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Fraud Charges; FG confiscates fugitive Tompolo’s property

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Agency Report     Fugitive former militant, Government Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo, has lost some of his assets to the Federal Government, temporarily, over his evasion of the court to answer fraud charges.

The Court of Appeal sitting in Lagos today dismissed an appeal filed by him, seeking to set aside the decision of the Federal High Court, Lagos which empowered the EFCC to attach all the properties belonging to the ex-militant.

Justice I. N. Buba of the Federal High Court, Lagos on February 19,  2016 made an order attaching Tompolo’s properties for failure to appear to answer the charges against him.

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission on December 15, 2015 instituted a Criminal charge against Tompolo and nine others over allegations of fraud at Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, NIMASA.

However, despite substituted service of the Court Summons effected on him, Tompolo refused to appear in Court.

Consequently, Justice Buba issued a warrant of arrest against him. Armed with the Warrant of Arrest, the Commission launched a manhunt for him, but could not effect his arrest.

On February 19, 2016, the Commission, through its counsel, Festus Keyamo, SAN, prayed the Court for an order attaching the properties of Tompolo by seizure, pending his arrest or appearance before the Court.

The court granted the Commission’s request prompting Tompolo to appeal against the decision.

However, in a unanimous judgment today, the Court of Appeal held that Tompolo cannot be heard complaining that his properties are attached by the Court below, when he has not come to answer to the summons against him.

The court held that the option available to Tompolo is to appear before the Federal High Court to apply for the order to be discharged, instead of filing the Appeal. The Court of Appeal was of the view that his private right of property has not been breached by the said order.  NAN

Zenith Bank/Delta Principals Cup Season2 Sets to Kick-off

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All is set for the second edition of the Delta State Principals Cup football competition for all secondary schools sponsored by Zenith Bank.

At the media conference of the Season 2 of the competition on Thursday, Governor Ifeanyi Okowa affirmed his resolve to give all young Deltans a platform to excel in their various areas of specialization and to expose their talents in the state to the global community.

The Delta State Commissioner for Basic and Secondary Education, Chiedu Ebie, who on behalf of the governor said the opening ceremony is scheduled for November 1, 2017 at the St Patrick’s College, Asaba while the final is scheduled for February 2018 at the Ozoro Polytechnic Stadium.

Stressing that the revival of the Principals Cup was one of the programs outlined by the Governor towards enhancing the grassroots sports developmental drive of the state, Ebie said that the Okowa administration was keen on redirecting the focus of young Deltans to meaningful ventures.

He commended Zenith Bank for partnering with the state and urging the private sector to also partner with the government on its laudable programs towards giving the youth a brighter future.

Deputy Managing Director of the Zenith Bank, Mr Ebenezer Onyeagwu, represented by Mr Lucky Ighade, the Deputy General Manager Asaba, assured of the bank’s determination to continue its partnership with the state, saying the Principals Cup was a veritable tool for engaging the youth in productively.

He said the Zenith Bank Delta Principals Cup was a flagship program of the bank aimed at giving back to society as well as providing the youth with a better future.

Ighade said the tournament was part of the bank’s ways of developing grassroots sports in the country with the hope that future stars would emerge therefrom to represent the country in international football competitions.

The Chairman of the Delta State Sports Commission, Chief Tonobok Okowa, represented by the Director-General, Mr Victor Onogagamue, assured that the commission will give necessary technical support to the programme

Weak sales plague Nokia

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Finnish telecoms equipment maker Nokia said Thursday its net loss deepened in the third quarter due to falling sales, as it presented a gloomy outlook that sent the share price plunging.

The net loss for the July-September period widened by 61 percent, to 192 million euros ($226 million), Nokia said in a statement.

Nokia’s share plummeted on the Helsinki stock exchange, shedding 15.2 percent in late afternoon trading in an overall market down just 0.83 percent.

Investors were mainly reacting to “the outlook for the networks business”, which Nokia said would probably see a four to five percent drop in sales for the rest of the year, Inderes analyst Mikael Rautanen told AFP.

The Finnish company posted a seven percent decline in sales to 5.5 billion euros.

“We experienced some challenges in our Mobile Networks business and see a continued decline in our primary addressable market in 2018,” chief executive Rajeev Suri said in Nokia’s statement.

The company said it expects its market share to fall by two to five percent in 2018.

Next year “is going to be another tough year in terms of market conditions,” Rautanen said, noting that Nokia had expected the market to stabilise next year “but it seems that it is not going to happen.”

