Thursday 26 November 2015

Virgin Atlantic’s hostility to Niger

Since the collapse of the effort of the Federal Government to partner with Virgin Atlantic Airlines to create a national carrier known as Virgin Nigeria, the deteriorating relationship between the British aviator owned by billionaire Richard Branson and Nigeria has hit a new low with the sack of all Nigerian cabin crew from its employ.

The airline, which had earlier on closed its call centre in Lagos reportedly disengaged the Nigerian staff after only three weeks’ notice and without any severance package. The representative of the Airline in Nigeria, Mr John Adebanjo, explained that the measure was part of a routine staff load shedding which affected 2,000 jobs, pointing out that staff layoffs are not peculiar to his company. The company’s marketing and communications manager, Kudirat Scot-Igbene, said bluntly that the local staff had to go because the company no longer had any need for them.
However, industrial unions within the Nigerian aviation industry – Air Transport Services Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (ATSSSAN) and National Union of Air transport Employees (NUATE) have vowed to fight Virgin over what they described as “acts of racism”. The unions accused the company of not having a “workable” condition of service for its Nigerian staff and discriminating against Blacks (Nigerians) aboard its flights.
The time has come for the aviation industry regulator to wake up from its slumber and find out what is really going on with a view to fixing it. While we acknowledge Virgin Atlantic or any other private company’s right to hire and fire its staff to maintain its operations, we cannot see any reasonable excuse for the termination of the employment of all Nigerian staff members of any foreign company operating in Nigeria.
We recall the grouse that the founder of Virgin Atlantic, Branson, had in 2012 when, after bitterly complaining about how corruption led him to pull out of the partnership with Nigeria, he vowed, in a publicly circulated statement: “Nigeria is a country we SHALL NEVER consider to doing business again”.
In spite of this disclaimer, Virgin Atlantic continues to operate lucrative flights on its Lagos-London route, thus living off the fat of our country without, feeling any obligation to give back. This we find unacceptable.
We hope the federal government’s regulatory agencies will bring the company and the unions to a round table to ensure that the right things are done and Virgin is made to fully discharge its corporate obligations to Nigerians.
Otherwise, we will support any lawful and peaceful step taken by the unions to assert the rights of Nigerians, even if it means denying Virgin Atlantic the freedom to operate within the nation’s airspace or the use of her facilities.

NAFDAC calls off strike

NAFDAC calls off one week strike


Staff of National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control, NAFDAC, yesterday called off the one week national warning strike embarked on as a result of the failure of National Incomes and Wages Commission, NSIWC, to review their monthly allowance.
The workers also urged the Federal Government to order Salaries and Wages Commission to review their allowance.
Speaking during a press conference in Lagos, the Chairman, Federal Area Council, FAC, Medical and Health Workers Union of Nigeria, MHWUN, Comrade Ibrahim Isah said the workers were resuming tomorrow (today), adding that they were giving the government more time to review their allowance.
He said: “We have been on NAFDAC job specific allowance since 2013, pleading with NSIWC, to review our allowance, but NAFDAC was denied the review by NSIWC in 2014. Tomorrow (today) our people will go back to work for the good of the country, but the commission should review the allowance to avoid subsequent illuminate strike in NAFDAC.”
He stated that the issue of allowance started when NAFDAC was moved from Consolidated Health Salary Structure (CONHESS) to Consolidated Research and Align Structure (CONRAISS), adding that NAFDAC was not a research institute but a regulatory agency.
Isah however faulted the Director of Admin/HR, NAFDAC, Mrs. Yetunde Oni as the cause of the internal and external problem bedeviling the agency among which are: persecution of union executives, illegal suspension of staff without due process, payment of 2015 productivity allowance, among others, urging President Muhammadu Buhari to redeploy her before she destroyed the agency.
He said: “Staff has generally requested the redeployment of the Director Admin/HR, Mrs. Yetunde Oni from the agency, as a result of her highhandedness, lack of administrative acumen, mis-managing staff welfare and creating confusion in the agency with respect to staff and management relationship.”

