Tuesday 13 December 2011

ACN senators to oppose oil subsidy removal

The Senator representing Osun East Senatorial District in the National Assembly, Babajide Omoworare has declared that senators elected on the platform of the Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN, will continue to fight against the move by President Goodluck Jonathan to remove oil subsidy.
Also, Senator Babafemi Ojudu yesterday called on the Nigerian workers and the Civil Society groups in the country to resist the proposed fuel subsidy removal by the federal government.
Omoworare who is the Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee on Federal Character said the decision of the ACN senators was born out of their determination to be on the side of the masses and also ensure welfarist policies and programmes by federal government.
Delivering a lecture entitled “Checks and Balances: Nigeria in Search of Credible and Sustainable Election” to mark the 2011 pen week of the Nigeria Union of Journalists, NUJ, Osun State Broadcasting Corporation, OSBC, chapel in Osogbo, Senator Omoworare stressed the need for all Nigerians to stand against the move to remove oil subsidy, saying time is not ripe for such development in Nigeria.

Alleged Independence Day Bombers, Charles Okah And Nwabueze, Complain Of Inhuman Treatment In Kuje Prison

Charles Okah and Obi Nwabueze, who were arraigned in October 2010 for alleged involvement in last year’s the Independence Day bombing in Abuja, have warned the Comptroller-General of Prisons over the harsh and inhuman treatment they are enduring in Kuje Prisons.
In a petition filed today by Ogbenovo Otemu and Matthew Omonade on behalf of Festus Keyamo Chambers, the lawyers alerted the Comptroller-General of impending legal consequences if he fails or neglects to redress the injustice to their clients in his custody.
The complaint said that that unlike other suspects awaiting trial, Okah and Nwabueze are being kept in solitary confinement. “They are deprived from worshiping God like other inmates in the worship center, they are not allowed to participate in sporting activities and when their wives and relatives visit them, they are not allowed to see them,” the complaint states.

It also said that Mr. Okah’s wife has on several occasions been humiliated at the prison and prevented from seeing her husband, contrary to the orders of the court that she and other relatives be allowed access to see him. 
Furthermore, when the prison was fumigated last week, specifically on December 8 because a scorpion was found in Okah’s cell, he was made to remain in the cell during the process and fumigated over, while others were allowed out. 
They noted that each time they have complaint about the situation, the officers of Kuje Prisons have always said they are acting on instructions from above.
“We state that our clients are merely accused persons and not convicts, which means, their presumption of innocence guaranteed by the Constitution should be respected,” the petition stated.  “Therefore treating our clients in a manner that suggest that they have been condemned is illegal and unconstitutional.”
Alleged

BA, Virgin Atlantic’s $235m fine: Probe panel begins sitting

The Justice G. A. Oguntade-led panel set up by Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, NCAA, to look into the legality and fairness of the $235 million fine slammed on British Airways and Virgin Atlantic Airways over price-fixing commenced sitting yesterday in Lagos.
The panel, however, adjourned  further hearing till January 9, to allow all the parties in the case to file their respective briefs/appeals to its secretariat in Lagos.
Counsel to the airlines had said they were still expecting the NCAA to furnish them with more documents for their defence.
Speaking to newsmen after the adjournment, Justice Oguntade said the airlines were simply taking advantage of the laws in Nigeria to test the fairness or otherwise of the decisions taken against them by the NCAA.
According to him, the panel was set up to review the decision of the aviation regulatory body against the two British carriers.
Justice Oguntade said the panel would operate with open mind to listen to the parties and look at the veracity of the agency’s claims of fare racketeering.
He said:  “This is a panel to review some damages awarded against BA and Virgin Atlantic and the airlines concerned are taking advantage of the laws in Nigeria to test the correctiveness of the decision against them.
“There was a ruling against them and they are dissatisfied with the ruling and they came to the appeal panel to test the correctiveness of the decisions of the NCAA investigative committee.
“All we have to do is to examine the basis of the decision  to know whether they were in accordance with the law.”
At yesterday’s hearing, British Airways was represented by Uzoma Azikiwe, Dan Agbor and Gbenga Ojo, while some top officials of  the airline, including Mr. Tunji Seymour and Mrs. Adetutu Otuyalo, were also present.
Similarly, Virgin Atlantic Airways  had Afolabi Caxton-Martins, Funke Agbor and Ben Unaegbunam representing it at the panel sitting, just as its United Kingdom lawyers, John Mc Inneas, and West African representative, Chief John Adebanjo, also registered their appearances.
Other members of the panel include K.G.B. Oguakwa, Alhaji Bala Ibn NaAllah, and Callistus E. Uwakwe, a senior lawyer and author of Introduction to Civil Aviation Law in Nigeria, who is also the panel’s secretary.

Fashola’s war on education (2)

IF Gov. Fashola truly loves Lagos State let him leave a self-generative legacy. A legacy that will build the infrastructures of an enduring solution to the states problem. A legacy that will regenerate itself. That legacy is EDUCATION.
Plato goes further by saying: “If the citizens are well educated, they will readily see through the difficulties that beset them and meet emergencies as they arise”. He further believes that education is the positive means by which the ruler can shape human nature in the right direction to produce a harmonious state.
One of America’s most popular Presidents-John F. Kennedy once said: “Our progress as a nation can be no swifter than our progress in Education”. Another great philosopher, Horace Mann, believes that: “A human being is not in any proper sense human till he is educated”. Peter Broughman also contends that “education makes people easy to lead but difficult to drive, easy to govern but impossible to enslave”.
Aristotle who was the most outstanding student of Plato also puts it very brutally thus: “Educated men are as much superior to uneducated men as the living are to the dead”. Aristotle believes that uneducated men are like dead men.
The present status quo concerning education in Lagos is to enslave Lagosians and make it possible for them to know only violence as their fundamental human right, as it is impossible to enslave the masses when they are educated.
The Lagos State government must know that such an astronomical increase in school fees will only keep the students at home and worsen the crime rate in the State. In the short term, Fashola will continue to win his elections with these uneducated masses but in the long run, they will make Lagos State ungovernable for the Governor through violence which is the only language they have been taught, tuition free.
How does Gov. Fashola expect a man on N 10,000.00 (ten Thousand naira only) per month to pay School fees of N348000.00 (for medical students) per session? Even most state goverments have not accepted to pay the slave wage of N18, 000.00 per month as advised by the Federal Government.
The Lagos State government has not told Lagosians the truth about its internally generated revenue, IGR. While the government puts this at N18, billion monthly, an unofficial source in Alausa puts it at over N60 billion. With the monthly Federal allocation of N6 billion, Lagos State Government official monthly revenue is estimated at N22 billion, while unofficial sources put total  revenue accruing to Lagos at about N66 billion.
This source also adds that revenue figures from the 2010 Fashola-introduced property tax are mind-boggling. Even let us assume that each property/house pays a conservative N3000, Lagosians should themselves calculate the billions from that sum.
Governor Fashola should be grateful to the society that educated him free of charge. It is, therefore, an unpardonable ingratitude and a heinous crime for him now to shoot and kill these same people who educated him, for depriving a people of education is tantamount to murder in line with Aristotle’s reasoning that “educated people are as much superior to uneducated people as the living are to the dead”.
In Lagos State, nothing is free. You will get the rudest shock of your life when you attempt to use a toilet at Alausa Secretariat or in any Lagos State designated office. I was once told at the Alausa Secretariat by a policeman after protesting the toilet fee: “My friend pay your money; you think say this na Freetown. Nothing is free here o!”.
The Governor must realise that the people are entitled to some social benefits from government like education, housing, water, good roads, etc. Now that education and housing are for the rich only, the Governor must resist pressure from above to do “Father Christmas” with Lagos State tax payers money by consolidating party positions in all states of the Federation.
The Governor must also realise that most Lagosians are unemployed, unempowered and poor. In Nigeria only government workers are billionaires because of unchecked corruption.
I am, therefore, specifically appealing to Gov. Fashola to declare tertiary institutions in Lagos State tuition free as I am convinced that Lagos State Government has enough funds to turn its only university into another Harvard, if the billions spent to expand the radius of its political party is downsized.
Mr. Thomas, a public affairs analyst, wrote from Lagos.

Ogun Police parade 6 Sagamu robbery suspects, 11 others

Ogun State police command yesterday paraded 17 suspected armed robbers including six members of the armed robbery gang that allegedly struck banks along Akarigbo road Sabo, Sagamu in  the state last month.
The state police Commissioner,Nicholas Nkedeme, told newsmen  in Abeokuta that, his men   have apprehended six  members of  the 35-man gang of  armed robbers that  unleashed terror in  Sagamu, on  November 24, where three people were killed.
According to Nkedeme, who also paraded other suspected murderers, kidnappers, impersonators and cultists, one of them,  Rasheed Ganiyu was said to be  in possession of one million, five hundred and fifty one thousand naira (N1,551,000) with his friend identified as  Tajudeen Alase by patrol team in Ogere.
The suspects, according to the police boss, were caught with  one Toyota Bus with inscription of Lagos State Polytechnic with number plate LA 65 A45, two empty magazines, one live G3 ammunition, one expended ammunition, one Toyota Sienna car with number plate LT 671 EKY and one kit that contained the  alleged stolen money.
Speaking with newsmen, one of the  robbery suspects, Rashhed Ganiyu denied involvement in the robbery attacks, claiming  he  was arrested in error.
He however confessed that, he was caught with a kit that contained the huge money with the wrappers with the inscription of some of the banks robbed in Sagamu, saying that, he saw the container somewhere and stole it, not knowing it was a stolen kit.
Also parading  two suspects for impersonation, Nkedeme said, the joint patrol team of the command and boarder patrol  team of Idi-Iroko intercepted an old Toyota Camry car with number plate DV 854 AAA driven by  Ogundare Olayiwola, who dressed in police uniform with the rank of Assistant Superintendent of Police, but, the logo on his shoulder  showed that, he was a fake officer and was promptly arrested.
The Police boss further disclosed that, another  impersonator identified as   Gabriel Olagbade  was arrested in Sango-Ota  during the recent transporters crisis, when he allegedly claimed to be a Deputy Superintendent of Police.
The command also  paraded one Joshua Fadebi, 18, for allegedly kidnapping two  school children in Ilaro  last week.
But, the suspect denied attempting to kidnap the children, saying, he was a commercial  motorcyclist, and that he  took the children near their school to their houses.
When asked where  he was taking them to, Joshua said,  he did not know the  children and did not know where they were going. He said that, he  had to take them to a  nearby police station before he was arrested.
The command also paraded one  Owolabi Kolade  for allegedly strangulating  his father to death in Bankole village,  in Oja-Odan Yewa North Local Government Area following a  disagreement.
And when the suspect was asked why he killed his father, Kolade denied killing his father, saying, he had a disagreement with his landlord that led to his death.

Jennifer Lopez Owns Britney And Beyonce Looks In ‘T.H.E. (The Hardest Ever)’ Video

Apparently, the flesh-toned body suit Jennifer Lopez wore during her performance at the American Music Awards last month was a hit. The 42-year-old mother of toddler twins looks incredible suited up in a similar one piece, this one black and lace, for will.i.am's new video, "T.H.E. (The Hardest Ever)," for which she sings the chorus.
More Jennifer Lopez music videos
Despite will.i.am's spectacular special effects in the clip, the recently separated superstar rumored to be dating a much younger man steals the limelight. The Black Eyed Peas frontman catapults himself from a speeding bike, stands atop of a racing train, and flies a spaceship, but viewers will walk away remembering J. Lo.

In another sequence, Lopez flaunts stilettos, thigh-high stockings and a leotard.


These looks were first popularized by then twenty-something pop stars Britney Spears and Beyonce. Britney was strategically covered with diamonds in her "Toxic" video, and wore a two-piece nude bodysuit for the 2000 VMAs. The leotards Beyonce wore for her "Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)" video were just as popular as the anthemic song. But time will tell whether the ladies will be able to don the styles in 10 years when they are J. Lo's age.

Beyonce, Britney Spears

Get info on Jennifer Lopez movies
The legendary Rolling Stones singer Mick Jagger, who appears in the third verse of the song and video, following J. Lo, gets lost in the mix. Jagger, the subject of Maroon 5's "Moves Like Jagger," lives up this his reputation, but here J. Lo is simply too tough an act to follow.

will.i.am
"T.H.E. (The Hardest Ever)" is the first single from will.i.am's forthcoming solo album, "#willpower," due out in 2012.

The "T.H.E. (The Hardest Ever)" video is not embedded in the blog because it includes inappropriate language.

iPhone 4S leads online smartphone buzz

Smartphones are predicted to be a popular present this holiday season, and of all the brands on the market Apple's latest offering, the iPhone 4S, is attracting the biggest internet buzz, according to a report released December 9 by Nielsen.

