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Many People Are Planning To Kill The President – Fr. Mbaka



In a video message, Mr. Mbaka urged the devotees at his popular Adoration Ground in Enugu to desist from speaking evil against the president.“So I want to tell you that so far, God is happy with Buhari.
And him whom God has blessed, may you not try to accurse, because God will curse you,” said the priest. “Many people are planning, as it is revealed, to kill him. There are many plans on how to eliminate his life so that corruption will continue, so that quantum embezzlement will continue.
Go ahead and war against evil. President Buhari, go ahead and war against corruption. President Buhari, God and his people are behind you, you are the answer of the prayers of the people, amen.’”
The priest attributed the hardship to past leaders who corruptly enriched themselves. “They succeeded in removing the liver, kidneys, and cardiovascular systems of this country, and paralyzed the neurological organs and handed over to Buhari, the new president, shambles, skeleton almost, a nation that is comatic. “Nigeria right now, economically, security wise, is in the intensive care unit.
If the oxygen is removed, Nigeria will go. “All the money voted for road constructions were swindled, eaten. Many of them became millionaires and billionaires in Naira, in Dollars, in Pounds, in Euro. Billionaires, when they have no workshop, no business centre. Somebody who has nothing he’s doing, yet he’s a billionaire, because he’s a politician.”

Federal Government Releases N400bn For Capital Projects


The Federal Government says it has released N400 billion from the 2016 budget to implement capital projects and an additional N60 billion will be released in a few days time.

Addressing newsmen on the state of the economy, Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun, disclosed that “over N400 billion has been released so far from the allocated funds for capital expenditure. We are holding another meeting today (Friday) for N60billion to be released in a couple of days.

We have been pumping money into the economy since May when the budget was signed.”

Speaking on the recession that the country has slid into, the finance minister assured that the country will come out of it. However, to overcome recession, Adeosun insisted that “if we stick to what we are doing: fight corruption, redirect stolen funds to the economy, cut out wastage, duplication and leakages, continue with the payroll clean up of the N165bn Federal Government wage bill monthly, the economy will recover." 

According to her, “Nigerians will soon begin to see the sign posts of recovery”.

SHOCKING | Pregnant Lady Dies after Falling inside Pits Twice Within A Week

Mysterious...the look on his face said it all, and it was a look with many emotions rolled up in one.

Each of his words was laced with a deep sense of grief, despair, and confusion; he had lost his woman and his first son in one day.

Mr. Buchi Eze, 30, stood awkwardly on the edge of the pit, where his woman, Blessing, had fallen to her death. She was 23 years old and was eight months pregnant.

Perhaps, Eze’s confusion overrode other emotions as he told his story...

Only a day before, Blessing had just returned home from a hospital, where she was on admission for four days after falling inside a pit beside the one in which she had taken her last fall.

“I am confused; I don’t understand how my woman fell inside the pits twice in one week,” he said with a look that seemed to be seeking for answers in the air.

“Her death was painful and I don’t think it was natural. The pits have been there for a long time and she met them here when she moved in with me in January, so how did she fall inside the pits twice in six days? She was not mentally unstable and did not show any suicidal tendencies.

“All the children in the compound pass there always and none of them has fallen inside before, so I am still confused. After she fell inside one of the pits the first time, I dismissed it as a mistake, but after the second one, I concluded that it was not natural.”

The couple shared a rented room in an uncompleted building on Akinola Street in Lusada community, Ado-Odo/Ota Local Government Area of Ogun State, until the incident.

According to Punch, both pits were meant to serve as septic tank and soak away for the adjoining house but because there was no fence separating the buildings, Eze and other occupants of the house only had to walk about two metres from their backyard door to reach the edge of the pits.

Both pits had been overgrown by weeds after being abandoned since 2012.

Eze had not slept in the house since the incident occurred because he was afraid of what memories of Blessing and all they shared would come with. He feared the worst; he was frightened that they would bring nightmares and more tears.

Since Blessing’s death, Eze has been having goose pimples every now and then, so he concluded that her spirit still hovered nearby.

Eze’s curiosity was piqued by Blessing’s last words to him after he had jumped in the pit to save her.

“I was on my way home when I heard that my woman was in pit the second time,” he said.

“When I got there, I saw my woman lying face down in the pit again. She was sleeping gently when I left home. She lay on the ground face down. People were holding me but I jumped inside the pit.

“As I raised her head up, she seemed to regain consciousness. I said ‘why again? Do you want to kill me? She said she did not know how she got there, and that she just realised where she was as we were talking.”

The first fall
The first incident occurred at around 6pm on Monday, July 25, 2016, while Eze was away at a mill in Agbara, an industrial estate, where he used to hustle for casual labour for N850 a day.

“Around the time the first incident occurred, I was at the flour mill and I started having a strange feeling that something bad was happening,” he said.

“I was getting angry for no reason at all and about 30 minutes later, my neighbour called me on the phone to say that I should return home immediately.

