Enugu to prosecute suspects over Nimbo massacre.

Enugu State government has ordered the Attorney-General of the Federation and the Inspector General of Police to transmit original case file of suspects arrested in connection with Ukpabi Nimbo incident in Uzo-Uwani Local Council of the state to enable it begin their trial.

This followed an alleged refusal by the Kogi State High Court presided over by Justice H.A Olusiyi to grant application for leave to enable the police prefer charges against five suspects arrested on May 25 and a suit by the Civil Rights Realization and Advancement Network (CRRAN) against the Attorney general of Enugu State over his alleged inability to prosecute the suspects.

The suspects, Mohammed Zurai, Ciroma Musa, Saleh Adamu, Suleiman Laute and Haruna Laute had been arrested and paraded by the immediate past Inspector General of Police, Solomon Arase in connection with the massacre, stressing that there were overwhelming evidence which included video recording of the incident found on one of the suspects.

CRRAN had on July 29 written the Enugu Attorney General to invoke his constitutional power and demand the case file from police and prosecute the suspects since the offence was committed in Enugu.

Piqued by the manner the letter was handled in prosecuting the alleged suspects, CRRAN had on September last month, dragged the Enugu Attorney General and Inspector general of Police to court, asking it to declare illegal the continued detention of the suspects by the police without trial.

Iraq Executes 36 Men Convicted In Massacre Carried Out By ISIS

On Sunday, the Iraqi government hanged 36 of those convicted of perpetrating the massacre, officials and activists said, in what was seen as the first measure of that long-sought justice, even as human rights activists raised concerns about the trials that convicted the defendants.

The mass execution was announced by Iraqi Justice Minister Haidar Zamili in a statement from the city of Nasiriya in Dhi Qar province, according to the online news outlet Arabi21. The provincial governor as well as families of those killed at Speicher were also in attendance at Nasiriya Central Prison.

“There were viewing areas for the families, the women on one side and the men on another. A man came and said, ‘I came today to tell you that the souls of the martyrs will rest,’” said Thaer Saadoun, a journalist with the local television station Ahwar who witnessed the executions.

“Some women ululated, and others immediately went on their knees and started praying right there. For the last two years, the families didn’t know where to go and to whom to complain, and they had gotten no response from the Iraqi government. The executions managed to mollify them a little,” he said in a phone interview.

Saadoun added that those executed Sunday were Iraqis, and some were from Dhi Qar.

Forty convicts were sentenced to death in February, and an appeals court this month upheld the sentences of 36. Four remain on appeal.

The massacre at Camp Speicher, a former U.S. military base outside Tikrit and roughly 100 miles northwest of Baghdad, occurred during Islamic State’s blitz offensive in June 2014 that saw the group take over wide swaths of northern and central Iraq.

Read More: LAtimes

Charleston Church Holds First Service After Massacre

Hundreds of people have flocked to Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, in the US city of South Carolina, after it reopened its doors to worshippers, four days after a white man shot nine black church members to death.

Sunday morning marked the first worship service at the church since Dylann Roof, 21, sat among a Bible study group and opened fire on Wednesday after saying that he targeted them because they were black, authorities said.

“It has been tough, it’s been rough, some of us have been downright angry, but through it all God has sustained us and has encouraged us,” said the Reverend Norvel Goff, who was appointed pastor to replace Rev. Clementa Pinckney, a state politician, who was among those people killed.

Al Jazeera’s Gabriel Elizondo, reporting from Charleston, described a “very emotional” church service attended by an estimated 2,000 people.Church attendees sang gospel songs as thousands more gathered outside to show their solidarity following the shooting.

#PAUSIBILITY: Solecism Of This Transformation – Adebayo Coker

Ordinarily, I do a weekly submission but my musing wouldn’t let me rest.

I am sure you will wonder the kind of paragraphs that will follow this opening. Some people will develop further defence when am done answering this question due to their embryonic stance on Americanism; they usually would say “ the fact that it worked in America doesn’t mean it is good for us”. To this set of people I will say I agree with them to the extent that until when we are ready to develop our own peculiar models to proffering solutions to our own peculiar problems, I will continue to use suitable examples from any part of the world.

Let me quickly draw a line of relationship between Hurricane Sandy and Boko Haram. Although they both proffered a saving grace scenario to the leaders of two wonderful countries in the world, whose popularity amongst their people was drowning, but like any survivalist would grapple for any thin line of hope that is likely to sustain their continued existence. The opportunity for redemption came. One of the leaders saw and acted accordingly as is expected of a leader who is in sync with his people but the other frittered away his chance.

Hurricane Sandy affected some parts of the United States Of America at about the peak of the decline of President Barrack Obama’s popularity. The Americans waited for him at the poll to send him out of the White House because so many of his promises were believed to be mere verbosity with little or no chance of reality. The election year came and the campaign started; movement from state to state, typical of political campaigns. True, it was another round of grandiosity from the first black man President of the most powerful nation in the world, but along the way came Hurricane Sandy; very disastrous ( not the first hurricane or disaster though) but was one of the (if not THE ONLY) saving grace of Obama in that election year. Barrack abandoned all campaigns and went to sympathise with the bereaved. He did it so genuinely that many yet-to-decide Americans at that time, even when they knew it will be another term of same and the same, gave their votes to him nonetheless. He won with a landslide victory.