The report was conducted by Nielsen/McKinsey company NM Incite over the period from July to December. It measured the buzz surrounding different brands and models of smartphones by looking at mentions, messages and other posts on blogs, message boards, Twitter, Facebook and other online sources.
According to the report, buzz for the iPhone 4S began building in July; it overtook the previously "most buzzed" phone -- the iPhone 4 -- in August, and peaked in October, the month of its release. Since then levels of buzz have declined but the iPhone 4S still remains the most-buzzed-about smartphone across the internet.
Throughout the period July-December 2011 Apple's iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4 and 4S accounted for around 66 percent of all online smartphone mentions.
In comparison the generic category of "Android" smartphones accounted for 23 percent of mentions while RIM's Blackberry gained 10 percent of buzz.
Despite Android devices now accounting for, according to Nielsen, 43 percent of the US market, Apple devices are still expected to dominate smartphone sales this Christmas, with research firms such as Euromonitor predicting high sales volumes of Apple's iPhone 4S. 

Shunning Facebook, and Living to Tell About It

Tyson Balcomb quit Facebook after a chance encounter on an elevator. He found himself standing next to a woman he had never met — yet through Facebook he knew what her older brother looked like, that she was from a tiny island off the coast of Washington and that she had recently visited the Space Needle in Seattle.
“I knew all these things about her, but I’d never even talked to her,” said Mr. Balcomb, a pre-med student in Oregon who had some real-life friends in common with the woman. “At that point I thought, maybe this is a little unhealthy.”
As Facebook prepares for a much-anticipated public offering, the company is eager to show off its momentum by building on its huge membership: more than 800 million active users around the world, Facebook says, and roughly 200 million in the United States, or two-thirds of the population.
But the company is running into a roadblock in this country. Some people, even on the younger end of the age spectrum, just refuse to participate, including people who have given it a try.
One of Facebook’s main selling points is that it builds closer ties among friends and colleagues. But some who steer clear of the site say it can have the opposite effect of making them feel more, not less, alienated.
“I wasn’t calling my friends anymore,” said Ashleigh Elser, 24, who is in graduate school in Charlottesville, Va. “I was just seeing their pictures and updates and felt like that was really connecting to them.”
To be sure, the Facebook-free life has its disadvantages in an era when people announce all kinds of major life milestones on the Web. Ms. Elser has missed engagements and pictures of new-born babies. But none of that hurt as much as the gap she said her Facebook account had created between her and her closest friends. So she shut it down.
Many of the holdouts mention concerns about privacy. Those who study social networking say this issue boils down to trust. Amanda Lenhart, who directs research on teenagers, children and families at the Pew Internet and American Life Project, said that people who use Facebook tend to have “a general sense of trust in others and trust in institutions.” She added: “Some people make the decision not to use it because they are afraid of what might happen.”
Ms. Lenhart noted that about 16 percent of Americans don’t have cellphones. “There will always be holdouts,” she said.
Facebook executives say they don’t expect everyone in the country to sign up. Instead they are working on ways to keep current users on the site longer, which gives the company more chances to show them ads. And the company’s biggest growth is now in places like Asia and Latin America, where there might actually be people who have not yet heard of Facebook.
“Our goal is to offer people a meaningful, fun and free way to connect with their friends, and we hope that’s appealing to a broad audience,” said Jonathan Thaw, a Facebook spokesman.
But the figures on growth in this country are stark. The number of Americans who visited Facebook grew 10 percent in the year that ended in October — down from 56 percent growth over the previous year, according to comScore, which tracks Internet traffic.
Ray Valdes, an analyst at Gartner, said this slowdown was not a make-or-break issue ahead of the company’s public offering, which could come in the spring. What does matter, he said, is Facebook’s ability to keep its millions of current users entertained and coming back.
“They’re likely more worried about the novelty factor wearing off,” Mr. Valdes said. “That’s a continual problem that they’re solving, and there are no permanent solutions.”
Erika Gable, 29, who lives in Brooklyn and does public relations for restaurants, never understood the appeal of Facebook in the first place. She says the daily chatter that flows through the site — updates about bad hair days and pictures from dinner — is virtual clutter she doesn’t need in her life.
“If I want to see my fifth cousin’s second baby, I’ll call them,” she said with a laugh.
Ms. Gable is not a Luddite. She has an iPhone and sometimes uses Twitter. But when it comes to creating a profile on the world’s biggest social network, her tolerance reaches its limits.
“I remember having MySpace for a bit and always feeling so weird about seeing other people’s stuff all the time,” she said. “I’m not into it.”
Will Brennan, a 26-year-old Brooklyn resident, said he had “heard too many horror stories” about the privacy pitfalls of Facebook. But he said friends are not always sympathetic to his anti-social-media stance.
“I get asked to sign up at least twice a month,” said Mr. Brennan. “I get harangued for ruining their plans by not being on Facebook.”
And whether there is haranguing involved or not, the rebels say their no-Facebook status tends to be a hot topic of conversation — much as a decision not to own a television might have been in an earlier media era.
“People always raise an eyebrow,” said Chris Munns, 29, who works as a systems administrator in New York. “But my life has gone on just fine without it. I’m not a shut-in. I have friends and quite an enjoyable life in Manhattan, so I can’t say it makes me feel like I’m missing out on life at all.”
But the peer pressure is only going to increase. Susan Etlinger, an analyst at the Altimeter Group, said society was adopting new behaviors and expectations in response to the near-ubiquity of Facebook and other social networks.
“People may start to ask the question that, if you aren’t on social channels, why not? Are you hiding something?” she said. “The norms are shifting.”
This kind of thinking cuts both ways for the Facebook holdouts. Mr. Munns said his dating life had benefited from his lack of an online dossier: “They haven’t had a chance to dig up your entire life on Facebook before you meet.”
But Ms. Gable said such background checks were the one thing she needed Facebook for.
“If I have a crush on a guy, I’ll make my friends look him up for me,” Ms. Gable said. “But that’s as far as it goes.”

4 Types of sex not to have this holiday


 

Holiday sex don'ts

The holidays are not the time to sabotage your sex life. You may be tempted to get a little extra cozy with whomever you happen to meet under the mistletoe, but be careful who you get too frisky with. Not everyone you take home with you (or go home with) will be worth it. Avoid post-sex regret this holiday season with our guide to four types of seasonal sex to avoid.

Ex sex

Getting back together with an ex for a holiday romp can be very tempting. It’s familiar, a bit naughty and it can feel good – while you’re doing it. Afterwards you’ll likely just end up angry at yourself for falling back into bed with someone you broke up with (or who broke up with you). Resist the urge to call up your ex or start flirting if you run into him at a party or bar. He may have turned on the charm to get you back into bed, but trust us; you’re better off being civil and just walking away.

Revenge sex

Guys can be hard to predict. One minute everything’s fine and the next minute they don’t return your calls. If you’ve recently been duped by a guy you thought you had something with, don’t deal with your frustration by sleeping with the next guy you see. Sleeping with one guy just because you’re angry with another one is never a good idea, especially around the holidays. You have too much going on (have you finished shopping yet?) to be plotting how you’re going to hurt the loser that stopped calling or who picked up where he left off with his ex. Good riddance!

Cocktail-inspired sex

While we’re not against a little holiday fun with someone you met at a party, be careful about how much you let your last cocktail dictate who you go home with. Too many seasonal one night stands can just cause stress and actually start to get boring. Take a second look at the guy who caught your eye after your fourth rum and eggnog to make sure it’s not just the rum that has him looking so good. Our advice: Be a little pickier and spend your time this holiday with someone that’s really worth your time.

Pity party sex

Being single around the holidays can feel like the worst thing in the world. When you’re not with someone, it seems like everyone around you is wrapped up in romantic relationships, sipping hot chocolate and kissing on sidewalks. It’s enough to drive even the most secure women to fits of self-pity. But having sex with someone just because you feel lonely isn’t always the best move. Rather than hit on a random guy in hopes of a hook-up, call a friend or spend extra time with your family. You’ll feel better if you remind yourself of all the love you do have in your life.

Ilo-Awela toll road


Ilo-Awela toll  road is popular for connecting many roads within Ota, Ogun state. It distributes traffic from Idiroko, Agbara Industrial Estate, Badagry and the international Benin Republic Seme border onto Lagos-Ibadan Expressway. More than Sango, the Ilo-Awela road is also plied every weekend by multitudes from Faith Tabernacle Church, otherwise known as Winners Chapel, as well as many other commuters. The fastest cut to linking Lagos from any of the aforementioned places is the Ilo-Awela road.

The choice of speed and the relevance of the organizations/institutions connected by this road causes it to bear huge traffic. If you ever had any activity at the Ota Local Government Secretariat, you have probably experienced this road, as it is situated immediately beside the Local Government. It suffices therefore to tag the road as an international carriage way and as such, should be one of the best tarred roads in Ogun State. Unfortunately, however, this road is the most neglected in history. 

Showing off double statuses, the road is a ‘red sea’ during wet season, due to the absence of a drainage system. And in the dry season, a cloud of rioting dust envelops road users. The worst time to experience this road is the period when the Winners Chapel is having its festive ‘Shiloh’ program. Although the church has played a plausible role in the history of patching the road with sand fills, the road possesses deep holes that are only inches away from one another. Cars are carefully driven on this road as bestirred dust ride stately with behind their motion. Road users inhale an estimated ‘De Rica’ quantity of sand per journey.  No known parametric technique can ascertain the mathematics of people weakening everyday by ingesting earth unconsciously while using this road. The history associated with the maintenance of this road is one fraught by deceptive administration of the former Governor of Ogun  State, Otunba Gbenga Daniel, whose inglorious pseudo name short-reads as ‘OGD’.

At first, OGD’s administration deceived people by demolishing houses along the road. Inhabitants took him seriously on the project that never was intended, never was initiated. The demolition of houses ended the project and the Winners Chapel took it up, filling pot holes with sands occasionally. OGD, throughout his eight years was reputed for putting sand on roads in Ogun State through his OGROMA (Ogun State Road Maintenance Agency) to create the impression that he would shortly commence a project.

The sands usually end up being carted away by erosions.


OGD’s political godfather, Obasanjo, is known to prefer sneaking through Joju express link way, a narrower but partially maintained access road channeling few vehicles from the Lagos-Abeokuta expressway to Idiroko road. Throughout his administration, Obasanjo flew on airplanes to his Ota farm, after he was once trapped for only two hours in a terrible traffic jam, which was already a daily experience for inhabitants of Sango, Idiroko, Iyana-Iyesi, Oju-Ore and the entire Ota region. Inhabitants of Ota Local Government area say Obasanjo is the ‘most useless President ever in Nigeria’ and that they will honor him with such chieftaincy title, if he would welcome a ceremony to its effect. Till the end of his eight years of seemingly democratic rule, no good road led to Ota, the host community of his Ota farm.

Recall also, that the first fly-over attempted at Sango Ota by the combined administration of Obasanjo and his late successor, Yar’Adua,  was half-constructed. On the same fly-over, two ‘illustrious’ sons of the land, former Speaker Dimeji Bankole and OGD, both of whom are currently having terrible corruption cases with the EFCC, fought each other to ‘commission’ the Sango ‘bridge’.

The duo were shameless, fighting to take credit for the construction of a fly-over that, even today, is still not showing any signal of completion in the near future.  Grapevine has it that Bishop Oyedepo’s church was invited to join efforts with the Government in reconstructing the Ilo-Awela road. The church Bishop, understanding that it will aid his business, subscribed to the idea, believing that it was a sincere agreement. The church is said to have paid its part of the agreement to the government, and OGD’s Government brought some equipment to demolish houses, leaving people with the impression that work had started. But OGD’s government never came back to the road and places cleared supposedly for the rehabilitation are already having new structures and business shops on them. On the account of Government’s insincerity, Winners Chapel has refused other invitations to partner with any government on road reconstruction. The church has reportedly asked to be allowed to do the proper tarring of the road without Government’s partnership, but the government of Ota local government and Ogun State under OGD refused him on the ground that the man may name the road after his church. The lack of attention of OGD’s government to this road and refusal to allow any individual touch it has extended the painful daily experiences of users of the road.

As a result, the Ilo-Awela road has always attracted curses on OGD but accolades on the Winners Chapel. Everyday, users protect their nostrils from inhaling dust and commend Winners Chapel for the sand fills, while cursing OGD for putting them in a deep mess. Inhabitants and commuters describe Gbenga Daniel’s entire life in antonomasia with the the Ilo-Awela road. “See Gbenga’s life spoiling like this”, some of them will say.
OGD is reputed for telling lies, engaging in corrupt practices and using thugs to achieve his selfish aims. As people who backed his corrupt lifestyle during his administration now turn away from him and castigate him, it signals they were either under Stockholm syndrome spell or only wanted their share of his stolen wealth.

Early Morning Bomb Blast Hits Maiduguri


The restive northeastern city of Maiduguri experienced yet another bomb explosion this morning. A bomb exploded on Ali Ngoshe street in the London-Chiki area of the city.

A source told Saharareporters that there are no known casualties so far.
However, soldiers in the Joint Task Force reportedly started shooting indiscriminately after the blast. Three kids were reportedly killed by revenge attacks by soldiers in the area. Saharareporters could not independently verify the claims as at the time of filing this report.

Jonathan's Budget Presentation: National Assembly In A Lockdown


Workers at Nigeria's National Assembly today got more than what they bargain for as the combined team of  security agencies subjected them to rigorous screening as Jonathan submits 2012 budget.