“When I got home, I saw my woman lying down beside one of the pits. She had been brought out. I was told that she fell inside the pit. I asked one of my neighbours to take her to the hospital while I tried to withdraw money from the Automated Teller Machine. The woman helped me take her to the hospital. The doctor rejected her and said he could not handle the case. Then she was taken to another hospital, where she was accepted and treated well. Some pastors also prayed for her and she was okay. We were in the hospital for four days and then the doctor said she needed blood and that it would cost me N20, 000.

“I did not have the money, and I told the doctor I was expecting some money- N30,000, so he said I should take her home and bring her back anytime I had the money. I planned to buy her blood tonic and fruits pending when I would be able to take her back to the hospital.

“We returned home on Friday, July 29, and ate and played together. She bathed and said she felt okay. We prayed and slept. We did a scan and the baby was said to be fine- a bouncing baby boy.

Second fall
“On Saturday morning, I boiled some water for her and after she bathed, she said she wanted to eat and I gave her food. It was Lusada market day. So I left to buy her some fruits so that she could use that to replenish till when the money I was expecting would come.

“Then, I had an ominous feeling again. I said what kind of sign is this? So I started going home. By the time I approached the house, I heard people shouting. When I got home, I saw my woman lying down in the pit again.”

Blessing was taken to the hospital again but before midnight, she and her baby were confirmed dead.

“The doctor said he would remove the baby to try to save her and I said no problem, let my woman just be okay,” Eze continued.

“After the doctor removed the baby, we saw that he was dead. I think the problem was serious because she hit her tummy on ground when she fell. Then my woman went into a coma and started vomiting blood from her mouth and nose. Everyone was shouting, even the doctor said he had never seen anything like it.

“He tried and tried to save her but couldn’t. We called her name, she didn’t answer but her eyes remained open. She was not talking but blood was coming out of her mouth. I was calling her people to tell them what was happening. By 11.30, the generator went out and by the time they put it back on, she took her last breath. I touched her, but she did not move again, she did not talk to me. I was just confused. I looked at the baby; I looked at her. Both of them were dead.”

When Blessing was alive, Eze said the two of them had had a playful argument over which sex they wanted their baby to be and he was glad when a scan confirmed his wish to have a boy.

So he named the baby Austin while Blessing said she would keep her child’s name to herself till she was delivered of the baby.

Eze’s parents in Imo State had also been expectant that finally one of their sons would give them a grandson, even though one of their daughters already had a son.

Sadly, Eze used his own hands to bury his first son, an experience he described as one of his most painful.

“People had to contribute money for me to take my woman to the mortuary as I had no money again,” he said.

“The doctor gave me N7, 000 and got me a vehicle to take her to a mortuary in Badagry. Then I returned to the hospital to take the baby. I wrapped him in nylon and prayed for him.

“Then I took him to where I buried him. It was very painful to use my hands to bury my first child. I never thought I could find myself in that position. No, Blessing and I didn’t expect this at all when we spoke fondly about our baby.

“When I pass by couples laughing together now, I remember her and tears flood my eyes. Also, when I see someone with a new born baby, I remember my dead child.”

Fighting back tears, Eze said he already missed Blessing, who he described as his “love and adviser”. He said it was Blessing that had given him some sanity since he lost his job at the mill, where he used to work as a contract staff.

“She always advised and encouraged me,” he said. “Anytime I didn’t have money, she would assure me not to worry and that everything would be fine. Sometimes, we would drink garri together. We would stroll in the streets, talk and laugh. We ate and bathed together. Everything about us just matched.

“I was still going to the flour mill daily because sometimes, if there was shortage of workers, they would come out to get people to work for N850 for the day. We were using that to survive. Sometimes when I had no work to do, I would return home in a bad mood. But she would encourage me to take it easy and that things would be fine someday.

“It is also painful she died because she has suffered with me. So why would she just go like that? She really tried for me. She would encourage me not to give up.”

Both of Igbo origin from Eastern Nigeria, Eze’s immediate problem is to get Blessing’s body to the East for burial and final rites.

In line with their tradition, Eze is expected to marry the Blessing as the two had not formalised their union before her death.

“I almost died when I realised that she was dead,” he said.

“I started thinking of so many things. I understand the Igbo culture and I knew I was in trouble since I had not formalised the union, although; I had her mother’s permission to bring her to Lagos. My family and hers are in the East. My family has gone to her family house in the village but her family said they would not say anything till they see their daughter’s body.

“The family is saying that I should bring her body and that has further compounded my problem. They have accused me of killing their daughter and that because we had not formalised the union, I would have to marry her, do the traditional marriage, pay her dowry and perform everything I was expected to do if she was alive. Blessing and I had planned to travel to the East in December to start preparations to formalise the union.

“Now I want to get her body to Imo State first, that is my priority now. I just want to get the money I need to bury her so that she can rest in peace. It was a painful death so her spirit will still be roaming the streets.

“The driver that wants to take the body there wants to collect N60,000 and the estimate of the amount I would need to settle the mortuary and get to the east is N25,000. So I need at least N85,000 to get my woman’s body to the East.”

Meanwhile, Eze said even though some of his neighbours had sympathised with him, the man who owns the septic tank and the pit his woman had fallen into had not done so.

