December 30, 2024
IBRAHIM QUADRI
Lagos State Governor, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu has described the October 2020 EndSARS’ protest period as one of his toughest moments as a leader.
Sanwo-Olu made this known on Monday during a chat with 30 fellows of the Lateef Jakande Leadership Academy, at the State House, Ikeja.
The Academy which was created by Sanwo-Olu was to immortalize the first executive Governor of the State, Alhaji Lateef Jakande.
The Academy is aimed at developing young, change-oriented individuals who are passionate about shaping the future of Nigeria.
Sanwo-Olu said, “One of my toughest moments as a leader was during the EndSARS protest. We have been tested as a government, but we must continue to put the needs of Lagosians beyond our struggles as a responsive and responsible government.
”No bad news stays forever. Work hard to create good news and make sure people listen to it,” Sanwo-Olu said.
He advised fellows of the academy to be intentional about developing their leadership skills.
”For you to have been selected out of 16,000 applicants means there is something of value in you.
“Leadership is something we should be deliberate about which was why we created this academy.
“You all are champions of good leadership. Challenge yourselves. The only limitation you have is not dreaming big enough.
”I know your generation may not know who Alhaji Lateef Jakande was,” he said.
The Governor said that Jakande epitomised leadership, noting “That is why we are still talking about him today,” he said.
The Governor told the fellows that it would be important to show courage in the face of adversity. A trait of a good leader is the ability to tolerate and endure, which is why we need you to stay together so you will learn how to tolerate each other and make meaningful friendships.
”You need to be courageous and be solution-oriented, don’t focus on the challenges,” he said.
The Academy’s Executive Secretary, Mrs Ayisat Agbaje-Okunade thanked the Governor for addressing the fellows.
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Retired public servants in Osun State, under the Forum of 2011/2012 Retired Public Servants of Osun, have called on Governor Ademola Adeleke to comply with a court ruling mandating the implementation of an N18,000 minimum wage for retirees.
The pensioners made their demands known during a protest in Osogbo on Monday.
The protesters had gathered at Ogo-Oluwa/Abere Road but were barred from accessing the governor’s office by security personnel.
Despite this setback, the retirees vowed to continue their agitation.
According to the group, the state’s failure to implement the court order has left them short-changed for years.
Speaking to journalists, the group’s leader, Yemi Lawal, accused the Osun State Government of neglecting a ruling by the Industrial Court delivered on October 5, 2017.
“We have been fighting for this since 2014, but the government has been paying us only N9,000 instead of the court-approved N18,000,” Lawal said.
He further explained that the government had delayed action through legal appeals, which were ultimately dismissed.
“In February 2024, the appellate court ruled in our favour, yet the government remains nonchalant,” he lamented, describing years of petitions, letters, and press conferences that have gone unanswered.
Lawal expressed disappointment in Governor Adeleke whom he described as a beneficiary of judicial intervention.
“The governor owes his mandate to the judiciary. Why then does he refuse to obey a simple court directive? This disregard for the law could lead to unrest,” he warned.
The retirees also criticised the state government’s recent announcement of a N25,000 relief payment to retirees, calling it insufficient.
“What can N25,000 buy in this economy? It’s not even enough for basic needs,” Lawal argued, adding that the gesture did not address the core issue of adjusting pensions to reflect the N18,000 minimum wage.
Lawal outlined their key demand: “The government must calculate and pay the difference between N9,000 and N18,000, which we have been denied for years. This adjustment is necessary for both our monthly pensions and gratuities, which have been unpaid since 2013.”
The group appealed to the Attorney General of the Federation and other stakeholders to intervene in ensuring the Osun State government complies with the court ruling.
They argued that the delay in implementing the minimum wage adjustment violates their constitutional rights.
Sola Olojede, the group’s secretary, condemned the actions of security personnel who prevented them from protesting at the state secretariat.
“Protesting is our constitutional right. Being denied access to a public space is both illegal and unjust,” Olojede said.
December 18, 2024
Workers of the Ondo State Internal Revenue Service, ODIRS, in their numbers on Thursday, stormed the revenue house as they protested over the non-payment of the new minimum wage by the state government.
The protesting workers who barricaded the roads leading to the office lamented that they received the old salary after assurances that minimum wage would be paid.
Meanwhile, other workers within the state civil service had received a new minimum wage following the pledge made by Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa during the build-up to last month’s election.
According to the ODIRS staff, there is a sharp contrast between the allowances of top executives and the meagre wages of junior staff in the establishment.
