Wednesday, 2 July 2014

Late Arisekola's eldest wife dies in auto accident!


Two weeks after the death of the Aare Musulumi of Yorubaland, Alhaji Abdul-Azeez Arisekola Alao, report filtering in says his eldest wife Alhaja Jelila died Tuesday in a ghastly auto accident along the Ibandan- Ilorin road. She was rushed to the hospital but died later as a result of shock suffered from the accident.


It was gathered that the deceased has been buried according to Islamic rite at her Apata residence.


R.I.P



Dino at it again!


Seems like Dino Melaye has done what he is becoming best known for again, your guess is as good as mine.



Story making the rounds revealed that oga has sent his new wifey Alero parking with his fist....same way he sent his first wife  and mother of his kids Tokundo away.



Twits of his ex- inlaw below:





Bros Dino, no man earns the title "macho" by turning his wives into punching bags, our people say "first time fit be happenstance, but second time ..mmmmm" ...bearing in mind the rather messy saga you cause with your relationship with Aunty Bisi.
E' no go bad if only you one waka go find solutionooooo.



Behold the female Boko Haram member arrested!


boko female


The National orientation agency have revealed on their facebook page the face of a female informant and accomplice of the terrorist sect, Boko Haram who was recently arrested.


The suspect was simply identified identified as Hafsat Bako , not much has been said about her or the circumstances of her arrest.
The facebook post below:

Did facebook manipulate users emotions?



Reports revealed that Facebook admitted to have “communicated really badly” after a controversial study says it secretly manipulated users’ feelings.

According to reports, the social network’s chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg on Wednesday admitted that the company secretly altered the emotional content of feeds of nearly 700,000 users for a week in 2012, giving some sadder news and others happier news in a study aimed at better understanding “emotional contagion”.
News has it that the research, published recently, has prompted online anger and questions about the ethics of the research and forced Facebook on the defensive.
Sandberg told a women’s business seminar in New Delhi when asked whether the study was ethical, that it was an experiment as part of product testing. 
“We communicated really badly on this subject,” she said, before adding: “We take privacy at Facebook really seriously.”
Sandberg, who was in India to promote her gender-equality book “Lean In” and meet leaders of Indian companies and senior politicians, declined to speak to reporters asking further questions.
The comments, it was learnt came as several European data protection regulators began looking into whether Facebook broke privacy laws when it carried out the study.

Police arrests suspects of Apapa tank explosion!


News made available to our desk revealed that no fewer than 50 suspects have been arrested in connection to the blasts in front of a tank farm and at the Alex Junction both on Creek Road Apapa- Lagos.




Following the incident, the Lagos state Police command conducting preliminary investigations leading to the arrestbetween Monday and Tuesday this week

It was gathered that some of these suspects are Nigerians while the rest are foreigners who according to report, smuggled themselves into the country without the appropriate pass.  

Furthermore, information has it that some of these suspects already wriggled into the country and currently setting up terror sects.  Some of them were picked up from Apapa, Ijora, Berger, Isolo, Mushin, Idi-Araba, and some other places in the state based on a tip-off. 






explosions rocks three Nigerian town!


Three Nigerian town has was recently attacked by explosions suspected to be carried out by members of the terrorist sect, Boko Haram, early Tuesday.


According to information received, a suspected suicide bomber detonated an Impoverished Explosive Device at the popular Maiduguri Market in north-eastern Nigeria, at about 8:30am Monday, killing about 17 persons. while about sixty-nine persons were reportedly injured in the blast which affected mostly petty traders and members of the youth vigilante group, popularly called Civilian JTF, in the area.

In the central northern town of Nigeria,  Kaduna, it was gathered that an explosion occurred around the Asikolaye/Bakin Ruwa area, along the Kaduna western bypass,  in the late hours of Tuesday at about 9:45pm. Casualty figure was not available as of the time of this report, witnesses however said many were killed and several injured. The explosion shattered the glass windows of some of the surrounding buildings.

Kano Explosion new

However, it was reported that the Commissioner of Police in Kaduna State, Umar Shehu, confirmed the incident but said that the blast caused no death. He said only two people were injured.

Likewise in Ile-Ife, Osun State, south-western Nigeria, a low-calibre bomb reportedly went off in the Onipetu area of the town around 4.00am, but nobody was killed. The Osun State Police said they deactivated another bomb before it detonated.


They were grenades of low calibre. The first one exploded and the other was defused. It happened in an isolated place, so it did not kill nor injure anybody. We have visited the scene and we are investigating the matter,” Commissioner of Police in Osun State, Mr. Ibrahim Maishanu said. 

The bomb was reportedly planted near a makeshift shop where provisions were sold but that it was unlikely that the casualty figure would be high since many people had gone for prayers at a nearby mosque.


Niger Delta: Of durable peace and political settlement (2)!