“His wife came to say sorry but the husband did not come; he does not talk to Igbo people in this area because we supported former President Goodluck Jonathan and he supported President Muhammadu Buhari,” he said.

REACTIONS...
But the neighbour Eze had referred to, Mr. Oyewole Ogundele, denied Eze’s claims, saying he had got a new job that had been taking a lot of his time. He accused Eze of being rude to him in the past.

“The lady died in the hospital; she did not die in the pit,” he said.

“He was not taking care of the lady and the first time the lady fell inside the pit, my wife and I were the ones who called on other neighbours to force him to take her to the hospital. He did not want to take her to the hospital because he did not have money.

“She was rejected by three hospitals before they got to the hospital that agreed to treat her. The guy did not have money to pay for her bills. Then the hospital rejected and he brought the lady home. The lady needed blood and was not okay.

“According to him, he went to get her fruits when the second incident occurred, but the lady was looking for him up and down and imagine somebody that had shortage of blood roaming up and down, her eyes would be dizzy.

‘That was how she fell inside the pit the second time. I was not at home when it happened. She died because there was lack of money to take care of her. This guy has not talked to me in almost two years, but the lady was nice to me. She was very nice to me, but the guy never greeted me. ”

On the reason why the septic tank and soak away were left open, Ogundele said: “I know, I just got a new job about three weeks ago. Very soon, I will start work on it. Thank you for your advice. I appreciate.

“When I started the project in 2012, we dug them for soak away and septic tank but could not complete them.

“Along the line, we had some challenges. I lost my job and had some crisis to the extent that I had to abandon the project and when the landlord was troubling me and even took me court, I left and moved into my uncompleted building. It is not as if I abandoned them (pits), and they are on my land.

“You would see that the house is not plastered, but very soon, we would complete the soak away and septic tank.”

Another neighbour, who identified himself as Alfa Saheed, described Blessing’s death as mysterious, saying “nobody understands how she fell inside the pits twice.”

He also said it could be that Blessing was feeling dizzy since she was said to have needed blood.

“But Eze didn’t take care of the lady; the lady needed blood,” he added. “Even small children play there but don’t fall inside.”

Legal angle
A lawyer, Mr. Wahab Shittu, said the person who constructed the septic tank and soak away could be criminally liable if found to have been negligent by leaving them open.

Shittu said he ought to have exercised “due care to ensure that his soak away and septic tank do not constitute danger to persons and property around”.

He said, “The relevant questions are: does he hold a duty of care? Has he breached that duty? The answer will be yes because he ought to have put in place some precautionary measures. Arising from that breach, has some damage been caused to particularly person(s)?

“But also since it happened twice, the issue of contributory negligence could arise on the part of the woman having been aware that the place posed some sort danger. Having fallen into the pit previously, she should have taken steps to mitigate the damage. But everything will depend on the evidence of proof. But these are evidential issues that an impartial arbiter will consider.”


PDP Lost Because Jonathan Didn’t Listen To Me – Ali Modu-Sheriff Opens Up

Factional National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Ali Modu Sheriff has claimed that former President Goodluck Jonathan was the reason PDP lost Borno and Yobe States to the APC.

Speaking with journalists at a news conference in Abuja on Friday, the embattled factional chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Ali Modu-Sheriff, has blamed former President Goodluck Jonathan for the party’s loss in Borno and Yobe states.

The former Borno state governor who revealed that if Jonathan had listened to him, the two states would have currently been under the PDP, said;

”Yobe and Borno are one and they will remain forever. I am following the trend of events in Yobe very well and I believe that PDP should never have lost Yobe at all.

”If the then president, Jonathan, had listened properly and we did what we had intended to do, by now we would have had the two states — Borno and Yobe.

”But unfortunately, whatever God decides, we will accept it and we cannot do otherwise,” he said.

Speaking on the widely publicized reconciliation between his faction and the Ahmed Makarfi  national caretaker committee of the party, he said: ”Members of the BoT are coming to see me.

”Even, last night they came to meet me at my place and the governors are also meeting with me. But that does not mean that we are going to agree on anything that will affect our integrity, followership and our political interests.

”As some of you rightly said, ‎some of them were ashamed to identify with the party. Now the PDP has become a strong party, everybody is looking up to PDP and we will not be distracted.

“This party, as I rightly said, must be returned to the owners. Anything short of that is a non-starter. What are our problems? How do we improve our standing, so that it is not when we want to go for election that we run around to put the house in order? It is now that we should put the party in proper shape ahead of the election period,” he added.

He expressed happiness with the leaders of the party in Taraba, saying people should always be allowed to chose who they want to lead them.


Pres. Buhari’s Senior Special Adviser On Economic Matters, Ayoleke Adu, Dies At 44


Senior Special Assistant to President Buhari on Economic Matters, Ayoleke O. Adu has died. He was aged 44. A statement by the Special Assistant to Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, states that Adu died last week Saturday after a brief illness. Read the statement from the Vice President’s office regarding Adu’s passing after the cut…

May his soul rest in peace Amen.

