New Olubadan of Ibadanland| Adetunji is crowned.

The ancient city of Ibadan was agog on Friday as Saliu Adetunji was crowned the 41st Olubadan of Ibadanland.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Adetunji, 87, was crowned at about 10.51 a.m. by the 10th Oluwo Afobaje of Ibadanland, Idowu Popoola.

NAN also reports that Adetunji, a doyen of the music industry and the former Balogun of Ibadanland, arrived the Oluwo Afobaje’s palace, Oja Oba, at exactly 9.52 a.m.

Clad in the traditional Aso-Oke, he arrived in a Peugeot 307 CC 180 with registration number KJA 701 DZ, to commence the traditional rites.

The new monarch left the Afobaje’s palace at exactly 10.18a.m. to the Afobaje arcade where he was crowned.

NAN reports that the new king, who also performed the calabash selection event, picked the Money Calabash, a reflection that his reign would depict prosperity.

Speaking at the event, Popoola, the Afobaje, described the coronation ceremony as unique in the history of Ibadan, commending Gov. Abiola Ajimobi for his support.

He also commended Globacom and producers of Eagle Aromatic Schnapps for their unflinching contributions and support to the coronation.

Popoola said the new king became a Mogaji during his father’s reign as the Olubadan in 1976.

He said that Ibadan began to use the appellation “Olubadan of Ibadanland” under the reign of Late Oba Abas Aleshinloye in 1936.

Saliu Adetunji, the Olubadan of Ibadanland
Saliu Adetunji, the Olubadan of Ibadanland

NAN also reports that Adetunji, the only king to be installed by an Ibadan indigene as governor, has his formal title as Oba Saliu Adetunji Aje Ogungunniso 1.

The members of the Olubadan-in-Council led by High Chief Lekan Balogun, the Otun Olubadan of Ibadanland and High Chief Rasheed Ladoja among others paid the traditional respect to the new king.

NAN reports that the new King left for the Ose-Meji Shrine where he was expected to undergo some other spiritual rites before proceeding to the Mapo Hall Arcade.

At the arcade was the handing over of the staff of Office to the new king by Gov. Ajimobi of Oyo State. 

NAN

THE TRAGEDY OF NIGERIAN SCHOOL SYSTEM: Obafemi Awolowo University, a Tragic Shadow of Great Ife – by Reuben Abati…

“Once upon a time, our secondary schools were like higher institutions, but today our universities, with a few exceptions, are no better than secondary schools, and the secondary schools are no better than poultries.” That was Reuben’s summation of the state of affairs of Nigerian Universities. I can not begin to narrate my hurt on this page….read Reuben’s take below and kindly leave your thoughts. By the way, it would be unhelpful  if you should  trivialise this very important highlighted decadence in the education sector or politicise Reuben’s view. Kind Regards – Jide Salu, #Tragic

 

oau-university-jidesalu

I have been reading some depressing stories about the state of the Obafemi Awolowo University, formerly University of Ife, which provide an equally depressing metaphor for the state of higher education in Nigeria. Great Ife as that university is known to its staff, students and alumni, is probably Nigeria’s first model university in every respect. Its major competitors were the University of Ibadan, the University of Lagos, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria and the University of Nigeria, Nsukka. But Ife was far ahead in terms of the beauty of its environment and the facilities made available to staff and students. Built with Cocoa money (not petro-dollar!) by the Western Region Government, that university was a perfect illustration of the idea of the university and it managed to produce generations of scholars and students, known for nothing but distinction.

I studied at the University of Calabar (Malabites!), and at the time, I took time out to visit all the universities I mentioned earlier. In those days, the top universities in Nigeria were tourism destinations. Ibadan and ABU had the best bookshops anyone could think of, and the bookshop in UNILAG was also professionally run. UNN students insisted that they attended the University of Nigeria! But Ife had the most beautiful campus. It was the only university that had a special publication titled “ç.” I remember receiving copies of that publication as a gift at different times from my friends: Kola Ogunleye, Akeem Adewuyi, and Kayode Ajala who served in the university as a youth corps member.

