The Boko Haram terrorist group has a number of bases in neighboring country, Cameroon.

On New Year’s Eve, the Nigerian government temporarily shut down its land boundaries withCameroon, Chad and Niger as a means of impeding crossborder activities by militants of the radical Islamic terrorist group, the Boko Haram.

And while the impacts of that decision are only beginning to be felt in Cameroon’s predominantly Muslim northern regions, with reports of rising fuel prices and stranded traders, authorities there are almost certain they have blown the cover on a Boko Haram refuge.

Reports indicate that members of the extremist group are increasingly present in Lagdo, a cosmopolitan settlement in the North Region, following calls for vigilance by local administrative authorities in the regional headquarters Garoua.

“They are easily identifiable with their bizarre dressing.  They wear long beards and red or black headscarves,” Peter Kum, a reporter with the French language daily, La Nouvelle Expression reported Tuesday, January 3.  According to him, since several months Lagdo locals have testified that the strangers are combing surrounding villages and actively preaching anti-Western sermons, establishing units and proposing huge amounts of money to those willing to follow them.

Presiding at a December 15 security coordination conclave devoted to maintaining peace and order before, during and after the 2011 end-of-year festive period, the Governor of the North Region, El HadjGambo Haman did not mince words.  He instructed security forces to be on the alert, noting the increasing influx and presence of Boko Haram militants in parts of the region.

“The Boko Haram being chased from Nigeria’s northeast, as well as thousands of runaway Chadian soldiers in irregular situation here must be closely monitored to avoid unwanted trouble throughout the national territory,” he warned.  Separate sources suspect that the presence of the extremist Boko Haram militants has soared steadily following increasing clampdowns on them by the Nigerian government especially following the Christmas Day blasts that left close to fifty dead.

Security sources and administrative officials in the North Region, speaking on condition of anonymity, say for the time being, there is no need to panic.  They are claiming that intensified intelligence monitoring implies the activities of the terrorists are under control.  “We cannot begin to arrest suspects because the law does not allow for that.  At the moment, they are not breaking the law,” one said.

Following the fatal Christmas Day attacks in Nigeria claimed by the group, authorities in Cameroon’s Far North Region, which also shares porous borders with Nigeria, have also reinforced surveillance.  Several Quran learning centers have been reportedly shut down, while Islam teachers are being closely watched by intelligence operatives.  Many of them are grumbling following several interrogations they have been put through.

Source: The Cameroon Post

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A total of five peaceful protesters were killed today across the country. 3 protesters were killed in Lagos, while 2 were killed in Kano.

The extra-judicial killings were unwarranted because the protesters were peaceful and unarmed. Three peaceful protesters at the Pen Cinema area of Agege, Lagos, allegedly by one CSP Segun Fabunmi and Victor Okafor, the DPO of Pen Cinema police station driving a vehicle with registration number RS 101 LA. The police shot and killed  after brutally torturing him on the street.

Pictures of the brutality meted out on Ademola Aderinlo have been widely circulated, the other two protesters killed in Lagos were shot when the policemen tried to disperse protesters.

In Kano, the police also killed two other peaceful protesters today at the protest rallies there.   Many injuries have also been reported.

Helicopters gunships were seen hovering over the Gani Fawehinmi Park, Ojota, where over 150,000 gathered at the venue of the Save Nigeria Rally. All the protest rallies organised by the NLC and TUC terminated at the Gani Fawehinmi Park.

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THE wind of change blowing across the public sector has swept away the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN). In its stead, 18 successor firms have emerged.

The Federal Government, which has stepped up the implementation of the Electric Power Sector Reform (EPSR) Act of 2005, says PHCN workers will be absorbed by the 18 firms, which were created by the law. The other personnel will be transferred to agencies under the Ministry of Power.

Minister of Power, Prof. Barth Nnaji, who confirmed the “liquidation” of PHCN, told reporters at the weekend in Abuja that PHCN corporate office in Maitama, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) would now house the Ministry of Power and its agencies, whose offices are located in different parts of Abuja.

Also, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has also withdrawn the funds it hitherto allocates for the maintenance of the PHCN head office.

The Act provides a legislative framework for the reform of the power sector in accordance with the policies set out in the National Electric Power Policy. It removes operational and regulatory responsibilities of the industry from the government. It provides the legal backing for the unbundling of PHCN, formation of successor companies to take over the functions, assets, liabilities and personnel of the parastatal.

Nnaji said: “PHCN is no longer legally in existence and as a result, the regulatory agency simply in its responsibility had instructed the market operator that the PHCN headquarters is not a market participant and it should no longer get funds in effect from this month and that is just in carrying out the law; implementing what is stated in the law.