With heavy hearts, we regret to announce the untimely passage of the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Economic Matters, Mr. Ayoleke O. Adu. He was aged 44.

Adu, a diligent economic professional and Certified Financial Analyst, CFA, passed on last week Saturday after a period of illness.

Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, on behalf of the President and himself condoles with his wife, children, mother and the entire family.

He prays that God will grant them the fortitude to bear the loss.

Before he joined the Buhari presidency last year, Adu was the Chief Executive Officer of Morgan Capital Securities Ltd, a leading investment firm with headquarters in Lagos.

As a member of the President’s Economic Management Team and a presidential aide deployed to the Office of the Vice President, Adu would be remembered as a patriotic, forthright, creative and astute professional.

He will indeed be sorely missed.

Burial arrangements will be announced later.

Laolu Akande

Senior Special Assistant-Media & Publicity

In the Office of the Vice President


An Encouraging Quote From TB Joshua

May the good Lord give us the enabling grace to overcome our "trials", whenever they come...Amen!


Did Donald Trump Suggest Assassination Of Hillary Clinton If She’s Elected President?

Donald Trump appeared to have suggested that if Hillary Clinton was elected president, the only way to stop her choosing a liberal Supreme Court justice would be to assassinate her.

“If she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do folks,” Trump said during a speech on Tuesday in North Carolina. “Although, the Second Amendment, people, maybe there is. I don’t know.”

The Second Amendment protects an American’s right to bear arms. Trump’s comment came during a rally in Wilmington, Delaware, and was immediately seized on by commentators as the latest example of the tycoon’s offhand language.

Shortly after the outrage, in a statement, Trump’s campaign blamed the “dishonest media” for overblowing his remarks, adding that the tycoon was only calling for supporters of the Second Amendment to rally around him, vote for him and protect the second amendment.

“It’s called the power of unification,” Jason Miller, senior communications adviser for Trump’s campaign, wrote in a statement. “Second Amendment people have amazing spirit and are tremendously unified, which gives them great political power. And this year, they will be voting in record numbers, and it won’t be for Hillary Clinton, it will be for Donald Trump.”

However, Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook said in a statement that Trump’s comment was “dangerous.”

“This is simple -what Trump is saying is dangerous,” Mook said in an emailed statement.

“A person seeking to be the President of the United States should not suggest violence in any way.”


Revealed! This Is How Aisha Buhari’s Trip To America Was Funded [See Details]

The wife of President Muhammadu Buhari, Mrs Aisha Buhar’s trip to the United States of America was not funded with public funds as many believe.


Aisha, on Saturday while speaking in an interview with the Hausa service of the Voice of America, Mrs. Buhari said the trip was being funded with personal funds and sponsorship grant.

“We sponsored even the government officials that came with us on this trip,” she said.

The president’s wife explained that the Muhammadu Buhari’s administration was not funding her office and that her role was just a supportive one to complement her husband’s services to the country.

Mrs. Buhari said the office of First Lady had become a tradition in almost all nations of the world, not just Nigeria.

“All that we are doing is to help our husbands,” she said. “For instance someone can decide to give me Indomie or Maggie, which he cannot give to the president, women need these things.

“In any state where a governor’s wife is irrelevant such as Yobe, you will notice that the women are suffering.

“Whenever we get such gifts, we don’t keep them but share to those in need.”

The president’s wife also explained that the Nigerian government had put in place a special programme to help women.

She said she held a meeting with the Minister of Women Affairs, Aisha Alhassan, before embarking on her U.S. trip on how to sensitize women on ways of taking advantage of the new policy.

“Very soon our women will get help,” she said.

Mrs. Buhari also responded to a question on why Nigerians are suffering at this time.

“This may be because of the existence of the Treasury Single Account, TSA, and the activities of Boko Haram which prevented people from farming last season,” she said.


We Have Recovered N644 Billion - AMCON Shares Testimony

Ahmed Kuru, Managing Director (MD) of the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON), says the corporation has succeeded in recovering N644 billion, according to the Cable.

Kuru disclosed this at a media briefing in Lagos, stating that the financial institution is on its way to achieving its objective of protecting the economy and retrieving acquired bad debts in the Nigerian financial system.

“We have so far collected cash of about N644 billion, and we have settle 56 percent of the total N3.7 trillion has also been settled. Settled doesn’t mean money in pocket,” he said.

“Like I told you, the challenge is from within, the framework is a bit faulty. You cant say that you are taking somebody’s liability, and this person’s business has failed, totally failed in the commercial bank, and you are giving the commercial bank liquidity.”

He further disclosed that seeking court orders in retrieving debts and sealing up companies was necessitated by many years of non-compliance from its debtors.

“We always tell them that we are not quarreling with anybody. If I tell you that there is somebody who can put N10 billion on the table today, I’m lying. But I believe that there are people that can tell me how they intend to pay the 50 billion, the 100 billion, the 150 billion outstanding debts,” Kuru said.

“Some of these guys, you see the lifestyle (they live), the moment you tell them to come and pay our money, it become a problem. So we understand these things.

