Tuesday, July 9, 2024

Father Of Twins Begs For Help After Wife Diε∂ Shortly After Delivery In Kogi

A father has pleaded with Nigerians to come to his help after his wife died after delivery.
 
The man identified as Mr Hassan Isyaka Ibori, an indigene of Lafia-Obessa community in Okehi Local Government Area of Kogi State asked Nigerians to help him take care of his set of twins.

Ibori, a young farmer who resides at Anyone community in Adavi Local Government Area, lost his wife, Nana Hawa Ibori, barely an hour after she was delivered of a set of female twins.
 
Narrating his ordeal to journalists on Tuesday in Adavi, amidst tears, Ibori said the sad incident happened on June 2, 2024, at a private hospital in Anyone community.
 
“I took my wife to the hospital around 4:00 am when she wanted to give birth on 2nd of June, 2024, and she delivered a set of female twins around 7:00 am successfully.
 
“I started jubilating at the arrival of the twins, but my joy suddenly turned to sorrow when my wife died about one hour after she gave birth.
 
“Shortly after the delivery, she started complaining of stomach pain and she was attended to by the nurse who gave her injection to relief the pain, but she died about one hour after.
 
“It was so painful losing my wife shortly after she gave birth to our set of twins. We never expected twins, but It is God that brought them to us, there is nothing we can do,” Ibori said with tears rolling down his cheeks.
 
He lamented the difficulties he has been going through in feeding and ensuring that the babies’ nutritional needs were adequately met using formula-feed.
 
“It has been God that has been helping me to feed the babies since my wife died.
 
“I am farmer. I have been using farming to take care of myself and my family, but for the past two years now the Fulani herdsmen have been destroying our farmlands without tangible harvest.
 
“Because of the destruction of our farmland, I get little or no harvest most of the time. It has not been easy for me feeding the twins as well as my other children,” he added.

Ibori, therefore, made a passionate appeal to the state government, the governor’s wife, commissioner for women affairs as well as other well meaning individuals to come to his aid.
 
“I am yet to get over the shock of my wife’s death, I have exhausted all my savings in taking care of the babies and I am left with nothing.
 
“I am appealing to the state government through the Ministry of Women Affairs and well meaning individuals to kindly assist in taking care of the twins as I am helpless.
 
“I am pleading with our mummy, the wife of our governor, Hajia Shekinat Usman Ododo, to come to my aid to enable me take good care of the twins.”
 
Ibori appreciated members of his community for the support they had rendered in taking care of the twins thus far.

SAN advocates decentralisation of judicial system

LAW
Text by: The Southern Post

A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Adeyinka Moyosore Kotoye, has advocated for the decentralisation of the country’s judicial system, saying that what is obtainable now is quasi unitary in nature.

Kotoye (SAN) spoke on the topic, “ The Law, the Bar, the Society” last Thursday at the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Ijebu Ode Branch Annual Lecture and inauguration of a new executive of the bar under the chairmanship of Chief (Dr.) Fassy Yusuf and held at Chief Chris Ogunbanjo Centre, Erunwon town, near Ijebu Ode.

Other members of the new NBA executive are the Vice-Chairman, A. D. Sosanwo, Secretary, Mrs Elsie  Adepitan – Olaniyi; Assitant Secretary, Adegboyega Titilayo Motunrayo; Financial Secretary, Abraham Sokefun;  Welfare Secretary, Mrs. Ogundile  Adebowale (Mrs): Social Secretary, Mariam  Ogunmoye; Treasurer,Adegbenle Joseph; Provost, Akindehinde Azeez Oyebola and Public Relations Officer (PRO), Atinuke Ibidapo Adebajo. 
Kotoye argued that Sections 271 (1 & 2), 276 (1 & 2), 281 (1 & 2) of the constitution, dealing with the appointment of the Chief Judges and High Court Judges of a state, Grandi Khadi and members of the Sharia Court of Appeal of a State, President and Judges of the Customary Court of a State. are anachronistic in nature and a complete aberration to the fundamental principles of Federalism.

 He said vesting the power of recommendation in the National Judicial Council (NJC),  completely eroded the status of each state, as an independent entity/unit in a federating structure.
“What we have now as law on appointment of judges is unitary in nature, pointing out that it limited the ambit of the legislative authority of the various state Houses of Assembly, on such matters as provided for at Sections 270 (2) (b); 275 (2) (b) and 280 (2) (b).

“This is more so, given the composition and powers of both the Federal Judicial Service Commission (FJSC) and the National Judicial Council (NJC) at Paragraphs 12, 13, 20 and 21 of the 3rd Schedule of the Constitution.”

Kotoye  contended that there is no reason why states should not be allowed to develop their own appellate structures, similar to what obtained in the old Western Region.

