Month: February 2024

  • President Tinubu cuts cost of governance by implementing Oronsaye Report

    President Tinubu cuts cost of governance by implementing Oronsaye Report

     

    By Bayo Onanuga

    Abuja”(Flowerbudnews): Twelve years after the Steve Oronsaye panel submitted its report on restructuring and rationalizing Federal government parastatals and agencies and a white paper issued two years after, President Tinubu and the Federal Executive Council on Monday decided to implement the report.

    Many agencies will be scrapped and many others will be merged, to pave way to a leaner government. (Flowerbudnews)

    Details later

  • FG Approves Coastal Super-Highway to Link Lagos-PortHarcourt- Calabar, Implements Oronsaye Report

    FG Approves Coastal Super-Highway to Link Lagos-PortHarcourt- Calabar, Implements Oronsaye Report

    By Biola Lawal

    Abuja (Flowerbudnews): The Federal Government has approved the construction of a superhighway to link Lagos to Port Harcourt-and Calabar.

    Mr. Bayo Onanuga, Special Adviser to President Tinubu on Information and Strategy disclosed this in a statement highlighting the decisions reached at the Federal Executive Council meeting Chaired by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    Onanuga wrote:

    Here are some of the highlights of the far reaching decisions taken today at the Federal Executive Council meeting, chaired by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    1. FEC approved construction of Lagos-Port Harcourt-Calabar Coastal Superhighway to Messrs Hitech Construction Africa. The First phase made up of 47 kms will begin in Lagos.
    2. Social security payments to the vulnerable households to begin immediately. Recipients will be those with NIN and BVN.

    3. Social security payments to be extended to graduates from NCE and upwards

    4. Consumer Credit to be established very urgently. Chief of Staff to lead a committee that includes Budget Minister, Attorney-General, Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Finance, to make the scheme a reality.

    5. The Council in order to enhance efficiency in the Federal service, and reduce the cost of governance, decided to implement the recommendations of the Steve Oronsaye panel on the restructuring and rationalisation of Federal agencies, parastatals and commissions.

    The implementation involves merging, subsuming and scrapping agencies with similar functions.

    The Oronsaye report was submitted in 2012 to the Jonathan administration. In 2014, the Jonathan government released a white paper on the report. The Buhari administration after re-examining the white paper also released a second white paper in August 2022, but did not implement the report.

    However, the Tinubu administration has decided to confront the monster of high governance cost by implementing elements of the report.

    An eight-man committee has a 12-week deadline to ensure that the necessary legislative amendments and administrative restructuring needed to implement the reforms are effected in an efficient manner.

    The committee comprises Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Head of the Civil Service, Attorney General and Justice Minister, Budget and Planning Minister, DG Bureau of Public Service Reform, Special Adviser to the President on Policy Coordination, Special assistant to the president on National Assembly. The Cabinet Affairs Office will serve as the secretariat.

    Key recommendations for implementation:

    National Salaries, Income and wages Commission to be subsumed under Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Commission. The National Assembly will need to amend the constitution as RMAFC was established by the constitution.

    Infrastructure Concession and Regulatory Commission to be merged with Bureau of Public Enterprise and be rechristened as `Public Enterprises and Infrastructural Concession Commission

    National Human Rights Commission to swallow Public Complaints Commission

    Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate(PTAD) to be scrapped and functions to be taken over by Federal Ministry of Finance

    NEMA and National Commission for Refugees to be fused to become National Emergency and Refugee Management Commission

    Border Communities Development Agency to become a department under National Boundary Commission

    NACA and NCDC to be merged

    SERVICOM to become a department under the Bureau for Public Service Reform(BPSR)

    NALDA to return to the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security.

    Federal Ministry of Science to supervise a new agency that combines NCAM, NASENI and PRODA

    National Commission for Museums and Monuments and National Gallery of Arts to become one entity that will be known as National Commission for Museums, Monuments and Gallery of Arts.

    National Theatre to be merged with National Troupe.
    13. Directorate of Technical Cooperation in Africa and Directorate of Technical Aid Corp to be merged under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs

    Nigerians in Diaspora Commission to become an agency under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    Federal Radio Corporation and Voice of Nigeria to be one entity to be known as Federal Broadcasting Corporation of Nigeria

    National Biotechnology Development Agency(NABDA) and National Centre for Genetic Resources and Biotechnology to be emerged into an agency to be known as National Biotechnology Research and Development Agency(NBRDA).