“They go to the press and I want to tell you that there is nothing personal. Some of them would write that they don’t owe. I cant wake up in the morning and say come and pay me N10 billion; there must be basis.

“If I believe that you are not owing me anything, and I go to court, and say court help me collect this money, there must really be something wrong with me.

“I can tell you that our recovery process is very vigorous, AMCON doesn’t wake up one fine morning and go to court. We must have given these people it for the last five to six years, but the last resort is the court; that means we must have exhausted all manner of mediation. Going to court is very expensive, and we also don’t like the bad publicity,” he added.


FG’s Decision To Change Polytechnics To Universities Will Not Augur Well – Stakeholders

The Federal Government recently directed that the award of the Higher National Diploma (HND) by the nation’s polytechnics be abolished.

It equally stated that the polytechnics will become campuses of the proximate universities with the Vice Chancellors of those universities appointing provosts for the polytechnics, subject to the ratification of the Universities Councils.

If this is implemented now, it means that the award of HND will only be limited to only the students currently admitted for the programmes. Subsequently, polytechnics will be limited to the award of National Diploma (ND) and any student who wish to further his or her studies after obtaining ND award will have to pursue the award of Bachelor of Technology (B. Tech) through the proximate university.

This directive by the FG has however attracted mixed reactions.

While some are in support of this development going by the fact it will help resolve the HND-B.Sc discrimination, some lecturers and stake holders are of the opinion that this move will result in the mass sack of polytechnic lecturers as many of them may not have the qualifications to fit into the new system and many not be able to improve their qualifications immediately due to constraints of time, age , finance and even unfavourable structures.

According to the Acting Head, Mass Communication Department, UNILAG, Dr. Oluruntola Sunday, the move by Federal Ministry of Education will not augur well as certain machineries ought to have been put in place before declaring the outright scrapping of HND by polytechnics.

Another senior lecturer, Dr. Tayo Poopola lamented that the constant change of policies without getting people’s opinions has been the bane in the education sector.

” Nigeria, who operate a democratic rule, ought to set agenda for public discussion before declaring a new policy. ” He stated.


Oil Producing States Shouldn’t Owe Salaries – APC Chief

A member of Board of Trustees of the All Progressives Congress, Jamiu Ekungba, has berated governments of oil producing states in the country which cannot pay civil servants regularly.

Ekungba, who is one of the governorship aspirants in Ondo State, dismissed the governors of such states as running out of ideas on how to run their states.
Ondo is one of the oil producing states owing workers salaries.
Speaking with journalists in Abuja on Thursday night after he submitted his APC forms to contest the governorship primary of the party, Ekungba said most of the governors lacked the leadership skill to run their states.
He said, “The state is owing six months salaries. An oil producing state owing salaries, can you imagine that? That is because we don’t have the right leadership.”

Speaking on his capacity to turn around the fortune of the state, Ekungba boasted that he was successful in his private business and he could repeat the feat as governor of the state.
He said as an accountant, “I restructured a dead company back to life, so I would restructure Ondo State back to life.”
Ekungba added, “I am not going to build an educational system that looks at just speaking in English alone, I am going to look at an educational system in totality; that is the development of the mind – mentally, academically, morally, physically and spiritually.”
The governorship aspirant also denied the insinuation that he was being sponsored by the national leader of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, to be governor of Ondo State.


Muslim World League To Hold Conference On Religious Tolerance In Nigeria

A member of the Muslim World League, Sen. Aliyu Wamakko, said on Friday that the organisation would work towards strengthening religious tolerance and understanding among Nigerians.

Wamakko said in Sokoto that the League would encourage followers of the two major religions in Nigeria to work closely, to engender respect and understanding among them.
According to him, the organisation is bringing together Muslim and Christian scholars to a conference aimed at strengthening knowledge on the teachings of the two religions.

Wamakko added that the conference would address issues of religious extremism, violence in the name of religion and similar issues that tend to portray religion in bad light.
He stressed the need for religious leaders at all levels to do more in sensitising their followers on the importance of tolerance, understanding and mutual respect.
Wamakko, a former governor of Sokoto State and now a Senator, said Nigerians must live in peace and pray for their leaders in order to reap God’s abundant blessings.


You’Re A Bastard Igbo, Leave Ekweremadu Alone – Archbishop Of Enugu Diocese Blasts Gov. Okorocha

The Archbishop of the Enugu Province has blasted Imo State Governor over his persistent attacks on the Senator Ike Ekweremadu and his vow to remove Ekweremadu and replace him with the Senator elect from Imo State.

Speaking when he played host to members of protesting National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) on Thursday, the Archbishop of Anglican Communion of the Enugu Province, Most Rev. Emmanuel Chukwuma, blasted Governor Rochas Okorocha over his persistent attacks on the Deputy Senate President, Senator Ike Ekweremadu.

The Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, had two weeks ago, said that Senator Ike Ekweremadu should be warming up to lose his seat as the Deputy Senate President, adding that he will replace Ekweremadu with a Senator-elect, Benjamin Uwajumogu from Imo State.

