Showing posts with label Nigerian Dailies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nigerian Dailies. Show all posts

Friday, August 3, 2012

NIGERIA: Weekend Papers, August 3-5, 2012




COMPILED BY AMBROSE EHIRIM

CHICAGO TRIBUNE-REUTERS: Olympics-Women's boxing middleweight last 16 results

SUPER SPORT: Gunners blast ASO

THE CARIBBEAN JOURNAL: Jamaica and Nigeria Sign Cooperation Agreements on Energy, Trade

CHANNELS TV: Nigerian footballer dies on pitch in Romania

AFP-GOOGLE NEWS: Women's boxing makes Olympic debut

LIBERIAN LONE STAR: Liberian Lone Star, and Super Eagles of Nigeria to battle for AFCON’s qualifying round

BBC NEWS AFRICA: Nigeria suicide bombing 'kills soldiers' in north-east

REUTERS: Insight: A year on, Nigeria's oil still poisons Ogoniland

THE WEST AUSTRALIAN-AFP: Nigeria sect leader criticises Obama over terrorist label

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: Mpape: Slum metres away from paradise

BBC NEWS: Nigeria gunmen storm oil ship - two dead, four kidnapped

EURO NEWS: ‘Nothing done’ over Nigeria oil pollution, say locals

RADIO NETHERLANDS WORLDWIDE: Explosions rock restive Nigerian city as troops raid homes

THE STATESMAN AUSTIN TEXAS: US men survive 1st test, beat Lithuania 99-94

DAILY TIMES NIGERIA: Lithuanian fined for racist chant at Nigerians

DAILY TIMES NIGERIA: Yobo moves to Fenerbachce

ORANGE NEWS UK: Odemwingie rescues Baggies

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS: Grand Finale: Phelps to swim in medley relay

P.M. NEWS NIGERIA: London Olympics: 6 arrests made by police

WAFB: Lady Tigers off and running at Olympic games

REDIFF: Expect a few surprises in the women's track events

CHICAGO TRIBUNE: 19-year-old Davis learning abroad

TELEGRAPH UK: Mo Farah's main rival for long-distance gold at London 2012 Olympics is Kenenisa Bekele, says Haile Gebrselassie

THE EAGLE-ASSOCIATED PRESS: Carmelita Jeter leads quick women’s 100 heats at Olympics

NIGERIA TRIBUNE: Nigeria Leaks Billions From Rampant Oil Theft

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: Public Revolt Imminent In Nigeria - Pastor Bakare

MY JOY ONLINE: Ghana, Nigeria pledge to deepen ties

ESPN SPORTS: Argentina-Nigeria Preview

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: ‘I Prepared For Mr Nigeria Contest As If I Was Going To War’

JAMAICAN OBSERVER: Nigerian president wants economic, cultural co-operation with Jamaica

EURASIA REVIEW: Nigeria’s Oil Production At ‘All-Time High’

THE NEWS PAKISTAN: Lithuanians outraged by racism allegations

THE NATION NIGERIA: US rewrites record book as Spain, Russia advance

THIS DAY LIVE: Aviation Minister, Officials Embark on Foreign Road Show

THIS DAY LIVE: Relax Restrictive Monetary Policy Stance, Analysts Tell CBN

THE VIRGINIA PILOT: Ex-Landstown star advances to 400 meters semifinals

SAN ANTONIO: Olympics TV schedule: Saturday-Sunday

MERCURY NEWS: Bay Area athletes at the London Olympics

NEWS AND SENTINEL: Records in hand, US men's team ready for Lithuania

PLAYBILL: Fela! Ends Limited Broadway Encore Engagement Aug. 4

THE MOMENT-ALL AFRICA: Police Ban Carrying of Polythene Bags in Polling Units in Borno

THE INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE: Nigerian Religious Leader Escapes Suicide Attack - Police

Thursday, August 2, 2012

NIGERIA: Friday Papers, August 03, 2012




COMPILED BY AMBROSE EHIRIM

PUNCH: Insecurity: House chickens out of summons to Jonathan

THE TRINIDAD & TOBAGO EXPRESS: Nigeria plans to enter air services agreement with

FOX NEWS: US men score 156 points against Nigeria in basketball blowout

BLOOMBERG BUSINESS WEEK: U.S. Men Face Tougher Basketball Tests After Rout of Nigeria

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Clinton May Stop By In Nigeria

THE NEWS PAKISTAN: ‘City’s children prone to polio after WHO office closure’

GUARDIAN NIGERIA: SON reads riot act to traders of sub-standard products

THIS DAY LIVE: Soludo Writes for THISDAY

WISCONSON STATE JOURNAL: Catholic group seeks space to serve needy

THE NEWS TRIBUNE: Douglas wins all-around Olympic title

THIS DAY LIVE: Police Set to Prosecute Lawan over $.62m Bribe

VANGUARD NIGERIA: Assad will go sooner or later – Annan

PUNCH: Okonjo-Iweala in Senate: Nigeria not broke, cash problems normal

SUPER SPORT: Race for NPL crown down to three

SUPER SPORT: Umar cherishes call-up

SUPER SPORT: Akpala still on course for UCL

SILVER RIVER SPORTS: Global reach highlights Razorback Olympians

DAILY TIMES NIGERIA: Crude oil production hits 2.7mbpd

DAILY TIMES NIGERIA: NUT commends Obi

DAILY TIMES NIGERIA: Man seeks divorce from violent wife

THE NIGERIAN ENTERTAINMENT TODAY: Bigfoot and Mr Rae release ‘The Big Rae’ EP

VENTURES AFRICA: U.S. Congress Renews African Trade Law Provision

NEWSDAY: Marketing critical — Nguni

Saturday, July 28, 2012

NIGERIA: Sunday Papers, July 29, 2012




COMPILED BY AMBROSE EHIRIM

CHANNELS TV: Nigeria produces most of W/Africa’s illegal weapons – Army

VOICE OF AMERICA: Nigeria, Tunisia Tip Off London Olympic Men's Basketball

PM NEWS NIGERIA: Captain Ore reports Aviation Minister’s threat

VANGUARD NIGERIA: How we will create new states – Dep. Senate President Ekweremadu

VANGUARD NIGERIA: Ex-deputy gov’s ADC shot dead

VANGUARD NIGERIA: ‘Nigerians can’t be going to India, US for simple diagnosis’

PUNCH: ACN, LP, PDP elect candidates for Ondo gov poll

PUNCH: Third Mainland Bridge: 3.4 million people used ferries in two months

THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Boko Haram: JonathanUnder Fresh US Pressure

THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Anambra Oil Field Ready For Commissioning Next Month

CHANNELS TV: Okorocha recalls 27 PDP council chairmen

SUN NEWS ONLINE: Abonnema waterfront demolition: drugs, arms sold like groundnuts –Govt

SUN NEWS ONLINE: Mother from hell: Woman stabs son to spite ex-hubby

THIS DAY LIVE: Hillary Clinton to Visit Nigeria Next Month

SUPER SPORT: Hoopers rule Nigeria again

DAILY TIMES NIGERIA: Pepsi Football Academy celebrates 20th anniversary

DAILY TIMES NIGERIA: Security networking will tackle terrorism - Experts

DAILY TIMES NIGERIA: Six die in Edo cult clash

Thursday, July 26, 2012

NIGERIA: Friday Papers, July 27, 2012




COMPILED BY AMBROSE EHIRIM

WASHINGTON POST: US returns 11 cultural artifacts to Nigeria in NY ceremony; recovered from airport shipment