Whenever UNIFE students spoke about their university, you would think it was a little piece of heaven that had been converted to a university. They spoke about beauty, excellence, intellect and great scholarship. Every lecturer on the campus was painted like an Oracle at Delphi. So much mythology mixed with tales of absolute excitement attracted other students to the university. Curiosity once took the better part of me also, and I went on a visit to see the marvellous depiction of a campus in physical reality. I was not disappointed. Great Ife was great. I did not go to the classrooms, but my friends took me round. The University had just opened a Bukateria at the time, where everything was available. Driving into the campus itself was a delight; well-manicured flowers at both ends, long, comforting, welcoming drive.

We moved from one hall of residence to the other, where the students felt as if they were God’s special creations, lucky to be receiving education in one of the brightest spots on planet earth. I didn’t like the arrogance of the typical Ife student or graduate, even the girls had a special bounce to their gait, even if less pretty than our girls in Calabar, and I always quipped that flowers and beauty do not make a university, rather it is the intellectual content, but even in this regard, Ife was well-regarded. It boasted of some of the brightest guys in academia: that was in those days when Nigerian universities were centres of excellence, knowledge, discipline and distinction. Let’s add culture, for truly culture matters, and in educational matters, culture is perhaps everything, and there were scholars in Ife who had grown to become cultural icons in their respective fields.

The visits to Ife as expected always ended up at the newly launched Bukateria. Good food. Great ambience. And from the Bukateria Complex, there was a place we always visited for palm wine. I think they called it Old Bukka, close to the theatre. The halls of residence – Awolowo, Fajuyi, Moremi, Angola, Mozambique were exciting too; the students behaved as if each hall was a country unto itself, with each student having a permanent badge of identity. The students had quadrangles in every Faculty, and a Sports Complex, where my friend Akeem ended up with a black belt in Karate in addition to a degree in Architecture. Indeed, the University of Ife that I describe could compete at the time with any top university in the world. I have been to quite a few as a regular or executive student, there is no doubt that the university environment, where the gown is a special symbol, is meant to be a combination of everything that is excellent, to impart knowledge in a friendly environment where the student is groomed to become great citizens in society and for knowledge to be produced for the advancement of mankind. That is the ideal!

This is why it is particularly tragic that the same Great Ife is now a shadow of its former self. These days, more than 30 years after that glorious era that I describe, students of Obafemi Awolowo University, are now reported to be protesting over dilapidated halls of residence and terrible facilities. That bad? There was even a picture in the newspapers of OAU students fetching water from a stream! And I read one columnist calling on the university’s alumni to hurry up and rescue their alma mater. Please, is it that bad? But the story of this tragedy is the larger story of the Nigerian education system. My generation (waoh, man don dey old oh) went to school in this same country, and from kindergarten to doctorate, we can only recall in comparison with emergent realities, good memories. Once upon a time, our secondary schools were like higher institutions, but today our universities, with a few exceptions, are no better than secondary schools, and the secondary schools are no better than poultries. In those days, there were school principals who were more famous than state governors, commissioners, and traditional rulers, because they were known for their ability to manage schools and produce excellent students. There were government schools, there were mission schools, there were private schools, but there were standards, competition and quality.

A whole generation of students has now passed through the Nigerian education system without any memory of those good old days. What they know is the story of distracted teachers who sell handouts or beg for money from parents. What they know is the tragedy of a school system where teachers are perpetually protesting about lack of pay, lack of facilities and the inadequacy of everything. What they know are lecherous male teachers asking for sex in exchange for marks. What they know are ugly campuses, with no toilet facilities, no water, no light. When they hear about the gown, what they imagine is a gown in tatters, now terribly disconnected from the town. In our time, companies and government departments came to campuses or the NYSC camp to recruit staff, the school-to-work transition was so smooth and certain that even nurses and midwives upon graduation were sure of a decent future.

