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Monday, February 8, 2016

Child dedication: How Hon. & Mrs. Mark Ebenuwah Dedicated Son Unto The Lord


Asaba Post News-Wire was there at Breakthrough Power Deliverance Ministry (The Untouchable Prayer City) Asaba, when the couple dedicated their first son, Sir Victor, Unto the Lord Most High.

 As the general overseer of the commission, Commander Aniedi-Abasi Edet under the unction of the Holy Spirit and the Lord's Authority performed the dedication service.

The photos below captured the high spirit and sweet emotion of the proud parents, their testimony of waiting upon the Lord was a huge blessing to all who witnessed the service.












 Share with us this sweet miraculous dedication service captured in photo-speak, we at Asaba Post News-Wire await to celebrate with you your own success stories and share same to the world.







 call us at 07063557099 or zccdelta@gmail.com or asabapost@gmail.com










Extradition Treaty With United Arab Emirates: Kudos, President Buhari!


Kennedy Emetulu 
 
As a notable critic of the president, I’m sure not a few would have their eyebrows raised on glancing the title of this piece. Some might even conclude before reading that it’s probably a sarcastic piece. No, I’m genuinely, genuinely happy with something President Muhammadu Buhari has achieved while on his visit to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which is signing an extradition treaty with that country. This is long overdue!

In 2010, when James Ibori was holed up there after being hounded out of Nigeria by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), I expressed the view that the Nigerian government ought to have worked to have an extradition treaty with the United Arab Emirates, considering the stories making the rounds about the place being a haven for Nigeria’s stolen money. But for some inexplicable reasons and to my frustration, the Jonathan government did not pursue this matter. 
 
They kept asking the United Arab Emirates to extradite Ibori to Nigeria when we did not at that time have an extradition treaty with them. In fact, Ibori was claiming political asylum and he would have been favoured by the rules under 1951 Geneva Convention, because of the way the EFCC militarised the hunt for him before his escape. What saved the day somewhat was that the British were equally interested in him. They have an extradition treaty with the United Arab Emirates and Ibori holds a British passport, so they simply asked for him to be extradited to the UK where he was tried along with some of his family members and associates, convicted and imprisoned. That was an embarrassment to Nigeria, especially after what happened with his case before Justice Marcel Awokulehin at the Federal High Court, Asaba.

So, hearing now that President Buhari had signed this treaty with them on his trip to the United Arab Emirates pleases me exceedingly. In fact, I was about to start complaining about his penchant to go abroad and diss Nigeria and Nigerians again as the news reports are suggesting he has done again in Abu Dhabi; but, no, whatever, this treaty he’s signed forgives everything else he’s done wrong on this trip. Of course, I’m aware that things like this are not done in a jiffy. It’s quite possible that the Jonathan government had actually initiated the process and that Buhari merely completed it since government is a continuum. If that is the case though, we were not told. But whatever the situation, the fact that it is Buhari effecting the signing of this bilateral agreement with the United Arab Emirates to me means he should fully take the credit until the contrary is proven.

Now, I’m not naively thinking mere signing of the treaty makes it effective. After all, we have an extradition treaty with South Africa, another haven of Nigeria’s stolen wealth, but I’ve never heard of South Africa returning any of our stolen wealth or investigating any of the many political criminals from Nigeria pouring stolen money there. It’s indeed an irony that while South Africans are bullishly out in Nigeria seeking business and making good money as titans of the Nigerian corporate world and the private sector, our public officials are legging it to their place with our money, pouring it into their economy, protected from the not-so-long arm of the Nigerian law. So, I know signing the treaty is one thing and making it effective by undertaking the right investigations and making the right requests to authorities of this country with the aim of extraditing suspects and repatriating stolen money back to Nigeria is another thing.

In this regard, Nigeria must be very much aware that there are two possible situations that an extradition request might hit the snag with countries like this. I mean, as much as countries want to be seen as cooperating under such a treaty, they would not make it easy for you to take money already invested in their system away if they can do so lawfully under the treaty. This is why such defences against extradition like political persecution and the possibility of the abuse of the human rights of the subject of extradition could work against states making the request. Nigeria must clean up its act properly. It’s not a case of comparing systems; it’s a case of ensuring that any request made by Nigeria under the treaty have no such defences.

