Saturday, March 07, 2015

Read Dele Momodu's open letter to Nigeria's First Lady


Pendulum by Dele Momodu, published on today's Thisday Newspaper. Read below...
Your Excellency please let me start by emphasising the fact that this is my very first letter to you since destiny elevated you and your husband to the highest positions in Nigeria. It may be the last before your tenure expires on May 29, 2015, and another begins with you or someone else in the saddle. Despite all the controversies engulfing you and your husband, I had resisted the temptation of writing you in the past for several, if not many, reasons. Kindly permit me to expatiate a bit.

I’m a great admirer of strong, confident and energetic women who cannot be bullied by the galaxy of male chauvinists that litter the political landscape of Africa. As someone who was brought up by my amazing mum, Omo Arotiwebiojo, an unlettered woman and petty trader, I knew what it took to survive in a particularly difficult terrain. Indeed, whilst some have impugned you for your so-called lack of command of the English language, I have remained partial to you because, like most of us, English is not your first language, and your contributions have enriched our home-grown lexicon! I can therefore imagine what you and our dear beloved President must have gone through together, in thunder, lightning, rain and sunshine. The hurly-burly of life must have thrown you hither and thither when there was no one else around to share in your secret pain and anguish. But it must have pleased God in His infinite mercy to raise you and your husband up, like Jesus did to a dead Lazarus, as original examples of uncommon transformation.
I must say, Ma, that I have a soft spot for you for other reasons. I was told on good authority that you were a more formidable politician and mobiliser of people and resources than your husband. A few of your friends often regale how you have been a solid pillar and a rock of Gibraltar behind the love of your life, Dr Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan. It is said that you’re willing to sacrifice your all for his sake and he has also reciprocated by according you humongous respect and granting you such vast powers that make onlookers see you as a de facto President in your own right. To God be the glory.
I vividly recollect your relationship with the former First Lady, Hajia Turai Yar’Adua. You gave her tremendous respect and your taciturnity was legendary. Not much was heard from you at that time and not many, except probably Bayelsans, ever suspected that you had so much buried inside your heart and that you were only waiting for the opportune time to vomit them. Even in the days of tribulations when the cabal held sway and grabbed our nation by the jugular, you and your husband handled the volatile situation with maturity and remarkable equanimity. Some of us were ready to fight your battle, and risked our lives, because we saw you as the underdogs who must be rescued from the fangs of the political hyenas. We were further emboldened by the facts of your husband’s man-in-the-street story, a fairy-tale of sorts about a man from the Otuoke manger who had no shoes. We were not just titillated but fascinated by such flashes of inspiration.
Against all odds, your husband became the substantive President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Nigeria after the demise of President Yar’Adua. Nigerians were happy about the smooth transition of power and they even boasted that for the first time we had not just another graduate but a PhD holder as President. Sooner than later, as time sped by, it was time for your husband to run his own race. Nigerians from all walks of life queued behind him and he won without much ado. The goodwill he garnered was awesomely massive and the people were very expectant about the “fresh air” promised by him. Of course, to whom much is given, much is expected.
It is nearly four years since that momentous occasion and it is time for a re-examination and re-election. But what should have been a simple walk-over for your sweetheart seems to have developed k-leg. While your husband and those close to him would want us to believe he is Nigeria’s best President ever, many Nigerians feel he has under-performed and would want to try someone else. I have seen you and your husband waka up and down this nation campaigning like no man’s business. Many have likened the exercise to a student engaging in last minute agberu (memorising) after failing to do so all along.  This is the crux of my epistle to you today.
I have read and heard so much about you as a very powerful First Lady. I know that when you are at that level, not many people can tell you the gospel truth. No one wants to offend those in power. But I have decided to tell you the bitter reality once and for all. I’m not writing out of any malice, since none can exist between us. But for the sake of posterity, which I know beckons as always; the fact must be told to you. The summary of what I’m about to say is that you and your husband have frittered away most of your goodwill. Had you retained your humility in power, may be you could have avoided this commotion and conundrum of trying to achieve in two months what you couldn’t in about five years. You would probably have avoided the tragedy of trying to manipulate the electoral process, buying more time and doing a catch-up on lost grounds.
If the actuality must be told Ma, the whole trouble started the day you publicly ridiculed the Governor of your home state. It was reported that you yanked a microphone out of his hands and lambasted him like a recalcitrant school boy. In order not to cause mayhem right there, the Governor was said to have left you to your tantrums and went home quietly like a penitent student. That day, you sowed the seed of discord that would later germinate and snowball into a consuming fire. Though the Governor and your husband like true gentlemen chose to carry on their damaged relationship as if all was well, but the worst was on the way.