Armed with placards of various inscriptions, they vowed to sustain the protest until the authorities met their demands, stressing that they had tabled their grievances before the management and decided to take the steps to protest after no positive response was received.
Meanwhile, the special adviser to the governor on union matters, Bola Taiwo, described the protest as a minor issue that will be resolved with the assurance that their demands will be addressed.
Two students of Borno State University, BOSU, have lost their lives in a fatal motor accident in the Jimtilo area along the Maiduguri-Damaturu road.
The Information and Public Relations Officer of the university, Abba A. Massa, confirmed that the incident occurred on Wednesday.
He said several students sustained various degrees of injuries and were evacuated to Umaru Shehu Hospital, Maiduguri and the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital.
“The students, a male final-year student and a female part-two student, lost their lives when a truck belonging to Dangote, traveling at high speed, lost control and ran into the BOSU students’ bus while they were on their way home after their semester exams,” the statement said.
According to the statement, BOSU’s Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Babagana Gutti, the Head of Service of Borno State, Barrister Malam Fannami, the Registrar of BOSU, Zanna Mustapha Kashim, and some management staff were also present through the night to provide necessary support to the victims.
In a show of solidarity and empathy, a bus full of BOSU students also came to sympathize with their colleagues and donate blood, which was critically needed to save the lives of their classmates and schoolmates.
The statement further said that the two deceased students would be buried on Thursday, December 12, 2024.
The pan-Yoruba socio-cultural and political group, Afenifere, has called on Nigerians to allow the judiciary to handle the criminal defamation case against legal practitioner Dele Farotimi impartially.
According to reports, the charges were filed by the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) following a complaint from Chief Afe Babalola, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria and esteemed elder statesman.
Babalola alleges that Farotimi’s 104-page book, Nigeria and its Criminal Justice, contains defamatory content.
The book, which has garnered international attention, is reportedly available in Ekiti State, where Babalola resides, allegedly damaging his reputation.
Farotimi, a prominent Nigerian activist, was arrested in Lagos last week and transferred to Ekiti State. He appeared before a Magistrate Court in Ado Ekiti on Monday, where Magistrate Abayomi Adeosun denied his bail application and ordered his detention until December 10.
In response, groups across Nigeria have planned large-scale protests on December 10 in Lagos, the Federal Capital Territory, and Ekiti State, demanding Farotimi’s release.
Afenifere’s National Publicity Secretary, Comrade Jare Ajayi, emphasized that the legal system is equipped to ensure fair adjudication and protect the interests of all parties involved.
“The court is the proper platform for determining and protecting the rights of individuals while ensuring justice is served fairly,” Ajayi stated.
He urged all parties to avoid actions or statements that could disrupt public order and called on the government to uphold the rule of law. Afenifere reaffirmed that the judiciary, as established by the Nigerian constitution, remains the rightful avenue for resolving disputes and seeking redress.
“We enjoin all parties to conduct themselves in total submission to and respect for the rule of law,” the spokesman added.
There were protests on Saturday at Umuezenta, Umuomaunta Mbawsi Nsulu, by people who identified themselves as landowners from the eight communities where the Abia State government has proposed to build an airport.
The protesters, comprised of youths and elderly persons, said they opposed the state government using their ancestral lands for the airport project.
According to them, the proposed project will lead to the destruction of their farmlands, adding that successive administrations in the state treated them unfairly.
Speaking during the protest, the village head of Umuezenta, Mr Ukaumunna Echezolam, said that the Abia State government did not meet the right persons before taking the decision to site the airport on their land.
He said that the project, if built, would make his people lose their lands, which are their sources of livelihood.
According to him, youths whose fathers are still alive cannot decide for their communities, adding that his people still lack basic amenities.
On whether the community will reverse its decision if the right persons from the community are met by the Abia State government concerning the airport project, Echezolam reiterated that there will be no compromise.
Echezolam also stated that Nsulu communities had in the past given lands to the Abia State Government, citing the Nsulu Games Village and Ntigha Inland Dry Port (IDP) project in Isiala-Ngwa North Local Government Area, among others, which took a large chunk of their lands.
The Abia State government has yet to react to the protest as of the time of the report.
In the wake of the WazirX hack, a growing number of users are demanding that the Pi42 Exchange be removed from the India Blockchain Week (IBW) event, scheduled for December 4-5, 2024, in Bangalore.