Fayose to Buhari: Tell Nigerians who the looters are, how much they returned

* Says President making noise in foreign lands about non-existing fight against corruption

* Urges him to get to work, instead of junketing around the globe

Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State, on Thursday, berated President Muhammadu Buhari’s claim that many of those who looted the public treasuries in the government of former President Goodluck Jonathan had started returning the stolen funds to the government, saying the President should rather stay at home to govern the country instead of junketing around the globe and acting like a saint before the international community.
Fayose and Buhari
Fayose and Buhari
In a statement issued in in Ado-Ekiti by his Special Assistant on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka, Governor Fayose challenged President Buhari to tell Nigerians how much was returned and the looters who returned the stolen funds, adding that “Since the purported looted funds belong to the Federal Republic of Nigeria, it ought to have been paid into the Federation Account and shared by the Federal, State and Local Government.”
Fayose advised Buhari to tackle the collapsed economy of the country headlong, instead of going from one country to another, casting aspersion on Nigerians with his sing-song of fighting corruption.
He said the President’s attitude was yet to change from that of 1984 when he was military Head of State, adding that, “Buhari’s statement in Tehran, Iran that it was easier for him as a military Head of State in 1984 to arrest corrupt individuals and put them in protective custody was a pointer to the fact that he has not changed from the dictator that he was then.
“The truth is that Buhari did not fight corruption in 1984. Rather, he persecuted great Nigerians, especially the likes Chief Adekunle Ajasin, Chief Ambrose Ali, Chief Bisi Onabanjo, Alhaji Lateef Jakande and Chief Bola Ige, who served the people meritoriously. Is Buhari justifying the imprisonment of Dr Alex Ekwueme, who was only the Vice President or All Progressives Congress (APC) leader like Chief Bisi Akande, who only served as a Deputy Governor?”
While urging the President to stop acting like the sole-administrator of Nigeria and the only honest man among Nigerians, Governor Fayose said: “Nigerians are desirous of concrete developments, not rhetoric about fight against corruption that is only being used to persecute perceived political enemies of the President both in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and within the APC.
“As at today, Nigerians are faced with serious hardship occasioned by prolonged fuel scarcity that the Federal Government does not have any solution to. Multi-national companies are laying-off thousands of workers while contractors working for the Federal Government have left their sites.
“Yet, what we get to hear from the President is noise in foreign lands about non-existing fight against corruption. Honestly, this President should get to work and stop lying to Nigerians and the international community.”

VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN

Two in court for allegedly gang-raping a 21-year-old lady


Two men, who allegedly gang-raped a 21-year-old lady on Thursday appeared before an Ikeja Magistrates’ Court. The accused are a trader, Adeniyi Gidado, 25, who lives at 5, Osanyinpeju St., Agege, Lagos and Simeon Nwaugo, 25, also a trader, who lives at 9, Akeem Boye St., Iju-Ishaga, near Lagos.
The accused are facing a two-count charge of conspiracy and rape. The Prosecutor, Cpl. Felicia Okwori, told the court that the offences were committed on Nov. 24 at a hotel situated at 156 Dopemu Road, Agege, Lagos.
Okwori said that the first accused, Adeniyi, who was a boy friend to the victim invited her for a date at the hotel. “On getting there, they both decided to sleep in the hotel since it was already late to go home but unknown to the victim, her boy friend had invited the second accused.
“It was after the victim had slept that the second accused came in to the room and they gang-raped her,” she said. The prosecutor said that it was the screaming of the victim that woke the people in the hotel and the duo were apprehended. He said that the offences contravened Sections 258(1) (2) and 409 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.
The accused, however, pleaded not guilty. The Magistrate, Mrs Taiwo Akanni, granted each of the accused bail in the sum of N250, 000 with two sureties in like sum. The case was adjourned till Dec. 15 for hearing.