AGI IT: One every 3 pregnant women is HIV positive in Nigeria

THE TIMES OF INDIA: Nigeria asked to punish killers of two Indian traders

THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Nigeria to procure $1.2bn on cassava, rice processing plants from China

THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Highest budget for defence, a fallacy, says Army chief

THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Their bra, hair wig as ‘hideout for drugs’

THIS DAY LIVE: “You Must be Creditworthy to Operate Airline in Nigeria”

VANGUARD NIGERIA: Kidnapped doctors freed

VANGUARD NIGERIA: 10 years younger in London

PUNCH: Women can vote us out in 2015 – Jonathan

PUNCH: Empower police to deal with Boko Haram – Buhari

SUN NEWS: Dana crash: Coroner issues Red Cross, Julius Berger, others bench warrants

BUSINESS DAY: Nigeria seeks $60bn war chest against economic turmoil

TRINIDAD EXPRESS: T&T to host Nigerian president for Emancipation

THIS DAY LIVE: With New Inventions, Army Aims to Check Terror Attacks

THIS DAY LIVE: Subsidy Fraud: Names of 25 Indicted Companies Revealed

BLOOMBERG: Shell to Invest $4 Billion in Two Nigerian Oil and Gas Projects

THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Okorocha’s battle with PDP council bosses

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

NIGERIA: Wednesday Papers, July 25, 2012




COMPILED BY AMBROSE EHIRIM

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: 2015 Polls: INEC Mulls Accommodating Nigerians In Diaspora

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Women Are Taking Over The Role Of Bread Winner In Nigeria

THIS DAY LIVE: ‘BOI Intervention Funds May Fail to Achieve Objectives’

NEWS DAY: Osi Umenyiora calls for players to be more like Tim Tebow

BUSINESS DAY: Brokers chart road map for government insurances

BUSINESS DAY: Ibori’s unclaimed $15m to be forfeited

BUSINESS DAY: EFCC arraigns PDP chairman’s son, 12 firms over subsidy fraud

VANGUARD NIGERIA: Turai vs Patience: FG opts for out-of-court settlement of land dispute

VANGUARD NIGERIA: Suspect in N32.8bn Police pension scam loses bid to defreeze accounts

THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Breakthrough as new TB drug emerges

CHANNELS TV: Jonathan mourns Atta Mills’ death

DAILY TRUST: Residents protest demolition of Abuja suburb

DAILY SUN: Dying Nigerian languages

Friday, July 20, 2012

NIGERIA: Saturday Papers July 21, 2012, Early Edition


SATURDAY TRIBUNE NIGERIA: I’m Against Nigeria Breaking Up, But... —Fani-Kayode

SATURDAY TRIBUNE NIGERIA: Edo Poll: Nigeria Can Truly Get It Right - Babangida

CHANNELS TELEVISION: Gunmen kill six in Borno after emergency rule was lifted

SATURDAY TRIBUNE NIGERIA: 21-Year-Old Nigerian, Chibundu Onuzo Is UK’s Best Black Student Of 2012

EURO SPORT: Merrit shines again in Monaco

DAILY TIMES PAKISTAN: Nigerian sect suspects kill 6 after emergency lifted

WASHINGTON POST: 2 killed in north Nigeria city drive-by shooting amid growing sectarian violence

THIS DAY LIVE: Please, Let’s Leave Keshi to Plot His Journey

SATURDAY TRIBUNE NIGERIA: Federation Cup: Prime Tops In Ibadan, Draws Enyimba In Q-final

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

NIGERIA: Thursday Papers, July 12, 2012 Early Edition




COMPILED BY AMBROSE EHIRIM

GLOBAL TIMES: Nigeria to set up cassava bread development fund

GLOBAL TIMES: Nigeria to send petroleum bill to national assembly

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Sen. Emodi Says Justice Mukhtar's Appointment Is Historic

NIYI TABITI: Multiple Grammy Awards Nominee,Femi Kuti,Wife Now Officially Divorced

KCUR: Despite Grim Headlines, Africa Is Booming

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Absence Of Judge Stalls Hearing Of Lagos Doctors' Case

REUTERS: WAfrica Crude-New July Bonny cargoes add further pressure

REUTERS: Nigeria's cabinet approves bill to overhaul oil sector

BUSINESS DAY: Edo Police arrest 4 over Oyerinde's murder

BUSINESS DAY: Gunmen kill 4 persons in Bauchi

CHANNELS TELEVISION: Security agencies deny fresh violence in Plateau and Bauchi states

WALL STREET JOURNAL MARKET WATCH: Air Products Celebrates Manufacturing of 100th LNG Heat Exchanger

INDEPENDENT UK: Catholic Melinda Gates defies the Vatican over birth control funds

THE NATION: Senate confirms Justice Mukhtar as CJN

THE NATION: 27.5% Salary: Teachers to begin indefinite strike July 23

PM NEWS: Military Denies Further Killings in Plateau

PM NEWS: New Igbo Group Vows To Avenge Killings In The North

PM NEWS: KILLING OF ARMY GENERAL: Police Arrest 4

Saturday, June 30, 2012

NIGERIA: Sunday Papers July 01, 2012




COMPILED BY AMBROSE EHIRIM

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: Malian jihadist group threatens to attack Nigeria, others

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: Why Oba of Benin didn’t receive Jonathan •The ‘gods’ stopped him - Aide •Oba of Benin met Jonathan in private - Edo PDP

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: US has confidence in Dasuki - Ex-Attorney-General...As Boko Haram splits the North

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: Police foil attempt to bomb bridge in Plateau

THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Kidnappers Renew Offensive In Abakaliki, Kill Pharmacist

THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Kidnapped Students Get Lawmakers’ N1m

PUNCH: ‘Why Nigerian businessmen can’t access funds in US’

PUNCH NIGERIA: Third Mainland Bridge closure: The anguish, pain begin today

PUNCH NIGERIA: Day all hell broke loose in Kaduna

NIGERIAN VANGUARD: 14 YEARS AFTER MKO’S DEATH: Abiola’s mandate had votes – Kola Abiola

THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Jonathan’s Stance On Asset Declaration Violates US, Nigeria Agreement

THE HIMALAYAN TIMES: Gunfire‚ explosions rock troubled Nigerian city

AFP GOOGLE WIRE: Mobile money firms seek Nigerian riches

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Other Cultures Lagging In Nigeria Movie Industry

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: NAF To Commence Int’l Helicopter Training School

THIS DAY: New PIB Resolves Controversy over Fiscal Regime, Gas Pricing

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Anambra North Senatorial Seat: As Supreme Court Beckons

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Nigeria: Monday Papers, June 25, 2012




COMPILED BY AMBROSE EHIRIM

Business Day: "Nigeria is not Broke, says Jonathan"

Business Day: "Improving Nigeria’s business environment for increased investments."

Business Day: Concerns as 134m Nigerians live as tenants.

The Guardian Nigeria: PDP, ACN factions submit separate lists for Ogun council polls.

The Guardian Nigeria: Ebonyi women protest suspension of female legislator for alleged drunkenness, riding Keke NAPEP

The Guardian Nigeria: Death toll in Ghana’s explosion hits seven

BERNAMA: Euro Crisis A Threat To African Airlines

The Guardian Nigeria: NAFDAC may seek life jail for fake drugs’ dealers

The Vanguard Nigeria: Aregbesola plans to surpass Awolowo’s policy.

The Vanguard Nigeria: Security frustrates Sunday worship in Jos.

