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PoliticsRe: Massob Respond To Tension In Onitsha by PointB: 10:39am On Mar 20, 2013
Bus loads of travelers were bombed in the North. Rather than every tribe to mourn their dead, some myopic folks are rejoicing over Igbo's death. Igbos may account for the majority; and reaction by Igbos to their losses is clear.

How about other ethnic groups, yooba for instance? Is that there are no yooba people affected, of that the yooba death/blood is insignificant, not worth mentioning, cheap?
PoliticsRe: U.S. Excludes Nigeria From Africa’s Democracy Summit by PointB:
Yawn.


After the summit, those countries will 'report' to Nigeria. A giant is a giant, sleeping or not!
PoliticsRe: Bomb Blast In Kano (Sabon Gari Luxury Bus Park) by PointB: 7:01pm On Mar 18, 2013
sheyie2007: Dem send children? huh
Yes and the children on those engaged in these murderous activities. They deny one or more children of peace when they rob them of their parents. So they and their children deserve no peace.
PoliticsRe: Bomb Blast In Kano (Sabon Gari Luxury Bus Park) by PointB: 6:56pm On Mar 18, 2013
Another black day in Nigeria's checkered history! May those who did this and their children never have peace in their lives.
PoliticsRe: SW Investors Invest Majorly In SE For First Time by PointB: 6:36pm On Mar 18, 2013
Nice one.

That's some savvy SW business men.
PoliticsRe: Afenifere Blasts Ahmadu Ali For Denigrating Yorubas by PointB: 5:55pm On Mar 18, 2013
Afenifere to the rescue.

That's more like it.
PoliticsRe: FG To Invest N1.6trn In Railway by PointB: 4:52pm On Mar 18, 2013
These are mind boggling proposals; undertaking them will cement GEJ place in the annals of Nigeria history. This shoeless fisherman is full of pleasant surprises.
He is stepping where those with snicker, canvass, etc couldn't dream to venture! Godspeed, my able shoeless Presido!
PoliticsRe: A Denied And Delayed Justice For Apo-6 And Ezu River-50. by PointB: 3:45pm On Mar 18, 2013
jackbauersballs: After reading this, I realize how stupid I have been.

I wholeheartedly apologize for a lot of the comments I have made here.

I am truly sorry.
Apologies accepted. Sometimes, it always better to get more information especially on sensitive matters.
PoliticsRe: Boko-Haram Has Destroyed 50 Catholic Churches In Borno by PointB: 2:47pm On Mar 18, 2013
Bombs and bullets can shatter and destroy buildings, but they only straighten the Christian faith! Kudos to the Catholic faithfuls. The joy of the Lord is your strength!
PoliticsRe: A Denied And Delayed Justice For Apo-6 And Ezu River-50. by PointB: 2:35pm On Mar 18, 2013
APO 6 STORY FROM BBC

[size=18pt]Will Nigeria's 'Apo Six' ever get justice? - BBC 2009[/size]


https://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45719000/jpg/_45719998_apo_aposix_466.jpg
The Apo Six clockwise from left Augustina Arebu, Anthony Arebu, Ekene Mgbe, Paulinus Ogbonna, Ifeanyin Ozor, Chinedu Meniru

In the fourth of a series of articles looking at policing in Nigeria, the BBC's Andrew Walker asks what happened to the "Apo Six", the most infamous case of extra-judicial killing in Nigeria's history:

The pictures are truly gruesome - we cannot publish them.

Lawyer Amobi Nzelu spreads the glossy prints out on his desk, covering it with horror.

There is nowhere else to look except at the bodies.

There is a close-up of a face, gaping exit-wound at the temple.

Limbs and torsos covered in blood.

Dead eyes stare upward.

"This is a human being," he says.

"Look what they did."

Apology

The bodies belong to six young Nigerians killed by the police.

Ekene Isaac Mgbe, Ifeanyin Ozor, Chinedu Meniru, Paulinus Ogbonna and Anthony and Augustina Arebu were killed on 7 and 8 June, 2005.


