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Home Blog Page 5196

The Lessons from the Sacked Chicken Republic Security Men

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Earlier this year, there was a video that trended on the internet where two security guards of chicken republic were seen dancing while on duty. This act put up by these guys earned them the admiration of many Nigerians who stated that they should be happy regardless of whatever situation they find themselves in.

Although very few Nigerians condemned their actions, stating that such an act was a case of negligence of duty and gross misconduct in the workplace. Also displeased with their actions, the management of Chicken Republic did not hesitate to sack the two security guards, citing improper behavior at work.

This however infuriated a lot of Nigerians who stated that chicken republic was so insensitive, with some of them stating that the company could have done better by utilizing such a moment to promote and market the company’s brand. After their sack, these guys were presented with tons of job offers from some Nigerians.

They were later reached out to by a clergyman in Nigeria, by the name Apostle Chibuzor who is the general overseer of Omega Power Ministries (OPM). He promised to give the security operatives scholarships to study abroad, following the sack from their workplace.

Just recently, pictures of the security guards surfaced online where they were seen in a foreign country. According to information obtained, it was disclosed that the clergymen offered the security guards scholarships to study in Cyprus. These pictures however spurred me to write this article. On seeing how transformed they looked, I was ecstatic that their lives have been made better compared to their former.

Although there is one thing I have to say in all of this, which is how most Nigerians now reward indiscipline in the society. I will state my personal opinion on this matter not minding whose ox is gored. First of all, I was bewildered by how so many Nigerians condemned Chicken republic for sacking the security guards.

Of course, Chicken republic might have properly gone too far by sacking them, they could have cautioned them as well, but who knows if they had earlier been warned. If we are to analyze this issue without being biased, we will realize that Chicken Republic’s action was also justifiable.

A lot of Nigerians went ahead to make rash comments calling out the company, rather than calling a spade a spade. The ideal thing any reasonable person would do was to analyze the issue properly, then afterward condemn the actions of the security guards. Rather most people were celebrating these guards who they should have reprimanded for improper behavior at work and negligence of duty. Indeed, “misery loves company”.

I am not saying that these security guards should be crucified or not given another opportunity/offer for their misconduct, all I am saying is that the ideal thing any reasonable Nigerian ought to do was to, first of all, agree that the actions put up by the security guards was unprofessional, but they never did.

They got overwhelmed with their emotions following the news of their sack, forgetting that the security guards erred in the first place. Also, I commend the clergyman for giving these young men a better future, but he ought to have openly condemned their actions which wouldn’t in any way deter him from still offering them scholarships. Such reprimand will serve as a deterrent to anyone who wants to replicate such an act. He could have also possibly stated that he was offering assistance to these guards out of his benevolence and not necessarily as a reward for misconduct.

It is very important that we must be honest with ourselves and do the right thing to reprimand and condemn bad behavior in society. We must note that whatever is tolerated in society is automatically accepted and allowed. One funny thing that happens in Nigeria, is that once there is an occurrence of something, other people want to follow suit.

Some workers who are not well-grounded would also want to replicate such acts by the security guards, forgetting that a workplace has etiquette, and going contrary to it is termed improper behavior at work. It is high time the society and leaders in different positions in the country become careful about what we celebrate and reward so that there won’t be a breed of lawless people in the society and place of work.

https://youtu.be/9rVfQhn_0RA

On Police Report Over Death Of Three At Checkpoint In Ondo State

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Nigeria police continues to struggle to maintain peace

Penultimate week, precisely on the night of Saturday, 23rd April 2022, three indigenes of Kajola in Odogbo Local Government Area (LGA) of Ondo State reportedly feared dead at a Police Checkpoint, shortly after they were fatally knocked down by a ‘hit-and-run’ driver.

According to reports, the deceased persons, who included the village head of the said area, were prior to the accident riding on a motorcycle, on the Lagos-Ore Expressway in Ondo State.