As an undergraduate, our room was cleaned, our beds were laid, and the cafeteria fed us well at cheap rates; we had water, we had uninterrupted electricity supply, our teachers were smart and committed, life was good. There were students in Nigerian universities from all parts of the world; the ones from Southern Africa were even sponsored by the Nigerian government and they were happy to be here, so happy some of them focused on our girls and caused problems each time they got drunk. But today, who will send a student to Nigeria?

Everything changed the moment government went mad, and till date that madness has not been cured. That madness started in 1984 with the removal of education subsidy. My point is: the present administration must see the need to properly define the role of government in the education sector, and further work out the details about sustainable development. The rot of past decades is so deep, the crisis so bad, as has been described, and the marks are still evident, only sustained intervention can make the difference. And if I may say so, this is one sector where government subsidy will be a good idea.

It is of course clear that President Buhari in his second coming wants to be remembered as the man who fixed Nigeria. He tried it in his first coming but he didn’t have a definite mandate. Now, he has the people’s mandate, plus extra-ordinary goodwill, and he is still determined to achieve his original objective. He wants to catch thieves. Fine. The only irony is that even General Sani Abacha did exactly the same thing, but other governments came and rewrote the narrative. Thief-catching is certainly okay! Perfect. It will excite the mob, extract vengeance, and may be promote justice, but President Buhari must begin to look to the future and build his own concrete legacy. His record in Nigeria in the long run, will be his legacy, but it must be that kind of legacy that cannot be re-written by revisionists.

So, what then, is his legacy project? I believe he can capture the society at the younger level: by investing in the historians of tomorrow and making their today better; by re-creating the future of Nigeria, by atoning for the past, by using public funds to secure the future of Nigerian children. Those young boys and girls in Nigerian public schools who are being poorly served, sitting in badly shaped classrooms, being taught by unpaid teachers; those undergraduates in higher institutions who graduate and have to be re-schooled by their employers before they can be found manageable; those graduates who learn research and science by simulation and who cannot compete in the international arena of skills; those unhappy teachers in our schools who are busy looking for other jobs on the side; all the children in special schools who have been forgotten by government, all the Nigerian children who are out of school, all those boys and kids who graduate from university but know nothing – they all need President Buhari. And time is not on his side. And he cannot do it alone. Many state governors have shown that they take their cue from him: most of them refused to appoint commissioners, until he appointed ministers. They should be part of this legacy project.

The President should launch an aggressive restoration programme in the education sector that takes off from where the Jonathan administration signed off. The rot is so age-long, so deep, that no Nigerian President in many years to come can ever have enough time to fix all the problems with Nigeria. But every President that comes along can either leave a scratch, a mark, or a legacy. It is up to President Buhari to make his choice. Salaam.

Legendary Nigerian Actor Baba Sala is not Dead, but health worsens…

Baba Sala-jide-saluThere are fears in family circle on Tuesday concerning the health of popular Yoruba actor, Moses Olaiya, popularly known as Baba Sala.

Sources in the family said the aged actor was rushed to the University College Hospital, Ibadan on Monday night after his health deteriorated in his Ilesa, Osun State, residence.

One of his sons confirmed to one of our correspondents that his father was rushed to UCH on Monday.

He, however, denied that his father had died as being speculated in some quarters.

PVC: A tale of an agitated Nigerian at INEC’s office.


INEC BossOn August 23, 2014, INEC officials issued to me what was stated to be a Permanent Voter’s Card. That was shortly after I had complained in the media (Nigerian Tribune) about the difficulties I was experiencing in my effort to obtain a Permanent Voter’s Card – as INEC had urged all Nigerians to do.

I was very surprised to learn recently that new and different PVC was being distributed, and that it would be the only valid card for voting in February 2015. Therefore this morning (Friday 9th January, 2015) I went to the INEC office on Parliament Road, Ibadan to seek clarification of the matter.