I also know that there are those who would feel that the President did not act strategically by first signing this treaty before preparing a case against persons likely to be the subject of extradition, as this might alert them to government intention and possibly see them moving these stolen money, assets and their related investments out of the United Arab Emirates before any request for extradition can come from Nigeria. While this is true, we need to be aware that there is no international law or principle that requires or obliges one country to hand over persons wanted by another country. Things like these are governed by bilateral agreements and relationships. So, this is hoping Nigeria will effectively engage other international measures against these persons wherever they go, including exploring bilateral relations with states they move to. It helps that Nigeria and the United Arab Emirates are also signatories to the United Nations Convention Against Corruption.

Finally, while I appreciate what the president has done in this regard, I must say I am still very much doubtful of his motive and the overall anti-corruption strategy. I’ve noted too many structural defects, a lot deliberately put in place, to suggest that there is more to it than meets the eye. But I’m still open to be convinced. I just believe we have been taken on a ride too many a time by all sorts of military adventurers and political leaders throughout our history and Buhari himself has been firmly part of that terrible history of shenanigans. The difference today is that he has an opportunity to make amends. We, the doubtful, are watching and I for one know that I’m open to be won over. But I will not accept lies and hypocrisy as options in the fight against corruption. Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom.

Once again, kudos to Mr President!

THE CRACK WALLS OF NDOKWA NATION.


By Ifeanyi Nwapanyi.
 
From time immemorial, the people of Ndokwa nation have lived as one inseparable whole, fully exercising the romance of brotherly love and uninterrupted serenity. From Aboh to utagba unor, back to Obiaruku to Abbi and Utagba Ogbe, love permeated geographical boundaries and we were the envy of the world.

Unfortunately, this genealogical tree is being presently cut by a leader who should be packing sand round the tree to strengthen the roots. Hon. Friday Osanebi is one leader whose pace of acceleration in the political landscape of Ndokwa nation is a common knowledge.
 
No one has however ever stood on his way as a result of pockets of philantrophic gestures attributed to his name. He has however thread on the tail of the chameleon with his recent shameful and degrading role in the feud between Kwale and Beneku both in Ndokwa nation.

Instead of negotiating for peace, he has succeeded in putting a knife on the things that held us together and celebrating the falling apart of a nation. He gave a directve of recent barring Kwale people from operating shops or businesses in Beneku unless they resided there.

What sort of draconian directive could this be from a leader? What a slap on his office? What a reversal of a responsibility? 
 
As if this was not enough, he has directed the shutting down of Pontu, the only access to these communities from Kwale. Where then is the morality in his political philosophy? I urge him to thread with caution, understand his age by revisiting his birth certificate, thank God for his stars and be grateful and respectful to the whole Ndokwa Nation.

Finally, I leave him with the Chinese apophthegm which urges that sofily sofily catchee monkey!

The mother of all lawsuits is about to begin in Nigeria - Emeka Ugwuonye b4kxkg





"I already prepared to expose Keyamo and his criminal tendencies. But I delayed because I wanted concrete evidence that he and Lauretta Onochie were working together. I hope this lawsuit they filed is real." - Author
 
I have always known that I would play a great role in the development of the Nigerian law. I knew it would come from multiple angles. First, it would come from my role as a lawyer. In less than two years after I established law practice in Nigeria, I am already involved in a number of cases that will ultimately change the legal landscape.
 
I recently obtained a judgment that should make it impossible for the EFCC to freeze people's bank account without a court order. I am starting a legal publication and case tracking program, which are calculated to eliminate corruption in the judiciary. Also, I am establishing a legal institute for legal education for both lawyers and non-lawyers in this country.
 