Nokia Technologies, the company’s patents unit, was Nokia’s only business to report growth in the quarter, up 37 percent to 483 million euros, after it won an arbitration case over a patent dispute with South Korean rival LG. The amount it was awarded has not been disclosed.

“I am also particularly pleased that in 2017 the growth in patent licensing has helped to offset the sales decline on the Networks side,” Suri said.

The group meanwhile reiterated its earlier savings target of 1.2 billion euros in 2018.

Nokia said it planned to raise its 2017 dividend by two cents to 19 euro cents. AFP

Presidency claims Maina a monster left behind by Jonathan

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A presidential spokesman has described Abdulrasheed Maina as “one of the monsters’’ and mess left behind by the Jonathan  administration to frustrate the fight against corruption by the Buhari  government.

Garba Shehu, who is the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, stated this in Abuja on Wednesday.

He, therefore, maintained that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had no moral right to level any accusations against the President Buhari administration in respect of Maina, the  former head of the presidential team on pension reforms.

He emphasised that Maina was “one of the monsters created by the former PDP government, and which are still rearing their ugly heads long after the Party was soundly defeated in the 2015 elections.

“Over and over again, the President Buhari government has pointed out that the administration’s greatest problem is the mess left behind by the previous government. Maina is just one more example.’’

Shehu noted that Maina was not the only member of the former government involved in the multibillion naira pensions scandal, but a man warmly ensconced in the bosom of power.

He said: “Top officials in the PDP government, from sectoral heads, to those charged with responsibility for law and order received some of these billions of naira from Maina.

“We have all the transaction records and these are matters that the EFCC has been pursuing to ensure that they all have their day in court.”

The SSA hinted that some influential officials loyal to the previous government might have been the invisible hand in the latest scandal that saw the return of Maina to the public service, despite being on the EFCC’s wanted list.

He, however, assured Nigerians that President Buhari was determined to get to the bottom of the matter of the impunity that led to Maina’s reinstatement.

“Everything will be uncovered in due course.

“This just goes to show us the scale of corruption that this government is fighting. And, as we can all see, corruption keeps fighting back viciously,’’ he added.

The PDP, on Monday, had called for immediate arrest and prosecution of Abdulrasheed Maina, a former Chairman of the Presidential Task Force on Pension Reforms, wanted for alleged fraud.

The party made the call in a statement by National Publicity Secretary of its National Caretaker Committee, Mr Dayo Adeyeye.

The party called for the arrest and prosecution of those who aided the return of Maina to the country after his disappearance for several years, and his restoration to his duty post with added promotion.

The party also called for immediate sack of the Minister of Interior, Gen. Abdulrahman Danbazzau (rtd) and Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr Abubakar Malami, for restoring Maina to office against good conscience.

President Buhari, had earlier on same day, in a memo to the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs Winifred Oyo-Ita, directed the immediate disengagement from service of Maina, former chairman of the Presidential Task Force on Pension Reforms.

The President equally demanded a full report of the circumstances of Maina’s recall and posting to the Ministry of Interior, saying the report must be submitted to the office of the Chief of Staff to the President, before the end of work today.

Oyo-Ita, on same day, submitted the report to the office of the Chief of Staff as demanded by the President. NAN

Liberia Presidential Election: Ex-Warlord supports Weah’s ambition

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Former Liberian warlord Prince Johnson has endorsed George Weah for president ahead of a Nov. 7 run-off vote between the former soccer star and current Vice President Joseph Boakai.

Johnson took more than eight per cent of votes in the first round and his support is seen as a crucial boost for

Weah, who won 38.4 per cent, shy of the 50.1 per cent needed to win outright in one round.

NAN reports that a consignment of ballot papers for the election is expected to arrive in the country on October 28, the National Elections Commission (NEC) disclosed on Wednesday.

NEC chairman, Jerome Korkoya, said the commission had ordered 3,053,435 ballots, the same quantity printed for the first round of the elections.

“The ballots are being printed in Slovenia,’’ the commissioner said.

NEC registered 2,183,629 voters, but 1,641,922 or 75 per cent turned out on October 10 in the first round of the polls.

Because none of the 20 contesting political parties won over 50 per cent of the votes, NEC declared a run-off between the ruling Unity Party and Coalition for Democratic Change.

