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Maristella Okpala, wins best National Costume at Miss Universe 2021

Miss Universe Nigeria, Maristella Okpala, has made Nigeria proud after she won the best National Costume at the Miss Universe 2021 pageant.

The 28-year-old beauty queen, who donned an outfit inspired by the ‘Mmanwa’ masquerade from Southeastern Nigeria, was named winner of the National Costume of the recently concluded event which took place in Eilat, Israel, on Sunday, December 12.

Taking to her Instagram page, Maristella disclosed that she choose the female masquerade costume because she sees a self reflection of her cause because ‘Mwanwa’ also protects children and women against any form of abuse.

The costume was designed by a Filipino fashion student, Kenny Gasper, and it featured a beaded headpiece, an ornate tribal mask, and an ancient back cape.

The Designer took to Facebook to celebrate after his design worn by Maristella, was announced Best in National Costume.

(Yabaleft)

Justice4slyvester: Five Students and Three House Masters Arrested

The management of Dowen College, Lagos has released a new statement confirming that five of its students and three house parents are currently in detention over the controversial death of one of its students, 11-year-old Sylvester Oromoni who was allegedly bullied to death by his schoolmates

In the statement addressed to parents and guardians, the school principal said the school has been working with the authorities and the Oromoni to ensure that justice is served. The principal pointed out that five students and three hostel parents have been taken into custody but that it isn’t an admission of guilt or wrongdoing

The principal also added that following the preliminary investigations, the management hopes that the Ministry of Education will let the school have a timeline for next term.

Read the full text of the statement below.

”Dear Parents/Guardians As we continue to commiserate with the entire Oromoni family, we also extend our condolences to our students, parents, staff and indeed the entire Dowen College family on the demise of our beloved son Slyvester.

We would like to extend our appreciation to all our parents and guardians for their calls, messages, advice and encouragement as we navigate this difficult time together.

We would also like you to know that we are working together with the relevant authorities and the Oromoni family to ensure that justice is seen and served in this matter. We understand and appreciate your anxiety and support. We plan to do all that we can to ensure that the education and future of our dear children is not mortgaged.

Investigations are moving along and we continue to work with all the relevant authorities.

1) So far all five of the children suspected have been remanded in custody as well as the three hostel parents. Please note this is NOT an admission of guilt or wrongdoing but part of their process.

2) The school and members of the Oromoni family have met cordially with the Commissioner of Police to discuss the matter and the way forward.

Nigeria is the Worst Place to Live on Earth- Pat Utomi

Pat Utomi, professor of political economy and APC chieftain, lamented increased poverty and insecurity under President Muhammadu Buhari’s regime, asserting that Nigeria is the most miserable place to live.

“The truth of the matter is that this is the most miserable place to live on earth today; all the statistics say so,” Mr Utomi said on Channels TV. “Poverty rules the land but do you see it reflected in the lives of the political class? No, you don’t. Today, we have overtaken India in terms of the total number of the poorest people on the planet.”

He added, “They are dying from insecurity with all the killings every day, more people are killed in Nigeria every day in most of the major civil wars of the world. Today we are dying more from malaria than any other people in the world.”

Mr Utomi accused Nigerian politicians of lacking empathy.

Politics has been reduced to how do you capture a state and use it for your own aggrandisement… Nigerian politicians do not have empathy for the people. There is a complete disconnect between the political class and the people,” Mr Utomi explained.

Mr Utomi’s remark came amid the deterioration of worsening insecurity.

Last week, bandits ambushed a 42-seater bus at Sabon Birni, Sokoto, killing 23 persons.

President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday sent a delegation to Sokoto and Katsina.

I have dispatched a high-level delegation of security and intelligence chiefs, led by the National Security Adviser, Major General Babagana Monguno (retd.), to Sokoto and Katsina states, in response to the spike in the activities of bandits in the two states,” Mr Buhari said.