Elvis Ozor
https://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45719000/jpg/_45719996_apo_elvis_226.jpg
My friend was going to the bush, to go to the toilet, when he saw the police digging a hole and preparing to bury some people
Elvis Ozor
Younger brother of Ifeanyin

Nigeria's 'civil lunatics'
Vigilante 'jungle justice'
On patrol with Nigeria's police

The police tried to say they were armed robbers who had opened fire first.

But a judicial panel of inquiry set up by former President Olusegun Obasanjo rejected the police's story and the government apologised on behalf of the police for their killings.

The government paid $20,300 (£13,800) compensation to each of the families.

It recommended the officers be arrested and face a criminal trial.

But nearly four years since the night the Apo Six were killed, the trial has got nowhere.

The public has almost forgotten the case is still going on.

Danjuma Ibrahim, the senior police officer accused of ordering the killings, lives free on medical bail.

And the families of the dead have all but given up on justice.

Tight-knit

Elvis Ozor is the younger brother of Ifeanyin Ozor.

Like his brother, he works as a spare car parts merchant in the Apo mechanics' village, south of the capital, Abuja.

It is a kind of shanty-town of sea crates and workshops where five of the Apo Six worked.


APO SIX TIMELINE
7 June 2005: 2200 Apo Six meet Danjuma Ibrahim at a party
8 June: 0200 Four shot at police roadblock
0400 Ifeanyin and Augustina seen alive at Garki police station
1100 Police try to bury six in a cemetery near Apo
Two days of rioting in Apo and Garki districts
13 June: Police begin internal investigation
24 June: President Obasanjo orders inquiry
5 July: Police witnesses testify the six were slain in cold blood
6 July: Police armourer admits weapons planted on bodies
13 July: Court rules the suspects will face trial
15 December: Bodies buried by families
18 January 2006: Trial of police officers begins
3 August: Danjuma Ibrahim released on "exceptional and special" medical bail


This is a tight-knit community, mostly of ethnic Igbos from Nigeria's south-east.

On 8 June 2005 the Apo mechanics found the police burying their friends in a cemetery that, by chance, was near their workshops.

"My friend was going to the bush, to go to the toilet, when he saw the police digging a hole and preparing to bury some people," Elvis says.

"They recognised my brother. When the police said they were armed robbers, no-one believed them - they knew my brother was not like that."

"When I arrived at work, word had spread, but I didn't know. I arrived and everyone was looking at me," he says.

The story was out, and an angry mob gathered.

There was a riot in Apo and the police shot two more people dead.

Unlike any other case of suspected extra-judicial killing in Nigeria, some of the police broke ranks and turned on the senior officer involved.

The other five officers accused of the murders and eight more police witnesses have testified that Danjuma Ibrahim ordered the killings.

During the judicial panel hearings, some Igbo police officers fed information to Mr Nzelu, who represented the families of the Apo Six.

The panel heard that the six were at a nightclub in Abuja's Area 11 when Mr Ibrahim - then off duty - propositioned Augustina.

She turned him down, according to the testimony of Ifeanyin Ozor's friends.

Ransom demand

Mr Ibrahim went to a police checkpoint at the end of the street and told officers there were a group of armed robbers in the area.

When the six young people came in their car, he drove into them, blocking their way and ordered the police officers to shoot.

https://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45721000/jpg/_45721239_apo_danjuma_226.jpg
Danjuma Ibrahim
Danjuma Ibrahim was a high ranking police officer in the Nigerian Police

Ifeanyin called his friends after he survived the first burst of gunfire, they testified.

Who actually fired the shots is still disputed by Danjuma Ibrahim's lawyers, but four of the six were killed there, the prosecution says.

Ifeanyin and Augustina were taken to a police station.

Officers called Augustina's family to demand a 5,000 naira (then $43, £22) ransom to let her go, according to a report by the UN special rapporteur on extra-judicial execution.

Her family could not raise the money.

They were taken to a piece of rough ground outside town where they were executed, police officers testified at the criminal trial.

Augustina was strangled.

Then the police planted guns on the bodies of all six of the bodies and pictures were taken of them in the grounds of a police station by a police photographer.

Danjuma's defence


At the criminal trial, Mr Ibrahim's lawyers maintained that the Apo Six fired first.

He says all of them were killed in the gun battle, and a "home made" pistol and a shotgun were found in the car.


