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A Kuje Prison inmate, Ifeanyi Ezenwa, described by police detectives as a super serial fraudster, who specialises in using fake bank alerts to defraud victims millions of naira right from inside the prison, has committed another crime again.

His latest crime comes four months after he threatened to sue four national newspapers for N4 billion for publishing how he had been carrying out his fraudulent activities and heading a fraud syndicate even while in prison.

Ezenwa committed this latest crime in July.

Ezenwa, who is currently in Kuje Maximum Prison, Abuja, coordinates his operations from there.

He poses as a Chief Executive Officer of a company in the United Kingdom, as a king and chief as well as an American doctor.

A police source said: “Intelligence Response Team operatives went to prison and confirmed that he is there.

“He used to pose as a chief and king on social media.”

The police also said that Ezenwa had masterminded many frauds, leading to the financial ruin of many businessmen and women.

It was also gathered that Ezenwa has 17 different fraud cases pending in different courts.

This latest discovery, if taken to court, would make it 18.

A police source said: “Ezenwa collected 15 brand new cars from a popular company that sells cars.

“This particular company is among the biggest car dealers in Nigeria.

“He also collected five new cars from another dealer in Abuja.

“Once he collects such cars, he will send fake bank alerts.”

The arrest of Ezenwa was led by Deputy Commissioner of Police, Abba Kyari.

In this latest incident, Ezenwa would have gotten away with his crime if not that he was caught on a Close Circuit Television.

The CCTV showed Ezenwa, posing as a rich man, in a shop that sells wheel chairs.

Incidentally, Ezenwa calmly left prison, accompanied by prison warders, to carry out this fraud.

Police now believe that warders are part of Ezenwa’s fraud syndicate.

A police source said: “The suspect and his members wanted to defraud the medical store of the automatic wheel chairs.

“They took him for medical check-up in National Hospital, and after they took him to the store to buy some things he said he needed.

“He dressed as a rich guy; how he got the clothes is yet unknown.

“He dressed, looking rich and the warders followed him like bodyguards.”

Our correspondent gathered that operatives have gone to the medical store and collected the store owner’s statement.

According to the store owner, he had already reported the case to X-Squad.

The police source disclosed: “The store owner said that on the fateful day in question, Ezenwa walked into his store and instructed one of the prison warders to pay for all he had bought that day.

“The store owner said that it was the prison warders that carried his phone and money, while he posed as a chairman.

“The complainant said that one of the prison warders held a gun and opened the door for him.

“After visiting the store, he now went back to the prison, called the management and sent a fake bank alert.

“He then sent Dalhatu Yahaya to go and pick the wheel chair.

“Obviously, prison warders are really helping him.

“It was the complainant that gave police the CCTV footage.

“The complainant said that Ezenwa, aside from the automatic wheel chair, collected other goods and later paid with fake bank alert.

“His boy, Yahaya, was later arrested and took us to the super market.

“Preliminary investigation showed that Ezenwa was allowed to leave to leave prison, with those prison warders, because he claimed he wanted to go for medical attention at the National Hospital, but soon, he was at the supermarket, ordering different items and with the warders acting like as guards.”

It was gathered that operatives of the IRT recovered a brand new Toyota Hilux from the suspect.

He used a fake bank alert to buy the car from Elizade Motors in Abuja from prison.

The police source further noted: “Yahaya was the person Ezenwa sent to collect the Hilux vehicle of N17 million from the car stand.

“He moved it to Kano and sold it for N9 million, where police recovered it.

“Yahaya confessed that his superior in the prison, aka Igwe, sent him to collect the motor from the car stand.

“Yahaya also said that he gave his boss the N9 million.

“The Manager of Elizade Motors was suspended because of this car and he had to meet us to solve the matter.”

Another police source alleged that prison warders working with Ezenwa are being paid by him.

He said: “Some of the prison warders are working with him.

“Yahaya used to bring the goods and money, while the prison warders would collect and deliver for him.

“Police investigation has revealed that Ezenwa used to buy cows and slaughters inside the prison every week.

“All persons close to him used to benefit from the good food, meat and other goodies.

