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Wednesday 31 October 2012

Freedom Of Information Act 2011


SENSITIZATION WORKSHOP FOR REPRESENTATIVES OF CIVIL SOCIETY & GRASSROOTS ORGANISATIONS ON THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT. daniel@aneej.org


Acronyms and Abbreviations
FOIA – Freedom of Information Act
MRA- Media Rights Agenda
CSO – Civil Society Organisation
FBO – Faith Based Organisation
CBO – Community Based Organisation
AGF – Attorney General of the Federation
ICPC – Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission

Introduction
The sensitization workshop was organised by MRA on the need for civil society organisations to use the FOIA in holding public institutions accountable and also enshrining the need for transparency. The meeting held at Prestige Hotel and Suites, Benin City on Tuesday October 30, 2012.

The target audience were representatives of various CSOs. CBOS,  FBOs, and grass roots organisations in Edo State.


Objectives of the Sensitization Workshop
1.      To Build the Capacity of CSOs, including CBOs, FBOs & other grassroots organisations, to effectively utilize the FOI Act.
2.      To encourage & motivate CSOs, including CBOs, FBOs, & other grassroots organisations, to make request for information under the FOI Act in areas which will lead to a more enhanced quality of life in society.
3.      To encourage the workshop participants to mainstream FOI in their organisations, regardless of the sectors in which they work.
4.      To train participants to formulate actual request for information relevant to their sectors and thereby increase their chances of obtaining information from public institutions & private entities that are relevant to the sectors in which they work
5.      To encourage participants to submit request to any public institution with information of interest to them after the workshop & to provide MRA with feedback on the outcome of such effort
6.      To encourage participants & equip them with the knowledge, skills & practical tools to sensitize & train others in their immediate communities to use the FOI Act.

Further Details
The meeting brings out the importance & underlying philosophy of FOIA aptly captured by Article IV (i) of the declaration of Principles on Freedom of Expression in Africa which states that: “Public bodies hold information not for themselves but as custodians of the public good and everyone has a right to access this information…”
In effect, therefore, every person has a legally enforceable right of access to records, documents and information held by public institutions, subject to certain exemptions stated in the Act. This right applies to both legal (Registered companies/organisations) and natural persons (you & I). The law stretches further to state that rights to information is not subject to citizenship making it possible for non- citizens living in Nigeria to be able to access information.

Participants were taken through the various importance of the FOIA which serves as a tool in fighting corruption and establishing democratic accountability and good governance. In the area of promoting the respect of human rights, the FOI law can facilitate access to reports of investigations into allegations of human rights violations, making it easier to get speedy judgement in human rights cases. 

Participants also looked at the timeframe for responses on information been sought, exempted information, judicial review, the role of the AGF and various offences and punishment under the FOIA. The Act supersedes the provisions of all other Acts, Laws or Regulations(the official secret Act, the Evidence Act, the Criminal Code, the Penal Code, the Federal Public Service Rules. etc.), except the Constitution & those Laws entrenched in the Constitution like the ICPC Law.   

There was a video documentary on how freedom of information law was used by disempowered communities in India to fight corruption and enforce their right of information.

Monday 22 October 2012

Goodwill To Flood Victims In Delta State


On October 15th and 16th 2012,  Nollywood actress Genevieve Nnaji, and the MAVIN family comprising, Don Jazzy, Dr. Sid, and Tiwa Savage provided succour to victims of the recent  disaster in Delta state as they paid a visit to the displaced persons’ camp at Asaba where relief supplies and other essentials were presented.
 The , which has rendered hundreds of thousands of Nigerians homeless and without access to basic necessities of life where available, is the worst in recent history. The Federal Government announced measures to ameliorate the financial burden on states devastated by the  even as concerned citizens and corporate organizations have made donations in cash and kind.
Joining the fray and pulling the weight of their popularity to bring awareness to the plight of these Nigerians in dire conditions, Tiwa, Don Jazzy, Dr Sid and Genevieve have shown that they feel the sufferings of Nigerians as they pass through this trying phase as government alone cannot bear the burden.
The Reach Out Initiative, a program kick-started by the stars themselves will be utilized to get a lot more people involved, both within and outside the country in donating help, either through relief supplies or financial donations.
Genevieve: “This is just the beginning, as our country has never experienced anything like this. The government is doing the best they can, but we as citizens, can also partake in helping the situation in the best way we can. The plan is to get more people involved, and visit more relief camps in the affected states.”
The Stars With Delta State Governor, Emmanuel Uduaghan
Relief Materials Donated