HOW TO LAND YOUR DREAM JOB

Why it's time you stepped out of your comfort zone

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Face your fears by doing something that scares you and watch your career soar (Shutterstock.com)
Sleeping, resting, chilling, cruising: we all yearn for a stress-free and easy life. We believe that being comfortable is good for us.
However, most successful people greatly disagree. Their experience has taught them that being uncomfortable is exactly the place where their potential thrives. Testing your limits, defying your boundaries, trying new things, putting yourself out there… that’s what takes you to the next level.
But people are usually afraid of failing and making mistakes and therefore opt to stick to exercises and activities that have known outcomes with little to no risk of embarrassment.
But that’s the surest way to stay stuck.
“I wan chop so I'm going to order what I know tastes good.”
But there could be something even better in the menu if only you’d spread your wings.
“I know I do this well so I’m always going to do it. It’s better than falling on my face by trying something else.”
But what if you are better at the something else too?
Warning:
The danger in always sticking with what is most comfortable is that you’ll always only know what you know. You'll always experience what you've experienced before. No new opinions, no new memories, no new feelings, no new accomplishments, and no new nothing. This is especially true in your career, for example:
• Passing on the opportunity to do a presentation (thanks to your glossophobia) means your colleague will always get credit for work you can do too. That's a missed opportunity.
• Saying no to extra work (because you think you're incapable) means it’ll be passed to someone else that gets to grow their skill set instead of you. That's a missed opportunity.
• Not sharing a new idea you have (do you think you’re too young/too new or that the idea will never work?) means that your superiors will continue overlooking your potential. You're missing out on new opportunities.
In addition, because your manager knows that you are unable to confront your fears, they'll stop offering you new opportunities all together. Have you ever noticed that there's usually only one person in the office that seems to get offered all the new opportunities? It's probably because they  take the chances you're too scared to take.
So, here’s why Neale Donald Walsch’s "life begins at the end of your comfort zone" quote should push you out of it:
Growth is at the end of your comfort zone
• You learn something new
With each new experience, you'll be able to see something in a way you've never seen it before.
• You’ll find out more about your strengths, weaknesses, likes and dislikes.
With each new experience, you'll know why it worked, what will make it work better next time, and if you'd enjoy a career that enables you to experience that regularly.
• You’ll feel more confident.
Achievement, pride and the realisation that you didn't die after completing an anxiety filled task, will make you believe in yourself so much more.
• You will get noticed.
If you put yourself out there, others will see you out there.
• You’ll begin inspiring people around you.
People will look at YOU and say: If she can do it then so can I.
It's true that people generally do not like to roam outside their comfort zone. And that's why most people aren't successful. Outside is where we grow, learn, and develop in a way that expands our horizons beyond what we ever thought we were capable of doing. Don't worry, you can fake it 'till you make it. Take the first step out of your comfort zone by growing your skillset, applying for that promotion, climbing the corporate ladder, leaving the job you hate,  and by finding better opportunities in other companies.

CAREER PATH

4 skills only work experience will teach you

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Your career teaches you many lessons that the ABCs of your textbook won't (Stocksnap.io)
From how to compete for a promotion to navigating your way around a difficult manager, there are skills that only your career will teach you. Even if you think you’re well-prepared for anything after university, surprises that life is likely to throw at you, will leave you thinking "Wetin dey happen?"
Regardless of where in life you are, there is something new for everyone to learn.
1. How to negotiate and not be taken granted of
If you want to build a successful career, you’re going to have to learn very early in your career that there is power in negotiating. Whether it’s starting a new job, asking for a salary increase or budgeting for a project, brushing up your negotiation skills will be the difference between striking the best deal and being taken for a ride. Unfortunately, school doesn't teach you this skills, like most people, you’ll have to take a few hard knocks and learn the hard way.
2. How to work with people and network
Learning to work with people is probably one of the most important skills you’ll have to master for success. You’ll have to learn how to handle the low-key aspects of your office culture and the people who make it that way: from your colleague who always has the most inappropriate things to say at the most inappropriate of times, to your manager who shoots down every idea you bring to the table.
The same applies to networking. Having a network of people you can reach out to in any situation will work to your advantage.
3. How to manage your time and responsibilities
Unfortunately in the office, there isn’t an administrator to set up a timetable for you and run after you when you’ve missed a submission date. This means that every single day you’ll have to manage your own responsibilities. You’ll have to be accountable for your own work, projects, meetings and emails. If anything goes wrong or you miss a deadline, you’ll be the one who'll have to answer to the mess.
You’ll also realise that enough time in a day usually doesn't exist. And if it does, there'll always be something else that can be done. But planning and keeping track of how you use your time, will help you to effectively manage it.
Remember: You have as many hours in a day as Beyoncé.
4. How  to handle feedback
Criticism whether positive or negative is an inevitable part of life. But the difference between school and office criticism is that in the office, there won’t be a teacher to congratulate you when you’ve aced a test or to tell you can do better when you haven’t. In fact, in business, you really are only as good as your last project. When given criticism the onus will be on you to listen to what you’re told, decipher what it means and decide how you’re going to apply it to better yourself.
Remember that receiving feedback of any nature from a colleague or your manager is usually a sign that they care about your personal growth and the trajectory of your career. The responsibility will be on you to remember this and use it to show your capability of learning and growth.
Just as with anything in life, the only way you’ll prepare yourself for the unknown is to break out of your comfort zone. Learning to navigate some of these skills before starting a full-time job - whether through an internship or a part-time job - will also ensure you’re aware of what to expect.

Union Bank appoints new chairman

Union Bank of Nigeria Plc (Union Bank) has appointed Mr. Cyril Odu as Chairman of the Board of Directors following the resignation of previous Chairman, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma, who was recently appointed Minister of Budget and National Planning by President Muhammadu Buhari.