There I met an official who introduced himself as Gbemi Adetona, a systems analyst. I showed him the card issued to me in August 2014 and asked him to clarify the status of the card. He replied that my card was not valid for the February 2015 elections, and added that he wished to check my card on their data base. I agreed, and he kindly gave me a chair to sit on while he went to check. A short while later he came back with another gentleman whom he described as his “boss”. The boss latter introduced himself as Nasiru Kazeem and, as Adetona walked away, he told me that my name/card was not on their data base. I expressed great surprise at this, and asked him to explain how it could have happened. He replied that it could be because I registered twice or my biometric data were not properly recorded/recognised. I asserted that I had registered only once, and reminded him that the biometrics was recorded by INEC staff that should have noticed and dealt with any problem when the exercise was carried out in August 2014.

At that point, Mr Kazeem expressed surprise that the card was issued in 2014; he had been under the impression that it was a 2011 card. It was then my turn to express amazement that he had not read the date of issue boldly written on the card which he was holding! He apologised for not looking at the card. He explained that Mr Adetona had merely informed him that my name was not on the data base and had requested that, out of courtesy to me, he (Kazeem) should be the one to convey the information to me.PVCs-INEC-Jide-salu.com-JSD

In the circumstance, I asked him to summon Adetona who admitted that he was aware that my card was issued in 2014. After a brief discussion between them, Kazeem said Adetona must have searched the 2011 rather than the 2014 date base. He then said my details would be on the 2014 data base and I should not worry. I insisted that he should go and check the 2014 data and confirm that my details are on it. Both of them then went into the recesses of the INEC building. When they came back about five minutes later, Kazeem confirmed that my details were on the data base. As proof he showed me a telephone number which he claimed to have copied from the data, and invited me to confirm that it was mine. I confirmed, accepted his assurance, and then asked him “where do we go from here?” In reply he said my PVC must be among those that would be distributed ‘soon’, and I should expect radio announcements on the matter.

My experience that day, (36 days to the elections), fills me with disappointment and concern. It demonstrates that INEC’s low level of efficiency and effectiveness about which I complained publicly five months ago persists and constitutes a serious constraint to peaceful and credible elections next month. It also raises several questions including why and how a ‘permanent voter card’ issued only five months ago is no longer valid.

It is my hope and prayer that PVCs will be distributed to all registered voters expeditiously so that I and other Nigerians are not disenfranchised by INEC deliberately or inadvertently.

by Kayode Oyediran 

[via Opinions NG]

#BringBackOurGirls plan events for 100 days of schoolgirls abduction.

bbog1 - Copy

BBOG Press release:

#BringBackOurGirls Day 100: THE NIGERIAN CITIZEN WILL NOT
BE SILENCED:

Wednesday, July 23rd will mark 100 days since 276 girls were savagely abducted from their school in Chibok, Borno State. 57 escaped and 219 remain in captivity.

The families and community have suffered deep anguish seeking effective rescue to end the peril that befell their daughters who had gone to school in search of knowledge.

In those 100 days, the Bring Back Our Girls Campaign has focused on creating awareness of the abduction to ensure that it is a priority issue requiring action and compelling the right sets of action for a positive outcome. We have engaged various stakeholders – the Presidency, the National Assembly, the office of the National Security Adviser, the Chief of Defense Staff, the Borno State Government & other State Governments, ECOWAS member countries and UN agencies to name a few.

Through our various meetings, our singular message has been to demand that the Federal Government perform its fundamental duty of ensuring the security and the welfare of its citizens. As we denounce the wave of terror and insecurity across the country, we continue to demand that the Federal Government deploy its resources to ensure that the missing girls are brought home, and the errors leading from three-weeks of delayed action are remedied.

Citizens who have insisted on standing with our girls and ensuring they are not forgotten are heartbroken that our daughters and sisters are about to spend 100 days with their evil captors.

To amplify our voices in demanding that these girls be brought home now and alive, on the 100th day, there will be a variety of activities around the world. These include:

• Ibadan: Press Conference at the BRECAN Centre at 10 am
• Abuja: Special Sit-out Ceremony at the Unity Fountain at 3 pm
• Lagos: Remembrance service at the Wall of Missing Girls at Falomo
Roundabout at 4pm
• New York: Candlelight vigil at the Nigerian Consulate at 5.30pm.

