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Thursday, 16 April 2015

A MAN INDICTED FOR DRUG SMUGGLING IN AMERICA IS NOW SENATOR-ELECT....AP

A man indicted in America for allegedly smuggling heroin, in a court case that was the basis for the TV hit "Orange Is The New Black," has been elected a senator in Nigeria.
Buruji Kashamu was little known before he returned home in 2003 from Britain despite a U.S. extradition order to become a major financier of President Jonathan's party.
Election results posted late Wednesday identify Kashamu as a senator-elect in southwest Ogun state. Opponents are challenging his victory in court, saying ballots were rigged.
Kashamu, 56, hung up the phone twice when the AP called for comment about the drug case on Thursday. Kashamu has said he is "a clean businessman" and that the 1998 indictment by a grand jury in the Northern District of Illinois for conspiracy to import and distribute heroin in the United States is a case of mistaken identity. He has said Chicago prosecutors really want the dead brother he closely resembles.

A British court refused a U.S. extradition request in 2003 over uncertainty about Kashamu's identity. Chicago Judge Richard Posner thought otherwise when he refused a motion to dismiss Kashamu's case last year.

A dozen people were long ago tried and jailed in the case, including American Piper Kerman, whose memoir about her jail time became the Netflix hit "Orange Is The New Black." Kerman's book never identified Kashamu by name, but there is a West African drug kingpin whom she calls "Alhaji," meaning one who has completed the haj or pilgrimage to Mecca.

A Nigerian federal court last year ordered Kashamu's extradition, an order upheld by an appeals court. But Nigeria's government has not extradited him.

That failure caused Olusegun Obasanjo, a former president, to warn that "drug barons ... will buy candidates, parties and eventually buy power or be in power themselves."
Jonathan's perceived protection of Kashamu was a factor that led Obasanjo to defect from the ruling party before recent elections to the opposition that won most votes in Ogun, the home state of Kashamu and Obasanjo.

Kashamu is suing Obasanjo for libel for stating that Kashamu is a fugitive from U.S. justice. He had won a court order halting publication of Obasanjo's autobiography but a judge this week rescinded it, saying Kashamu had misled the court. Obasanjo's lawyer argued that the truth cannot be libel.
President-elect Muhammadu Buhari, a former military dictator who had people jailed for littering in the 1980s, has promised to fight corruption. That has many politicians fearful in a country where corruption is endemic.


Source: Associated Press 

PHOTO OF THE DAY: FACE OF THE NANNY WHO KIDNAPPED THE 'OREKOYA BOYS'

This is the face of the nanny who kidnapped the ‘Orekoya Boys’. Her real names are Funmilayo Adeyemi aka Mary Akinloye, she has been arrested by the police.

AT LAST 'NANNY FROM THE HELL' MARY AKINLOYE WHO KIDNAPPED 'OREKOYA BOYS' HAS BEEN ARRESTED

Mary Akinloye, 23, the maid who kidnapped the three Orekoya boys has been arrested. Lagos state Police Commissioner, Kayode Aderanti, said she was arrested yesterday night but did not say where she was arrested.

Meanwhile, Senior Apostle Abraham Adekunle, the maternal grandfather of the Orekoya boys, claims a ransom was paid for the release of his grandchildren

"For the eight days that the children were taken away, we did not rest. But yesterday (Monday), they called us and said we should send the money to them. They sent their account number to us. Immediately they collected the money, they called us and said they had dropped the children at Egbeda.” he told Punch


 

XENOPHOBIA: SOUTH AFRICAN GOVERNMENT IS GOOD ..BUT THE PEOPLE ARE BAD..

A South African man with a knife ready to attack immigrants 
Running small convenience stores in the townships has become a dangerous business for foreigners. Often serving their customers through locked gates, they are accused of spreading disease, stealing jobs and sponging off basic government services like electricity, running water and healthcare. But as violence against them continues, the South African government insists that criminality is behind it, not xenophobia.

In a haze of violence in late January, an angry mob approached a convenience store belonging to Abdikadir Ibrahim Danicha. They pried open its iron gates and looted everything inside. Even the large display refrigerators were carried away. Danicha’s life was upended.
“South African people don’t like us,”Danicha, a 29-year-old Somali national, told Al Jazeera, while sitting on his bed in a small room he shared with three others in Mayfair, a suburb popular with foreign nationals in Johannesburg.