Extra-judicial killing in the police remains a shockingly common occurrence
Eric Guttschuss
Human Rights Watch


His lawyer Hyeladzira Nganjiwa says the prosecution dropped charges against some police officers in return for them changing their testimony.

Mr Ibrahim is the fall guy in a government plot to sweep the incident under the carpet, he said.

"I could never have done what they are accusing me of," Mr Ibrahim told the BBC outside the Abuja court where he is being tried.

He was released on medical bail in 2006, after his lawyer said he had a heart condition.

The five other accused - one of whom is now dying of Aids, according to his lawyer - remain in police custody.

That trial has been going on for almost three years.

After hearing the testimony of eight prosecution witnesses, the defence is now cross-examining the first.

Lawyers say the case is being stalled so it will eventually be forgotten, and the charges dismissed.

'Stalling'

In this case people accepted the victims were not armed robbers because they came from a close community.

But in other less high-profile cases, the public turns a blind eye to police killing, human rights advocates say.

The reluctance to punish police officers "emboldens" other officers to kill, says Eric Guttschuss of Human Rights Watch.

But the police say a great deal has changed since Apo Six case.

"The police have a higher respect for human rights than before," says spokesman Emmanuel Ojukwu.

"I am not aware of any recent cases of extra-judicial killing."

Divine justice?

Mr Guttschuss of Human Rights Watch, which tracks alleged cases, disagrees.

"Extra-judicial killing in the police remains a shockingly common occurrence."

He says the police lack the capacity to properly investigate crimes, and because of the pressure from society to deal with violent criminals, they simply dispose of suspects without the encumbrance of trials.

"[A] Nigerian's guilt or innocence is immaterial," he says.

Elvis Ozor says he has given up on the judicial system.

"When Danjuma was released, I forgot everything about the case."

"The only way justice will be delivered is from God."
PoliticsRe: A Denied And Delayed Justice For Apo-6 And Ezu River-50. by PointB: 12:15pm On Mar 18, 2013
One again begin to wonder what was going on in the mind of the Police Officers and men, as they line up these fifty defenseless people before killing them in cold blood.

What other such mass murder can be going on in other police formation as we speak!
PoliticsRe: Southwest PDP In Fresh Bid To Oust Tambuwal by PointB: 10:49am On Mar 17, 2013
Interesting.

Let's see if and how they pull this through.
PoliticsRe: N2bn Approved To Develop Maritime Academy by PointB: 10:43am On Mar 17, 2013
Good move.

I would like to see a Military Academy and Police Academy established in the SE/SS Zone. It will certainly go a long way in balancing ethnic composition of these institution.
PoliticsRe: Will GEJ Be More Effective In The Zoo?? by PointB:
Humans are higher order animals; primates.

On that note Nigeria is an open Zoo. Who better manage an open Zoo than a Zoologist?
PoliticsRe: A Denied And Delayed Justice For Apo-6 And Ezu River-50. by PointB: 7:57am On Mar 17, 2013
The quote below was set in the background of Nazi occupation of europe during the second world war.


First they came for the communists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't
a communist.

Then they came for the socialists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't
a socialist.

Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't
a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't
a Jew.

Then they came for the Catholics,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't
a Catholic.

Then they came for me,
and there was no one left to speak for
me. ” - Martin Niemöller
It is on this background that I join a commentator in insisting that 'Injustice anyway is a threat to justice everywhere.' It is important that we speak out against evils such as the murdering of APO 6, and the murdering and dumping of 50 bodies in the Ezu Rivers.

It is without doubt that these murdered are extra judicial killing perpetrated by police. What however is in doubt is the general populace ability to articulate their total rejection of any form of extra judicial killing anyway in Nigeria. Live is sacred, and as such the right to take lives especially those of unarmed groups, and none combatants must undergo a rigorous process.

We must jointly demand justice for these mass murders!
PoliticsRe: Second Niger-Bridge To Be Completed Before 2015 - Minister Of Works by PointB:
Sincere 9gerian: Even the ones that did not raise a finger on the issue of second Niger Bridge since 1979 has always gotten your votes. I dont understand your anger on this issue. Is it because Peter Obi's name was mentioned?

Previous report was that the Bridge will be completed in 2017 but I was pleasantly surprised to hear the minister say it will be completed in 2015.

