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Policy against killer herdsmen affected my political career – Ortom
The immediate-past governor of Benue State, Samuel Ortom, has said he sacrificed his future political ambition to protect the state against killer herdsmen.
The former governor, who spoke through his media aide, Terver Akase, in a statement in Makurdi, also said some financial benefits meant for the state were denied during his tenure because of his stance against killer herders.
In 2023, Ortom lost both his bids to install a successor and toproceed to the Senate.
He linked his loss to his policies against killer herders.
In his Sunday statement, he refuted the claim by his successor, Rev. Fr. Hyacinth Alia, that his administrator did not do enough to check killer herdsmen.
According to the statement, Alia had in a certain interview accused Ortom’s administration of complicity in the insecurity that ravaged the state.
Alia was quoted to have said: “So one bad man was in some quarters orchestrating these and was cashing in when people were being buried every day.”
But Ortom, in a statement titled, ‘Those unfortunate statements on insecurity in Benue’, condemned the ‘unfortunate and unfounded’ allegations targeted at him.
“We find the above statements not only unfortunate but disturbing. Raising such weighty allegations without providing any proof to support the claims sends a rather wrong signal to the rest of the country. Benue people are known as very hospitable and peace-loving citizens of Nigeria,” Ortom’s aide, Akase, said.
He said, “It is an incontestable fact that His Excellency Ortom was the first Benue Governor who boldly confronted the monster known as armed herdsmen attacks on Benue people, which predated his administration.
“He (Ortom) was the first Governor to enact a law not only to end open grazing of livestock in all parts of the state but to also introduce ranching as the global best practice of animal husbandry.
“In his eight years as Governor, Chief Ortom never accused Benue youths of being cattle rustlers and killers of their own people.
“Instead, he encouraged youths of the state to aspire to achieve their dreams, and his administration engaged young people who were willing to complement conventional security agencies as members of the state Community Volunteer Guards.
“The Livestock Guards which his administration had earlier established as the enforcement agency of the law on open grazing were also made up of hard-working and patriotic Benue youths who, for six years, did a commendable job.
“It is equally imperative to state that Governor Ortom never requested funds from the Federal Government or anyone else regarding the security situation in his state.
“Instead, he made huge sacrifices and put his political career on the line to ensure that enemies of the state did not succeed in taking over the land that they have always wanted to occupy.
“In the process, he was vilified, victimized and the state government was denied several entitlements including funds from bonds, Stamp Duty, SURE-P, Signature Bonus, among other funds that the state legitimately deserved to benefit.”
Ortom said all the financial interventions denied Benue State during his tenure had been released to the present administration and asked his successor to give an account of how he had expended the funds.
“Their explanation should include what has been done with Benue’s share of the N50bn which President Bola Tinubu graciously released to five northern states affected by insecurity,” he said.
News
Panic as Trump’s order sends transgender inmates to men’s prisons
Hundreds of transgender United States federal prisoners have been gripped by fear following an executive order signed by President Donald Trump on his first day in office, mandating the transfer of transgender inmates to facilities aligned with their biological sex.
Lawyers have raised alarms about the potential dangers faced by transgender women who will now be moved to male prisons, warning of severe risks.
“It’s going to be incredibly dangerous,” attorney Moira Meltzer-Cohen told DailyMail.com. Meltzer-Cohen, who represents Donna Langan—a transgender woman serving a life sentence for bank robbery—expressed concerns about the safety of her client and others, fearing a potential “bloodbath.”
The executive order stipulates that the federal government will only recognise two sexes—male and female.
Therefore, access to intimate spaces such as prisons and shelters will now be determined strictly by biological sex rather than gender identity.
According to DailyMail.com, a federal public defender in Massachusetts highlighted the plight of a transgender inmate in Minnesota. Sandra Gant, the defender, described how the inmate was abruptly informed of the transfer, leaving her “terrified.”
“Her family reached out in a panic,” Gant said in a message circulated among public defenders. “As of this morning, she, along with others at FCI Waseca, have been segregated and told they are being processed out to a transfer centre and then to a men’s prison.”
Gant called for insights or assistance, particularly from organisations like the ACLU, to challenge the policy.
In addition to the changes in prison policy, Trump’s order rolled back various protections for transgender individuals. The directive bans federal funding for transition-related services and mandates the use of the term “sex” over “gender” in official documentation.
Federal agencies have also been instructed to stop funding initiatives promoting what the order terms “gender ideology.”
News
Buhari returns home after testifying in $2.3bn corruption case
Former President Muhammadu Buhari has returned to Nigeria after testifying in a case filed against Nigeria by Sunrise Power at the International Chamber of Commerce Court of Arbitration in Paris, France.
Buhari’s return was disclosed with a video shared on X on Friday by former Special Assistant to the President on Digital Communications, Bashir Ahmad.
Buhari was spotted stepping off an aircraft as he returned from Paris.
Ahmad wrote, “Former President Muhammadu Buhari has returned to Nigeria after defending the country before the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) in Paris in connection with the $2.3 billion arbitration case filed by Sunrise Power.”
It was reported that Buhari was summoned before the ICC to testify in the $6bn Mambilla power contract dispute.
The presidency denied reports that it forced the former president to testify in the matter.
Although it did not deny the existence of such a proceeding, the presidency insisted that all those testifying in Nigeria’s defence were doing so willingly.