A team of heavily armed anti riot mobile policemen and plain cloth operatives were stationed at the main gate. Also a mobile scanning vehicle was stationed at the main gate scanning all vehicles coming in and out of the National Assembly complex.  At the second gate where a dusty car park was located staff were asked to line up in a single file for check.

Soldiers were also stationed beside the gate brandishing with guns . But the entrance of the white House (main building) was a different ball game as  staff were asked to follow the Senate or House of Rep. wing entrance after a long walk from the main gate.                 


There was confusion at the lobby as all the doors were shut forcing people to follow underground tunnel.

All the offices such as banks at the basement were forced to a lock down.                          
Members of the Strike Force, snippers and police detectives took over the entire building for the fear of attack by Boko Haram sect members who listed President Goodluck Jonathan as one of their main targets.                                          

National Assembly workers blamed the security for overzealousness in discharging their duty.
"These security men are not civilized in the manner they are conducting this check. We are not saying they should not search but the way and manner they are doing it is an eye service."  A staff said.                                             

President Jonathan later presented the budget proposal by noon before the joint session of both upper and lower House of the National Assembly.

Fuel Subsidy: NEC Got It Wrong-CNPP

The National Economic Council {NEC} met yesterday and endorsed the removal of fuel subsidy, with scant regards to the monumental corruption unveiled at the Senate Joint Committee on Fuel Subsidy Management, nor the attendant spiral inflation on goods and services which the removal will surely engender and hence the unimaginable pains the removal will visit on the citizenry. It is our considered view that NEC got it wrong.

Conference of Nigerian Political Parties {CNPP} therefore is alarmed that the NEC had at the expense of the 99% of Nigerians paged with the train of desperation, insensitivity and sheer deafness to public will, which herald and govern President Goodluck Jonathan’s inordinate resolve to remove fuel subsidy. It is very dangerous and portends danger to our fledgling democracy.

We are pained over the paradox of their submission, speaking on behalf of NEC, the governor of Anambra State, Peter Obi said, ‘it is a case of inevitability, considering the level of present level of debt portfolio of the Federal Government and the continuous funding of it’.

It is painful and awful that NEC did not query such huge subsidy debt which rises on daily basis and we are yet to locate in their statement, where they called for the prosecution of those who made the NNPC a cash cow, who over the years sell 65, 000 barrels of crude oil per day for themselves; hence could not account for over $10 billion.

We disagree with the Managing Director of NNPC when he said that, ‘subsidy by implication is very easy to abuse because you are carrying the risk on behalf of others and as a policy. It is not good for the economy’.


 President Jonathan instead of waging the war against the cabal who loot our Oil resources, personalize the NNPC, and pauperize the citizenry is deploying all manner of uncanny lobbying, and waste of public funds on advertisement to force the removal.

We to assure Nigerians that we will also deploy all legal means to resist the removal, until the cabal who benefit from the monumental corruption which made the subsidy to rise in 2006 from N261bn, 2007-N279billion, 2008-N648billion, 2009-N422billion, 2010-N622billion to 2011-N1.4trillion are prosecuted.

Finally, if President Jonathan lacks the political will to recover and restore sanity in the NNPC; he should resign and save our democracy. Is it not shameful that we are importing refined fuel from Cote d’ivoire?

Osita Okechukwu
National Publicity Secretary
CNPP

Wole Soyinka Centre Honours Seven Outstanding Journalists

The award presentation ceremony of the Sixth Wole Soyinka Award for Investigative Reporting which held on Friday 9 December 2011 at the NECA Hall Lagos saw the honouring of seven journalists for the merits awards and two individuals for the honorary awards.

In the photo category, Adeparusi Oluyinka of National Mirror Newspaper took the lead in the photo category with his picture captioned – Corporal Punishment lingers, while Sodiq Adelakun a photojournalist with The Punch Newspaper was adjudged runner-up for his picture titled – Electricity at all cost.

Musikilu Mojeed of 234next.com took the prize in the online category with his story – The Philip Emeagwali Series: The lies of Philip Emeagwali. The runner-up in the category was Idris Akinbajo also of 234next.com with his piece titled – Officials plunder nomadic education fund.

The Climate Change category which had no winner due according to the judges to the poor quality of works submitted had a runner-up, Adejunwon Soyinka of Tell Magazine who got the prize with his entry; Sitting on gunpowder.

A six-part series team entry – The Oil Minister Series/Diezani Chronicle written by Elor Nkereuwem, Peter Nkanga, Idris Akinbajo and Musikilu Mojeed of Next Newspapers took the lead in the print category. The runner-up position in this category went to Nicholas Ibekwe of the same media, for his story – The Pfizer Series.

Mr. Idris Akinbajo was announced the WSCIJ-Nigerian Investigative Journalist of the year 2011 for his overall outstanding performance.

Following the Centre’s tradition of best standards, the judges found no work suitable for an award in the radio, television, local government and gender issues categories.

The honorary award of Lifetime Award for Journalistic Excellence was presented to Mr. Lanre Idowu, Managing Director; Diamond Publications while its twin the Anti-corruption Defender award was received on behalf of Justice Kayode Eso by his son Arc. Olumide Eso.

In her opening speech the Centre Coordinator, Motunrayo Alaka lamented the crises in the Nigerian media and called on all especially credible Nigerians with means to join the programme sponsors the Netherlands Embassy in supporting  the Centre financially and otherwise  to enable it maximise its potentials.

Although this year’s winners are unlikely to enjoy the opportunity of a sponsored international training abroad which started with the 2010 winners, they went home with the award plaque, a cash prize of N100, 000, a laptop and six-month free internet access.
Guests at the event included the Board Chair of the Centre, Professor Ropo Sekoni, the Chairperson of the Judges’ board Ms. Ayo Obe, President Nigerian Guild of Editors, Mr. Gbenga Adefaye, Royal Netherlands Ambassador Mr. Bert Ronhaar, the British Deputy High Commissioner, Mr. Peter West, foremost photographer, Mr Tam Fiofori to mention but a few.

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ABOUT THE AWARD

The Wole Soyinka Investigative Reporting Award was first held in October, 2005 to encourage the development of an investigative tradition in the Nigerian media through rigorous scrutiny of human rights violations, regulatory failures and corruption in the public and corporate departments of the nation’s life and has so far rewarded twenty-four (24) finalists out of which thirteen (13) are the ‘Soyinka Laureates’ and eleven (11) are runners-up.

The WOLE SOYINKA CENTRE FOR INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM (WSCIJ) is a registered not-for-profit, non-governmental organisation with social justice programmes aimed at exposing corruption, regulatory failures and human rights abuses with the tool of investigative journalism. Initially known as the Wole Soyinka Investigative Reporting Award (WSIRA), the change in name became necessary in 2008 to reflect the intentions of the coordinators to embrace a more robust line of activities that have greater capacity for engendering the right values of investigative journalism in the Nigerian media. The centre is named after Professor Wole Soyinka in recognition of his life-long work in support of the freedom of expression, freedom to hold opinion, and freedom to impart them without fear or favour and without hindrance or interference.

Signed:

Motunrayo Alaka
Centre Coordinator

Statement by the Netherlands Ambassador to Nigeria on the occasion of the Sixth Wole Soyinka Award for Investigative Reporting, December 9th 2011, Lagos

Professor Wole Soyinka
Chairman of the Board of Judges
Ladies and Gentlemen and all protocol duly observed,

It is a great pleasure and honor for me to present this speech on the occasion of the 6th edition of the Wole Soyinka Award for Investigative Reporting.

Since 2007, the government of the Kingdom of the Netherlands has co-financed this event through a special Human Rights Fund. Through this Fund, the Netherlands Embassy in Abuja supports projects promoting Human Rights and activities fostering good governance. The relationship between the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism and the Netherlands Embassy in Abuja over the last years stems from the mutual interest in promoting critical and investigative journalism in Nigeria.

Why do we do that?

We do so because independent, well-researched and balanced journalism is essential to educate people on the status quo of a country and its profile within the world community. We also need investigative reporting to create and maintain a sound environment of public accountability. This goes for the Netherlands as well as Nigeria and it applies to bilateral relations, as good as these may be like in the case of Nigeria and The Netherlands, and to international relations and achieving peace and stability. History has proven that investigative journalism is vital in exposing human rights abuses, corruption and regulatory failures.
And by working together with the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism we also acknowledge the work of Professor Wole Soyinka, who is praised all over the world for his fight for the freedom of expression and not at least his support for investigative journalism.

Allow me now to say a few words about our Human Rights policy. This is appropriate because the Awards for Investigative Reporting are designed to honor the works of Nigerian reporters, which promote not only transparency and accountability but also respect for human rights. The mere fact that these Awards are being handed out tonight, means that a lot of good work in being done in the field of Investigative Reporting.
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Promoting human rights is one of the core aims of Dutch foreign policy. Human rights are commonly understood as inalienable fundamental rights to which a person is inherently entitled, simply because he or she is a human being. International human rights law stresses that all human rights are universal, indivisible and interrelated. They are the guiding principles for a society in which people are free to be different, but equal before the law. They oblige governments to protect their citizens from violence and ensure that all people enjoy equal opportunities and treatment. The Netherlands gives special attention to promoting the freedom of expression and of religion and belief. Furthermore, it actively fights two particular forms of discrimination: discrimination on the grounds of gender identity and discrimination based on sexual orientation, such as homosexuality. With reference to sexual discrimination, we regard the current developments in Nigeria as especially worrisome for the position of human rights in this country.

Only last Tuesday, the Nigerian Senate has passed the Same Sex Marriage Bill, which further criminalizes not only same sex marriage and the solemnization thereof. Besides raising the penalties for same sex marriage, this bill also criminalizes publicly displaying affection of a homosexual nature and establishing or supporting gay-associations. The Bill passed its first reading at the House of Representatives last Wednesday.

If I could, I would have added right now an extra award category for the best investigative journalism around the proposed “Same Sex Marriage Bill”. For the simple reason that I have missed true investigative reporting around this lawmaking process and the draft text. I have missed journalism that goes beyond the ideological debate on whether homosexuality is good or bad, natural or unnatural, whether it is a Western concept or not. I have missed reporting that actually looks into the text of the Bill as it stands and has critically investigated the legal aspects of it. How does this law relate to international human right treaties as well as your own Constitution? What could be the implications of the broad interpretations of the wording chosen for Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender persons as well as for the public at large? What is the risk of increased human rights violations based on this Bill?

For example: the wide definition of "same sex marriages" and the criminalization of persons who witness a "same sex marriage" is very, very far-reaching. Besides a further criminalization of same-sex relations between consenting adults, it increases the risk of false criminalization of persons of the same sex who simply live together. It may as well criminalize their families, friends and/or neighbors, who may find themselves being easily accused of being "witnesses" of so-called same sex marriages.

Furthermore, the Bill punishes any person who participates in or supports the registration, operation and sustenance of gay societies, organizations, processions or meetings. Such provisions can and will seriously affect the activities of civil society organizations and human rights defenders. How does this relate to Nigeria's international obligations to respect the freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly?  I might be wrong, but I have not seen substantial comments on such issues and questions in the Nigerian press till today.

Nigeria is a respected party to many international human rights treaties. The principle that all individuals –thus including Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender people- have a universal right to privacy and non-discrimination, is enshrined in many of these treaties. For example in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Art. 7); the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (Art. 26); the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (Art. 2.2), and; the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights (Art. 2).
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The media as a critical and objective body, and thus you all, have a responsibility to investigate any proposed Bill in the light of its legal implications, and its implications for the protection of human rights in Nigeria. Journalists are also there to thoroughly investigate claims of human rights abuses and other vices in society like corruption, mismanagement and regulatory failures. Journalists and reporters serve as whistleblowers to the public. They are supposed to hold governments accountable if they deny certain groups access to fundamental human rights, and put the exercise of power under public scrutiny.
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Another example of where more investigative reporting is needed is the situation in the Niger Delta.

One of the most obvious problems in the Niger Delta is the fact that the distribution of costs and benefits of the oil production is extremely skewed. In the midst of enormous wealth generated for the nation and the world at large by the exploitation of oil and gas reserves, extreme poverty and environmental hazards exists among the local communities.
The media, you, play an important role in bringing the facts and the news behind the news to the public. Transparency is the first step towards accountability. But you also have a role to play in bringing about a constructive dialogue about solutions. In August this year, the United Nations Environment Programme presented President Jonathan a report on their environmental assessment of Ogoniland. It is a well-balanced solution oriented report based on in-depth independent scientific research by the UN and makes a large number of specific recommendations for the way forward. It discusses both the role of the oil industry, as well as the role of the Nigerian government. But the report is also addressing sensitive issues such as lack of good governance, law and order and the prevalence of illegal oil bunkering and criminal sabotage. This quite balanced report is the first report of this kind in Nigeria, and yet it has received little all-inclusive attention in the Nigerian media. What have been the reactions of the different stakeholders including the government to the report? How they go about their specific responsibilities? What specific actions have they taken to follow up on the recommendations made? Are they actually doing what they have said to be going to do? How are the governmental roles of regulator and supervisor been segregated in Nigeria to ensure all necessary checks and balances and the implementation of world-wide accepted best practices and standards on oil spill management and gas flaring in the system?
I challenge you all to critically follow how the issues in the Niger Delta will be brought to a solution.
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You all play an important role in exposing corruption, mismanagement and human rights abuses. It is necessary to make such issues known to the general public in Nigeria and in the world at large, in order to enable people to hold their superiors and government accountable. Furthermore, an important part of investigative journalism is providing arguments for consensus and contributing to a constructive dialogue and sustainable solutions.