The Vanguard Nigeria: Reps ask ECOWAS to stop deportation of Nigerians from Ghana.

The Daily Sun: Attacks on Unongo, Shaahu’s homes, arson -Police.

Nigerian Tribune: Azazi/Bello ouster: Minister, presidential aides panic over imminent changes •2 cut short foreign trips; lobby for defence ministry begins.

Nigerian Tribune: Woman inserts 66 wraps of drugs in private part.

Nigerian Tribune: US designation of Boko Haram leaders: Nigeria’s sovereignty compromised.

The Punch: 700,000 Lagos houses to get new numbers.

The Punch: States evacuate ABU students, Army sends reinforcement.

The Punch: Keep off S’West, OPC warns Boko Haram.

The Punch: Far North, South lobby for defence portfolio.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

NIGERIA: Dana Crash: LASUTH Releases 26 Identified Bodies




The management of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, LASUTH, has released a list of 26 victims of the Dana Air plane crash that have been identified by their relatives.

Bodies identified include those of:

1. Martin Alade (M) 2. Prof C.O. Onwuluri (M) 3. Temitope Ariyibi (F) 4. Sonny Ehioghae (M) 5. Nagidi Ibrahim (M) 6. Chinwe Uzoamaka Obi (F) 7. Okocha Christopher (M) 8. Mahmud Ahmed Dukawa (M) 9. Anibaba Tosin (F) 10. Stanford Obrutse (M) 11. Ibrahim Jangana (M) 12. Ikpoki Obiola (M) 13. Ailende Ehi Joel (M) 14. Patrick Eze Okonji (M) 15. Kim Edger Norris (M) 16. Bassey Eyo (M) 17. John Ahmadu Hamza (DIG)(M) 18. Kanguyi (Chinese (M)) 19. Femi Shobowale (M) 20. Charles Ntoko (M) 21. George Moses (M) 22. Dr Abiodun Jonathan (M) 23. Obinna Akubueze (M) 24. Ifeanwaka Jones (M) 25. Olabinjo Awodogbin (M) 26. Obot Emmanuel (M)

Fourteen out of the 43 bodies at the hospital’s mortuary were yet to be identified by their relatives.

The family members were given forms to fill for identification process which also included taking the passport photographs of family representatives and photocopies of their international passports.

Yet, relations of victims who thronged the hospital’s mortuary for collection of the corpses may not be able to claim them until autopsy is carried out according to Lagos State Coroner Law.

As the clamour to take away identified corpses continued, the chief medical director (CMD), LASUTH, Prof Wale Oke, appealed to the aggrieved relations, saying “already we have started doing the autopsy today (Wednesday), and we are going to do at least 12 autopsies per day”.

“Every corpse leaving our mortuaries will leave with a death certificate. And we cannot issue death certificates without autopsy,” he explained.

The CMD affirmed that “in the next three days, all identified corpses must have been handed over to their families. Our team of pathologists has started work today. We are being careful not to hand over a corpse to the wrong family”.

The consultant pathologist, forensic medicine, and vice chancellor, Lagos State University (LASU), Professor John Obafunwa, led seven other pathologists to commence the autopsy.

For many of the relations of the victims, the waiting game to collect their relations’ corpses was unacceptable. They openly expressed their displeasure, compounded by the sudden grief.

Earlier in the day, those who had not identified the corpses of their loved ones were anxious to do so, as two family members of the deceased were allowed into the morgue at a time.

Meanwhile, stench from the morgue grew worse by the day. The stench was evident as family members that thronged the mortuary had to buy nose masks to prevent inhaling the stench that was coming out of the overwhelmed morgue.

SOURCE: LEADERSHIP NIGERIA

Monday, May 28, 2012

NIGERIA: Tuesday Papers, May 29, 2012




BBC: Nigeria's President Jonathan 'must act over fuel scam'

BUSINESS DAY: Nigeria surpasses 5 million Visa cards milestone

BUSINESS DAY: FG partners foreign firm To Train 5,000 Nigerians on ICT, says minister

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: Democracy Day... Democracy Day... Democracy Day... Democracy Day...

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: Edo gov: Politicians plan to import arms - Police

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: US security experts meet today on Boko Haram

THE MOMENT: Democracy Day: Balarabe, Ngige, others score Jonathan low

THE MOMENT: Gunmen behead four policemen, village head, 29 others in C/River

THE MOMENT: Northern elite own three-quarters of Nigeria's oil blocks

VANGUARD: N32.8bn pension scam: Accused beg court to quash charge

VANGUARD: NAFDAC uncovers illegal drug factory in Onitsha

VANGUARD: Tension in Adamawa as Igbo protest killings

VANGUARD: Army court-martials 2 colonels, 12 others for alleged misconduct

PM NEWS: Shot Nigerian Council boss flown to India

NIGERIA: Criminal Cases For Speedy Trial, CJN Promises As He Swears In 12 Judges


According to the CJN, “the Federal High Court is now properly staffed to deal, without any delay, these cases filed by the EFCC and ICPC. Arrangements are being made to hear these cases from day to day without any adjournment. Some of these judges will be exclusively assigned to try all those high profile cases on day to day basis.” While congratulating the new judges, the CJN commended the National Assembly for approving the increase in the number of Federal High Court judges from 70 to 100 and noted that the move will go a long way in reducing the number pending cases at the Federal High Court.

READ FULL STORY

NIGERIA: Danjuma Bails May and Baker with N1.3bn


The shareholders of the pharmaceutical giant had, last Thursday, pleaded with Danjuma to bail out the company from its bank debts. Sonny Nwosu, the President of May and Baker’s Shareholders Solidarity Group, had moved a motion urging Danjuma to intervene by personally repaying the loan at the company’s 61st annual general meeting in Lagos; adding that failure to do so would amount to the company using the rest of its life paying interest on the loans.

READ FULL STORY

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Nigeria: Sunday Papers, May 27, 2012


Los Angeles Times: Nigeria Islamic group Boko Haram spreads fear far and wide

VANGUARD: INSURGENCY AND UTILITARIAN VALUE: Boko Haram is helping Nigeria to review its foundation – Uma Ukpai

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS: Politician Shot Dead In Nigeria

INFORMATION NIGERIA: Massive corruption at all levels of the Nigerian Government —US report

SUNDAY TRIBUNE: Nigeria's Democracy: Any Cause For Celebration?

SUNDAY TRIBUNE: Nigeria’s children: Their hopes, their frustrations

THE SUN: ‘Presidency can’t help PDP win Edo guber’

THE SUN: I rejected Charles Taylor’s $450,000 bribe –Sacked Customs Officer

THE SUN: I’m ready to dance naked to prove my innocence-Lulu

VANGUARD: Why good governance and security go hand-in-hand, by Obasanjo

VANGUARD: Children’s Day: Delta releases 35 children for adoption

THIS DAY BUSINESS: Central Bank Bars Banks from Recapitalising African Subsidiaries

PUNCH: Ibori: Nigeria has no reputation to lose – Lawyers

PUNCH: Salami: Civil society groups plan mass action

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Nigeria: News Desk, Thursday, May 24, 2012




THIS DAY: Nigeria’s GDP Drops to 6.17% in Q1

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Nigeria, South Africa Partner On Crude Oil Supplies

THIS DAY: Nigeria, Others Need $2.4bn to Stop Malaria, Says WHO

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Malabu Deal Latest: Shell’s Dirty Lies

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Insecurity: Where Will Nigeria Be By 2015?