(Journalist101)

Bandits Collect Levies From Farmers in the North

Bandits have continued to collect levies from farmers in Birnin Gwari, even after the restoration of telecommunication services in the state, Alhaji Zubairu Abdurra’uf ,an indigene and traditional title holder of ‘Dan Masanin Birnin Gwari has said.

Reports from.Birnin Gwari and from other parts of Kaduna State, indicated that the bandits have committed nefarious acts with impunity, after the authorities restored telecommunication services in the state.

Some natives from Birnin Gwari said the bandits had denied farmers in the area from conveying the farm.produce they harvested,in spite of the series of counter attacks by the nation’s security agencies.

Alhaji Zubairu Idris Abdurra’uf,the Ɗan Masanin Birnin Gwari ,told the BBC Hausa  that ” restoring the telecommunication services had afforded the people of Birnin Gwari the opportunity to communicate with each other and with the security agencies ,anytime the bandits attacked.”

“The soldiers have bombarded Birnin Gwari forests,but it appeared nothing has changed about insecurity in the area. The situation now is like nothing has changed, bandits are attacking, even though the security agents are also attacking them, till date, attacks on communities have not stopped, ” he said.

He said the disturbing fact was that the bandits were currently imposing tax on farm produce and farmers must pay or be dealt with.

Many farmers will lose their farm products ,the bandits have denied them access to their farms unless they pay tax before they will be allowed to harvest the crops. “

Reports in recent times, said the Nigerian military succeeded in destabilising a gang of bandits that had been terrorising  travelers plying the Kaduna-Abuja road, where over 45 bandits were killed including their kingpin ,Ali Kwaja.

(Vanguard)

Nigeria is Falling Apart- Jega

Prof. Attahiru Jega, former Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), has said while many might argue with those who described Nigeria as a failed state, no person would dispute that the country is fast failing.

The politician, who is also a former Vice Chancellor of Bayero University, Kano said this on Wednesday in a lecture he delivered at the Owolabi Afuye Memorial Lecture organised by the Nigerian Bar Association, Ibadan Branch as one of the events to mark its 2021 Law Week.

Jega lamented that the spate of insecurity in the country is a source of worry and would support the claim the the country is falling apart.

Specifically, on insecurity, a combination of militancy, insurgency, banditry, farmer-herder conflicts, kidnapping for ransom, and ethno-religious or communal conflicts, with evident lack of competence and capacity to address these challenges, has unleashed generalised individual and collective apprehension, palpable insecurity and fatalistic resignation,” Jega said.

Many citizens have been killed, maimed, raped, displaced, and properties stolen, confiscated and/or destroyed. Hundreds of thousands of citizens have been staying in Internally Displaced Persons camps for long, with the future of children compromised by malnutrition, diseases, and prolonged abandonment of schooling.

In some areas of the country, notably North-East and North-West geopolitical zones, famine is imminent, as insurgents and/or bandits have obstructed farming and agrarian food production and destabilised the rural economy, with outright killing of whoever ventures out to their farms, or imposition heavy taxation on those allowed to farm.

“Indeed, things have been so bad for so long that, some scholars are beginning to perceive Nigeria now, perhaps exaggeratedly, as a ‘failed state.’”

(Journalist101)

Buhari Rejects Electoral Bill And Returns It To National Assembly

Few days after it was reported that Muhammadu Buhari may reject the Electoral Amendment Bill over the removal of indirect primaries from the document, the president has returned it to the National Assembly.

A senator who spoke with us, revealed that the Bill was returned to the Senate and the House of Representatives in a letter addressed to the two principal officers.

The source said the president cited high cost of conducting direct primaries by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), which according to him, hovers around N500 billion.

He said the president met with INEC chairman, Professor Yakubu Mahmoud, who briefed him on the dangers the law would pose to the conduct of elections in the coming months.

President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, are expected to read the content of the president’s letter next week, when the two chambers reconvene.