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Mr. Cyril Odu as Chairman of the Board of Directors , Union Bank of Nigeria
Mr. Odu joined the Board of Union Bank in 2012 following a $500 million (USD) investment in the Bank from Union Global Partners Limited, a private equity consortium.
“The Board and Management of Union Bank thank Senator Udoma for his astute leadership and support over the past three years. Under Senator Udoma’s guidance, the Bank defined its strategic direction, outlined its transformation roadmap, and has made significant strides executing its priorities as is evident in our achievement of critical operational and financial milestones. We wish him success as he is called to serve our country in a higher capacity and to assist the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari in the transformation of the Nigerian economy,” says Emeka Emuwa, Group Managing Director and CEO of Union Bank.
On the appointment of Mr. Odu, Mr. Emuwa continues, “We are very pleased as Mr. Cyril Odu assumes the role of Chairman of the Board of Directors. As a non-Executive Director since 2012, he has brought his extensive knowledge and experience to bear and has provided critical input and direction to support Union Bank’s transformation. His appointment brings continuity and ensures that the Bank will continue to execute its defined strategic initiatives over the next few years.”
Mr. Odu has nearly 45 years of professional and management experience. His 40-year distinguished career at ExxonMobil saw him rise from Trainee to Vice Chairman of the Board of Mobil Producing Nigeria and Chief Financial Officer of ExxonMobil Upstream Companies in Nigeria, making him the highest ranking Nigerian in the organisation until his retirement in 2012.
During the span of his career at ExxonMobil, he served in many technical and managerial functions including Associate Geologist, Treasurer, Controller, Project Finance Director (Europe, Middle East and Africa), Country HR Manager, and General Manager, Planning and New Business Development. He was actively involved in developing and executing ExxonMobil business strategies in Nigeria, as well in as the implementation of several innovative funding and financing solutions, including the first upstream financing deal (the 1991 Oso Condensate field development) in Nigerian history.

Wednesday 25 November 2015

Eaglets stars head for Belgium

Kelechi Nwakali and three others in FIFA Under-17 world cup team will join Belgian club Standard Liege before moving to bigger European clubs.

Nwakali, Samuel Chukwueze, David Enogela and Joel Osikel have been signed by foremost players’ agents Stellar Group, who manage several top stars including Gareth Bale.
A top source informed: “The players have been invited to Europe by Standard Liege and it is from there that the players will be moved to other clubs in other leagues.”
Midfielder Nwakali was the MVP of the 2015 FIFA U17 World Cup and he has been variously linked with several top English Premier League.
Despite the tightening of restrictions on foreign youngsters moving to England, Nwakali is expected to be granted a work permit when he turns 18 using the special talent clause.
Manchester City starlet Kelechi Iheanacho was MVP of the 2013 FIFA U17 World Cup and used this clause to get a work permit this year.
Nigeria's players celebrate with the FIFA U-17 World Cup Chile 2015 trophy, at Sausalito stadium in Vina del Mar, on November 8, 2015. Nigeria defeated Mali 2-0.    AFP PHOTO

