Monday, 21 November 2016

Kogi governor urges Senate to allow him appoint board members for NIWA

Bello
Kogi State governor, Alhaji Yahaya Bello, has asked the Senate Committee on Marine Transport to include in the proposed amendment of Nigeria InlandWater Ways Authority (NIWA) a clause that empowers Kogi state governor to appoint a board member for the authority.
Bello who was represented by his Special Adviser on legislature (Assembly matters), Barrister Haruna Yusuf argued that NIWA Act, 2004 which allows the Minister of Transport the sole authority to appoint board members was counter productive, insisting that the minister could appoint wrong persons.
He added that the Minister could appoint board members outside the host state and no body can challenge him under the current laws.
“Since the headquarters of Nigeria Inland Waterways Authority is in Lokoja, Kogi state, I should be allowed by law to appoint board members and so I am appealing to the Senate Committee on Marine Transport to include this provision in the amendment,” Bello posited.
The demand, however, caused laughter among the audience.
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Accused families protest as Appeal court’s motion stalls Aderiye’s murder case

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The non-adoption of brief of argument at the Ado Ekiti Division of the Court of Appeal has stalled the trial of seven persons accused of complicity in the killing of former Ekiti State National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) Omolafe Aderiye.
The case could not go on at the Ekiti State High Court 6 on Monday as presiding judge, Justice Adekanye Ogunmoye adjourned to December 19 for mention pending the conclusion of hearing at the appellate court.
The accused persons are Adebayo Aderiye (1st), Adeniyi Adedipe (2nd), Oso Farotimi (3rd), Ajayi Kayode (4th), Sola Durodola (5th), Rotimi Olanbiwonnu (6th) and Sola Adenijo (7th).
Prosecution counsel, M.T. Alaaya told the court that there was a pending motion on the matter at the Court of Appeal praying for an adjournment of the case.
Defence counsel, Elijah Nworie, said the Appeal Court was yet to adopt the brief of argument of the parties pending before it, hence the need for adjournment.
Justice Ogunmoye said his court could not go on with the matter when the Court of Appeal had not disposed of the motion filed there by the prosecution, adjourning the case to December 19 for mention.
Shortly after the court rose, families of the accused persons alleged a conspiracy between the state government and the authorities of the Ado Ekiti Court of Appeal to stall hearing and keep their breadwinners permanently in prison custody.
Adedipe’s daughter, Oluwatoyin, called on the Fayose administration to release her father and other accused persons unconditionally saying the family is suffering the over two year incarceration of his father.
She said: “I gained admission into the university but I could not pay because of my father’s detention in prison custody and we the children are crying everyday.
“We know for sure that he did not commit the offence for which he is being tried and we are calling on them to release him unconditionally. When my father had the opportunity to run away during the last jailbreak, he did not do so because he knew he didn’t commit the offence.”
Olanbiwonnu’s son, Olaide, urged the National Judicial Council (NJC) and the Court of Appeal headquarters in Abuja to intervene, accusing the Ekiti government of colluding with the Ado Ekiti Division to stall the case.
Olaide said: “This is a delay tactic employed by the state government, the accused should be the one delaying the matter but it is now the other way round.
“We want to appeal to the Federal Government and NJC to intervene by investigating those at the Ado Ekiti Court of Appeal. These people are suffering for the offence they did not commit and judges and officials of the Appeal Court here should not delay the case before them.”
Mrs. Seun Adenijo, who spoke on behalf of the wives of the accused persons, alleged that the delay was deliberate as the motion was filed at the Appeal Court over five months ago without being heard.
She said: “We believe the case is being intentionally delayed because over five months ago when the state government filed a motion there, they are yet to give a date to hear it.
“There was a time they said they were on vacation and we waited until they finished vacation and nothing has been done by the Court of Appeal so far. We appeal to the judges and the Registrar to dispose of the motion so that the High Court can go on with the case before it.”
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Miss Anambra Sex Video: Beauty queens are not prostitutes – Miss Heritage Tourism, Queen Iormua