Korkoya, while addressing a news conference in Monrovia, also disclosed that the commission has received 56 election-related complaints, 33 of which have been concluded and forwarded to NEC Board of Commissioners.

He added that it all comprised seven members of the electoral body.

He revealed that NEC has begun hearing the complaint of All Liberian Party challenging the conduct of the Oct. 10 elections, while it just received another complaint from Liberty Party petitioning it for a re-run of the first round of the polls.

He, however, encouraged political parties to be represented at all polling places and to train their agents in their role at polling places.  Agency Report

 

We’ve delivered on our electoral promises –Kwara State Gov. Ahmed

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Kwara State Governor, Dr Abdulfatah Ahmed has said that the All Progressives Congress (APC) has delivered on its electoral promises to the people of the state.

The governor, who stated this yesterday in Ilorin at the flag off of APC campaign ahead of November Local government election in the state, said “we promised you improved health services. We have delivered. We promised safer roads, we have delivered. Good education, we have delivered. Jobs for youths and women, delivered. On our watch, Kwara state, from North to south, is witnessing great transformation”.

According to the governor, the APC remains the only credible platform for improving the living standard of the people through the provision of infrastructure for economic development.

Gov Ahmed explained that the existing nurtured political structure in the state would continue to guarantee good governance and deliver dividend of democracy and assured the people of the state that all the APC flag bearers in the local government election would deliver on the mandate of the party.

Governor Ahmed urged Kwarans to continue to give maximum support to the All Progressives Congress by casting their votes for the party in the November 18th Local government election.

Also speaking, the State Chairman of APC, Alhaji Ishola Balogun-Fulani charged members of the party across the sixteen local government areas of the state to campaign rigorously and tiredness for the party’s success.

In their separate remarks, Chairmen, Kwara Central, North and South Senatorial Districts of the state, Alhaji Jimoh Adesina, Alhaji Isiaka Oniwa and Alhaji Jimoh Balogun, respectively, promised to ensure that the party’s candidates win the election through hard work.

Also speaking, the State Women Leader of the party, Hajia Rahmat Oganija thanked the APC, the Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki and the State Governor, Dr Abdulfatah Ahmed for the opportunity given to women folks and promised that women would turn out en mass to vote for APC candidates in the election.

Anti-Corruption War: A Campaign Compromised? By Abdulahi Osi

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 “I belong to everybody and I belong to nobody” – President Muhammadu Buhari

It was May 29 2015 when that speech was made by the then newly inaugurated President Muhammadu Buhari. That punchy line resonated across the country, from the vast landscape of the north to the forest region of the south. The long awaited nemesis of the chronically corrupt and unrepentant enemies of good governance has arrived. It shall no longer be business as usual. The optimism on the part of the citizens was infectious.

From a backdrop of a beaten and battered economy, widespread insecurity and a massively looted treasury, President Buhari served to the citizenry a three pronged dosage as antidote, namely- Anti-corruption war, security and economic rejuvenation.

It is common knowledge that the most potent weapon in the kitty of General Buhari was the famed iron cast integrity earned over the years in the course of his service to fatherland. To clean the Augean stable of 16 years of filth left behind by the former administrations of the retreating PDP, he had committed himself to taking on corruption in every area where it reared its ugly head and there was no doubt on the part of Nigerians and other watchers that this difficult battle was capable of been won given the antecedents of its exponent.

The zeal and seeming determination with which the onslaught against graft commenced gave hope that, indeed, the nation was undergoing a rebirth; that a new Nigeria, free of malfeasance, was here.

But recent developments have given Nigerians and, indeed, international observers cause for serious concern. Is this war on course? Is the battle arsenal been evenly deployed to all troubled spots? Are some toes getting too big and too sacred to be stepped upon? More and more frightful questions continue to run through the minds of many. And rightly so, their doubts have not been unfounded.

As this article is being written, the nation’s media landscape is saturated with, perhaps, the most scandalous and most embarrassing story that promises to deliver the biggest blow to the anti-corruption drive of this government. It is the story of the former chairman of the Presidential Task Force on Pension Reforms Task Team, Mr Abdulrasheed Maina who the EFCC had declared wanted for monumental fraud, but was helped back to the country and reinstated to the public service with promotion. We will shed further light on this presently.

Only recently, the federal government approved the appointment of a fourteen member board to boost the arsenal of one of the duo of the country’s Anti-corruption specialized agencies, Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission, ICPC. On that list of anti-corruption warriors was Maimuna Aliyu. She would have made her way through but for the prompt intervention of the fourth estate of the realm, the press and other concerned Nigerians who took it upon themselves to keep watch over our fragile democracy.