    National Institute for Leather Science Technology and National Institute for Chemical Technology to become one agency.

    Nigeria Natural Medicine Development Agency and National Institute of Pharmaceutical Research and Development to become one agency.

    The National Metallurgical Development Centre and National Metallurgical Training Institute will be merged.

    National Institute for Trypanosomiasis to be subsumed under Institute of Veterinary Research in Vom, Jos.

    The list is not exhaustive. (Flowerbudnews)

  • We’ll not rest until we bring succour to Nigerians – Tinubu

     

    By Ismail Abdulaziz

    Abuja: President Bola Tinubu says his administration will continue to put in place measures to bring succour to Nigerians.

    At a tripartite meeting with governors and business people on Sunday in Abuja, he pledged that all options would be explored to resolve the nation’s socio-economic challenges.

    The President met with Governors Charles Soludo of Anambra and Dapo Abiodun of Ogun States; Aliko Dangote, Abdulsamad Rabiu and Tony Elumelu as well as Mr Segun Ajayi-Kadir, Director-General of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria.

    At the meeting, President Tinubu said the government was ready to rub minds with all stakeholders to find lasting solutions to the current situation in the country.

    “Let’s look at what we are doing right and what we are doing wrong to bring life back to the economy.

    “Like I said many times, the people of this country are the only people who we have to please.

    “We are very much concerned; from students to mothers and fathers, farmers, and the traders, realising that everyone of us will have to fetch water from the same well.

    “We are looking for additional efforts that might help the downtrodden Nigerians and we will provide that hope and reassurance that economic recovery is on its way.

    “We are not saying that we have all the answers but we will not be blamed for not trying.

    “We assure Nigerians that we will do our best to get our marshal plans in place and fashion out the best economic future for this country,” President Tinubu said.

    In his briefing, Gov. Soludo said that the meeting allowed for cross fertilisation of ideas on the state of the economy and the way forward and that every Nigerian needed to contribute to its growth.

    “We have all the potentials and we have all that it takes to make Nigeria ride through these turbulent times and put the economy back on a sustainable growth.

    “I think there is unity of purpose, determination, the sense of patriotism and determination by all to make it happen and, by the special grace of God, it is now the execution, execution execution,” Soludo said.

    The governor of Ogun State, for his part, said all governors had resolved to join hands with the President to provide the necessary intervention to cushion the effect of the administration’s reforms.

    Dapo also assured Nigerians that the government at all levels would continue to support them through the trying period.

    “I assure Nigerians that better times are in the offing shortly.

    “In my State and in other States, we are bringing in rice, we are bringing in food items and we are selling at rates that can be obtained before the downslide of the Naira,” Dapo said.

    Similarly Dangote of Dangote Group, after the meeting, also disclosed that the committee deliberated on issues concerning the economy, food security, national security and job creation.

    “I have confidence that Nigeria and Nigerians have the potential to be great again.

    “The country is on the path of transformation,” Dangote said.

    Rabiu, who is the Chairman of BUA Group, said the meeting dwelt on issues about the foreign exchange rate and how to bring it down.

    “We discussed how to bring the foreign exchange rate down.

    “We all know that what is happening as regards the foreign exchange is artificial.

    “It is manipulative and, thank God, the CBN is doing quite a lot,” Rabiu said.

    Elumelu, Chairman of Heirs Holdings, said that the various discussions and solutions would reshape the country, alleviate poverty, create employment and put food on the tables of Nigerians.

    Ajayi-Kadir of the Manufacturing Association of Nigeria said that the private sector was looking forward to the implementation of the decisions taken at the meeting.

    “The issues surrounding foreign exchange, insecurity and general operating environment were discussed.

    “And we received the assurances of Mr President that, very soon, we are going to start to see some major changes.

    “I think, in the advisory committee that has been formed, the private sector will play a very significant role.

    “And Nigerians, going forward, should be hopeful that we are having solutions to the challenges that we have,” Ajayi-Kadir said. (NAN) (www.nannews.ng)
    IS/

    ====
  • ECOWAS Summit: A regional bloc & its renegade member States, plus was it a missed opportunity on Senegal?

     

    ECOWAS Summit: A regional bloc & its renegade member States, plus was it a missed opportunity on Senegal?

     

     

  • Update: Court to rule on Nnamdi Kanu’s bail plea, preliminary objection March 19

    Update: Court to rule on Nnamdi Kanu’s bail plea, preliminary objection March 19

    Flowerbudnews

    A Federal High Court, Abuja, on Monday, fixed March 19 for ruling on the bail application filed by Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).

    Justice Binta Nyako will, also on the same date, rule on a notice of preliminary objection filed by Kanu praying the court not to allow his trial until certain conditions were met by the Federal Government.

    Justice Nyako fixed the date after the new counsel for the Federal Government, Adegboyega Awomolo, SAN, and Kanu’s lawyer, Alloy Ejimakor, adopted their processes and presented their arguments for and against the motions.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the IPOB leader was initially standing trial on a 15-count charge bordering on terrorism offences before eight of the counts were quashed by the trial judge leaving seven counts, and the Supreme Court, on Dec. 15, 2023, affirmed the lower court decision.

    When the matter was called on Monday, Awomolo told Justice Nyako that the case was coming up for hearing after the decision of the Supreme Court on Dec. 15, 2023.

    Awomolo said the apex court affirmed Nyako’s decision of April 8, 2022, by preserving counts one, two, three, four, five, eight and 15 of the charge which Kanu pleaded not guilty of.

    The senior lawyer said that the Supreme Court ordered the continuation of trial of Kanu on the remaining seven counts.

    “So we are ready to proceed with the hearing of this matter and it is in the defendant’s interest and everybody’s interest in this country to see to the end of the trial” he said.

    But Counsel to Kanu, Ejimakor, told the court that he had two motions; an application for bail and a preliminary objection.

    He said though he agreed that the Supreme Court directed the continuation of Kanu’s trial, they were not ready to continue the proceedings.

    He urged the court to take his client’s bail application and preliminary objection for court to decide whichever way, and the prosecution did not object.

    While given grounds why the bail plea should be granted, Ejimakor said Kanu currently suffered from life-threatening and serious health conditions.

    According to the lawyer, Kanu has heart disease, hypertension and dangerous potassium levels that pose daily risks to his life while in detention.

    He argued that the DSS had no standard medical facility that could treat the defendant but was only subjected to cell-grade medical treatment, which did not abate his conduction but instead worsened it.

    He urged the court to grant the bail request on most liberal terms to enable the IPOB leader seek better medical care he urgently requires.

    He said though Section 161 of Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA), 2015, raised three conditions for bail to be satisfied, Kanu had met those terms, including ill-health, delayed proceedings and not being given adequate time and facilities to prepare for his defence.

    Ejimakor alleged that the prosecution, since Kanu’s arrest and arraignment, had delayed the proceedings for several months through amendment of charges and adjournments

    He also argued that he might not be able to put up a good defence unless Kanu was admitted to bail to have unfettered access to his lawyers.

    Contrary to the prosecution’s counter affidavit that Kanu jumped bail, the lawyer argued that Kanu only fled for his dear life when his residence was attacked by security agents and that as far back as October 2018, he deposed to an affidavit to explain the circumstances.

    But Awomolo disagreed with Ejimakor, insisting that the defendant violated the bail conditions, jumped bail and fled the country,.

    He said there was no evidence before the court that if granted another bail, he would not jumped bail, urging the court to dismiss the application.

    The senior lawyer said Kanu’s failure to prove that there was no standard medical facility in Department of State Service (DSS)’ detention contradicted Section 161(2a) of ACJA.

    “So he has not been able to satisfied Section 161(2a),”:he said.

    He argued that the IPOB leader had not tendered anything tangible or extraordinary to show he was entitled to bail.

    On the delayed proceedings, Awomolo said the court itself observed that both parties were responsible.

    The lawyer, who argued that the Supreme Court had settled issues about Kanu’s rendition, said other judgments in favour of the IPOB leader were only persuasive, and not binding on Justice Nyako.

    On the preliminary objection, Ejimakor said the application prayed for an order that before any proceeding could commence in the trial, the Federal Government must cease and desist from certain conducts.

    He said these include seizure of documents of his lawyers, stopping his lawyers from taking notes during visitation, and eavesdropping on Kanu’s consultation with lawyers on matters pertaining to his defence,

    He also sought an alternative order that before commencement of trial, a non-custodial arrangement be made so as to afford Kanu adequate time and facilities to prepare for his defence.

    But Awomolo, who opposed the application, described it as an abuse of court process.

    He argued that a party cannot dictate to court how to conduct its proceedings.

    He said it was an insult to the court for a party to dictate that unless the detaining authority acts in certain ways, trial should not commence.

    The lawyer, who said that the prosecution had never breached the fundamental rights of the IPOB leader, urged the court to dismiss the application.

    Justice Nyako adjourned the matter until March 19 for ruling and trial commencement for March 20.(NAN)(www.nannews.ng) / Flowerbudnews

  • JUST IN: NECO releases 2023 SSCE results

    JUST IN: NECO releases 2023 SSCE results

    The National Examinations Council (NECO) has released the results of the 2023 Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE) results.

     

     

     

    The examination body also said that it blacklisted two supervisors in Oyo and Lagos states and one examination centre in Borno state for being involved in examination malpractices in the 2023 SSCE external.

     

    NECO’s Registrar/Chief Executive, Professor Dantani Wushishi disclosed this while briefing journalists in Minna during the release of the 2023 SSCE external results.

     

    Wushishi said that 8,518 candidates were booked for various forms of malpractices, adding that the examination malpractices cases included two centers in Kaduna and Ogun states involved in whole center cases.

     

     

     

    Announcing the results said that 74,950 candidates registered for the examinations out of which 74,342 sat for the examination.

     

    He said: “The number of candidates that sat for the English Language is 73,123 out of which 55,272 representing 75.59 percent got Credit and above.

     

    “The number of candidates that sat for Mathematics is 73,119 out of which 67,815 representing 92.75 percent got Credit and above.

     

     

     

    “The number of candidates that got five Credits and above including English and Mathematics is 50,066 representing 67.35 percent. Also, 63,539 candidates representing 84.11 percent get five Credits and above irrespective of English Language and Mathematics.”

     

     

     

     

    The Registrar also launched the automated annual posting calendar to address the problems associated with posting the Council’s staff for out-of-station assignments.

     

     

     

     

    He said that the e-posting calendar would address the lopsidedness and favoritism that trail staff posting for various assignments.

  • N-HYPPADEC to provide solar street Lights, borehole to Bina Community in Niger

    N-HYPPADEC to provide solar street Lights, borehole to Bina Community in Niger

    By Mohammed Baba Busu

    National Hydro Electric Power Producing Areas Commission N- HYPPADEC has pledged to provide solar powered street lights and a borehole at Bina community in Lapai local government area of Niger state.

    The commission’s Director of Operations, Engineer Iliyasu Abdullahi Wara made the pledge in an exclusive
    interview with journalists after listening to a bitter complain from the community representative in Minna on Monday

    He said that the light will provide security for the residents especially at night.

    Abdullahi Wara who spoke on behalf of the N- HYPPADEC Managing Director, Alhaji Abubakar Sadiq Yelwa further revealed that the borehole is an intervention to provide a clean portable drinking water to the people of the community.

    According to him, this year twenty twenty four the community of Bina will be captured by the commission to benefit from intervention of solar street lights and a borehole as part of their mandate to provide succour to the commission’s communities.

    Responding, the Dagacin Bina community, Alhaji Mohammed Umar Bina applauded the management of N-HYPPADEC for the unexpected kind gesture in ameliorating the suffering of the people who were lacking such basic amenities of live over the years however, thanked the commission for the intervention.

    It could be recalled that Bina community have been suffering from acute shortage of clean portable drinking water over the years since the broke down of the two boreholes hence the residents have continued to depend on well water for their livelihood.

  • Court to rule in Nnamdi Kanu’s bail prayer March 19

    Court to rule in Nnamdi Kanu’s bail prayer March 19

     

     

    Flowerbudnews
    A Federal High Court in Abuja, on Monday, fixed March 19 for ruling in the bail application and preliminary objection to his trial commencement filed by Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).

    Justice Binta Nyako fixed the date after counsel for the Federal Government, Adegboyega Awomolo, SAN, and that of Kanu, Alloy Ejimakor, adopted their processes and presented their arguments for and against the motions.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) earlier reported that at the resumed hearing of the matter, Awomolo told Justice Nyako that the case was coming up for hearing after the decision of the Supreme Court on Dec. 15, 2023.

    Awomolo said the apex court affirmed Nyako’s decision of April 8, 2022, by affirming the preservation of counts one, two, three, four, five, eight and 15 of the charge which Kanu pleaded not guilty of.

    The senior lawyer said that the Supreme Court ordered the continuation of the hearing on the remaining seven counts out of the earlier 15 counts.

    “So we are ready to proceed with the hearing of this matter and it is in the defendant’s interest and everybody’s interest in this country to see to the end of the hearing,” he said.

    But Counsel to Kanu, Ejimakor, told the court that he had two motions; an application for bail and a preliminary objection.

    He said though he agreed that the Supreme Court directed the continuation of the trial, they were not ready to continue the proceeding.

    He urged the court to take the bail application and the preliminary objection for court to decide whichever way, and the prosecution did not object. (NAN)(www.nannews.ng)

     

    Details later

  • Some detainees drugged for deportation

    Some detainees drugged for deportation

    The U.S. government has injected hundreds of foreigners it has deported with dangerous psychotropic drugs against their will to keep them sedated during the trip back to their home country, according to medical records, internal documents and interviews with people who have been drugged.

     

    The government’s forced use of antipsychotic drugs, in people who have no history of mental illness, includes dozens of cases in which the “pre-flight cocktail,” as a document calls it, had such a potent effect that federal guards needed a wheelchair to move the slumped deportee onto an airplane.

    Unsteady gait. Fell onto tarmac,” says a medical note on the deportation of a 38-year-old woman to Costa Rica in late spring 2005. Another detainee was “dragged down the aisle in handcuffs, semi-comatose,” according to an airline crew member’s written account. Repeatedly, documents describe immigration guards “taking down” a reluctant deportee to be tranquilized before heading to an airport.

     

    In a Chicago holding cell early one evening in February 2006, five guards piled on top of a 49-year-old man who was angry he was going back to Ecuador, according to a nurse’s account in his deportation file. As they pinned him down so the nurse could punch a needle through his coveralls into his right buttock, one officer stood over him menacingly and taunted, “Nighty-night.

     

    Such episodes are among more than 250 cases The Washington Post has identified in which the government has, without medical reason, given drugs meant to treat serious psychiatric disorders to people it has shipped out of the United States since 2003 — the year the Bush administration handed the job of deportation to the Department of Homeland Security’s new Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, known as ICE.

     

    Involuntary chemical restraint of detainees, unless there is a medical justification, is a violation of some international human rights codes. The practice is banned by several countries where, confidential documents make clear, U.S. escorts have been unable to inject deportees with extra doses of drugs during layovers en route to faraway places.

     

    Federal officials have seldom acknowledged publicly that they sedate people for deportation. The few times officials have spoken of the practice, they have understated it, portraying sedation as rare and “an act of last resort.” Neither is true, records and interviews indicate.

     

    Records show that the government has routinely ignored its own rules, which allow deportees to be sedated only if they have a mental illness requiring the drugs, or if they are so aggressive that they imperil themselves or people around them.

     

    Stung by lawsuits over two sedation cases, the agency changed its policy in June to require a court order before drugging any deportee for behavioral rather than psychiatric reasons. In at least one instance identified by the Post, the agency appears not to have followed those rules.

     

    In the five years since its creation, ICE has stepped up arrests and removals of foreigners who are in the country illegally, have been turned down for asylum or have been convicted of a crime in the past.

     

    If the government wants a detainee to be sedated, a deportation officer asks for permission for a medical escort from the aviation medicine branch of the Division of Immigration Health Services (DIHS), the agency responsible for medical care for people in immigration custody. A mental health official in aviation medicine is supposed to assess the detainee’s medical records, although some deportees’ records contain no evidence of that happening. If the sedatives are approved, a U.S. public health nurse is assigned as the medical escort and given prescriptions for the drugs.

     

    After injecting the sedatives, the nurse travels with the deportee and immigration guards to their destination, usually giving more doses along the way. To recruit medical escorts, the government has sought to glamorize this work.

     

    “Do you ever dream of escaping to exotic, exciting locations?” said an item in an agency newsletter. “Want to get away from the office but are strapped for cash? Make your dreams come true by signing up as a Medical Escort for DIHS!”

     

    The nurses are required to fill out step-by-step medical logs for each trip. Hundreds of logs for the past five years, obtained by The Post, chronicle in vivid detail deviations from the government’s sedation rules.

     

    An analysis by the Post of the known sedations during fiscal 2007, ending last October, found that 67 people who got medical escorts had no documented psychiatric reason. Of the 67, psychiatric drugs were given to 53, 48 of whom had no documented history of violence, though some had managed to thwart an earlier attempt to deport them. These figures do not include two detainees who immigration officials said were given sedatives for behavioral rather than psychiatric reasons before being deported on group charter flights, which are often used to return people to Mexico and Central America.

     

    Even some people who had been violent in the past proved peaceful the day they were sent home. “Dt calm at this time,” says the first entry, using shorthand for “detainee,” in the log for the January 2007 deportation of Yousif Nageib to his native Sudan. In requesting drugs for his deportation, an immigration officer had noted that Nageib, 40, had once fled to Canada to avoid an assault charge and had helped instigate a detainee uprising while in custody. But on the morning of his departure, the log says, he “is handcuffed and states he will do what we say.” Still, he was injected in his right buttock with a three-drug cocktail.

     

    In one printout of Nageib’s medical log, next to the entry saying he was calm, is a handwritten asterisk. It was put there by Timothy T. Shack, then medical director of the immigration health division, as he reviewed last year’s sedation cases. Next to the asterisk, in his neat, looping handwriting, Shack placed a single word: “Problem.”

     

    One deportee who was sedated last year had convictions for armed robbery and assault. Another kept telling immigration officers, “I am God.” But many of those injected with psychotropic drugs, records show, are neither violent nor mentally ill. They simply do not want to go home.

     

    (M)ild anxiety and agitation” is how a deportation log describes Remmy Semakula’s state on the afternoon he was taken from his cell in the Middlesex County jail in New Jersey to be deported to Uganda in early April 2007. According to a memo from his deportation officer, he had said earlier that he would “fight with the officers and obstruct the operation of the airline” if guards tried to force him to go home. Semakula, 42, said that he had not tried to thwart his deportation and had not known it was imminent because his immigration case still was before a federal judge. “I never fought violently or physically,” he said. “They just grabbed me and injected me with a sleeping drug.

     

    The first time immigration agents tried to deport Michel Shango, he slammed his head, hard, against the outside of the van that had come to pick him up at Atlanta’s city jail. Instead of being driven to the airport, then flown to the Democratic Republic of Congo, he was brought back to the jail so his wound could be tended to.

     

    “I asked him why he feared being returned back to his country,” an immigration officer wrote of the incident. Shango, now 42, replied that he had been a journalist and had written articles critical of the Congolese government. “Detainee stated … that he might as well die trying to avoid deportation,” a second officer wrote, “because they will kill him as soon as he gets to the D.R. of the Congo.

    Until early 1996, Shango worked in Congo, ghostwriting articles and supplying information to foreign correspondents about the repressive administration of President Mobutu Sese Seko, he said in telephone interviews from locations in Congo, Gabon and Equatorial Guinea, where friends are now helping him hide. Eventually Shango was arrested, he and two of his lawyers said, but he escaped to Canada, then settled in North Carolina, where he started a limousine business with a cousin in Charlotte. He married an American, who at first offered to help him become a citizen. The marriage dissolved. He applied for political asylum. He was turned down.

     

    He was remarried to a Congolese woman by the time immigration officers came to his house at 4:30 one morning in May 2006. As his wife and their three American-born children cried at the frightening scene, the officers led him away at gunpoint.

     

    On Feb. 28, 2007, three months after the first deportation attempt was aborted because of the head-banging incident, seven guards arrived at the Atlanta jail to make a second attempt. Shango glanced at his watch and noted that it was 1:45 p.m. “They pushed me against the wall,” he recalled. “They pulled my pants down.” His medical log shows that he was given seven shots in his right buttock and right shoulder before he boarded the airplane.

     

    He was remarried to a Congolese woman by the time immigration officers came to his house at 4:30 one morning in May 2006. As his wife and their three American-born children cried at the frightening scene, the officers led him away at gunpoint.

    On Feb. 28, 2007, three months after the first deportation attempt was aborted because of the head-banging incident, seven guards arrived at the Atlanta jail to make a second attempt. Shango glanced at his watch and noted that it was 1:45 p.m. “They pushed me against the wall,” he recalled. “They pulled my pants down.” His medical log shows that he was given seven shots in his right buttock and right shoulder before he boarded the airplane.

     

    The log says his only psychological problem was “anxiety disorder.”

     

    By the time Shango reached Congo, records show, he had been injected with 32.5 milligrams of Haldol and 7.5 milligrams of Ativan. As he was thrown into a prison after he got off the plane, and even as friends helped him escape, he was so disoriented, he said, that he did not fully know where he was. For two weeks, Shango said, “It was like I was dreaming. … I started crying, crying, crying all day long. … I was like crazy, because (of) the drugs, knocking me down.”