CriEnglish: Nearly 100 Chinese Citizens Detained in Nigeria

DAILY TIMES: Unscrupulous professionals aid fraudsters - EFCC

THIS DAY: Nigeria Can’t Operate Without Satellite Technology

COLLIE MAIL: Apartheid legacy lingers

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

NIGERIA: News Desk, Wednesday, May 23, 2012




DAILY TIMES: Ijebu Residents Cry Over Erosion

MONEY WEB: Tiger Brands has been blazing an acquisitive trail into Africa

THIS DAY: NSE Seeks CBN’s Intervention on Dividend Payment

THIS DAY: For UNILORIN 44, it’s Still Cry for Justice

THE BOTTOM LINE: Environmental Justice Fair Fights Against Harmful E-Waste

THIS DAY: House Summons Nnaji , NERC over Planned Hike in Electricity Tariff

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Insecurity: Jonathan In Crucial Meeting With Sultan, CAN Leaders

THIS DAY: Immigration to Repatriate 45 Chinese Nationals

THIS DAY: Again, JNI, CAN Trade Blame over Bomb Attacks

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Nigerian Embassy In US Denies Laundering Allegation

FOCUS NEWS AGENCY: Blast damages houses in northern Nigerian city

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Kabir Sokoto: Suspects escape from police custody when Igbos are murdered —Nzelu, (SAN)

Daily Sun Interview

‘This is the second time within three years that police officers had unlawfully eliminated Igbo people, while in police custody’


Nigerians were stupefied over the news of the mysterious escape of Kabiru Umar (aka Kabiru Sokoto), the alleged prime suspect in the macabre Christmas Day bombing of Saint Theresa Catholic Church, Madalla, Niger State, which left 43 people dead and many severely injured.

But a legal practitioner of South-east extraction, Amobi Nzelu (SAN), was not jolted over the development. Speaking with Daily Sun in this interview, Nzelu gives a stunning account of how suspects from a certain section of the country, often disappeared from police custody.
Excerpts:


How do you see the sudden disappearance of Kabiru Sokoto, the prime suspect of the Madalla bombing?

It is very embarrassing. A major breakthrough in the unmasking of those that are behind the Boko Haram has been scuttled by those given the responsibility to protect lives and property and I feel worried.
Worried in the sense that I have to go down memory lane:

In 2003, one Superintendent of Police called, Gambo was DPO in Nsukka, three men were shot dead by him. He was brought to Abuja in handcuff and taken to Area 10. While he was in custody, which is a loose detention, a DIG came to negotiate for his bail and he was told point blank that it was a murder issue and couldn’t be granted bail.

The man on the excuse that he was going to observe his prayer walked out of the gate of Area 10 and disappeared till today! CSP Abdulsalam Uthman supervised the killings of three Igbos during the Apo six saga - to the glory of God, I was the lawyer in that matter.

I took the pictures of those that were killed in Apo, we took their corpses for burial. The man went into custody of the police. He was detained on the 5th floor and from there we were told he said was going to pray. He came downstairs and an AIG, who later retired as a DIG provided his official vehicle and he was ferreted him away!

Again, the man that committed the mayhem of December 25 has disappeared. The question is, is it only when they killed Igbos that the culprits escape from the custody of the police?

Nobody has the monopoly of violence. If the Igbo aren’t secured in this place called Nigeria, we should be told in unmistaken terms… people shouldn’t frustrate the good work of President Goodluck Jonathan. If there is any mayhem in any part of the country, the victims are Igbos. There is a town in Anambra State, they lost nine people in Mubi; nine corpses were brought to the town during the Boko Haram violence. What has been said about this? The government of the day should protect us; we are an endangered specie in the country.

Because Kabiru Sokoto has a lot of information to give to this country that was why the man has been kept and if you look at the sequence, Zakari Biu is from Biu, one of the towns in the old Borno State that formed Borno and Yobe, apparently the headquarters of Boko Haram, the man arrested him and told the entire country.
So, how do you explain this? This is my 32 years as a lawyer, I did my youth service in Maiduguri, I practised there for 14 years, I married there had my children there; I am a grand father. So, I lived in Maiduguri when there was no Boko Haram, peace-loving people.

Suddenly, from nowhere, Boko Haram was introduced into the whole system. So, to tell us that that kind of man, Kabiru Sokoto, has escaped is most unfortunate. Now, we have to cry out to Mr. President that we are the endangered specie; and to hear that they only suspended Zakari Biu.

For how long?

You see, as I have said , anybody created by God has some percentage of insanity in him, it is only when you develop your own that it becomes full-blown madness and nobody has a monopoly of violence. You can decide to be violent, it depends on how you want to use your life but where you turn us to be guinea pigs of this country, it isn’t healthy.

CSP Uthman is on the run and I shouted at the Okiro Panel that time, put this man under handcuff. I wrote a book, called, “Apo Six + one: the tragedy of a nation.’’ Everything you want about Apo Six is in that book and in that book I wrote in page 75 of that book: “This is the second time within three years that police officers had unlawfully eliminated Igbo people, while in police custody.

The first was by SP Gambo, a DPO in Nsukka, Enugu State, who had killed three Igbo men; he was brought under custody to face charges of murder and escaped while in police custody at the then police headquarters in Area 10, Garki, Abuja. Till date, nothing has been said about it.’’

So, it didn’t start today. This is a book I wrote after the Apo Six and it is being published in London. I have held this book down because the judgment hasn’t been delivered in the criminal trial going on. Six years after they have been arraigned in court, no judgment! August 2005, they were arraigned in court, seven years today they haven’t got judgment on this Apo case. The girl that was one of the victims in that case wasn’t shot to death, she was strangled to death.

Each time I remember that seven years after these people were killed, nothing has been done… Reverend King is an Igbo man; he killed somebody in church, within six months he was sentenced to death by hanging but Apo Six has been there for seven years.

But it isn’t only Igbo that died at Madalla. How many from the other ethnic groups? Does a Suleiman go to church? I am asking. Check the number of the people that died there and you would be shocked that, out of the number 35 are from South-east. The one they killed in Mubi, nine of them were from one town in Anambra State. Nine corpses from one town! The uproar in Borno State, how many Northerners has it claimed? Let us see the statistics. I know some Nigerians are equally involved but the majority at the receiving end are Igbos. If there is bombing today in Abuja, they look for Igbo people shops to go and burn. May God forbid.

of the IGSo, what exactly do you want Mr. President to do now? People have called for the resignation P

(cuts in) It is a cartel, they know what they are doing. It is unacceptable to the Igbo nation, they must produce the man. That man, Kabiru Sokoto, has a lot of stories to tell Nigerians, he has a lot of names to mention that will jolt this country.

government. Don’t you think his fears are reaYou have said it is a cartel but don’t you think Mr. President could be exonerated. He has said, even before this jolting escape of Kabiro Sokoto, Boko Haram had infiltrated his l?

You see, anything that it will take him, he is the president and he must be determined to do the work for Nigerians. We know that within the system, people are sabotaging him, that I must tell you. They are there, they are called AGIP – Any Government in Power, they must dictate to government. They don’t want to leave; they recycle them until they cannot recycle them again. There are no bad governments but bad advisers. The good of Mr. President is being frustrated, left, right and centre.

Because of June 12, 1993 election that was annulled, Yoruba went into trenches, both politicians and professors, they got the mandate to rule this country for eight years, but where are my people? When they massacred the Apo Six, nobody raised a voice. I put my life and that of my family on line for that Apo Six and God said to me, I will pay you and God is paying me. I can raise up my head and say my children are doing fine. That’s God grace.