While reacting to Governor Okorocha’s comments at the Archbishop’s place in Enugu, the cleric maintained that Okorocha was pursuing anti-Igbo agenda.

According to DailyPost, Chukwuma declared: “We are saying that the Governor of Imo State should apologize to Ekweremadu because he has no right to be harassing him‎.

“The person who is going to the Senate under the APC is coming just for the first term; whether you like it or not, he must come and pay homage to Ekweremadu.

“How can you as a Governor who is just sponsoring one person, for the first time be threatening that you will remove Ekweremadu? It is not possible.

“What I am saying is that Okorocha should apologize and he should know that he is either an Igbo man or a bastard Igbo.

“He is a bastard Igbo if he does not apologize and we are ready to disown him because he is not in the same page with us as an Igbo man. If he was sent by agents from outside, they have failed.”


Many People Now Shun Hospitals To See Native Doctors Instead – Doctors Raise Alarm

Some medical doctors have raised alarm over the fact that the economic crisis plaguing the nation has affected the health sector.


According to The Punch, the doctors warned that if the country’s fortune does not change for good, more private hospitals may shut down due to low patronage.

They expressed concerns that mortality rates might soar, as many patients with terminal illnesses such as stroke and diabetes have stopped their treatments due to lack of funds.

The Punch reports that Consultant Psychiatrist, Dr. Adeoye  Oyewole, complained on Tuesday that patients’ patronage at his private practice in Osogbo, Osun state, have dropped abysmally.

He quickly noted that the poor attendance recorded at the clinic was not because such cases had reduced, but rather due to the fact that patients can no longer offset their medical bills.

He lamented that patients have turned to unconventional but “cheaper” alternatives for their health needs.

“I work both in private and public sectors and I can tell you that patients are no longer coming. At least before now, the patient load could be so much such that you have to turn back some cases. But now, they don’t even come at all. They will rather go to herbalists whose services are cheaper but deadly.

“One of my old patients stopped his medications and engaged a herbalist because he could not pay his previous bills, or afford to buy new drugs again.

“He was rushed in almost unconscious yesterday because he had attempted to kill a friend after hearing voices that told him to do so. This young man, who had managed his mental challenges for years while working, sought the services of a herbalist when he could no longer afford his treatment,” Oyewole said.

The expert in psychiatry told The Punch that the economic situation had also increased emergency cases, as many Nigerians now wait till they are critically ill before they seek treatment.

“Before now, relatives will bring patients when they are seeing some symptoms of mental illnesses; but now, because they don’t have money, they wait till the patients have attempted suicide before they bring them to the clinic.

“I have not seen patients this broke. I have not seen doctors this broke either. Many Nigerians will drink dogonyaro (neem tree) water to treat malaria because they don’t have N500 to buy anti-malaria drugs.”

Corroborating his colleague’s views, the Medical Director, Daysprings Hospitals, Ajah, Dr. Samuel Adebayo, told our correspondent that pregnant women now opt to deliver in churches and also in illegal maternity homes.

Adebayo, a consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist, said that many of the women who had registered at the clinic seek these alternatives due to lack of money to pay for delivery.

He said, “Patronage has dropped among patients in general; but it is worse among pregnant women. They now deliver their babies in churches’ maternity homes under the supervision of unskilled persons. They do that because they pay little amount of money, even though they could die in the process.

“Many of them, when I checked their cards, were already owing the clinic N500 or N1,000 during their antenatal. Do you think they will come back for delivery? These are patients that had their babies with us in the past but are forced to seek dangerous alternatives due to the state of the economy.”

The physician noted that patients with terminal diseases such as stroke and hypertension, who can no longer pay for their drugs and treatment now resign to fate.

Adebayo stated that now is the time for government to subsidise health insurance coverage for Nigerians in the informal sector, as patients can no longer afford out-of-pocket payment for health services.

He said, “I have a hypertensive patient who had stroke and was brought in unconscious a week ago. We needed to do a CT scan of the brain, but the family didn’t have money for the test. They also could not pay for a neurologist to assess his brain. The relatives took the patient home to die after I stabilised him.

“They brought him back some days later. I managed him and he was discharged this morning without making any payment.”

These are also challenging times for managers of public health institutions. It was gathered that government subventions have crashed by 80 per cent in some federal hospitals.

The Chief Medical Director, Federal Neuropsychiatric Hospital, Yaba, Lagos, Dr. Richard Adebayo, said the hospital’s monthly overhead allocation from the Federal Government has dropped from N14m to N2.9m.

According to The Punch, Adebayo, who spoke on Tuesday, said the hospital had yet to receive funds for capital projects this year.

He said, “Instead of our overhead allocation, which used to be N14m every month, we now get between N2.9 and N3.2m. We have not increased our charges because most of our patients will not be able to pay. We want to generate more revenues internally, but it’s a challenge because we don’t do surgeries.

“We’re grateful that our salaries are being paid and we understand the fact that government is also not finding it funny because of dwindling price of crude; but the financial climate is biting us harder than harmattan.”

