Friday, 20 June 2014

Uganda vows to implement gay law despite new U.S. sanctions


The United States imposed sanctions on Uganda Thursday over the East African nation’s anti-gay law, which can see homosexuals jailed for life.

The U.S. government said it was cancelling a military exercise and cutting funds to a number of programmes it is running with the Ugandan authorities.

Tougher measures will also follow.

“The Department of State is taking measures to prevent entry into the United States by certain Ugandan officials involved in serious human rights abuses, including against LGBT individuals,” said National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden Hayden in a written statement.”

The US will also discontinue or redirect funds for certain programmes involving the Ugandan Police Force, National Public Health Institute and Ministry of Health, and has cancelled plans to conduct a US military-sponsored aviation exercise.

The White House said the Uganda’s Anti-Homosexuality Act is “counter to universal human rights”.
A spokesperson for the Ugandan government, Ofwono Opondo, dismissed the sanctions.

Mr. Opondo said the contentious law will be implemented except it is amended or nullified by court following a petition in Uganda’s constitutional court by a group of gay rights activist, the country’s Daily Monitor reported Friday.

“These measures by the US government do not diminish our resolve to obtain and exercise full sovereignty. Mr Obama has more on his plate [with the war] in Syria and Iraq, and could be diverting domestic attention for a while,” he was quoted as saying.

The United States provides about $740 million to Uganda annually in development assistance, with much of the money going to agriculture and health- mostly for supply of anti-retroviral drugs.

Mr. Opondo said the new sanctions will be inconsequential as the U.S. had already withdrawn much of its direct support to the government preferring to channel its assistance through non-governmental organisations.

The U.S. threatened punishment over the legislation since it was signed into law in February by President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda.

Nigeria should negotiate with Boko Haram – NBA President


The President of the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, Okey Wali, on Thursday urged the Federal Government to engage Boko Haram insurgents in dialogue to achieve meaningful peace and progress in Nigeria.

Mr. Wali said this in Abuja during a valedictory session of the Supreme Court in honour of the late Justice Chukwudifu Oputa.

He said that there was need to engage the insurgents to facilitate truth and reconciliation that would stop the intransigence of the group, leading to the much desired peace.

“Like they say, issues are better discussed unresolved than resolved un-discussed; too many issues are begging to be addressed and we keep shutting our eyes to the obvious. This is why the NBA has continued to advise that the President engages the insurgents and never let-off because of the intransigence of the insurgents.

That way, we will most probably get to the bottom of the matter,” Mr. Wali, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, said.

He observed that there existed three Boko Harams – the political Boko Haram, the religious Boko Haram and the criminal Boko Haram.

Mr. Wali said that government needed to find out by engaging the insurgents, what was their ideology and who were the proponents of the ideology.

Citing global instances of how such engagement worked, Mr. Wali said that the Obama administration in the U.S. exchanged five Guantanamo Bay detainees for one American Sergeant.
He said that it took the 1998 Good Friday Agreement which was brokered by then British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, to resolve the Ireland Revolution Army, IRA, insurgency in the U.K.

Mr. Wali said that notwithstanding some sentiments against it, engaging the insurgents was a sensible option.

The NBA president said that this was desirable, especially in the efforts to rescue the kidnapped Chibok girls.

“Everyday, the Chibok girls and other victims are away from their families and are somewhere nobody knows, that is hellish for the girls and their families,” he said.

(NAN)

Lagos deportation: Court adjourns suit filed by Igbo deportees

A Federal High Court in Lagos on Friday adjourned to October 15 hearing in a suit filed by seven Igbo deportees challenging an alleged breach of their fundamental rights.

The plaintiffs – Joseph Aniebonam, Osondu Mbuto, Osondu Agwu, Nnenna Ogbonna, Emily Okoroariri, Friday Ndukwe and Onyeka Ugwu – are suing the Lagos State Government on behalf of 76 others for infringing on their fundamental rights.

