Monday 5 March 2012

TOBI Gets New Date


As U.S-based producer arrives in Nigeria
Buoyed by his quest to consolidate on the standard set by previous Nigerian movies shot on foreign soil, Nigeria’s emerging producer, Emmanuel Ijeh has revealed that the premiere of the movie, TOBI (a Nigerian movie shot in New York and New Jersey) has been rescheduled for May 18, 2012.

MAGIC KAY GLOBAL SERVICES: Independence Day bomber’s remains smuggled out of ...

MAGIC KAY GLOBAL SERVICES: Independence Day bomber’s remains smuggled out of ...: Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, MEND, alleged, Sunday, that the remains of Francis Osuvwo, alias General Gbokos, arrest...

Fed Govt to South Africa: stop cruelty to Nigerians


A row has broken out between Nigeria and South Africa over last week’s deportation of 125 Nigerian travellers.
 Foreign Affairs Ambassador Olugbenga Ashiru
The Federal Government at the weekend demanded an explanation from the South African government over the “harsh” treatment meted out to the Nigerians, who were turned back at the Oliver Tambo International Airport in Johanesburg for allegedly carrying fake yellow fever clearance certificates.
The government also vowed to react in a “calculated” manner, depending on the outcome of talks between Nigeria and South Africa today in Pretoria.
 The Nigerian passengers, comprising 50 on Arik Air and 75 aboard South African Airways, were deported at the point of entry on Friday.
Following the action, Arik Air suspended its flight operations to South Africa. It later rescinded the decision, pending further discussions.
Minister of Foreign Affairs Ambassador Olugbenga Ashiru yesterday said the Federal Government considered the maltreatment of Nigerian passengers as harsh and a violation of international practice.
The Minister said: “On Friday, I directed our High Commissioner to South Africa, Amb. Yusuf, to formally send a protest note to South African Government about this maltreatment of Nigerian passengers. And that South Africa should stop this harassment.
“First of all, the Federal Government deplores what the South African Immigration officials did to Nigerian passengers by sending them back to Nigeria on the excuse that they were in possession of fake yellow card certificates.
“Number one, the same yellow card certificate is a requirement at the South African Embassy before they can issue you visa. So, the visa officers at the embassy in Nigeria usually crosscheck yellow card certificate submitted by the applicant.
“Having crosschecked and given them visas, why should the Immigration Department at the point of entry say the same certificate that have been crosschecked by their embassy officials is fake.
“And the standard international practice, for countries requiring yellow card, is for them to quarantine passengers without yellow card certificates at the point of entry.
“It is improper to send them back. It is a harsh treatment of Nigerian passengers, it is not good to send them back.
“They should realise that they do not have the monopoly of sending back passengers or ill-treating them at the point of entry.
“Our officials and the South African officials will be meeting on Monday in Pretoria. And thereafter, Nigeria would react in a mature and calculated manner to this obvious maltreatment of Nigerian travellers.”
Ashiru also said Nigeria had been certified by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as a Yellow Fever-free nation and, as such, he did not see why the South African Immigration Services turned back the travellers.
“That is why countries in Europe and the United States do not demand Yellow Fever cards from Nigerian travellers; it is only South Africa and a few countries in the Southern Hemisphere that demand Yellow Fever card from Nigerian travellers.”
Nigeria and South Africa in 2001 established a Bi-National Commission to, among other issues, promote trade and investment. The pact is also to ensure easy visa process.

