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Sanwo-Olu moves to abolish entitlements for ex-governors

Babajide Sanwo-Olu, the governor of Lagos state, has submitted a bill to the state house of assembly to abolish pension payments to former governors.
According to a tweet by Jubril Gawat, the governor’s senior special assistant on new media, the bill will repeal pension payments and entitlements to ex-governors and their deputies.

“Governor of Lagos State, Mr @jidesanwoolu has announced his intention, through executive bill, to repeal the public office holder (Payment of Pension Law 2007), which provides for payment of pension & other entitlements to former governors and their deputies,” Gawat tweeted.

More to follow…

#EndSars Protests: Distinguishing Between Respective Rights Of Protesters And Other Citizens

Does the constitutionally guaranteed right to peaceful protest include the power to deny other citizens the right to free movement and the right to earn a lawful livelihood? This question is more than ever before pertinent in the wake of the recent #Endsars protests in Nigeria.

This right to protest involves the exercise of numerous Fundamental Human Rights and can be essential for securing all other human rights. In Nigeria, Chapter 4 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) catalogues the rights of citizens and generally safeguards them. As inalienable as the right to protest is, unaddressed protests may grow and widen into civil resistance, dissent, activism, riots, insurgency, revolts, and political or social revolution. 

So the question therefore is, did the #EndSars protests degenerate to a riot? What is the stance of the law on these two contrasting activities?

First, riot in criminal law is described as a violent crime against public order involving three or more people. Like an unlawful assembly, a riot involves a gathering of persons for an illegal purpose. In contrast to an unlawful assembly, however, a riot includes violence. 

Again, a riot is a form of civil disorder commonly characterized by a group lashing out in violence. Under International Law, the duty on the state and its law enforcement agencies is to facilitate the enjoyment of the right of peaceful assembly. According to the 1990 United Nations Basic Principles On The Use Of Force And Firearms By Law Enforcement Officials:”…in the dispersal of assemblies that are unlawful but non-violent, law enforcement officials shall avoid the use of force or, where that is not practicable, shall restrict such force to the minimum extent necessary.” 

So, what about the restrictions and barricades that were all over the streets of various states restricting the movement of people, especially those who were just trying to get to their legitimate places of business? Where they in exercise of the right to protest or precursors to the roots that followed?

While applauding the efforts of Nigerian youths who came out in large numbers to seek change and make their voices count for something, one would wonder if preventing others from their daily earnings was the best way to garner support for their march.

Let’s look at the alleged Lekki Massacre. After millions of Nigerians had difficulty sleeping on the night of Tuesday, 20th October, 2020 (the so-called BLACK TUESDAY), citizens woke up to realize there were material inconsistencies in what was initially reported from the scene. Recall that several fact checkers refuted the alleged massacre as it was shown later that those who supposedly died that night were found to have died under different circumstances or were still alive. 

It is worthy of note at this juncture that, there is no justification whatsoever for law enforcement officials firing live bullets at peaceful demonstrators. This piece does not in any way seek to justify such extra-judicial acts.

But it was apparent that the tales of the protests were spiked with a lot of fake news, misinformation and outright falsehoods. And it makes one to wonder why so much unfounded claims.

Of course every life matter and if there was any unsanctioned shooting or killing of an innocent Nigerian(s), there must be proper investigation, but there is still the need to err on the side of the truth at all times. With the back and forth between the military and the Lagos State Government, Nigerians can only hope and pray that the families of the departed get justice.

In the meantime, intrigues seem to be trailing the Lagos State Judicial Panel of Inquiry which had started hearing allegations of extrajudicial killings and abuse by the Special Anti Robbery Squad amongst others. Can one man be the accused, prosecutor, judge and jury at the same time?

Furthermore, the fact that there is no identifiable leader of the #EndSars movement also raises a lot of questions as to the viability and purpose of the movement. So to the citizen out there, before you join in the next onslaught, do you have the means to jet out of the country like the major front liners seem to be doing at the moment?