MAMA TARABA

Mama Taraba: Curious case of Nigerian women ceiling breaker


Senator Aisha Jummai Al-Hassan, popularly known and addressed as Mama Taraba, has grabbed the headlines in Nigeria’s socio-political hemisphere in recent months and for all the right reasons. Born on 16th September 1959 as Jummai Ibrahim Abubakar in Jalingo, Mama Taraba’s political clout has been on the increase and went even several knots higher since the last general elections in Nigeria, when she contested for the office of governor of her home state, Taraba.
She was tipped to win the election and become the first democratically elected female governor in Nigeria’s history, but that glory was derailed briefly through the election malpractices antics of the People’s Democratic Party. That election has since been overturned by the Taraba State Election Tribunal, and pending the judgement of the Appeal Court, Mama Taraba’s history-making ascension seem to be on course again.
L-R; New Ministers Brig. Gen. Munsur Mohammed Dan Ali (Defence); Hajia Khadija Bukar Ibrahim ((State Foreign Affairs); Aisha Jummai Alhassan (Women Affairs); and Hajia Aisha Abubakar (State, Trade and Investments) taking the oath of Office as Federal Ministers during their swear-in ceremony, held at the Presidential Villa Abuja. Photo by Abayomi Adeshida 11/11/2015
File: Aisha Jummai Alhassan ( 2nd right)  with other ministers taking the oath of Office during their swear-in ceremony recently.
The tribunal nullified the election of Architect Darius Dickson Ishaku as governor of Taraba, stating the he was not validly nominated as candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party in theApril 11 governorship election in the state. The tribunal chairman Justice Danladi Abubakar then declared the All Progressives Congress candidate, Senator Aisha Jummai Alhassan, as the winner of the election, having polled the second highest number of votes cast in the election, while equally directing the Independent National Electoral Commission to withdraw the certificate of return issued to Ishaku and swear in Alhassan.
While being the first female Governor of Taraba State would undoubtedly be the icing on the cake of her political career, Senator Jummai Al-Hassan has her resume littered with a number of equally enviable feats. Perhaps from her first foray into politics as an 18-year-old student of the School of Basic Studies, Ahmadu Bello University, she has distinguished herself as a woman who wouldn’t be limited by gender, religious, class or social factors in her quest to serve and contribute to the development of her immediate constituency.
She contested for and won the election for the post of the Vice-President of the Student Union Government of ABU in 1978, making her the first non-undergraduate to scale such heights in the political history of the illustrious school. Since then she hasn’t looked back. She was the only female in the ABU SUG Exco of the 1978-1979 set, and indeed ended her tenure as Acting President after the then President and other exco members were expelled from the University.
Senator Jummai Al-Hassan joined the Kaduna State Judiciary in 1988 as a Magistrate Grade II and rose through the ranks to become the first female Chief Magistrate in the FCT in 1996. A year later, she was moved to Judicial Administration and became the first female Deputy Chief Registrar and Director Litigation, High Court of the FCT. That same year (1997), she became the first female Attorney General of Taraba State. She then went back to Abuja in 2002 as the first female Secretary of the FCT Judicial Service Committee, spending just a year in that role before being appointed the first female Chief Registrar of the FCT High Court in December 2003.
Mama Taraba retired from the civil service as Chief Registrar of the FCT Judiciary in 2009 and has excelled in politics since then as she did in her professional career. Aisha Alhassan became a Senator of the Federal Republic in 2011 when she won the election to represent Taraba North Senatorial District in the National Assembly on the platform of the PDP. Her victory was even more remarkable in that she defeated a former Governor of Taraba State, Reverend Jolly Nyame. It was from the Senate that Mama Taraba took on the daunting task of governing her state and emerged as APC’s flagbearer for the April 11 election.
While the tribunal case was ongoing, Mama Taraba was nominated and confirmed as a Minister for Women Affairs by President Muhammadu Buhari. As we await the resolution of the legal tussle at the Appeal Court, it seems inevitable that Mama Taraba will be the one to shatter the glass ceiling for Nigerian women in politics. However it goes, the story is nonetheless remarkable that a woman from Jalingo would in the space of 5 years be senator, minister and governor.

Manchester United fans honour late hero Best

Manchester United’s supporters paid tribute to late club great George Best as their team played PSV Eindhoven on Wednesday, 10 years to the day since he died aged 59.

George Best
George Best
Fans illuminated the screens on their smartphones and held them aloft during the seventh minute of the Champions League game, in a nod to the shirt number most closely associated with the richly talented Northern Irish winger.
Supporters had earlier hung a new banner in the stadium bearing the legend ‘GEORGIE… SIMPLY THE BEST,’ while fans laid roses at Best’s feet on the statue of him, Denis Law and Bobby Charlton that stands on the Old Trafford forecourt.
The dashing Best, who won the 1968 Ballon d’Or, played 470 times and scored 179 goals for United, winning two First Division titles and scoring in the club’s European Cup final triumph over Benfica in 1968.
But he left aged 27 after becoming disillusioned with the game and wound down his career over a nomadic 10-year period that took in sporadic spells at clubs in England, Scotland and North America.
Heralded as one of the game’s finest players by greats such as Pele, Diego Maradona and Franz Beckenbauer, Best was renowned for his charisma and playboy lifestyle but struggled with alcoholism in later life.

IS OZIL THE BEST NUMBER 10?

