Monday, August 31, 2009

52 Nigerians on Death Row in Foreign Countries

According to the Nigerian Ministry of Foreign Affairs 52 Nigerians are currently on death row in different countries around the world. 


Mr. Ayo Olukanni, spokesman for the ministry said that 3,132 were serving various terms of imprisonment, 1,640 were in detention, and 3,719 others were to be deported, and about 5,145 Nigerians abroad, mostly girls, are victims of human trafficking.


The list of offences committed by these Nigerians abroad include: drug trafficking, armed robbery, credit card scam, formation of cartels, membership of secret cults, human trafficking and prostitution.


"The overwhelming nature of the problem, in addition to other diplomatic responsibilities, has put a lot of pressure on the Nigerian missions. The activities of these Nigerians are irritating to some countries," he said.


Mr. Olukanni said the involvement of some Nigerians in such shady activities continues to have a negative impact on the country's image.


"Avoid by all means the use of fake passports, visas and other documents, shun criminal activities and respect the laws and regulations of host countries," Olukanni added.


This Day


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Sunday, August 30, 2009

Video report on growing middle class in Nigeria


Financial Times talks with some of Nigeria's elite like Nigerian rapper Naeto C on how the infrastructure in Nigeria is playing catch up with Nigeria's growing middle class.


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Video report on the EFCC crackdown on corruption in Nigeria


The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is hunting down some of Nigeria's wealthiest individuals for failing to repay billions of dollars worth of loans. EFCC agents warn they will use all their powers to arrest and seize the assets of those implicated.The deadline issued for the repayment of the loans expires on September 1st.









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Saturday, August 29, 2009

Nigeria getting social security next year


 The Federal Government of Nigeria has announced it would begin the implementation of national social security policy next year. Nigeria has never had a social security system since its independence 49 years ago.


The draft policy for social security was submitted to the government by General Yakubu Gowon (rtd), a former Head of State, who is also the Chairman of the National Working Committee on Social Security Policy for Nigeria.


The minister of Labour, Price Adetokunbo Kayode, received the document on behalf of the President Yar'Adua in Abuja. He said the implementation would begin in the next four months because the present administration is eager to provide social security for the people. He added that the essence of government itself was to provide security and welfare for its citizens:


"Though it took us 49 years as a nation to do this, the most important thing is that we have done it. The purpose of the government, according to the laws and the constitution, is the security and welfare of the people and this (the document) represents the social security and welfare of our people."


"I want to assure you, even though it took us 49 years to do it and it took the committee four months to put this together, the government will implement it and it will not take four months for the Federal Government to implement it.



"Government must provide social security for our people. It is the duty of government to do so, and this is my belief and I will drive this belief as long as I remain in office. The seven-point agenda of President Yar'Adua is all about security and welfare of our people.


"With social security, we will handle poverty, crimes and other social vices. We will implement this policy. We will drive it."


The former head of state also expressed serious concern about the current state of Nigeria, adding that collapse and non-existence of basic infrastructure had created a disincentive for millions of Nigerians who live in the cities, constituting serious danger to the public:


"The steady decline in the standard of living and ethical values of our countrymen and women over the years are attributable to ever widening income inequality, mass unemployment, mass poverty and social exclusion. These socio-economic maladies are due to external macro-economic dislocations and largely to internal mis-governance and malfeasance across the board" he said.


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Friday, August 28, 2009

11-Year old girl sentenced to seven years in prison finally set free

An 11-year old girl imprisoned for allegedly stealing 10,000 naira ($64.91) from her foster mother has finally been set free after someone noticed that it probably wasn't legal to put her in prison in the first place. Here's the full article from Daily Independent:


Freedom came the way of 11-year-old Rose Otuba in Ebonyi State a couple of weeks back when the wife of the State Governor, Mrs. Josephine Orji, visited the prison. She suspected that Miss Otuba's incarceration was unlawful and contacted the State Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development, and the International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA), who investigated the matter.


It emerged that sometime in 2007, one Paul Nwochi who claimed to be Rose Otuba's father handed her over to his purported distant cousin, Nicholas Otuba, on the grounds that Rose was stubborn. Shortly after, she was accused of stealing ten thousand naira from her foster mother and was charged before an Effium magistrate's court in Ohuakwu Local Government Area of Ebonyi State. The court found Rose guilty and sentenced her to a seven-year imprisonment, which she began to serve. Her case is a nauseating travesty.


Nigeria's oldest legislation regulating the welfare of children and young persons, and the treatment of young offenders, is the Children and Young Persons Law (CYPL), a version of which is contained in Chapter 25 of the Laws of Lagos State, enacted on July 1, 1946. Under the this law, a "child" means "a person under the age of fourteen years", and a "young person" is "a person who has attained the age of fourteen and is under the age of eighteen years." This law, or some version of it, applies to all the Southern states of Nigeria.


It is evident that, as at the time Rose was 'sentenced' and up to her recent release, she was and is still a child. She has not even attained the age of 14 that would qualify her to be seen before the law as a 'young person'. Even if she had attained the age of 14, the provisions of the CYPL would have made her appearance before a juvenile court unlawful. Section 3 of the law authorises arraignment before the juvenile court only in matters relating to a person of the "age of seventeen years or upwards".


Further, in Section 6(5)(6), the CYPL prohibits the publication of the name, address, school, photograph or any identification of the child or young offender except with the permission of the court; while the words "conviction" and "sentence" are prohibited from being "used in relation to children and young persons dealt with in a juvenile court".


It can hardly be gainsaid that the legal rights of little Rose have been grossly violated by her country. While Mrs. Orji's intervention leading to her release is commendable, it does not serve the cause of justice sufficiently that no subsequent investigation of the circumstances that led to this miscarriage of justice took place, to the knowledge of the public, in order to prevent an odious precedent from being set in our legal system.


What is the explanation for the magistrate's court's provocative conduct? Was Rose, for example, unusually mature in appearance as to mistake her for a young person? What efforts were made by the court to ascertain her true age? Was it a behind-the-scenes trial? Who, really, is to blame, for the conduct of a delinquent child if not the parents and the society itself? Is it justified to lock up a child in prison for seven years on allegation of stealing? And in a society where the elite are reported daily to be engaged in treasury looting and fraud?


Section 15(a-m) of the CYPL says "Where a child or young person charged with any offence is tried by a court, and the court is satisfied of his guilt, the court shall take into consideration the manner in which, under the provisions of this or any other law, the case should be dealt with, namely, whether (a) by dismissing the charge; or (b) by discharging the offender on his entering into a recognizance; or (c) by discharging the offender, by means of a corrective order, to the care of a relative or other fit person; or (e) by sending the offender by means of a corrective order to an approved institution; or (f) by offering the offender to be caned; or (g) by ordering the offender to pay a fine, damages, or costs; or (h) by ordering the parent or guardian of the offender to pay a fine, damages, or costs; or (i) by ordering the parent or guardian of the offender to give security to his good behavior; or (j) by committing the offender to custody in a place of detention provided under this Law; or (k) where the offender is a young person, by ordering him to be imprisoned..." At 11-year-old, when Rose was allegedly sentenced to prison, Section 15(k), which permits imprisonment of a young person as the last option of punishment, certainly did not apply to her.


It is disgraceful that a colonial law enacted 63 years ago is more humane in its recommended treatment of children and young persons than the 21st century Nigerian judicial system, under a sovereign State, is capable of delivering to its own children. What a tragedy!