Speaking on the dangers the law would pose, Uzodimma claimed the proposed amendment does not tally with the provisions of the 1999 constitution, insisting that parties’ supremacy and rights to opt for direct or indirect primaries must not be tampered with.

He said laws that cannot be implemented should not be passed, arguing that it was insensitive to do so.

For over two weeks, governors elected on the platform of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have been mounting pressure on President Buhari not to sign the Electoral Amendment Bill into law until contentious areas are resolved.

Many of the governors, who are at loggerheads with senators and members of the House of Representatives from their various states, had insisted that the National Assembly must yank off indirect primaries from the Electoral Act.

Two weeks ago, APC governors, represented by the caretaker committee chairman of the party and Governor of Yobe State, Mala Buni, met with President Buhari. Others present during at the meeting were Governors Atiku Bagudu of Kebbi and Abubakar Badaru of Jigawa states respectively.

Though the governors did not speak on the ongoing controversy trailing the removal of indirect primaries from the Electoral Act by members of the National Assembly, sources in the APC told our Reporter that the issue featured prominently during the meeting.

The source said the three APC governors, who represented their colleagues, urged the president to return the Amendment Bill to the National Assembly to reflect some of the concerns raised by stakeholders.

The source said National Assembly leaders, who until now refused to listen to concerns raised by governors may lose out in the ongoing power play.

It said many APC lawmakers were already aggrieved that governors have hijacked the structures of the party ahead of the 2023 general elections.

It said lawmakers believe that direct primaries would raise their chances of returning to the Assembly in 2023 if allowed to scale through.

Similarly, President of the Senate, Lawan two weeks ago, met with President Buhari on the same Electoral Amendment Bill. While briefing newsmen, he frowned at politicians lobbying the president not to sign the Bill into law.

Unlike Lawan who kept mum on the issue of indirect primaries yanked off from the Bill, Speaker Femi Gbajabiamila, last week, during a visit to the president explained why the exclusion of indirect primaries was good for the country’s democracy.

A source said the Speaker, who is the arrowhead behind the removal of indirect primaries from the 2010 Electoral Amendment Act, is also under fire from his South West leaders for taking a decision without due consultations.

Source: Sun

All Nigerians Must Be Involved To Resolve Evil Attacking Us– Buhari

President Buhari has called for the support of all Nigerians as his government confronts the various faces of evil plaguing the land.

He was reacting to the latest massacre of travelling villagers in Sokoto.

“It shows that the evil this administration is confronting is one that requires the support and involvement of all Nigerians”, said spokesman Femi Adesina.

The presidency put the death toll in the attack at 23. The charred remains have been given mass burial.

Buhari expressed sadness over the gruesome attack on the innocent travellers.

As he had done in the past, Buhari said the nation’s security agencies have been instructed to put an end to the attacks.

“I am very distressed at the manner of death visited on these hapless citizens who were undertaking a legitimate journey to another part of the country.

“I extend deep condolences to the families of the victims as I assure that the security agencies will continue to give their all to bring to an end the operations of these despicable people.”

Source: Journalist 101

Justiceforsylvester: Parents Stage Protest At Dowen College Gate

Parents of pupils of Dowen College, Lekki, Lagos State on Wednesday stormed the school to protest the death of 12-year-old Sylvester Oromoni.

They insisted that justice must prevail over the death of Oromoni, who reportedly died from injuries he sustained after being beaten by his senior colleagues.

Although the school has been sealed by the Lagos State Government, the management had pledged its commitment to unraveling the mystery surrounding the death of the late student.

Meanwhile, the Lagos State Police Command on Tuesday said it had arrested three students in connection to Sylvester’s death.

The protesters, mostly women dressed in black, besiged the school gate, carrying placards and obituary posters of Sylvester.

Some others chanted “All we are saying, give us justice for Sylvester”, “What do we want, Justice for Sylvester”

One of the parents who addressed reporters, said: “It is so painful that we gather here as mothers today to mourn a star.