The project is worth about N100billion, out of which FG will bring N30billion and Julius Berger N70billion.

I'm very sure of the construction of the bridge under this dispensation because the project is part of SURE-P. Any project under SURE-P is a forgone conclusion because the funds, which is usually the major cause of abandoned projects in Nig, is READY at hand.

However, what I dont know is whether they'll meet up with the target of completing it in 2015.
Second Niger bridge was part of GEJ campaign promise to the SE as you rightly noted. That Gov Peter Obi has taken it upon himself to follow-up with this issue is very commendable, and whatever reason you think my 'anger' is due to a mention of his name is best left to your imagination. I consider Peter Obi one of the very good and prudent governors across the Niger River if you must know.

However, you will agree with me that it is in the best interest of Goodluck Jonathan to complete the project within his first term, as Igboland is litered with abandoned FG projects. So best he completes it before 2015 balloting commences alongside the Onitsha River Port, and Enugu International Airport as those will certainly be discounted in Igboland as campaign issues by then. Enough time has been wasted as it were on this very important bridge already! We should be talking about high speed rail lines within and across region, not some bridge.
PoliticsRe: Second Niger-Bridge To Be Completed Before 2015 - Minister Of Works by PointB: 8:25am On Mar 16, 2013
Story!
Complete that bridge before the first ballot of 2015 general election is cast or lose our votes!

Time for Second Niger Bridge politics has long past.
PoliticsRe: NSCDC Suspends Lagos State Commandant by PointB:
Moral of the story:
Playing the loyalty card does not often pay. Eventually your lies, deceits, and pretense will eventually be exposed by your glaring incompetence.

Agberos and members of their clan should take note!
PoliticsRe: Three Boko-Haram Commanders Killed In Kaduna by PointB: 8:01am On Mar 16, 2013
Nigerians are behind you JTF, and able General!

Kill them terrorists! All of them!!
PoliticsRe: My Oga At The Top; Was It Really Obvious He Is Yoruba? by PointB: 7:55am On Mar 16, 2013
'My oga at top' seem to have a generous dose of the gene responsible for servitude (slavery) in him.

Where he comes from may or may not be responsible for his unabashed playing of loyal card. He's probably from agbero clan.
PoliticsRe: Train Ride From Lagos To Kano (live Blogging)- Premium Times by PointB: 4:50pm On Mar 15, 2013
^^^
Nice thread.

I am sure they will put it on the FP in due time.
PoliticsRe: Okorocha’s House Demolished In Orlu For Road Project by PointB: 9:39am On Mar 15, 2013
Some State governors loot their states dry without even demolishing a stall. Let's cut the guy some slacks already, he is not taking salary, and is using the his security votes to fund his free education pet project.


I think he made the right call!
PoliticsRe: OPC Leader Gani Adams Wants Amnesty For Boko Haram Militants by PointB: 9:12am On Mar 15, 2013
Everyone now has a voice in Nigeria, even crooks, vagabonds, and ex-militant terrorist - all because of amnesty, clemency, plea bargain etc. In saner climes, Garri Adams should be in cooling gulag
PoliticsRe: National Chairman Of Controversial APC's Speech by PointB: 8:24pm On Mar 14, 2013
Nna meeen, this na knockout blow! cheesy cheesy
PoliticsRe: BREAKING!!! Northern Elite Express Fear Over US Drone Base In Niger Republic by PointB: 6:10pm On Mar 14, 2013
The country hosting the drones (Niger) is not complaining, neither is Nigeria. Who exactly is complaining?
PoliticsRe: Jonathan Nominates Akinkuotu As Demuren’s Replacement by PointB: 5:57pm On Mar 14, 2013
Let me join in extending congratulatory message in advance to Mr Akinkuotu, for the nomination. I hope he doesn't let Nigerians down.
PoliticsRe: The Lawyer Behind The Controversial Phantom APC by PointB: 5:52pm On Mar 14, 2013
By the way does it matter who initiate a party registration process with INEC? Does such individual need be a lawyer?
PoliticsRe: African People's Congress Unveils Logo by PointB: 3:11pm On Mar 14, 2013
African Peoples Congress soldering on, All Progressive Congress gallivanting in a whining tour! grin grin grin

Who is the man??

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