Connect with us

News

EFCC LAUNCHES MASS PROBE OF 28 GOVERNORS, DEPUTIES AS 18 GOVS PREPARE TO LEAVE ON MAY 29

Published

on

Barely one week before the change of administration in some states, Nigeria’s anti-corruption agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has launched investigations into the activities of outgoing governors and their deputies, PREMIUM TIMES reports.

Meanwhile, SaharaReporters reported on November 17, 2022, that the EFCC Chairman, Abdulrasheed Bawa announced that the number of governors on their watchlist had increased from its previous number.

Also in November, the EFCC said it was monitoring at least three serving governors who hoarded billions of naira in various houses.

Multiple sources later identified the governors as Nyesom Wike of Rivers State, Bello Matawalle of Zamfara State and Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano State, as exclusively reported by SaharaReporters on November 4, 2022.

Although he did not mention the number of governors being monitored by the anti-graft agency, Bawa said the EFCC was pleased with the move by the Central Bank of Nigeria to redesign some naira notes.

However, PREMIUM TIMES based on an exclusive memo it obtained reported that the anti-corruption agency is beaming its searchlight on 28 governors and their deputies, out of which 18 governors and their deputies would hand over to newly elected governors and their deputies on May 29, after which their constitutional immunity will expire.

Nigeria has 36 states and each is governed by a governor with support from their deputy.

At least 18 of the governors with their deputies targeted for investigations by EFCC are preparing to leave office when they complete their second terms in office on May 29. One is leaving office after completing a term, while 10 others, who recently won their second term elections, are expected to remain in office for the next four years.

The anti-graft agency, according to the paper has requested their assets declaration forms from the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB), in official communication between the two agencies.

Details of the cases EFCC has against the officials are not immediately made clear, but the commission said in its letter addressed to the chairperson of CCB, Mohammed Isah, that it needs the asset declaration documents to facilitate an ongoing investigation involving them.

“This commission is investigating a case in which persons listed in the attached schedule. featured,” read the EFCC’s letter dated 11 April and signed by an official on behalf of the EFCC’s chair, Abduralsheed Bawa.

The letter signed by Umma Sulaiman of the Proceeds of Crime Management Department of the EFCC, and exclusively obtained by PREMIUM TIMES, contains an annexure of a list of governors with their deputies who either took office in 2015 or 2019.

It requested the asset declaration forms submitted at the beginning and the end of the current tenure of the governors and their deputies.

“In order to facilitate the investigation, you are kindly requested to furnish the commission with the Certified True Copy (CTC) of the Asset Declaration Forms filled by each of the subjects for period stated against their respective names.

“Also, you are to forward the Bureau’s examination/verification report of the declared asset,” the letter read, citing section 38(1) of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (Establishment) Act, 2004, as the basis for the request.”

The paper, however, could not confirm if the CCB had responded to EFCC’s letter, although the acknowledgment copy of the letter viewed by the newspaper shows the bureau received it on April 11.

Meanwhile, SaharaReporters on May 18 reported that the EFCC announced that Zamfara State, Governor Bello Matawalle was under investigation for alleged N70 billion fraud.

EFCC’s Director of Public Affairs, Osita Nwajah, said allegations against Mr Matawalle include “corruption, award of phantom contracts and diversion of over N70 billion.

Matawalle, however, hit back at the anti-graft agency, accusing the EFCC chairman of demanding $2 million as a bribe from him.

The outgoing governor, who lost his re-election bid in March, however, denied any wrongdoing and asked the anti-graft agency to probe ‘officers of the presidency’ and members of the Federal Executive Council (FEC).

But the commission in response described Mr Matawalle’s outburst as the case of a “thief” saying he must not be touched until other “thieves’’ are caught and dared the governor to provide evidence to support his claim.

The spokesperson for the EFCC, Wilson Uwujaren said the commission would not be drawn into a mud fight with a “suspect under investigation for corruption and unconscionable pillage of the resources of his state”.

Mr Matawalle, the Zamfara governor, and his deputy, Hassan Gusau, are among the 28 governors the EFCC is investigating according to the report.