In reaching a conclusion on such sensitive appointments, one must have thought that proper background security checks would have been carried out to ensure a high level of uprightness in character and reputation of those in whom we would be placing our collective aspirations in routing the disaster that corruption and all its vice have bedeviled us with.

But as it was later made known, bringing Maimuna Aliyu’s name for such a position was a grave error that shouldn’t have happened in the first place, given that there was an ensuing topnotch investigation into alleged corrupt activities by Maimuna by agencies of the federal government, the Nigerian Police and the EFCC.

Littering the media landscape were series of incriminating documents on how Aliyu as an ex-banker, allegedly used her position to confer corrupt advantages upon herself, appropriating to herself property valued at over N1billion.
Only last week, the Federal high Court in Abuja, ordered an interim forfeiture of 14 properties owned by former FCT Minister, Bala Mohammed over alleged corruption, abuse of office, corrupt practices and money laundering were among the charges instituted by the EFCC. The court further noted that the said properties are reasonably suspected to be proceeds of unlawful activities and crimes kept and concealed in names of ‘proxies and nominees’ of the ex-minister.

Guess those the Judge, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba found culpable and said to be at the vanguard of this despicable act, fronting as proxies in the pilfering of our commonwealth? Yes, same Maimuna Aliyu, among others.

Indeed, the eagle-eyed section of the media had also reported the content of a letter addressed to the Federal Ministry of foreign Affairs by Maimuna Aliyu titled “RE: APPEAL FOR INTERVENTION TO RECOVER MY INVESTMENT WORTH $3.05M” where she sought for recovery of her funds (One Billion, One Hundred and Fifty Nine Million Naira) invested into some real estate ventures in Dubai. For an ex-banker who lived on a monthly emolument while in service. How did this come about; was the question begging for answer.

And to think that this same ex-banker with such serious credibility question still to be solved would have made it to the ICPC board leaves observers short of words.

The ICPC Board appointment misstep is just one of the series of unfolding events that are daily rubbishing the gains of the anti-corruption campaign and depleting the credibility this government initially enjoyed at the onset of the battle.

Take the recent open altercation between the Minister of State, Petroleum, Dr Ibe Kachikwu and the Group Managing Director of NNPC, Dr Maikanti Baru. Pointedly, Kachikwu accused Baru, among others, of awarding contracts totaling $24 billion without due process and without recourse to the Board of the corporation. The contracts include: the crude term contracts valued at over $10billion, the Direct Sale Direct Purchase, DSDP contracts valued at $5 billion, the AKK Pipeline Contract valued at $3 billion, various financing allocation funding contracts with the Joint Venture oil Companies to the tune of $3 billion.

Baru’s defence was that the said contracts went through due processes and was approved by the President, who also doubled as the substantive Minister of Petroleum Resources. What Baru however failed to explain is if it was statutorily tenable for the Board which was supposed to formulate the workplan and the Budget of the Corporation not to be carried along in the award of contracts of such monumental proportion.

After all sides have stated their cases and all dirty linen washed in the open, one major take away was that impunity and corruption are still firmly entrenched in the nation’s oil sector and that some sacred cows can still get away with any malfeasance even without the proverbial slap on the wrist. How does this help the war against graft? How does this help to build confidence and engender trust in the government’s much touted determination to fight corruption to a standstill?

All these questions are being raised even while the grass cutting contract scandal which led to the suspension of the Secretary to the Federal Government, SGF, Babachir Lawal and the riddle surrounding the discovery of millions of dollars at a location in Lagos are yet to be laid to rest. Several weeks after the Vice-President, Yemi Osinbajo led panel set up by Mr President submitted its report, the nation is still kept in suspense, in  matters that ought to have been treated with utmost dispatch.

Mr Lawal, as the Secretary to the Government of the  Federation, SGF, allegedly used a company, Rholavision Engineering Ltd, while his name was still on its directors’ list, to secure a N230 million contract to clear “invasive plant species” in Yobe State.

The Senate ad-hoc Committee that investigated the contract scam found out that some tidy sum of N450 million was paid into the Ecobank account of Lawal’s Rholavision by five different companies which also benefited from the grass cutting contracts which was awarded by the now suspended SGF.