The battle for the soul and control of your state would later spread to Abuja where your husband began to see the Governor as an enemy who must be cut down to size. In the process of trying to achieve that dream, more Governors joined the fray and in a jiffy, the centre could no longer hold. I do not want to go into some obvious details as I’m sure you know about the intrigues of power more than me. But I must give one more example of how you laid the foundation for today’s grand alliance against your husband.
Let me put it this way. Never in the history of Nigeria have I read of a First Lady responding to criticisms in the frontal manner you attacked Professor Wole Soyinka over an issue that you could easily have ignored. That singular act of unrestrained combativeness was one of your worst public relations gaffes. Wole Soyinka is one of those global icons that you can’t take on and win. If for nothing, here was a man who at about 76 years of age trekked under the scorching sun of Abuja to defend the rights of your husband when many of the acolytes around you today were nowhere to be found. You were not supposed to repay such selfless gestures with verbal blows. That was when you finally lost me and I’m sure many others.
Let me remind you that virtually all Nigerian leaders have been disparaged at one time or the other. It is one of the heavy prices to pay in compensation for the privileges of leadership. Just imagine how much some of us attacked President Ibrahim Babangida, Chief Ernest Shonekan, General Sani Abacha and others over the June 12 crisis. None of their wives ever hit back at the critics no matter the degree of provocation. In fact, they acted perfectly normal and even tried to build bridges of friendship instead of bombing the castle. I remember with fond memories, Dr (Mrs) Maryam Ndidi Babangida, who remained graceful to the very end. Mrs Maryam Abacha endured the most blistering attacks against her husband in life and death. She has since reconciled with many of her husband’s vociferous enemies. Hajia Turai Yar’Adua was subjected to virulent criticism by many, and I confess I was one of her knockers in the dying throes of the cabal, but she wisely kept her own counsel and declined to join issues with anyone. When it dawn on her that the battle was lost and won, she packed her baggage out of Aso Rock without as much as a whimper.
If Justice Fati Abubakar was a selfish woman and a poor adviser to her husband, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, she would have insisted that they should not quit power within the one year he promised to hand over to a democratically-elected President. That government had more than enough resources to buy the ubiquitous array of mercenaries but General Abubakar chose to go in peace and not in pieces. It was such a rarity in Africa and till this day the General is still enjoying a standing ovation for his vision.
I must also mention specifically Mrs Stella Obasanjo, whose husband has always had a running battle with the media and yet she maintained steady media frenzy in her own kingdom. She was everyone’s friend and continues to be fondly remembered even in death. I recollect one occasion when we travelled to Beverley Hills, USA, with her, and her simplicity just wowed everyone. She made sure we jumped in the cars and buses and headed out to a night club owned by Don Cornelius. She was so down to earth. On her last trip to Ghana before her unfortunate death, I had gone to pay her a visit at M-Plaza hotel where she and President Obasanjo stayed. Despite my frosty relationship with her husband, we sat in one corner chatting away as the President attended to his own visitors. She never got involved in our endless battles with Baba. I have cited these examples to show that you and your husband are not alone in the barrage of criticisms and attacks. You must rise up way above such pedestal. But sadly, you have not been able to allow any comment pass you by, no matter how mundane.
I decided to write this open letter after the spate of vocal terror you deployed in the last few days against your husband’s opponents. In case some praise-singers told you lies that what you did was right, I wish to assure you that you’ve done almost irreparable damage to your husband’s presidential campaign. I will now proceed to paraphrase about three of those satanic verses that escaped from your tongue this week alone, but not in any particular order.
The first shocker was when you said before a crowd that those shouting the mantra of Change are not serious and that as a matter of fact they should be stoned anywhere they shout Change! I thought it was a joke until the video went viral. The next one was when you spoke dispassionately about how your husband should be praised and thanked for improving the welfare of the menacing Almajiri kids in Northern Nigeria but you then went astray by insensitively and inconsiderately saying that the Northerners are fond of bearing children with reckless abandon and throwing them on the streets to fend for themselves. You went further to say such things don’t happen in the part of Nigeria you come from. I think that wasn’t very nice or tactful.
The last straw for me was when you declared matter-of-factly that your husband’s main challenger, Major General Muhammadu Buhari should not be voted in because he is “brain dead”, according to you. That was extremely malevolent and sinister, to say the least. It is not an elegant language to be used by any lady not to mention the First Lady and certainly not about a former Head of State of the same country that you are governing and from whose citizens you are seeking a second term in office. However, I believe that this may have been an innocent quip. Whilst some may be willing to forgive such naivety, it is essential for you to quickly assure Nigerians that you meant no harm and that despite the ill-feeling and bitterness that politics and electioneering may engender you wish no evil to any man least of all your husband’s leading rival and contender. There is nothing wrong in admitting your mistake of commission or omission. It is actually a sign of strength.
In conclusion, I think you need to offer urgent apologies for those unguarded, unbecoming statements and try to be more circumspect in the future. One of your best appellations that I love most sincerely is that of Mama Peace. Please, don’t change it to Mama War …!
May God continue to bless you and yours.

