Category: Uncategorized

  • Man attempting to steal transformer cables electrocuted in Gombe

    Man attempting to steal transformer cables electrocuted in Gombe

    An unidentified man was electrocuted while attempting to steal transformer cables belonging to the Jos Electricity Distribution Company (JEDC) on Friday in Gombe.

    Confirming this to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Gombe, ASP Buhari Abdullahi, the Police Public Relations Officer, Gombe State Command, said the incident happened at about 7:00a.m.

    “Around 7:00a.m. on Friday, the Police on duty saw someone trying to cut high tension cable that linked the pole to the transformer at Independent National Election Commission (INEC) Zonal Store in Gombe.

    “He cut one of the armoured cables; in the process of cutting the second, he was electrocuted,” Abdullahi said.

    He said that the policemen took the unidentified man to the Specialist Hospital, Gombe, where he was certified dead by a medical personnel.

    Abdullahi said the body had been deposited at the hospital’s mortuary.

    “The deceased is yet to be identified because there was no item on him,” the police spokesperson said.

    Abdullahi said that the deceased might have tried to take advantage of the recent power outage in the state to steal the armoured cables, not knowing that electricity had been restored.

    When contacted, the Head of Corporate Communications, JEDC, Dr Elijah Adakole appealed to residents to always resist the temptation to vandalise electrical installations and equipment to avoid such unpleasant occurrence.

    Adakole said that the company had been losing huge investment through vandalism; hence, the appeal to communities in their franchise areas to protect installations from being vandalised.

    “If you see anyone entering any of our transformers, ask questions and interrogate them and if possible, report them to the nearest security agents.

    “We know that these assets serve the various communities, so it behoves on communities to take ownership of the facilities, so that all of us can benefit from them maximally.

    “When equipment are vandalised, communities will be in darkness, economic activities will be affected, social life truncated, security of the area could be compromised,” he said.

     

  • Saving School Children From Tobacco, E-Cigarette Vendors

    Saving School Children From Tobacco, E-Cigarette Vendors

    Fifteen years after the National Assembly enacted the National Tobacco Control Act (NTCA) to protect Nigerians from the dangers of tobacco, the problem of the tobacco industry’s unhealthy relations with minors continues to be a talking point.

    A case in point is the recent investigation by a tobacco control advocate, GST, which revealed that vendors are having a field day dispensing the tobacco industry’s products of death and diseases to children.

    GST’s findings, partly published in a video on its X handle, showed several vendors on the streets of Abuja, freely selling cigarettes, vapes and other kinds of e-cigarettes to school children. Not only is this morally reprehensible, but it has further emphasised the fears of tobacco control advocates that tobacco corporations are – whether by hook or by crook – finding ways to reach their target: the youth.

    Ultimately, their goal is to recruit a new generation of young Nigerians addicted to smoking as a replacement for older victims who die from smoking or manage to quit the habit. About 28,876 Nigerians die of smoking-related diseases annually. The tobacco industry increasingly preys on children and adolescents, employing advertising tactics both online and offline to target them directly with a portfolio of products that threaten their health. The industry is rapidly rebranding existing products and launching new articles promoted as sophisticated to young people. It is using every means to expand its market offerings to manoeuvre or beat public health regulations.

    Globally, the tobacco industry has been very successful in killing its customers. According to the WHO, there are 1.3 billion tobacco users worldwide. That number would be even larger if tobacco didn’t kill half of its users who don’t quit. Every four seconds, tobacco takes another life. No fewer than eight million persons died from tobacco use last year, including an estimated 1.3 million non-smokers who were exposed to second-hand smoke. Decades of the tobacco industry’s deception and devious tactics have hooked generations of users to nicotine and tobacco, driving a global epidemic.

    In the video, GST volunteers, dressed as underaged pupils, went out to buy cigarettes and vapes in Abuja. Incredibly, every vendor agreed to sell to them, blatantly flouting tobacco control laws. Since 2015, the NTCA has banned the sale of tobacco products to persons under 18 years. This includes cigarettes, vapes and all other tobacco products. Any vendor who violates this law is liable to spend one year in prison (or/and) a fine of N200,000.

    However, as is common knowledge in Nigeria and globally, laws do not seem to deter the industry. Tobacco corporations, using their substantial financial resources, relentlessly try to circumvent national regulations and laws. Only last November, the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) fined British American Tobacco Nigeria Limited (BATN) and its affiliates an unprecedented $110 million for violating national tobacco control regulations, among other laws.

    The GST’s investigation, supported by video evidence, is another incontrovertible instance of the industry and its affiliates undermining public health policies. To this, the Nigerian state must respond firmly, especially with the lives of young children at stake.

    Thankfully, the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) is taking a tough stance to protect children, starting from the home front. The FCTA has urged the Federal Government to initiate a law that will prosecute parents who send children on errands to buy tobacco-related products. According to Dr. Doris John, FCTA’s Director, Public Health Department, more than 25, 000 children between 10 and 14 years are daily tobacco users in Nigeria, while the age of tobacco use initiation is between 13 and 15 years. John, who was quoted by the Vanguard newspaper on June 11, 2024, added that secondary school and university studies showed ‘shisha’ smoking rates between 3 to 7 per cent.

