FG blames Fubara for bombing of oil pipeline – Newstrends
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FG blames Fubara for bombing of oil pipeline

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Siminalayi Fubara

FG blames Fubara for bombing of oil pipeline

The Federal Government yesterday placed the blame for the declaration of a state of emergency firmly on the doorsteps of suspended Rivers State Governor Siminalayi Fubara.

Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Lateef Fagbemi accused Fubara of fueling the destruction of oil pipelines by suspected militants.

He said the governor not only failed to stop the assailants, but he indirectly encouraged them.

“There was what I would call telegraphing of the militants by the governor,” Fagbemi said.

“He initially suggested that he would beckon on them to let them know when it was time to act.

“Even if we assume that was just rhetoric, did he come out to disown them when they took action? The answer is no.

“And barely a week after, we saw the vandalisation of oil pipelines,” Fagbemi said.

During his broadcast on Tuesday night, citing security reports, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu said Fubara did not take any action to curtail those involved in the vandalisation of pipelines.

The AGF spoke with reporters at the State House in Abuja 24 hours after President Tinubu declared a state of emergency in Rivers and suspended the governor, his deputy and the House of Assembly for an initial six months.

But Fubara yesterday pleaded his innocence.

President Tinubu appointed retired Vice Admiral Ibok-Étè Ibas, a former Chief of Naval Staff, as the state’s sole administrator to restore stability.

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Ibas was sworn in by the President yesterday. The National Assembly is expected to approve the declaration of emergency today.

The emergency declaration followed Tuesday’s explosion at the critical Trans Niger Pipeline (TNP) around Bodo, Gokana local government area in Ogoni land.

Another explosion also occurred at a pipeline manifold in the Omwawriwa axis of the Ogba-Egbema-Ndoni local government.

The AGF was referring to Fubara’s comments at the inauguration of Government Staff House Quarters on March 3.

The governor had said: “People should know that because no matter how we have been fooled in this state, it has gotten to a point where this state has decided to take their destiny in their hands.

“In as much as I don’t subscribe to violence, when the time comes for us to take a decision, I will lead the cause for that decision.

“Let me say it again, I am not scared of anything. The worst that will happen is for me to leave the office. It is not that I am leaving the earth.

“Is it going to stop me from existing? So, I am not bothered about that. But the right thing must be done and said when the opportunity is given to us.

“Let me thank everyone, especially our youths, be strong, don’t be perturbed. I assure you that at the right time, you will get instructions.”

Fagbemi stressed the importance of oil infrastructure to the economy, warning that anyone involved in its destruction is not just an enemy of Rivers, but of the country.

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He defended the emergency declaration, saying it was necessary to prevent a total collapse of governance in the oil-rich state.

He noted that the President had exhausted all diplomatic efforts before taking the extraordinary step of protecting lives and critical infrastructure.

“I think the President has acted timeously. He has given an opportunity to all the parties involved to make amends. Before then, he assembled them, tried to mediate,” Fagbemi said.

“The Supreme Court, that’s the highest court in the land, made a categorical pronouncement.

“It concluded that he was acting like a despot and that, as the situation is in Rivers State, there is no governance.

“These are very serious and very weighty allegations that only an irresponsible head of state or leader will ignore. The President took a very bold decision.

“People were living in fear, and some were losing their lives. This is an extraordinary situation that required decisive action,” Fagbemi added.

The AGF dismissed claims that President Tinubu’s intervention was hasty, insisting that the escalating crisis left the President with no choice.

On whether the Rivers situation warranted a state of emergency, he said: “Since 2023, I think towards the end of 2023, things have not been going on well to the extent that the governor took the law into his hands and demolished the House of Assembly complex.

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“Since that happened, things have not been the same at all. In a community of 32, you expect that at least 15 or 16 will be there to do the job.

“The governor constituted three or four of the members into the House of Assembly, and gave them preferential treatment, moved them to the Government House to be performing legislative functions.

“This situation got to the court. There were about 10, 15, 16 cases, and at the end of the day, the Supreme Court came out and made very profound findings of breaches of the Constitution, mainly against the governor.

“You see, you rise or fall on the basis of what you took to court and what decision of the court is on it.

“The court came to the decision that the governor had long anticipated, wrongly, that he might be impeached, and because of that, he knew that the House of Assembly was a critical structure, or organ to do that, so he brought down the House of Assembly.

“Fourteen months after that, there was no effort to rebuild the House of Assembly.

“The government stands on the tripod – the executive, the legislature and the judiciary. You have made the functioning of government impossible.

“If there was no government in Rivers, what else are we looking for?

“I’m so sorry for bringing in this, this issue in the Bible. They asked Jesus Christ, are You the Son of God? And he said, Yes. Then others chorused, what further evidence do we need from this man?