There will also be events in India, Pakistan, the UK and most world capitals where there are teachers’ organisations in partnership with the UN Special Envoy’s Office of Gordon Brown. Organisations participating are World at School, Girls not Brides, Global March Against Child Labour, Walk Free, Educational International and ITa.

The continued pattern of intolerance to the activities of the Bring Back Our Girls Campaign is at variance with our effort to promote healthy civic engagement by citizens to strengthen the resolve of government to rescue the girls.

As days become weeks and months and our girls are separated from their parents and their community, our singular focus remains on their safe return in the shortest possible time.

God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Signed:

Hadiza Bala Usman, Abuja
Oby Ezekwesili, Abuja
Aisha Oyebode, Lagos
Yemisi Ransome-Kuti, Lagos
Betty Anyanwy-Akeredolu, Ibadan
Amina Hanga, Kano
Eleanor Ann Nwadinobi, Enugu

FRESH IBADAN HORROR: ‘Madman’ caught with human tongue, weapons…

FRESH IBADAN HORROR: ‘Madman’ caught with human tongue, weapons...Barely four days after the discovery of mysterious forest where over 19 human skulls were found in Ibadan, another horror was discovered in the ancient city, yesterday.

A man, who feigned lunacy, was allegedly caught with human tongue, gun and cutlass around the popular Ring Road area of the city.

According to reports, residents of Ibadan rushed to catch a glimpse of the suspected human eater. The suspect was, however, whisked away by armed policemen to avert jungle justice.

Also, another man was mobbed by angry crowd after a price list of human parts was allegedly found on him.

This came as a man, who was about being dispossessed of the large sum of money he withdrew from a commercial bank at Mokola area of the city jumped down from a flyover with his money.

Vanguard gathered that the suspect caught with human tongues was arrested at Oni and Son Memorial Hospital area of Ring Road.

A source said that over 400 posters of a politician contesting the 2015 governorship election, women underwear and some weapons were found on him. The source said he was rounded up by the policemen from Oluyole Police Station.

Another man, who reportedly disguised as a destitute, was caught at Adeoyo State Hospital with a price list of human parts.
After they were beaten by the mob, policemen took the three men to the State Criminal Investigation Department, SCID.

Exposure
According to information, the ‘mad’ man was exposed when his hidden blackberry phone rang. This was said to have aroused suspicion of passers-by who had all the while known the man as a destitute.

Further search on him, Vanguard gathered, revealed that he listed those owing him outstanding balance and the human parts they bought. That was when the mob descended on him.

When Vanguard got there, the police refused to comment saying the newsman should go to the police headquarters at Eleyele, Ibadan for reaction.

The man that jumped to escape being robbed of his money by two men on commercial motorcycle, it was further gathered, was rescued by policemen who were on duty under the flyover and taken to the hospital in an ambulance, as he sustained injuring in his arms.

The Police Public Relations Officer, SP Olabisi Ilobanafor, confirmed the arrest of a man who was beaten by the mob but said he did not know anything about the Adeoyo State Hospital incident.

She said: “I can’t say whether he is a ritualist or destitute. I don’t know whether things found on him were human tongues or not.
“It is only a forensic expert who can say precisely what they are. We use this opportunity to warn members of the public not to take laws into their hands by resorting to jungle justice whenever they see a suspect.

“We also want to advise parents not to allow their wards to mix up with mob to break any law.”

as published in Vanguard

SHOCKING PHOTOS – Ibadan House Of Horror….

map-ibadan-jidesalu

Nigerian police said they have opened a murder probe after the discovery of rotting bodies and skeletons in an abandoned building in Ibadan, Nigeria’s second largest city.

The Nigerian media have branded the building “House of Horror”.

Oyo state police spokesperson Olabisi Ilobanafor told AFP that a murder investigation has begun, following the arrest of some suspects at the scene. Olabisi said six suspects, including five security guards allegedly armed with guns, bows and arrows, found at the scene, were arrested. Ibadan House Of Horror

Police also rescued several severely malnourished people founded wandering in the bush and others shackled in leg-chains inside.