Photos: OAU students tussle to seat on Pastor Kumuyi's chair


The General Superintendent of the Deeper Life Bible Church, Dr. William Kumuyi, was at Ile- Ife last Tuesday March 3rd for a two day campus crusade organised by the Campus Christian Mobilisation Committee of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife.

The pastor ministered to thousands of people at the new crusade ground of the university and then something funny happened after the event ended. Students began to tussle to be the first to seat on the chair the man of God sat on during the crusade. lol. See the photo after the cut...



10 feared dead after suicide bomber attack at Maiduguri market this morning


At least 10 people are feared dead after a suicide bomber riding on a tricycle popularly known as Keke NAPEP attacked the Baga fish market in Borno state about an hour ago. More details later.

UN envoy welcomes Somalia ceasefire agreement

The Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Somalia Nicholas Kay has welcomed the interim ceasefire agreement between the government of Somalia and the moderate Islamist group Ahlu Sunna Wal Jamaa.
The government of Somalia on Friday signed the agreement with Ahlu Sunna Wal Jamaa, ending weeks of fighting that has claimed almost 50 lives and displaced hundreds of families in Guri El central Somalia.
“I welcome the ceasefire agreement reached today between the Federal Government and Ahlu Sunna Wal Jamaa. We note that the two forces have agreed to separate, local people displaced by the conflict will be returned home and that formal talks to secure a lasting solution will begin within ten days,” Kay said in a statement issued in Mogadishu late on Friday.
“All parties must now refrain from any violent actions, and resolve their differences through peaceful dialogue and compromise. The United Nations stands ready to support all such efforts,” he added.
In the agreement, which was led by Somali defence minister Abdiqadir Sheikh Dini and witnessed by local leaders and intellectuals in the region, the government agreed to withdraw its forces from the embattled town to allow displaced people to return.
Ahlu Sunnah Wal Jamaa had clashed with government forces over control of the town, with the former insisting to control it after wrestling it from the Al-Qaida linked militant group Al-Shabaab.

Edward Snowden seeks asylum in Switzerland


National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden has publicly asked Switzerland to grant him political asylum.
The most prolific leaker in U.S. intelligence history told a crowd in Geneva from video link in Moscow Thursday night that he would love to return to Geneva, where he formerly worked undercover for the CIA before rejoining the NSA.
“I would love to return to Switzerland, some of my favorite memories are from Geneva. It’s a wonderful place,” Snowden told the audience at the International Film Festival and Forum on Human Rights after a viewing of “Citizenfour” — the Oscar-winning documentary about his unprecedented leak of classified intelligence documents to journalists Laura Poitras, Barton Gellman and Glenn Greenwald.
“I do think Switzerland would be a sort of great political option because it has a history of neutrality,” Snowden said according to Reuters.
Snowden said he has applied for asylum to 21 countries, the majority in central and Western Europe, but that political interference by the Obama administration has so far kept him from being accepted anywhere outside of Russia, where his political asylum was renewed last year.
The former NSA contractor repeated his chief desire was to return to the U.S., but reiterated he would not do so until the U.S. government guaranteed him a fair trial. According to current U.S. law grounded in the Espionage Act, under which Snowden was charged, the leaker would not be allowed to make a public disclosure defense — essentially, a defense based on the premise that the public has the right to know the level to which they are being surveilled by the state.
So far, all the U.S. government will guarantee is that they will not execute Snowden, “which is not the same as a fair trial,” the whistleblower said.
“Edward Snowden is without a doubt a whistleblower and someone who should be protected,” Amnesty International’s Sherif Elsayed-Ali said in defense of Snowden’s asylum request during a debate following the film. ”He should not even be tried, because what he did was to expose government over-reach and things that should not be happening.”
According to Swiss law, an applicant for political asylum must be in Swiss territory for the government to consider the request.

