Thursday, March 21, 2013

Lautech Student Arraigned by EFCC on His way To Cash $6.9M [N1.03Billion Naira]




The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on Wednesday, 13 March, 2013 arraigned Akinluyi Akintunde (a.k.a Akin Cindy) before Justice Bolaji Yusuf of the Oyo State High Court, sitting in Ibadan on a two count charge bordering on obtaining money by false pretence and possession of documents containing false pretence contrary to Sections 6, 8(b) and 1 (3) of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud Related
Offences Act No. 14 0f 2006.
Akintunde allegedly obtained the sum of $450.00(Four Hundred and Fifty USD) from one Robert Jackson via Western Union Money Transfer and another $6,450,000.00 (Six million, Four Hundred and Forty UDS) through false documents.

He pleaded not guilty to the charge. Count two of the charge reads: “Akinluyi Akintunde ( a.k.a Akin Cindy) on or about the 12th October, 2011 at Ogbomosho within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court with intent to defraud had in your possession documents containing false pretences, to with an air travelling regulation purportedly issued by the Ministry of Aviation of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, a drug free certificate for the sum of $5,000,000.00( Five Million United States Dollars) in favour of one Stan Wills Chevron Oil & Gas Company purportedly issued by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, two revenue collector’s statement for the sum of $1,450,000.00 ( One Million, Four Hundred and Fifty Thousand United States Dollars) purportedly issued by the Federal Inland Revenue Service of Nigeria in favour of
one Stanley Woodley and Stan Wils, three contract award certificates purportedly issued by Chevron Oil & Gas plc in favour of Frank David, Stanley Wils and Stanley Dreckley and draft e- mails.

“That you, Akinluyi Akintunde sometime between January 2011 and December 2011 at Ogbomosho within the jurisdiction of this honourable court with intent to defraud, obtained the sum of $450.00 from Robert Jackson , via Western Union Money Transfer under the false pretence that you were a lady which representation you knew to be false”.

Prosecution counsel, Gbolahan K. Latona asked the court for a trial date and to remand the suspect in prison custody. However, defense counsel, Olusegun Jaiyeola, prayed the court to grant his client bail, stressing that his offences are bailable.
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Justice Yusuf however remanded the accused person in prison and adjourned the matter till March 20, 2013 for hearing of bail applications.

BREAKING NEWS The Great PROPHET OBADARE DIES!



The Christ Apostolic Church leader, Prophet Timothy Oluwole Obadare is dead. The man of God who lived over two scores doing evangelism died today. We shall give you full detail soon

***RIP Great PROPHET OBADARE***

The mystery of women’s handbags





“Madam, wetin be this now? How long will it take you to look for a bunch of keys in this your small handbag? Abeg hurry up jo before I piss for body.”

A woman’s bag as Bermuda Triangle

It was late Saturday evening; I had arrived at home in a frantic state, sweating and in distress. My bladder was bursting at the seams. Earlier on that fateful day, I had been practically dragged by friends and family to one social function or the other with so much to eat and drink. First, somewhere in Ikeja, I attended the wedding of a close friend. It was a typical Yoruba wedding turned to an Owambe party. The bride and groom were nearly overshadowed by family members and well-wishers consisting mostly of women in colourful Aso Ebi clutching different sizes of handbags. I was particularly struck by the array of handbags on display that I have decided to make it the subject of today’s piece.

At the parties, what stood out in the women outfits were their handbags. Indeed, a woman’s dressing is not complete without the ubiquitous handbags. They came in different colours, shapes and sizes. Over the years, the handbag has become an item of fashion, a fashion statement. Some bags are as expensive as the price of a first grade Tokunbo car! This is not an exaggeration.

Arriving from the parties, I suddenly discovered why I had been in awe of women handbags and why I had considered them mysterious. Having been terribly pressed to answer the call of nature, I was in a hurry to get into the house. But there was a problem. The keys to the house, kept in my wife’s bag had suddenly disappeared. She searched her bag for several agonising minutes for the bunch of keys. I can’t remember now but we must have stood at the door for close to 10 minutes as she combed through her handbag hysterically in search of the keys.