The violent outburst that led to the looting ofDanicha’s store began in Snake Park, in the western reaches of Soweto, when 14-year-oldSiphiwe Mahori was allegedly killed by another Somali shop owner, Alodixashi Sheik Yusuf. Mahori, a South African, was allegedly a part of a group of people who attempted to rob Yusuf’s store on January 19. His death sparked a week of mob justice, which appeared to be inflamed by xenophobia. Scores of people were injured and hundreds of stores were looted. As the violence spread to nearby Kagiso, a South African baby was trampled to death. For the foreign nationals affected by the violence, the actions of the mob were inexplicable. “I don’t even have clothes … I lost all my things,” said Masrat Eliso an Ethiopian national, four days after his shop in Protea Glen, a suburb of Soweto, was looted.
I don’t havemoney. I don’t have anything on ground. I’m scared for my life.”

Calm was eventually restored and most foreign-owned stores reopened. Shelves were restocked and customers returned, poking their arms through the closed metal gates of the stores to buy a loaf of bread. Groups of children clamoured to buy lollipops, while tired looking men eyed the fridges for energy drinks. It appeared to be business as usual, but to the foreign nationals who returned to their stores in Soweto, there was a shared fear that they may soon be the subject of another attack.
Danicha returned to his shop in Mofolo, another suburb of Soweto, three weeks after the violence subsided. “I don’t feel safe, “he said in early March, outside his partially restocked shop. He is one of a few hundred thousand Somali refugees in South Africa who have found some measure of success in operating small stores in townships around the country. He is also one among thousands of foreign nationals here who report multiple incidents of persecution. But Danicha’s life in South Africa has been filled with hardship. And the scars, which run across the entire left side of his body, act as a stark reminder.

In June 2014, he and a friend were running a small store in the Johannesburg suburb of Denver, selling groceries and basic cosmetics when their store was set upon by an angry mob. “The first day, a group of people came to the shop. They wanted to loot us. We closed the doors but then they started stoning us,” he said. “Then, on the second day, they just came and threw a petrol bomb at the shop. I was inside the shop.”Danicha was one of four people who sustained severe burns in Denver on that day. “I came to South Africa in 2012 and I thought life would be easy’’.
“Everywhere, everywhere I am burned, “he said. “I was in hospital for three months. “After being treated at the Charlotte Maxeke public hospital, Danicha was then forced to rely on the Somali community in Johannesburg for assistance. “A brother of mine helped me out by giving me a share in a shop in Soweto. “Two months later, another mob attacked his store. “Unless I have the capital to start another shop, I don’t know what I can do. “Estimates suggest that more than 50,000 Somalis have fled to South Africa since their home country erupted into civil war in 1991.Many of them have settled in townships across the country, operating small businesses among the poorest South Africans. While the store in Mofolo has reopened, and Danicha helps his co-owners periodically, he has not been able to contribute to the capital needed to get the store sufficiently restocked. It is very difficult to start again and again “

As researchers begin to unpack the stories of yet another bout of violence against foreign nationals in urban South Africa, many of the victims are beginning to feel that the pain caused was not just the loss of goods, earnings and trading days; “We came to South Africa because we needed to save our lives, “Mohamed Rashid, an Ethiopian national from the Oromo community says. He runs a store in Snake Park and is angered by the lack of justice in cases involving foreign nationals. “The law is forgetting us so soon we will also forget the law, “he warned.

Back at the store in Mofolo, Danicha watches as his co-owners serve customers through a gate. He is not sure what the future holds for him. “At first I had a plan but the plan has been destroyed two times now, ”he said. With Somalia still reeling from conflict, he has nowhere else to go. Despite the on-going violence, South Africa

I came from Somalia in 2009. And the South African government is good; they let us work for ourselves. I say the government thank you very much and I was working myself and I was looking my food and to trade. Some people come to South Africa by plane. Others come with taxis and busses. But I took a very long route to South Africa. I came to South Africa in 2010 and it took me three months to get here.

This is how I started, I worked and got together some money, and I put this money together with other people. Then I acted like a supervisor. I would go to a place and see the owner of the property where I think we can make a shop and I say can you give us the lease I’m going to work in the building here. Then when we make money I  don’t take it all, we are sharing. So if it is, 18, 19, 20 thousand rands ($2,000)profits, it is shared between five people. That is how we work. When we make this money here we working hard. In Somalia there is no peace there. When I ran away from there, I was not the only guy. And I run because from Somalia there was no government and I came here where I can stay and make a life in peace. I got the family there but I don’t have the choice to go back hat time if I stayed in my country there was no law and order, I was scared.