“When we got to the abandoned building in the Soka community of Ibadan on Saturday, we saw decomposed corpses, skeletons and skulls in the building and surrounding bushes,” Olabisi Ilobanafor said.

“Some seven malnourished human beings looking like living skeletons were also rescued in the bushes surrounding the building. One of them died on the spot while we were there,” she said.Ibadan House Of Horror

Ibadan House Of Horror Ibadan House Of Horror Ibadan House Of HorrorIbadan House Of Horror

 

 

House of Horror In Ibadan, Nigeria As Rotting Corpses And Chained Kidnap Victims Are Found….

‘Living skeletons’ found in ‘House of Horror’ in Nigeria’s Ibadan

Rotting bodies and skeletons have been found alongside several severely malnournished people wearing leg-chains in an abandoned building in the Nigerian city of Ibadan.
Ibadan street scene (WikiCommons)

Nigerian police have found rotting bodies, skeletons and people bound in chains in a house in Ibadan that has been dubbed the House of Horrors.

They said that emaciated people had also been found wandering in the grounds of the property, reports AFP.

Police raided the house after a group of people looking for a missing relative, who was a motorcycle taxi driver, found the property in an undeveloped part of the Soka community and discovered there were people trapped inside.

“When we got to the abandoned building in the Soka community of Ibadan yesterday (Saturday), we saw decomposed corpses, skeletons and skulls in the building and surrounding bushes,” Oyo state police spokeswoman Olabisi Ilobanafor told AFP.

“Some seven malnourished human beings looking like living skeletons were also rescued in the bushes surrounding the building. One of them died on the spot while we were there,” she said.

Ilobanafor said that a murder investigation had been launched and six suspects were arrested at the scene.

Ibadan is Nigeria’s third largest city, and the capital of Oyo state.

In Nigeria, kidnapping victims are often killed in black magic ritual sacrifices or for their organs or body parts, which are sold on in the southern region of the country.

Corpses are often found abandoned on roadsides near the country’s cities with parts of their bodies missing, including their eyes and genitals.

Nigeria’s Vanguard newspaper last year reported that three dealers in body parts and kidnapped people had revealed a “price list”, where a live person could be bought for about £150, a human head for £30 and genitalia for £36.

The Nigerian Tribune newspaper reported that about 15 people were found chained up in the property in Ibadan, and six guns and several cutlasses recovered from a neighbouring house.

Containers holding clothes, shoes, mobile phones and bank cards were found inside.

The Tribune claims that a woman held as a captive had been forced to deliver a baby at the property only the previous Friday. The child was then taken away from her.

The Nation newspaper reported that bodies had been dumped in shallow graves and dry wells.

One resident quoted by the Tribune said: “When I got there, I saw people who were like mad people but on a closer look, I saw that they were not really mad, but had gone through starvation. Some of them said they had been there for two years while others said seven months.”

International Business Times

10 things you need to know this Monday morning, 24th March 2014.

Nigeria news-jide-salu

1. Indication emerged on Sunday that, Interior Minister, Abba Moro and Comptroller General, Nigeria Immigration Service, David Paradang would on Tuesday appear before the Senate Committee on Interior to clarify some burning issues regarding the controversial Immigration recruitment which led to the death of over 18 people.

2. Sad report from Borno state this morning says over 29 people have been killed in a bomb attack launched on a Market by suspected Islamist Sect, Boko Haram. Report says the Islamist group bombed the market located in Nguro-Soye, near Bama, Borno State.

3.Youth and families who are still looking for persons believed to be missing stormed Soka forest, Ibadan, Oyo State yesterday. The forest is believed to be a ritual killers’ den where over 20 dead bodies were recovered. While some families felt disappointed that the faces they were tracing could not be found, the youth were seen killing cows belonging to herdsmen and attacking security companies close to the forest. Relatively, 7 suspects have been arrested in connection with the crime.