Boko Haram is a menace that has been terrifying the entire Nigeria nation (whichever way we look at it we are all in this together), the most populous black nation in the world. The Shekau scourge became intense just few years ago. When the whole world was wondering what the FG was doing to address the issue and were ready to their give utmost support to the government to get this hydra- headed monster annihilated once and for all the government saw another rhythm to it that the rest of the world was not listening to. They claimed this is a guerrilla war, not conventional and will require some level of expertise to address. Quite understandable. But for six years that the FG sought training of military personnel, chaos was let lose. Thousands of lives were lost. People were dehumanized and killed. Girls and boys were kidnapped, conscripted into the sect and used to cause further mayhem on Nigerian communities. Parts of the country were seized and flags hoisted establishing the sect’s territory within Nigeria, a sovereign nation!

In the reign of all this, the President saw nothing threatening as long as it was not anywhere near Aso Rock. He did not act as expected of a Commander-in-Chief. Rather, he partied and danced on the graves of so many lives that were lost. He enjoyed his campaigns of calumny till the last minute, sometime two weeks ago.

Just as election came and Sandy presented a saving grace for Obama, so also election came and what was considered inconsequential so long as it could be used as a factor in a political permutation, is now a curse for this President.

Had this administration acted rightly six years ago by decimating or working assiduously to decimate the insurgents, some Nigerians will, at least, see a path of moral recompense to the President by giving him their votes because of that act of bravery. The President lacks every moral right to ask for any reimbursement whatsoever. His prehensile associates and aides miscalculated on that.

The recent exploits being recorded by the Nigeria Armed Forces in routing the insurrection just after the six weeks solecism, is a pointer that truly and truly, this government knew what to do all the while to stem this menace but chose the path of wickedness as they had thought that by allowing the crisis to fester( I suspect complicity), a State of Emergency will be declared in the Northeast, then the PDP will have a roller coaster ride back to power… the heart of man is desperately wicked

In the face of this deliberate delay to score a cheap political point which has led to loss of lives and properties, I hereby endorse CHANGE as the only panacea to this transformation that polarized us along sectional and sectarian lines. A transformation that underestimated the enemies of Nigeria bringing about a Rwandani-treat to our people. A transformation that makes me buy fuel to power my generator to watch the President on national TV, launching a power station purportedly generating some immeasurable megawatts of power. A transformation that has turned unyielding goons to sudden billionaires. A transformation being led by a President that wants to enjoy the full benefits and appurtenances of office but has shamelessly failed (on many occasions) to stand up to the functionality and responsibility of office. A re-commissioning transformation.

I laugh.

jonathansambo

BTW

Is Marilyn on vacation?

Army Clashes with ‘Rebels’ Blamed for DR Congo Massacres

The Congolese army clashed Monday with suspected Ugandan rebels blamed for two massacres in the town of Beni in the volatile east of Democratic Republic of Congo, a senior official said.

 The rebels were “organising themselves” for another possible attack on the town — the scene of two bloodbaths in almost as many weeks — when troops came upon them, the governor of troubled North Kivu province Julien Paluku told AFP.

Soldiers freed a hostage, but the shooting stopped as night fell, he said. “We couldn’t see the enemy… and we risked falling into an ambush.”

The fighting erupted as families in Beni were preparing to bury the dead from the latest attack when 11 people were killed — mostly hacked to death with machetes — in a raid on Saturday night.

Credit: Yahoo News

Congo Crowd Kills Man, Eats him After Militant Massacres

A crowd stoned to death a young man in northeast Congo on Friday before burning and eating his corpse, witnesses said, in apparent revenge for a series of attacks by Ugandan rebels.

The incident in the town of Beni followed a number of overnight raids in the area blamed on the Islamist group ADF-NAUL, who are thought to have massacred more than 100 people this month, using hatchets and machetes to kill their victims.

Witnesses said the man, who has not been identified, aroused suspicion on a bus when passengers discovered he could not speak the local Swahili language and that he was carrying a machete.

Tensions ran high in the town on Friday morning with around 100 demonstrators blocking the road from the airport into town, throwing stones and waving machetes to demand greater government protection against the rebels.

Read More: http://news.yahoo.com

 

#BornoYobeMassacre: The Fire Next Time – Ogunyemi Bukola

Angels lay in the pool of their own blood,

Their fire snuffed out, the ashes blown away,

The barrage of lead their fragile flesh could not defy,

To nocturnal marauders have they fallen prey,

Thus by shine or shower we ceaselessly mourn,

Despondent, miserable, bereaved and forlorn.

From whence, and why these menacing cannonade?

The back of tripod-stones has become the habitation of snails,

The cat’s back finds home with the earth,

The hands which the cradles rocked now the graves dig,

The owls have indeed awakened the crowing cock,

Alas, fire dies in the billow’s presence.

The drum is now beating wildly pit-a-pat,

Too incongruous for the royal masquerade to do his dance,

Trousers are pulled up, but the flood soaks you still,

What matters then, wither you go now, or where you turn?

He that does not want strange footsteps in his backyard,

Must fence it up, and further raise the fort.

For how long shall we fold our arms and live in fear?

While the stream of innocent blood flows in our backyard,

For how long shall the guns rotten in the shade,

While the oafish birds shit on our heads,

The fire next time, whose hut shall it burn?

The flood next time, whose child shall it drown?

Whoever kills a vulture lives not to see another year,

Whoever hunts a phoenix does not live to see another moon,

If death strikes on the right,

Obaluaye cue a cry from the house evildoers,

If pestilence strikes on the left,

May it spare not the shed of terror agents.

Ogunyemi Bukola (@zebbook)