Other governors on the list include Rivers State governor Nyesom Wike; Kano governor, Abdullahi Ganduje; Kebbi governor, Abubakar Bagudu; Niger governor, Abubakar Bello; Benue governor, Samuel Ortom; Cross River governor, Benedict Ayade; Ebonyi governor, Dave Umahi; Abia governor, Okezie Ikpeazu; Delta governor, Ifeanyi Okowa; Adamawa governor, Ahmadu Fintiri; Lagos governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu; Kaduna governor, Nasir El-Rufai; Bauchi governor, Bala Mohammed; Katsina governor, Aminu Masari and Plateau governor, Simon Lalong.

The outgoing governors under the watchlist incude Abia State – lkpeazu and deputy Ude Oko Chukwu; Adamawa State – Fintiri and deputy Crowther Seth; Akwa Ibom, Udom Emmanuel and deputy Moses Ekpo; Bauchi State, Mohammed and deputy Baba Tela; Benue State, Samuel Ortom and deputy Benson Abounu; Borno State, Babagana Zulum and Umar Kadafur; Cross River, Ayade and deputy Ivara Esu; Delta State, Okowa and deputy Kingsley Otuaro.

Others include Ebonyi State, Umahi and deputy Eric Igwe; Enugu State Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi and deputy Cecilia Ezeilo; Gombe State Muhammad Yahaya and deputy Manasseh Jatau; Jigawa State Muhammad Abubakar and deputy Umar Namadi; Kaduna State Nasir El-Rufai and Hadiza Balarabe; Kano State Abdullahi Ganduje and deputy Nasir Gawuna; Katsina State Aminu Masari and Mannir Yakubu; Kebbi State Abubakar Bagudu and deputy Samaila Dabai; Kwara State Abdulrahman AbdulRasag and deputy Kayode Alabi; Lagos State Sanwo-Olu and deputy Femi Hamzat.

Others are Nasarawa State Abdullahi Sule and deputy Emmanuel Akabe; Niger State Abubakar Bello and deputy Ahmed Ketso; Ogun State Dapo Abiodun and deputy Noimot Salako-Oyedele; Oyo State Oluwaseyi Makinde and deputy Adebayo Lawal; Plateau State Simon Lalong and deputy Sonni Tyoden. Rivers State Nyesom Wike and Ipalibo Banigo; Sokoto State Aminu Tambuwal and deputy Manni Dan-Iya; Taraba State Darius Ishaku and deputy Haruna Manu; Yobe State Mai-Mala Buni and deputy Idi Gubana and Zamfara State, Matawalle and Hassan Gusau.

For news and events coverage, photo features, contributions and adverts contact us via:
Phone: +2348029115783
WhatsApp: +2347037611903
Follow us via:
Facebook: @Words and Shots
Instagram: @words_and_shots
Twitter: @wordsandshots

Foreign

SHOCKING REASONS WHY THE BIBLE WAS BANNED FROM SCHOOLS IN THE UNITED STATES

Published

on

The Bible, pictured at a Utah Capitol reading in 2013, has been banned at schools in the Davis School District north of Salt Lake City. CREDIT: AP

Salt Lake City: The Good Book is being treated like a bad book in Utah after a parent frustrated by efforts to ban materials from schools convinced a suburban district that some Bible verses were too vulgar or violent for younger children.

And the Book of Mormon could be next.

The 72,000-student Davis School District north of Salt Lake City removed the Bible from its elementary and middle schools while keeping it in high schools after a committee reviewed the scripture in response to a parental complaint. The district has removed other titles, including Sherman Alexie’s The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian and John Green’s Looking for Alaska, following a 2022 state law requiring districts to include parents in decisions over what constitutes “sensitive material”.

On Friday, a complaint was submitted about the signature scripture of the predominant faith in Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, widely known as the Mormon church. District spokesperson Chris Williams confirmed that someone filed a review request for the Book of Mormon but would not say what reasons were listed. Citing a school board privacy policy, he also would not say whether it was from the same person who complained about the Bible.

Representatives for the church declined to comment on the challenge. Members of the faith also read the Bible.

Williams said the district doesn’t differentiate between requests to review books and doesn’t consider whether complaints may be submitted as satire. The reviews are handled by a committee made up of teachers, parents and administrators in the largely conservative community.

The committee published its decision about the Bible in an online database of review requests and did not elaborate on its reasoning or which passages it found overly violent or vulgar.

The decision comes as conservative parent activists, including state-based chapters of the group Parents United, descend on school boards and statehouses throughout the United States, sowing alarm about how sex and violence are talked about in schools.