“So, the stage was set. But no action was taken immediately in the expectation or hope that good sense would prevail, the governor would create an enabling environment, and that the House of Assembly too would be reasonable enough to ensure that the people of Rivers got a return for their voting of both members of the House of Assembly and the governor and other elected officials to enjoy dividends of democracy.

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“Then the third in the series is about the security situation. If he (the President) had waited maybe a day longer, only God knows what would have followed.

“As a result of that, he came out to say: ‘I am not only the head of state. I’m Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces’. He declared a state of emergency,” he stated.

Fagbemi pointed out that the declaration ultimately prevented Fubara from being completely removed from office.

“So, the other one is about compromise and replacement. It appears so. Don’t forget, there was a notice of impeachment from the House of Assembly.

“If that impeachment had been allowed to take its full course, then the governor would have lost entirely and completely.

“So in a way, if you say it’s a compromise, I will agree that instead of allowing the impeachment process to continue, which in the end, would have seen both the governor and the deputy governor out of the office and been out for the rest of the four-year term.

“So if normalcy returns, some other things may come in. But for now, well, maybe it’s a compromise. I will agree,” Fagbemi affirmed.

He urged those aggrieved by the President’s decision to seek redress through the National Assembly, noting that the federal legislature has the constitutional authority to overturn the suspensions by refusing to grant the required two-thirds majority approval.

“If the National Assembly feels what the President did was not okay, he will not have two-thirds of the National Assembly. We are expecting that within 48 hours, something will come out.

“The ball is now in the court of the National Assembly. If they do not ratify it, the suspensions will not stand,” he said.

Fagbemi explained that the Rivers case is different from that of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states where the elected structures were preserved despite the declaration of a state of emergency under President Goodluck Jonathan in 2013.

According to him, the governors requested the action whereas Fubara did not urge President Tinubu to intervene.

“Every matter depends on the peculiar facts and circumstances of the case.

“You can declare an emergency in a variety of ways. If it was Boko Haram, they were situated or confined in particular areas and the governor then said come to my aid.

“But the governor who is at the centre of it here has not made any such request and it would have been grossly irresponsible for the President to fold his arms.

“So the situation in the era of Jonathan is different from what we have here. What we have here is everybody is involved.

“You can exercise your rights but there are always lines. You don’t cross the lines because there will be consequences,” he said.

Fagbemi absolved the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FTC), Nyesom Wike, of responsibility.

He insisted that the Supreme Court’s findings did not implicate the FCT Minister.

“There are occasions when, especially when it comes to national issues, we have to come out plainly and sincerely.

“Where do you put the Minister of FCT in this case? Was he the one who asked for the demolition of the House of Assembly?

“Was he the one who said the governor should not present his budget to the House of Assembly?

“Was he the one who advised the governor not to go through the House of Assembly for purposes of ratifying the commissioner nominees?

“The FCT minister did not feature. Assuming he featured, he would have featured maybe on the side of the legislators,” Fagbemi said.

He called for patriotism from all parties involved in the Rivers political crisis, stressing that prioritising the entity Nigeria is most crucial.

On allocations, the Minister of Justice said it would be in order to release the funds for the smooth running of the state.

“An extraordinary situation has arisen in River. When the administrator comes, he may request for this fund, and to me, it will be in order for the release of that fund because of the extraordinary situation,” Fagbemi added.

FG blames Fubara for bombing of oil pipeline

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Shehu Sani faults senators taking voice vote objection to media

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Former Kaduna Central Senator, Shehu Sani

Shehu Sani faults senators taking voice vote objection to media

A former senator who represented Kaduna Central Senatorial District has slammed lawmakers for going to the media to raise objections against the adoption of voice voting for the confirmation of a State of Emergency in Rivers State.

Shehu Sani said that any lawmaker who wished to raise such an objection ought to have done so in the chambers of the National Assembly and not the media.

Recall that members of the National Assembly had voted on the proclamation of a State of Emergency in Rivers by President Bola Tinubu.

However, rather than adhere to the provisions of the law by taking a head count to determine that the Assembly had formed a quorum, the leadership of both chambers adopted voice voting.

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Shortly after the voting process which was condemned by many including Peter Obi, Atiku Abubakar, and the Peoples Democratic Party among others, Ireti Kingibe, a serving lawmaker condemned the process.

In his reaction, to this Sani said all objections should be done within the chambers, not outside or in the media.

He wrote on X, “If any lawmaker had issues with voice votes or quorum, he or she is supposed to raise a point of order on the floor and insist on being heard; and not be silent in the chamber then come to the media to raise objections.

“If there is no quorum, it’s because some lawmakers deliberately chose to abstain,” Sani noted.