It was gathered that former president Olusegun Obasanjo also journeyed to France to testify in the case.
In 2017, Sunrise Power initiated arbitration against Nigeria at the tribunal, seeking a $2.354bn award for alleged “breach of contract” regarding a 2003 agreement to build a 3,050MW power plant in Mambilla, Taraba State.
The plant, valued at $6bn, was to be constructed on a build, operate, and transfer basis.
The company is demanding a $400m settlement, claiming the Nigerian government failed to honour a 2020 agreement to resolve the dispute.
Obasanjo had denied authorising Olu Agunloye, the former Minister of Power and Steel, to commit Nigeria to the $6bn power contract.
In February 2024, Buhari also stated he never authorised any settlement agreement with Sunrise Power and Transmission Company Limited on the project.
News
We’re Qualified To Represent Africa, Nigeria Makes Case For UN Security Council Seat
Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Yusuf Maitama Tuggar has called for a permanent seat for Africa in the United Nations, UN, Security Council while making a case for Nigeria as the country that should represent the continent in the global body.
A statement by the Minister’s Special Assistant on Media and Communication Strategy, Alkasim Abdulkadir, said Tuggar spoke during a panel discussion on the theme, ‘Africa’s Momentum’, at the World Economic Forum summit in Davos, Sweden.
Africa has no permanent seat in the Security Council, arguably the UN’s highest decision making organ.
Tuggar decried the exclusion of Africa in the UN Security Council while stating that about 60 percent of the resolutions of the Council bother on issues that have to do with Africa.
He also noted that many of the laws promulgated by the Council have adverse implications for Africa, including the Deforestation Law which bans the purchase of produce from deforested land in Africa while ignoring the technological companies that produce the machineries that enable deforestation on the continent.
The minister further disclosed that Nigeria’s global outlook under President Bola Tinubu’s administration is premised on the accentuation of the country’s strategic autonomy and nonalignment principle in its relations with the rest of the world.
The panel discussion, which featured other African leaders including the Foreign Ministers of Tunisia, Mohammed Ali Nafti, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Therese Kayikwamba Wagner, and the Ugandan Minister of Finance, Matia Kasaija, was moderated by the Director of Chatham House, Bronwen Maddox.
The conversation also highlighted the role of Africa in global governance and the implications of the first 2025 G20 Summit scheduled to be held in South Africa.
Tuggar equally made a case for Nigeria becoming a member of the G20.
“The G20 summit in South Africa presents an opportunity for us to make a strong case, in the case of Nigeria becoming a G20 member and of course, South Africa is a brotherly neighbour, we have strong ties,” Tuggar observed.
Highlighting Nigeria’s significant role in not only supporting South Africa’s liberation from Apartheid but also in providing asylum to Thabo Mabaki during the years of South Africa’s struggle for liberation, Tuggar said Nigeria is the country that should represent Africa in the UN Security Council.
Enumerating Nigeria’s strengths and qualifications, and why the country should lead Africa on the global stage, the minister said, “It is important for a country like Nigeria to be a member of the G20 because we are used to making a case for Africa, we have got a lot of goodwill, we have got soft power.”
The minister highlighted the historical contribution of Nigeria to the struggles for Africa’s liberation and fight against racist regimes in the continent.
Tuggar also disclosed that as part of its soft powers, Nigeria through its Technical Aid Corp sends volunteer professionals including medical doctors, engineers, and university lecturers to other African, Caribbean, and Pacific countries to support their development.
Tuggar further stated that Nigeria is a non-threatening power that is friendly with its neighbours and does not have land or boundary disputes, and when such issues come up, they are resolved in most cases with Nigeria conceding to its neighbours. “Nigeria’s nonthreatening nature has earned the trust of its neighbours who support Nigeria to represent them globally,” he observed.
Speaking further, the minister stressed that Nigeria is the only African country with a permanent seat in the African Union’s Peace and Security Council.
Furthermore, Tuggar said it is important for Nigeria to be at the table because the G20 was created to review global economic and financial issues such as the utilization of Special Drawing Rights to fund the energy transition in Africa. He called for a return to the promises made by developed nations to developing countries during the Rio Summit with regards to the transfer of technology, which he said has gone quiet and Nigeria using its big strong voice can bring it to the fore as a member of the G20.
Responding to what Nigeria would do with the G20 seat, Tuggar submitted that Nigeria would advocate for the reconsideration of the Special Drawing Rights, and push for the consolidation of the global tax reforms which he said was championed by African countries at the United Nations with Nigeria leading the charge, to make the tax system fairer for the Global South countries.
On Nigeria’s expectation from South Africa at the G20 summit, the minister opined that South Africa can make a strong case for fairness, for the process to be more representative, and to become more democratic. He faulted the argument that because Africa is already represented by the African Union and South Africa, the continent should not demand for more representation, citing South America which representation does not attract the same reaction as Africa.
He emphasized that Africa should not be viewed as a single country but as a continent with 54 countries, noting Nigeria’s over 220 million population with a potential to rise to 400 million by year 2050 and the third largest population in the world.
Tuggar said that Nigeria deserves to be represented, given its track record, the size of its economy, and many other factors. He submitted that he expects South Africa to support Nigeria’s case and added that Nigeria is already being invited as an observer.
(DAILY POST)
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