In other words, ladies and gentlemen, investigative journalism and investigative reporting is not only a plight but also a right


Thus, I urge you, as we are standing here today on International Anti-Corruption Day and on the eve of International Human Rights Day, to continue to make an effort to uphold and further promote the culture of investigative reporting in Nigeria.
For as Kofi Annan, former UN Secretary Genera,l once said: “Press freedom is a cornerstone of human rights. It holds governments responsible for their acts, and serves a warning to all that impunity is an illusion.”

Finally, please allow me to congratulate the prizewinners of this evening in advance. I wish them the inspiration and the courage to continue their very important work over the years to come.

I thank you for listening and let us hope, accepting the challenges before you.



Remarks by Ayo Obe on behalf of the Judges
9th December 2011

Your Excellencies, Gentlemen of the Press, Distinguished Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen, it is indeed an honour and a privilege to participate in judging the entries for the 2011 Wole Soyinka Award for Investigative Journalism.

Before I make some brief remarks, I would like to introduce the other judges who, together with me, considered the entries for this year's awards. Would those of you who are present please rise for recognition as their names are called.

Mr. Olumuyiwa Adekeye is the CEO of Barnes and Molby, a public relations firm. He was formerly an Editor with The News magazine.

Mr. Abiodun Olowu is a Lecturer with the Journalism department at the FRCN Training School in Lagos.

Mr. Gbile Oshadipe is the Editor of Scrutiny and a lecturer at the Nigeria Institute of Journalism. He is a former Editor of Lagos Life; former photo editor at NEXT Newspaper.

Ms. Kadaria Ahmed is the former Editor-in-chief with NEXT Newspaper, former producer with the Africa Service of the BBC - and many of you will also have seen how she anchored the Presidential debates on NN 24 during the general election campaign this year.

Mr. Gbolahan Olalemi is a broadcaster, and the Deputy CEO at TV Continental.

Mr. Boye Ola, former features editor at National Concord, is presently Head of Photojournalism at the Nigeria Institute of Journalism.

Lastly myself, a legal practitioner, formerly a columnist with NEXT, presently a weekly contributor to The Guardian.

The quality of work submitted varied as it does in every year, and while the panel of judges did not award prizes in every category, we have no doubt that the winning entries can stand with the best anywhere in the world. That said, of the eight categories in which entries were invited, namely Print, Radio, Television, Photography, Online, Climate Change, Local Government and Gender Issues, we were able to award top prizes in only three, while in four categories, we were unable to make any award at all.

You will understand that our decision to only make awards where we feel that the necessary standard has been met is vital if the quality and prestige of the awards is to be maintained. At the same time, we do not want to discourage journalists from carrying out investigation where it is warranted, and from submitting the results of their investigations for awards such as this where appropriate. It is with this in mind that we made some observations.

The first is that we should all remind ourselves that there is a difference between a feature and an investigative story. So the main question those submitting entries should ask themselves is not simply: Am I drawing attention to something that people didn't know about, or which deserves more publicity, but: Is this story exposing what someone is trying to hide? It is true that journalists should continue to ask themselves the five questions: Who? What? When? How? and Why? But for an entry in the investigative category, they must also ask in the context of concealment and exposure.

Another point we would like to stress is that an investigative journalist - or I suppose any journalist for that matter - is not supposed to be just a lone ranger. Yes, it will be the person whose name appears on the by-line who will get the accolades; but he or she is part of a team. In this context, editors need to be up and doing. Their role must be more than simply saying 'yes' or 'no' when a story is presented. The point of having experienced people in the newsroom is to scrutinise, encourage and advise. They should act as mentors, giving guidance and directions where necessary. We found that several of the entries were of stories that seemed to stop half way: stories that would have been greatly improved if an editor had been on hand to say - go back, or check out this angle. It is part of the job of such editors or news managers to identify where some follow-up is needed. In this context I should like to emphasize that because of the role that she played in some of the stories that were submitted, one of the judges, Kadaria Ahmed, recused herself and did not participate in the marking or decisions on entries submitted by reporters who had worked under her leadership at Next.

Many of the stories seemed content to report: "We tried to get an interview, but were asked to come in person" or "but Mr. X did not answer his telephone". In one case a journalist was asked to return with a letter of introduction, but instead of doing so, reported the fact of the request as though this was ipso facto evidence of having something to hide! But I am sure that we can all imagine - in a world where the journalism profession is as or more susceptible to imposters and impersonators - why a busy person might want confirmation about the identity of the person to whom they are being asked to give an interview.

Definitely we expect that an award winner should be someone who used all the tools available to them - the Freedom of Information Act is certainly not only for journalists, but it is definitely for them, and it is a tool that they should use. We also want to see - not cynicism - but a degree of scepticism: not simply accepting everything at face value, and certainly much less credulousness. When stories are about matters that appear to fly in the face of the natural order, journalists should not refrain from asking pertinent questions just because some divine 'explanation' is offered. We had two entries which covered a woman who claimed to have given birth to a series of babies who had not undergone the expected 9 months gestation period. Both of these entries are worthy of mention, but that the reporter has doubts ought to be apparent right from the first report; unfortunately, it is generally the rule that women who cite the Biblical Sarah as a precedent are probably up to no good!

In some fields, particularly the broadcast media, we had only one entry, and we hope that this will be improved next year. The judges intend to make recommendations to the Centre about how photojournalism entries should be judged, as we are of the view that the same criteria cannot apply to picture entries as to other types of entries. However, the award is not just about nice or artistic pictures, and entries must demonstrate an investigative quality. We would also urge photojournalists to improve their editing.

We were impressed this year with the quality of the entries in the online category, and also took special note of Emeka Imezie whom we commend for taking his entry online under the by-line "Jaja King" when his own employers felt unable or unwilling to publish the results of his investigations.

When we met for the awards ceremony last year, we were in the middle of the run up to the 2011 general elections. The judges expressed their disappointment that there were so few political stories at such a time. With the elections behind us, we hardly had many more - certainly there were some, but if we consider the scrutiny to which candidates in the United States who want to become the Republican Party candidate for the presidency are being exposed - we really had not much in comparison. Is it that the political investigative story can only happen when it is planted by political opponents? Mention has already been made of a journalist who had to go online with a story that his employers deemed too hot to handle. Where is the independent investigation of stories without regard to whose political ox might be gored?

Is it that we, the consuming public, are simply not interested in such stories, or that we write them off as being planted to do political damage? Indeed, what do we, the public really want? We may all be aware of the phone-hacking scandal in the United Kingdom, where reporters have been sent to prison for hacking into the private voice mails of targets of their investigations, but which is now revealed to be widespread in the British media and indeed, led to the closure of one of the chief exponents, the News of the World.

For many of us who have no real experience of the British tabloid press, the phone hacking scandal in the United Kingdom seems as baffling or as it is astonishing because of the sheer banal irrelevance of many of the phone hacking targets. If I have enjoyed the books of, say J.K. Rowling - author of the Harry Potter books - it might be interesting to know this or that about her, but it is hardly essential to my enjoyment of her books, and certainly not to the extent that I would consider stalking her children inside their schools to be necessary or even acceptable at all. Why?

Yet it is we, the public, upon whose shoulders the blame for much of the obsessive stalking of personalities in the news to get a bit of celebrity tittle-tattle, is placed. It is, we are told, what the public wants. But here at home, this is a year in which we have seen one of the media houses which submitted several high quality entries discontinue its print edition. Does that mean that hard hitting exposes are not what the public wants?

We must also remember that undercover methods used by journalists abroad have exposed corruption in sport and bias on the part of those who are supposed to be taking independent decisions. Here at home, undercover methods have also exposed corruption in high places, although we also had one reporter whose story included the line: "I posed as an undercover reporter". Er no!

Yet - grammatical blunders aside - we should encourage such methods as a means of uncovering the truth. One of the reasons why the former Head of State, late Murtala Mohammed, was so popular in the short time before he was assassinated, was because unlike leaders who are shielded from the lives of ordinary people, he often went 'undercover' to see what they suffered at the hands of oppressive public officials. Unfortunately, the way that Murtala's own life ended gave reason for those who prefer to stay behind their security barrier to continue to do so, and in these days of terrorism and assassination, it is difficult to ask our rulers to emerge. But that gap is what the journalist - particularly the investigative journalist - ought to fill.

Nigeria In A State Of War: How Over 54,000 Nigerians Died Outside The Law Since 1999



Policeman collecting bribe from drivers-Photo credit: InterSociety
Nigeria’s human rights problems during the year (2009) included the abridgement of citizens’ right to change their government; politically motivated and extra-judicial killings by security forces, including summary executions, vigilante killings, abductions by militant groups, torture, rape and other cruel, in-human or degrading treatment of prisoners, detainees and criminal suspects; hash and life-threatening detention center conditions; arbitrary arrest and prolonged pretrial detention, denial of fair public trial, executive influence on judiciary and judicial corruption; infringement of privacy rights; restrictions on freedom of speech, press, assembly, religion, and movement; official corruption and impunity; domestic violence and discrimination against women; the killing of women suspected of witchcraft; female genital mutilation; child abuse and child sexual exploitation; societal violence; ethnic regional and religious discrimination, trafficking in persons for the purpose of prostitution and forced labour; discrimination against persons with disabilities; discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity; and child labour - The US Department of State Report on the State of Human Rights in Nigeria in  2009.
Introduction:
On 10th December 2010, the leadership of Intersociety marked the 62nd Anniversary of the UDHR by choosing dictatorship, which ravages Africa and world public governance, under civil and political rights, as our topic. We inquired and exposed most of the Africa’s and world’s dictators or totalitarian rulers and asked them to quit or they would be booted out of office. And on 17th December 2010, the Mohammed Buazizi inspired “Jasmine Revolution” started in Tunisia and on 14th January 2011, former President Azedine Ben-Ali of Tunisia was forced out of office, followed by former President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and late President Mouamar Gaddafi of Libya. They had been in office since 1979, 1981 and 1969 respectively. We heartily congratulate the great Arab people for this rare feat and reiterate our earlier call on the remaining dictators in the Central, Southern, West, East and North Africa as well as Asia including Middle East and former Soviet Union to quit before it is too late for them. The rights of the peoples of Tunisia, Egypt and Libya to choose and change their political leaders must be upheld at all times.
Today, we are zeroing down on Nigeria against the backdrop of rising unlawful killings since 1999. Taking a critical look at the above - summarized 2009 US Department of State Report on Nigeria’s Human Rights Records.
It is very clear that nothing in that Report has changed since 2009. Instead, bombing, arson and mass-murder associated with Boko-Haram terror as well as ethno-religious or sectarian violence has swollen the long list of the Nigeria’s rights abuses. In other words, all the rights so mentioned are still observed in grievous breach. In the area of the “citizens’ right to choose and change their leaders”, for instance, its violation appears unabated especially in the Local Government Council (LGC) administration, which constitutionally is supposed to be democratic at all times. The Government of Anambra State under Mr. Peter Obi appears to be the “first degree” violator of this important right following its refusal to conduct polls into its 21 LGAs, which have not had democratic structure since 2002 when the last democratic structure elapsed. States that have conducted “very glaringly” shambled LGA polls are the “second-degree” violators, while Lagos State, which recently conducted “glaringly” shambled polls into its LGA System, is the “third-degree” violator. The Constitution of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), which failed in its Section 7 to clearly stipulate the autonomy of the LGA system in Nigeria, is the “grand violator” of this vital political right. At this stage, we renew our call on the Government of Anambra State to ensure that the State Independent Electoral Commission conducts the LGA polls into the 21 LGAs.
In this report, our sources of information are derived from credible open sources such as the United States Department of State, the Human Rights Watch (USA), the Amnesty International (UK), AFP (France), Associated Press, Reuters, Bloomberg, CNN (USA), Aljezeera (UAE), BBC (UK), authoritative local and international online media, Nigeria’s print, audio and audio-visual media, the Department of Criminology & Security Studies of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN), NOPRIN (Nigeria), ERA (Nigeria), OSIWA, Black’s Law Dictionary -2009 edition, Uche-Wisdom Durueke Law Firm, Owerri-Imo State, eye-witness accounts, on-the-spot findings and the Intersociety’s library, as well as de-classified security reports from the State Security Service, the Police and the Army. We are immensely grateful to them.
     How Over 54,000 Unlawful Deaths Were Recorded Since 1999:
According to recognized war dictionaries, war is simply an inter-state or intra-state violent conflict that claims over 999 lives. With the foregoing definition, Nigeria is truly in a state of war against herself and her over 150 million population (intra-state war) with over 54,000 citizens killed since 1999 outside the law. This type of war clearly goes beyond norms guiding wars, contained in the international laws of war or the Geneva Conventions. These shilling killings can best be described as “genocide” and “crimes against humanity”. On 8th April 2003, the leadership under this writer in then Anambra State CLO estimated that over 18,000 Nigerians died outside the law since 1999. On 5th August 2009, we in the Intersociety estimated that over 30,000 unlawful deaths took place in Nigeria since 1999, a period of ten years, and on 17th March 2010, we reviewed it and concluded that the number might have increased to 34,000 as a result of the further rise in the killings. Our latest findings, however, indicate that these figures may have been under-calculated, hence the latest figure in the neighborhood of 54,000 illegal deaths.