Now, there is yet another angle from which I would contribute to Nigerian law. These are from cases in which I am a party. Last November, the Federal High Court, Lagos gave a judgment which found that the EFCC violated my rights when it detained me unlawfully in 2011. That court awarded me damages in the amount of 10 million naira. I will take that case all the way to the Supreme Court of Nigeria. I want the apex court to decide definitively on the detention powers of the executive arm of government.
 
Also, the two cases the EFCC has against me will similarly end up at the Supreme Court.
Finally, a person is said to have sued me for defamation in Nigeria. I am happy. It is an opportunity to test the defamation laws of this country. All those websites which wrote that I stole 1.5 million dollars - Premium Times, and the rest are going to come to court to explain when and how I stole the money. These news websites are carrying false defamatory stories about me that I stole money. It is really good to drag all of them to court and let them explain where they got such story. So, I am happy.
 
As to how I would react to this rumored lawsuit, I can tell you that I will use shock and awe on them. First, I already prepared to expose Keyamo and his criminal tendencies. But I delayed because I wanted a concrete evidence that he and Lauretta Onochie were working together. I hope this lawsuit they filed is real. We need to stop this practice whereby Keyamo poses as EFCC lawyer on some case and turn around and collect money from private persons. That is corruption. That is criminal. So, he has to be stopped, and he has to disclose all the money he was paid for this. He has been using the EFCC connection to extort money from victims. I have evidence.
 
WHAT IS THE REAL MOTIVE FOR THIS LAWSUIT BY MADAM LOLLY? It is not with the intention to win a judgment against me. That I can tell you now. The last person to sue me for defamation is the woman that defamed me ten times over. You don't need to be a lawyer to understand that she would have to prove that all she said about me was true. And she cannot. But because she is stupid, she may not realize that.
 
The real motives for suing me are:
(1) She wants me to stop talking about her. She wants me to suspend or abandon my work in exposing the Dubai Madams. She believes that I would shut up and stay silent. But she does not know me. My response is clear. I will file a lawsuit against her for the trauma she caused my clients when she helped send them to Dubai and Greece for prostitution.
(2) Another reason for her suit was that she wanted to project herself as Buhari's aide. She wanted to say that in the media, and this is a good way to say it. But she does not know that she would have to prove her real link to President Buhari. She has to. And if she lied, then she cannot have any basis to stand. And if it is true that she is working for Buhari, then we need to know whether the President authorized the attack she mounted on me. Is this how President Buhari would like to deal with opponents and critics? That we shall find out too.
(3) Thirdly, Lauretta simply wants to further defame me using her publication about the lawsuit to defame me. All that she wrote in her media publication on this case are defamatory. She said that I deliberately failed to file papers for tax exemption for the 1.5 million. She thinks that America is like Nigeria. An embassy's tax status is known to the US Government. You don't need to file any papers for that purpose. But because they are criminals, they lie to you.
(4) Fourthly, Keyamo realized that he will not win any of the EFCC cases he has against me. He already lost the one in Lagos so woefully. This case is just another opportunity to appear to hurt me. But he is so stupid. He has now exposed himself to a counter offensive.
I say to all of you: do not worry. If you love me, go and drink Champaign. These people have done me the best service ever. I just hope that this so called lawsuit is not a hoax. I hope it will be real.
 
DID YOU KNOW THIS:
Did you know that after the courts granted me bail in 2011, Keyamo, because he collected money from a private client, did everything to delay my bail? Did you know that after I finally was released, Keyamo filed an application in court to revoke my bail? Did you know that? Did you know the reasons Keyamo gave for my bail to be revoked? He said that I was intimidating Mrs. Farida Waziri and Ambassador Adefuye through my media comment. That was the first time I realized that some people were afraid of my outspokenness.
I will post Keyamo's application for the revocation of my bail soon. I would want you people to read and know the real Keyamo. Now, you can see the sort of person he is. Totally corrupt and criminal! But he goes around bullying people and pretending to be brave.
 