The controversy stems from the involvement of Nischal Shetty, co-founder of Pi42 Exchange, and the fact that Mahin Gupta, former security partner of WazirX and CEO of Liminal, was also an advisor for Pi42.
Users, many of whom claim to be victims of the WazirX hack, argue that the promotion of Pi42 Exchange at IBW represents a conflict of interest and an affront to the millions of users whose assets are still trapped on the platform.
The sentiment is growing that Pi42 is indirectly benefiting from the WazirX hack, with user funds potentially funneled into supporting the exchange’s sponsorship of IBW.
As part of the campaign, users are flooding social media with demands for IBW to revoke Pi42’s sponsorship, labeling the exchange’s participation as a “scam” and a betrayal to those who lost their hard-earned money. Some are even accusing IBW of being part of a hack.
There is a growing call for #BoycottIBW and for individuals to make their voices heard by attending the event and protesting if necessary.
In response, some users have started accusing IBW organizers of enabling Pi42’s presence despite the controversy, with allegations that WazirX’s user funds are being used to promote companies like Pi42 while the company refuses to compensate its victims.
Nischal Shetty, also involved in WazirX’s operations, is now linked to Pi42 Exchange, raising further concerns about the platform’s legitimacy. Pi42’s participation in IBW is seen as an extension of WazirX’s broader failure to address the hack’s aftermath.
The protestors are urging IBW to reconsider its partnership with Pi42, calling it a moral responsibility to disassociate from any platform connected to the unresolved issues of the WazirX hack.
While IBW organizers have yet to comment on the situation, users continue to escalate their demands. With tickets to the event already on sale, the unfolding drama has raised questions about the event’s integrity and the role of corporate sponsorship in the blockchain community.
Also Read: WazirX Has Failed To Deliver Live POR, Users Disappointed
Residents of various villages that make up Ikwuano LGA of Abia State, on Thursday, stormed the operation base of Hartland Construction Company to protest the continued delay of works on Umuahia-Ikwuano-Ikot Ekpene Federal road.
The road, which connects Abia State with Akwa Ibom and Cross River State, has been in terrible conditions, despite a contract awarded by the Federal government about five years ago.
Leading his kinsmen on what they called a peaceful protest on Thursday, Catechist Ambrose Jonah said the road contract was awarded to be completed in three years but had been delayed for five years.
He declared that “only 20% of work has been done” and called for speedy completion of the road to save his people from death, economic destruction and other inconveniences.
Jonah, who described the situation as unacceptable, told the Federal government to release enough money to the contractor to complete the job without further delay.
Another protester from Ogbuebele community, Ejim Ndubuisi said the road would split into two parts by next rainy season if not fixed this dry season.
But explaining his company’s predicaments, the Project Manager of Hartland Construction Company, Mr Egner Velya blamed it on delayed funds from the Federal Ministry of Works, budgetary allocations and rising cost of materials, begging that “our equipment will be deployed to fix the worst sections before Christmas”.
Also speaking on the situation, the Federal Contractor in charge of Abia State, Tony Onwubiko said that the Federal government was aware of the situation but assured the protesters that work would resume in full swing once funds were released to the company.
DAILY POST recalls that the Abia State House of Assembly had last week, directed the contractor to immediately return to the site within seven days or risk having parts of the road given to the Abia State Ministry of Works to execute.
Over 60 women on Monday protested and danced across some major streets in Abraka, Delta State over incessant abductions in their area.
The protesters carried placards with several inscriptions such as ‘End kidnapping in Abraka, ‘Enough is Enough’; ‘ DPO Must Go’, and ‘Hardship Is Unbearable’.
Motorists plying the express road linking Abraka town to Obiaruku community were delayed for several hours due to the roadblocks created with tree stems by protesting aged women.
The protesters refused to open their shops, saying until something urgent is done to change the narrative.
Speaking to journalists, their leader, Mrs Gloria Edah, said the protest was about the rise in kidnap and incessant robbery operations in the community.
She said they were fed up with the incessant abductions in their area and asked the authorities to put an immediate end to the trend.
She alleged that the operatives of Abraka police station, led by the Divisional Police Officer, SP Fabian Ayameh, have not been living up to expectations as they are more bent on apprehending young boys in the area.
She also decried the incessant attacks by gunmen and other criminals in their communities, alleging that there was no day that their communities were not under attack by gunmen and kidnappers.
“Some residents in the area have relocated to other neighbouring communities, hence hindering the growth in the area.
“The kidnappers demand as much as #20m before the release of victims. Recently, a youth was kidnapped, killed and buried in one of the farms.
