It was another rough outing for President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday as the issue of corruption under his administration featured prominently in a sermon delivered by a cleric at the funeral service for the former National Security Adviser Gen. Andrew Azazi in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital.
■ The Bishop of the Bomadi Catholic Vicarage, REV. HYANCITH EGBEDO, was point blank when he attributed the bad condition of the East-West Road and the series of plane crashes in the country to corruption in the polity. Rev. Egbebo said he was nearly killed on the bad East-West road. He told the gathering that there was need to tackle corrupt practices among political office holders and focus on the construction of roads.”
■ But PRESIDENT JONATHAN disagreed with the cleric’s assertion that poor infrastructural development under his administration was due to the active involvement of elective office holders and political appointees in corrupt practices. The president insisted that what the nation needs was for Nigerians to change their attitude towards governance and development. He said though corruption exists in the country, the citing of corruption as the reason for the failure in certain sectors of the economy including aviation and road sectors was wrong. “We talk about corruption as if it is the cause of our problems. No, yes, we have corruption in this country. The government has also been fighting corruption.”
Monthly Archives: December 2012
Hillary Clinton receives blood-clot treatment
(CNN) – Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was hospitalized Sunday after doctors discovered a blood clot during a follow-up exam related to a concussion she suffered this month, her spokesman said.
She is expected to remain at New York Presbyterian Hospital for the next 48 hours so doctors can monitor her condition and treat her with anti-coagulants, said Philippe Reines, deputy assistant secretary of state.
Clinton was suffering from a stomach virus earlier this month when she fainted due to dehydration, causing the concussion.
She was expected to return to work at the State Department this week after being sidelined for the past three weeks.
Unearthing The Akpabio – Umana Scam 1
I Hate Godswill Akpabio-Thompson Essien
Why is Umana Okon Umana So Desperate?
Why is Umana Okon Umana So Desperate?
By Tony Udomkpa
I am 60 years now and I do not witch haunt because I have grand- children. I used a journalistic style to make my reportage. I have lived in Lagos for about 35 years and the kind of stories I hear in our state are disgusting. Politics should not degenerate to a do or die. In the west, most of us had been part of the political system and we contributed our quota, and helped hundreds of Akwa Ibom people who came my way. That was why my people back home decided to honor me with a chieftaincy title, which I rejected at first. I even wanted to go back to Lagos because of the way people perceive wealth and power back home. If there is anything I hate, its desperation for power because only God gives political power and to who he chose. Why must we sacrifice zoning on the alter of selfishness and material aggrandizement? There is no state in Nigeria where zoning is not practised. In fact it was in the spirit of the PDP norms that Liyel Imoke, openly stated that the governorship of cross river state is for cross river north senatorial district. I will not stop speaking until we all reach a point of harmony that ” every man should have his due”. If you short change the people of Eket and they rally and say, “no more oil production in our district until we are given our due”, will the heavens fall? They have a moral right to the governorship of the state. We all know the truth but when the chips are down, I will be vindicated. If the people of Eket are cheated, let me see where the the state will get the resources to even thrive.
There is yet another issue, In other places, commissioners are respected members of the society who use the opportunity of their office for the betterment of their society. They are not compelled to take actions but work on conviction, the dictates of their responsibilities and the code of conduct. It gave me joy when my friend Senator Tokumbo Afikuyomi left the senate and took up a commissioner appointment in Lagos, it shows patriotism and loyalty.
Back here, we feel that because A is a commissioner or Secretary, therefore, he must be a governor. A Governor to be must not be a controversial person, must show humility and carry everyone along. I was happy when I read that the present governor of our state, chief Akpabio was very humane as a commissioner. God had already designed the office of governor for him, in spite of the antics and force of money displayed by my younger brother Udoma bob Ekarika. A governor to be must not step on several toes because you will need the people to get to your destination. That is why I am convinced that the present SSG cannot succeed Godswill Akpabio, even if he is given the PDP ticket as birthday gift. What about his relationship with Senator Effiong Bob, with whom he would have teamed up long time ago? What about Ime Albert, who he frustrated his senatorial bid?, what about Ambassador Edem, or we think he is silent for nothing? What about the ex councillors who are so disenchanted with the system for being owed several millions each? Who does not know that the State House is polarised into 3 camps with the speaker’s group as majority? The list is endless but I can remember that I once told a friend that I do not know who will be the governor, but I know who will never be: the SSG. He is not loved, everyone follows him out of fear, he has no charisma, he is so vindictive, oh my God! I do not know why they cannot learn from Governor Akpabio, who has no dull moment. Even if he does not like you, but manages to smile and give you hope, he can dance the rhythm of every music and lavish both friends and foe with the values and splendour of leadership. If you cannot learn to be friendly with people at 60, Achong oooooh
Chief Tony Udomkpa
Oruk Anam,Aks
The Touting AIDN,AKISAN AND Godswill Akpabio:The Triangle Of Hubris

By Clayton ‘Bane‘ Udoh idiongo@hotmail.com
According to the (CRS) Congressional Research Service, US firms invested $419 Billion dollars in foreign lands for the year 2011. This brings the cumulative amount for foreign investment to $4.7 Trillion in the past 22 years (1990-2011).