It’s noteworthy that the residents of the area had accused the police of being responsible for the untimely death of the three, owing to their illicit activities on the road, on a daily basis.

Reacting to the accusation, the Ondo State Police Command, on Sunday, 24th April 2022, stated that its officers were not responsible for the death of the three accident victims.

The command’s Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Funmilayo Odunlami, while refuting the allegation, claimed that the victims’ death was not due to police recklessness but flouting of traffic rules.

She disclosed that the deceased used a motorcycle without a headlamp, adding they were riding on a one-way route, thus leading to a head-on collision with a speeding vehicle.

“The death of the victims was not caused by the police, as is being circulated. They died as a result of flouting traffic rules. The deceased were riding a motorcycle with no headlamp on a one-way route and had a head-on collision with a speeding vehicle. They have died now and are not able to tell the story.

“Youths should find a way of registering their grievances. Lynching police officers or burning down police station at every slightest opportunity is barbaric.

“Police are there to protect them, while there are several emergency numbers through which they can report issues to the police headquarters. They should not take laws into their hands.” The Police spokesperson said.

The youth in the area had accused the police of extortion at a checkpoint in the area, which they described as illegal. A witness, Funmi Olowogboye told newsmen that the accident occurred when the police officers were trying to extort the victims while a speeding vehicle trying to escape arrest crushed them to death.

The youths had, in their large numbers, swooped on Kajola Police Station with the corpses of the deceased, and attempted to burn it down.

It took the combined efforts of police operatives and other security agents to prevent the youth from lynching the personnel and razing the police station as well as restoring normalcy in the area.

It could be that the Commissioner of Police in the State, Oyeyemi Oyediran had, upon assumption of duty, ordered the immediate dismantling of all illegal roadblocks and checkpoints on the Ore-Benin Expressway.

Whatever that might have caused the accident, the truth remains that the various checkpoints of the point, in the guise of protecting the lives property of the citizens, end up constituting more nuisance than good.

On several occasions, the Inspector General of Police (IGP) had ordered dismantling of every illicit checkpoint along Nigeria’s major roads, yet till date, the ugly situation remains the same.

It’s no longer news that any IGP that comes on board wouldn’t hesitate to issue a directive as regards illegal checkpoints on the expressways across the federation, but it seems the order keeps falling on deaf ears.

This is the reason many concerned Nigerians have been compelled to believe that the various police authorities or bosses in the country have their own share of the tolls being collected at the checkpoints situated at their respective jurisdictions.

The punishment for murder is death penalty; trigger happy policemen should take note

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A birthday celebration in Lagos last Sunday turned sour when trigger-happy police security who was hired to guard the venue decided to shoot some shots into the air for the entertainment of the guests.

According to the eyewitness report; the policeman was not able to properly position the gun but rather shot into the crowd killing three persons on the spot and leaving numerous others who scampered for their lives severely wounded. 

Some things cannot just be justified. How can you justify a policeman shooting into the air as he claimed or opening fire with an Ak47 rifle fully loaded in a crowded public place in the name of cheering on the crowd? 

This is a common occurrence in Nigeria, policemen shoot into the air at parties and guests will cheer them on but this police guy and the guests at the party on Sunday became quite unfortunate. 

In an act like this, the offender (the shooter) will be charged with murder, it does not matter that it was an accidental discharge or he had no intention (the mensrea) of shooting directly at the victims or that he only wants to release some shots into the air. This is usually an offense of strict liability. 

A trained policeman armed with rifles is presumed to know that the aftermath of a shooting in a crowded public place is getting some people shot. There’s no reasonable justification whatsoever for those shots unless the police agency now permits its officers to shoot into the air for celebratory purposes. 

For clarifications purposes of what the term murder or unlawful homicide really means under the Nigeria law; i will replicate its definition as provided in the criminal code act. 

Section 315 of the act hereby provides (Unlawful homicide); 

Any person who unlawfully kills another is guilty of an offense which is called murder or manslaughter, according to the circumstances of the case.