He argued that matters covered at Sections 241 (1) (a – f), 242 (1 & 2), 248, 254 (a – f), 260 – 269, should be within the purview of the state, except where it involves the Federal Government. 

He suggested that two or more states, may agree, by way of a memorandun, to establish a joint appellate structure.

“A region or a zone, like the south west, may also undertake this jointly. This is one sure means of reducing the burden of the different Appellate Courts workload”, he argued.

“Matters relating to customary law like chieftaincy, obaship disputes etc. should be limited to that region or that state Appeal Court. Such cases have no business being taken to Abuja. This way there would be considerable reduction in the number of cases that go to Abuja.”

He charged the NBA to lead the crusade to effect this change in the nation’s judiciary.

Kutoye also advocated devolution of powers down to the local and state governments explaining that some matter listed in the exclusive list should be devolved under concurrent list.

He said: “ there is no reason why matters like aviation, bankruptcy and insolvency, banks borrowing of money within Nigeria, construction, copyright, designation of securities in which trust funds may be invested, election to the office of Governor and Deputy Governor and any other type to which a person may be elected under the constitution, evidence, fingerprints, identification and criminal records, fishing and fisheries, incorporation, regulation and winding up, insurance, labour, mines and minerals, patents, trademarks, trade or business names, industrial designs and merchandise marks,pensions, police, prisons, public holidays, railways, stamp duties contained at Items 2 – 7, 11, 13, 19, 22, 23, 28, 29, 32 – 34, 39. 43 – 46, 48. 51, 55. 58 – 67, are included in the exclusive legislative list.

“I believe that they should be made concurrent, so that states may also have powers to go into those areas too.

“For instance, provision of rail services has the potential of increasing economic activities. generating income and increasing the employment rate, if states are allowed and encouraged to provide same within their territories.

“Two or more states or a zone like the South West, may thereafter make arrangements to link each other by train. This will also enhance migration of labour and increase mobility. The rate of commerce will increase and so on”, he contended. 

He condemned the country’s  electoral process which at the moment is designed to operate from top to bottom.

He suggested a bottom to the top approach adding “I suggest that we revert to the electoral cycle of 1998, during which the first election conducted was that of the local government, followed by the Gubernatorial and various states Houses of Assembly election which held on the same day, whilst the Presidential and National Assembly elections that also held on the same day, was used to conclude the process. 

Kotoye disagreed with the idea being canvassed by some functionaries in the present administration proposing that the election into the 774 local government councils, should continue to be conducted by INEC.
“It is not only retrogressive but also a complete anathema to the avowed principle of Federalism, anywhere in the world. As a matter of fact, the appropriate thing is that. each state, should have its own electoral laws, that will regulate/govern all its electoral processes, including Gubernatorial and Houses of Assembly election”, he argued.

The Chief Judge of Ogun State,   Justice Mosunmola Dipeolu, who was the chairman of the event, urged lawyers to entrench rule of law and nobility of the profession in their service to the society.

Justice Dipeolu who was represented by Justice O.A.B. Onafowokan, in an opening remarks stated that a society’s true freedom requires the rule of law and justice and a judicial system in which the rights of some are not secured by the denial of the rights of others.

She said the bar owes it a duty to protect, serve and ensure that the rule of law is upheld and justice entrenched, adding that this is why “ lawyers are tagged as ministers in the temple of justice, a phrase that should tug at the conscience of every lawyer as he stands to attend to the services he was paid for.”

Sunday, July 7, 2024

Breakaway junta confederation undermines ECOWAS Summit

Text by: News Wires
A West African leaders' summit opens on Sunday amid political turmoil after the military rulers of Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso cemented a breakaway union at a rival meeting.

The three countries announced they were forming a new confederation, and their defiant first gathering on the eve of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) summit marks another test for the regional bloc they split away from earlier this year.

ECOWAS is already wrestling with sweeping jihadist violence, financial trouble and the challenges of mustering a regional force.

It was not clear how the weakened bloc would respond after Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso adopted a treaty establishing a "Confederation of Sahel States" in Niamey on Saturday.

Backs turned  
The juntas in those three countries came to power in a series of coups over recent years and announced their joint departure from ECOWAS in January.

They have shifted away from former colonial ruler France and expelled French troops, with Niger's General Abdourahamane Tiani calling for the establishment of a "community far removed from the stranglehold of foreign powers".

"Our people have irrevocably turned their backs on ECOWAS," General Tiani said on Saturday, rebuffing the bloc's pleas to come back into the fold.

The Sahel countries' ECOWAS exit was fuelled in part by their accusation that Paris was manipulating the bloc and not providing enough support for anti-jihadist efforts.
France 24