 

Shehu Sani faults senators taking voice vote objection to media

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Abducted Anambra Rev Fr released after police, gunmen fierce battle

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Anambra State Command Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, DSP Tochukwu Ikenga

Abducted Anambra Rev Fr released after police, gunmen fierce battle

The Anambra State Police command has secured the release of a Catholic priest, Rev Fr Stephen Echezona, who was abducted in Ichida, Anaocha Local Government Area of the state.

The state Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, Tochukwu Ikenga said the priest was released unhurt after an encounter with his abductors in Ihiala.

In a statement in Awka, the PPRO said: “In the early hours of March 23, 2025, a joint security team comprising the Police, Military, Civil Defence, AVG Ichida, and Ihiala respectively, secured the release of Rev. Father Echezona at Ihiala. The priest was returned unharmed.

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“The victim was abducted at a fuel station in Ichida. A joint security force, in an ensuing gun duel with the armed criminals operating in a white Lexus SUV without plate number, overpowered the kidnappers.

“The assailants abandoned the white Lexus and in a bid to flee the scene due to the superior fire power of the joint security team, fled the scene and held the Rev. Father hostage. The operatives also recovered the white Lexus vehicle.”

“In a coordinated hot chase by the operatives, different security checkpoints and security operatives in the state were alerted, which resulted in the criminals abandoning the Priest at Ihiala and escaping through a nearby bush.”

According to the PPRO, the joint security team has taken over the scene in Ihiala for possible arrest of the armed men and recovery of the Toyota Highlander belonging to the Rev. Father.

Abducted Anambra Rev Fr released after police, gunmen fierce battle

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Group tackles Natasha over call for drug test on senators

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Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan

Group tackles Natasha over call for drug test on senators

Some indigenes of Kogi West Senatorial District on Sunday, rose in defence of their senator, Sunday Karimi over the verbal tirade between him and Mrs Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, the embattled Senator of Kogi Central who is currently on suspension from the national assembly, noting that her call for periodic drug tests was apt and self-indicting.

The indigenes said the embattled senator’s advice was in order, considering the fact that her conduct since she refused to obey a simple sitting arrangement rule at the Senate, had truly called for a drug test to ascertain if she was free from the influence of substance.

The constituents were responding to a statement by the embattled Senator, where she called for periodic drug tests for senators, in response to a statement by Karimi.

Their reaction came through a statement signed by the Chairman, Kogi West Patriotic Assembly, Ayodele Joshua, PhD; and Secretary, Kareem Adigun.

Senator Karimi had said former Governor Yahaya Bello had been vindicated by the embarassment Akpoti-Uduaghan had brought on the Senate and Nigeria as a whole.

The Kogi West Indigenes, who swiftly rose in his defence after Akpoti-Uduaghan’s response, told him not to engage in a war of words with her, stating that they were well positioned to give the embattled Senator the right response.

“Our attention has been drawn to a rejoinder by the suspended Senator representing Kogi Central in the National Assembly, Mrs. Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, to Senator Sunday Karimi’s comments on her conduct at the National Assembly, which recommended drug tests for serving senators.

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“The embattled senator’s advice is in order, considering the fact that her conduct since she refused to obey a simple sitting arrangement rule at the Senate, has truly called for a drug test to ascertain if she is free from the influence of substance.

“Or how else can one explain the ridiculous things she has been saying from one media house to the other, both in Nigeria and abroad, to authenticate her spurious allegations against the Senate President? We need to be sure that she is the one saying those things and not someone under the influence of some substance.

“We identify with our brothers and sisters, fathers, and mothers from Kogi Central at this trying period. The disgrace a so-called daughter of the land has brought is not to them alone but to the entire state.

“If a woman of her age can be going from one international platform to the other, shouting sexual harassment against the Number 3 citizen of a country as populous and influential as Nigeria, with no iota of proof, then Nigerians need to really accept the fact that drug tests must be carried out on every aspiring Senator so that we would always avoid swearing in the wrong characters.

“Even Nigerian women are unanimous in their position that they must be wary of those they elect into sensitive positions and by virtue of this, become role models for their children. Forget about those who would never see anything good in their country.

“Previous actions and false accusations by this same suspended Senator against other personalities have shown that she is not fit to hold such position. The recall process should be followed through so she can at least learn and also represent her people better next time.”

“Senator Karimi should not join words with the suspended Senator. We will respond appropriately on his behalf. With her unfounded allegations, resort to cheap propaganda in the media against dissenting voices, and ridiculous kindergaten statements that shouldn’t even be uttered by people in their right frame of mind, it is clear that she should be the first person to take her proposed drug test,” the Kogi West indigenes declared.

 

Group tackles Natasha over call for drug test on senators

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