The plaintiffs filed the suit through their lawyer, Ugo Ugwunnadi.

The Attorney-General of Lagos State and the Commissioner of Police, Lagos State were joined as respondents in the suit.

The case could not be heard at the resumed date due to a notice of preliminary objection filed by the Attorney-General of Lagos State.

The objection was dated June 17 and served on counsel to the plaintiffs in court.

Since the application was not yet ripe for hearing, Justice Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia fixed October 15 for mention.

The judge also ordered hearing notices to be issued to the police before the next adjourned date.
In their motion, the applicants wanted the court to declare that they, as Nigerian citizens, were entitled to their fundamental rights as enshrined in the constitution.

They sought a declaration that their arrest and detention in various camps in Lagos in July 2013, and their subsequent deportation to Anambra on July 24, 2013, for no offence, amounted to a serious breach of their rights.

The deportees also sought an order mandating the respondents to tender a written apology to them by publishing same in three national newspapers continuously for 30 days for gross violation of their constitutional rights.

They asked for an order directing the Lagos State Government to re-integrate them into the state as well as a perpetual injunction restraining the respondents, their agents, and officers from further deporting or refusing them free entry into Lagos.

In addition, the applicants claimed the sum of N1 billion against the respondents jointly and severally as general damages for a breach of their rights.

Meanwhile, the Lagos State Government in its counter-affidavit contended that the deportation was not borne out of malice, but out of genuine intention to re-unite the applicants with their families.

It further averred that the applicants were only assisted by the government to re-join their families after pleading that they had no homes, relatives or businesses in Lagos State.

(NAN)

Why baby making factories are on increase in Nigeria – NAPTIP


The National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons and other Related Matters, NAPTIP, has attributed the proliferation of baby making factories to a lapse in the child adoption process.

The Head, Media and Communication of NAPTIP, Arinze Orakwue, said on Friday in Abuja, that stigmatisation by the society encouraged the increasing rise of baby making factories in the country.
He also expressed regret that the child adoption process had been hijacked by criminals, a situation, which, he said, had led to the prevalence of criminal activity in the society.

“What is happening is a criminalisation of the adoption process; some criminals have infiltrated the adoption programme. So, what has happened is that these people go on and set up homes – things that ordinarily institutions are allowed to deal with – and they go outside of the homes to do illegalities. Now what has also fast tracked it? We are a pretentious society.

“You have people needing children to adopt that do not want to make it public. Then you have a society that throws children who by reasons of misadventure have become pregnant. Then, you now have criminals who have pretentiously provided shelter and cover for these children to come and drop.

“So, when these three things meet that is when you have the issue we are talking about. Inadvertently you are producing merchandise for these individuals to deal with. But the funny thing is that they have taken a step further by picking up children, make them pregnant and they become baby making factories for these criminals to sell,” he explained.

He, however, said that the agency had all necessary steps to end the “scourge.”

He disclosed that the law setting up the agency was being amended to deal with the issue of sale of babies, adding that the law had been approved by the senate but was still awaiting adoption.

“Part of what is being incorporated is that some aspect of it as it affects the sale of babies – that is, exploitation of the offspring of another – will be captured in the amendment. So that those who exploit persons because they are teenagers, pregnant, out of wedlock – or their parents have thrown them out of the homes because of teenage pregnancy or what our society calls unwanted pregnancy – will be protected and it’s not an excuse to take away their babies and to sell them.

“Children have a right not to be sold, it is against their law. So, sale of babies is not permitted; the sale of any human being. That is the position,” Mr. Orakwue said.

According to Mr. Orakwue, NAPTIP is working closely with relevant agencies such as the police and the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs to find the perpetrators of “this hideous crime.”

He advised Nigerians, especially parents, to ensure that they provide adequate protection for their children to prevent them from becoming victims.

“It is the responsibility of parents to protect the child from the advances of people, who might pick them, abuse them, and exploit them to their own gain.