DURING THE INTERNATIONAL BREAK, WE WERE ABLE TO STEP BACK FROM PREPARING FOR AND THEN DISSECTING MATCHES AND TAKE A LOOK AT THE BIGGER PICTURE. EVEN AS WE’VE BEEN RAVAGED BY INJURIES, ONE OF THE BRIGHTEST SPOTS HAS BEEN THE PLAY OF MESUT OZIL, WHO HAS NOW DELIVERED ASSISTS IN SIX CONSECUTIVE PREMIER LEAGUE MATCHES, AN HISTORIC FEAT, AND HAS TWICE AS MANY ASSISTS AS THE NEXT MOST-GENEROUS MAN.
Does this make Ozil the best No 10 in England? Almost certainly. Does it make him the best No 10 in Europe? Probably. What’s scary, though, is that he’s not even scratching the surface of his talents.Three years into his time at Arsenal, Ozil finally looks like he’s comfortable: with the new league and country for one, but, more importantly, with his new role. At Real Madrid, he could more comfortably lurk in the long shadows cast by other Galacticos who craved and coveted the limelight that comes with being the leading man.Upon his arrival at Arsenal, though, he was immediately elevated to that echelon, and that, more than the more-ordinary transition from one league to another, seems to have taken much longer for the retiring Ozil to deal with.It’s not just that the man conjures scoring chances out of thin air – but, to be clear, he does, often to the extent that his own team-mates can’t anticipate the passes that he threads – it’s in how much he pulls defences out of shape.Traditional No 10s might spend most of their time in the centre of the pitch in order to send passes forward to the striker or to wingers, but Ozil defies conventional wisdom by spending just as much time if not more on the wings, finding space behind Arsenal’s wingers from which to send angled passes or crosses into the box (such as for the equaliser against Tottenham).He pops up all over the pitch, dropping deep to receive the ball, arriving on one touchline or the other, all but daring a defence to track him. Assign a defensive midfielder to him, and watch as he stays wide in order to open space through the middle for others to flow into.However, any suggestion that the man is the best No 10 in the world invites certain comparisons, and the first names that come to mind would have to be Manchester City’s David Silva and Barcelona’s Andres Iniesta.Comparisons to the former are complicated by his injury woes; comparisons to the latter are complicated by his age. Comparisons to both are complicated by each squad’s propensity to overwhelm opponents.When we talk of Ozil, very often the talk turns to intangibles, at times in a sardonic sense as if his occasional invisibility indicates a lack of quality. However, Arsène has spoken of Ozil’s less-quantifiable contributions, saying the following:“He was outstanding again [during the north London derby]. He has grown into a very great player as he has added commitment, leadership qualities and responsibility, and I’m very pleased with his development.”Yes, Arsène mentioned “leadership”, which might seem an odd quality given Ozil’s understated personality and the enduring image of Mertesacker berating him after a loss to Man City in December 2013. The squad has taken great strides since then, but perhaps no one has taken greater strides than Ozil.In other words, not only is he staking a claim to being one of the best No 10s in the world, Ozil might be on the verge of taking Arsenal itself by the scruff and elevating it to one of the best squads in the world. That’s a long row to hoe, but the early returns suggest that he has risen to the task.
Ozil