Ukraine starts rocket launchers withdrawal from frontline


The Ukrainian army on Friday began the withdrawal of multiple rocket-launching systems, its heaviest weapons, from the frontline in eastern regions, a government military spokesman Andriy Lysenko said.
“Today, our forces started the pullout of Uragan rocket launchers,” Lysenko told reporters during a media briefing.
Monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) are observing the process, Lysenko said.
The withdrawal of multiple rocket launchers marked the third phase of weapon pullback by Ukrainian forces in eastern regions.
During the first two stages of removal process, Kiev has withdrawn heavy guns and artillery from the line of contact with pro-independence rebels.
The withdrawal of heavy weapons and creation of a buffer zone between the two warring sides are a part of a ceasefire deal signed on Feb.12 in Minsk, the Belarusian capital, to end the conflict, which has killed more than 6,000 people since April 2014.
The rebel forces said they have already withdrawn their heavy weapons from the frontline.

(UPDATE) Jonathan, others in long trek, promises special sports fund


sportsmen
President Goodluck Jonathan on Saturday promised to institute a special fund for the sports sector if re-elected for a second term on March 28.
Jonathan made the promise while addressing sportsmen and others at a solidarity rally organised for him at the Eagle Square, Abuja.
The event put together by a Non-Governmental Organisation, Desire for Greatness Foundation, saw the President walking from the Presidential Villa, Abuja to the venue.
He was joined in the long walk by Vice President Namadi Sambo and President of the Senate, David Mark, among other top government officials and presidential aides.
The President said the special fund would serve as stop gap for training of the nation’s sportsmen before their budgets are approved.
He added that the fund would also be used to bring succour to sports who have brought glory to the nation but suddenly found themselves in need.
He said, “To strengthen sporting activities in Nigeria further, there are some areas that we need to look into and I promise that when we come back, we are going to set up a special fund that will handle these special areas.
“I have identified about five areas that we must look at. I realised that sometimes when we have major tournaments, because of government budgeting and files movement, training periods are delayed. We want to make sure that we stop that by setting up a special fund that can serve as a stop gap.
“One other thing I realised from our interactions with sportsmen and women from my days in Bayelsa State to the centre here is that some of them want special training programmes that their federation cannot fund and they won’t have money to do that. We must stop that.
“Some other ones want to improve their professional career. Because they are so committed to sports, they may not go to university at the time they should have gone. So when they want to go, they may not have the money. We must have fund for that.
“Another area is that some of them get injured and can no longer participate and sometimes, they are left on their own. We must get some funds to take care of such people.
“Another one that I have identified is that some people have made this country proud. Sport is one key thing that brings unity to this country. Whenever our sportsmen are playing, we don’t discriminate.
“We must set up fund to make sure that nobody who had made this country proud will be a beggar.”
Jonathan also promised that his administration would strengthen sports institutions such as the National Sports Institute in Lagos, and the Centre of Excellence here in Abuja.
He said in developing the institutions, his government would not depend on annual budget with its yearly change in benchmark.
He said the management of the fund would be in the hands of the private sector so that it would continue to grow and take care of all the areas that he had identified.
The President said his government would continue to budget for fund but the intervention fund was needed to complement what government budgets annually.
“That will give us the opportunity to take care of these areas that we have identified. My conviction is that when these areas are properly handled, Nigeria will begin to dominate sporting activities globally,” he concluded.
Sambo, in his short remarks, said Nigeria could not afford to be governed by a 73-year-old President.
He was referring to the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.).
“I don’t think this country deserves a 73-year-old President. Jonathan should carry go,” the Vice President declared.
He aligned with the position of Mark who had earlier called on the people to ensure that they collect their Permanent Voters Card to enable them vote massively for the President during the election.
Others who spoke included the Minister of Sports, Tamino Danagogo; Director-General, National Sports Commission, Gbenga Elegbeleye; football stars, Augustine Eguavoen and Joseph Yobo as well as Mary Onyali.
They all lauded the support the present administration had been giving to the sports sector, urging Nigerians to give Jonathan the opportunity of consolidating on his achievement by voting for him.
Jonathan and his men started the long walk from the gate of his official residence inside the Presidential Villa, Abuja at about 7.15am.