Thursday 18 October 2012

Swap Of Prison Inmates


United Kingdom, Nigeria To Swap Prison Inmates

9 October, 2012
Foreign
photo
The United Kingdom and Nigeria have reached an understanding to swap prison inmates the moment Nigeria signs its Prison Act into law.
The chairman of senate committee on human rights and judiciary, Senator Dahiru Tambuwal disclosed this yesterday at the national human rights commission (NHRC) flag off of the 2012 prison audit at Kuje prison.
Senator Tambuwal said that the Bill seeking the amendment of the Prison Act has gone through the second reading and would be finally passed by the senate next week.
United Kingdom, he added, has promised to provide money to fund the process of prison inmates’ exchange, as well as rehabilitate the prisons where such prisoners from United Kingdom would be kept at least to meet minimum world standard.
This is coming against a disclosure by the chairman of House of Representatives committee on human rights , Hon Beni Lar that the amount budgeted to feed prison inmate per day is two hundred naira (N200).
Hon Lar who was also at the Kuje Prison for the NHRC flag off of 2012 prison audit said all hands were on deck by her committee to increase the N200 per day feeding allowance for prisoners in Nigeria in view of the current reality.
Meanwhile, the deputy comptroller of Nigeria Prisons, Mr Kasali Yusuf stated that as at yesterday, the total prison inmates in Kuje was 500, and out of this number, 401 were on awaiting trial list, 99 were those that have been convicted.
He said that the challenge of the prison condition in Nigeria was becoming everybody’s challenge on the grounds that it was irreconcilable that more than three-quarters of the entire prisoners in Nigeria fall on the category of those awaiting trial.
"There are those held for capital offences that can not easily be disposed off. Before this can be done easily, the criminal justice system which is made up of the police, the courts, attorney general of the federation and Nigerian prisons must chart a course to make the system workable.
"Our justice system, especially, our criminal laws and criminal trial process requires overhauling. Justice can be on one side, both the complainant and the person being complained about must be heard equally’’.
The NHRC boss, Professor Bem Angwe, said that with the renewed effort, coupled with the NHRC Act 2010 in place, the Nigerian prisons would sooner or later no longer be the same