“Now, the PHCN workers in order to get paid, they need to be transferred to where they can be useful. You talked about redundancy, what’s the point of people just sitting in their offices doing nothing? Who is benefitting? Nigerians are paying their salaries and they need to be working to continue to advance the power sector.”

The minister stressed that what the government aims to do is to ensure that electricity workers justified their pay.

“They won’t get salaries if they sit in the headquarters; there is no money to pay them. It is almost like what we are talking about in the fuel subsidy case; if there is no money for subsidy in the budget, where will the money come from? We have a similar situation where there is no money to pay people in headquarters and so it requires that we get them to where they have specialisation amongst the 18 successor companies so that they can be paid.”

Nnaji said sometimes labour unions forget the rules of engagement, among which is the existence of relationship between management and workers, adding that “you cannot tell people who employ you not to come into the building. There is no place where that happens and so I think when you begin to distort ownership versus worker relationship, then we have the kind of situation we had a couple of days ago and it’s not good.”

He wondered why workers would be shutting government’s officials from electricity facilities and offices, stressing that NERC and the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) should be able to go to any of the power installations without hindrance from anybody.

Nnaji said the sector is not created for persons but for Nigerians to get stable electricity. The minister declared that for proper reforms in the sector, Nigerians should not be personal about it. “What is important is that the workers are going to be transferred to either distribution, generating or electricity services management companies or to even NELMCO and the bulk trader properly with their salaries and they will continue to work in the sector, nobody will be discharged.”

According to him, “the PHCN building will revert to the power sector and house the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), NERC, Ministry of Power, the Bulk Trader and NELMCO. It is very important to consolidate the ministry because right now, you have people scattered all over the place.”

Source: Guardian Newspapers

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Three Nigerian literary icons: Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe and J.P. Clark in a joint letter called for an end to the spread of violence across the country, warning that Nigeria cannot afford another civil war at this time in history.

A statement jointly signed by the trio and entitled “LET NOT THIS FIRE SPREAD!!! An Appeal to the Nigerian Nation Community”, reads in full:

“The fears we have all secretly nursed are coming to realisation. The nightmare we have hugged to our individual breasts, voicing them only in family privacy, or within trusted caucuses of friends and colleagues – lest they become instances of materialising evil thoughts – has finally burst through into our social, physical environment. Rumblings and veiled threats have given way to eruption, and the first cracks in the wall of patience and forbearance can no longer be wished away. BOKO HARAM is very likely celebrating its first tactical victory: provoking retaliation in some parts of the nation.

We insist however that this need not be, and should not be so. And as long as any part, however minuscule, opts for the more difficult path of envisioned forbearance, we are convinced that its responses will find neighbour emulation between homesteads, between towns and villages, between communities on all levels and indeed – states. This hard, demanding, but profoundly moral and heroic option will be recognised and embraced as the only option for the survival, and integrity of the whole. All who claim to be leaders must lead – but in the right direction!

We urge a proactive resolve in all such claimants to leadership. It is not sufficient to make pious pronouncements. All who possess any iota of influence or authority, who aspire to moral leadership must act now to douse the first flickers of ‘responses in kind’ even before they are manifested, and become contagious. We urge that, beginning from now, leaders become true leaders in all communities, utilise the platforms of their associations, professions, clubs, places of instruction and places of worship, NGOs and other civic orgnisations, that they relentlessly spread the manifesto of Community – capital letters! – as an all-embracing human bond, and refuse to be sucked into the cauldron of mutual attrition that is the purpose of the religious warmongers among us.

What is proposed here is not any doctrine of submission, of ‘turning the other cheek’, or supine supplication to divine intervention etc. etc. Very much the contrary! Self-defence is a fundamental human right and responsibility. However, we caution that we must place the total humanity of our nation above the methods and intent of a mindless, though programmed minority that are resolved to set religion against religion, community against community, destroy the internal cohesion of homes, render meaningless the very concept and imperatives of guest, strangers, the extended human family, and the universalist obligations of hosts as practiced under the finest traditions of human encounters. Our duty is to denounce the killers among us, to deny them, right from source, the sump of blood that is their nourishment, the chaos that is their ambition, and the hatred that has poisoned their collective psyche. Our mission is to prove ourselves superior to them in understanding, to leap ahead of their perverse scheming and preserve our own humanity even as they jettison theirs – if ever they even were aware of its existence.