One final question. Before you try to barricade the streets again, are there no other ways to ventilate and air your grievances? On what basis will you then contend with the government that you are not liable or complicit in the widespread mayhem, loss of lives, destruction of public and private property that swept through the nation?

But like the President of Loveworld Incorporated, Pastor Chris Oyakhilome, will always say, Nigeria can only be built by Nigerians.

It is time to build, mend and heal. While we continue to seek a better Nigeria devoid of police brutality, corruption and the like, wanton arson, looting and other vices should not gain acceptance in our nation. That is not who we are.

#bewise

GOP State AGs Urge Supreme Court to Overrule Pennsylvania Court’s Election Law Changes

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Republican state attorneys general say the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has jeopardized the nation’s constitutional balance of power by legislating from the bench and allowing late-arriving ballots to be counted. Now, they’re calling on the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene. 

Three of the state attorneys general—Jeff Landry of Louisiana, Eric Schmitt of Missouri, and Mike Hunter of Oklahoma—held a virtual press conference Monday to announce the filing of an amicus brief in the Pennsylvania mail-in ballot challenge brought by the Pennsylvania Republican Party, which is before the Supreme Court.  

In unofficial results contested by President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign, Democratic challenger Joe Biden got 49.8% of the vote in Pennsylvania to Trump’s 49.1%. The president has not conceded the election, which major media outlets called Saturday for Biden after some put Pennsylvania in the former vice president’s column.

The matter at hand is the constitutionality of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling allowing mail-in ballots to be received and counted in the three days following the Nov. 3 election.

Opponents appealed the move to the Supreme Court before the election, but a split 4-4 ruling by the high court let the Pennsylvania court’s decision stand.

Nearly a dozen state attorneys general have come together to urge the Supreme Court to review the constitutionality of the Pennsylvania’s court decision, which allowed late-arriving ballots to be accepted even if no proof existed that the ballot was postmarked by the end of Election Day. 

Along with Landry, Hunter, and Schmitt, the attorneys general who signed the friend-of-the-court brief were Steve Marshall of Alabama, Leslie Rutledge of Arkansas, Ashley Moody of Florida, Daniel Cameron of Kentucky, Lynn Fitch of Mississippi, Alan Wilson of South Carolina, Jason Ravnsborg of South Dakota, and Ken Paxton of Texas.

The central concern of the attorneys general is that “the Constitution is very clear that it designates to state legislatures the ability to designate time, place, and manner frameworks for elections,” said Schmitt, who filed the brief.

Mali’s Former President Amadou Toumani Touré Dies At 72

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Mali’s former president Amadou Toumani Touré, has died in Turkey aged 72 according to his chief of staff Seydou Cissouma, providing no further details.

A former army general, Touré who led the Sahel nation for 10 years before being ousted in a coup, won acclaim for pursuing democratic reforms when he helped topple the country’s longtime military ruler Moussa Traoré.

Touré’s life, in many ways, symbolised the stop-start nature of democracy in Mali, where his successor Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, was overthrown in another coup this August.

Widely known by his initials ATT, Touré led an army coup in 1991 against Moussa Traoré after violent anti-government protests.

He organised democratic elections the following year and handed over power to a civilian president, earning him the nickname of “Soldier of Democracy”.

Touré returned to the presidency in 2002, winning election with 65% of the vote, and was re-elected to a final five-year term in 2007. Touré was planning to step down when his second term expired in 2012.

JUST IN:President Buhari Orders C’ttee To Sell All Assets Forfeited To Federal Government

President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered the sale of assets forfeited to the Federal Government within the next six months.

Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami made this known on Monday during the inauguration of a 22-member Inter-Ministerial Committee on the disposal of the Federal Government of Nigeria’s forfeited assets.

According to him, Buhari approved the composition of the Committee which is headed by the Solicitor-General of the Federation and Permanent Secretary Federal Ministry of Justice, Dayo Apata, since October 27.