Anti Terrorism Bill in Nigeria


Senate Passes Anti-Terrorism Bill

17 October, 2012news.naij.com
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The Senate, Wednesday, passed the Bill for Terrorism Act, 2011 and other related Matters as amended as part of moves to nip in the bud the present security challenge in the country where persons are killed almost everyday.
This followed the report presented by the Senator Mohammed Magoro led Senate Joint Committee on National Security and Intelligence; Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters and Drugs, Narcotics, Financial Crimes and Anti-Corruption.
With the passage by the Senate, it is expected that President Goodluck Jonathan will sign it into law to then become an Act of the parliament against the backdrop that the House of Representatives had earlier passed the Bill.
According to the Committee, the absence of a National Coordinator to tackle the problem of terrorism in the country has affected collaboration among the Security Agencies in fighting and combating terrorism, adding that there was no acceptable standard definition of terrorism and as such each country tries to adopt definitions to suit its peculiar situation.
According to Senator Magoro, PDP, Kebbi South, the Committee in its findings discovered the absence of specialized designated prosecutors and judges to try terrorism related cases as well as the absence of Specialized Prisons, detention facilities for keeping terrorist suspects.
Against this backdrop, the Committee said, ‘’the Joint Committee on National Security and Intelligence; Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters; and Drugs, Narcotics and Financial Crimes was referred and having favourably considered same, recommends ‘’that the Senate do consider and pass the Bill for Terrorism(Prevention) Act, 2011 and for other Related Matters as amended.’’
Also same Wednesday, the Senate read for the third time, a bill to amend the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2011, providing for the forfeiture of all undeclared funds in breach of Section 12 of the Foreign Exchange(Monitoring and Miscellaneous Provisions)Act.
The Senate yesterday rejected the amendments of a bill that sought to remove the consent of a prisoner serving his term in a foreign prison, to be repatriated to complete his jail sentence in Nigeria.
Presenting the report on the money laundering bill, Chairman, Senate Committee on Drugs, Narcotics, Financial Crimes and Anti Corruption, Senator Victor Lar, Plateau South  who explained that the bill sought to increase the punishment for false declaration of funds to the Nigerian Customs Service, said,  “The 2012 amendment has removed the limit of ‘not less that 25 per cent’ of undeclared funds to be forfeited in the event of default to include the whole undeclared funds.”
Senator Lar explained further that  the amendment to be carried out the Central Bank of Nigeria(CBN) and the Securities and Exchange Commission(SEC) as regulatory agencies in addition to the Financial Intelligence Unit(FIU) contained in the Principal Act, adding that  as provided for in section 12 of the Principal Act, only directors of financial institutions were liable.
According to him, with the amendment the bill seeks to achieve,  both the corporate institution, the director and employees will now be liable, adding that the amendment made it mandatory for financial institutions to put in place, internal procedures, policies and controls with adequate resources units and regulatory agencies that will be empowered to impose penalties and sanctions.
Senator Lar said, “Under definition of terms, P.E.P(Politically Exposed Persons) is introduced to replace ‘Public Officers) used in the Principal Act. By adopting this definition, children and associates of politically exposed persons, even civil servants who preside over public funds or take decisions that lead to expenditure on the public purse are encapsulated friends, cronies of political office holders are also included.
At yesterday’s plenary, the Senate did not to pass the amendments to a bill on the transfer of Nigerians serving jail terms in foreign prisons, just as Senators rejected the provisions seeking to delete the sections which provides for the consent of the prisoners, through voice votes.
In his remarks, Senate President David Mark who noted that the bill had been passed by the House of Representatives, suggested that a harmonization would be required as that would handle the variations.

Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, at the Hay Festival in Mexico


‘If religion was taken away, I’d be happy’