But I have seen this scenario play out many times.

Why do objects kept in women’s handbags disappear like those fabled ships in Bermuda triangle? How many times have you observed women bury their heads deep in their handbags in search of something they kept there? It’s kind of strange. Isn’t it? As my wife furiously searched her handbag, emptying the whole content on the floor, I grew from being annoyed to joining in the search. It was like for a pin in a haystack.

But it has been much worse

Recently, I stood in a queue at my local supermarket to witness another drama involving a woman and her handbag. It was her turn to pay for the items bought. She reached casually into her handbag for her credit card. But it turned into another search for Osama bin Laden. The ATM card had disappeared! The agitated woman rummaged through her bag. She searched everywhere. At a point she emptied all the contents on the counter. Several minutes later and after another round of search, the card reappeared miraculously. Exasperated, she intoned. ‘’This stupid bag’’. The other day too, it was my niece birthday. As usual, I was at my wit’s end at deciding what would be the perfect gift. But when I observed her reaction to a handbag a friend of hers clutched adorably when she visited recently and knowing her to be a handbag freak, I decided to give her yet another gift of that designer’s accessory she has always craved for. Never mind that she has a wardrobe full of totes, large enough to open an accessory shop. At the Palms Shopping Mall Lekki, I was again confronted by a countless of handbags from top designers ranging from Fendi, Louis Vuitton, Mulberry, Dior, Jimmy Cho, Versace to Veronica Bradley.

The enthusiasm of the shop attendant, as she took me through mind-boggling prices of handbags of different shapes and sizes set off a chain of questions and thoughts. Why do women carry handbags? Why do women buy so many types of handbags and whose idea was it to have so many different styles and types? Why are women handbags getting bigger and heavier? What exactly do women carry in their handbags? Doesn’t all this make a woman handbag sound like a mystery? Could it be that women are just genetically wired to a secret love for handbags? Why is it that an adorable handbag can’t be passed up by most women? A woman’s quest for the perfect handbag should be taken seriously especially if you are the one sharing a bank account with her.

Why do certain women have no problem spending a fortune on the perfect purse? From designer purses to adorable monogrammed handbags, a stylish purse just can’t be passed up. Over the years, designers have come up with even more expensive handbags. You could buy a car for the price of certain designer handbags. But for every designer handbag there is a woman ready to buy. The media do seem to help in calming women’s fix for the perfect purse. Scroll through any celebrity magazine and you will most certainly have a first peek on what purse a certain celebrity is carrying. Of course, this just adds to their need for that specific bag or a really good knock off. Women most definitely hold their purses as prized possession.

Have you also ever tried to take a peep into a woman’s bag? Why won’t they just throw all of these items into a plastic bag and save themselves a whole lot of money? Will this go against every inborn genetic marker that dictates a woman’s need to carry an adorable purse? I have always asked this question: Do women like a handbag because of the designer name? If you saw it on another woman’s shoulder without the designer logo visible, would you still like it? For a lot of women (even though they won’t admit it) the answer is a no!

I suspect that the majority of women interested in designer handbags these days do not know much about the bags themselves, all they know are a designer logo or name. If these people were to see a Gucci handbag right in front of them, would they know it was a Gucci unless they could see the logo? And would they still like the bag as much? Wouldn’t it be extremely frustrating for women who own authentic designers bag to get comments like “oh I love your Prada handbag” but in reality if the women making that compliment didn’t see the logo on the bag she wouldn’t look twice at it. Does recognizing a couple of logos make them handbag enthusiasts? I have also seen that there’s a definite trend for large bags, but what on earth are women carrying in their bags to make them so heavy? Nowadays, men manage to walk around with the three essentials (comb, wallet, keys) tucked neatly into their pockets. Women, on the other hand, seem to carry everything but the kitchen sink! Perhaps it’s their lifestyle growing ever faster and more hectic that it requires them to have a ‘mini life’ with them at all times.