“The DPO is not doing enough and must be asked to leave the community. The police authority in the state should do the needful” she stated.
She prayed that those behind the insecurity situation in the community would be destroyed.
They, however, appealed to Governor Sheriff Oborevwori and the Delta State Police Commissioner to redeploy the Superintendent of Police and DPO in charge of Abraka to restore calm and revive economic activities in the area.
Scores of Tricyclists in Ogbomoso, Oyo State, have staged a peaceful protest over hike in their licence fees.
DAILY POST reports that the protest led to the drivers withdrawing their services, refusing to ply the major road from Takie to the Egbeda area of the city.
Our correspondent gathered that this made many commuters plying the road stranded and frustrated.
A tricyclist, Mr. Mukaila Oyelami, who spoke on behalf of his colleagues, said that they usually pay N700 daily to the Oyo State Government.
He however said that the fees has been increased to N1,000.
The fees, according to him comprises two tickets, one for Oyo State Daily Ticket Scheme codenamed “ALGON ticket” and the other one known as “Terminal Ticket”.
Oyelami said a meeting was held on Wednesday with the Ogbomoso Park Committee where the decision to raise the charge to N1,000 was announced.
He said the tricyclists have asked the Soun of Ogbomoso to intervene on the matter.
“Normally, we pay N700 every day and still pay N200 to LAUTECH at the park. It was yesterday that the park chairman now called all of us, telling us that we’ll now be paying N1,000 daily,” he said.
But the Park Chairman, Hammed Alao, while reacting, said that the decision to increase the fees from N700 to N1,000 was not borne out of wickedness against the drivers.
According to him, the fees was increased due to the increase in the prices of goods and services in the country.
Alao added that it had been decided by the Soun of Ogbomoso that the new revenue charge should start from January, 2025.
“But I have told them before that the ticket payment will increase since February 2024 when the state government brought ALGON ticket, in addition to the previous ticket, making it two. They pleaded that time too.”
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A vote in New Zealand’s parliament was suspended and two lawmakers ejected on Thursday when dramatic political theater erupted over a controversial proposed law redefining the country’s founding agreement between Indigenous Māori and the British Crown.
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Under the principles laid out in the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi, which guide the relationship between the government and Māori, tribes were promised broad rights to retain their lands and protect their interests in return for ceding governance to the British. The bill would specify that those rights should apply to all New Zealanders.
The bill has scant support and is unlikely to become law. Detractors say it threatens racial discord and constitutional upheaval, while thousands of New Zealanders are traveling the length of the country this week to protest it.
Despite its unpopularity, however, the proposed law passed its first vote on Thursday after dominating public discussion for months, due to a quirk of New Zealand’s political system that allows tiny parties to negotiate outsized influence for their agendas. It also reflects unease among some New Zealanders about more rapid progress in recent years toward upholding the promises made to Māori when the country was colonized.
For decades after the Treaty of Waitangi was signed, differences between the English and Māori texts and breaches by New Zealand governments intensified the disenfranchisement of Māori.
By the middle of the 20th century, Indigenous language and culture had dwindled, much tribal land was confiscated and Māori were disadvantaged on every metric. As the Indigenous protest movement surged in the 1970s, lawmakers and the courts slowly began to elucidate what it understood the treaty to promise Māori: partnership with the Crown, participation in decision-making and protection of their interests.
“What all of these principles have in common is that they afford Māori different rights from other New Zealanders,” David Seymour, leader of minor libertarian party ACT and the bill’s author, said Thursday.
To those who have championed the treaty, that is the point. Work has involved billion-dollar land settlements, embrace of the Māori language, guaranteed representation in central and local government and attempts through policy to reverse the stark inequities Indigenous people still face.
But Seymour—who is Māori—said no law or court had actually settled for good a definition of the treaty’s principles, and that had caused division. His bill filled “a silence this parliament has left for five decades,” he said.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon disagrees, but his party voted for the bill Thursday to fulfil the political deal with Seymour that handed Luxon power. Without enough seats to govern after last October’s election, Luxon curried support from two minor parties—including Seymour’s ACT, which won less than 9% of the vote—in return for political concessions.
Luxon told Seymour his party would vote for the treaty bill once, while promising publicly that it would go no further.
The treaty’s principles had been negotiated and debated for 184 years, Luxon told reporters Thursday, and it was “simplistic” for Seymour to suggest that they could be resolved “through the stroke of a pen.”