We deeply commiserate with the family of Oromoni. We want to implore the commissioner of Police to use his good office to ensure that justice is served.

CP Hakeem Odumosu should fish out the culprits and make their names public.

“Regardless of whoever is involved, the state authorities must fish out the killers who cut short the life of Oromoni.

“It is sad that despite paying such huge fee as school fees, it is quite painful that a school like this can’t provide safety for its pupils.

This is a wake up call to mothers to build confidence in their children, and pay attention to them. At this point, we want an open investigation. We’ve submitted to various ministries and government authorities.”

(Journalist101)

UK Parliament To Debate Petition Seeking To Sanction Buhari’s Administration For Human Rights Abuses

The United Kingdom Parliament will, on Wednesday, debate a petition submitted to it which called for sanctions against the Nigerian Government and its officials over cases of human rights abuse during the #EndSARS movement.

Members of the Parliament will hold a debate on Magintsky sanctions and human rights abuses today (Wednesday) at the Westminster Hall.

The debate which will start at 2:30 pm (1.30 pm Nigerian time) will be led by parliamentarian Chris Bryant.

In October 2020, a petition was filed which condemned the illegal activities of the now disbanded unit of the Nigeria Police force, Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) which led to a protest and consequent shooting of peaceful protesters by members of Nigeria’s security force.

The petitioners argued that deploying sanctions against the government would serve as a deterrent to anyone involved in human rights abuses.

It reads, “Implement sanctions against the Nigerian Government and officials

The Government should explore using the new sanctions regime that allows individuals and entities that violate human rights around the world to be targeted, to impose sanctions on members of the Nigerian government and police force involved in any human rights abuses by the Nigerian police.

”There have been deeply concerning reports of a Nigerian police force unit (SARS) engaging in illegal activities and human rights abuses, and there have also been reports of police firing at protestors calling for SARS to be disbanded.

“Deploying sanctions would provide accountability for and be a deterrent to anyone involved in violations of human rights.”

All petitions run for six months and by the time the petition closed, it had gathered 221,258 signatures and the United Kingdom government responded on November 11, 2020.

Responding in a statement issued by the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, the government said it is concerned by violence during the protests and was waiting on the outcome of Nigerian investigations into reports of police brutality.

The response stated, “The UK Government is deeply concerned by violence during recent protests in Nigeria, which tragically claimed lives. Our thoughts are with the families of all those affected.

“The Foreign Secretary issued a statement on 21 October calling for an end to the violence and for the Nigerian Government to urgently investigate reports of brutality by its security forces and hold those responsible to account.

“The Minister for Africa tweeted on 16 October, noting that the Nigerian people’s democratic and peaceful calls for reforms, and again on 21 October, encouraging the Nigerian authorities to restore peace and address concerns over brutality towards civilians.

“He reiterated these messages when he spoke to Foreign Minister (Geoffrey) Onyeama on 23 October. The British High Commissioner in Abuja has also raised the protests with representatives of the Nigerian Government and will continue to do so.

“We welcome President Buhari’s decision to disband the Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS) and the establishment of judicial panels of inquiry to investigate alleged incidents of brutality by the security services.

“They must investigate all incidents, including in Lagos, fully. The Minister for Africa tweeted on 29 October stressing the importance of the police and military’s cooperation with the panels. He raised this, and the need for the panels to urgently start investigations, when he spoke to the Governor of Lagos on 11 November.

“The UK Government will continue to work with the Nigerian Government and international and civil society partners to support justice, accountability and a more responsive policing model in Nigeria.

“We will continue to push for the Nigerian security services to uphold human rights and the rule of law, investigate all incidents of brutality, illegal detentions and use of excessive force, and hold those responsible to account.

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“On 6 July, the Government established the Global Human Rights sanctions regime by laying regulations in Parliament under the Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Act 2018.