4. Rising from their meeting in Ogbia local government of Bayelsa state on Saturday, some Bayelsa State indigenes, particularly from Ogbia LGA have said that whether President Jonathan likes it or not, he must contest the 2015 presidential election. They insisted that no other person must win the 2015 election but Jonathan.

5. Delegates at the National Conference have resolved to revoke the accreditation of any media representative at the ongoing conference whose report fails to communicate the true situation of things at the conference. The delegate said the essence is to feed the public with authentic details of what transpires at their various sittings.

6. A former Minister of Education, Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili, has further condemned the Ministry of Interior as well as Immigration Service for organising a job test for 500,000 people when only 4500 of them would be given employment. He said the motive behind it was to dupe applicants as they were all made to pay 1000 naira each. The Minister faulted the federal government for not using other honourable things to compensate the family of the decease, but the same job.

7. The Nigerian Labour Congress, NLC has supported the ongoing probe of the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Madueke, by the House of Representative, saying that such probe should be extended to other Ministers and state governors who are culpapble of squandering the wealth of the nation on themselves.

8. On sports, Nigeria’s Flamingoes top its group in the ongoing Under 17 Women’s World Cup by beating Mexico 3:0. Nigeria will now play Spain in a Quarter-Final match.

9.The United Nations has published the Joint Letter of Concern that it sent to the government of President Goodluck Jonathan where they expressed concerns that access to electricity (and regularity of supply) was a significant problem in Nigeria. In the letter which the government was yet to respond to, 8 questions were raise as to why Nigerians should be suffering from epileptic power supply.

10. Lastly, Rivers state chapter of the APC has castigated President Goodluck Jonathan for his inability to fight corruption and take the country beyond its present status. In a statement by its Senior Special Assistant to the state chairman of the party, Eze Chukwuemeka, the party said that Abacha government, comparatively was better than Jonathan’s.

[DISTURBING PHOTO] 19 Redeemed Church members, 45 others die in multiple crashes…..

19 Redeemed Church members, 45 others die in multiple crashes…

A multiple crash on the Potiskum-Maiduguri highway, involving three vehicles on Monday killed 35 people, including 19 church members on their way back from Lagos where they attended a religious meeting.

“All the 19 members of Redeemed Christian Church of God who were travelling in one bus were burnt beyond recognition as the bus caught fire on collision with the other two vehicles which also burst in flames shortly afterwards,” said Yusuf Sani, spokesman of the Federal Road Safety Commission in Yobe state.

“The victims in the other two vehicles were returning from a wedding.”

The spokesman blamed the collision, which occurred on the highway, on speeding.

On Sunday, 20 traders returning from a local market were killed when the open van they were in collided with an articulated truck, Sani said, attributing the accident to “reckless overtaking”.

Sixteen of the 20 victims were girls who had been selling wares, he added.

Another 10 persons also died in another crash on the Lagos-Ibadan expressway.

“We recorded 55 deaths in two road crashes on Sunday and Monday due to speeding and reckless overtaking,” said Yusuf Sani, Nigerian Road Safety spokesman for Yobe state.

On the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway crash, the Commander of Olympic Unit of the commission, Mr Tanya Adeoye, who made the confirmation, told newsmen in Ibadan that the dead were burnt beyond recognition.

Adeoye said that four persons survived the crash which involved two trucks and one 18-seater Toyota Hiace commercial bus with registration number BDG 767 XB.

He said that the bus, which was travelling from Ibadan to Lagos was rammed into by a truck while it stopped to allow another truck with registration number SW 175 EPE to pull out of a quarry.

He attributed the accident to speeding and dangerous driving, saying that “the commercial bus immediately went up in flames and the flames later spread to other trucks.’’

He said that the four people who sustained injuries were in the trucks and had been taken to the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan for treatment.

“The victims who were burnt beyond recognition were deposited at the Adeoye State Hospital mortuary,” Adeoye added.

He disclosed that the commission was making efforts to contact the families of the victims through the driver’s manifest which was not burnt.