“He lives in a self contained room fully furnished inside Kuje Prison with AC, TV, fridge, exercise machines.”

BIG STORY

Minimum Wage: We Are Deliberating On What We Can Sustainably Pay Workers — Governors Forum

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The Nigeria Governors’ Forum says it is yet to conclude work on what the states can sustainably pay.

Chairman of the Governor’s forum, governor Abdukrazaq of Kwara State, noted that as members of the 37-member tripartite committee for the national minimum wage which is yet to conclude its work, “the governors are reviewing their fiscal space to see the consequential impact of the various recommendations.”

“While we acknowledge various initiatives adopted of recent by way of wage awards and partial wage adjustments, it is imperative to state that the 37-member tripartite committee inaugurated on the national minimum wage, is still in consultation and yet to conclude its work.

“As members of the committee, we are reviewing our individual fiscal space as state governments and the consequential impact of various recommendations, to arrive at an improved minimum wage we can pay sustainably,” the statement read in part.

However, the governors said they remain committed to the process and promised that better wages will be the invariable outcome of ongoing negotiations.

“We remain committed to the process and promise that better wages will be the invariable outcome of ongoing negotiations”.

Meanwhile, organised labour has submitted a proposal of N615,000 monthly minimum wage for workers, urging the federal government to approve same.

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BIG STORY

Fuel Crisis: We Don’t Know About NNPCL’s Logistics Challenges — Oil Marketers

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Oil marketers have stated that they are unaware of the specific logistical issues that the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) indicated were to blame for the country’s present low product supply.

Last Wednesday saw the return of a fresh petrol shortage, which has since gotten worse, leaving Nigerians to deal with the fallout.

Due to the scarcity, prices have since increased in Lagos to ₦1,200 per litre on the black market and as much as ₦800 per litre in some filling stations owned by the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN).

Prior to the shortage, fuel was sold at stations run by the Major Energy Marketers Association of Nigeria (MEMAN) for around 610 per litre.

Some filling stations sell petrol for as high as N850 to ₦900 per litre in locations such as Maryland, Ikeja, Agege, Iyana Ipaja, and other outskirts of Lagos. In some states, the product sells for more than ₦1,000 per litre at filling stations. Even at that rate, most filling stations have since shut their doors due to a lack of products.

The NNPCL blamed the development on logistics challenges. The spokesperson for the company Olufemi Soneye said last week that the challenges have been resolved.

But almost a week later, oil marketers have said they are in the dark about the nature of those challenges. They also dismissed claims that they were hoarding the products.

“Do you blame oil marketers for the current situation? If NNPCL gives us products, we will sell them because we are businessmen. We are in this business to make money, so we won’t keep products in our tanks if we have,” the Chairman of IPMAN Satellite Depot, Lagos, Akin Akinrinade told Channels Television.

“They said they have a logistics problem and have 240 million litres in store to distribute. But that was what they told us since last weekend. They said the logistics challenges have been resolved but they didn’t tell us the type of logistics problem they have.

“For now, NNPCL stations are mostly the ones selling with just a few others getting supply. But you know our members have the largest number of stations nationwide. If they give IPMAN stations products, you will see that the queues will disappear immediately.”

Currently, IPMAN has over 30, 000 filling stations nationwide.

According to Channels Television, a top source among the oil marketers said  that there is not much product in circulation.

“We don’t have much products as we speak. According to them, they don’t have smaller vessels to take the fuel from the larger vessels. Others are saying it’s because of bridging claims. As I speak, I don’t have fuel in my depot. I am going around begging for fuel,” he said.

“If you tell NNPCL you need say like 80, 000 tons of product now, they will give you 10, 000 tons. So, you will sell small, and then everything goes dry again.

“If they claim they have fuel, and no products in our tanks, then, it still translates to a no-fuel situation. Again, NNPCL is selling to us at around N600 per litre, and as of today, the landing cost of gasoline at the international market is ₦847 per litre.

“So, if I buy at ₦847/litre and add other costs, the pump price will be about ₦1400 per litre. So, if I sell at that price in my station, who will buy it? Even we marketers can’t buy much at that price. So, we continue to manage the situation.