As I sat to write the concluding part of this essay, I couldn’t help but think about events in the Middle East. For instance, the Palestinians are no closer to independence today than they were a decade-and-half ago. With the passing of every month – and with Benjamin Netanyahu as the Prime Minister of Israel, the chances of a free and independent Palestine get grimmer and grimmer. I doubt if statehood can be achieved this decade. And I wonder what’s going through the mind of the President of the State of Palestine, Mahmoud Abbas.

And I wonder if anyone anticipated the quick rise and supremacy of the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS). The group is shaping out to be more vicious and violent than al-Qaeda. What’s going on in the Middle East; and what’s going to happen to Syria, Iraq and a few other countries as we know them today? For several decades, the expectation was that the world would be a peaceful place once the Cold War ended. Sadly, two-plus decades later, the world seems to be more dangerous and unstable.

One more thing: We mourn the passing of one of the truly great minds and scholars of this or any other generation, Prof. Fouad Ajami. According to the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa, Ajami was “born in southern Lebanon and raised in Beirut. He authored several books including Beirut: City of Regrets; The Vanished Imam; The Arab Predicament; The Dream Palace of the Arabs; and The Foreigner’s Gift: The Americans, the Arabs, and the Iraqis in Iraq.” As with Edward Wadie Said before him, the world will miss his beautiful prose and verbal eloquence. He was truly a brilliant man.

Now, back to where I stopped last week: Immediately after the guns and ammunition were surrendered, and the dotted lines of the Presidential amnesty documents were signed and or thumb-printed, the Presidency, along with the multinational oil corporations began to pop Champagne and feast on caviar. The low intensity conflict was over. Promises were made. Inducements were given. And many of the major actors packed their bags and, figuratively, left the creeks.

Today, many of the major players swim in money; and a good number have unrestricted access to the Presidency and the various governors of the Niger Delta. For such militants and insurgents, the Niger Delta crisis is history. They speak about it only if there is profit to be made, otherwise, they boast about it in drunken moments. The sad part is that many of these moneyed militants cannot tell you, in logical or coherent language, why they fought the government and the oil companies.

And frankly, I doubt if the government remembers. Sadder is the fact that a majority of Nigerians have moved on. Our very short collective memory enables us to move from one crisis to another without ever taking the time to find durable solutions to our challenges. Everyone is today focused on the audacity and cruelty of Boko Haram and on President Goodluck Jonathan’s political ambition. You need not be an accurate reader of tea leaves to know that (a) barring extra-legalities, Jonathan will contest and win the 2015 presidential election; and (b) that Boko Haram is just warming up (unless its backers have a change of mind).

In spite of the much heralded amnesty programme by the Yar’Adua administration – which emphasised ceasefire, surrendering of arms and ammunition, and overseas training – there really was nothing concrete in terms of addressing the factors that gave rise to the conflict; and indeed, there was nothing in terms of peacemaking and peacekeeping. Those who genuinely confronted the government and pointed out its duplicity are either dead, politically and economically incapacitated or locked up.

Dead, incapacitated or locked up, one can still hear the occasional sound of artilleries, the occasional destruction of oil-related infrastructure; and the occasional skirmishes between the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta and the Nigerian Armed Forces. But, as I told you last week, MEND has decided on an armistice. And I say this authoritatively: the leadership of MEND has agreed to the President’s call for a dialogue. This is a good and commendable move on the part of Jonathan and MEND.

When the President said, “Our doors remain open to them, (aggrieved armed groups) for dialogue and reconciliation if they renounce terrorism (armed struggle) and embrace peace,” he certainly wasn’t extending the olive branch to Boko Haram alone. And when the National Chairman, Peoples Democratic Party, Adamu Mu’azu, encouraged members of Boko Haram to accept amnesty, he surely wasn’t limiting it to Boko Haram alone. But if he was, I would suggest that he also look favourably to MEND and its affiliates.

Other than Mu’azu, John Cardinal Onaiyekan also supports granting amnesty to all such non-state actors. Indeed, many traditional and religious leaders from the northern and southern parts of the country all supported the idea of amnesty for the leaders of Boko Haram and other such groups – MEND inclusive! The group looks forward to a continued and meaningful contact with the Jonathan administration through its trusted and well-respected representative, Kingsley Kuku.

To this end, therefore, we call for and encourage Jonathan to promptly release Charles Okah, Edmund Ebiware, and Henry Okah. They have suffered enough and suffered needlessly and for a crime they swore not to have committed. No irrefutable evidence points to the contrary. And even if the government is arguing that they committed the said offences, the time for political settlement is now. Every single life that is lost is far too many as every human life is precious. No one should ever condone the loss of innocent lives. Never! But, how many lives were lost as a result of MEND’s activities – compared to that of Boko Haram?

The supplication to Jonathan is simple: Since MEND has signalled its willingness to engage in constructive dialogue, the President should so engage them. But before or during the talks, he should grant Charles, Ebiware, and Henry a full presidential pardon. The case of Henry is a bit complicated simply because he is in a South African jail. His release can and should be effected through political settlement with the South African government. This can be done.
Written by SABELLA ABIDDE
Copyright PUNCH.