Large turnout at pre-election trial in Niger


There was a high turnout of registered voters at the pre-election trial of the card reader devices by the Independent National Electoral Commission in Niger on Saturday.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that residents of Egwa-Gwada area of Shiroro Local Government Area started coming out as early as 8am to participate in the exercise.
INEC Commissioner Niger, Kaduna, Kwara and the FCT, Dr. Chris Iyimoga, told newsmen that the whole exercise was encouraging.
“The turn out is good as of this early hour of the exercise. We have all the card readers in place with additional ones as backups.
“The pace of screening has been smooth. In some instances, where there were delays, it was not due to the machines.
“The reading may reject the fingers, because of blurred capturing. But, by and large, this has been identified and rectified,” he said.
INEC’s Niger State Resident Electoral Commissioner, Mr. Nasir Ayilara, said the trial had been accepted by the people.
He said the sensitisation conducted by the Commission had paid off with the large turnout witnessed.
“We are happy that what we expected was achieved. Our people had carried out sensitisation in the last few days.
“The various challenges encountered here today will be used to refine the entire process of the card reader and other logistics details of the upcoming elections,” Ayilara said.
NAN reports that 22 polling units were involved in the pre-election trial in the wards.
Some challenges encountered during the process included lack of proper handling of the machine by officers, non-compliance with machine instructions and the resultant waste of time.

Blatter urges Iran to allow women in stadiums

FIFA President Sepp Blatter has urged Iran to end the ban on women watching football in stadiums, describing the situation as “intolerable”.
In comments published on Friday in FIFA’s weekly magazine ahead of International Women’s Day, Blatter said that despite his efforts to convince Iranian President Hassan Rouhani to let women attend matches when he met him in 2013, “nothing has happened”.
“I raised the topic at my meeting with President of Iran Hassan Rouhani, and came away with the impression that this intolerable situation could change over the medium term,” Blatter wrote in the letter titled “An appeal to Iran.”
“However, nothing has happened. A collective stadium ban still applies to women in Iran, despite the existence of a thriving women’s football organisation.
“This cannot continue. Hence, my appeal to the Iranian authorities; open the nation’s football stadiums to women.”
Iran is one of the few countries that block women from attending matches but has permitted female fans at some other sports venues in the past.
In 2006, then-president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said women could attend matches in a special section of stadiums, but the decision was overruled by higher authorities. A year later, Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi showed girls who dressed as men to sneak into football matches in Tehran.
Iran is bidding against the United Arab Emirates to host the 2019 Asian Cup and the ban on women is expected to damage their chances of being awarded the tournament.
At the Asian Cup earlier this year in Australia, Iranian players were reportedly threatened with punishment back home if they were to take selfies with female fans attending their games after pictures emerged on social media. Iranian female fans also showed up in numbers at stadiums during the tournament.

Five killed in Mali restaurant terror attack


Three Europeans and two locals were shot dead on Saturday in a busy restaurant in the Malian capital in what security sources described as a terrorist attack.
At least one gunman entered La Terrasse in an area of Bamako popular with expatriates shortly after midnight and opened fire, according to police and an AFP correspondent on the scene in the aftermath.
“This is a terrorist attack, although we’re waiting for clarification. Provisionally, there are four dead — one French national, a Belgian and two Malians,” a policeman told AFP, adding that the dead included a police officer who had been passing the restaurant.
A source at the Gabriel Toure hospital in Bamako said a third European, whose nationality was not immediately clear, had died on arrival, while eight people were wounded.
Firefighters carried the body of the French national from the restaurant in Bamako’s lively Hippodrome district, according to an AFP correspondent who witnessed the aftermath.
In moments after the attack the body of the police officer and a guard of a private home could be seen in the street outside, while a little further on the body of the Belgian national was also visible.
Dozens of police officers secured the area but the few witnesses to the attack were initially refusing to testify, fearing reprisals.
The French embassy in Bamako issued a message to all French nationals in the city to exercise caution if they had to leave their homes.