“You cannot sell a human being; there are procedures for giving up a child for adoption, which must be duly followed,” he said.

He listed Imo, Abia, Enugu, Port-Harcourt, Edo, Ondo, and Osun as states with the presence of homes for baby making.
(NAN)

Presidential committee on Chibok schoolgirls submits report


The committee confirmed that 219 girl remain with their abductors.
—————————————–
The Chairperson of the Presidential Fact Finding Committee on the abducted Chibok girl, Ibrahim Sabo, has revealed that a total of 219 girls are still missing.

Mr. Sabo, a retired brigadier general, disclosed this at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, while presenting the report of the committee to President Goodluck Jonathan.

Mr. Sabo, who disclosed that a total of 276 girls were abducted by members of the Boko Haram Sect, said 57 of the girls escaped while 219 were still unaccounted for.

President Jonathan had set up the fact finding committee on May 2 to gather information surrounding the abduction and to ascertain the exact number of students abducted amongst other terms of references.

“Mr. President, the committee here wishes to lay to rest any residual doubt whether or not any student was abducted at Chibok,” he said. “As most Nigerians already know, there were some persons who doubted whether in fact any student was abducted from Government Secondary School, Chibok.

On the other hand, for those who believed that there was an abduction, there were lingering doubts as to how such a number of kidnap victims were conveyed, considering also that information was sparse as to how the raiding insurgents evacuated the victims.”

“During the siege on the school, 119 students escaped from the school premises, before the insurgents took away their classmates.

“A total of 276 students were thus abducted. As of today, 57 of the abducted students have been reunited with their families after escaping along zig-zag transport route taken by the insurgents or by bolting to safety when the insurgents laid for a rest. Sadly 219 students remain unaccounted for,” he said.

Mr. Sabo also revealed that in the committee’s interactions with four of the girls who regained their freedom and their families, the girls were hesitant to discuss the full details of their experience, citing the fear of possible reprisals from Boko Haram elements.

He noted, however, that the committee received the full cooperation of the people and interacted with different stakeholders considered relevant to the fact finding mandate but with an exception.

“The singular exception was a senator from Borno, who after agreeing to an appointment with the Committee, turned around to avoid the meeting on the excuse that he had another appointment and would thereafter be unavailable for one month or so.

“Not that his non-appearance has materially or in any way affected the outcome of the committee’s findings, but the senator’s avoidance of an interface with the committee may well speak to a motive not too difficult to discern,” he said.

The chairman also noted that though Nigerians and the rest of the world have been galvanised to drum up support for the freedom of the Chibok schoolgirls, little could be achieved through finger-pointing.

“Getting the girls out and safely, too, is by far more important than the publicity generated by the blame game that has tended to becloud the issue,” he said.

He said that the committee had begun the process of mobilising the communities, but it was still an unfinished business. He said to achieve a more worthwhile outcome, more time and a more compact team would be required.

The committee also advised that in order not to jeopardise the on-going rescue efforts and also the possibility of compromising national security matters, the report should be treated with utmost confidentiality.

Mr. Sabo noted that this, however, did not preclude government from releasing information that may be useful for a better public understanding of issues surrounding the abduction saga.

In response, the President, who promised that the report would not be shelved, also urged owners of boarding schools in the country, especially those in the North East, to provide at least some basic security for their students.

He noted that the insurgents were able to operate unhindered because there was no security arrangement at the Government Girls Secondary School, GGSS, where the girls were kidnapped on April 14.

“Let me charge everybody, whether corporate bodies, federal and state governments or individuals that own especially in the north east, that if we must keep students in hostels there must be some basic security that should be provided,” he said.

Boko Haram: Ihejirika warns against ‘inflammatory’ comments


Former Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt. General, Azubuike Ihejirika, on Friday warned against inflammatory statements from northerners over the recent arrest of 486 alleged Boko Haram suspects in Abia State.