Professor Wole Soyinka
The Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, spoke this week at the Hay Festival in Mexico. In an extract from his talk, he tells Peter Godwin that now is the time to tackle militants in Nigeria
Professor Soyinka, you’re not an ivory-tower kind of writer. You are not a stranger to danger, and in fact you’ve been imprisoned on at least two occasions, once in solitary confinement. Can you tell me what that was like?
Writing in certain environments carries with it an occupational risk. When I was imprisoned, without trial, it was as a result of a position I took as a citizen. Of course I used my weapon, which was writing, to express my disapproval of the [Biafran] civil war into which we were about to enter. These were people who’d been abused, who’d undergone genocide, and who felt completely rejected by the rest of the community, and therefore decided to break away and form a nation of its own. Unfortunately, the nature of my imprisonment meant that I couldn’t practise my trade because I was in solitary confinement for 22 months out of the 27, and I was deprived of writing material. So I had to somehow break through the barriers, smuggle in toilet paper, cigarette paper, scribble a few poems, pass messages outside. I was able to undertake exercises to make sure that I emerged from prison intact mentally.
There have been high hopes for some African leaders after they were elected – Meles in Ethiopia, or Museveni in Uganda, or Kagame in Rwanda – but who then went to  show a more authoritarian bent. Are you an Afro-optimist or an Afro-pessimist?
I’m an Afro-realist. I take what comes, and I do my best to affect what is unacceptable in society. I’ve remarked how similar in many ways Mexico is to Nigeria, and to a number of places: we have the same condition of unstructured, unpredictable violence, both from the state and from what I call the quasi-state. Whether the quasi-state is formed, as its basis, of theocratic tendencies, or secular ideological rigidity, you always have forces, even outside the state, competing for the domination of people. That’s what’s happening on the African continent today. That’s what’s been happening in the Arab states and what led eventually to the Arab Spring. Gradually people come to the recognition after decades of supine submission that they are not whole as human beings.
Your parents were Christians, Anglicans, I understand. How has your own religious belief evolved?
I consider myself very fortunate. I was raised in a Christian environment in Abeokuta, but another side of me was very much enmeshed in African values. I gravitated towards what I saw was a cohesive system of a certain relationship of human beings to environment, a respect for humanity in general. I came through a traditional system, where children not only had rights, but had responsibility. In the Western world today, especially in America, it seems to be forbidden for children to have responsibilities…
I gravitated towards a deeper knowledge of the orisha, which represents the Yoruba pantheon, very similar in many ways to the Greek pantheon. You have reprobate deities, beneficent deities. I found that more honest than a kind of unicellular deity of either Christianity or Islam.
I don’t know if you’ve been following the news, but just a few days ago some of these Islamic fundamentalists butchered close to 50 students of a technical college. I cannot imagine the religion I was brought up in having such complete contempt for human lives. And yet these are supposed to be the world religions. So that’s why I consider myself rather fortunate that I’ve been able to see what other religions had to offer.
How should Nigeria deal with the Boko Haram, the Islamic militants in the north of the country?
All religions accept that there is something called criminality. And criminality cannot be excused by religious fervour. Let me repeat something I first said at the meeting organised by UNESCO a few weeks ago, which was prompted by the recent film insulting the religion of Islam and depicting the Prophet Mohammed in a very crass way.
The first thing to say is that we do not welcome any attempt to ravage religious sensibilities. That can be taken for granted. But you cannot hold the world to ransom simply because some idiot chose to insult a religion in some far-off place which most of the world has never even heard of. This for me is a kind of fundamentalist tyranny that should be totally unacceptable. So a group calls itself the Boko Haram, literally: “Book is taboo”, the book is anathema, the book is a product of Western civilisation, therefore it must be rejected.
You go from the rejection of books to the rejection of institutions which utilise the book, and that means virtually all institutions. You attack universities, you kill professors, then you butcher students, you close down primary schools, you try and create a religious Maginot Line through which nothing should penetrate.
That’s not religion; that’s lunacy. My Christian family lived just next door to Muslims. We celebrated Ramadan with Muslims; they celebrated Christmas with Christians. This is how I grew up. And now this virus is spreading all around the world, leading to the massacre of 50 students. This is not taking arms against the state, this is taking up arms against humanity.
PG: Is freedom of expression something you see as a universal right rather than as some Western construct?
WS There are many cultures on the African continent where days are set aside, days of irreverence where you can say anything you want about an all-powerful monarch or chief. It’s a safety valve. It’s a recognition of freedom of expression, which perhaps has not been exercised, and bottled up grievances; this is the day when you express your grievances in society. So there is no society, really, which does not boast some form or measure of freedom of expression. Now, it’s true that freedom of expression carries with it an immense responsibility. Well that is why laws of libel exist – that when you carry things too far, you can be hauled up before the community, and judged to see whether you are right to call somebody a thief, or a hypocrite, and damage his reputation. But unless you establish that principle of freedom of expression, we might all just go around with a padlock on our lips.
Audience member: I read somewhere my freedom ends where your freedom begins. In Europe there have been cartoonists who have mocked the Prophet. Should they limit their freedom of speech?
Religion is also freedom of expression. People want to express themselves spiritually. And they also exercise the right to try and persuade others into their own system of belief. Those nations that say it’s a crime to preach your religion are making a terrible mistake. All they’re doing is driving underground other forms of spiritual intuitions and practices.
If religion was to be taken away from the world completely, including the one I grew up with, I’d be one of the happiest people in the world. My only fear is that maybe something more terrible would be invented to replace it, so we’d better just get along with what there is right now and keep it under control.
The unrest which is taking place as a result of Boko Haram, in my view, has attained critical mass. When a movement reaches that state of total contempt even for universal norms, it is sending a message to the rest of the world, and to the rest of that nation, that this is a war to the end. The president of Nigeria is making a mistake in not telling the nation that it should place itself on a war footing.
There’s too much pussyfooting, there’s too much false intellectualisation of what is going on, such as this is the result of corruption, this is the result of poverty, this is the result of marginalisation. Yes, of course, all these negativities have to do with what is happening right now. But when the people themselves come out and say we will not even talk to the president unless he converts to Islam, they are already stating their terms of conflict.
Culled from Telegraph of London