You as an individual is squealing against the injustice in the system; aren’t you worried that South-east governors aren’t talking?

You see, I have gone through the valley of the shadow of death, I have seen what most of them never saw. For primitive gains, they will say nothing. Not only am I speaking out for now, I have been speaking out in the past. I don’t think I need to cringe before anybody. No, I can afford one good meal a day in my house. I have practised law for 32 years; how many years do I have ahead?

What I am saying is that, once they are within the comfort of the Governor’s Lodge, they forget that they will come out one day to meet us on the streets of Nigeria. I am watching to see them take a stand.

One needs to take a stand. My people, they don’t sustain opposition, Yoruba do. I am an Igbo man by birth, a Yoruba man by education because I went to the University of Ife, now Obafemi Awolowo University.

An Igbo man, once his container is arriving at the port, he forgets about what is happening to his brother. That’s the problem we have.

The Yoruba, because Babangida annulled June 12, all of them went into trenches: Bola Ige, Adesanya, Obasanjo, all of them, they went into war and they got eight years to rule. Head, or tail – 1999, that was the only election in Nigeria, head or tail, APP, Olu Falae, PDP, Obasanjo.

That was the gain because they could sustain an aggression. That was why I could sustain aggression myself because I have picked part of their blood but my people will not say anything!

Now, this man has escaped and where is the one that escaped after the Apo Six killings?

But he is in Nigeria, they know where he is. It isn’t healthy. They should give this government a chance and not distract it. Anything short of producing this man isn’t acceptable to Nigerians in general and Igbos, because we went to bury our people that were killed.

But the IG has queried and ordered suspension of Zakari Biu; don’t you see that as indication of seriousness to get to the root of the matter?
Query? You see, there are certain things that when they happen in this country, they are laughable. What are you telling me? They allowed the guy to escape. For a CP, Zakari Biu, to allow a star murderer to be taken to his house, doing what? They might have arranged his escape. That’s uncalled for.

But are you calling for the IG resignation?

The issue of his resignation, the president is competent to handle the matter at that level. All I am saying is that, the man must be produced, let him (Kabiru Sokoto) tell us who and who are behind this thing. They denied us the opportunity of getting to the root of Boko Haram when they killed the leader. Those this boy is working for would be on his trail now and before you know, they will kill him. How can these boys buy bombs? Somebody, somewhere is buying the bombs for them to go and bomb. Something must be done. You cannot continue to keep quiet when you are being slapped. This thing is getting too much. We cannot be guinea pigs in this country. Never.

Saturday, December 17, 2011

How Shagari Granted Ojukwu Amnesty


The late Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu’s former media aide, Mr. Kanayo Esinulo, today concludes his account of life with Ikemba Nnewi
Saturday December 17, 2011
- Daily Sun

Gowon’s pardon

By 1981, particularly after President Shehu Shagari granted amnesty to General Yakubu Gowon, Emeka, who was fond of calling Gowon ‘Jack,’ felt that their ‘two cases’ could have been considered in tandem, but because the people of Plateau made a strong case for Gowon, while ‘the East’ was not able to present a united front on his case, it would appear to Shagari that Gowon’s case was a more pressing national issue. He then suggested that we pursue a new initiative by making the necessary contacts with those within the listening range of President Shagari and others outside of this orbit. The primary targets were Dr. Chuba Okadigbo, Dr. Ibrahim Tahir and Chief Victor Masi.

Okadigbo was to be the arrowhead, since he was the Political Adviser to the President. Tahir, then Chairman of the Board of Nigerian Telecommunications, was chosen because of his influence and political pre-eminence within northern political circles. Masi was an important Minister of Works in the Shagari administration and a brilliant Army Captain with the Biafran Army Engineers. General Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu gave these as his reasons for preferring that we worked with these eminent Nigerians.

The meeting with Tahir and Obiano

In part two of this narrative that appeared last week, I traced the initial involvement of Okadigbo in the project of Emeka’s homecoming, and how I took him and Obiozo to Bingerville to meet and discuss with the General. Soon after we returned to Nigeria, we tracked Dr. Tahir at Ikoyi Hotel, where he was temporarily accommodated. He was very warm and polite to us and Okadigbo had tutored Vincent Obiano and I how to present the case to Tahir. As he chain-smoked, he listened us out and made promises he so dutifully fulfilled. We then moved to Victor Masi’s official residence in Ikoyi. He was waiting for us. Obiano had contacted him, for they knew themselves at the University of Nigeria in the early sixties. Here, again, the reception was warm and friendly. Before we knew it, Emeka called Chief Ike Onunaku, a top management staff of the United Africa Company (UAC) (I mean the UAC under Chief Ernest Shonekan), who was a part of us and who hosted so many of our meetings in those difficult days, to say he was getting feelers on how effective the team had become. By this time, Emeka had asked Colonel Joe Achuzia to join us and to handle the security component of the project. We continued to meet regularly at Onunaku’s Bourdillon Road, Ikoyi residence – Bless his soul.

Ojukwu met Shinkafi in London

One early Saturday morning, Onunaku sent his driver to bring me to Ikoyi. ‘What about’? I asked the driver. He wouldn’t know beyond the instruction to get to my Ikeja residence and “get Kanayo here before two o’clock.” When I arrived, I was told that the General wanted to give me a new brief by 3pm, and since I didn’t have a telephone at home, Onunaku’s place at Ikoyi was the best option. At exactly three o’clock, the call came through and Emeka said he had just returned to Abidjan from London, where he had “fruitful and rewarding discussions” with the Director-General of the Nigeria Security Organization (NSO), Alhaji Shinkafi. I was to constitute a strong media team to start working on softening the ground for his journey home. His meeting in London with Shinkafi had increased his optimism that his days in exile were, indeed, coming to an end, he said. He sounded slightly excited, and I was happy and so was Chief Onunaku.

The media campaign

Two days later, I traveled to Enugu on a Nigeria Airways flight, in the company of Vincent Obiano. We were in Enugu to ask for the support of a good friend and colleague, Obinwa Nnaji, who was then Editor of Sunday Satellite of the Satellite Newspaper Group in Enugu. We confided in him and told him precisely how the General wanted the media aspect of the project handled from the East. After getting his advice, support and firm commitment, Vincent and I came back to Lagos. The following day, I drove to Iwaya Road Yaba, Lagos to brief and request the support and sympathy of veteran journalist and editor, Gbolabo Ogunsawo, the former editor of Sunday Times. Emeka knew him by reputation and specifically advised me to reach out to him. In his days as the editor, the weekly was reputed to be the highest circulating newspaper in Africa, south of Sahara. And from exile, he was a loyal reader of Sunday Times.

We secured Gbalabo’s sympathy and through him the understanding of the Unity Party of Nigeria, as well as access to as many editors in the Lagos/Ibadan media axis as possible. Obinwa Nnaji also inherited the duty of getting his editor colleagues in the South East to step up the media campaign. Before we all knew it, Ojukwu’s return to Nigeria had developed into a huge national discussion and conversation. Indomitable Tai Solarin added his voice in an article that was published in both the Nigerian Tribune and the Daily Sketch.

The debate was now widening and going in the direction we had planned. And Emeka was letting us know that he was following developments closely but warned: “You must not relent until Shagari pronounces the magic word ‘Emeka, Come Home.’” Dr. Chuba Okadigbo was doing just fine in the political turf. He called me one day to say that the media tempo must not go down at all. Gbolabo, Obinwa and I were taking care of the media angle. Colonel Achuzia (now a chief in his native Asaba and its Ochiagha) was making progress with security arrangements. Everything was going good. Everybody was cooperating and the end of Emeka’s days in exile was nearing its terminal stage.