They must do something about these people who are attacking our business and take everything. I think other people are jealous. My shop was closed for 10 days after the attack. After my shop was looted, we came back, and we fixed it. We bought a new fridge, we made a new gate and we put new shelves. So now people think we have a lot of money here, we don’t have the money because they took everything. Because we also have to buy food, we have families to feed. But even when I came back, I was told I could not open my shop. I went to the police station and complained and told them that some people have given me this paper that says I must close my shop or they will kill me. They give this letter to all the shops.

They told us not to open, to go back to where we come from. They asked me why I am coming here. I said I live here. They said close your business, go back to where you come from.
They are fighting us. We called in the police. The police did not care. They did not listen, they did nothing. They said, “Voetsek!”We are not feeling safe right now. It’s the police who are supposed to look after our safety but they say they don’t care. They listen to other people only. If someone attacks us they don’t care.
Despite promises of help, the situation on the ground is disastrous and rebuilding almost non-existent.With help hardly getting through, and so many in need, building materials are scarce and flats for rent even scarcer – and expensive too.

The South African government is not bad. But the people… they really don’t like us. Even when they come to the shop, we are giving them big discounts because we sell everything very cheap. But they are abusing us. Even the police when they come to help you they first take money from you. There is nobody that helped us to get so far in South Africa. We did by ourselves. I am here for almost two years but I can’t leave South Africa.

We have problems in South Africa but it is still better than Somalia. I am from Kismayo. If my country has peace, I want to go back to my country. It is my country. I love my country. Family? (His face creases with deep emotion) I don’t think I have any family any more. They have all passed away. You see, the problem in Somalia is if you want to be safe you have to join Al Shabaab, or else they will kill you. And I can’t join Al Shabaab. They kill innocent people. I’ve seen this. There is no law. What we need is more security from government. We just want to be safe.
“Of cource violence against foreign nationals is criminal. But it can be criminal and xenophobic, it doesn’t have to be either or,” Misago said.
And even before the onset of the latest wave of violence in 2015, there was more to come.
In early 2013, a young Mozambican man named Mido Macia was tied to a police van and dragged through a street close to Johannesburg by officers. He had parked his taxi on the wrong side of the road which was captured on video.

 A national survey of the attitudes of the South African population towards foreign nationals in the country by the South African Migration Project in 2006 found xenophobia to be widespread: South Africans do not want it to be easier for foreign nationals to trade informally with South Africa (59 per cent opposed), to start small businesses in South Africa (61 per cent opposed) or to obtain South African citizenship (68 per cent opposed)
The government attempted to reduce the perception of the terror meted out on foreign nationals as benign, unexceptional acts of criminality. If they were orchestrated attacks, they said, ‘a third force’ was behind the violence, apartheid parlance for acts perpetrated by outside forces, or intelligence agencies.

SOURCE:AL-JAZEERA


NB: The South African government is not bad. But the people…. that was how one migrant sum up the act of criminality in South Africa. To be blunt with the South Africans indigene, it is so common with South African blacks to blame their woes on others...if they are not complaining about apartheid, they complains of racism. Having said that, South African men are bunch of lazy, good for nothing, #ukomboti drunkards, criminals that hide behind job equality to commit crimes!!!

Wednesday, 15 April 2015

ROBBERS WHO USES 'EFCC' UNIFORMS TO ROB THEIR VICTIMS NARRATES THEIR 'MODUS OPERANDI'


A gang of suspected armed robbers, namely; Princewill Eze, 55, Amira Abdallahi 32, Daniel Okpara 30, Paul Irior 37, Bassey Williams Ekpenyoung 39 and Royal Nwabuike 32, who used to wear reflective vest of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), to rob, steal and dupe unsuspecting Nigerians, have been arrested by Operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), Ikeja, Lagos State Police Command


Eze is alleged to be the ring leader and goes by the alias, Senator Nwobodo. The suspect, a father of five kids, was further alleged to have houses spread across the nation, including a hostel in the Ambrose Allie University, Edo State. He said to have been arrested several times for robbery, but always to seem to have a penchant for escaping conviction whenever he gets charged to court.
The suspect goes about in a tinted car, fitted with a radio base, where police radio messages are intercepted. The car also has siren which blares whenever Eze is moving.