I will make a website and post everything - every case, every document, that I have been involved with, starting from Sahara Reporters to Premium Times, to Tell, to all the other shenanigans. You will see how these outfits were paid money to lie against me. That was how they created all those nonsensical stories you google up about me. None of those things you see in google about me is true. It is all bullshit which showed how uniquely criminal some Nigerians are. Only Nigerians would take money and go to a website and lie against a person in the manner these people did to me.
 
All these years, I kept quiet. I watched as they tried to destroy me. But they didn't know how strong I was. When it did not work as they planned, and when I continued to be more and more popular despite their attacks, they got angry and complained that I was too popular. In the story that Tell Magazine was paid to publish against me, it complained that Emeka Ugwuonye, who was supposed to be in jail had become a rock star. Can you imagine? Me, a rock star. I claimed it immediately. I claimed the status of a rock star. I realized that if I became a celebrity, it would drive these people to their graves. I then accepted that status and worked toward that. Now where is Tell Magazine? Do you still hear about them? Today, I thank God that I have greater audience than Tell Magazine, assuming it is still existing.
 
When Lauretta Onochie and her dumb gang found out that their attacks on me was not diminishing me and that the membership of our great group (DPA) was increasing rather than decreasing, they proclaimed that even international criminals are popular. I laughed. So, she did not know I was popular when she started attacking me falsely? She should have thought about that before her mindless attacks.
 
My enemies are dying because nobody is believing their lies anymore. When they call me a thief, many more people call me the advocate. That kills their spirit. I laugh all the time. Keyamo and Lauretta have entered one chance if they actually filed a lawsuit for defamation against me. One chance.
 
Emeka Ugwuonye

Buhari orders 2016 budget proposal published online



 
The Federal government under President Muhammadu Buhari will continue to welcome well-meaning criticism of its policies, its budget and expenditure.
 
Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, who stated this in a statement on Sunday said the government has taken the position because it is the only way the change promised the country will have a meaning.
 
In line with established tradition, he said that the President has directed that the draft 2016 appropriation budget, now before the National Assembly should be uploaded on the website of the budget office so that Nigerians can read it with a view to making their observations.
 
With online publication of the budget, Garba said the suggestions that the Presidency is misleading the public on any aspects of the budget can no longer stand the test of time.
 
Responding to a report that the the President is to spend more on State House Clinic than on all federal govt-owned teaching hospitals in the 2016 budget, he said that the Budget Office supplied a summary of the allocations to the various sectors under the Ministry of Health, which showed clearly that the published story was inaccurate.

He said: “The budget office has affirmed that in terms of both capital and recurrent allocations, the draft budget has put far more money in the 17 teaching hospitals than it did in the State House Clinic.
“Having said this, we are not by any stretch of imagination suggesting that the draft budget is beyond comments or reproach. Nor do we wish to dwell on this simply to make a point. To do that will drive away good citizens from pointing out needed corrections and, ultimately defeating the change mantra of the administration.
 
“The budget is a Nigerian budget and citizens reserve the right to examine its content and provide their own perspectives.
 
“As the draft goes through the approval process, this and many other aspects will continue to generate interest, criticism, commendation and sometimes condemnation in discussions in the parliament, the media and the court of public opinion.
 
“We believe that the process of “change” will be affected by, and stands to gain from these debates especially where there is good faith on all sides.
 
“Government has no reason whatsoever to mislead the citizens on the budget and on all other matters for whatever reason,” Garba stated
v



Karl Marx, He dead

 
Sam Omatseye 
 
I take the title of this essay from a passage in one of 20th century’s most controversial, if seminal, novels. Chinua Achebe called the author of Heart of Darkness “a thorough-going racist.” He might be right about Joseph Conrad. But Achebe ironically owes his inspiration from the Polish-born English novelist for his popular work, Things Fall Apart. Heart of Darkness paints Africa as the “night of first ages” famished for the civilising light of Europe. But the novel’s darkest creature is a white man, who milks and tyrannises over the Africans to enrich Europe with all its smug morality. His name is Kurtz, and he eventually dies of his own barbarous entrapment.
 