Because of the district’s privacy policy, it’s unknown who made the request for the Bible to be banned from Davis schools or if they are affiliated with any larger group.

A copy of the complaint obtained by The Salt Lake Tribune through a public records request shows that the parent noted the Bible contains instances of incest, prostitution and rape. The complaint derided a “bad faith process” and said the district was “ceding our children’s education, First Amendment Rights, and library access” to Parents United.

“Utah Parents United left off one of the most sex-ridden books around: The Bible,” the parent’s complaint, dated December 11, said. It later went on to add, “You’ll no doubt find that the Bible (under state law) has ‘no serious values for minors’ because it’s pornographic by our new definition.”

A scene from The Passion of the Christ (2003), which was based on the Bible gospels. CREDIT: AP

The review committee determined the Bible didn’t qualify under Utah’s definition of what’s pornographic or indecent, which is why it remains in high schools, Williams said. The committee can make its own decisions under the new 2022 state law and has applied different standards based on students’ ages in response to multiple challenges, he said.

An unnamed party filed an appeal on Wednesday.

The Bible has long found itself on the American Library Association’s list of most challenged books and was temporarily pulled off shelves last year in school districts in Texas and Missouri.

Concerns about new policies potentially ensnaring the Bible have routinely arisen in statehouses during debates over efforts to expand book banning procedures. That includes Arkansas — one of the states that enacted a law this year that would subject librarians to criminal penalties for providing “harmful” materials to minors, and creates a new process for the public to request materials be relocated in libraries.

“I don’t want people to be able to say, ‘I don’t want the Bible in the library,” Arkansas Democratic state Sen. Linda Chesterfield said during a hearing.

Parents who have pushed for more say in their children’s education and the curriculum and materials available in schools have argued that they should control how their children are taught about matters like gender, sexuality and race.

EveryLibrary, a national political action committee, told The Associated Press last month it was tracking at least 121 different proposals introduced in legislatures this year targeting libraries, librarians, educators and access to materials. The number of attempts to ban or restrict books across the US in 2022 was the highest in the 20 years, according to the American Library Association.

“If folks are outraged about the Bible being banned, they should be outraged about all the books that are being censored in our public schools,” said Kasey Meehan, who directs the Freedom to Read program at the writers’ organisation PEN America.

AP

For news and events coverage, photo features, contributions and adverts contact us via:
Phone: +2348029115783
WhatsApp: +2347037611903
Follow us via:
Facebook: @Words and Shots
Instagram: @words_and_shots
Twitter: @wordsandshots
Continue Reading

News

MAN SURVIVES ENCOUNTER WITH LION BY LAUNCHING SURPRISE COUNTER-ATTACK

Published

on

I ran towards it while shouting ‘iwe, iwe shumba’

Just as Tachivei Machona Nebiri reached the crest of a steep ascent along the Charara Road in Kariba, he saw four lions, a female and three cubs, steal into a nearby thicket.

Nebiri was taken aback by the sight, but drew solace in the thought that the lions had not seen him and were going about their business.

While contemplating his next move, he saw the figure of another lion on the right side of the road, gazing at him.

It roared, and Nebiri froze.

The lion charged at him with a dishevelled mane and an accentuated chest, accompanied by a spine-chilling roar, which disturbed the serene Sunday morning.

At this stage, tonic immobility, mimicry and deimatic display could have been pulled out of the toolkit of prey faced with such a predator. These are theatrics of survival in the jungle theatre.

Nebiri did the unthinkable!

He dropped his bag, flipped the slippers off his feet, and ran towards the approaching lion, screaming and raising his hands.

It was around 6am on a Sunday as security guards on nightshift made their way home, while others walked to work.

Being a Sunday, the road was teeming with people.

“The first thing that crossed my mind as I saw the lion charging towards me was that should I show it my back, then I am dead,” recounted Nebiri.

“So, I ran towards the lion while screaming and raising my hands. In my mind I was saying, ‘I am dead anyway, so why not go down with a fight?’”

Pound for pound, he stood no chance, but like a titan, he charged anyway.

Could this have been a shock and awe strategy that temporarily disoriented the lion as it moved to the side of the road before engagement?

The adrenaline rush cut the 100-metre distance between them to about 10 metres, with the lion gaining on him.