In a related scandalous development, the EFCC last April, following a whistle blower’s tip off, found a pile of currencies in an apartment in Ikoyi. By the time the counting was concluded, the currencies included: $43.4 million, N23.2 million and £27, 800. A shocked nation was still wondering who could have turned a living apartment into a cash warehouse, when it was treated to further absurdities as the Director-General of the National Intelligence Agency, Mr Ayodele Oke, claimed that the huge pile of cash belonged to his agency. A government Agency? With such huge amount in cash? For what purpose? Under which appropriation?

Following the decision of the President to set up a high powered committee to look into these two unsettling developments and come up with all the facts, and subsequent submission of the report to the President since August 20, Nigerians had largely awaited a Presidential pronouncement on them. The silence from the seat of power since then has remained very deafening.

Does this not amount to a major setback for the War Against graft? Does this not take a big chunk out of the credibility rating of this government regarding its avowed desire to stamp out corruption?
Concerned citizens were still analyzing the disturbing turn of events and taking stock of the reverses the anti-graft battle has recorded when the Maina bombshell dropped. Now, this is a major devastating and damaging blow on whatever may have been left of the anti-graft campaign.

Abdulrasheed Maina, the former Pensions Czar who was accused of fleecing retired people of billions of naira and fled the country to escape arrest and trial, was, under the watch of a corruption fighting government, smuggled back into the country and not only reinstated but given double promotion, a reward(?) for the agony and deprivation he threw hundreds of tired and retired senior citizens of this country into.
Although President Buhari intervened and ordered his sack and investigation of how this happened, the fact that it happened at all, under the watch of a regime that parades itself as anti-corruption warriors, has left a permanent dent and irreparable damage to the campaign. Can this government still reverse the losses already suffered and rev the anti-corruption battle back to life?  The answer lies in the womb of time.

Abdulahi Osi, Osi wrote in from Ajaokuta, Kogi State

Culled from The Capital NG

World politics analysis

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South Korean police were on high alert in Seoul on Tuesday to monitor protests by both critics and supporters of President Donald Trump as the U.S. leader arrived in the country amid concerns over North Korea’s nuclear threats.

Surrounded by thousands of police officers and a tight perimeter created by buses, hundreds of anti-Trump protesters rallied at a boulevard near the U.S. Embassy, holding banners that read “No Trump” and “No War.”

The demonstrators accused the outspoken president of raising tensions with North Korea and pressuring Seoul to buy more U.S. weapons. They also criticized him for pressing Seoul to re-do a bilateral free trade deal between the countries so that it’s more favorable to the United States.

Across the street, hundreds of Trump supporters waved the U.S. and South Korean flags and held signs that read “Blood Allies Korea US.” They chanted “USA!” when Trump’s motorcade passed by the two protest groups for a meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae-in at the presidential Blue House.

More than 15,000 officers will be deployed to provide security during Trump’s two-day visit and monitor the demonstrations, according to the National Police Agency.

Police had unsuccessfully attempted to block anti-Trump protesters from marching in streets near the presidential palace, with the Seoul Administrative Court ruling that such a ban would infringe on the protesters’ freedom of assembly. Dozens of anti-Trump protesters rallied near the presidential office earlier on Tuesday under the close watch of police.

“We oppose the visit to South Korea by Trump, who has heightened the fears of war on the Korean Peninsula,” said one of the protesters, reading from a statement.

The group, which calls itself the “No Trump Coalition,” also plans to protest on Wednesday near Seoul’s parliament, where Trump is to make a speech calling on the international community to maximize pressure on North Korea.

Pro- and anti-Trump protesters have been staging dueling but peaceful protests in Seoul in recent weeks ahead of Trump’s visit, reflecting a public deeply divided along ideological and generational lines.

Many South Koreans are concerned that Trump’s fiery rhetoric on North Korea, which has included threats of military options, is raising the risk of an unwanted war on the Korean Peninsula that could cost thousands of South Korean lives.

Others, including older people who tend to be more conservative, are supportive of Trump’s tough stance against the North, which has been accelerating its nuclear weapons and missile tests in recent months, and accuse liberal South Korean President Moon of being too soft on Pyongyang.

South Korea is known for its vibrant, and occasionally violent, protest culture that sometimes results in significant political changes. Massive but peaceful street protests by millions drove lawmakers to impeach then-President Park Geun-hye over a corruption scandal in December. Park was formally removed from office and arrested in March over charges including bribery and extortion.

