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‘Executive Order 10 will engender judicial, legislative independence’

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Fomer Chief Judge of Anambra State  Prof. Peter Nnanna C. Umeadi and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Louis Alozie have praised President Muhammadu Buhari for signing Executive Order No.  10 of  2020 which grants financial autonomy  to states legislature.

In a tweet on his Twitter handle Prof. Umeadi, now a chieftain of All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) said: “With humility, I congratulate Mr  President on the bold, irreversible step to entrenching the rule of law.

“The offshoot should be obedience to decisions of courts of competent jurisdiction, whether favourable or not, and seeking appropriate redress according to law” Umeadi stated.

To Alozie,  the Executive  Order no 10 of 2020 will engender independence of the judiciary and the houses of assembly.

Alozie described the order as a welcome development.

“As  it relates  to  the  judiciary,  Section 162(9) of the  Constitution of the  Federal  Republic  of  Nigeria 1999 as  amended  provides  for  financial  autonomy of the  judiciary  by  stating that  any  amount standing to the  credit  of the  judiciary  in the  federation  account  shall  be  paid  directly to the national  judicial  council  for  disbursement  to the  heads  of court  established for the  federation and the  states  under  section 6 of the  constitution.

He lamented: “Unfortunately, this  provision  of the constitution has  been  flouted  since  the  return of  democracy in  Nigeria.

Every month, the accountants  general  of the  state  go to  Abuja  and  collect  all  the  monies  due  to both the executive, the  legislature  and the  judiciary  which they  disburse  as  it  pleases  them.

The judiciary and the  legislature  at  the  state  levels  have  been starved of funds  thereby  hampering their  operations.”

He recalled that in the  recent  past,  foremost  human  rights  activist, Olisa  Agbakoba SAN  obtained a  judgment  commanding the  enforcement  of  judicial  autonomy of the judiciary but  unfortunately  that  judgment  was  ignored.

“Now  that  the  President  has  issued the executive  order, there  is  no doubt  that  it  will  be  complied with,  so it  is  a  welcome development  even  though in a  democratic  setting  such  executive  order    would not  have  been necessary in order to obey the  constitution.

But  because  Nigerian  leaders  like  being  ordered or  coerced into  doing  the  right  thing, the  executive  order  issued  by the  President  is  a  welcome development.

“Lack of financial autonomy has rendered both the legislature and judiciary to mere stooges in the hands of the governors.

Our governors  are  completely  lawless  and have adamantly  refused to obey the  provisions  of the  constitution they  swore  to  uphold.

That accounts for some senseless laws  by the state Houses of Assembly and also some odd judgments by our courts”, he added.

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JUST IN : $4.2m COVID-19 fraud : Apetu of Ipetumodu, Oba Olugbenga Oloyede.jailed four years in US

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The Apetu of Ipetumodu in Osun State, Oba Joseph Oloyede, has been sentenced to more than four years in prison in the United States.

Oloyede, 62, who holds dual U.S. and Nigerian citizenship and resides in Medina, Ohio, was on August 26 handed 56 months in prison by U.S. District Judge Christopher A. Boyko.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio in a statement on Tuesday, the monarch, was also ordered to “serve three years of supervised release after imprisonment and pay $4,408,543.38 in restitution.

“He also forfeited his Medina home on Foote Road, which he had acquired with proceeds of the scheme, and an additional $96,006.89 in fraud proceeds investigators had seized,” the statement read.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office said Oloyede led a conspiracy to exploit COVID-19 emergency loan programmes created for struggling businesses.

“From about April 2020 to February 2022, Oloyede and his co-conspirator, Edward Oluwasanmi, conspired to submit fraudulent applications for loans that were made available through the U.S. Small Business Association (SBA) under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act,” the statement read.

In April, the duo pleaded guilty to wire fraud and tax fraud charges linked to a pandemic relief scam that siphoned over $4.2m in federal stimulus funds.

The court was told that Oloyede, who also worked as a tax preparer, “operated five businesses and one nonprofit, while Oluwasanmi owned an additional three business entities.

“Both defendants used their businesses to submit loan applications using false information.

“They obtained approximately $1.2 million in SBA funds for Oluwasanmi’s entities and $1.7 million for Oloyede’s entities,” the statement added.

According to investigators, “Oloyede submitted fraudulent PPP and EIDL applications in the names of some of his clients and their businesses.

“In exchange, Oloyede would receive 15-20% of their loans as the fee, or kickback, for obtaining the loans for them, without reporting this income to the IRS on his own tax returns.”

The funds were then used for personal gain, prosecutors said.

“Investigators learned that the defendant used funds obtained from these loans to acquire land and build a home and purchase a luxury vehicle,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office disclosed.

In all, Oloyede “caused the SBA to approve 38 fraudulent applications, amounting to $4,213,378 in disbursed loans and advances.”

His co-conspirator, Oluwasanmi, 62, of Willoughby, was earlier sentenced in July to 27 months in prison.

He was also ordered to pay more than $1.2 million in restitution, forfeit a commercial property purchased with fraud proceeds, and surrender more than $600,000 held in financial accounts.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office emphasized the significance of the conviction, noting that the case was jointly investigated by the Department of Transportation Office of the Inspector General, the FBI Cleveland Division, and IRS-Criminal Investigations as part of the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee Fraud Task Force.

“This case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Edward D. Brydle and James L. Morford for the Northern District of Ohio,” the release concluded.

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BREAKING : Air Peace is set to launch direct flights from Lagos to Brazil, following an agreement reached during President Tinubu’s visit to Brazil

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Air Peace, is set to begin direct flights from Lagos, Nigeria  to São Paulo, Brazil following an agreement reached during President Bola Tinubu’s state visit to Brazil

Details later

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Breaking : Panic as Abuja-Kaduna Train Derails

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A passenger train traveling from Abuja to Kaduna derailed on Tuesday morning, sparking panic among passengers and their families.

The incident reportedly occurred along the Kaduna corridor shortly after the train left Abuja around 11 a.m. on its way to Kaduna.

A passenger on board described the situation as “chaotic,” noting that people were “scrambling to safety in fear and confusion.”

The cause of the derailment remains unclear, but official confirmation indicates about six people sustained injuries, with no fatalities reported.

According to security sources, military personnel have been deployed to the scene to help evacuate stranded passengers.

The Nigerian Railway Corporation has issued a statement on the incident.

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