Was it going for the kill or it was protecting the lioness and her cubs?

Man and beast came face to face, and the latter charged. Each charge was met with Nebiri’s animated return, which seemed to fend off the King of the Jungle.

“It would back pedal and come charging at me again, but I kept on shouting, ‘Iwe, iwe shumba’, while kicking in the air and raising my hands,” said Nebiri.

His animated gestures were synonymous with Jackie Chan or Bruce Lee’s martial arts displays. Asked if he was a trained karateka, Nebiri said he had never undergone any martial arts training.

With Nebiri growling, shouting, charging and mock charging, and the lion discharging sand and stones at him in a bid to obstruct his vision, the tango continued. After a 15-minute stand-off, the King of the Jungle gave in and retreated to his abode, leaving Nebiri nursing chest and rib pains owing to the protracted exertions.

When the lion withdrew into the bush, Nebiri back pedalled while remaining alert to any sudden movement.

Just as he feared, the lion suddenly reappeared from the bush and the battle continued with Nebiri shouting, kicking and raising his hands, again.

“I don’t know how I mustered the courage to confront the lion, and where the theatrics came from. I just found myself doing what in hindsight seem to be karate moves,” he said.

After some time, the lion retreated into the bush once more, but Nebiri did not drop his guard, until he saw and heard the lion roaring in a nearby mountain with the female reciprocating the call.

Evidence of the dance for survival was left conspicuous in the lion’s spoor and trampled grass.

Nebiri walked back towards his workplace and saw a vehicle heading in the direction of his home in Batonga. He waved it down.

The driver of the car, Hardlife Zawani, said Nebiri was panting as someone who had been running for a long time.

“I couldn’t believe it when he told me what had happened,” Zawani said, adding, “I drove him to the scene where we found his bag and slippers.”

Some residents who live near the area said they heard roaring noises, but thought it was an elephant.

“I could hear the noises from indoors. It went on for a long time. I thought it was a lion and an elephant fighting,” said a woman who did not want to be named.

The area between the University of Zimbabwe fisheries research station and Lomagundi Lakeside Association is a known crossing point for lions as they make their way to and from Lake Kariba to drink water.

Kariba residents in Nyamhunga, Batonga, and Garikai suburbs, among others, walk along the Chawara Road which is buffeted by 330kva power lines to work and school.

People work in lodges and houses in the Cutty Sark Harbour area, despite the lurking danger of wild animals, including elephants, buffaloes, hyenas and lions.

When The Herald visited the scene of the skirmish, some people were walking along the route used by the lions to and from the lake. Ironically, Nebiri had passed two boys who asked him if there were no elephants where he was coming from and he did the same.

For news and events coverage, photo features, contributions and adverts contact us via:
Phone: +2348029115783
WhatsApp: +2347037611903
Follow us via:
Facebook: @Words and Shots
Instagram: @words_and_shots
Twitter: @wordsandshots
Continue Reading

News

FATHER IMPREGNATES DAUGHTER, SHE BECOMES MOTHER’S CO-WIFE

Published

on

Screenshot of the family

The daughter also regretted the situation but said that regret could not change anything.

A mother from Congo has narrated the pain she felt after finding out her daughter had slept with her husband and ended up giving birth.

The disappointed mother halfheartedly accepted the results of the union and forgave her husband and agreed to live with her daughter as a co-wife.

According to the story, the mother was very hurt and had asked for a divorce, but she got the idea that this would not solve things and instead would put the seed of enmity between them, if not welcome the devil into the family.

“She wanted to send her husband to jail for forcing their daughter to sleep with him and have a child with him but she realized that was not the solution,” Afrimax reported.

The daughter also regretted the situation but said that regret could not change anything.

“After the mother came back, she realized that it was her mistake for leaving her husband for a long time, which led to the unfortunate situation. Then she decided to forgive and now they all live a good life as a polygamous family,” the article said.

Despite the challenges of the issue, they decided to bury their differences and come together to agree on the way forward, which is how they came to the resolution.

Source: Afrimax

For news and events coverage, photo features, contributions and adverts contact us via:
Phone: +2348029115783
WhatsApp: +2347037611903
Follow us via:
Facebook: @Words and Shots
Instagram: @words_and_shots
Twitter: @wordsandshots
Continue Reading

Trending