Tuesday 9 October 2012

Tee Mac Apologies To Bishop Oyedepo


Ex-PMAN President Tee Mac Apologises To Bishop Oyedepo

Ex-PMAN President Tee Mac Apologises To Bishop Oyedepo via his facebook page, (Remember he called Oyedepo a typical money “tax free” Fraud) he wrote
Why You may have read on many blogs a statement I made about Bishop Oyedepo (the bloggers love to pick up any statement by a celebrity because they have nothing else to write)
I was angry when I saw on a FB site bya CKN the Challenger Bombardier plane (Mike Adenuga has one too, sold by my partner to him) owned by Bishop Oyedepo. In Nigeria at the moment millions do not know where to take the money from to buy their next meal; millions go to bed hungry and then this opulence by a “Man of God”! I may have been a bit harsh and somehow regret that I even responded to that FB message, but I am a bit out spoken and don’t mean bad. I have seen Pastors and Men of God in Nigeria who carry bags of rice on their shoulder to help the Hungry, who drive cheap second hand cars and their office is a small cubicle, because they believe the money given to them by their congregation is given to them to distribute to the poor.
I know a man of God who heals hundreds and doesn’t ask for one Naira, no he will even give the poor and sick transport money to go home. My partner and myself tried to sell him a second hand cargo plane so he can fly food and blankets to disaster areas, but that man of God stated: “I can not own a plane, even if you prepare a good lease/ repayment schedule, what will my congregation think? The money they put into the envelops on Sunday must be used to the last Naira for charity only”. If my statement about Bishop was offensive to him and his followers, I render herewith a sincere apology.

Relief To Victims Of Flood Disaster in Nigeria


FG doles out N17.6bn to flooded states, government agencies…sets up fund-raising committee