Calls have been made in the past – sometimes in response to a crisis within the nation, other times as an objective necessity even in the most tranquil of times – for the convening of a National conference to debate just how the nation should proceed in reinforcing civic and political life, and decide, in full freedom, the terms of her integrated existence. The government is urged to stop shying away from this project, pretending that those who happen to have been elected into the nation’s legislatures are best qualified to undertake the exercise, largely through piecemeal tinkering. This surely begs the question, since the very system and terms under which these – often dubiously – elected, serve, including the intolerable strain these institutions place upon the nation’s resources – are all at issue. That last indeed, the very inordinate exaction of running a presidential system, forms part of the impatience of the public, as new avenues for economic hardship are opened in a people’s struggle for survival, such as the recent crisis of the removal of petroleum subsidy. We call upon the government to re-think this measure. We warn the Security forces to recall that their primary duty is to protect all citizens, and most especially those in opposition to government policies, in the exercise of their democratic rights. We cannot turn a blind eye to the killing of our fellow citizens even before the earliest manifestation of popular discontent gets under way. The first single Security notch on the gun is always the signal for a countdown towards two, then three, moving to four figure statistics in the struggle for human dignity. Syria is our current cautionary instance. We know how Libya ended.

The Security arms of government should recognise where their urgent and immediate capabilities and competence are needed, where the greatest threat to nationhood since the Nigerian Civil War has been gloatingly launched, and with a daily toll of casualties of the innocent. We call upon the Nigerian government to intensify its obligations to protect the citizenry it claims to govern. The basic professional strategy of preventive policing, which appears no longer in fashion, must be re-activated. Security may appear less glamorous than the moral imposition that is articulated in appeals such as this, but it is nonetheless a crucial partner in the very existence of civil existence and the preservation of civic dignity. Necessary measures to curb the activities of a homicidal few, no matter under what name, faceless or disguised, whose minds have been warped beyond recovery, must be taken, and without flinching. Public evidence of the effectiveness of such measures makes our call for restraint meaningful. It reduces the stress placed daily on a people’s aspirations to a visionary fortitude, and reinforces the resolve for an engagement under forbearance in the ultimate pursuit of social justice as the foundation of peaceful co-existence.

This Appeal comes from Three Survivors of the Pioneering Writer/Teacher Generation of a half-century, post-Independence Nigeria, in her continuous struggle for a viable Nation-Being:

Chinua Achebe
J.P. Bekederemo-Clark
Wole Soyinka

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ABA—THE National Youth Wing of the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, has warned the militant Islamic sect, Boko Haram, that it would retaliate any further attack on churches and Christians in any part of the  country.

The group declared this threat yesterday in a communiqué  issued at the United Evangelical Church, Ogbor Hill, Aba, Abia State, after a two day meeting on “Peace, Dialogue and Reconciliation”  attended by over 68 youth leaders from the 36 states of the federation,  including the Federal  Capital Territory Abuja.

National President of the Youth Wing of CAN, PATRIOT A.S, DOLLY (JP), who read the communiqué at the end of the meeting, warned that Christian youths in the country were now ready for war and would match violence with violence in reaction to the incessant threat to lives and properties of Christians, especially in Northern Nigeria and the recent Christmas day bombings in Madalla, Jos and Maidugiri.

The Youth CAN observed “that the Christmas day bombings was uncalled for, totally unacceptable and a direct attack on Christianity. That the year 2011 bombing was the climax of attacks on the church and that the tolerance of the Christian community is the major contributor to the continued existence of Nigeria”

They maintained that the current terrorism  act falls short of any expectations and was baseless without motive by the faceless group called Boko Haram which has rained terror on defenseless women and children mostly Christians.

The Youth CAN called on ‘the Federal Government to rise up to expectations. The Security chiefs should be given an ultimatum to decisively deal with the perpetrators and sponsors of the Boko Haram or be shown the way out”

They said “the Christian youths from the Northern and Southern parts of the country have after a thorough deliberations on the ills of the past agreed to forgive one another and work together in the best interest of Christianity”.

They called on the National Assembly “to review the current anti-terrorism act to place death sentence on perpetrators and sponsors no matter their status”.

The Youth CAN called on the Federal Government to ensure that proactive measure be taken to avoid similar attacks on churches and Christians, failure of which may  leave us with no option than to rise up to defend ourselves.

The Christian Youths sympathized with the families who lost their loved ones in the unfortunate Christmas day bombing and those who sustained various degrees of injuries.

Among Christian youth leaders that attended the conference included Evang. Musa D. Misal North East Zonal Chairman, Emmanuel Martins, South-South, Emmanuel James G, North West, Apostle Zion Obiefuna, South East, Evang. Sam Eke, North Central, Adeyemi  Timothy O. South West, Vincent  Ogbonnah  among others.

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By Kenneth Ehigiator
The Federal Government, yesterday, assured that there would be no reprisal killings in the Niger Delta region, in response to the violent activities of the dreaded Islamic sect, Boko Haram.

Government’s assurance came against the backdrop of the two weeks ultimatum given by Egbesu warriors, after the bombing of a mosque in Sapele, Delta State, to Muslims in the region, to leave or face reprisal killings.

Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Matters, Mr. Kingsley Kuku, in an interview in Lagos, said the reported attack on the mosque in Sapele was an isolated case, which should not be seen as retaliatory attack.

According to him, the provocative antics of the Boko Haram sect will not instigate any form of attacks on Northern or Islamic targets.

He said:  “The President has said it all, what Boko Haram is doing is pure terrorism. What the sect is doing has nothing to do with Islam neither can any one say the sect is propagating a Northern agenda. It is terrorism, pure and simple.

“The wicked activities of Boko Haram are affecting both Christians and Muslims. The bombs they have been throwing have been killing northerners and southerners.  Beyond the declaration of state of emergency in certain parts of states in the north, where Boko Haram cells are very active, I am aware of other unprecedented security measures that had been put in place by President Goodluck Jonathan.

“Based on what I know as a Presidential Adviser, I can confidently tell Nigerians that the days of Boko Haram are numbered.”

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*Oil workers reject hike, vow to fight
*It ‘ll discourage saving, bankers warn

BY VICTOR AHIUMA-YOUNG

LAGOS – LEADERS of Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, and their Trade Union Congress of Nigeria, TUC, counterpart, will tomorrow meet to fix a date for the commencement of a general strike, mass protest and rally to force government to rescind the subsidy removal that has skyrocketed the pump price of petrol to N150 per litre.

This came as oil workers rejected the total removal of subsidy on petrol and vowed to join forces with other unions and the two central labour organisations to fight the policy, describing government action as the height of insensitivity and wickedness, especially when the minimum requirements for subsidy removal had not been met.

Similarly, bankers yesterday warned that the new policy would, among other economic implications, discourage saving and mass withdrawal of deposits to finance additional cost of social services and other needs.

Vanguard gathered that leaders of NLC and TUC are meeting in Labour House, Abuja to fix a date and methods for the general strike, mass actions and streets protest.

It was further gathered that the last National Executive Council, NEC, of NLC directed affiliate unions and state councils to put members on stand-by for any eventuality.

…PENGASSAN kicks

Also, Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria, PENGASSAN, has rejected the subsidy removal and described the action as totally unacceptable and a crass display of bad faith, especially the unilateral increase in the pump price of petrol by the government in the guise of “subsidy removal.

“We, therefore, urge all Nigerians to gird their loins and begin immediate mobilisation for the struggle ahead aimed at ensuring that this exploitative policy designed to further impoverish Nigerian workers and masses does not stand.”

It ‘ll  discourage saving, bankers warn

In the same vein, organised labour in the financial sector, under the aegis of the of Association of Senior Staff of Banks, Insurance and Financial Institutions, ASSBIFI, while rejecting the the policy, warned that it would worsen the banking sector of the economy.

President of ASSBIFI, Mr Sunday Salako, lamented that the policy would have untold negative consequences on all sectors of the economy, saying it is unnecessary, uncalled for, anti-people and should be resisted by all.

According to him, “among others, it would discourage saving because it is only when you have enough before you can think of saving. At the same time, even deposits will be affected badly because depositors will resort to mass withdrawal to meet the additional cost imposed by the hike and it’s consequences.

JAF protests today

Meanwhile, the Joint Action Forum, JAF, umbrella body for pro-labour civil society groups in the country, has called on Nigerians to troop out today to make a statement to President Goodluck Jonathan and other promoters of the wicked subsidy removal that enough is enough.

Secretary of JAF, Comrade Abiodun Aremu, told Vanguard that the group had put everything in place for the protest expected to kick off at the NLC Lagos office, Yaba.

He vowed that any filling station found selling product above N65 per litre would be shut down and advised security operatives to be on the side of the Nigerian people and ensure seamless protest.

Source: Vanguard

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The violent terrorist group, Boko Haram, has issued a three day ultimatum to all Christians and Southerners who live and do business in NorthernNigeria to vacate.
The Boko Haram group has threatened to confront the military in areas where the federal government has declared a state of emergency.
According to a spokesman for the Boko Haramgroup, Abul Qaqa:
“We find it pertinent to state that soldiers will only kill innocent Muslims in the local government areas where the state of emergency was declared. We would confront them squarely to protect our brothers.”

Speaking in Hausa language, Qaqa said “we also wish to call on our fellow Muslims to come back to the north because we have evidence that they would be attacked. We are also giving a three-day ultimatum to the southerners living in the northern part of Nigeria to move away.”

Qaqa also criticised President Goodluck Jonathan over his visit to the Catholic Church where the bloodiest Christmas day attack took place. “The President had never visited any of the theatres were Muslims were massacred,” he said, naming areas where scores of Muslims were killed in post-election riots in April.

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