Adebayo urged governments to adopt genuine public-private partnership initiatives to address the challenge of funding.

He also called on the Federal Government to be prudent in its spending, in order to make room for funding of important projects in the health sector.


Obama Pardons & Shortens Terms For 214 Prisoners; 67 Had Life Sentence


US President Obama commuted the sentences of 214 federal prisoners Wednesday, the largest single-day grant of commutations in the nation’s history.  He has 562 total commutations during his presidency — most of which have come in the past year . Obama has now used his constitutional clemency power to shorten the sentences of more federal inmates than 9 past presidents combined.
The early release of the 214 prisoners, mostly low-level drug offenders and non violent offenders, is part of Obama’s effort to correct what he views as unreasonably long mandatory minimum sentences to those inmates. Some date back decades, including 71-year-old Richard L. Reser of Sedgwick, Kan., who was given a 40-year sentence for dealing methamphatamine and firearm possession in 1989. He’ll be released Dec. 1.
Obama said in a Facebook post:
“The more we understand the human stories behind this problem, the sooner we can start making real changes that keep our streets safe, break the cycle of incarceration in this country, and save taxpayers like you money,”
The president’s clemency power usually takes one of two forms: Pardons, which give offenders a full legal forgiveness for their crimes, and commutations, which shorten prison sentences but often leave other conditions intact. Many of those granted commutations Wednesday will remain under court supervision even after release.
He shared a letter he received from a prisoner he pardoned and wrote on FB:

A few months ago, I received this letter from a Floridian named Sherman Chester. When Sherman was a young man, he wrote, he made some bad choices, got in over his head, and ended up with a life sentence without parole for a nonviolent drug charge. At Sherman’s sentencing, even the judge couldn’t believe he was bound by law to hand down a punishment that didn’t fit the crime.
We know that Sherman‘s story is all too common in this country — a country that imprisons its citizens at a rate far higher than any other. Too many men and women end up in a criminal justice system that serves up excessive punishments, especially for nonviolent drug offenses.
But this is a country that believes in second chances. So we’ve got to make sure that our criminal justice system works for everyone. We’ve got to make sure that it keeps our streets safe while also making sure that an entire class of people like Sherman isn’t relegated to a life on the margins.

 Last year, after he served more than 20 long years in prison, I commuted Sherman’s sentence and those of many others who were serving unjust and outdated prison sentences.
 And today, I’m commuting the sentences of an additional 214 men and women who are just as deserving of a second chance. Altogether, I’ve commuted more sentences than the past nine presidents combined, and I am not done yet.
These acts of clemency are important steps for families like Sherman’s and steer our country in a better direction, but they alone won’t fix our criminal justice system. We need Congress to pass meaningful federal sentencing reform that will allow us to more effectively use taxpayer dollars to protect the public.


I hope you’ll take a minute to read and share Sherman’s letter. The more we understand the human stories behind this problem, the sooner we can start making real changes that keep our streets safe, break the cycle of incarceration in this country, and save taxpayers like you money.

Federal Government releases N150bn for female entrepreneurs


This is good news... I will try and access more details about this positive initiative and share the info.

Oh No! Man Strips N*ked and Goes to the Middle of the Road to Cry...You Won't Believe Why

A Frenchman has caused a stir after he stripped n*ked and went to the middle of a road to cry bitterly.
According to khaosodenglish, the incident took place on Friday in Prachuap Khiri Khan city, Thailand. 

The report further states that the 62-year-old Frenchman decided to get some rest just on Sala Cheep Road in front of the Emmanuel Guesthouse where he had been staying since July 14 before he suddenly removed his cloth and went to the middle of the road to cry bitterly.
Police who came to the scene to persuade him later discovered that he was heartbroken as he had some days ago, split with his wife.

“We took him to the hospital as he was determined to be in a deranged state,” said police Col. Amphol Amornlakpreecha.

According to Kanokwan Saleephol, the 34-year-old guesthouse owner where the man was staying,  said her guest appeared to be sad some days ago, saying he missed his wife whom he had split from before the trip to Thailand.
She said nearly a full bottle of wine precipitated his appearance in the road.

Budget padding: DSS lacks rights to investigate reps, says Falana

Human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), added his voice to the call for investigation and prosecution of federal lawmakers involved in the padding of the 2016 budget, but said the Department of State Service lacked both the moral and legal rights to carry out the probe.
Falana said in a statement on Sunday that the DSS had by its recent acts lost moral right to probe the scam and thus could not be trusted with such responsibility.

He cited as an example, DSS’ recent arrest and detention of the principal officers and administrative staff of the Zamfara State House of Assembly for attempting to commence an impeachment proceedings against Governor Mohammed Yari on grounds of alleged corrupt practices
He also said there was no legal backing for the DSS to embark on such investigation as the agency, according to the senior lawyer, by virtue of National Security Agencies Act, was strictly limited to the “preservation and detection within Nigeria of any crime against the internal security of Nigeria.”