Current Miss Heritage Tourism, Queen Iormua, has waded into the much publicized lesbian sex tape of the crowned winner of Miss Anambra 2015 competition, Chidinma Okeke.
Controversies and mixed reactions have continued to trail the ex-beauty queen’s involvement in the scandal.
Recall that the embattled ex-beauty queen had been entangled in a lesbian sex tape scandal, in a video which went viral on the internet where she was seen having a ‘cozy time’ with her female sex partner, who unconfirmed sources simply identified as Ada.
The video shows her on a lesbian act with Ada, who is reportedly one of her close friends and happens to be her personal assistant and also the 3rd runner up at the queen of democracy, 2014.
While some have said most Nigerian models would do anything for money, others say Ms. Okeke’s involvement in the saga was a set up by her enemies.
Miss Okeke, had also alleged that the organizers of the Miss Anambra Beauty Pageant, Anambra Broadcasting Service, ABS, was behind the blackmail video. 
But reacting to the scandal and comments, Miss Heritage Tourism spoke on the incident which has purportedly brought disrespect to the crowns of other beauty queens in the country.
She cleared the air on the alleged mindset that beauty queens were prostitutes hiding under the umbrella of beauty pageant to practice their key professions.
Iormua, in an exclusive interview with DAILY POST blasted critics, saying Ms. Okeke’s mistake cannot and must not be used to judge other beauty queens.
The Benue-born said, “Beauty queen or not, we are all faced with scandals. If you haven’t wore the shoes, you can never know where it hurts.
“Chidinma’s sex tape is unfortunate and it obviously wasn’t a deliberate act. A girl cannot drop a nude video of herself on social media deliberately.
“I am not supporting her but there is more to that story which ears have not heard.
“You can’t use another person’s situation to judge everybody.
“Beauty pageantry is a platform to impact the society through humanitarian activities, so people out there should stop seeing models as sex icons but ambassadors,” she stated.
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Philippines to jail nine-year-old children for crimes

Prison
Children as young as nine could be jailed in the Philippines for certain crimes under a proposed law backed by the president, sparking concern Monday from the United Nations and rights groups.
President Rodrigo Duterte’s allies have been pushing to pass laws by December that would restore the death penalty and lower the minimum age of criminal responsibility from 15 to 9.
Duterte won May elections largely because of a vow to kill tens of thousands of drug dealers, also promising on the campaign trail to close a loophole in the juvenile justice system that he said allowed traffickers to use minors as narcotic couriers.
“Adult criminals knowingly and purposely make use of youth below 15 years of age to commit crimes, such as drug trafficking,” Pantaleon Alvarez, one of the proposed law’s main backers, said in an explanatory note.
While Duterte wanted the age threshold dropped to 12, his allies went one step further by calling for it to be lowered to nine.
The UN children’s agency UNICEF reminded the Philippines of its international obligations.
Manila is a state party to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, which says criminal responsibility below the age of 12 is not acceptable.
“Jail is no place for a child. It is alarming for children to be institutionalised (sent to a penal institution),” UNICEF said in a position paper sent to AFP Monday. “It will be retrogression on the part of the Philippine Government.”
Rights organisations launched a campaign called #ChildrenNotCriminals to urge lawmakers to reconsider their support for the law.
One of the groups, Plan International, told AFP that children on the wrong side of the law were often victims of criminal gangs.
“It is unfair that it’s always the children who are blamed. This will result in children becoming hardened criminals,” said Ernesto Almocera of Plan International Philippines.
The advocates appealed to Duterte to explore factors that led children to commit crimes, such as poverty and lack of parental guidance and education.
“We cannot hold children to the same standard as we hold adult offenders,” Melanie Llana of the Philippine Action for Youth Offenders told AFP. “Are we really going to jail 9-year-olds who we know are not fully mature?”
Duterte’s hardline approach to criminals has drawn criticism from its ally the United States, the UN and human rights groups.
Nearly 2,000 people have been killed in police operations and 2,800 have died in unexplained circumstances since Duterte took office on June 30, according to official figures.
Critics allege some of these deaths amount to state-sponsored extrajudicial killings, a charge Duterte has rejected.<

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