PDP Tackles APC Over Kogi Polls Deadlock

PDP kicks as INEC asks APC to replace Audu

The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, yesterday, invited the All Progressives Congress, APC, to forward a replacement for Prince Abubakar Audu, its dead candidate in the inconclusive Kogi State governorship election, thereby throwing up fresh legal and political firestorm in the state.
The INEC decision followed a pronouncement to that effect by the Minister of Justice, Mallam Abubakar Malami. While the APC welcomed the decision, the opposition Peoples Democratic Party, PDP demanded Malami’s resignation as it described the decision as an affront to democracy laced with mines to torpedo the democratic choice of the people in Kogi State.afa
Meanwhile, APC, ahead of the December 5 supplementary polls to conclude the governorship election, has proposed fresh primaries to throw up a replacement for late Audu. At press time, yesterday, the APC hierarchy in Abuja and Lokoja were still undecided on the mode of the potential primary contest.
There was also a cloud on whether it would be restricted to only those who bought the initial forms or opened up to new entrants, a possibility that could draw in Audu’s running mate, Rep. James Faleke and Alhaji Isah Jibrin Echocho who recently defected from the PDP after a stormy political battle with the incumbent governor, Captain Idris Wada.
The seeming constitutional crisis in Kogi State was opened after last Saturday’s governorship election was declared inconclusive upon the fact that the difference in votes between the late Audu and Wada was smaller than the number of registered voters in the 91 polling units where the votes were cancelled. Audu died Sunday  before the election could be concluded, throwing up a legal storm on the fate of the election.
Justice Minister on Kogi election
Malami, speaking at a seminar organised by the Nigerian Law Reform Commission on the reform of the National Environmental Standards and Regulation Enforcement Agency (Establishment) Act , said the Kogi gubernatorial election must be concluded within the next 14 days.
Specifically, the AGF said his position on the matter was fortified by a combined reading and application of Section 221 of the 1999 Constitution and Section 33 of the Electoral Act.
However, he failed to state whether or not the deputy governorship candidate of the APC, Mr. Abiodun Faleke, should be the proper person to replace Audu for the purpose of the run-off poll.
He said: “The issue is very straightforward. Fundamentally, Section 33 of the Electoral Act is very clear that in case of death, the right for substitution by a political party is sustained by the provisions of Section 33 of the Electoral Act.
“And if you have a community reading of that section with Section 221 of the constitution it clearly indicates that the right to vote is the right of a political party and  the party, in this case, the APC has participated in the conduct of the election. It is, therefore, apparent that the combined community reading of the two provisions does not leave any room for conjecture.
“APC as a party is entitled to substitution by the clear provisions of Section 33 of the Electoral Act. Also, Section 221 of the Constitution is clear that the votes cast were cast in favour of the APC.
“Arising from that deduction, it does not require any legal interpretation. The interpretation is clear, APC will substitute, which right has been sustained by Section 33 of the Electoral Act. So be it.
“The supplementary election has to be conducted along the line”, the AGF added.
Weighing in on the way forward following its acknowledgment of a notice from the APC on the death of Audu, INEC in a statement issued by the secretary of the commission, Augusta Ogakwu, put all the political parties on notice that the supplementary polls would hold on December 5.
She added that the APC has also been offered a window of opportunity to pick a new candidate for the exercise.
The statement reads: “The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, conducted governorship election in Kogi State on 21st November 2015, which was declared inconclusive.
“On November 23, 2015, the All Progressives Congress, APC, notified the commission of the death of its governorship candidate in the election, Prince Abubakar Audu.
“The commission has after due consideration of the circumstances, decided as follows: To conclude the process by conducting election in the 91 affected polling units as announced by the Returning Officer;
“To allow the All Progressives Congress to fill the vacancy created by the death of its candidate;
“To conduct the supplementary election on December 5, 2015.
“Accordingly, notice is hereby given to all the 22 political parties participating in the Kogi Governorship Election that supplementary election in the 91 affected Polling Units shall hold on  December 5, 2015”.
PDP slams INEC, AGF
The INEC statement was immediately strongly condemned by the PDP.
Immediately INEC issued the statement senior officials of the party in Lokoja huddled into a meeting to review the situation. At the end of their meeting, yesterday evening, party leaders refused to comment, saying the party in Abuja would speak for them.
The party, reacting through its National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh in a statement issued in Abuja demanded the resignation of Malami as Minister of Justice and Prof. Mahmud Yakubu as INEC chairman as the party alleged a conspiracy between the two to derail the democratic enterprise.
“The party is shocked that INEC, a supposedly independent electoral umpire could allow itself to succumb to the antics of the APC by following the unlawful directive of an obviously partisan AGF to substitute a candidate in the middle of the ballot process.
We are all aware that the two legal documents guiding INEC in the conduct of elections; the Constitution and the Electoral Act, have provisions for electoral exigencies as well as empower the electoral body to fully take responsibility for any of its actions or inaction without undue interference from any quarters whatsoever.
“We are, therefore, at a loss as to which sections of these two relevant laws, INEC and the AGF relied on in arriving at their bizarre decision to substitute a dead candidate in an on-going election even after the timelines for such has elapsed under all the rules.
INEC as a statutory body has the full complements of technical hands in its legal department to advise it appropriately and we wonder why it had to wait for directives from the AGF, an external party, if not for partisan and subjective interest.
Consequently, the PDP rejects in its entirety, this brazen move by the APC and INEC to circumvent the laws and ambush the yet-to-be concluded election by introducing a practice that is completely alien to the constitution and the electoral act.
“The clear implication of this action of the AGF and INEC is that the APC would be fielding two different governorship candidates in the on-going Kogi election, meaning that INEC would be transferring votes cast for late Prince Abubakar Audu to another candidate, scenarios that have no place in the constitution of the land.
“Whereas the PDP, in honour of the sanctity of human life and respect for the dead, had since Sunday refrained from making comments on the conduct of the election, we can no longer maintain such in the face of the bare-faced attack on our democracy.
“This INEC under the leadership of Prof. Mahmood Yakubu has shown itself as partisan, morally bankrupt and obviously incapable of conducting a credible election within our laws.
“In view of the foregoing, therefore, the PDP demands an immediate resignation of the INEC chairman, as the nation’s democracy cannot afford to be left in the hands of an electoral umpire that cannot exert its independence and the sanctity of the electoral process.
“In view of the developments regarding Kogi Governorship election, the National Working Committee of the PDP has summoned an emergency National Caucus meeting of the party on Wednesday, November 25, 2015 (today), to take a decision on this obvious threat to our democracy.
APC welcomes development
The APC on its part, however, welcomed the development even as it proposed a primary among interested contestants as a replacement for Audu.
It was learned, last night, that the APC National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, met behind closed doors with some of the aspirants who participated in the previous primaries yesterday. Audu’s running mate in the election was also invited to the meeting.
Speaking to newsmen yesterday, Odigie-Oyegun said: “We lost our candidate for the election in Kogi State on Sunday and since then, we have concentrated as a party on paying him the right respect that is due to a man of his calibre. Let me take this opportunity to express the very sincere condolence of the entire party nationwide to the family of Prince Abubakar Audu and to the people of Kogi State who have just gone through the rigours of an election, indicated their preference for Prince Abubakar Audu, only to lose him at the very moment of victory. We were represented at the funeral by almost the entire executive and that is now behind us. Now, matters of state must now come back to the fore.
“I want to underscore the fact that INEC is also apparently in agreement with the views of the Attorney-General because we have already received a letter from them formally asking us to find a replacement for the vacancy that has been created by the passing on of Prince Abubakar Audu, and that is what will now engage the APC from this moment on.”
Asked when the primary election was expected to hold, the chairman said all that was a matter of discussion with the party stakeholders
“We just got notification from INEC today. So, we will go into an emergency session to work out the modalities and nature of the primary. We are told that the supplementary election will be on December 5. When that will be or who will be is a matter of details. But it is going to be the preference of the electors and we will respect that. We are a democratic, law abiding party, and we are going to proceed accordingly.”
On the fate of Audu’s running mate, Faleke, Odigie-Oyegun decided that it was incumbent on the people to decide whether he would join in the primaries.
“I said it will be the preference of the electors on who the candidate that will replace Prince Abubakar Audu will be”, he said.
On a similar stance, the national chairman also refused to give details on whether it would sell fresh expression of interest forms or work with the former aspirants of the ticket.
Meanwhile, it emerged, yesterday, that Alhaji Echocho, who crossed over to the APC from the PDP after a futile bid to take the governorship ticket from Wada, was inclining into the contest.
Echocho had reportedly been backed by Senator Smart Adeyemi in the PDP primary and failing which, his supporters and those of Senator Adeyemi collaborated in the election to fight Wada.
On whether such new entrants would be allowed into the APC contest, Odigie-Oyegun was yet undecided saying: “So, we are going to do everything as straightforward and simple, but clearly above board in maintaining due process as much as possible. I cannot give you that answer now because we just got indication of the clear direction from INEC within the last few hours.”
The INEC stance on a fresh election was also flayed by the Progressive Peoples Congress.
Speaking to Vanguard, the Kogi State Chairman of the party, Mr. Simeon Ojonuba said the electoral body erred by arrogating importance to illegality. He said the party was prepared to contest the position of INEC in a competent court of jurisprudence if the commission fails to retrace its steps on the matter.
Ojonuba accused the electoral body of acting the script of a political party, saying the party would only favour an outright cancellation and rerun.