The conservative Korea Freedom Federation released a statement welcoming Trump’s visit, which it described as a “God-like move” that would “instantly reverse” the security situation on the peninsula after the allies had been forced to the “defensive” by North Korea’s weapons tests. However, the group also lamented Trump’s decision not to visit the heavily guarded demilitarized zone between the Koreas during his visit to the South, saying that it might lead North Korea to misjudge that its provocations have hurt the allies’ morale.

Meanwhile, in the Philippines, dozens of protesters burned a portrait of Trump in downtown Manila on Tuesday, saying the president, who will join a summit of East Asian leaders next week in the country, is not welcome there. Members of Kadamay, an alliance of urban poor activists, camped out at a bridge near the presidential palace and chanted “Ban Trump in the Philippines!”

Exclusive: Givanas Cosmetics Factory, A Wage Slave Camp- Insider Informs

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Lagos, Wednesday 4th of October; over three hundred workers of Givanas Cosmetics, a Lebanese firm in Apapa, locked up the gate of their factory in obvious frustration with the management anti-labour stand and arbitrary cut in their paltry take-home pay.

newsheadline247 checks revealed the workers who are employed as casuals on grade levels C1 & C2 are paid N1100 & N950 daily respectively for eleven hours arduous factory work!

It was also alarming to know that without prior consultation, the Factory Manager, an immigrant Lebanese, Mr Sheriff Zacca allegedly cut their wages to N800 & N700 for the two grades of casual workers respectively.

Newsheadline247 understands this irked the workers to protest the wage cut and other alleged inhuman treatments by the expatriate Lebanese manager.

While the protest was ongoing, our source informed that Mr Zacca organised armed security personnel to disperse, coarse and intimidate the hapless workers, threatening “they will all be sacked as there are many looking for jobs on the streets.”

 

It was gathered that a pro labour organization, United Action for Democracy took up the case with the management and labour centre.

It was also learnt that Givanas Cosmetics Human Resources Manager, Mr Daniel Itiveh pleaded with the organization that “there was only slight misunderstanding and that four out of the casuals have been staffed since his assumption of office recently.”

Further digs show that the organized labour is however angry with Givanas Cosmetics’ refusal to allow its employees join and be members of labour unions for the protection of their constitutionally guaranteed rights.

An impeccable source also hinted that “the workers are subject to intense pauperisation, sordid harmful factory exposure and casualisation beyond the period stipulated by extant labour laws.

“Labor believes that the factory is another industrial accident waiting to happen.

“We are concern that what happened in Ikorodu where workers were locked up and burnt into ashes by a foreign-owned factory shall never occur again” the source informed.

We gathered that one of the labour centres has already written the factory and may likely take further steps as may be appropriate to ensure that the company respects the country labour laws.

However, Mr Daniel Itiveh told newsheadline247 that the allegation of labour slavery in Givanas cosmetics factory are mere “hearsays and perpetuated lies.”

In his response to our mail, Daniel said “the mentioned allegations are to the best of my knowledge, hearsays.

“We are not sure what the motives of those perpetuating these lies are as there has not been any demonstration at our premises.

“As an organisation, we have a strong employee value proposition and we are law abiding.

“Check your records, our organisation currently runs a foundation- Givanas Foundation- and we encourage you to visit us to see first-hand the impacts we are making in peoples’ lives,” Daniel stated.

Popular American actress accuses George Bush Snr of sexual assault

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American actress, Heather Lind, has accused a former US President George HW Bush of sexual assault.

Lind stated the incident occurred in 2014 while posing for a photo with the ex-president at the screening of her movie ‘Turn’.

The actress claimed Bush ‘groped’ her from his wheelchair and shared a dirty joke with her.

“When I got the chance to meet George H.W. Bush four years ago to promote a historical television show I was working on, he sexually assaulted me while I was posing for a similar photo,” Lind was quoted.

“He didn’t shake my hand. He touched me from behind from his wheelchair with his wife Barbara by his side. He told me a dirty joke.”

A spokesman for the ex-president reacting to Lind’s allegations said it wasn’t an ‘intentional act of assault.’

Bush also apologised to the actress for the “distress” she may have felt as a result of his “attempt at humour”.

“President Bush would never under any circumstances intentionally cause anyone distress, and he most sincerely apologizes if his attempt at humor offended Ms. Lind.”

Recently, sexual harassment has been a major topic of discussion in America’s film industry.

Over 40 actresses have come out to accuse veteran Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein of sexual assault.