He said: “It is my pleasure to note that Mr President approved the composition of the Inter-Ministerial Committee on the Disposal of Federal Government of Nigeria Forfeited Assets on 27th October 2020 which we are inaugurating today. The Committee has a time frame of six (6) months for the disposal of all Federal Government Forfeited Assets.”

Malami noted that the core mandate of the Committee was to ensure the expedient disposal of all forfeited assets, to generate revenue for the Federal Government.

“You may recall that pursuant to Mr. President’s directive in October 2018 following the recommendations of the Presidential Audit Committee on Recovery and Management of Stolen Assets, there was the need for effective and efficient management of recovered assets, as an interim measure, pending the passage of the Proceeds of Crime Bill. In compliance with the directives of Mr. President, the Office of the Honourable Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice issued Asset Tracing, Recovery, and Management Regulations, 2019 to provide legal and administrative frameworks for the investigation, tracing, seizure, and disposal of stolen or illegally acquired assets and proceeds of crime.

“The Regulation was drawn from the extant laws of the relevant anti-corruption and law enforcement agencies. It is aimed at ensuring proper coordination of the disposal of the Federal Government assets and for promoting a uniform, harmonised, and transparent procedure to safeguard the assets recovered by the relevant agencies in line with the anti-corruption drive of this administration.

“Members of the Committee are drawn from the relevant agencies that deal with the recovery and disposal of the Federal Government of Nigeria’s assets. While the Solicitor General of the Federation and Permanent Secretary Federal Ministry of Justice, Dayo Apata, SAN shall be the Chairman of the Committee, the Asset Tracing, Recovery and Management Unit under the Office of the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice shall serve as the Secretariat of the Committee.”

ALLEGED VOTER FRAUD: US election crimes director resigns after justice chief authorises probes

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The top federal investigator of election crimes in the US has resigned just hours after Donald Trump’s attorney general William Barr authorised probes into claims of voter fraud.

Richard Pilger, director of the election crimes branch of the Department of Justice, stepped down from the post he has held since 2010 on Monday.

The branch director, Richard Pilger, handed in his resignation within hours of Barr’s authorization.

In an email to colleagues about Barr’s order, Pilger said, “Having familiarized myself with the new policy and its ramifications… I must regretfully resign from my role,” The New York Times reported.

US Attorney General William Barr gave federal prosecutors blanket authorization Monday to open investigations into voting irregularities, as President Donald Trump repeated claims he lost the presidential election due to fraud.

Barr, long a close defender of Trump, stressed that his letter to US attorneys around the country was not an indication that the Justice Department had evidence yet of genuine cases of fraud in the election won by Democratic challenger Joe Biden.

But he unleashed the prosecutors from former restrictions on such probes, just as Republicans levelled claims of illegal voting and vote-counting in several states, claims that still await solid evidence.

“Given that voting in our current elections has now concluded, I authorize you to pursue substantial allegations of voting and vote tabulation irregularities prior to the certification of elections in your jurisdictions in certain cases,” Barr said in the letter.

“Such inquiries and reviews may be conducted if there are clear and apparently-credible allegations of irregularities that, if true, could potentially impact the outcome of a federal election in an individual state.”

Voting fraud investigations are normally the purview of individual states, which establish and police their own election rules.

Justice Department policy has been to hold back any federal involvement until vote tallies are certified, recounts completed and races concluded.

But Barr told the attorneys that “practice has never been a hard and fast rule,” and stressed that, if they see anything that could reverse the results of last Tuesday’s election, they should pursue it.

Trump’s Allegations: US Election Crimes Director Resigns After Justice Chief Backs Probes

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The top federal investigator of election crimes in the US has resigned just hours after Donald Trump’s attorney general William Barr authorised probes into claims of voter fraud,

Richard Pilger, director of the election crimes branch of the Department of Justice, stepped down on Monday from the post he has held since 2010.

The branch director, Richard Pilger, handed in his resignation within hours of Barr’s authorization.