HID's Burial in Pictures

In photos: Buhari, Tinubu, others attend late HID Awolowo’s burial

President Muhammadu Buhari among other eminent Nigerians attended the burial ceremony of late Chief HID Awolowo in Ikenne Ogun State on Wednesday…See photos.
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L-R Governor Ibikunle Amosun, Minister of Communication Bar. Adebayo Shittu, Minister of Power, Works and Housing Babatunde Raji Fashola, Minister of Interior Lt. Gen. Abdulrahaman Dambazzau (Rtd) and Minister of Solid Minerals Kayode Fayemi waiting to welcome President Buhari as he arrives Ikenne Ogun state to condole the Awolowo Family over the death of the Matriarch, Late Mrs HID Awolowo
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President Buhari with Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and his wife, one of the surviving daughters of the Awolowos and Governor Ibikunle Amosun.
President Buhari being received by Governor Ibikunle Amosun, Minister of Defence Brig. Gen. Mansur Dan Ali, Minister of Agriculture Chief Audu Ogbeh, Minister of Science and Technology Dr. Ogbonaya Onu and Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi as President Buhari arrives Ikenne Ogun state to condole the Awolowo Family over the death of the Matriarch, Late Mrs HID Awolowo
President Buhari being received by Governor Ibikunle Amosun, Minister of Defence Brig. Gen. Mansur Dan Ali, Minister of Agriculture Chief Audu Ogbeh, Minister of Science and Technology Dr. Ogbonaya Onu and Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi as President Buhari arrives Ikenne Ogun state to condole the Awolowo Family over the death of the Matriarch, Late Mrs HID Awolowo.
President Buhari with Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and his wife, Wife of the Senate President Mrs Toyin Saraki, Wife of the Speaker of House of Representative and One of the two surviving children of the Awolowos
President Buhari with Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and his wife, Wife of the Senate President Mrs Toyin Saraki, Wife of the Speaker of House of Representative and One of the two surviving children of the Awolowos
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President Buhari with Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and his wife in a group photo with the Awolowos.
President Buhari with Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and his wife at the tomb of Late Mrs HID Awolowo
President Buhari with Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and his wife at the tomb of Late Mrs HID Awolowo









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Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and Chief Rotimi Ameachi
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Chief Dele Momodu, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, Osun State Governor and his counterpart Abiola Ajumobi of Oyo State.
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L-R: Chief Ernest Sonekan, Gen. Dipo Diya rtd and Gen&Mrs. Yakubu Gowon.