Ihejirika spoke at a public presentation of the biography of the 17th Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Mohammed Dikko Umar, in Abuja.

The book entitled: “The Pursuit of Providence” was written by the Abuja Bureau Chief of the Guardian Newspapers, Mr. Madu Onourah.

Ihejirika said rather than speaking in a manner that portrays the country as divided, northern elders should assist the military to identify the insurgents among those arrested by the military.

He said: “Referring to the contemporary situation, currently, we have some people of northern extraction arrested somewhere in my state by the military and other security agencies.

“Let us not forget that not too long ago, we spoke in one voice that we are going to join hands to rid the nation of the menace of terrorism.

“One good way of doing this is for people from that same extraction to avail their services to the military and they will definitely help the military in sorting out the chaff from the wheat rather than speaking in a manner that tends to create the impression that this country is divided.

“The truth is that ordinarily you do not choose who to buy pepper from. If you want to eat in a restaurant you do not ask is the owner a Yoruba, Igbo or Hausa…you just buy.

“If a man is good he is good, irrespective of where he is coming from. I think all we need in this country is development and progress.”

APC condemns planned impeachment of Adamawa governor


The Adamawa State chapter of All Progressives Congress, APC, has accused the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP-led Assembly of acting out the party’s script by serving impeachment notices on the state Governor, Murtala Nyako, and his deputy, Bala Ngilari.

Speaking to journalists on Thursday in Yola, the Publicity Secretary of the APC, Phineas Padio, said the Assembly’s action left no one in doubt of the Speaker, Ahmadu Fintiri’s blind ambition to become governor of the state.

Mr. Padio said the allegations against the Governor were not only laughable but embarrassing coming from lawmakers.

“There is no way a house will bring something that happened in 2007, during previous legislations, as some of its allegation against the Governor. It goofed,” Mr. Padio said.

He pointed out that the Speaker, who had been nursing a gubernatorial ambition on the platform of the APC, became angry with the party when Binta Masi from the same zone as him emerged the state chairperson, blocking his chances.

Mr. Padio, who commended groups and individuals for showing solidarity with the state APC led government over the matter, urged the people of Adamawa to resist the lawmakers attempt to scarify the state based on selfish ambitions.

Lawmakers flee Yola
Meanwhile, PREMIUM TIMES gathered some members of the Adamawa State House of Assembly on Wednesday fled Yola for Abuja following their sitting where they ordered the clerk of the House to serve the state governor and his deputy impeachment notices.

Nine members of the Assembly have reportedly denied putting their signature on the impeachment notice.

It was gathered that the lawmakers ran away from the state for fear of being lynched by protesters in Yola who condemned their action.

The state Commissioner of Police, John Abakasanga, in a statement by the command spokesperson DSP, Othman Abubakar, warned “desperate politicians” trying to set the state ablaze for personal reasons.

He said that the state police command was ready to deal with any ugly situation and advised members of the public to go about their normal business without fear.

Contractor threatens to sue Assembly
One of the contractors mentioned in the notice of impeachment sent to Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa State by the State House Of Assembly on Wednesday, Hydro Source Resources Limited,
gave the Assembly seven days to apologise to the company or it would be forced to seek redress in the law court.

Addressing a press conference at the Nigeria Union of Journalists, NUJ, press centre, M. A. Bello, counsel to the contractor,  said, “Paragraph six of the allegations stated that Hydro Source was given N300 million to move to site.”

He stressed that the company was at no point in time given such money. He noted that his client was a major contractor to the Adamawa State government and that the state awarded contracts for the construction roads within the state to the tune of N1.1billion including the Mubi bye pass road that is in contention.

Mr. Bello said that the state government had only paid N600 million.

He lamented that the inclusion of his client on the alleged corrupt deal of the state governor had brought embarrassment to the chairman of the company, Maiwada Baba. He urged the members to verify issues brought before them rather than rush to make statements that could cause disunity and lead to the breakdown of law and order in the state particularly in this trying times.