One of his African victims gloatingly announces his passing in the memorable phrase: “Mistah Kurtz: He dead.” That phrase, with its many-layered meanings, haunted the American literary imagination about a century later. Critic Richard Gilman borrowed it when he panned the decline in the prowess of the playwright Tennessee Williams who could no longer match the sublimity of his earlier plays like Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, A Streetcar Named Desire, Glass Menagerie, etc. Gilman titled his literary obituary of one of the best playwrights of the 20th century thus: “Mistuh Williams, He dead.” If Conrad’s Kurtz was real in fiction, Gilman’s Williams was unreal in non-fiction.
 
Last weekend at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, I thought I inhaled a decomposing Karl Marx. It was during a fete for Professor Biodun Jeyifo at his 70th birthday. It was a two-day affair of intellectual fare, bonhomie, introspection and trips back into the past. It was a crowd of Marx disciples, from Governor Rauf Aregbesola, to Playwright Femi Osofisan, Arigbede, Femi Falana, Edwin Madunagu, Odia Ofeimun, Dipo Fashina. Of course, Professor Jeyifo, fondly called BJ, stands out as one of the most articulate of that tribe ever born. A few attendees like yours truly and Dr. Yemi Ogunbiyi have been inoculated against Marx.
But the BJ fete only revealed the unflagging zeal of the faithful. In one of the sessions, I titled my contribution, “BJ: A Marxist in a post Marxist world.” Of course, some of the panelists, including Ofeimun, objected, arguing that Marx was alive and well. But mine was still a tribute to BJ’s staying power. As a public intellectual he has tried to pursue his creed without cant or doctrinaire obsession. His column, first in The Guardian and now in The Nation, has continued to pursue his belief.
 
But the crucial revelation of the weekend was the talk by Edwin Madunagu. He kept the audience spell-bound when he took his listeners back to the mid-1970s. It was a time when young Marxists formed a commune in a Southwest community. They made it a collective. Their goal was to ignite a revolution in Nigeria. They cast their lots together and formed common cause with the Agbekoya folks. These young men sacrificed their vital years brainstorming, plotting and living on spare resources. They had to surrender their earnings to the common pool, like the Christians in the Acts of the Apostles. Madunagu tells the story of how he was singled out as a mole, and he had to be held as prisoner to BJ as he was being investigated. He noted that so grave was the air that they had the means “in the next room” to end their lives. Madunagu, who turns 70 in May, still betrays that “babyish” innocence not only in his relationships but also in telling the tale of those boisterous years.
 
His exculpation lay with his wife of about four months who was to answer questions confidentially in a form and it had to be sealed in an envelope. The wife, who was present at the telling last weekend, viewed with awe. She was learning of the import of what she wrote for the first time, according to Madunagu. The mathematician, who became a well-known columnist in the feisty days of The Guardian, said the collective eventually freed him of all charges.
 
BJ who had been taciturn on this subject also confirmed Madunagu’s story and described himself as his warder. BJ narrated how the commune experience endangered their family lives. Tension bustled in his home with his African American wife who was puzzled at the comings and goings of BJ’s comrades. Once BJ told her that it was better she did not know much about them. One of the members, BJ noted, once asked the commune to dispose of his wife and children in order to free him for the revolutionary work. The commune cautioned him. Another member slept off in any of their brainstorming sessions unless the topic was how to overthrow the Nigerian state with arms struggle, beginning with the American ambassador.
 
I told myself that this was one other reason why we should study our history in schools. Too many puzzles and mysteries. This story bears comparison with the pre-Menshevik, pre-Bolshevik Russia. The custodians of these vital narratives are in their hoary years, and no one has put down the ins and outs of this tale to enrich our self-knowledge as a people. For the great things said about BJ, his prowess as a thinker, his ideological subtlety, his plebeian lifestyle, his passion and empathy as a teacher, the best authority on Soyinka, etc, what struck me most was his audacity as a man. Lean, tall, urbane and without airs, BJ’s revolutionary story was unknown to me other than his duels in ASUU, his leadership role in the left to enthrone an egalitarian society. But those were halcyon times in comparison with the risk they took. They might have been rounded up by the military and executed for treason.
 