The only female in the gang, Amira Abdallahi, white skinned and born of Lebanese father and Edo State mother, said she has five kids, with the youngest, just six months old. She said she is an interior decorator and said she deceived into joining the gang, but later took to the crime because of the money.
She added: “I’ve only been with the gang for just six months and made about N10 million. Right now, I have no money in my account. Police have collected all!”

According to the State’s Commissioner of Police, Mr. Kayode Aderanti, the gang uses EFCC uniforms, handcuffs and guns to rob bureau de change operators in Abuja and Lagos State of foreign currencies.

Recovered from them are; Bryco 59 pistol with serial no. 930945 with six rounds of 5.56mm live ammunition, single barrel pistol cut to size with four live cartridges, and three Toyota Highlander jeeps. The first is ash colour, marked LSR11DB. The second is maroon colour marked LSR 671DK, another maroon colour marked KTU 380DK. Police also recovered a Toyota Sienna 2012 model, marked JJJ424CQ, Toyota 4 Runner, marked KRD 449DG, one Toyota Camry Saloon car unregistered, N4 million cash and 13 dollars.

Aderanti said that all the suspects have houses spread through Nigeria, adding that they also have different exotic cars.

Aderanti said: “Princewell built a hotel in Edo State, while other members built houses in Delta, Ogun and Lagos States. Effort is on to arrest the only gang member at large.”
Recalling how the waterloo of the gang started, Aderanti said that he acted promptly on credible information received from a source on February 25, 2015. He had immediately ordered the officer in charge of SARS, SP. Abba Kyari to launch a massive manhunt and round up the criminals.

Aderanti added: “Kyari swiftly deployed cutting edge technological tools on ground and eventually tracked and arrested the kingpin, Princewell alias Senator Nwobodo who lives VGC Ajah on February 27, 2015. His confessions led to the arrest of a female Lebanese nationale and gang member Amira and others. We also discovered Irior is a dismissed police corporal, while Ekpenyong had once been charged by SARS for kidnapping in 2012. They all confessed to several robberies within Lagos and Abuja.”

Eze confessed that he had been into the crime for long, adding that he got his Police radio and Walkie-Talkie because he was once involved in politics, while partnering with Charles Soludo, who was vying for governorship post back then in in Anambra State.

Denying that he and his gang doesn’t use guns, Eze said: “We just call to get in touch with the person who sells the dollar.  We box fix a convenient place where we can meet for the transaction, which may be either in the bank or restaurant. The vulnerability of not having a license is what we bank on. While discussing with the operator, the person wearing the EFCC vest would approach, asking questions. When arrest is done and out of that venerability the person who does the arrest get scared, so the job of the lady and mine is to just give a call whenever an arrest is done and out of the fear of not having the license the person gets scare and walks away.”


TESLIM FOLARIN RELEASES PRESS STATEMENT ON TRANSFORMER ISSUE

Teslim Folarin , PDP governorship candidate in Oyo state  at the just concluded governorship election, has said he did not remove the transformer he donated to a community in Ibadan after he lost out in the Governorship election. In a press statement regarding the issue, Teslim said:

"It is with sadness that I learnt of a particular incident which purportedly took place in the Sabo area of Ibadan on Sunday.

I understand that a transformer which I had donated to the community was the subject of controversy between the youths of the area and some leaders with either side accusing the other of trying to sell the transformer.


The PDP youths in the area subsequently took the transformer to a safe place within Sabo area itself pending an amicable resolution which I understand was resolved by the leaders of the community.

Fact; I was not aware of this incident until this morning when I was woken up with headlines all over the internet that I had taken back the transformer because I had lost an election. It is instructive to note that no media house had even contacted me to find out the truth.

I have since contacted members of Sabo community and they confirmed that the matter has been resolved.

Which brings me to the worrying conclusion that a well orchestrated and sophisticated campaign of calumny has begun against my person as a precursor to the 2019 elections. I would advice my supporters to take heart and remain peaceful as this is only one in a long line of attacks that I will expect from enemies of my progress.

For now it is a time for healing and introspection, we have had a long campaign and everyone needs to rest and thank God for his or her life before asking God to prolong our lives to the said 2019.

I thank the good people of Oyo state for your continued support."

One love.

Oloye Teslim Folarin


PHOTO OF THE DAY: 'TUALE' SALUTE TO SIA

One of the Ogun state governor’s supporters’ in a ‘Tuale’ salute to Senator Ibikunle Amosun while on a thank you tour of Ewekoro, Ifo, Santo Ota, Alagbole, Akute, Ojodu yesterday.