Outrage after IS bulldozes ancient Iraq city


Condemnation poured in Friday of the Islamic State group’s bulldozing of the ancient city of Nimrud, the jihadists’ latest attack on Iraqi cultural treasures that the UN termed a “war crime”.
After rampaging through Mosul’s museum with sledgehammers and torching its library last month, IS “bulldozed” the nearby ruins of Nimrud Thursday, the tourism and antiquities ministry said.
The devastation comes with the jihadists the target of an Iraqi government offensive.
The US military said Friday Iraqi government forces and allied tribal militia have retaken the town of Al-Baghdadi, from where jihadists had threatened to attack an airbase housing American troops.
Iraqi antiquities officials said IS militants had moved trucks last week to the Nimrud site overlooking the Tigris River, 30 kilometres (18 miles) southeast of their main hub of Mosul.
“Until now, we do not know to what extent it was destroyed,” one official said.
Washington’s National Security Council tweeted Friday: “Deeply saddened by incomprehensible destruction of historical, cultural and religious artifacts in Iraq, including recent attacks in Nimrud.”
Nimrud was the latest victim of what appears to be a systematic campaign by the jihadists to obliterate Iraq’s rich heritage.
“I’m really devastated. But it was just a matter of time, now we’re waiting for the video. It’s sad,” Abdulamir Hamdani, an Iraqi archaeologist from Stony Brook University in New York, said of the propaganda film of the destruction that IS is likely to release.
Nimrud was founded in the 13th century BC and was considered the jewel of the Assyrian era.
Its stunning reliefs and colossal statues of winged bulls with human heads guarding palace gates filled the world’s museums in the 19th century.
A collection of 613 pieces of gold jewellery, ornaments and precious stones discovered in a royal tomb in 1988 has been described as one of the greatest archaeological finds of the 20th century.
“Their plan is to destroy Iraqi heritage, one site at a time,” said Hamdani.
“Hatra of course will be next,” he added of a 2,000-year-old UNESCO-listed site about 100 kilometres south of Mosul known for its beautifully preserved temples blending Hellenistic, Roman and Eastern influences.
Irina Bokova, the head of the UN’s cultural body UNESCO, condemned the destruction of Nimrud “with the strongest force.”
“We cannot stay silent. The deliberate destruction of cultural heritage constitutes a war crime, and I call on all political and religious leaders in the region to stand up against this new barbarity,” she said Friday.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, also calling the destruction a war crime, urged political and religious leaders in the region to speak out in condemnation of “these unacceptable attacks”.
UNESCO has called for tougher action to protect the many heritage sites in one of the cradles of civilisation, but little can be done in areas under jihadist control.
The Cairo-based Al-Azhar, Sunni Islam’s leading authority, expressed outrage at what it termed “a major crime against the entire world.”
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq’s top Shiite cleric who is revered by millions, sharply criticised IS’s targeting of the Mosul museum and archaeological sites.
It demonstrates “their savagery and their barbarism and their hostility to the Iraqi people”, Sistani’s representative said on his behalf at weekly Friday prayers in Karbala.
The destruction was met with condemnation and sadness on Baghdad’s Mutanabi Street, a favourite haunt of Iraqi intellectuals.

Sierra Leone’s vice president expelled from ruling party


The National Advisory Council of the ruling All People’s Congress party in Sierra Leone has in a closed door meeting held Friday expelled the country’s Vice President Alhaji Samuel Sam Sumana from the party.
According to Usman Yansanneh, the party’s secretary general who broke the news to journalists at a press conference Friday, the decision was taken by the Council of the party based on recommendations from a special committee that was set up to investigate certain allegations against the vice president.
He told the media that according to the Council, the vice president holds a graduate degree from a U.S. college which was proved to be incorrect.
Yansanneh also accused Sumana of “being responsible for the wave of unrest in his hometown Kono,” some 400 kilometers from the capital Freetown and was about to form his own party.
Sumana who is on a self imposed quarantine was unable to attend the meeting to defend himself, the secretary general reacted to a question posed to him.
The development caught political analysts by surprise, and some believe the expulsion should not affect his position as vice president according to the constitution.