Accidents are frequent on Nigeria’s poorly maintained roads due largely to speeding, overloading and reckless driving.

Daily Post

40 more States in Nigeria…..?

In the midst of it all there are 40 state creation requests sent to the National Assembly. Only in Nigeria.

40 requests for new states, yes , in addition to the 36 states in Nigeria are to be tabled for debate in the National Assembly. This could just be the solution we have been searching for in Nigeria since Lord Lugard left us to get on with it. I just love this country. What an ingenious way to distract Nigerians when the removal of Oil subsidy finally kicks into effect, come January 2012.

Guys, never mind the stringent guidelines that have been put in place to discourage mischief makers.

According to the 1999 Constitution, in order to create a new state, it requires that such creation be supported by the following;

  1. At least two-third of members (representing the area demanding the creation of the new state) in the Senate, House of Representatives, the House of Assembly in respect of the area and the local government councils in respect of the area that the state will be created in.
  2. A referendum on the new state must be approved by two-third of the people in the area where the state is to be created
  3. The result of the referendum must be approved by a simple majority of all the 36 states of Nigeria
  4. It must also be supported by a simple majority of members of the Houses of Assembly.
  5.  After all these stages have been completed, the state is then approved by a resolution passed by two-third majority of members of the Senate and House of Representatives.

 

Some of the proposed states are as follows:

SOUTH EAST

  1. Igboezue
  2. Adada
  3. Aba
  4. Njaba
  5. Orlu
  6. Orimili
  7. Orashi

SOUTH SOUTH

  1. Anioma
  2. Oil Rivers
  3. Ogoja
  4. Afemaiesan
  5. Toru-Ebe
  6. New Delta

SOUTH WEST

  1. Oduduwa
  2. Ijebu
  3. Ibadan
  4. New Oyo
  5. Oke-Ogun

NORTH CENTRAL

  1. Apa
  2. Idoma
  3.  Edu
  4. Okun
  5. Oya

NORTH EAST

  1. Amana
  2.  Savannah
  3. Katagum

NORTH WEST

  1. Gurara

Don’t mind that some states are incapable of standing alone, not to talk of surviving, yet some Politicians are conniving to set up more states…..all for selfish interests. This article in the Tribune is an interesting read for those whose stomachs will not wretch with disgust. My stomach, after, how many years of relocation can now be said to be immune. This is not to say that my head doesn’t spin more than 10 times a day in utter amazement with the indescribable method of living, albeit surviving in Nigeria. A very close friend of mine, based in the UK, told me that …..with a straight face….. that one had to be abnormal to live in Nigeria. Knowing, I was included in the abnormal people, I quickly exchanged the “abnormal” word with “obsessed”.

I honestly believe you either have to be OBSESSED, that is relocating from anywhere or that you simply have no CHOICE but to stay and slug it out.

Check out what the Sunday Tribune pointed out in its article titled “State creation: Bottlenecks, agitations, new challenges”.

Talks of merging current states were suggested. Some of these conditions that, perhaps, seem to be witnessing erosion in some states and this might explain the alarm raised by the Senate last Thursday where it claimed that some states in the country were on the verge of bankruptcy.

The development pushed the upper chamber of the National Assembly to mandate its committees on National Planning; States and Local Governments; and Finance to study the situation and make recommendations on possible remedial measures to avoid total collapse of the economy of the states.

Some of the states said to either in critical conditions or unhealthy are Ekiti, Plateau, Benue, Edo, Adamawa, Cross River, Enugu and Taraba.

Others are Ogun, Kogi, Yobe, Ebonyi, Ondo, Kaduna, Oyo, Bauch, Bayelsa, Nasarawa, Gombe and Rivers.

Against this backdrop, some senators have suggested the merging of some of these states, though there have also been other suggested solutions, such as readjustment of the revenue sharing formula. The question now is with the current agitation for more states, how does this new development affect the process believed to have been set in motion to actualise the goal?

Simply insane……what a country full of talents and idiots as well.