Unconstitutionality Of The Killings:
 There are over 54,000 unlawful deaths in Nigeria since 1999 had arisen from ethno-religious and inter-communal/intra-communal conflicts, vigilante killings, politically and other socially motivated assassinations, abduction-for-death killings, election-related killings, extra-judicial killings (those killed outside the law by security forces), and involuntary disappearances (those abducted and presumed killed usually by State and non-State actors). These killings are unknown to Section 33 of the Constitution of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended) and other sub-regional, regional and international rights instruments recognized by the Federal Republic of Nigeria such as the African Charter on Human & Peoples’ Rights of 1981. The illegal deaths are also a clear sign of failure of the State to ensure the security and welfare of the citizens of Nigeria in accordance with Section 14(2) of the Constitution of Nigeria 1999 (as amended) and an inglorious attempt by the State to invoke as a policy the “Malthusian theory of population control”, which chooses mass-death as a form of population control.
General Data:
Vigilante Killings:
In the vigilante killings, the periods of 1998 and 2002 were the bloodiest era for the Nigerian States of Anambra and Abia, followed by Lagos, Imo, Ebonyi and Enugu. Apart from mass-murder openly recorded in those States, their Houses of Assembly, particularly those of the five Eastern States passed legislations, indirectly sanctioning summary executions, abductions, false imprisonment, rape, torture, forceful possession of properties, etc through “trial by ordeal”, which is considered repugnant to Nigeria’s written criminal laws, equity and good conscience, all in the name of “fighting crime”.
Within this period, married women were forcefully taken away from their husbands, abducted, raped and murdered; under-age female students abducted, held illegally and raped for days (at the Bakassi White House in Onitsha Main Market); 32 innocent traders abducted, locked up in a small illegal cell and allowed to suffocate to death (i.e. the “Orie Ohabiam 32” of August 2005 in Abia State) to mention but a few.
Over 5,000 summary executions or killings were recorded in Anambra State (1998 - 2002) in the hands of Onitsha Traders Vigilante Group (OTA) (1998 - 2000) and those of Anambra State Vigilante Services a.k.a Bakassi Boys (2000 - 2002). In Abia State, 3,500 - 4,000 killings were believed to have taken place (1998 - 2002) in the hands of the Abia State Vigilante Service (also called Bakassi). In Lagos State, the O’odua People Congress Vigilante Group (OPC), backed by then Government of Lagos State is believed to have carried out over 1,500 criminal executions. Imo State is believed to have recorded over 1,500 unlawful killings courtesy of the State Vigilante Service between 2001 and 2002.
In Ebonyi and Enugu States, which embraced the monstrous vigilante security methods in 2001, dozens of unlawful executions were recorded before the Federal Government dislodged them in the Southeast in September 2002.
However, they re-grouped later with a slight pattern change as seen today. In all, over 11,500 criminal executions or killings appeared to have taken place as a result of vigilante killings in the States mentioned between 1998 and 2002. Though the vigilante killings, particularly in Anambra and Abia States have continued since 2002, but the rate and pattern with which they kill have reduced.
Presently, there are more than 1.000 armed vigilante groups operating in Anambra and Abia States respectively that is to say that over 2,000 armed vigilante groups may exist in the two States.  Even though they are code-named “community-based vigilante groups”, yet, they are still controlled by various States’ government, which sometimes use them for political purpose. As it is now, secret killings have replaced open killings and body dismemberment methods hitherto applied by the murderous outfits. Today, Abia State appears to record the highest number of unlawful deaths arising from vigilante killings since 2002, which is in the neighborhood of 2,000 including the “Orie-Ohabiam 32” of August 2005, followed by Anambra with over 1,000 and Imo with about 500.
Victims Of Vigilante Killings:
Some of those killed or tortured by the Anambra State and the Abia State Bakassi Boys as well as the Onitsha Traders’ Vigilante Group (OTA) during the periods under review include: Citizens Chukwudozie Nwachukwu (29) and Okechukwu Maduekwe (27) (killed on 10th January 2000 by Abia Bakassi Boys), Chuma Onwuazo and Bonaventure Egbuawa (murdered in April and July 2000 by OTA Vigilante Group backed by then Government of Anambra State), Hon. Ifeanyi Ibegbu (then member of the Anambra State House of Assembly (abducted and tortured by Bakassi Boys on 21st August 2000), Edward Okeke (murdered in Anambra State on 9th November 2000 by AVS or Bakassi Boys), Ezeodimegwu Okonkwo (murdered in Anambra State by AVS on 18th February 2001), Ikechukwu Nwagboo (murdered in Anambra State by AVS in February 2001), Rockfeller Okeke (murdered in Anambra State by AVS in his residence on 23rd April 2001), Felix Ikebude (murdered in Anambra State by AVS in December 2001), Sunday Uzokwe (murdered in Anambra State by AVS on 30th  January 2002), Mrs. Ngozi Oranu (raped and murdered in Anambra State by AVS at the Bakassi White House, Onitsha Main Market in November 2001), Barnabas Igwe (then Onitsha Bar Association Chairman murdered in Anambra State by AVS in the evening of 1st September 2002), and Barr (Mrs.) Amaka Blessing Igwe “A. B. Girl” (wife of Barrister Barnabas Igwe murdered by AVS alongside her husband on 1st September 2002).
There were also cases of thousands of torture and rape involving the murderous groups mentioned. For instance, in 2002, 17-year-old Miss Chinenye Okoye, who was an SS2 Student of the Mathamavis Secondary School, Umuoji, Anambra State was abducted by Bakassi Boys, taken to the Bakassi White House in Onitsha Main Market and raped for 60 days (Source: The News Magazine, 21st October 2002, page 21).
In August 2005, Citizens Uchenna Elewa (23), Jonathan Ukaegbu (39), Onyebuchi Nwamuo (22), Uzoma Njoku Nwangwa (41), Onyema Ibeneme( 27), Goodluck Sunday (26), Uzoma Onyebuenyi (40) and 25 others were forced to suffocate to death by the Abia Bakassi Boys in Orie-Ohabiam near Aba in Abia State (Source: Human Rights & Justice Foundation, Aba, Abia State).
In all, it may be correct to say that vigilante killings in Nigeria since 1999 accounted for over 15,000 unlawful deaths. Those tortured and extorted within the periods are also in tens of thousands. It should be noted that many States and communities have also formed armed vigilante outfits, which sometimes engage in torture and summary executions expressly through “trial by ordeal” crime methods, and in all these, most, if not all those responsible for the illegal killings, torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatments are neither investigated nor prosecuted, making them to be on the prowl ad infinitum thereby encouraging culture of impunity.
Deaths Arising From Police Crackdown On MASSOB Activists:
Those who died since 1999 as a result of several crack downs by the Nigerian security forces on innocent members of MASSOB - Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra other than some of them, the break-away members, who turned militants and took up arms against their fellow citizens, are believed to be in the neighborhood of 2,000. The bloodiest crackdown is believed to have resulted from several invasions of the Okwe headquarters of MASSOB in Imo State by the Nigerian security forces led by the Nigeria Police Force and the 2006 Federal Government’s military action in Onitsha, Anambra State against the break-away militant MASSOB activists, which led to the death of scores of uninvolved MASSOB activists as well as innocent civilians. For instance, in the second week of July 2006, 14 people including a Pastor were killed in Iyiowa - Odekpe Layout in Ogbaru LGA, Anambra State by a combined team of soldiers and police personnel. They were accused of belonging to MASSOB, which is demanding for a separate territorial enclave for the people of the Southeast Nigeria called Ndigbo through non-violence means.
Deaths Arising From Inter-Communal & Intra-Communal Conflicts:
In the Ezza-Ezillo inter-communal conflicts of 2008 and 2010, over 300 unlawful deaths were recorded owing to the failure of the State to effectively manage the conflict. Other inter-communal and intra-communal conflicts in Nigeria since 1999 such as Ife - Modakeke inter-communal conflict in 1999/2001, Hausa/Yoruba Shagamu and Igbo/Yoruba (Alaba Market & Lagos Wharf) clashes in 2001, Umuleri - Aguleri inter-communal conflict in 1999/2000, Owerre - Ezukala/Ogbunka inter-communal conflict in 2011, Umunya intra-communal conflict, Akpu - Ajali inter-communal conflict, Fulani - host farmers’ clashes in Nasarrawa LGA, Nasarrawa State, which killed at least 50 people, etc have resulted in over 1,000  unlawful deaths or summary executions since 1999.
Deaths Arising From Military Invasion Of The Nigerian Hostile Communities:
It is estimated that over 4,000 civilians were killed outside the law by the Nigerian security forces led by the Nigerian Army during the military invasion of the Odi community in Bayelsa State in 1999, Zaki-Biam community in Benue State in October 2001 (over the abduction and killing of 19 soldiers), Gbaramatu community in Delta State in May 2009 and other troubled areas in the South-south or Niger Delta region between 1999 and 2009. In the Odi massacre, for instance, over 2,000 innocent citizens were massacred. The leadership of the Environmental Rights Action (ERA) believes that over 2,500 civilians were massacred; while in the Zaki-Biam community’s military invasion, the Human Rights Watch stated that about 200 civilians were killed by the Nigerian Army in revenge for the abduction and killing of 19 soldiers.
Ethno-Religious/Sectarian Killings:
Judging from several media and rights groups’ reports, over 16,000 Nigerian civilians might have been killed in ethno-religious/sectarian violence in Nigeria since 1999. As of March 2010, it may be correct to say that over 13,500 civilians particularly women, children and the elderly were killed. Over 5,000 civilians may have died in Jos crises since 2001. In the 2000, 2001 and 2002 Kano and Kaduna ethno-religious violence alone, over 3,000 deaths were reportedly recorded. In the ethno-religious violence that hit Jos in September 2001, at least, 1,000 people lost their lives (Human Rights Watch). In May 2004, over 700 lives were lost in Yelwa, Plateau State. In November 2008, over 700 people were killed in Jos. The Human Rights Watch recorded about 133 extra-judicial executions carried out by the Police-led Nigerian security forces. Other media reports showed that on 17th January 2010, over 150 people were killed in Kuru Karama near Jos in Plateau State. On 7th March 2010, over 400 people died in the villages of Dogo Nahawa, Zot and Rassat in Jos South LGA of Plateau State as a result of early morning bloody attacks launched by armed suspected Muslim fanatics. Most of those killed were women and children. Over 120 people were killed in main and reprisal attacks in Jos prior to the Christmas Eve bloody bombings in the troubled capital city, which also killed at least 80 people. On 7th January 2011, 8 Muslim youths were killed in Jos and on 8th January 2011, 48 Igbo traders were ambushed and killed in Dilimi and Bauchi Road Markets in Jos. In the evening of same day, 14 Muslims were killed in several communities near Jos. On 10th January 2011, 11 Christians in the village of Wareng in Southern Jos were killed. Between 28th and 30th January 2011, 15 people including Police Corporal Jacob Mada were killed in Jos. In January 2011 alone, at least 42 Muslim commercial motorcycle operators and 51 Christians were declared “disappeared” by their relatives. The Jos killings continued into August 2011 and even beyond it. On 9th August 2011, at least 23 people were killed.  In August 2011 alone, at least, 50 people were killed. Therefore, it may be correct to say that up to 1,000 unlawful deaths have been recorded in Jos in 2011 alone.
Other Sectarian Killings (i.e. Boko-Haram):
According to media reports monitored by the Intersociety, following the Yelwa sectarian violence of 2004 that led to the death of over 700 people, some of them
Muslims, the reprisal killings that took place in Kano in 2005 resulted in the death of over 200 Christians, who were mostly Igbo traders and in the reprisal killings that took place in early 2006 in Anambra State, over 80 people, many of them Muslims were killed. The Boko-Haram violence in Nigeria, which started in 2002 in Borno State, may have killed over 3,000 innocent citizens. The Islamic Sect abhors “western education” and opts for the strict application of the Sharia Criminal Law as a State law governing Nigeria. The late Ustaz Yusuf Mohammed and Alhaji Fuju Foi, a former Commissioner for Religious Affairs in the Government of Borno State, who reportedly resigned in 2008, led it. Both of them are university graduates.
While the Niger Delta militants adopted bombing of oil installations and other strategic government facilities and abduction-for-ransom as its “war methods”, the Boko-Haram uses bombing of government facilities and mass-murder as its “war tactics”. Unlike the Niger Delta militants that are traceable, the members of the Boko-Haram sect are highly elusive and very scientific. The Sect has killed notable religious or Christian denominational leaders; and destroyed a number of Churches, beer parlours, hotels and restaurants in the Northern part of Nigeria.
Key government facilities including the Nigeria Police Force Headquarters, Military Barracks and the UN Headquarters in Abuja, Nigeria have also been bombed with the Sect claiming responsibilities for such attacks. In July 2009, for instance, the Boko-Haram inspired violence broke out in the Northern States of Bauchi, Borno, Yobe and Kano, resulting in the death of between 800 and 1,000 people. The ‘This Day Newspaper’ of 2nd August 2009 reported “about 700 dead bodies were recovered and buried in Borno State alone”. One Colonel Ben Ahanotu, an official of the Nigerian Army in the area, according to the newspaper, confirmed the causality figures to the Associated Press. The violence sparked off by an attack at a Police Station in Bauchi State lasted for six days (26th July - 2nd August 2009). On 29th January 2011, at least 25 people were killed in Bauchi State and 4 people in Borno State, bringing the total to, at least, 29. The violence started in Belewa LGA in Bauchi State. In the 2010 Boko-Haram inspired bombings that hit the Nigeria’s Golden Jubilee anniversary and the “Mogadishu” Barracks, over 50 people were killed. At least, 30 people died on the 1st October 2010 attack. On 16th June 2011, at least 5 people were killed when a car bomb went off at the Force Headquarters of the Nigeria Police Force in Abuja. On 26th August 2011, according to independent sources, as many as 80 people were killed when bombs went off at the Nigeria’s UN Building in Abuja. The Government of Nigeria and her security forces put the official figure at 24. On 4th November 2011, between 100 and 150 people including 11 security personnel were killed in Yobe and Borno States during bomb attacks suspected to have been launched by the Boko-Haram Sect, which hit five Churches, liquor joints and strategic security formations in Yobe State, where most of the casualties were recorded. The Nigeria Police Force puts the official figure at 65. On 26th November 2011, at least four Police personnel and an undisclosed number of civilians were killed in Geidam, Geidam LGA of Yobe State when bombs hit eight Churches and a Police Divisional Command.