Shagari’s declaration

In a terse statement issued by the presidency, Shehu Shagari allowed Emeka to come home and a huge volley of joy and jubilation were unleashed. Preparations for his trip home began in earnest. Individuals and groups that were afraid to mention Emeka Ojukwu’s name in public since January 1970 began to come out of their holes, like termites. I remember one fellow who refused to touch the letter from Ojukwu to him in 1972, and even warned Emeka Enejere and I never to mention that we ever saw or came to his office located in central Lagos, was busy granting elaborate press interviews soon after the amnesty announcement. He was hailing the General as “my infinite hero,” who is on his way back home. Such is life.
At the end of it all, however, many genuine Igbo groups made contacts with us and began to donate time and buses that would convey people to Lagos and back.

The Cote d’Ivoire angle

Many Ivorians, too, voluntarily donated huge sums for the printing of thousands of T-shirts. Emma Ackah, an Ivorian presidency staff, was in-charge of that. Emeka had instructed what should be written on the shirts – simple Igbo words, ‘ONYEIJE NNO.’ What happened at the airport the day he arrived Nigeria is now history. The day his body arrives Nigeria will record yet another history.

It is on this note that I say, with tears in my eyes, to my General, mentor, adviser and ogam: sleep well and good night – Chukwu nabata mkpuru obi gi. Ka emesia!

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

[Nigeria] State creation: Bottlenecks, agitations, new challenges

By JUDE OSSAI, STEPHEN GBADAMOSI and BANJI ALUKO -- Sunday Tribune

That new states are on the agenda of the National Assembly with respect to expected constitution amendment is no longer in doubt. The focus is on which of the new state movements is likely to get the nod, even as new realities from the Senate appear to stand against the target. Regional Editor, OLAWALE RASHEED, writes on the politics of state creation from the country’s inception and likely new states to emerge from the impending exercise.

MANY justifications have been advanced for the push for new states out of the existing 36 in the federation. Similarly, countless reasons have been canvassed to support non-creation of states. Indeed, a couple of days ago, calls had been made for some states to be merged. The argument had been that some states were becoming non-viable. Politics of the time is, however, driving fast towards the emergence of new states between now and 2015.

Many citizens worry about the effects of further balkanisation of the federation. Those in support of new states, however, regard it as part of national restructuring to ensure equity and justice.

Since the amalgamation of the Southern and Northern protectorates of what now is Nigeria in 1914 and the subsequent creation of states in the country, the issue of state creation has always been a strenuous and delicate matter. Instructively, all the states in Nigeria, apart from the Mid-Western State, were created by the military government that had ruled in the past.

The last National Assembly took the bull by the horn as it started a process for the creation of new states. Although the Assembly could not complete the business, the new and present National Assembly has picked it up from where the last Assembly stopped. Shortly after its inauguration, Senate President, David Mark, and the new Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, gave indications that creation of new states would feature prominently in the proposed amendment of the 1999 Constitution. A stamp of legislative authority has been given as the presiding officers of the two chambers have declared their commitments to the project.

There also appears to be a presidential support. President Goodluck Jonathan, while seeking the presidential mandate, had cause to promise new states in some zones of the federation. What is more, some Ijaw leaders see the Jonathan presidency as an opportunity to add another predominantly Ijaw state to Bayelsa. Checks also revealed that key actors in power and out of power are resolutely behind the project.

The framers of the constitution are conscious of the possible agitation and so the procedure was deliberately complicated. The constitutional requirements for creating a new state are as follows:

According to the 1999 Constitution, to create a new state requires that such creation be supported by 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. That is not all; 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 and the result of the referendum approved by a simple majority of all the 36 states of Nigeria supported by a simple majority of members of the Houses of Assembly. 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.

This stringent guideline has not deterred successive civilian governments from commencing moves towards state creation. In the Second Republic, A Senate committee set up in 1981 under Senator Abubakar Tuggar shortlisted 50 new states to be created. The then National Assembly approved the list for subsequent referendum in accordance with the provision of the constitution, but the process was aborted when the military overthrew the Sheu Shagari-led government in December 1983.

In the current republic and even with those stringent constitutional provisions, the legislature has received more that 40 requests for state creation. Among such proposed states are Igboezue, Adada, Aba, Njaba, Orlu, Orimili and Orashi (South East); Anioma, Oil Rivers, Ogoja, Afemaiesan, Toru-Ebe and New Delta (South South); Oduduwa, Ijebu, Ibadan, New Oyo, Oke-Ogun (South West); Apa, Idoma, Edu, Okun, Oya (North Central); Amana and Savannah, Katagum (North East); and Gurara (North West).

The underground scheming is almost akin to what happened in previous state creation exercise under the military. Most states created under Generals Ibrahim Babangida and Sani Abacha were due largely to the influence of highly placed people from the fortunate states. Even new state capitals were determined more by who was closer to the military rulers. Osogbo, for instance, got the capital of Osun due to such figures as Dr. Olu Alabi. Dutse upstaged Hadejia just as Asaba got the nod due mainly to influence peddling factors.

In the subsisting scenario, some of these personalities have promised their kinsmen a state of their own. What is more, some are hoping to emerge as chief executives of the new states after the expiration of their existing tenure. Hence, there are elements of personal and tribal agenda in the on-going exercise.

Conditions
But part of the criteria used in the past for a state to be created included the economic viability of the area demanding the new state, especially the ability and potentials for sustainable internal revenue generation, provable cases of demographic strength and underdevelopment arising from denial of access to human development; provable evidence of socio-cultural affinity and geographical contiguity; the need to redress lopsided cartography and boundary lines resulting in endless border and resource-based conflicts; provable instance of consensus among the demographic groups demanding the new states.

Others included the ability of the new states to provide their structure and resources to take off; ability to ensure internal security and cohesion and peaceful co-existence with their neighbours and the existence of human resource and personnel to run the state.

Talks of merging current states emerge
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?

Current agitation
A zone by zone analysis focussing on the politics of the exercise can be done as follows:

South East zone
Of the six geopolitical zones, the South East has been the most vociferous in the agitation, citing the need for zonal parity as it has only five states, while others have six or more. To the advantage of the zone, it currently has the deputy Senate president, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), the deputy speaker of the House of Representatives and, strategically, the coordinating minister for the economy.

This connection within the administration is, however, generating divisions, rather than the unity needed to make the project a reality. The deputy speaker, Emeka Ihedioha, is believed to have his eyes on a Njaba/Orlu state to be create from Imo and Anambra states. But the deputy Senate president, Ike Ekweremadu, and the SGF, Chief Pius Anyim, appears to be poles apart on this issue. Anyim is reported to be interested in the creation of Old Ohaozara/Igboeze Orimili out of the present Anambra State. Senator Ekweremadu hopes a new state can emerge from Enugu State.

An Igbo writer attempted to resolve the riddle when he analysed the history of state creation in the South East. According to him, South East zone was first divided into Anambra and Imo states. Anambra got divided again into Enugu and Anambra states, the same time Imo was divided into Abia and Imo states. At last, Ebonyi State was created from Enugu and Abia states. So, the next or sixth state in the South East is obviously to be created from both Imo and Anambra states.

