yes, the 1999 constitution as amended may have enabled the ruling of the court. But it needed to be restated that a political solution will be the right thing to do. On councils and other areas, the constitution is riddled with contradictions that should be untangled through clear-eyed amendments. Imagine a scenario where an autonomous council which is flush with money decided on a partnership with a foreign entity to deliver a big ticket project. And along the line something goes wrong, and gets to an arbitration. Then the local government loses, and Nigeria is held liable because of one treaty or the other. What will happen? There could be a case of multiple councils getting into such entanglements. If Ogun state with its legendary embarrassment of riches in human capital appear to have failed woefully in handling a contract divorce, then we can only conjecture what will be the outcome for a local government area.

    But we can save ourselves future ridicule by pulling back on this local government autonomy madness now that it is not too late. We have no evidence of anywhere in the world where local government areas are components of federating units. The framework for governance at that level should be the exclusive preserve of the states in Nigeria. They should create and fund as many councils as suit their fancies. The first step in this regard is to expunge the names of the current 774 local government areas from the constitution. It’s about time we stopped making simple things unnecessarily difficult.

  • LG Election:  Ogun Announces Date

    LG Election:  Ogun Announces Date

    Determined to be one of leaders of the bandwagon, Ogun State has fixed Saturday, November 16 2024 as date for elections into its local government councils.
    The Chairman of Ogun State Independent Electoral Commission, Mr Babatunde Osibodu, disclosed this in a statement signed by him and made available to journalists in Abeokuta on Tuesday.
    Osibodu, according to the statement, said, “Thursday, August 8, 2024, is scheduled for the release of guidelines for the conduct of the elections and stakeholders meeting while campaigns by the political parties begin on Friday, August 9.
    “The political parties are also scheduled to hold their party primaries between Monday, August 26 to Monday, September 9, 2024”.
    Recall that the Special Adviser on Media and Strategy to Governor Dapo Abiodun of Ogun State, Mr Kayode Akinmade, had last month described as fake news a statement circulating on social media announcing that the next local government elections in the state will be held on October 26, 2024.
    The elected local government officials completed their tenure about a week ago.
  • Police arrest man with fresh human corpse in Ogun

    The Police Command in Ogun said one Babatunde Kolawole, allegedly found with a fresh male human corpse, was arrested and handed over to its personnel at Ado/Odo-Ota area of the state.

    SP Omolola Odutola, the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), who disclosed this in a statement on Sunday in Ota, Ogun, said the suspect was apprehended by Amotekun Corps.

    According to her, the Divisional Police Officer (DPO), Sango-Ota, CSP Saleh Dahiru, received a report by Amotekun and took the suspect, Kolawole, into custody.

    “Preliminary investigations have commenced into the incident.

    “Although the suspect did not deny the incident, he claims to be a native doctor who was attempting to revive the deceased.

     “However, it remains unclear how the suspect obtained the fresh corpse during the late hours of the night,” she said.

    The PPRO said that so far, no one had come forward to claim the body, and the suspect had not revealed any information about the origin of the corpse, to enable police to gather more information and solve the case.

    She added that the corpse had been transported to the Ifo General Hospital for an autopsy.

    Odutola enjoined members of the community to provide any useful information related to the incident to the police.

    She also said that the community members could assist the police in their investigation by helping to shed more light on the disturbing occurrence.