The Boko-Haram Sect claimed responsibility for the attack. In all, over 3,000 people might have been killed since the Boko-Haram violence started in 2002 at the Nigerian - Nigerien border, which is close to Borno State, North-east Nigeria.
Election Related Killings Since 1999:
Nigeria has conducted four major elections since 1999, that is to say; the 1999, the 2003, the 2007 and the 2011 general elections and none of them was violence free, though some were more violent than others. It is believed that up to 300 people died during the conduct of the 1999 and the 2003 general elections. In the 2007 general elections, at least 300 people were killed (Human Rights Watch, USA) and in the 2011 general elections, over 1,200 people including at least 50 members of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) were killed. At least, 150 people were killed between July 2010 when the INEC released the first elections timetable and 1st April 2011(pre-election killings). Between 2nd and 26th April 2011, a period of 24 days, up to 1,100 people were killed. Some of these deaths were on: 9th January 2011 - 4 people were killed in the hometown of Mr. Timi Alaibe in Bayelsa State; 28th January 2011 - Engineer Fannami Gubio, Alhaji Godi Modu Sherrif and seven others including a ten-year old boy were killed in Maiduguri, Borno State, near a Mosque, 1st February 2011 - a MOSOP activist, Mr. Richard Nima was killed in Eleme LGA in Rivers State, 9th February 2011 - two kids were shot dead reportedly near the Palace of the Emir of Lafia in Nassarawa State when police fired at anti - government protesters, 12th February 2011 - about 20 people died in a stampede caused by security forces in Rivers State during a political rally attended by President Goodluck Jonathan, 3rd March 2011 - 4 people were killed when a bomb went off during a political rally attended by Governor Babangida Aliyu in Niger State, 19th March 2011 - three people were killed in Izzi LGA of Ebonyi State during a political rally, 21st March 2011 - three people were killed in Lagos State during a clash between the ACN and the PDP supporters, 21st March 2011 - seven people were killed in Jos, Plateau State during a political rally attended by Alhaji Mohammed Buhari of the CPC.
On 22nd March 2011, at least 12 people were killed in Akwa Ibom Sate during a bloody clash between the ACN and the PDP supporters. Over 200 vehicles and tricycles were burnt beyond recognition, and the violence continued into 25th March 2011 when five more people were killed. More violence erupted in Ogun, Ekiti, Osun and Jigawa States claiming more lives and destruction of properties. In March 2011 alone, at least, 40 people were killed. On 1st April 2011, at least, 10 people were killed. On 2nd April 2011, over five people were killed. On 13th April 2011, at least, 13 people died in the Suleja INEC Area Office bombing in Niger State. On 9th April 2011, 39 people were killed. On 16th April 2011, at least, 10 people were killed and between 26th and 27th April 2011 post presidential election violence that rocked over half of the 19 Northern States including Kano, Kaduna, Sokoto, Bauchi, Adamawa, Niger and Taraba, up to 1,000 people were massacred including over 50 members of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC). The Government of Nigeria reportedly put the official figure at “over 200”.
Strictly speaking, over 2,000 innocent Nigerians may have been killed since 1999 in election-related violence and out of the four general elections conducted in Nigeria since 1999. The 2011 general elections are the bloodiest, with at least 1,200 deaths.
In all these killings, including ethno-religious and sectarian violence, the people of Southeast Nigeria (Ndigbo) are the most vulnerable. It may be correct to say that out of every five people killed in the ethno-religious violence in the Northern part of Nigeria, four are from the Southeast Nigeria and out of every five killed in the Jos sectarian violence, one, if not two is from the zone. The Southeast also constitutes the bulk of those killed in Church, beer parlour and restaurant bombings by the Boko-Haram Sect in Borno, Bauchi, Plateau and Yobe States since 2009. Out of the over 16,000 unlawful deaths believed to have been recorded since 1999 in ethno-religious and sectarian violence, well over half of them (8,000) are likely from the Southeast Nigeria, which is similar to the 30,000 people from the zone killed in the North, particularly in then Kano sub province in 1966, which sparked off the Nigeria - Biafra civil war of 1967 - 1970.
Police Extra-Judicial Killings:
It is widely believed that the Nigeria Police Force carries out an average of 1,500 extra-judicial executions annually in Nigeria since 1999, resulting from custody and roadblock killings. There are also unlawful killings by the Police Force, which are associated with torture, highhanded crowd control and conflict management. Many, if not most of these killings originate from the Special Anti Robbery Squad (SARS), the Joint Taskforce (JTF) and the Anti-riot Police Personnel (Mobile Police). The latter mount roadblocks on Nigerian roads and engage in killing and maiming those who resist their extortionist and other graft activities. Torture, which is nicknamed “discipline” by the Nigerian Army, is also common among various departments of the Nigeria Police Force, particularly its Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) and SCID or SCIB operatives. Rights groups have also recorded many deaths arising from torture and unlawful detention. Comrade Ifeanyi Onuchukwu of the Humane Justice International in Nnewi, Anambra State, Nigeria on 4th November 2004, at the Central Police Station, Awka, Anambra State, Nigeria, witnessed the mass killing of 20 innocent detainees, who had been held for months without trial in the Station by the Special Anti-Robbery Squad of the Anambra State Police Command.
According to Comrade Onuchukwu, who was also detained in the SARS cell from 4th to 19th November 2004 when he was granted bail, one of the Police officers handed a sheet of paper with a pen to one of the detainees to re-compile their names and their States of origin and at around 7:15pm same day, they were taken out of the cell. Comrade Onuchukwu said he took possession of the sheet of paper containing their names when the Police officer forgot to recover it from the detainee. The 20 detainees were lined up and shot dead by the corner of the Station and their remains taken to “Agu-Awka dumping site” and mass buried. The burial site was revealed to him by one of the passers-by forced to carry their remains to the burial site.
The 20 massacred detainees, according to Comrade Ifeanyi Onuchukwu, are: Nduka Okoye, Ephraim Okenyeka, Samuel Odoh, Oforbike Odoh, Chibueze Ugwuoke, Ugochukwu Okonkwo, Chizoba Mbaebie, Ifeanyi Nwafunanya, Ugochukwu Anaekwe, Ifeanyi Izueke, Ekene Ejike, Chinedu Okoro, Uche Ubaka, Charles, Onyeabo Anaekwe, Leonard Obasi, Emeka Ofoke, Chibuzor Asouzu, Obiajulu and Ugoo Nwude. Their killers are still on the prowl. But, it should be noted that while the rate of extra-judicial and custody killings among the Anambra SARS operatives under Sir Felix Kigigha(Chief Superintendent of Police) seem reduced, torture and extortion including demands for and collection of “bail fees” have continued.
On 7th June 2005, Citizens Ifeanyi Ozoh, Chinedu Meniru, Isaac Ekene, Paulinus Ogbonna, Anthony Nwokike and Tina Arebum (the popular “Apo Six”) barely left their Gambiya Street relaxation joint in Area 11, Abuja, when a team of Policemen from the FCT Command rounded them up. They were labeled “armed robbers” and summarily dismembered with live bullets. Since then, the trial of the 10 indicted Police officers among them are DCP Danjuma Ibrahim, ASP Othman Abdulsalami and eight others, which commenced since June 2006 before Justice Ishaq Bello, Abuja High Court, has been at a snail speed despite the establishment of enough prima facie evidence. For instance, the former IGP Okiro headed Police report indicted the 10 Police officers and the Federal Government accepted same and approved the payment of N3 Million compensation to each of the six families. The Police authorities also apologized and catered for the funeral expenses of the six citizens, yet justice is still delayed and being denied.
Extra-judicial killing by the Police is partly responsible for the bloody bombings and violence carried out in various parts of Nigeria by the Boko-Haram Sect, especially since 2009. For instance, on Wednesday, 29th July 2009, according to media reports, the Nigerian security forces led by the Nigeria Police Force invaded a Mosque in Borno State controlled by the Boko-Haram Sect and killed over 100 suspected members of the Sect extra-judicially. On Thursday, 30th July 2009, the Police killed the leader of the Islamic Sect, Ustaz Yusuf Mohammed extra-judicially. He was captured alive by the Nigerian Army Taskforce, code-named “Operation Flush” and handed over to the Nigeria Police Force. The pictorial evidence obtained by the British Broadcasting Corporation authenticated Ustaz Mohammed Yusuf’s extra-judicial killing. The second-in-command in the Islamic Sect, which is also called “Taliban”, Alhaji Fuju Foi, died under extra-judicial circumstances too. In the Jos sectarian violence of 2008, where over 700 people were killed, according to HRW; there were about 133 extra-judicial executions by the Nigeria Police Force. As a result of the July 9, 2011 bombing of Kaleri, Ngomari Custain area in Maiduguri, Borno Stae, according to the Amnesty International, at least 25 people were killed extra-judicially by the Joint Military Taskforce in response to the bombing through house-to-house invasion and application of maximum force against the area’s innocent residents.
In the course of our recent inquiries into criminal deaths in Nigeria, particularly the extra-judicial executions by the Police, we discovered that extra-judicial killings associated with the NPF in our March 2010 statement, which was estimated to be 34,000 Nigerians (killed outside the law since 1999) is most likely under-calculated. For instance, the leadership of the Network on Police Reforms in Nigeria (NOPRIN) and the Open Society Institute for West Africa (OSIWA) in their 2010 Report - “Criminal Force”, quoted then Inspector General of Police, Mr. Tafa Balogun as informing the Human Rights Watch researchers in April 2004 that “the NPF killed 7,198 “armed robbers” from January 2000 to March 2004”. In other words, the NPF carried out 7,198 extra-judicial executions in four years. Those killed extra-judicially by the NPF are usually called “armed robbers” in the Nigeria Police parlance (like the “Apo Six”). In November 2007, the Human Rights Watch reported that the Nigeria Police Force in eight years, 2000 - 2007, carried out over 10,000 extra-judicial executions. This figure, according to the leadership of NOPRIN and OSIWA, may be lower to compare with what could be fairly accurately obtained (“Criminal Force 2010” by NOPRIN & OSIWA).
In 2004 alone, according to the leadership of the Legal Defence & Aid Project (LEDAP), 2,987 cases of Police extra-judicial killings were recorded. These dastardly acts of the NPF are still unabated.  For instance, on 26th November 2011, the NPF Warri Division killed Hon. Ogbe Onokpite, the Governorship candidate of the Citizens’ Popular Party (CPP) in the 2007 and 2011 elections in Delta State, South-south Nigeria, extra-judicially, after his arrest in a hotel room. He was accused of “gun-running”. According to his lawyer, Mr. Festus Keyamo, he surrendered himself to the arresting Police officers who brought him out of the hotel and shot him on the leg and took him to their Station where he was, again, shot at in the delicate organs of his body. He was abandoned and left in the pool of his blood to bleed to death. The Police Area Commander-in-Charge of the Area claimed that he was “maimed” while trying to escape from arrest and “gave up to the ghost” on their way to hospital.
In all, it may still be correct to say that an average of 1,500 extra-judicial executions is carried out annually by the NPF since 1999. This further indicates that 125 innocent Nigerians are killed monthly. In some cases, this figure is much higher. Therefore, the Nigeria Police Force may have carried out over 17,000 extra-judicial executions since 1999. Over 4,000 extra-judicial killings carried out by other security forces including the Nigerian Army may have also occurred, bringing the total number of extra-judicial killings since 1999 to over 21,000. Extra-judicial killing simply means the killing of any Nigerian citizen by a member of the Nigerian Armed Forces, including a Police officer outside the processes provided by the country’s body of laws. Vigilante killings are considered an act of murder because the law disallows the vigilante operatives to kill their suspects. But they can arrest and hand over to the Police for competent investigation and diligent prosecution. The Nigeria’s body of laws abhors any form of “trial by ordeal”, which is very rampant among the Nigerian armed vigilante groups.
Political Assassinations:
It may be correct to say that up to 220 prominent Nigerians have been assassinated since 1999 and most of those responsible have not been held to account for their crimes. Between 2001 and 2003 election seasons, over 60 Nigerians were reportedly assassinated. Some of those assassinated since 1999 are: Mr. Sunday Ugwu, elder brother to Honourable Nwabueze Ugwu of then Enugu State House of Assembly (9th September 1999), Chief Bola Ige, Alliance for Democracy chieftain and Attorney General of Nigeria (December 23, 2001), Chief Ezeodimegwu Okonkwo, a politician/musician of Anambra State (18th February 2001), Mr. Ikechukwu Nwagboo, Personal Assistant to Hon. Chudi Offordile, a member of the House of Representatives from Anambra State (February 2001), Chief Rockfeller Okeke, Public Relations Officer of Anambra State Ministry of Health (23rd April 2001), Mr. Felix Ikebude, a top member of Sir Emeka Offor’s Anambra People’s Forum (December 2001), Johnson Chukwuegbo, an LGA Councilor in Enugu State (2nd February 2002).