The Federal Government has approved N17.6bn as direct financial intervention in the cases of flooding currently ravaging many parts of the country.
While affected states would share N13.3bn according to the level of the flood’s impact on them, Federal Government agencies saddled with the responsibility of providing relief would share N4.3bn.
President Goodluck Jonathan disclosed this in a nationwide broadcast on Tuesday morning.
While commiserating with the victims of the floods, Jonathan said his administration was prepared to do everything possible to mitigate the impact of the natural disaster on the people.
For the purpose of sharing the N13.3bn government intervention, Jonathan said affected states had been categorised into four groups with the states in the first, second, third and fourth groups getting N500m, N400m, N300m and N250m each respectively.
According to the President, the states that will get N500m each include Oyo, Kogi, Benue, Plateau, Adamawa, Delta, Bayelsa and Anambra.
States that will get N400m each are Jigawa, Kano, Bauchi, Kaduna, Niger, Nasarrawa, Taraba, Cross Rivers, Edo, Lagos and Imo.
Kwara, Katsina, Gombe, Ogun, Ondo, Eboyin, Abia and Rivers States will get N300m each while Sokoto, Kebbi, Zamfara, Yobe, Enugu, Ekiti, Osun, Akwa Ibom, Borno and the Federal Capital Territory will get N250m each.
Jonathan said as part of the financial intervention, Ministry of Works will get N2.6bn; the National Emergency Management Agency will get N1.16bn while the Ministry of Environment will get N350m.
He added that the National Commission on Refugees will get N150m while the presidential committee he set up on the disaster will get N100m.
Since the disaster broke out, the President said NEMA had so far spent N1.314bn to provide relief materials for the victims.
He added that the Ministry of Works on its part had spent N568m on the repair of collapsed bridges and construction of bye-passes while the Ministry of Environment also spent N95m on sundry relief efforts.
He said, “Over the past few weeks, unprecedented flood has ravaged many parts of our country rendering tens of thousands of fellow Nigerians homeless and causing massive destruction of properties, farmlands and infrastructure across the country.
“I wish to express our deep commiseration with all those who have lost loved ones, those who have lost their property as well all the affected communities and institutions.
“It is sad that this global phenomenon of devastating flood has come to Nigeria at this time.
“I want to reassure all Nigerians that the Federal Government is prepared to do everything possible to mitigate the impact of this natural disaster.”
He recalled that he had earlier set up a presidential technical committee to visit all affected areas with a view to properly assessing the impact of the floods.
He said copies of the interim report submitted by the committee had been made available to critical stakeholders including the leadership of the National Assembly as well as governors of the affected states.
He said the committee would continue to go round the country while himself and Vice President would also visit some parts of the affected communities.
Jonathan promised that whenever he receives the committee’s final report, the Federal Government would further initiate medium and long term measures to check future flood disaster.

Campaign to Identify Uniport Students' Killers


Outraged Nigerians launch campaign to identify students’ killers

Uniport lynching: faces of killers?
Nigerians outraged by the lynching of four University of Port Harcourt undergraduates in Aluu, Rivers State, have launched an online campaign to have the killers identified and punished.
Although it was learnt that the community has been deserted following the arrest of the village head, Alhaji Hassan Walewa, and 13 others by the police, users of social media argued that some of the killers could still be traced.
Already, photographs of some of the suspected killers, have surfaced on the Internet.
The photographs were frozen from the video tape of the killings.
One of the suspects was believed to have poured petrol on the students and lit the fire. For instance, a blog, AmeborTalk.com, has the photographs of two of the suspected killers and a crowd at the scene on its page.
A contributor on Nigeria Online Community wrote. “The guy holding the plank was an especially enthusiastic BEAST and deserves capital punishment.
“The video appeared to have been shot by the woman in purple/jeans. If you know anyone of them on this picture, have them reported to the police.”
Popular blogger, Linda Ikeji, wrote, “If the Rivers State government thinks this is an incident that will eventually die off, then they have another thing coming! They must prosecute and jail the people who committed this dastardly act before we let it rest!
“We the youths of this country demand that the River State Government look into this matter and arrest everyone in that video. Except the government want to tell us that they have given the youths of Aluu power to arrest and kill indiscriminately.
“The Rivers government MUST make a scapegoat of the people who did this so it doesn’t repeat itself. Next time, it could be my brother or your brother, my child or your child! We can’t let this happen again.”
A blogger, identified simply as Kel, warned that the United Nations would be alerted if any attempt was made to sweep the matter under the carpet, adding that “if our government can’t help us then I guess we’ll get help elsewhere.”
It was also being claimed on some blogs that some policemen were allegedly at the scene of the incident and when the mob told them the young men were killers, they gave their ‘go ahead.’
Some bloggers were enraged that contrary to claims in some quarters, neither arms nor “stolen items”were found on the four young men as confirmed by the JTF who brought their bodies to the mortuary.