Section 316 went on to state the circumstances where murder or unlawful homicide will be said to have taken place, thus:

316: Except as hereinafter set forth, a person who unlawfully kills another under any of the following circumstances, that is to say?

(1) if the offender intends to cause the death of the person killed, or that of some other person;

(2) if the offender intends to do to the person killed or to some other person some grievous harm;

(3) if death is caused by means of an act done in the prosecution of an unlawful purpose, which act is of such a nature as to be likely to endanger human life;

(4) if the offender intends to do grievous harm to some person for the purpose of facilitating the commission of an offence which is such that the offender may be arrested without warrant, or for the purpose of facilitating the flight of an offender who has committed or attempted to commit any such offence;

(5) if death is caused by administering any stupefying or overpowering things for either of the purposes last aforesaid;

(6) if death is caused by wilfully stopping the breath of any person for either of such purposes, is guilty of murder.

The act of the policeman shooting some shots into the air falls into the category provided in S. 316 (3): “…. which act is of such a nature as to be likely to endanger human life”. 

Therefore, When a person who ought to know and was negligent in his actions which led to the death of another person, the offender will be held to have committed murder and it does not matter that the killer has no intention (mensrea) to cause the death of the victim. 

Murder as an offense is the only crime currently that carries capital punishment in Nigeria. Therefore the punishment for murder as provided in the criminal code act is the death sentence;

S 319(1) provides; Subject to the provisions of this section of this Code, any person who commits the offense of murder shall be sentenced to death.

Section 33(1) of the constitution also acknowledges the death penalty for an offender. It provides thus: Every person has a right to life, and no one shall be deprived intentionally of his life, save in execution of the sentence of a court in respect of a criminal offense of which he has been found guilty in Nigeria.

Trigger happy policemen and other security agents should know that in every action there are consequences, when you cause the unjustified death of another you will pay for it with your own life, it does not matter that the act was done in your line of duty. 

 

As APC Defends Its N100m Presidential Ticket Price, Nigerians See Loopholes

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Nigeria’s ruling party, the All Progressive Congress (APC), recently announced that it has tagged the price of presidential ticket for the 2023 elections $100 million, the most expensive in Nigeria’s history and the highest among the political parties.

The decision, which has generated a lot of criticism from members of the public, has put the Party in a spotlight. The criticism has been largely based on the concern that the office of the president is being commercialized.

However, the APC has defended the decision. The party has said that the price isn’t much for anyone vying for the office of the president. The APC national publicity secretary, Felix Morka, said on Monday during an interview with SIlverbird Television, that anyone who does not have the “sufficient base” to raise N100 million has no business being in the race for Nigeria’s presidency.

“I hate to use the US as an example. The ability to raise funds is a clear criterion whether or not you are eligible to participate at the primaries and the debate especially.

“You aspire to run for the highest office in the land, you should have some appeal, some reach to members of the party. Sell your ideas, sell your vision.

“Forty-five million people giving you N1, do the math and see what it comes to. That is a lot of money. We do have that possibility,” he said.

He added that although, within the Nigerian context, N100 million is a lot of money, the party has commitments and “we do not have any statutory funding as you know.”

“Within the context of Nigeria, N100 million is a lot of money. Those who seek the office around the country are expected to have a sufficient base, otherwise why would you aspire to be president, if you are that obscure or unsupportable by your party members and the electorate?” he said.

Where Nigerians’ issues lie.

Nigeria has been bedeviled by poor leadership exacerbated by corruption since its independence in 1960. A parcel of that ordeal is the high cost of governance amid scarce resources. Against this backdrop, the idea of selling a presidential ticket N100 million is not only seen as cynical, it’s also seen as fuel for corruption.