Others are Mr. Victor Nwankwo, younger brother to Chief Arthur Nwankwo of the People’s Mandate Party (PMP) who was shot dead at Enugu -29th August 2002. Professor Chimere Ikoku, former Vice Chancellor of University of Nigeria, Nsukka (Enugu State, October 2002), Retired Navy Captain Anthony Onyearugbulem, former Military Administrator and ANPP Gubernatorial faithful for 2003 polls in Imo State (allegedly murdered via poison in a hotel - 22nd July 2002). The rest are: Chief Sunday Uzokwe (Anambra State, 30th January 2002), Mr. R. Odigwe, a top official of the Anambra State Sanitation Authority (Anambra State, August 2002), Barristers Barnabas and Amaka Blessing Igwe (Anambra State, 1st September 2002), Chief Ogbonnaya Uche (Imo State, 7th February 2003), Chief E. Emenike (Imo State, 15th February 2003), Chief Egwuatu, Principal Secretary to the Government of Imo State (22nd February 2003), Mr. Kenneth Ije (Ebonyi State, 2002), Mr. Dele Arojo (Lagos State, 25th November 2002), Chief Odunayo Olugbaju (Osun State, 21st December 2001), Dr. Harry Marshall (from Rivers State but assassinated in Delta State on 7th March 2003), Alhaji Ahman Pategi (Kwara State, 2nd August 2002), Mr. Musa Dayo   (Bauchi State, 2003), Mr. Udo Marcus Akpan (Akwa Ibom State, May 2002), Chief Funsho Williams (Lagos State, 2007), Comrade Chima Ubani (believed to have been killed in a stage-managed accident, September 2005), Comrade Chidi Nwosu (Abia State, by suspected State agents, 29th December 2010) and Alhaji Modu Gana Mechanici (Borno State, 27th March 2011). Bloody clashes among supporters of some politicians within the period also left at least 60 people dead.
Human Abductions Arising From Political & Business Disputes:
It may also be correct to say that at least 4,000 Nigerians and expatriates have been abducted since 1999. According to the Nigeria’s ‘Daily Independent Newspaper’ of July 23, 2009, quoting then Minister of Police Affairs, Mr. Yakubu Lame, it stated that “over 850 Nigerians and non-Nigerians were abducted between January 2008 and June 2009” .The report also stated that 353 people were abducted in 2008 and 512 between January and June 2009.
The Niger Delta militants first adopted the art of abduction-for-ransom as an asymmetric war tactics against the Federal Government of Nigeria. A belligerent breakaway from MASSOB group later embraced it in 2005 and 2006 particularly in Anambra and Abia States. Later on, deadly politicians in Imo, Anambra and Abia States adopted it. Killer-business moguls particularly in Nnewi markets and the Iron Dealers’ Market in Onitsha now use it to settle business scores.
Armed robbers and their sponsors including some senior officers of the Nigeria Police Force, particularly in the Southeast Nigeria have also embraced it. It has evolved from abduction-for-ransom to include abduction-for-life robbery tactics. Today, out of every five citizens abducted, five pay ransoms to regain their freedom. According to some recent media reports, quoting an American FBI official, Nigeria is now fourth in the world ranking in terms of human abduction index.
Report Analysis:
The chilling killing of over 54,000 innocent Nigerians outside the law since 1999 depicts the failure of the Nigerian security system and gross inability of the Nigerian State to protect innocent citizens. Nigeria is a party to many sub regional, regional and international treaties meant to protect citizens’ rights. Sadly, Nigerian citizens
have continued to die unnaturally. The Nigerian security system seems terribly sick.
There are over 600,000 security operatives bearing arms in Nigeria with the Nigeria Police Force accounting for 371,800 (Wikipedia Internet Encyclopedia, 2011), yet their security approaches have remained grossly out-dated and anti-social. The vigilante security system in Nigeria particularly in the Southeast States of Anambra and Abia is a time bomb, waiting for explosion! Today, there may be over 2,000 armed vigilante groups operating in the two States with little or no effective regulations over their sources of arms and numbers. Also, there may be over 500,000 small arms in the wrong hands in the zone and the number increases steadily. It may be correct to say that unless extreme care is taken, otherwise, the vigilantes of today will be transformed into armed robbers, kidnappers and assassins of tomorrow. Nigerian history tells us that one of the reasons that led to dissolution of the various Police forces in the 60s maintained by regions, Emirs, Obas and LGAs, which gave room for a unified Nigeria Police Force of today, is hyper proliferation of arms and gross rights abuses.
Communal, ethno-religious, election, sectarian, and Boko-Haram-related killings are barbaric, highly political and deeply religious. The political, religious and security leaders in the Northern part of Nigeria are directly and indirectly responsible for the unlawful killings. Apart from using and dumping, deceiving and misleading their people, they have done little or nothing in terms of effective infrastructural and human capital developments of their zones. Other than their capital cities, other important parts of their States are nothing to write home about, thereby spiraling rural-urban migration and incessant urban violence. While their children are sent to the best schools in Arab and Western capitals, they continue to play ostrich with Western education.
They siphon billions of Naira meant for their people and turn round to propagate strict adherence to Islamic Criminal Law, which they apply with utter discrimination. We are not in the know of any child of these leaders who has participated or got killed in any of the holy wars.
The porosity of some key border posts in the country such as the Nigerian - Nigerien and the Nigerian - Chadian borders help to fuel the Boko-Haram and other ethno-religious violence because of the unchecked influx of poor and jobless Nigeriens and Chadians in the country. These foreign unemployed nationals are easily recruited as political thugs and holy-war fighters by some, if not many crooked politicians and religious zealots in the North. The Nigerian citizens from the zone and the nationals of the two countries also belong to the Afro-Asiatic Language F
amily, which further makes it somehow difficult to distinguish them from non-Nigerians.
We have severally pointed out that the educational system as we have it today did not originate from the so-called “Western World”, which is contrary to the “Boko-Haram” doctrine, which holds that “western education is a taboo”. History tells us that the first ancient University in the World was “the Egyptian System Mystery School”. Presently, the world’s oldest university is “the Al-Ahzar University of Cairo” opened in 970AD. The division of days into seconds, minutes, hours, weeks and so on originated from Egypt and Iraq (Babylon). The first world calendar, which got transformed into the present “Pope Gregorian Calendar”, also originated from them. During the Dark Ages (450 - 800AD) and the Renaissance (800 - 1400AD), Islamic learning in ancient science flourished. Apart from criticizing and innovating, Islamic scholars also developed the primitive Greek Alchemy into today’s chemistry. Many Greek writings were translated into Islamic languages. The Islamic thinkers also borrowed the idea of zero from the Hindu Mathematicians and invented the Arabic numerals. They created the science of Algebra and the study of Algebraic functions. Today, many scientific terms such as alcohol, syrup, camphor, lute, guitar, azimuth, azure, cipher, zenith, algebra, zero, etc are the legacies of Islamic thinkers and their contributions to modern education, including science and technology. Even words such as almanac, mattress, take, tartan, astronomy, etc also originated from Arabic terms. The most eminent Muslim physicist was Ibn-al Houthan (965 AD to 1020 AD). His chief work was done in optics and he showed a great advancement in experimental method. What about the great Razes (865 AD to 925 AD)?  He was the greatest of the Arabic Alchemists (chemists).
With the foregoing, it is obvious that the “Boko-Haram” doctrine is grossly misconceived. The Northern leaders should face realities by embarking on aggressive mass education of the “Almajaris” and other brains they are allowing to waste in their zone as well as effective infrastructural development of their States. The recent confessional statement made to the Nigeria State Security Services by Malam Ali Sanda Umar Konduga a.ka. Al-Zawahiri, an expelled spokesman of the Boko-Haram Sect, to the effect that some Northern politicians (like Senator Ali Ndume and late Ambassador Saidu Pindar) were behind the violent activities of the Sect, is a case in point. We ask that justice be done, according to law, in that case.
Further Report Analysis On Security & Criminal Justice:
The extra-judicial killing by Nigerian security forces, which includes the unwarranted bloody military attacks on Odi, Zaki-Biam and Gbaramatu communities, roadblock killings and deaths in Police cells as well as abductions, armed robbery attacks and assassinations, has shown clearly that the Nigerian security system and her criminal justice administration are nothing to write home about. The preemptive security system in Nigeria is a disaster likewise in crime detection and prevention methodologies. The country’s criminal investigation and prosecution have been defaced by graft practices. The entire policing system in Nigeria seems not intelligence based or sensitive. Instead, it is AK-47 driven. Poor data mining and near-absence of sound database and “immunity from modern security technology” are other factors seriously challenging the competence and efficiency of the Nigerian security organizations, especially the Nigeria Police Force.
Of the entire border posts in Nigeria including her four trans-national highways, airports and international waterways, the trans-sahelian highway to Algeria and the trans-sahelian highway to Dakar, Senegal are most terrorists prone. They are grossly under-secured likewise the Nigerian - Nigerien and the Nigerian - Chadian borders. The Nigeria Police Force clearly lacks the capacity to provide the security direly needed in a democratic Nigeria. Apart from the few efforts of the State Security Services (SSS) in anti-terrorism crusade, the NPF with its 371,800 officers can best be described as “a failed Police force”. Its intelligence gathering capacity is non-existent. The Force is grossly corrupt and incompetent. It may also be correct to say that the Force does not have an accurate data about its members not to talk of possessing effective crime management skills. The corridors of the Force can easily be walked in and worked out with utter alacrity, more so when there is no credible modern record keeping for its “in-service”, “out-service” and “out-of-service” personnel.
The Force lacks modern tools of crime fighting, including criminal investigation. For instance, modern criminal investigation now involves e-investigation. Sadly, early criminal investigation methods, which are mainly crude or backward because of their reliance on eyewitnesses’ accounts, inferences and confessions extracted under torture, are still the order of the day in the NPF. The Scotland Detective Department of the London Metropolitan Police, established by Robert Peel and his team in 1829 remains the best modern detective Police in the world today. Crime detection, which is the discovery, identification and analysis of criminal evidence as a means of law enforcement (Criminology & Security Studies Dept of NOUN 2010), is totally unavailable in the NPF likewise crime prevention. Parts of the modern crime management techniques, include decoy methods, stakeout or surveillance and comparative scientific criminal investigation. Under the latter, there is yet no computerized database for criminal records in the Nigeria Police Force.
In the modern policing, there are also scientific firearms examinations and biometric technology. Others are: serological investigations (study of body fluids in relation to sickness and treatment); toxicology (science study of poison); science study of hairs and fibers; mineralogical investigation (study of soil, plaster, cement, brick, concrete and glass for any criminal evidence); metallurgical investigation (an identification of the sources of an item whether made of metal, plastic, ceramic, etc found on crime scene); and science study of documents to determine forgery or otherwise, etc. There is also numerous modern scientific security tracking devices such as closed circuit televisions, hidden cameras, etc. In the cyber security technology, numerous crime preventive and combating appliances abound.
Sadly, none of these modern security technologies has been fully embraced by the NPF. As a matter of fact, many, if not most top Commanders of the NPF ranging from CPs to the IGP hardly operate and maintain e-mails except aided by outsider parties. In the average Nigeria Police field formation or station nowadays, every Police officer including Police tailor, Police driver and Police animal keeper is an “Investigating Police Officer” (IPO), who applies torture and crude inferences as his or her tools of investigation with zero knowledge in modern criminal investigation technology. Effective criminal investigation and prosecution are the hallmarks of a modern criminal justice system.  Intelligence, counter-intelligence and strong political will anchored on due process are the non-negotiable answers to Nigeria’s rising rate of intra-state violence and other criminal killings. It amounts to total shallowness to amass Armored Personnel Carriers, war helicopters and anti-riot Police personnel to combat the Boko-Haram terror, when the Sect’s operatives are applying information intelligence and “demobilized intelligence” warfare as asymmetric war tactics against the Federal Government of Nigeria.
For effective or diligent criminal prosecution to be ensured there must be effective criminal investigation. It is correct to say that criminal prosecution in Nigeria is more of a colossal failure. While legislative bottleneck contributes a part, many Police prosecutors, top officials of the Directorate of Public Prosecution and some, if not many Magistrates are drenched in corruption, thereby messing up the system. These corrupt Magistrates indiscriminately allow the arraignment of accused persons over matters with heavy penalties such as capital punishments, which are outside their jurisdictions, which lead to the accused persons being dumped and abandoned in prisons for months, if not years. Even when the files of the accused persons are taken to the DPP for “legal opinions”, it takes many months further before they either bribe their way out of the prisons under “no-case-to-answer” or face the appropriate prosecutions at High Courts.
For instance, on 29th September 2011, 62 MASSOB activists including three juveniles were arrested by the Abia State Command of NPF on their way to Abakiliki, Ebonyi State, Southeast Nigeria to celebrate the World Igbo Day. 52 of them were arraigned on 30th September 2011 in an Umuahia Magistrate Court in Abia State that lacked the jurisdiction over criminal charges preferred against them, usually treason and other spurious capital criminal charges.
They were remanded in prison custody for want of jurisdiction.
Till date, they have not been properly arraigned in the appropriate Court or granted bail. Out of the 62 of them, 52 were arraigned wrongfully and remanded in prison custody, while the Police released seven of them after their families reportedly bribed them with huge sums of money. The three juveniles detained among them since 29th September 2011, who have not been taken to Juvenile Court till date, in accordance with the Juvenile & Young Persons’ Act, 1944, are Irechukwu Nnogidem (16), Chukwuebuka Okata (15) and ThankGod Nwachukwu (13). Four members of the group were also arrested and currently detained at the State CID, Asaba, without trial by the Delta State Police Command since third week of November 2011.
Grand Data Summary:
Totally, it may be correct to say that over 54,000 Nigerians have died outside the law since 1999. Vigilante killings account for at least 15,000 murders; ethno-religious and sectarian violence including Boko-Haram terror account for at least 16,000 criminal deaths; extra-judicial executions by Nigerian security forces led by the Nigeria Police Force account for at least 21,000 killings, which include Odi, Zaki-Biam and the Niger Delta (i.e. Gbaramatu invasion) massacres. Police killings or extra-judicial executions may have accounted for over 17,000 deaths. The election-related killings since 1999 may also have accounted for over 2,000 deaths. These figures did not include deaths arising from other man-made tragedies such as road accidents, flood menace and those killed by arm robbers including deaths arising from robbery gunshot injuries.
Recommendations:
•    It is our considered view that the first step towards remedying the rot in the Nigeria Police Force is a total purge of its top command structure. To this effect, the President & Commander-in-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces, who is also the Chairman of the Police Council of Nigeria should, by a presidential directive cause the retirement with benefits of all serving Commissioners of Police holding “State command positions” and those not holding such positions, who are 50 years and above and all the serving AIGs, DIGs and IGP. This directive should concurrently run with an immediate approval for mass promotions in the Force to fill the vacancies left by them. Among the newly promoted senior officers, an intelligence egg-head, who is also a modern technology expert, could be made the next IGP in line with Section 215(1(a) of the Constitution of Nigeria 1999 as amended, which states: “an Inspector General of Police who, subject to Section 216(2) of this Constitution shall be appointed by the President on the advice of the Nigeria Police Council from among serving members of the Nigeria Police Force”.
•    It has been observed that most, if not all the senior police officers are “enemies of modern technology”, which is the bedrock of modern policing. They constitute a serious threat to e-policing and e-investigation. Also, there is gross lopsidedness in terms of geopolitical equity with respect to the promotion and appointment of CPs, AIGs and DIGs, which is contrary to Section 14(3) of the Constitution of Nigeria 1999 as amended.
 Among the present 37 CPs of the 36 States and the FCT, Abuja about 25 of them are from the North. Among the 21 AIGs in the present NPF, 13 are from the North. While among the seven DIGs, four are from the North (Source: Laws & Facts Guiding Nigeria’s Elections, published by the Policy & Legal Advocacy Center (PLAC) 2011). Therefore, these anomalies should be corrected.
•    It is our recommendation that the Nigeria Police Force should return to intelligence -based crime management. To this end, the NPF Detective College in Enugu, which offers programs in Detective, Anti-Fraud, Fingerprint, Modus Operandi, Prosecution, Photographic, Criminal Intelligence, Scene of Crime and Criminal Records & Statistics, should be technologically overhauled, expanded and elevated to the status of “the Nigeria Police Detective University”, while modern technologically advanced Police detective colleges should be established in each of the Nigeria’s six geo-political zones.
•    The age-long monopoly enjoyed by the NPF in the field of criminal investigation and criminal prosecution should be clearly broken. An Act of the National Assembly should be enacted for registration and regulation of private detectives and/or investigators as well as to ensure the citizens’ right to seek alternative avenues for criminal inquiries, if unsatisfied with Police handling of a criminal complaint. The Coroner Law in the country should also be thoroughly updated in line with the international best practices as part of the new alternatives.
•    On the same note, the right of every Nigerian to effective criminal prosecution should be ensured. The powers of the Federal and the State Attorneys-General to grant fiats to interested citizens according to their dictates should be liberalized and translated as a right into legislation with laid down conditions, so as to stamp out any form of abuse. The constitutional powers invested on the Federal and the State Attorneys-General to “continue” or “discontinue” any criminal proceedings in Courts, which are now subject of abuse, should be reviewed as well.
•    On the issue of “holding charge” or “committal proceedings”, which is unduly used by the Nigerian Magistrates, there should be an effective disciplinary body akin to National Judicial Council to sanction these “junior juries”, who technically assume jurisdiction over serious criminal matters that are clearly outside their jurisdiction. There should be “practice directives”, as a takeoff, to be issued by the States and the FCT Chief Judges and an Act of the National Assembly, later on, barring Magistrates from allowing the commencement of criminal charges that are outside their jurisdictions in their Courts. Criminal prosecutors should be made to take their suspects or defendants to the appropriate Courts.
•    The 6,651 field Police formations in Nigeria should be fully computerized and adorned with sound database. There should be a central computing and control system digitally linking the 6,651 field Police formations in Nigeria, which should be situated at the Force Headquarters of the NPF. Specifically, the art of criminal investigation in the Force should be professionalized and removed from the hands of quacks. To this end, the Divisional Crime Offices and the SCIDs/SCIBs of the Force nationwide should be overhauled and computerized; peopled with more competent hands and retrained on regular basis in technological criminal intelligence and investigation.
•    Offices of the NPF legal departments, which appear to exist only at the 12 Police Zonal Commands and the 37 State and FCT Police Commands, should, as a takeoff, be established at all the 127 Area Commands and later extended to the 1,129 Police Divisional Commands in Nigeria so as to eliminate congestions associated with rising number of criminal cases in the country. To this end, more lawyers with experience in criminal law should be recruited by the Force and the existing O/Cs-Legal in the above mentioned police formations, should be absorbed into such legal departments. The Investigating Police Officers, who must be trained in modern criminal intelligence, biometric, ICT technologies and human rights, should keep their legal departments updated on their investigations, which must be devoid of torture and crude inferences.
•    The Federal and the States’ Attorneys-General should overhaul their Directorates of Public Prosecution nationwide and put effective disciplinary measures in place to monitor and curb their corrupt practices including their poor attitudes to work. There shall be established the Federal DPP offices in the 109 Senatorial Districts in Nigeria to ensure timely and diligent criminal prosecutions in matters of federal jurisdiction. There shall also be established in the 774 LGAs in Nigeria the States’ DPP offices for effective access to criminal justice in Nigeria in matters of States’ jurisdiction, with more qualified lawyers and criminologists recruited to man them. The recruitments and promotions as per the personnel of the DPP should be based, strictly, on merit. And the police criminal investigators should be made to duplicate their files and forward to the Directorates of Public Prosecution before the arraignments of the accused persons or defendants in courts.
•    Police prosecutors should be barred from preferring charges with capital punishments and other charges that are outside the magisterial jurisdictions of the magistrate courts against the accused persons in any magistrate courts in Nigeria.
Only qualified police lawyers should be allowed to prosecute capital offence cases in the appropriate Courts, not Magistrate Courts and police investigators should duplicate and send their files to the DPP before prosecution.  There must be an end to the investigation of criminal matters in Nigeria. To this end, where the accused persons are at large, such investigations may continue, but where they are in custody or not at large, their investigations must be brought to an end within a specific time frame. An Act of the National Assembly may be required in this case.