He said since the alleged budget padding was a form of economic crime and had nothing to do with internal security, the DSS should be stopped from going ahead with the investigation.
He also said the police as well as other anti-graft agencies should be allowed to get to root of the scam and bring the culprits to book.
Falana said, “It was reported last week that the Nigeria Police Force had commenced investigations into the criminal allegation of the padding of the national budget by some members of the House of Representatives.
“Some civil society organisations have also requested the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Offences Commission to wade into the matter. Curiously, the State Security Service (Department of State Service) is alleged to have usurped the statutory duties of the police and the anti graft agencies by taking over the investigation of the padding of the budget.

“Based on the illegal decision to take over the investigation the DSS is reported to have sealed off the office of the Chairman of the Appropriation Committee of the House of Representatives.
“Having regard to the recent activities of the SSS and the clear provisions of the relevant laws on investigation of corruption and other economic and financial crimes the DSS lacks the moral right and legal powers to interfere in the investigation of the criminal allegation of padding of the budget in any manner whatsoever.”
He added, “More importantly, by virtue of the provisions of the National Security Agencies Act the powers of the SSS are strictly limited to the ‘preservation and detection within Nigeria of any crime against the internal security of Nigeria.’

“Since the padding of the national budget is a straight forward case of economic crime which is not concerned with the internal security of the nation the SSS should not play into the soiled hands of the criminal suspects in the House of Representatives as they may later turn round to challenge the legal validity of any criminal charge arising from a faulty investigation report.
“The SSS should be called to order as the nation cannot afford to bungle the investigation of the highly placed politically exposed persons involved in the padding of the budget.
“In the light of the foregoing, the Police and the anti graft agencies should be allowed to get to the root of the criminality of budget padding in the National Assembly.”

The Economist Makes U-Turn on the Nigerian Finance Minister.....Read What the UK Newspaper is Saying Now


Former Ogun State Commissioner for Finance, Kemi Adeosun seems to have impressed international news agency, The Economist as it has commended her efforts in the last 9 months as the economic head in Nigeria. 




The Economist newspaper has made a U-turn in its perception of the current Finance Minister, Kemi Adeosun which it described as "poorly qualified" to marshall the economy of Nigeria which has been marred with crisis following the dwindling prices of oil in the international market.

The highly influential British newspaper within a space of eight months has stunningly described the ex employee of auditing giant, PricewaterhouseCoopers Limited United Kingdom as a "tenacious Minister" fixing Nigeria's economy, according to The Cable.

In November 2015, The Economist said Adeosun, who has over two decades of experience in financing and capital management, had only managed one of Nigeria’s smaller  states.

“However, the new finance minister, an accountant who cleaned up the books of one of Nigeria’s smaller states, is poorly qualified for the job,” The Economist had said earlier before now.

But in less than a year on her job, the paper now sees Adeosun as helping Nigeria get control of its earnings.

“In an effort to fix this, a tenacious finance minister, Kemi Adeosun, has told skint governors that they must make their finances public before they receive a second federal bailout,” the newspaper said.

“She has struck thousands of ghost workers off the public payroll. Her ‘treasury single account’ (TSA) may be the biggest coup of all. It replaced a labyrinth of government piggy banks, giving Nigeria more control of its earnings.”


It added that financiers reckon that Nigeria’s Treasury Single Account “could serve as a lesson to others in West Africa as well”.

The Economist further explained how President Muhammadu Buhari has been fighting corruption in Africa’s  largest economy.

Dogara in Trouble as 113 Reps Gather Signatures for EFCC to Probe Him and Jibrin


It is going to be serious trouble for the Speaker of the House of Representatives as members now want the EFCC and ICPC to probe Dogara over budget padding. 




The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and the sacked Chairman, House Committee on Appropriations, Abdulmumin Jibrin, might soon be facing serious legal issues as the ‘Transparency Group’ of the House of Representatives on Wednesday demanded that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) commence probe on the two over alleged padding of the 2016 budget.
According to a Vanguard report, the lawmakers made this known in Abuja while briefing journalists. The group insisted that Dogara and other principal officers mentioned in the budget padding scam, and Abdulmumin Jibrin, former Chairman, House Committee on Appropriations, be investigated by relevant “external” government agencies.
Jibrin had alleged that the 2016 budget was jacked up using 10 of the 96 Standing Committees in the House.
The report reveals that Musa Soba (APC-Kaduna) while speaking on behalf of the Transparency Group, claimed that about 113 signatures had been collected from lawmakers from the six geopolitical zones and across party lines before Sallah break.
“We call for an external investigation into the matter, to enable us know if our principal officers are guilty or not.

“For this group, we say the budget was padded and as such, the budget being a document that belongs to all Nigerians, it is no longer an internal affair”, Sabo said.
He called on the speaker to desist from making Jibrin’s allegations look like a problem of the house.

He maintained that henceforth, the speaker, the deputy speaker, the majority whip and the minority leader should confront the allegations made against them as individuals.
“We urge the leadership of the House of Representatives to stop presenting the 2016 budget padding allegations as the problem of the entire house.


“Let those at the centre of the controversy answer to all the allegations made against them individually and collectively in line with legal practice and our criminal justice system,” Soba added.