Apart from the above, there are those who also believe the Igbo can never agree to get a new state, even as the race is being blackmailed based on alleged ruling presence of Igbo in Delta and Rivers states. Interests from the North which are waiting in the wing to stop a new state for the Igbo cited the notion that the Igbo, indeed, have seven states as they are substantially present in controlling stature in Delta and Rivers.

But only last week, the Ambassador Ralph Uwechue-led Ohanaeze Ndigbo rose from its meeting in Enugu and reiterated its quest for an additional state in Igboland.

In Enugu State, agitators for Adada State creation have called on the National Assembly to stick to the guidelines spelt out by the Senate President Mark who emphasised that the exercise should be an opportunity to right the wrongs of the past which have resulted in perennial misgivings among many Nigerians.

Adada State also prominent
Leading the Adada group was a former speaker of the defunct Eastern House of Assembly, Igwe Charles Abagwu. Also in the lead of agitators were chairman of the state Committee on Actualization of Creation of Adada State, Major General Godwin Ugwuoke (rtd); chairman, movement’s Tactical Committee, Chief Cletus Opata; and the spokesman for the group, Chief James Ugwu.

Who will have the upper hands among these heavyweights spearheading the Igbo cause is only a matter of conjecture. Anioma state, from current Delta and Anambra states is, however, being touted as a likely option.

Why Anioma is likely
The creation of Anioma State is, perhaps, one of the oldest in the country. Records show that agitation for the creation of the state dates back to 1951. It is an attempt by the Igbo-speaking people of Delta State to have a state of their own. The word, Anioma, was a coinage used by the late Anioma state agitator, Osita Osadebey, to group the Igbo-speaking people of Delta State in Aniocha, Oshimili, Ndokwa and Ika areas.

According to Emeka Esogbue, a native of Ibusa in Oshimili North Local Government Area, the proposed Anioma state will also bring together other Anioma communities, such as Ndoni in Rivers State, Igbanke and Ekpon in Edo State and other Anioma communities in Edo, Imo and Rivers states.

Igboezuo State
Perhaps, the most convincing of all the agitations for state creation in the South East, agitators of Igboezuo state just want the creation of a state from the five states in the region to make up for the imbalance. By not citing cultural affinity or historical antecedents as reasons for its creation, it appears proponents of Igboezuo state have demonstrated correctness of perspective and have placed the overall interest of the Igbo nation before any other mundane consideration. What is their argument? To them, Igboezuo is like a union of the five Eastern states; the new heartbeat of the Igbo nation.

They are proposing that some existing local governments from the five states of the region be excised to form the new state. From Anambra State, Orumba North and South local government areas; from Enugu, Awgu and Aninri local government areas; and from Ebonyi, Ivo and Ohaozara local government areas. Abia will cede Isuikwuato and Umunneochi, with Imo producing the bulk of the local government areas by giving up Okigwe, Onuimo, Ideato North and South, Isiala Mbano and Ehime Mbano. With these, the new state will be ready to take off with 15 local government areas with headquarters at Okigwe.

Njaba State/Orlu State
In the vanguard of Njaba state is former Governor Achike Udenwa, while Senator Hope Uzodinma is behind Orlu state. The proposed Njaba state, according to its promoters, should be carved out of the 12 local government areas that make up Imo West (Orlu zone) of Imo State and Ihiala in Anambra State. The local governments are Orlu, Orsu, Oru East, Oru West, Oguta, Ohaji/Egbema, Nkwerre, Nwangele, Isu, Njaba, Ideato North and Ideato South. Njaba state, according to them, will ensure fairness as regards state creation in the former Eastern Region.

They recalled that the region was split into Imo and Anambra and from Imo; Abia was carved out while Enugu was created from Anambra and out of Abia and Enugu, Ebonyi later emerged. They, therefore, maintained that equity demands that the sixth state for the area be carved out of the present Imo and Anambra states. In the same senatorial district, agitators of Orlu state want the 12 councils that make up the zone to be accorded a state status.

South South zone
The zone, though with six states already, seems also set to get additional state. Those in the know said the president is under pressure to ensure the creation of a new state for the Ijaw in the Niger Delta. The argument is that as the fourth largest ethnic group in Nigeria, Bayelsa alone should not be the only predominantly Ijaw state. This is the genesis of the proposed Toru-Ibe state which is generating heated controversy between the Bini people and the Ijaw of the Niger Delta.

The Bini and Itsekiri recently accused the Ijaw of annexing their riverine areas to increase the land areas of the new Ijaw state. The opposition has been very vociferous. The Ijaw have also responded, claiming that the said riverine areas belonged to them as the Bini met them while on migration.

The Ijaw of Edo State said their demand for the creation of Toru-Ibe state from Edo and Delta states was to save them from the oppression they claimed to be suffering in the hands of the Bini people, which they said was more than what the Israelites suffered while in bondage in Egypt.

They described the claim by the Bini that all Ijaw riverine communities in the state belonged to them as “a bundle of lies and deliberate falsehood carefully crafted to bamboozle, misinform and mislead governments of Nigeria, especially members of the National Assembly who must be very wary.” Spokesman for the Ijaw in Edo State, Professor Christopher Dime, insisted that the Ijaw would never cede an inch of their land to any ethnic nationality in the country, adding that “the Ijaw had been the aborigines and the customary owners of all land covered by the proposed Toru-Ibe state.”

He said “despite their posturing, blind guessing and recent attempts at historical revisionism, it is clear that the Bini do not know and, indeed, cannot know when the Ijaw came into the Ijaw lands of present Edo State because the Ijaw were on the land long before the Bini migrated from Yorubaland.

“That the Ijaw were among the oldest ethnic nationality in Nigeria and, indeed, in the West African sub-region is not in doubt. That they are indigenous to the Niger Delta and its fringes to the West, East and North is equally no news. There is a pool of incontrovertible scholarly evidence and documentations in support of these claims. Among them is Chief Jacob Egharebva of blessed memory, the best known and celebrated Bini historian with Bini royal blood, who in his A Short History of Benin, said, ‘many, many years ago, the Bini came all the way from Egypt to found a more secure shelter in this part of the world. After a short stay in the Sudan and Ife, tradition says that they met some people who were in the land before their arrival.”

Agitators of Toru-Ebe State are said to aim to bring together the Ijaw in Delta, Ondo and Edo states. The demand for the creation of the state is, therefore, aimed at satisfying the long-standing yearnings of the people for self reliance, peace, stability, self-determination and development.

According to Dr. Felix Tuodolo, the clamour for the Ijaw to have a state of their own did not stop with the creation of Bayelsa State in 1996 and that agitation for the creation of Toru-Ebe State dated back to 1976. They are also insisting that Ijaw in Edo, Delta and Ondo states have become minorities in these states, a situation they believe can only be remedied if they are given a state of their own.
Appartr frome Dime, some of the other prominent Ijaw leaders agitating for the creation of this state include Chief J. O. Mieyebo, Lieutenant Colonel Edwin Okokolo Carter, Mr. V. B. Bamuza-Mutu, Brigadier-General Broderick Demeyeibo, Chief Edwin Clark, Rear Admiral Festus Porbeni (rtd), Chief Joshua Fumodoh and Chief F. J. Williams.

They asserted that the proposed Toru-Ebe State was viable with abundant minerals, oil and gas, river-bed sand and gravel, oil palm produce, timber, raffia palm for the production of industrial gins, mangrove trees for salt making, deep sea coastal and river fishing, shrimp and also farm produce in commercial quantities. The proposed state has natural landscape with beautiful beaches which can be developed into revenue generating tourist industry. The proposed state is also said to have enough human resources.