Nigeria’s president annual salary is N14 million, according to the information on the website of the Revenue Mobilization Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC), an office statutorily empowered by Section 32 (d) of Part 1 of the Third Schedule of the Constitution to determine the remuneration appropriate for political office holders. This means that for the four-year term a presidential candidate will lead the country if he eventually wins, he could only earn N56 million, just a little above half of what he spent to purchase his form alone.

It is thus believed that a presidential aspirant who has no intention of embezzling public fund, will not spend N100 million purchasing the form.

The APC, in its defense of the price, had said that the money could be crowd-funded, taking the burden off the contestant’s shoulders – thus eliminating the tendency of corruption. But critics said that the Nigerian political ecosystem does not have the crowd-funding culture for elections, and in addition, the presidential ticket is just the first money move before the campaigns that will eventually gulp billions of naira.

The campaign, which is seen as spreading as much money as you can to buy votes, is usually funded by a circle of supporters who are expected to be replenished from the government’s coffers if their candidate wins. This political culture has fueled the criticism trailing the ruling party’s decision to hike their ticket fees for aspirants.

The call to reduce the cost of governance in Nigeria, which is said to be among the most exorbitant in the world, weighing the country’s economy down, has been on for long. Nigerians believe that the message the APC is sending by its decision is that the government is not ready to reduce the cost of governance or fight corruption.

ASUU Faults Federal Government Negotiation, Says Strike May Continue

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It is not a new occurrence for a typical Nigerian to notice that the Academic Staff Union of Nigeria, ASUU, and the federal government of Nigeria are always at loggerheads. They seem to have an unending rift which usually occurs at different points in time.

Recently the academic staff union of Universities, ASUU has condemned the federal government regarding the way it handled their negotiation. They disclosed that the FG has been nonchalant on their demands regarding the strike.

Last week, the minister of Labour and employment, Dr. Chris Ngige, who was featured as a guest on Channels Television’s “Politics Today”, disclosed that he told the union to meet with the Benimi Briggs committee stating that the decision to suspend the industrial strike action embarked upon by ASUU could only be taken by the union. He was asked when the issue will be resolved, and he disclosed that it depends on ASUU.

He stated that the ball is in their court and they should go and meet the Benimi Briggs committee and observe closely what the committee is doing to make further inputs so that the work can be accelerated. Displeased with the remarks made by the Minister, the President of ASUU Prof. Emmanuel Osideke while in an interview disclosed that it was indeed shameful for Chris Ngige to tell the union to go and liaise with another party other than the government.

He further added that the union might have no choice but to roll over the strike after its expiration. It is disheartening that the federal government continues to toil with the future of young Nigerians. Their nonchalant nature reeks of incompetence, which shows that they are not bothered about the strike action embarked upon by ASUU.

The government continues to disclose that it cannot meet up with ASUU’s demand due to a lack of funds, yet at the beginning of the year, it was disclosed that President Muhammadu Buhari donated a whopping $1 million to Afghanistan, yet the educational sector in Nigeria is poorly funded. Such a crass display is nothing but a misplaced priority.

One thing the government fails to understand is that education plays a very big role in nation-building. The fundamental value of education extends beyond individuals, as it is also for the good of the nation. A nation cannot be built without quality education, because if you observe closely developing and developed countries, you will notice that their educational sector is properly funded.

When citizens are properly groomed in schools with adequate resources, they will in turn contribute what they have learned/acquired towards the growth of the nation. Rather than develop the educational sector in Nigeria, the leaders will choose to send their children overseas to get a quality education.

The past and ruling government’s overbearing negligence to fund the educational sector has led to the continued poor standard of education in the country. These incessant strike action has made some passionate Nigerian students who had a great passion for learning to lose interest in their education which has taken an adverse effect on their grades.

I am still perplexed as to why the government has relegated the educational sector to the back, with the sector receiving a very low amount of allocation. Recall that in 2019, for the election, the federal government doled out a whopping 143 billion naira with ease to INEC for an exercise that lasted only a few days. But when it comes to education, they find it hard to find the sector that would enlighten its citizens which will in turn bring about development in the society.