Gadgets are getting a lot of the blame for heavy handbags too. Okay so the iPod is far smaller and lighter than the iPods we were using some years ago, but now we have electronic organisers, BlackBerrys, digital cameras and often a personal as well as a business phone. Do they need all of these gadgets knocking around in the bottom of their bags with their hair bands? Maybe, they’re not doing so much harm after all, but health experts and chiropractors warn that back problems are often cumulative, so while you feel right as rain waltzing through town with a new tote, five years down the line wearing it mostly on your right shoulder could be putting your back out of alignment.

However, it’s difficult to monitor what the average woman carries in her handbag and evaluate it, but one disturbing trend is that handbags are getting bigger, heavier and more expensive. What a woman considers essential is on a different scale, far grander and more imaginative level, than men could ever perceive. But it seems to me that the handbag of a woman is both a weapon and a shield wherein lurks the means for urban and suburban survival and defence, as well as the means for taking the world by storm.

Man accused of raping daughters, granddaughter


                                         Sylvester Ehijele
A seven-year-old girl (name withheld), has accused her 49-year-old father of rape.

The girl said her father, Sylvester Ehijele, had on numerous occasions had sex with her, adding that he used to promise to buy her goodies and toys before the actions.

She said he usually had sex with her on a daily basis whenever her mother was not home.

She said, “Whenever my mum is not at home, he grabs me, forces his hand over my mouth and then inserts his penis into my private part. He promises to buy me a car, cake and biscuit but he doesn’t buy anything for me.

“He also threatens to use a knife to gouge my eyes out anytime I threaten to report to my mother.”

Sylvester’s wife, Margaret, told PUNCH Metro that he (Ehijele) also raped their 23-year-old daughter when she was much younger and recently, he raped their one-year-old granddaughter that lives with them.

She said, “I am a caterer. In 2006 I went to Abuja for a catering job where I spent five days. But at about 1am, my first daughter, who was about 17-years-old at the time, called me on the phone crying that her father raped her that night.

“When I returned, I confronted him but he beat me up and he continued to molest our daughter and each time I confronted him, it earned me a beating. I had no choice but to leave him when I got fed up with seeing him molesting our daughter and later sleeping with me. I took my six children and we relocated.”

She said in 2011, Sylvester’s family settled their differences and urged the couple to reconcile for the sake of the children.

She said her husband swore never to touch any of his daughters again and she reluctantly returned to her husband’s house.

Margaret said she was however disappointed to find out that less than a year after moving in with her husband, he went back to his old ways.

She said, “We reconciled in May 2011 and I really thought he had changed but in August last year, I caught him in a compromising situation with our seven-year-old daughter. I called her out and she told me how her father had constantly been abusing her.

“Again, I confronted him and he beat me up. I had to pick my daughter and ran to his brother’s house, where I stayed for three days before I went back home.”

Mrs. Ehijele said she continued to cope with her husband’s ways until he finally raped their 15-month-old granddaughter.

She said, “Because my oldest daughter works, we decided to put her daughter baby at a day care in Ejigbo. I have always been the only one that brings her back at 6pm everyday from the day care. But on that particular day, my husband went to the day care and after an altercation with the teacher, he took the baby home.

“He took the baby home and hours later the baby was crying profusely. When I got home, the baby was still crying and I wondered what was wrong. When I finally took off her diapers so I could bathe her, I noticed she was bleeding in her private part. When I raised the alarm, my husband was unnerved. That was when I suspected him.

“I rushed down to the Ejigbo Police Station and reported the matter.”

Margaret said she had been married to the suspect for over 23 years and lamented that he had had carnal knowledge of all their daughters.

“I have two daughters, four sons and a granddaughter. Sadly, my husband has raped all of the females,” she said.

The Police Public Relations Officer, Ngozi Braide, said the suspect would soon be charged to court on charges of defilement.

“The suspect is in the habit of sleeping with his daughters and now his granddaughter. We have the doctor’s report which shows that the girls have been defiled,” she said.

A copy of medical report issued by the Isolo General Hospital reads in part that, “The vaginal hymens of the girls are no longer intact.”

Sylvester however denied the allegation, adding that it was his wife that poisoned his daughters’ minds against him.

He said his wife left him initially because he had refused to pay her dowry.