Independence Day bomber’s remains smuggled out of Kuje Prison – MEND


 Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, MEND, alleged, Sunday, that the remains of Francis Osuvwo, alias General Gbokos, arrested in connection with the October 1, 2010 Independence Day bombing, were smuggled, Saturday night, out of Kuje Prisons, Abuja, where he died, to an unknown destination.
The group, in a statement  by its spokesperson, Jomo Gbomo, said it “received without surprise, news of the death of Mr. Francis Osuwo.
Charles Okah
“For refusing to cooperate with two Nigerian government informants, an employee of Agip and  an employee of Daewoo, Yenagoa, to testify falsely against Henry Okah, Osuwo was arrested and accused of complicity in the MEND bombing of  October 1, 2010.
“Francis Osuwo and all other detainees in State Security Service, SSS, custody wrongly arrested in connection with our October 2010 attack on Eagle Square, Abuja, have been held under the most appalling conditions and exposed to toxic fumes in their cells.
“Francis Osuwo died as a result of such exposure and neglect by his jailors. His body was smuggled out of Kuje prison, Abuja, on March 3, to an unknown destination, shortly before midnight.”
Meanwhile, Niger Delta activist, Ankio Briggs, weekend, called on the Inspector General  of Police, IGP, to probe Osuwo’s death in Kuje Prisons,  Abuja, last Saturday.
www.magickayglobe.blogspot.com
Briggs, in an interview, called on the IGP to order the Commissioner of Police, Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Abuja, to investigate the circumstances surrounding Osuvwo’s death in prison.
She said: “We are calling for an autopsy to determine the real cause of death.  Osuvwo, 32, was from Kalafiogbene in Delta State. He died in Kuje prison a few days ago, where he was held since his arrest.”
He was accused of playing a part in the bomb blast in Warri in 2010. “The circumstances under which he died are worrisome. The story we got was that he died from inhaling fumigation fumes with other prisoners that were locked up in their cells while the fumigation was ongoing.
“Knowing what fumigation fumes are like, I find it hard to believe, though not surprised to hear that Nigerian prisons are fast becoming killing fields.  Indeed this is the second time we are hearing about these stories about fumigation from Kuje prisons.
“I am the first to condemn the killing of any human being for any reason. To kill prisoners before they have been found guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction is inhuman, criminal and must be condemned, so that it does not happen again.

Ojukwu Has Done His Part In Building The Nation.. What are you doing?

•President Jonathan, his wife, Patience, and Chukwuemeka Ojukwu Jnr, paying their last respect to Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu at Nnewi.Ojukwu’s body was lowered into a grave in his palatial residence, after a requiem mass was held at the next door St. Michael De Arch-angel Catholic Church.
Before the interment, Ojukwu’s body was laid-in-state in his compound, with family members and dignitaries paying their last respects.
President Goodluck Jonathan, accompanied by his wife, Patience led a federal government delegation to the funeral to pay his last respects to the deceased Igbo leader.
The president was received by the host governor, Peter Obi of Anambra State.
In a condolence message, the president extolled Ojukwu’s virtue of selflessness.
“I am here with my wife to pay respects to our leader Ojukwu whose life symbolises service to the people. May his soul rest in peace,” Jonathan wrote in a condolence register opened at Ojukwu’s home.
One of Ojukwu’s heirs, Chukwuemeka Jnr, also paid tributes to his dad describing him as “a hero to all”.
“He was a champion of the people. Someone who stood up when the country needed somebody to stand up; and he did that selflessly,” he said.
The Biafra leader’s son rejected the tag of “rebel” being associated with his dad for spearheading the botched secession of the Republic of Biafra from Nigeria, which resulted in a 30-month long bloody uprising.
“My father was not a rebel. My father was a freedom fighter. He was a man that fought against injustice,” said the younger Ojukwu.
The Nnewi town, where Ojukwu holds the revered traditional title of the Ikemba of Nnewi, throbbed as dignitaries from far and near came to honour the departed Ezeigbo Gburu-Gburu – supreme leader of the Igbo race.
Among the dignitaries are the Chief of Army Staff, Gen Ihejirika, Emeka Anyaoku, former head of the Commonwealth, politician Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, and APGA National Chairman, Chief Victor Umeh.
Ojukwu died, aged 78, on 26 November last year, in London, after suffering a stroke. He is survived by his widow, Bianca and many children.