•    We further recommend that the National Assembly of Nigeria should re-enact a new Nigeria Police Act and Regulations. The present Act is outdated and antithetical to modern intelligence, protective and preventive policing. The infamous “Order 237” of the NPF, which permits a Police officer to shoot any person suspected or detainee “trying to escape” or “avoiding arrest” should be reviewed, if not abolished. It has become a “license to kill” for the personnel of the NPF.
•    In view of the rising proliferation of vigilante groups and small arms in Nigeria particularly in the Southeast, we recommend that the Federal Government of Nigeria should take steps to effectively put them under tight checks forthwith before it becomes too late. Also, disciplinary measures should be taken against personnel of the NPF who failed to attach their service uniforms and numbers while on duty. Some of them now wear bathroom slippers, pyjamas and rags while on road duties, thereby degrading the NPF and making it difficult for citizens to differentiate them from criminal-citizens.
•    Nigeria should aggressively pursue national intelligence, external intelligence and foreign counter-intelligence policies with human rights consciousness. To this end, the Acts setting up the Police, the SSS, the NIA and the DMI (Army) should be over-hauled and expanded to clearly define the new intelligence security roles as per internal intelligence, external intelligence and foreign counter-intelligence. This is because the intelligence roles by these bodies seem blurred. To add life to this, the Nigeria’s Criminal Reforms Bill lying unlegislated before the National Assembly should be passed into law immediately. Also the Nigeria’s trans-sahelian highway to Dakar, Senegal and to Algeria as well as the Nigeria - Nigerien and the Nigeria -Chadian borders, which have become “the routes of terrorism”, should be properly policed so as to check the Boko-Haram violence and other homicidal activities.
•    There should be massive investment by the Federal Government in intelligence security and intelligence policing. To this end, selected departments of criminology & security studies, pathological science, psychology, sociology and criminal law of selected Nigerian universities(like NOUN-National Open University of Nigeria) should be designated as intelligence priority list, equipped and funded properly to serve as research grounds for countering the steady intra-state violence in Nigeria.
•    It is obvious that Mr. President has not demonstrated enough political will to nip this recurring unprovoked sectarian violence in the bud. His “Commander-in-Chief” status appears under-utilized particularly as per bringing those responsible for these abominable killings to justice. To this end, President Jonathan should re-organize and re-shuffle his security chiefs including the leadership of the Police Service Commission and take full charge of the security of the nation.
•    While commending Mr. President for his recent presidential directive, ordering the release of all MASSOB members detained unjustly across the country, which led to over 98% of them being released, we wish to draw Mr. President’s attention to the continued detention of S2 of them including three juveniles in Umuahia, Abia State and four of them in Asaba, Delta State since September and November 2011 respectively by the Nigeria Police Commands of the two States. We demand for their immediate release in compliance with the presidential directive.
•    It is our recommendation that a day should be set aside every year with a national holiday for the remembrance of those killed outside the law. A posthumous national highest honour of the GCFR should collectively be bestowed on them to be hung around a status dedicated to them at the FCT, Abuja. Further steps should be taken by Mr. President to ensure that these senseless killings are nipped in the bud, through effective security and conflict transformation.
•    Lastly, it is our recommendation that the Prosecutor for International Criminal Court and the UN Raporteur on Extra-judicial Killings should carry out extensive investigations into these unlawful killings, including finding out what measures, if any, the Government of Nigeria have taken to ensure that those responsible for the killings are brought to justice. If in their opinions, the measures are insufficient, and then relevant UN Charters should be invoked so as to bring those responsible to account for their crimes against humanity.
Prepared & Delivered At Media Forum In Onitsha, Nigeria, Today, 11th December 2011
By:
Emeka Umeagbalasi
                       Chairman, Board of Trustees
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