He said, “If I was the one that raped them, let me die. My wife and I were separated for four years and it was because her family said I hadn’t paid her bride price. After we reconciled, she told my daughters to tell lies against me in order to disgrace me.

“Even my oldest daughter confessed to my family that I never raped her and that it was my wife that told her to lie.”

When quizzed about the medical report, Sylvester said it was not authentic

We can no longer guarantee peace in the East – Ohanaeze






March 21, 2013


The pan-Igbo socio-cultural organisation, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, has said that it can no longer guarantee peace in the East in the face of the continued killing of the Igbo in some states in the North.

The group said that stopping its youths from carrying out reprisal over the years, even in the face of extreme anger, had been an onerous job.

It added that it was not sure if it would continue to restrain them from doing so, especially in the South-East.

Ohanaeze Ndigbo, in a statement by its Secretary General, Dr. Joe Nwaorgu, said this on Wednesday while reacting to last Monday’s bombings in Kano State in which many Igbo were killed.

But just as the statement was made available to journalists, Jama’atu Nasril Islam, a group led by Sultan Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar 111, called on the Federal Government to urgently track down and bring those behind the series of bombings and killings in the country to book.

Ohanaeze Ndigbo, however, still appealed to its youth wing to maintain the peace while awaiting President Goodluck Jonathan’s reaction to the latest “dastardly” act. It advised that in the future, “ Islamists fundamentalist murderers must be tackled with the same ruthlessness with which they destroy lives.”

Its statement reads, “We roundly condemn the sponsors and perpetrators of the continued cold blooded murder of fellow Nigerians. The Igbo nation is taking the heaviest toll on the casualty list and Ndigbo are grossly pained by this organised pogrom on her people.

“Ndigbo cannot continue to bear this unnecessary and unprovoked loss of their blood. Patriotism is just not enough. Keeping our restive youths calm has been an onerous job and only God has helped thus far. We can no longer guarantee the civil response of our people in a country that has become one huge slaughter house.

“The Federal Government must convince the people, especially Ndigbo, that they are safe in Nigeria. Meanwhile, Ohanaeze state chapters are to compile the names of all those affected in the bomb blasts.

“Let’s act fast. However, as a reminder, no tribe is essentially completely made up of cowards and Ndigbo are certainly no cowards.

“Need we remind these murderers that no ethnic group has the monopoly of violence? A final position will be taken in due course after due consultation with Igbo leadership.”

The National Organising Secretary of Ohanaeze Ndigbo Youths, Mr. Okechukwu Isiguzoro, said that Ohanaeze youths would no longer keep quiet if the killings continued.

“For now, we will not do anything because we have chosen to listen to the advice of our leaders who have asked us to be quiet and calm. But if it happens again, or something similar to that occurs again in any northern state, advice or no advice, we would be forced to retaliate,” Isiguzoro said.

Sultan Abubakar-led JNI, has however, condemned the Kano explosions, saying those responsible for the killings in the country deserved no mercy.

The group, in what seems to be at variance with Abubakar’s call for “total amnesty” for members of an Islamic fundamentalist group, Boko Haram, said concerted “efforts and strategies” were needed to stem the bloodletting in the nation.

The Sultan of Sokoto had at a JNI meeting on March 5, 2013 said, “We want to use this opportunity to call on the government, especially Mr. President, to see how he can declare total amnesty for all combatants without thinking twice; that will make any other person who picks up arms to be termed as criminal . If the amnesty is declared, the majority of those young men running would come out and embrace that amnesty.”

But the JNI, in a statement by its Secretary General, Sheikh Khalid Aliyu, specifically flayed the Monday bomb blasts in Kano, Kano State, saying the killing of innocent people was “disturbing and alarming.”

Boko Haram, which is believed to be largely responsible for the bombings and killings in parts of the North, including Abuja, has yet to make any comment on the Kano incident.

The JNI statement was made public just as the Kano State chapter of the Ohanaeze Ndigbo, said 35 corpses had been identified by relatives who had already started preparations for their (corpses) burial.