Buhari’s wife not a political tout –Campaign team


Mrs. Aisha Muhammadu Buhari
The Director, Media and Information Technology, Buhari Campaign Organisation, Dr. Chidia Maduekwe, has said that the wife of the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Maj.-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), will not join the First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, to play political thuggery, because she is not a tout
Maduekwe, in an interview with Saturday PUNCH in Abuja on Thursday, said, “You should know it is beneath the person of our respected General’s wife to join issues with Dame Patience Jonathan.
“Mrs. Jonathan has clearly shown that she lacks the discipline and composure required of the occupant of the office of the First Lady. It is neither the General’s style nor is his Madam’s style to join Mrs. Jonathan to play the role of political tout.
“Mrs. Buhari is too refined and well groomed to descend to the level of insulting someone else’s husband in the name of politics.
“There is this adage which says you don’t run after a mad person who took your cloth while you were taking your bath because those who see you running after the mad person may not distinguish between the mad person and you.” The campaign organisation was reacting to a report that Mrs. Jonathan said Buhari might be brain dead because of his age at a campaign rally in Lokoja, the Kogi State capital, on Tuesday.
Patience had said that old people might not reason very well because of their ageing mind.
She said, “Vote for my husband, Jonathan. Do not vote for Buhari. He is an old man. People, when they become old, may not reason well and their brain may even be dead.”
Reacting to Mrs. Jonathan’s comments on Buhari, Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Diaspora Affairs, Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, also described her as “an embarrassment to Nigerians and Nigeria.”
Dabiri-Erewa, who is a cognate member of the APC in the House, said, Mrs. Jonathan was not only “crude” in her actions, but her utterances had taken away the “poise” associated with the office of the First Lady.
She said of all Nigeria’s First Ladies, Mrs. Jonathan remained the “worst.”
Dabiri-Erewa said, “Mrs. Jonathan is an embarrassment to the whole country. The only people shouting her praise or listening to her are the sycophants; outside them, nobody else does.
“She is crude and unrefined. When you travel out of the country, Nigerians keep asking you how we came this bad.”
Another member of the Buhari campaign, who asked not to be named, told Saturday PUNCH, “Mrs. Buhari does not have a structure different from that of General Buhari.
“The campaign has already responded copiously to the reckless statement by Mrs. Jonathan. Besides, the general’s wife accompanied her husband on the trip to London.”
In a statement signed by the APC’s campaign’s Director of Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, in Abuja on Wednesday, the party said the President’s wife was insultive.
The APC campaign urged President Jonathan to caution his wife.

I went abroad to rest, says Buhari

ad to rest, says Buhari

All Progressives Congress presidential candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari (second right) on arrival in Nigeria from the United Kingdom at the Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport in Abuja... on Friday.
The presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Maj.Gen Mohammadu Buhari on Friday returned to the country after spending two weeks abroad.
Buhari returned in company of his family members, members of the APC Presidential campaign team led by the Deputy Director-General of the campaign, Senator Olorunimbe Mamora.
The retired General, who arrived the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport aboard a British Airways flight at about 5:40am dressed in a black flowing gown, dismissed speculations about the state of his health.
Responding to news making the rounds that he went abroad to seek medical attention for an undisclosed ailment, Buhari said, “I just went off for a couple of weeks to rest. That’s all I did.”
Asked whether he visited any hospital during the trip to the UK, he replied, “What is wrong for me to go to the hospital? Am I not here now? Aren’t you seeing me? Are you seeing a sick man?”
Addressing his Chatham House visit also, the APC presidential candidate said, “I went to Chatham House to deliver an address and there was a question and answer session. That’s all.”
He took no further questions as he joined a waiting vehicle while waving to several of his supporters who were on hand to welcome him.
Entry into and exit out of the airport was chaotic as a long convoy of vehicles belonging to his supporters who wanted to catch a glimpse of their hero blocked the major entry and exit point at the airport.
Ongoing rehabilitation work within the facility added to the chaos.
His return ended speculations about his state of health especially by members of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party.
At the height of such speculations, the Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo Fayose, announced that the retired General was actually in London to seek medical attention.
He was even said to have sent a team to monitor the general’s movement in the United Kingdom.
It will be recalled that Buhari left Nigeria on Thursday, February 19, 2015.

S’Sudan peace talks suspended indefinitely

Peace talks between the two warring parties in South Sudan have been suspended indefinitely.
President Salva Kiir and his rival, rebel leader and former vice president, Riek Machar, had been meeting in Ethiopia since Tuesday, but the talks were adjourned on Friday with no peace agreement in place.
No further meetings have been scheduled.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn said in a statement on Friday that he regretted “the talks did not produce the necessary breakthrough”, adding that the failure was disappointing for mediators and observers who had tried their best to urge the warring factions to make concessions for peace.
“The consequences of inaction are the continued suffering of you, the people of South Sudan, and the prolonging of a senseless war in your country,” the statement said. “This is unacceptable, both morally and politically.”
Fighting erupted in December 2013 after a political dispute in which Kiir sacked Machar. 
The fighting has killed more than 10,000 people and driven more than 1.5 million from their homes. The conflict runs along ethnic rifts that pre-date independence.
On Thursday, the mediator said the talks had extended to Friday to allow the two sides to finalise details of power sharing.
An African Union report, yet to be officially released, calls for Kiir and Machar to be barred from a transitional government and for the oil-producing country to effectively be placed under AU control, sources and a draft of the report said.