“And if we make noise too much, they will tell us to go and import too. How will we import with the high exchange rate? If we import on our own, who will buy from us at that high price?

“Those currently selling at low prices know how they go about it because, during scarcity, everybody will be doing whatever they like.”

Chinedu Ukadike, the Public Relations Officer of IPMAN, had on Sunday, said that the prevailing scarcity of petrol could persist for an additional two weeks.

Ukadike told journalists that the product was not available in the country, because most refineries in Europe were undergoing turnaround maintenance.

“I also have it on good authority that most of the refineries in Europe are undergoing turnaround maintenance, so sourcing petroleum products has become a bit difficult.

“NNPC Group CEO has assured us that there will be improvement in the supply chain because their vessels are arriving.

“Once that is done, normalcy will return. This is because once the 30-day supply sufficiency is disrupted, it takes two to three months to restore it”, he said.

Unconfirmed speculations doing the rounds have also woven the current scarcity around an imminent increase in the price of PMS, which according to them, led to excessive hoarding, and panic buying, among other things.

While the public was still hoping for an improvement as promised by the NNPCL, IPMAN had threatened to withdraw services over non-payment of ₦200bn bridging claims.

The association’s unit chairman and spokesperson, Aba Depot, Mazi Oliver Okolo who made the threat, said it was with the backing of the IPMAN’s national leadership.

He claimed that the debt is being owed by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NMDPRA).

In a communique released after a press conference on Tuesday, Okolo said NMDPRA failed to pay the ₦200bn debt despite a directive for payment from the Petroleum Minister (Oil) Heineken Lokpobiri.

The IPMAN deport chairman claimed that since the directive by the minister in February 2024, only ₦13bn had been paid to their members, saying that the unpaid claim had crippled their businesses.

“We are extremely distressed and depressed by the laidback attitude of the leadership of the Nigerian Midstream Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), towards the survival of our member’s businesses, arising from NMDPRA’s deliberate delay and refusal to offset the debt of over ₦200 Billion owed our members, which has consequently led to the deaths of many of our members and the unfortunate collapse of their businesses.”

He blamed the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), the sole importer of petroleum products, for the current nationwide petrol scarcity, adding that some of its members have “completely” shut down their businesses, and retrenched their employees.

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BIG STORY

Governors Can Pay N615,000 Minimum Wage If They Get Priorities Right — NLC

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The President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero, says state governors can afford to pay the proposed N615,000 minimum wage if their priorities are right.

Ajaero made this known on Thursday during an interview with Channels Television.

Organised labour recently declared that N615,000 should be the new minimum wage.

The idea was made in the midst of continuous discussions about the minimum wage between organised labour and the federal, state, and local governments.

The national minimum wage was set at N30,000 by the former president Muhammadu Buhari’s administration in 2019. Some states took an extremely long time to enact the increase in the minimum wage when it was announced at the time.

When asked during the interview if the N615,000 offered by organised labour is reasonable, Ajaero responded that, considering the nation’s rapidly rising inflation, it is the “most realistic” sum.

The NLC president said organised labour considered factors like transportation, housing, and feeding before arriving at the sum.

“If you are talking about being realistic, the N615,000 demand is the most realistic. Being realistic is not about slave wage,” Ajaero said.

“However, N30,000 is big money if inflation is brought down, and at a single digit.

“Look at the indices that create inflation. If you check them, you can talk about being realistic. All other factors in the country are going high and wages remain constant.”

Asked if states can afford the N615,000 proposal, the NLC president averred that it is not about ability to pay but the priorities of states.

“I think we need to understand the issues of ability to pay and not getting the priority right,” he added.

“Most of the states that have shown willingness to pay the current minimum wage are not among those getting the highest revenue.

“During the time of Muhammadu Buhari, some states were declared not having enough money to pay and he released funds for them to pay.

“Those states still refused to pay. It is not the question of either the quantum of money that they have or not, it is what they decide to do with such money.

“If they get their priorities right, then a lot can happen.”

Organised labour has also threatened to embark on a strike if a new minimum wage is not announced before May 31, 2024.

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