BJ himself said, with irony, that they did not expect to outlive 40. We need to know what stories inspired them. Did they also take something from the fervour of the American founding fathers? When the commune life came to an end, Madunagu told the villagers who asked for his forwarding address. He gave them his full name. It was then they asked, what Ijesha name was Madunagu? He had blended so irretrievably with the community. He spoke Yoruba like locals, ate their food, dressed like them. He was a perfect example of the death of alienation. The locals shed tears as he left town.
 
As I told Kunle Ajibade, who paid a glowing tribute to BJ as a teacher, the risk of BJ and company recalled Soyinka’s third force exercise in the tempestuous hours before the civil war. I also thought their commune died just like Christian communalism in Aiyetoro, a sad narrative revisited recently by The Nation’s writer Seun Akioye. They, however, did not eat up their own flesh in the mould of William Golding’s chilling novel, The Lord of The Flies. But how did the commune end? What was their day-to-day life? Why did they have weapons with them? What pacts did they sign, if any? Etc. We need to know. Only a tome of a narrative can document this for history.
 
So, for such a revolutionary as BJ, he must have watched with denial as communism fell. The 2008 economic crash brought Marx from the dead. Some young American Marxists found solace in a novel, Indecision by Benjamin Kunkel. For BJ though, he is no more the romantic of mass movement and the cliché the dictatorship of the proletariat. He is Marx the physician but not Marx the priest; Marx becomes a good tool for diagnosis. But the solution? No. Not because he does not believe it, but it is becoming less likely with the Trojan called capital. That is what I mean by denial. Playwright Eugene Ionesco once accused Jean Paul Sartre of silence over the Gulag in Russia. Raymond Aron, Sartre’s friend, and nemesis of Marxists, also said the famous Marxist philosopher and playwright acted as though Soviet invasion of Hungary did not happen. BJ’s is not denial as self-deceit or conceit, but as a realist. If you specialise in Soyinka and Achebe, you absorb something of their nuanced essences.
 
At 70, still energetic, BJ is one of the great lights of his generation anywhere in the world. We still need him around.

Metuh’s Political Handcuffs


Kennedy Emetulu

I’m presently engaged in an exchange with one Ahmmed Wazobia on Kelechi Deca’s wall over the handcuffing of Olisa Metuh. I was actually not originally interested in the issue, because I have since come to the conclusion that Buhari is not interested in justice, but in vendetta and everything being done now under his government has that signature all over it. He actually proved that with his comments at the Media Chat. Anyone can believe whatever they want, it’s a free world.

But quite apart from the angle of the debate I’m exploring with Ahmmed Wazobia, I have since been seeing comments to the effect that Olisa Metuh was handcuffed, because he’s Igbo and not Fulani or Northerner and all that. This is quite depressing, not only because it’s not true, but also because it’s a perfect case of people falling into a trap set by those engaged in the selective prosecution of persons in the name of fighting corruption. 
 
For instance, those contrasting how Metuh was brought to court in handcuffs with the fact that Sambo Dasuki was not are inadvertently giving the prosecutorial authorities more leeway to act more unlawfully. I say this, because some, in the name of equality before the law are actually now saying others being brought before the court should now come in handcuffs!

The truth is apart from the political undertones of Dasuki’s arrest and trial, he was not brought to court in handcuffs, because that is what the law says. Section 5 of the Administration of Justice Act (2015) makes this clear:


http://www.justice.gov.ng/documents...

Section 5: A suspect or defendant may not be handcuffed, bound or be subjected to restraint except:

there is reasonable apprehension of violence or an attempt to escape;
the restraint is considered necessary for the safety of the suspect;
by order of a court


As a matter of fact, we know that there was no reasonable apprehension of violence from Metuh or an attempt to escape by him, because while he was in detention, family, friends and well-wishers were allowed to see him. In fact, it must be supposed that the same prosecutorial and law enforcement agencies quick to release statements to the press about the supposed activities and statements of suspects in custody, suspects under interrogation or investigation, must be quick to let the world know if the suspect is being violent or attempting to escape. We heard nothing of the sort. 
 