Enough of this insult – Reps, MEND


Enough of this insult – Reps, MENDSharp criticism to the call by northern governors for the reduction in derivation proceeds to oil producing states continued weekend with members of the House of Representatives from the region, leading stakeholders and the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta, MEND angrily rebuffing the quest.

While MEND threatened dire consequences as its response, spokesman of the defunct Niger-Delta Liberation Front, NDLF, a militant group founded by the late “Gen” John Togo, “Captain” Mark Anthony, accused the northern governors of playing on the seeming quietness of President Goodluck Jonathan to railroad what he described as their provocative agenda.
Rep. Victor Ogene, particularly, charged northern governors to situate their call against what he described as the lopsidedness in the local governments of the country which he claimed has given the north a disproportionate leverage in the funds to the local governments of the country.
Erstwhile Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, Mr. Emmanuel Arigbe-Osula was also among those that condemned the demand.
In separate interviews with Vanguard, the members of the House of Representatives from the South-South region said it was illogical for the northern governors to make their demand for derivation proceeds when they were isolated from the problems of oil exploitation.
In his reaction, Hon. Ken Chikere (PDP Rivers) said while asking for more money is a legitimate demand by the ACF and the northern governors, the timing of the demand was wrong as their demand amounted to incitement.
“It is legitimate to ask for more money. Every governor would want the revenue accruing to his state to be more so that he can develop the state. But what is wrong with the call for more money by the northern governors is the fact that the call is predicated on the report of the revenue accruing to oil bearing states. It is wrong to predicate their call based on the revenue accruing to these states because of the problems associated with these states where oil is coming. The resources that are given to them by way of derivation is to help them confront the numerous problems.
“It is irresponsible to ask for additional funds based on the funds given to oil bearing states at this time of gross upheaval in the polity. It is like incitement and it is unexpected of governors and leaders to incite Nigerians, even their own people at this time of security threat in our country” he said.
In his reaction, Hon. Eseme Eyiboh said rather than ask for more funds from the federal government, every state in the country should explore ways of generating more money for itself to fund its programmes and project.
“What I expect is that as leaders we should concentrate on the issue of diversification of our revenue base, on the issue of sustainable alternatives not only sharing and sharing. People are threadbare, hungry and hopeless. Leadership is becoming more complicated and intriguing by the day.
Nigeria is one nation on the surface of the earth that is very blessed. The weather is very fair, no natural disaster. What leaders should be thinking about now is how to replicate the groundnut pyramid in Kano, Cocoa revolution in the South West and Palm oil in the East. We should return to Agriculture. Natural resources abound in this country. This should be developed rather than insist on sharing” he said.
In his reaction, Hon. Kehinde Oduneye (ACN Ogun) said ‘rather than the leaders calling for more revenue for the northern states, I think we should be looking at fiscal federalism. Fiscal federalism will ensure fairness and equity and every state of the federation will be equally and fairly treated’.
In his reaction, Hon. Victor Ogene (APGA Anambra) said: “While I do not quarrel with the Northern clamour for more money, I do not, however, share their sentiment. Instead of concentrating on funds from the Continental Shelf, why wouldn’t the Northern governors push for increased mining activities in their area to increase the federally collectible pool? Would they give up the additional income that they get from a lopsided Local Government system? What of the South East that gets less than the other zones because of the fewer states they are saddled with? In a democracy, these are ever-present challenges, which cannot be resolved merely on the say-so of one party. Equity, justice and fair-play must be the watchwords as we continually interrogate these issues that define our complex nationhood”.
S-South deserves apology for the insult — Osula
Hon Arigbe Osula asserted in an interview: “Decades of irreparable damages done to the Niger-Delta region by years of gross neglect by the military, whose leadership were mostly Northerners cannot be compensated for by a few years of marginally improved revenue represented by just 13 per cent revenue derivation.”
He continued: “What the Nigerian state has done to this region is a criminal destruction of unimaginable proportion, which will continue to have infinite consequences on all imaginable lives.
“In the face of the absolute tragedy which oil and gas discovery and exploration have been to the people of the oil and gas producing area, it is deeply disturbing to note the contention of the Northern Governors questioning of the meager and sorry current revenue derivation formula which is very insulting to the people of the region compare to the disastrous consequences it has foisted on them.
“It is even more painful when you compare this formula with historical antecedent of past formulae used when groundnut and cocoa were our major sources of revenue without the attendant adverse effect of oil exploration in the name of national revenue generation.”
Don’t take S-South for a ride
Hon Abel Oshevire a former member of the Delta State House of Assembly in his response in an online statement made available to Vanguard, weekend, said: “I am an advocate of a strong, united Nigeria, where every Nigerian will be entitled to his or her rights and privileges so as to realize his or her full potentials. This is why I want to advise the northern governors, elders and leaders, to watch their utterances in order not to compound the present volatile situation in the country”.
He, however, stated: “It beats my imagination as to why these leaders chose this period of all times to introduce such a provocative and vexatious issue as the reduction in the 13 per cent derivation to oil producing states.
“These northern leaders must be very, very careful as not to lend credence to the information flying all over the place that they instigated the Boko Haram mayhem in order to hold the country to ransom and use it to negotiate for their selfish interests.
“How else can one explain the timing of their demand for a review of the revenue allocation formula and the reduction in the 13 per cent derivation to the oil producing states? Are the northern leaders using their demand as a bargain for something they are keeping close to their chests?”
Wake-up call
Ex-militant leader, “Captain” Anthony, said: “The call by Northern governors on reduction of revenue derivation of South-South states is very provocative and clearly shows how arrogant the north is to the south-south.
“It is a wake-up call to the people of south-south to come together to tackle this arrogant north by pushing that derivation should be increased to 50 per cent, as it was done when cocoa, groundnut, palm oil were the mainstay of the nation’s economy”, he said.
He said Niger-Delta youths would give the north more than it could chew when the time comes since “they believe that they can use Boko Haram and all these antics to distract President Goodluck Jonathan”.

