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Arewa Group Alleges Customs Selective Promotion, Demands Buhari’s Intervention

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A northern group, the Arewa Youth Consultative Forum, has asked the President, Muhammadu Buhari, to urgently cancel the promotion in the Nigeria Customs Service as it is selective.

According to the group, the current policy of promotion in the service smacks of administrative abuse, injustice and can breed indiscipline in the system.

The National President of the AYCF, Alhaji Yerima Shettima, in a statement in Kaduna on Sunday, said Buhari needed to intervene in the matter.

The AYCF had cried out over what it alleged was the selective promotion of officers and men of the NCS and called on the Customs management to halt the exercise for the sake of institutional growth.

The group noted that the NCS refused to heed its plea over the controversial policy of elevation of a certain group of officers in the service.

Consequently, the AYCF called on the relevant federal agencies, especially the Presidency, to intervene in the matter to save the nation from national calamity.

The statement read in part, “Information available to the Arewa Youth Consultative Forum confirmed that despite our plea to the Nigeria Customs Service on February 27, 2022, to reconsider its controversial plan to elevate certain officers, who joined the service between 2009 and 2015 and leaving behind those who joined the service between 1992 and 1994, the service has proceeded with the widely-condemned plan.

“We wish to re-state our stand against this policy that smacks of administrative abuse, injustice and to further declare as follows:

“That this selective exclusion in the name of elevation plan should be canceled immediately so that everybody can now be carried along.

“The gap or vacuum created due to the embargo on employment in the service between 1994 and 2009 was not caused by the older officers and they should not be made to suffer for it like sacrificial lambs.

“This group of officers has already suffered a lot in the service in the form of delay in promotion (some stayed up to eight years in one rank), poor remuneration, etc.

“That if this plan stands, it may breed indiscipline, low-morale, low-productivity, feeling of rejection, alienation, work at cross-purposes, low esteem, sabotage, dichotomy and failure in meeting up with targets.”

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Nnamdi Kanu Seeks Transfer From DSS Custody To National Hospital

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The Federal High Court in Abuja will today (Monday) hear an application filed by Nnamdi Kanu, detained leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), seeking transfer from the custody of the Department of State Services (DSS) to the National Hospital, Abuja, for urgent medical attention.

The motion, filed on September 3 by Chief Kanu Agabi (SAN), followed what Kanu’s lawyers described as a “worrisome decline” in his health while in detention.

Vacation judge, Justice Musa Liman, had earlier granted leave for the case to be heard during the court’s annual recess, stressing its urgency.

In a supporting affidavit, Emmanuel Kanu, the IPOB leader’s brother, said recent medical tests revealed kidney and liver complications, dangerously low potassium levels, and a swelling under Kanu’s armpit requiring immediate investigation.

Agabi told the court that doctors led by Prof. Austin Agaji had advised Kanu’s transfer to the National Hospital as an interim step. He noted that letters to the DSS on the issue had not been answered.

“The applicant’s health is seriously deteriorating considering the nature of his confinement,” Agabi argued, adding that granting the transfer would not prejudice the DSS.

Kanu has been in DSS custody since 2021 following his arrest in Kenya and repatriation to Nigeria. He is currently facing terrorism-related charges before Justice James Omotosho of the same court.

A bail application filed in May is still pending. The court is expected to hear arguments from both sides before ruling on the transfer request today.

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World Bank, IMF Forced Nigeria To End Petrol Subsidy — Femi Falana

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Human rights lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) says the federal government’s removal of petrol subsidies was not a domestic policy choice but a condition imposed by international lenders.

Speaking on Sunday Politics on Channels Television, Falana argued that no country in the world has fully abolished subsidies.

“Even the United States, the United Kingdom, France and others subsidise electricity, agriculture and many aspects of people’s lives,” he said.

Falana accused the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) of pressuring Nigeria to scrap the policy.

President Bola Tinubu announced the end of petrol subsidy during his inauguration on May 29, 2023, alongside a foreign exchange market unification policy. Both measures triggered record inflation and worsening living standards.

Falana also warned against the federal government’s plan to introduce a five percent fuel surcharge, urging it not to worsen economic hardship. He said existing laws already mandated a fuel levy, but funds were never remitted to the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency (FERMA).

Between 2007 and 2011, Falana said FERMA confirmed it received nothing despite deductions from petrol sales.

“By 2022, even the Senate confirmed that over one trillion naira was owed to FERMA. Before introducing new levies, the government must explain what happened to those earlier deductions,” he said.

Falana also called for an end to the dollarisation of the economy, stressing that rejecting the naira remains a criminal offence.

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Peter Obi Visits Olubadan-Designate Ladoja, Says Nigeria’s History Is Incomplete Without Ibadan

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Peter Obi, the Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate in the 2023 election, says Nigeria’s history cannot be written without Ibadan, the Oyo state capital.

Obi stated this on Sunday during a visit to Rashidi Ladoja, the Olubadan-designate, at his Bodija residence.

He praised Ibadan’s central role in Nigeria’s political and socio-economic development and commended its people for their hospitality.

“The position of Ibadan in the history of Nigeria cannot be ignored as a home to all because of the hospitable nature of the indigenes,” Obi said.

He described Ladoja, a former governor and senator, as a leader whose experience will shape his reign as the 44th Olubadan of Ibadanland. Obi also pledged personal support to the incoming monarch.

In response, Ladoja said ascending the throne was “another opportunity to serve humanity,” stressing that the Olubadan stool is not about glamour but service.

“It is God who enthroned Olubadan, not because you have money or influential people around you. The time of glamour is gone; it is about service and what you have on the table for the people,” he said.

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