What we heard at the time of his initial arrest while he was with the EFCC was that he ate up his own statement voluntarily made. Of course, the man denied such a thing and there is no reason to disbelieve him, because it does not make sense that a suspect would eat up a statement he voluntarily made. And if indeed he did, what was the incriminating thing in this statement he made that he had to eat up? Where is the evidence of their claim? 
 
It’s obvious that this was a statement they released in the press to stigmatise and criminalise Mr Metuh as part of a broad range of underhanded tactics being employed by the prosecution and agents of the government, tactics that include putting suspects through media and mob trial. I mean, there is nowhere else in the world you will get the activities of a suspect under police or law enforcement custody being released to the press while that suspect is under interrogation or still being investigated. But this is what we are seeing daily in Nigeria now.

At any rate, if we even accept the speculation that the paper-eating episode was the reason for the handcuffing, why was he not handcuffed when they first bought him to court on Thursday, 14 January 2016, well after the incident was reported and after he’d spent more than a week in detention? What has happened between then and now to warrant them handcuffing him? Those claiming that he was handcuffed, because he was brought from prison, rather than from EFCC custody need to explain why others brought from prison over this same matter were not handcuffed. Also, there was no reason to fear for the safety of the suspect, because we are not told that Mr Metuh has a history of self-harm and at no point during his detention has he acted in a manner to make them fear for his safety. If there was any reason for this, they would not have allowed people to see him in detention. Every person who’s been to see him in detention has come back to say he’s in high spirits and looking forward to his day in court. Finally, there was no order of the court saying Metuh should be handcuffed.

So, why did they put Metuh in handcuff? They have not told us yet and in the absence of them telling us, we can only speculate. But we have to make reasonable speculations based on our reading of events. To me, this is part of the antics of those prosecuting Metuh to break him. Not only that, I view those handcuffs as political handcuffs, because they are meant by those prosecuting Metuh to prove that they’ve conquered the PDP. Or what better way to prove this than to put its national mouthpiece in handcuffs and parade him in court and before the world? Not sure if he’s been released yet after the grant of bail, but if he hasn’t, someone should tell him to quickly declare for APC. That way, he will get a contract of N1 billion, pay something to the EFCC and then go home to his wife and family. Yeye dey smell!





PDP Congress: Eluaka, Okolotu Say No To Imposition, Impunity



Okonta Emeka Okelum, Asaba, Delta State

Ahead of the forth coming politica.l party congress of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Delta State, some party elders and leaders have made their stand and positions clear.

In an exclusive media chat with our reporter, Ogbueshi Adizue Eluaka and Ogbueshi Douglas Okolotu shared some in-sight into issues around the forth coming party congress.

Both party leaders believed the exercise will be conducted in fairness and peace, in accordance to party rules on party congress.

I have only one faer in the up-coming event and that is imposition of candidates, such is bad for internal democracy, it destroys partisan politics.

I will never support such move, it is not in my nature, Ogbueshi Eluaka pointed out.

Everybody has equal rights to contest in the congress, there is complete zero room today in the party for imposition of unpopular candidates, Ogbueshi Douglas Okolotu said.

I don’t think that Gov. Okowa will be party to such nor support same.

Gov. Okowa emerged through well contested party and general elections, so he knows what healthy democracy means, especially one grounded on sound democratic process.

Oshimili South party congress will be an open contest and peaceful too.

If you have any interest, indicate same, if your people wants you, good, but it must be done in an open contest fashion, Ogbueshi Okolotu noted.

Both leaders noted that now is the time for more youths and women to be elected and take active roles in the party leadership structures, as they are the most active actors during campaigns and election periods.
I am happy over the Supreme Court verdict in favour of the governor, Ogbueshi Eluaka said.
Governor Okowa’s Supreme Court victory is a welcome development and well deserved, Ogbueshi Okolotu remarked.