Government lawmakers made awkward speeches in parliament explaining that they opposed the bill before voting for it to jeers from opponents, who demanded they break ranks. Luxon was spared that; he left the country for the meeting of leaders from the Asia-Pacific APEC bloc hours before the vote.
His political horse-trading drew scorn from opposition lawmakers.
“Shame! Shame! Shame on you, David Seymour,” roared Willie Jackson, a veteran Māori lawmaker. “Shame on you for what you’re trying to do to this nation.”
Jackson was thrown out of the debating chamber by Speaker Gerry Brownlee for calling Seymour a liar.
“You are complicit in the harm and the division that this presents,” said Rawiri Waititi, a lawmaker from Te Pāti Māori, an Indigenous group, speaking to all who advanced the bill.
“If you vote for this bill, this is who you are,” Green party leader Chloe Swarbrick told Luxon’s lawmakers.
No one deviated from their planned votes and the bill passed. But not before one final flashpoint.
When asked how her party’s lawmakers would vote, Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke of Te Pāti Māori stood and began a ringing haka—a rhythmic Māori chant of challenge—which swelled to a roar as first opposition lawmakers, and then spectators in the public gallery, joined in.
An irate Brownlee was unable to quiet the fracas as opponents approached Seymour’s seat. The live broadcast of Parliament’s proceedings was cut and Brownlee ordered the public be removed before the vote resumed.
He suspended Maipi-Clarke, 22, from Parliament for a day.
Read More: Meet New Zealand’s Gen Z Māori Guardian in Parliament
The bill will proceed to a public submission process before another vote. Seymour hopes for an outpouring of support to change Luxon’s mind about vetoing it.
The proposal will shortly roil Parliament again. Thousands of protesters are due to arrive in the capital, Wellington, on Tuesday for what is likely to be one of the largest race relations marches in New Zealand’s history.
Some patients and their families are protesting the unavailability of water and electricity at the University College Hospital in Ibadan, Oyo State.
The aggrieved protesters lamented that the Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company, IBEDC disconnected UCH’s power for 17 days.
The disconnect is said to have affected vital hospital operations like delays in test results and surgeries, among others.
Reacting, the hospital management said the hospital falls under the “Band A” electricity tariff structure, which requires them to pay N80 million monthly.
In a viral video obtained by DAILY POST, some patients were heard saying: “UCH don’t kill us, we want light. You people want to destroy the prestige of UCH, it’s a premium hospital.”
Patients and some families of patients are protesting unavailability of water and electricity after IBEDC disconnected UCH’s power for 17 days, which has affected vital hospital operations like delays in test results and surgeries, among others.
UCH management says the hospital… pic.twitter.com/fwLUqawSpW
— Oyo Affairs (@Oyoaffairs) November 11, 2024
Home owners of Ruga, a settlement along Airport Road, Abuja, took to the streets on Friday to protest the demolition of their homes by FCT Minister Nyesom Wike.
According to reports, Wike had previously ordered a task force, “Operation Sweep,” to demolish Ruga and other communities within the nation’s capital to clear the city of perceived nuisances and criminal activities.
Leading the demonstration, renowned lawyer and activist Deji Adeyanju, along with Vincent Martins Otse, popularly known as VeryDarkMan, said the demolition was carried out with malicious intent.
Adeyanju expressed concern, stating that the task force burned many houses and destroyed property worth millions of naira.
He urged President Bola Tinubu to consider the plight of poor people who had been driven from their homes in Borno and other northern states due to insecurity in the region.
Adeyanju said: “There is no justification for this demolition. We are using this medium to appeal to the president to consider the plight of the displaced residents, who are barely surviving.
“Most of the residents here were forced out of their homes in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe due to insecurity.
“Most of them are artisans trying to make a living. These demolitions are excessive, and Mr President needs to act to prevent further harassment of the people.
“We are sounding a warning to those in government that peace is only achievable if the poor are allowed to live peacefully. When the poor cannot sleep, it affects everyone.
“Tinubu should call Wike to order and stop him from demolishing people’s homes and reallocating the land to rich people.
“There is no justification for demolishing these homes and allocating them to the rich. There is no overriding public interest here because the community is far from the main road.”
On his part, Otse stated: “This is strange. The repercussions of this will have a heavy toll on Abuja. This area that has been demolished is not near the main road. These people have been rendered homeless amid the ongoing hardship in the country.
“They are evicting these people without compensating them. It is sad that the elite think the poor are not part of society.”
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