“In a statement to Parliament, the Foreign Secretary set out in full the scope of the UK’s new Global Human Rights sanctions regime. He announced the first tranche of designations, as well as the Government’s approach to future designations.

“This sanctions regime will give the UK a powerful new tool to hold to account those involved in serious human rights violations or abuses.

“The sanctions regime is not intended to target individual countries. It will allow for sanctions to be imposed on individuals and entities involved in serious human rights violations or abuses around the world.

“We will continue to consider potential designations under the Global Human Rights sanctions regime. It is longstanding practice not to speculate on future sanctions designations as to do so could reduce the impact of the designations.

“The UK Government will keep all evidence and potential listings under close review.”

Electoral Act: INEC Asks President Buhari To Sign Amended Bill

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has replied to President Muhammadu Buhari’s letter seeking an explanation from it on some areas in the Electoral Act amendment bill transmitted to him by the National Assembly.

Newsmen report that President Buhari, who received the bill on November 19, has until December 19 to sign it or withhold his assent and communicate to the National Assembly his feelings and comments about the bill.

If after 30 days the president refuses to sign the bill and the National Assembly is not in support of the president’s amendments or reservation, the Senate and the House of Representatives can recall the bill and pass it.

In a letter dated November 29, 2021, signed by the Chief of Staff to the President, Prof. Ibrahim Gambari, the president requested INEC chairman and the office of the Vice President, Attorney-General of the Federation, the Minister of Finance and the Inspector General of Police to provide considered views on the bill by Friday, December 3, 2021.

Officials of the commission, who cannot want his name mentioned for obvious reasons told newsmen that the INEC chairman has sent his reply to the president via the appropriate channel.

It was reliably gathered that the commission in its reply enjoined the president to toe the line of constitutionality, especially that the views of the federal lawmakers seem to have represented the opinions of the majority of opinions of Nigerians.

The commission also highlighted landmark proposals in the bill that would improve the quality of elections and deepen democracy in the country.

INEC also said in its response that accelerated assent to the bill by Mr President will facilitate the preparation of major elections like the FCT municipal area council election, Ekiti and Osun governorship elections and the 2023 general elections.

The commission, in the response, also listed the gains of the electronic transmission of results, early submission of list of nominated candidates and the power of INEC to review election results declared under duress or in contravention of electoral laws and guidelines as some of the vital areas in the proposed amendments.

Meantime, the National Assembly has been called upon to be prepared to veto Buhari should he decline assent to the Electoral Act amendment bill.

The call was made on Monday in Kano by the Organization for Community Civic Engagement (OCCEN) in conjunction with the Kano Civil Society Forum.

Addressing journalists, the Executive Director of OCCEN, AbdulRazak Alkali said, “the National Assembly has done a wonderful job and this is the first time that the legislature, the CSOs and the generalities of Nigerians are on the same page.”

He said the president’s referral of the bill to the INEC may turn out to be a delay tactic which will eventually lead to the use of the 2010 Electoral Act in the conduct of the election, despite its deficiencies.

He continued, “Sadly, this issue is taking a similar approach to how the president behaved pre-2019 elections which made INEC use the 2010 Electoral Act despite all deficiencies in the law.”

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He said the president needs to do away with the selfish interests of some Nigerian politicians and focus on what is in the best interest of Nigeria and its citizens.

He said it is very clear to all peace-loving Nigerians that the conduct of party elections through direct primaries in Nigeria remains the most transparent mode of nominating candidates.

Meanwhile, INEC has said that the number of fresh registrants in the ongoing nationwide Continuous Voter Registration (CVR) has hit 4,539,102.

This is contained in the CVR weekly update, quarter 2, week 9, as of December 6, 2021.

Newsmen report that INEC’s online registration portal was launched on June 28 and was followed with the applicants’ physical registration on July 26 this year after the formal launch by INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu.