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  • Indonesian police confirm arrest of octogenarian accused of keeping girl as sex slave for 15 years

    Indonesian police confirm arrest of octogenarian accused of keeping girl as sex slave for 15 years

    police in Indonesia confirmed te arrest of an 83-year-old
    village witch doctor who entrapped a 12-year-old girl and tricked her into having sex with him for the past
    15 years by claiming to be possessed by the “jin”, or spirit, of a young boy.

    The police said the woman, an identified as “H”, was rescued on Sunday in Tolitoli regency, in Central
    Sulawesi province.

    Acting on a tip-off, police said they had found the woman, who was now aged 28, in a rocky crevice in a
    jungle near Bajugan village, where she had been held during the day since her disappearance in 2003.

    At night, police said she stayed in a hut near the house of the 83-year old man, identified by police as JG.

    Central Sulawesi Police Chief Muhammad Iqbal Alqudusy said the man had shown the girl a picture of a boy
    named Amrin “who she thought was her boyfriend”.

    “She was led to believe that Amrin’s spirit had entered (the elderly man’s) body,” Iqbal said on Tuesday
    at a news conference that was posted online.

    “It is obvious that he was satisfying his lust.”

    Indonesia is a predominantly Muslim country but old beliefs about spirits and other paranormal activity
    are still held by some.

    Iqbal later told Reuters the woman said she had been having intercourse with “Jin Amrin” since 2003 “but
    she was really having sex with JG”.

    The man, he said, admitted to sexual relations since 2008.

    Police said they found the woman after her sister alerted neighbours she was nearby.

    According to the Jakarta Post, the sister was married to the son of the shaman, known for his traditional
    healing methods and abilities to channel spirits.

    The man explained the victim’s disappearance to her parents by saying she had gone to Indonesia’s capital,
    Jakarta, to work, the newspaper reported.

    The man has been charged with offences under Indonesia’s child protection laws, which carry a maximum
    sentence of 15 years in prison. (Reuters/NAN)

  • Psychologist says poor sleeping habit contributes to weakened immunity, mental health challenge

    Psychologist says poor sleeping habit contributes to weakened immunity, mental health challenge

    Mr. Eigege Ejegbolo, a Psychologist with Mind-Set Integrated Services, said on Monday that sleeping for less than eight hours daily could lead to a weak immune system and mental health challenges.

    Ejegbolo told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Jos that sleeping for less than eight hours daily was considered a poor sleeping habit.

    “Sleeping for less than eight hours daily is a poor sleeping habit which is linked to physical problems like a weak immune system and mental health problems such as anxiety and depression.”

    According to him, adequate sleep is as important to the health as eating, drinking and breathing, adding that it enabled the body to repair itself and the brain to consolidate memories and process information.

    “Proper sleep is a key contributor to our health and well-being which enhances the body’s ability to perform optimally.

    “When we sleep, the brain and the body do not shut down; rather they perform important tasks that promote both mental and physical health by producing hormones that help repair cells and fight off illness,’’ he said.

    Ejegbolo counselled people who could not sleep for eight hours at a stretch to observe their siesta to make up for the hours skipped. (NAN)

  • Osinbajo sacks Lawal Daura DG DSS

    Lawan Daura: sacked as DG DSS

    The Director-General of the Department of State Services, Lawal Daura has been sacked by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo.

    According to a tweets by Laolu Akande, Senior Special Assistant to the Acting President,
    Osinbajo has ” directed the termination of the appointment of the DG of the DSS, Mr. Lawal Musa Daura”.

    “Mr. Daura has been directed to hand over to the most senior officer of the State Security Service until further notice”, Akande said.

    Laolu Akande

    ?@akandeoj

    AgP Yemi Osinbajo has directed the termination of the appointment of the DG of the DSS, Mr. Lawal Musa Daura.

    Laolu Akande

    ?@akandeoj

    AgP Yemi Osinbajo has directed the termination of the appointment of the DG of the DSS, Mr. Lawal Musa Daura.

    Laolu Akande

    ?@akandeoj

    Mr. Daura has been directed to hand over to the most senior officer of the State Security Service until further notice.

    Operatives of the DSS, wearing masks blocked the gates of the National Assembly this morning, preventing senators and workers from gaining entrance.

    Some PDP senators, who were caught in the blockade interpreted it as a move to impeach Senate President Bukola Saraki. But it turned out there was nothing like that in the offing as no APC senator was in the National Assembly when they were creating the row outside the gate.

    The blockade has been roundly condemned as anti-democratic and has made the leadership of the National Assembly to call off a scheduled meeting this afternoon, that would probably have paved way for the reconvening of the Assembly.

    Members of the two-chamber legislature went on break on 24 July. They were scheduled to resume on 25 September. The executive arm of government has issued a red alert that the recess may lead to a government shutdown.

  • Agric minister launches IFAD-assisted projects in Katsina

    Agric minister launches IFAD-assisted projects in Katsina

    The Minister of Agriculture Chief Dr Audu Ogbeh, has inaugurated the construction and rehabilitation of 22 rural roads covering 59.09 kms across the seven participating states under the IFAD-assisted climate change adaptation and agri-business support programme (CASP).

    Ogbeh made this known in Daura on Monday when he launched the construction of the 10-km Tambu-Makkah Sabro road under the programme.

    He said that CASP was one of the IFAD assisted programmes being implemented in seven states located in the Savannah belt of Nigeria.

    He said the goal of the programme was to reduce rural poverty, increase food security, accelerate sustainable economic growth and reduce vulnerability of smallholder farmers, including youth and women.

    He said that the Federal Government was providing critical rural infrastructure as a tool to reduce the poverty level among rural dwellers and create the enabling environment for the rejuvenation of the rural economy.

    The minister identified the participating states as Borno, Yobe, Jigawa, Katsina, Kebbi, Sokoto and Zamfara, stressing that the programme was also aimed at unlocking the vast potential in the rural areas.

    He urged the benefiting communities to ensure regular maintenance of the rural roads to achieve a long-lasting life span.

    “I urge the communities to form a road maintenance group which would assist in simple repairs.’’

    Ogbeh added that under the CASP programme, a total of additional 375 kms. earthen roads would be rehabilitated and 243 kms. of new rural roads would be constructed.

    According to him, the project will benefit 7,000 people across the participating states.

    He said his ministry was intervening in the provision of 997 solar-powered boreholes which would benefit 5,000 people across the benefiting communities.

    He added that a total of 4,000 hectares of range lands would be developed to cater for the pastoral requirements of 3,000 herdsmen, adding that the project would commence with a pilot of 50 hectares per state.

    He said that in Daura Local Government Area, 600 hectares of land in Madobi and Turumni villages had been earmarked for the commencement of the pilot programme, stressing that holistic land management would be taught and practiced.

    He added that the Federal Government would establish 3,000 hectares of community woodlot, shelter-belts and ensure the afforestation of the fast depleting vegetation across the participating states.

    Ogbeh said that an estimated 3,000 vulnerable men and women would benefit from the programme.

    “We were collaborating with the National Agency for the Great Green Wall across 18 communities.”

    Earlier in his address, the National Programme Coordinator of CASP, Alhaji Lawal Idah, commended the minister for finding time to be in Daura for the programme.

    He said the programme was aimed at reducing rural poverty, increasing food security and economic growth on a sustainable basis

    The programme, he said, had received wider acceptability among rural dwellers, traditional rulers and community leaders.

    He added that the programme comprised four components of productivity enhancement and climate change resilience, enterprise development for youth and women, instructional development and management and coordination.

    He said that CASP was supporting the production of cash crops such as maize, rice, sorghum, wheat, rice, cowpea and groundnut, adding that each of the participating states produces a variety of crops.

    Idah said the programme was being implemented at the community level with the facilitation of federal, state and local governments, while the community driven development (CDD) implementation model produces the fourth tier which is the Community Development Associations (CDAs).

    In his remarks, Alhaji Munir Yakubu, the Deputy Gov. of Katsina State, who doubles as the Commissioner for Agriculture, commended the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and IFAD for finding the state worthy of benefiting from the programme.

    He said that the state government had in the last three years, placed priority on agriculture by providing subsidised agricultural inputs to farmers and training and re-training of agricultural extension officers.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the event attracted all stakeholders in agriculture and IFAD programme officers from the seven participating states.
    (NAN)

  • FG directs ‘full action’ against driver’s licence racketeers

    FG directs ‘full action’ against driver’s licence racketeers

    The Federal Government has directed “full action” against unscrupulous driving school operators and other saboteurs of the nation’s driver licensing system.

    The Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr Boss Mustapha, announced this in Abuja on Tuesday.

    Mustapha spoke at the 4th National Workshop for Driving School Operators in the North-Central, organised by the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC).

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the series of workshops are part of efforts by the FRSC to sanitise the process of drivers’ training and licensing in the country.

    The move, according to the FRSC Corps Marshal, Dr Boboye Oyeyemi, follows a recent media report that the process has been “grossly compromised by driving school operators” and other actors.

    Mustapha said the government was aware that some operators were deliberately sabotaging its Driving School Standardisation Programme (DSSP), implemented by the FRSC.

    The operators, according to him, do this mostly by “breaching the DSSP portal” to help their clients to bypass the due  process of acquiring driver’s licence.

    Represented by Mr Adekunle Olusegun, the Permanent Secretary, General Services department of his office, Mustapha said the FRSC had been mandated to punish those already identified to deter potential offenders.

    “Government is closely watching the execution of the DSSP and would appreciate its expansion to ensure that only those who are qualified to drive on Nigerian roads do so.

    “Let me emphasise here that those who make use of the roads must continually be properly trained and certified in order not to lose focus and be guilty of gross negligence in crucial areas of national development,” he said.

    Mustapha, whose office supervises the FRSC, said the workshop could not have come at a better time than now that the government was concerned about driver education, training and certification.

    The SGF noted that government was appreciative of “diligent and law-abiding” operators, and would continue to support all policies and programmes aimed at making the nation’s roads safer.

    He urged operators to join forces to acquire driving ranges, a key requirement for the licensing of driving schools by the FRSC.

    Mustapha amplified the call by the FRSC on state governments to set up model driving schools to guide the private sector players, and also to support the Corps.

    In a keynote address, the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola, expressed concern over the current quality of driver training in the country.

    Fashola based his worry on “the observed level of insanity displayed by drivers on our highways nowadays, in spite of the DSSP”.

    “There is no doubt that there is a wide gap between FRSC efforts and the return the nation is getting to it in respect of driving school activities.

    “For instance, some driving schools have been found to have developed the habit of using the highways as driving ranges even when the requirements and procedure for driver training are explicitly provided for by the FRSC,” he said.

    The minister said his ministry was collaborating with the FRSC to rid the nation’s highways of all plagues, including unlawful access by driving school operators.

    He lauded the Corps for organising the workshop to ensure proper regulation of the driving schools, urging other stakeholders to do their part.

    Chairman of the FRSC Governing Board, Malam Bukhari Bello, said the board was aware of the recent challenges bedevilling the DSSP.

    Bello said he was happy that the Corps was already taking steps, including organisation of the workshops, to address the challenges.

    He assured the Corps of the board’s support to ensure that the programme was effectively implemented, in addition to other inititiatives, for an enduring road safety in the nation.

    The Corps Marshal of the FRSC said the workshop was organised to re-evaluate the performance of the DSSP and chart the way forward.

    Oyeyemi said the DSSP, which came into force in 2006, was facing a number of challenges including “relentless hacking into the DSSP portal to gain unmerited advantage for driving school clients”.

    He said operators were also not adhering to the rules of engagement, and outright deceit by state committees of driving school registration leading to “rogue approval of non-existent/sub-standard driving schools”.

    Another setback, he said, is the general non-cooperative attitude of driving school operators to be properly organised for better operation and regulation in order to ensure the maintenance of best practice.

    He said the FRSC had so far suspended the licences of 124 driving schools in the country due to compliance breaches.

    “The workshop will take a holistic approach to the DSSP value network and proffer comprehensive and enduring strategy to rejuvenate it roward ensuring effective functioning of the programme.

    “This will enhance road safety and also continue to offer assistance and guidance to driving school operators to channel them toward innovation and efficient investments.

    “It equally seeks to continually offer the highest safety and security standards and build a strong safety culture crucial to driving school operations,” the FRSC boss said.(NAN)

  • NASS Barricade: Food vendors make brisk business

    Cecilia Ijuo

    Food vendors on Tuesday took advantage of the barricade of the National Assembly entrance by security operatives to make brisk business.

    Newsmen, the assembly workers and other Nigerians, who were barred from entering the assembly complex, resorted to the vendors for food as they waited at the entrance.

    Security operatives of the Department of State Service (DSS) had as early as 7 a.m., barricaded the entrance to the complex, denying some lawmakers, journalists and staff of the assembly, access into the premises.

    The lawmakers were later, at about 9 a.m., allowed into the premises, but newsmen, assembly workers, including Clerk of the National Assembly, Alhaji Mohammed Sani-Omolorin, and other Nigerians, continued to be barred from entry.

    The entrance of the assembly where the barred persons gathered was littered with bottles of water and soft drinks, groundnut peels, and used food packs among others.

    One of the vendors, Mrs Hauwa Ismaila, said that the development at the assembly entrance was unusual, but had however, made her to make business and gain.

    She said “today is better than other days. My food is almost finished.’’

    Another vendor, who pleaded anonymity, said “my buns is finished. I thank God.’’

  • IGP exonerates police from NASS invasion

    IGP exonerates police from NASS invasion

    The Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Alhaji Ibrahim Idris, has exonerated the Nigeria Police Force from Tuesday’s blockage of the National Assembly (NASS) by security operatives.

    Idris absolved the police of any blame after a closed-door meeting with the acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    He said that the standoff at the NASS complex reached him as a surprise, adding that the police would soon issue a statement in relation to the impasse.

    “Obviously, like I said, I have not got a detailed brief on that. In fact we are going to issue a (press) release (on that),’’ he said.

    The acting President had on Aug. 7 sacked the Director General of the Department of State Services (DSS), Lawal Daura with immediate effect, over Tuesday’s invasion of the premises of the National Assembly by security operatives.

    Osinbajo condemned the unauthorized standoff at the National Assembly complex, describing it as “a gross violation of constitutional order, rule of law and all acceptable notions of law and order’’.

    He said, the “unlawful act, which was done without the knowledge of the Presidency, is condemnable and completely unacceptable.’’

    The acting President, therefore, assured Nigerians that all persons within the law enforcement apparatus, who participated in “this travesty’’ would be identified and subjected to appropriate disciplinary action.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the sacked DSS boss had, along with the IGP and the Chief of Staff to the President, Malam Abba Kyari, earlier met behind closed doors with the acting President. (NAN)

  • NYSC D-G warns corps members against night parties

    NYSC D-G warns corps members against night parties

    Brig.-Gen. Suleiman Kazaure, the Director-General, National Youth Corps (NYSC), has warned corps members against night parties and organising social events without the knowledge of the appropriate authority.

    Kazaure, while addressing corps members in Ikare Akoko on Tuesday, directed that all social events must not hold without approvals.

    He said the scheme was devastated over the sad occurrence in Taraba State where nine corps members got drowned.

    Kazaure said serving one’s fatherland was all about devotion, urging them to learn the necessary skills while in camp.

    “I am sure you are aware we lost nine corps members in Taraba; they were 2018 Batch ‘A’ corps members.

    “Whenever you are going to embark on any social outings, you must seek clearance from NYSC officials, either the local government inspectors or the state coordinator; that’s my directive.”

    He urged them to respect the culture of their host communities and behave like graduates that they are.

    Kazaure later reiterated the commitment of the scheme to security and welfare of corps members nationwide.

    Later, Mrs Grace Akpabio, the State Coordinator, said she was happy with the visit of the director-general, being the first time she would host an NYSC boss.

    Akpabio said Kazaure was happy and impressed with what she had done so far at the orientation camp, in terms of infrastructural development.(NAN)

  • Accept change to promote NEMA to global standard, DG urges workers

    Accept change to promote NEMA to global standard, DG urges workers

    Mr Mustapha Maihajja, the Director-General, National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), on Tuesday urged members of staff to accept the change that would promote the agency to global standard.

    Mr Ibrahim Farinloye, the spokesman for the agency, said that Maihajja gave the advice while addressing participants at the ongoing Pre-Promotion Training at the Public Service Institute in Abuja.

    Farinloye quoted the director-general as saying that the Federal Government had acknowledged the need for institutional framework that would enhance welfare of the workers.

    He said that the federal government had also approved the conditions of service that would boost the workers’ morale to be more dedicated and put in their best in the service of the nation.

    Maihajja also called for positive change in service delivery to the nation.

    The director-general said that the training template of the worker would involve the nation’s security architecture and other specialised training.

    Maihajja said that the briefing he got while being appointed as the director-general was to ensure that the agency should be restructured to be able to tackle the contemporary challenges in accordance with the global standards. (NAN)