In an email to colleagues about Barr’s order, Pilger said, “Having familiarized myself with the new policy and its ramifications… I must regretfully resign from my role,” The New York Times reported.

US Attorney General William Barr gave federal prosecutors blanket authorization Monday to open investigations into voting irregularities, as President Donald Trump repeated claims he lost the presidential election due to fraud.

Barr, long a close defender of Trump, stressed that his letter to US attorneys around the country was not an indication that the Justice Department had evidence yet of genuine cases of fraud in the election won by Democratic challenger Joe Biden.

but he unleashed the prosecutors from former restrictions on such probes, just as Republicans levelled claims of illegal voting and vote-counting in several states, claims that still await solid evidence.

“Given that voting in our current elections has now concluded, I authorize you to pursue substantial allegations of voting and vote tabulation irregularities prior to the certification of elections in your jurisdictions in certain cases,” Barr said in the letter.

“Such inquiries and reviews may be conducted if there are clear and apparently-credible allegations of irregularities that, if true, could potentially impact the outcome of a federal election in an individual state.”

Voting fraud investigations are normally the purview of individual states, which establish and police their own election rules.

#EndSARS: No petition received yet, says Gombe panel

The Gombe State Judicial Panel of Inquiry into complaints of human rights violations by the disbanded Special Anti-Robbery Squad says it has yet to receive memoranda from members of the public.

The panel was inaugurated more than a week ago by Gombe State governor, Inuwa Yahaya.

The secretary of the panel and the acting Director of Public Prosecutions in the state, Mohammed Kumo, said the commission was still expecting victims of police brutality to come forward with their complaints.

Kumo said, “We are yet to receive memoranda from members of the public, but we are still waiting for a memo. As you are aware, the commission has expanded its window of communication; we can also receive entries through emails.

“We have two desk officers for those who want to file their complaints manually.”

Armenia Signs Peace Deal To End The War Over Nagorno-Karabakh

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The prime minister of Armenia, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, signed the cease-fire agreement in the presence of Russian President Vladimir Putin and President Ilham Aliyev, who is the Azerbaijan president.


Over 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory has been under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades and relations between the two former Soviet republics over Nagorno-Karabakh have remained tense since 1991.


However, fresh clashes broke out on September 27. Since then, Armenia has repeatedly attacked Azerbaijani civilians and forces, even violating three humanitarian cease-fire agreements.
While the Azerbaijanis celebrate their victory over Armenia, the Armenians are not taking it well. The Armenia president, in a post on Facebook, expressed his pain at the loss and appealed to fellow Armenians to understand the decision he had to make.

News of the cease-fire, did not please many Armenians, as hundreds of protesters stormed their parliament building, taking the seats of parliamentarians and shouting “resign!” or “out!”. They proceeded to lynch the speaker of the parliament who was then rushed to the hospital.

COVID-19: Nigeria’s recoveries exceed 60,000

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The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) confirmed 159 new recoveries on Monday, increasing the country’s total number of discharged patients to 60,069.

The agency confirmed the new recoveries in its update for November 9, 2020.

The development comes more than one month after Nigeria exceeded 50,000 recoveries — 421 patients were discharged on September 30, increasing the recovery count to 50,358 at the time.

Between September 1 and October 31, 2020, more than 16,000 people were discharged across the country.

However, with less than 17,000 recoveries in two months, the rate recorded a significant drop between September 1 and October 31, when compared to more than 20,000 recoveries for August alone — the number of discharged patients increased from 20,087 to 41,638 in August.

Meanwhile, four persons were confirmed to have died of coronavirus complications on Monday, increasing the current fatality toll to 1,158.

NCDC also confirmed 98 new infections in six states and the federal capital territory (FCT).

According to the breakdown, the cases are distributed as follows: 50 in Lagos, 24 in FCT, nine in Kwara, four in Edo, three in Kaduna, and two each in Ondo and Plateau.

A total of 64,184 infections have now been confirmed across the country.