Beyond historical disputations, many insiders appear sure that if new states are created, Toru-Ibe is certain to be one of them.

North Central zone
Many are clamouring for new states in this zone as earlier listed. A factor very potent in the exercise is Senate President David Mark, an Idoma from a Tiv dominated state of Benue. Mark is seen by his people as the one to liberate them from the alleged hegemony of the Tiv.

This is why the creation of Apa state is very central to the political life of the Senate president.

His detractors were even as mean as to suggest that Senator Mark is to secure the creation of the new state and emerge as its first governor. This is if, as rumour mongers noted, he fails to secure the presidency come 2015.

According to the Senate president, the Assembly would break the jinx that states could only be created by the military. He assured Nigerians that the committee on the review of the 1999 Constitution would be fair to all in the consideration of states to be created.

The Mark factor is, thus, seen as set to stop a very historic opportunity for the Yoruba to have another state in the zone. In the North Central, Apa state and Senator Mark hold the key.

South West zone
The agitation for new state is also very strong in the South West. Three prominent expected states exist in the zone namely, New Ijebu, Ibadan and Oduduwa.

Oduduwa state is facing challenges due to change of government in Osun state, in addition to other associated development in the state. This is especially so in view of the constitutional requirements.
The two leading movements are basically those of Ibadan and Ijebu. Minister of State for Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Ms Jumoke Akinjide, was upbeat about the chance of Ibadan state. According to the minister, the creation of Ibadan state is realistic and nobody should doubt it.

“Ibadan state, when created, will be one of the most viable states in the country. The reason, as you know, is that we have the Ibadan metropolis and the Ibadan less city. We also have strong economic potentials in view of the large number of people in Ibadan.

“In terms of economic viability, population and landmass, Ibadan ranks number one in terms of earning state position. If any state will be created, Ibadan state will certainly be one of them,” she stated.
But some analysts are pointing at change of government in Oyo state with a rationalisation that he minister may not be in a position to be so hopeful. While not doubting her good intention, the thinking of some pundits is that Ibadan state will be a mirage, unless the incumbent governor, Senator Abiola Ajumobi, pursued it as his agenda.

There is also the doubt as to whether Ibadan can stop the highly influential Ijebu from getting a state of their own in the new dispensation. The Ijebu are anchoring their agitation on records of history.

According to proponents of the new Ijebu state, its creation was long overdue because out of the old 24 provinces in Nigeria, only Ijebu province was yet to get a state, while three states had been created out of the old Sokoto province and two out of Kano.

But will the Egba let the Ijebu off the hook by backing the creation of the new state? Analysts premise that question on the history of rivalry between these two great ethnic stocks of Yoruba race, a competition a prominent Egba writer traced to political power struggles after the fall of the Oyo Empire and commerce, as to who controlled the slave market or route.

Interestingly, Ijebu and Egba lands extend beyond the present Ogun State with Ijebuland reaching up to Somolu and Epe and Egbaland extending to Oyingbo, Mushin and Abule Egba in the present-day Lagos State.

Sunday Tribune was, however, told that Egba and Ijebu elites are unanimous in the drive for the new Ijebu state. What remains, according to pundits, is for the new state governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, to publicly support the bid for the new state.

Proponents of the new state are, however, very hopeful of having a new state possibly rich in oil and gas, good sea port and a rival to Lagos State. Unless the state government opposes the new state, insiders are sure Ijebu state will beat the proposed Ibadan and Oduduwa states, if new state were to be created from the South West.

Oke Ogun State
But there is also the issue of the proposed Oke Ogun state. The creation of the state from present Oyo State is among the most prominent agitations in the South West. With a land mass constituting about 60 per cent of the present Oyo State and a population of about 1.4 million, the Oke Ogun area in Oyo North Senatorial zone believes it deserves a state of its own. Other reasons being given is that the area has for long suffered neglect as a result of the distance between the area and Ibadan, the state capital, which is as much as 130 kilometres, as well as lack of development in the area.

But according the proponents of Ibadan state, which is the main road block to the proposed Oke Ogun state, of all the former regional capitals in Nigeria—Enugu, Kaduna and Ibadan—only Ibadan has not got a state of its own. It is based on this historical fact that backers of Ibadan state believe that it will become a reality if the National assembly eventually considers state creation.

North East zone
Two new state creation movements are very prominent in this zone, namely Katagum, wanted out of the present Bauchi State; and Savannah state, out of present-day Borno State.

Historically, Katagum is a province which leaders have been agitating for a state for long. Possibly due to geopolitics of the state, Katagum, despite producing key national leaders, has not been lucky in the quest for a new state. It was one of the 50 states shortlisted in 1981 and one of the 20 recommended during the Abacha-led regime.

In the present scheming, Katagum is truly strategically placed to realise its dream. A likely new Emir of Katagum is a prominent leading player in the present power structure in the country. Additionally, decision-makers are bending towards the scarce values of equity and justice in treating the Katagum request.

But there is a possible new equation to the situation in the North East. With low-level insurgency ongoing in central and Northern Borno, many are proposing the creation of a new state of Savannah to cover Southern Borno, which, interestingly, is predominantly Christian.

Leaders from Southern Askira/Uba, Bayo, Biu, Chibok, Damboa, Gwoza, Hawul, Kwaya-Kusar and Shani local government areas of Southern Borno had constituted committees to pursue the ambition. What is hard to determine is whether the mainstream Borno political elites will support such a move.

The Savannah state proponents are facing the same challenge as those of Gurara state in North Western zone. The leader of the movement, Bawa Magaji, said the creation of the proposed Gurara state was approved by the Kaduna State House of Assembly in its resolution on November 18, 2009.

“The proposed Gurara state, with headquarters in Kachia, has a population of 3,383,207 and a land mass of about 28,393 square kilometres,” he said.

But will mainstream Kaduna elites allow the separation? And again, can the North West have another state, since the zone is already with seven?

In the meantime, Katagum holds the ace in North East zone.

North West zone
Agitation for the creation of Southern Kaduna state from the present Kaduna State has been on for a very long time, but the aspiration has never yielded any positive fruit, despite that many states were created by the military governments. Their cry received further impetus after the religious crisis which rocked Kaduna State in 2000. As a result of the crisis, a committee (leaders of thought) formed by former governor of the state, Ahmed Makarfi, recommended the splitting of the state. Motion for the creation of the proposed state was also moved in the Kaduna State House of Assembly in 2002. Upon the declaration by the National Assembly to create additional states in the present dispensation, agitators for the creation of Southern Kaduna have returned to the drawing board.

One issue that comes up each time the debate for the creation of Southern Kaduna state is raised is about where the state capital will be located. It was even said that this singular issue prevented the creation of the state by the government of the late General Sani Abacha in 1996. Although the proponents of the state seem to have accepted making Kaduna metropolis the capital of the new state, they are still undecided over the choice of the capital between two towns—Zonkwa and Kachia.

Options for National Assembly
Again, the process is complicated and allows for unhappy elements to spoil the realisation of the project. For the National Assembly, many are suggesting the creation of five new states, one per zone, minus North West. But the former leadership of the National Assembly suggested 10.

If new states are to be created, the nation may well be expecting the following states: Ijebu, Katagum, Apa, Anioma and Toru-Ibe.

But with the new development over the unhealthy state of some states, which is sending jitters down the spines of stakeholders in the affected states and has made some notable Nigerians to call for the merging of some states, the death knell of new state creation might have been sounded.