Iraqi forces retake key town from ISIL


Iraqi government forces and allied tribal fighters have retaken the town of Al-Baghdadi from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group, according to the US military.
A statement from the headquarters of the US-led coalition on Friday said security forces and tribal fighters from the Anbar region had successfully cleared Al-Baghdadi of ISIL fighters, retaking both the police station and three Euphrates River bridges.
The  US-led coalition, which is conducting air strikes in Iraq and Syria against ISIL targets, said it had ordered 26 air strikes around the town since February 22.
ISIL had taken Al-Baghdadi, a small town on the Euphrates River in western Iraq, in February, posing a threat to the nearby Ayn al-Asad air base where US forces train their Iraqi counterparts.
US ground forces were not directly employed in the battle, but “the coalition supported the operation with surveillance assets and advise and assist teams” attached to Iraqi headquarters units.
Iraqi and Kurdish forces, supported by Sunni tribes and Shia armed groups, have begun to push back ISIL forces from a swathe of territory the group seized last year in their quest to build an Islamist “caliphate”.
On February 13, as Al-Baghdadi was falling to ISIL fighters, suicide bombers attacked Iraqi forces protecting the Ayn al-Asad air base, where a small contingent of US troops works with Iraqi allies.
No Americans were hurt in the assault but their relative proximity to the fighting increased fears that US ground troops could find themselves drawn into the conflict.
Al Jazeera’s Jane Arraf, reporting from Baghdad, said Friday’s announcement does not come as a surprise.
“The Iraqi military, with the help of coalition air strikes, had already broken the siege of Al-Baghdadi a couple of days ago. What the Americans are announcing now appears to be that they cleared the town of more ISIL fighters, making a few more gains around there,” she said.
“It is a hugely significant town. Significant to the US because of course their troops are at the Ayn al-Asad air base, which is not far from there, and significant to Iraqis because thousands of people from the town were displaced. Some of them had to be evacuated by air by the military after ISIL surrounded the town.
“So this development might not be as dramatic as it might seem.”

N’East won’t vote Jonathan despite military success –ACF, NEF


President Goodluck Jonathan
The Arewa Consultative Forum and the Northern Elders Forum have said that the North will not support President Goodluck Jonathan in the March 28 election despite the relative success the military is recording in the fight against the Boko Haram sect.
The two groups said they could not change the decision they made sometimes ago on the choice of their presidential candidate.
The ACF and NEF had recently expressed their support for the All Progressives Congress presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, saying he was better than Jonathan, who is contesting the next election on the Peoples Democratic Party platform.
But speaking with Saturday PUNCH on Thursday, the ACF National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Muhammed Ibrahim, dismissed the insinuation that the forum might change its mind because of the appreciable success soldiers are making in dislodging the insurgents from the North-Eastern part of the country.
He said the ACF’s decision remained sacrosanct as far as the candidate to support was concerned.
The NEF Deputy Chairman, Dr. Paul Nnongo, explained why the forum would not change its mind.
Nnongo said, “The Northern elders cannot support him not because he is an Ijaw man; we resolved not to support him because he is not performing.
“He should not have allowed many people to have been killed before he wakes up to his own responsibility.
“We want a competent leader that can stop the genocide occurring in the North. We have yet to understand why it took Jonathan so long before he began to act as Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces by now buying equipment for the military.
“So, we congratulate him for finally waking up to his responsibility after insurgents have killed thousands of innocent people in the country.
“For no just reason, Jonathan made life too cheap in Nigeria. We, as a result, agreed that Nigeria needs a change; we do not care if Buhari comes from Ijaw land. If another candidate that has the capacity to stop killing in the country hails from Ijaw land, we will support him.
“Every day, minimum of 100 people are being killed by the insurgents non-stop for two solid years. We don’t want genocide in Nigeria.”

Nigerian Woman Shows Off Giant Cassava Tuber She Harvested From Her Farm (Photo)

  A woman from Orlu, Imo State showed off a giant Cassava tuber she harvested from her farmland, NairaNaijaNews reports. See photo below.