Why did Osaze snub Keshi?


On the blast of the final whistle Richard Gahonzire, an Executive member of Rwanda Football Federation, approached this reporter and said “why did Osaze snub Stephen Keshi?
When it was clear that Osaze Odewengie was not getting it right in the Nations Cup qualifier last Wednesday he was substituted and Victor Moses came in and showed that he was a star in the making for Nigeria. He controlled the ball well and had precision in his attack.
Osaze Odemwingie in a with the press
When Keshi stood and stretched his hand  to pat Osaze on the back as he was leaving the pitch Osaze ignored Keshi and quickly reached for a bottle of water.
He appeared unhappy that he was being substituted. But Keshi did not look at his face. His eyes were focused on the field and he probably did not see Osaze’s action. But those who watched closely saw what happened.
Osaze wasn’t happy that he was substituted and walked straight to the bench, reaching out for a bottle of water instead of shaking his coach Stephen Keshi. He could have taken the water and still responded to Keshi’s pleasantry. He did not. His countenance pictured his mind.
“I did not even take notice of what he did as I had my eyes on the pitch at the same time,” Keshi said when this reporter asked him about it.
Richard who saw it all was  outraged.
“Was Osaze sad that he was changed,” Richard, rhetorically, asked again?
“I told you that the match would be a David and Goliath affair and your stars from Europe almost made it so. Our fans expected a lot from them but they were no where in this match. These big names have been failing your country and today wasn’t different.”
Richard, like their coach Militi, has been monitoring Nigeria’s football and knew why Nigeria did not qualify for the last Nations Cup.
Keshi, Daniel Amokachi, Sylvanus Okpala, Valere and Shorunmu all agreed that Nigeria could have won the match if they fielded the team that beat Liberia two weeks ago. They have concluded to field more of the local players in subsequent matches especially during the qualifiers for Nations Cup and World Cup.
They have been building a new national team and want to build confidence into the local Eagles. Four played in Kigali and excelled more than the Europe-based players.