    To save our children, we join the GST in demanding that the government impose proof of age verification as a condition for the sale of tobacco and related products. We also urge the government to enforce the law and punishments on erring vendors and shield children from predatory tobacco marketing tactics.

    Egbe and Fatuase work with Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA).

     

  • NDLEA Arrests Wanted Drug Kingpin After Two Years of Hiding

    NDLEA Arrests Wanted Drug Kingpin After Two Years of Hiding

    After many years of wearing the toga of invincibility, the overall head of the Mushin, Lagos drug cartel, 57-year-old Alhaji Sulaiman Jimoh (alias Olowoidiogede, populary known as Temo), has been arrested by operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, NDLEA, at his enclave after an initial resistance from him and his horde of hoodlums.

    The operational breakthrough was stated in a press release issued by Femi Babafemi, NDLEA’s Director of Media and Advocacy.

    Babafemi said “In the last two years, the NDLEA had intercepted large consignments of illicit drugs worth billions of naira owned by Temo but he has remained largely evasive while a few encounters with him and his armed gangs in his Mushin enclave had resulted in gunfight.

    “Some of the recent seizures of his shipments include: a 14, 524.8 kilograms of Ghana Loud, a strong strain of cannabis sativa, smuggled into Lagos from Ghana in two trucks and a J5 bus intercepted at Ojuelegba area of Lagos in the early hours of Sunday 28th January 2024; two truck-loads of the same substance weighing 8,852kg intercepted at Eleko beach, Lekki Lagos on 4th May 2023 and 252kg of Loud seized from his enclave in Mushin on Wednesday 26th July 2023. Indeed, in the last two encounters, his men engaged NDLEA operatives in gunfight”

    The drug kingpin was very notorious for always being on the move to evade arrest but with persistence and determination of the Agency aided by modern tools and intelligence, the concerted effort to get him paid off at 10am on Monday 22nd July 2024 when NDLEA’s surveillance teams on his trail tracked and pinned him down at Igbarere street, Mushin.

    A reinforcement of about 50 operatives was immediately mobilized to the area while he was attempting to escape in a Mercedes Benz SUV GLE 350 marked 01G-300G. His attempt to escape by mobilizing hoodlums to engage and distract the operatives however failed after which he was overpowered and whisked away from the chaotic scene while his men surrendered to the superior firepower of the anti-narcotic agents who also succeeded in recovering the Mercedes Benz SUV the suspect was found in.

    In his reaction to the arrest of Temo, Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of NDLEA, Brig. Gen. Mohamed Buba Marwa (Rtd) commended the officers and men of the Lagos State Command, Special Monitoring Task Force and other formations tasked with the assignment of getting Temo arrested for their resilience, vigilance, and professionalism. He urged them to intensify the heat on all drug cartels wherever they are located.

  • Eight Countries Secure Qualification for 2025 AFCON in Morocco

    Eight Countries Secure Qualification for 2025 AFCON in Morocco

    Eight countries have officially qualified for the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON), set to take place in Morocco, the Confederation of African Football (CAF) confirmed on Tuesday.

    The qualified teams include Congo, Senegal, Egypt, Angola, Cameroon, Algeria, Burkina Faso, and hosts Morocco.

    CAF made the announcement through a series of posts on their X (formerly Twitter) account, following the completion of crucial qualifying matches.

    Congo, Senegal, Egypt, and Angola were the latest teams to secure their spots after winning their respective matches on Tuesday.

    Congo defeated Tanzania 2-0 at the Benjamin Mkapa National Stadium, while Angola secured a 1-0 victory over Niger RepublicEgypt triumphed 1-0 against Mauritania, and Senegal also claimed a 1-0 win over Malawi to confirm their place in the prestigious tournament.

    These teams will now join Cameroon, Algeria, Burkina Faso, and Morocco, who had already qualified for the tournament, which is slated to take place in 2025.

  • “Make your man your bestfriend” Singer Portable tells his wife amid recent online saga with 4th baby mama, Ashabi.

    “Make your man your bestfriend” Singer Portable tells his wife amid recent online saga with 4th baby mama, Ashabi.

    The recent video of the 4th baby mama Ashabi has gotten the singer angry as she tagged herself blessed, happy, determined, grateful, and peaceful woman. The context seems to have gotten to the singer Portable as he replies under her comment that fame made her bed him and have his kids. He further mentioned that she used him and her leg couldn’t stay in a place.

    This also got the baby mama angry as she started going back and forth with him. It is not a new thing that the songer Portable is a troublesome person, as he currently has a beef going on with the activist VDM.

    In a screenshot shared by the singer on his Instagram story, the singer’s legal wife can be seen begging on behalf of the 4th baby mama’s behalf as the singer advises her to stay away from the baby mama with the notion that anytime they hang out together, she always ends up having problems with him.

    Further into the chat, he advised the wife to run from Ashabi because she is wicked, also give him a chance and stop having issues with him and make him (her man) her best friend