The JNI statement reads in part, “This new trend of bombing at a motor park, and the killing of innocent people that gathered to travel to various destinations, at New Road Motor Park, Sabon Gari, Kano, Kano State on Monday, March 18, 2013 is disturbing and alarming.

“We, therefore, call for calm and restraint. The situation is very worrisome, and calls for more concerted efforts and strategies of averting such ugly situations.

“Therefore, the JNI once more calls on government at all levels to as a matter of urgency nip in the bud future recurrence and the perpetrators of these barbaric acts be brought to face the wrath of the law.

“Human lives are sacred and must be treated as such, in line with the teachings of the revered books.

“More so, our concern is why was the park targeted? It seems there is a design to set the entire North on fire and by extension, the whole country, starting with Kano.”

In Kano, the President of Ohanaeze Ndigbo in the state, Chief Tobias Idika,said the association was opposed to any plan to conduct a mass burial for bodies yet to be identified.

Idika, in a telephone interview with one of our correspondents, explained that he and other members of the association were worried about reports of a planned mass burial of such bodies.

He said, “So far, relatives of the dead have identified 35 bodies. Some identified their dead using the clothes they wore last. Some used their shoes and other physical attributes because some of them were badly burnt; others had their faces still intact. We are still trying to identify others but we now hear that there are plans to conduct a mass burial.

“We are worried about this information. We would like to use this opportunity to warn the Kano State Government and the Police not to bury our people in a mass grave because this will increase tension. We will like to see the bodies of our people to give them a proper burial.

“How do you tell a mother, father, brother or sister that their loved one is dead and you do not have the body for them to see and bury properly? It is not done. We have suffered enough; people must not add salt to our injury by committing further abominations against us.”

The Ohanaeze leader also expressed sadness that the state Governor, Alhaji Rabiu Kwankwaso, had yet to visit the site of the incident.

But the Director of Press and Public Relations to the Kano State Governor, Haliru Dantiye, said he was not aware of any plan to give the victims a mass burial.

Dantiye, who added that the state government was doing all within its power to deal with the situation, explained that the injured had been visited by government officials in their various hospitals and instructions given for their treatment.

He said, “As you are aware, government is taking responsibility for their medical bills. I believe there may be a policy pronouncement. On the issue of mass burial, I am not aware of any such plan.”

The Kano blasts were also deliberated upon by the Senate at its plenary on Wednesday.

During the session, a member, Uche Chukwumerije, said the Igbo in Kano State believed that the blasts were pre-meditated against them.

Chukwumerije, who read a script titled,”Bomb Explosions in Luxirious Buses Park, New Road, Sabon Gari, Kano on March 18, 2013,” said the Igbo in the state felt so because about 80 per cent of the passengers in the two South-bound luxury buses first attacked by the bombers were their kinsmen.

He said that the Ohanaeze Ndigbo in Kano State would want the Federal Government to set up a committee to collect and manage any compensation for the victims because the Igbo no longer trusted the Kwankwaso administration.

The lawmaker added, “ More dangerous still, they (Igbo in Kano) believe that the Monday mayhem was a pre-meditated attack primarily aimed at them. This is the view of a group, a major component of our plural community. This view has two strategic implications for the viability and vitality of the Federation.

“The first implication is the possibility of extreme alienation and resort to the option of withdrawing allegiances from the State since the most crucial of the obligations of a State in this Social Contract is protection of life and property.”

Making specific demands on the Nigerian State, Chukwumerije said, “For the Igbo in Kano, the people and their leadership insist on three immediate remedial actions from government.

“One is permission to arrange private burials, in place of mass burials, for their loved ones because some of the deceased were their leaders.

“The Federal Government should beef up security around the Igbo and other endangered groups in the North. They demand a visibly effective termination of terrorism in Nigeria.

“The fight against terrorism is like a football match. The people are not interested in stories of efforts being made, but in actual results like victory goals in a football match.”

Commenting on the issue, Senator Kabiru Gaya said it was sad that enemies of the Nigerian State were seeking to exploit ethno-religious differences to destroy “our nation.”

He said, “From history, Kano people had been business partners with other tribes in Sabon-Gari; we are worried that some people are working against the unity of this country, yet government is not doing anything
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