The average amount invested per year based on information from the CRS would be roughly calculated as $214 billion dollars a year.
More interesting is the fact that Reuters reports that American firms are sitting on cash reserves of an estimated $5.1 Trillion dollars.
So why has investors eluded Godswill Akpabio in his two terms as a Governor of Akwa Ibom State?
Why has he been unable to attract one real investor that could bring at least 4000 middle class jobs to Akwa Ibom State?
Rather the Governor has gone on a wild goose chase across the globe to as far as Australia when the answer remains in the USA.
The simple reason is one word; Hubris. Especially if the key man of the Governor on Diaspora Affairs makes statements of the like below;
“I am the SSA (Diaspora Affairs) to the Governor .The days and culture of dumping hypes on the State Government, calling them proposals by the Diaspora citizens, who have nothing but bloated ego and gross incompetence to show, is over. Those who parrot unity, stop bellyaching in their envy and pull-them-down tradition. They should shut up because Diaspora never has anything good to offer and are serial leadership failures as far as the Akwa Ibom State is concerned. No organization gets the kind of global attention AIDN is getting by happenstance, definitely not by listening to detractors and little minds.. But,by sheer hardwork and the kind of strategic leadership offered by itsGlobal Secretariat and other executives. …….Clement Ikpatt.”
The above statement was made by a key figure in the search of investment into Akwa Abasi Ibom State.
AIDN “Global” was originally a praise group created to usher in the Governor’s presence in the USA. The SSA (Senior Special Advisor or Assistant?) of Diaspora Affairs is a product of this group. However without any corporate experience (he was a praise singer surviving on selling wheel chairs) or administrative knowledge, he can be seen every now and then attacking perceived non-supporters of the Governor with expletives or posting articles ranging in topics from Boko Haram to medicinal African plants on the internet. All the while collecting his salary and making lofty statements as seen above.
AIDN has been leveraged (Akwa Ibom Diaspora Network) as the only portal for the incursion of foreign investment into the state. In the same vein it is shrouded in secrecy with no transparency. Access to information involves paying a membership fee of $200 and a registration fee of $150. AIDN has no functionalwebsite (The links do not work).
All investment chances and proposals are to pass through this organization
either by two emails controlled by Clement Ikpatt namely; aksdiaspora@yahoo.com or
(preferred) or calling the number 1-302-494-1304.
With ultra-sycophancy and an urge to make as much as he can to match, he arranged a few stints for the Governor to fly into Houston, Texas and do a Powerpoint presentation of roads made and other stuff. The audiences in these so called “Banquet Hall Economic Expos” comprised of a few Caucasians from the Chamber of Commerce down the street and nothing else.
In the end, true foreign investors looking at the set-up have decided that it has nothing to do with a free market economy. The American Business class is very wary of working with third world government stooges/organizations!
People from Diaspora who have decided to travel to Akwa Abasi Ibom State have seen that there are no structures set in place for people trying to bring home ideas without it passing through the political and highly biased machinery of AIDN and a record number of people in Diaspora worldwide (97%) have decided to wait it out.
AKISAN USA (Akwa Ibom State Association of Nigeria) would have been the saving grace of Akwa Ibom State as the oldest association so far in the USA with professionals steeped,tried and tested in corporate experience and expertise and connections in every field.
A valuable ally (its members not the organization!), in the search for investment from the fortune 500 companies globally and in the USA. However they were regarded as refusing to violate their 501C status and be used as the praise apparatus for Godswill Akpabio, a group refusing to bend over and be subservient, hence the need for AIDN.
However the Governor shrewdly saw that AKISAN also had no backbone and this has been proven through several incidences. One being that AKISAN execs had their flight tickets to attend Akwa Ibom State Anniversary dispensed to them by AIDN.
Recently pressure was made to bear on AKISAN to make sure that the venue for the 2013 convention is not held in Phoenix, Arizona because of the presence of one Idiongo Clayton-Thomas Udoh (Bane) a Software IT Specialist that speaks without fear about the inefficiency of the Governor’s administration courtesy of parasites like Clement Ikpatt all around him.
AKISAN in like manner of not wanting to be straight and tell the Governor the facts (For hope of being dashed money or favor) caved in to the request. The carrot dangled before AKISAN was simple ;Governor wants to come and he will not come because of Bane to Phoenix,AZ. So if you want a venue in which Governor will come and you can comfortably beg him for money then it will not be Phoenix!
So the triangle involves a Governor who is a stickler for praise (recently praise master, Emmanuel Nicholas alias White Bom Bom received a check for 20 million Naira or $126,000) and two associations that do not have the guts to tell the Governor the real facts he needs to hear to be able to get the ball rolling as far as bringing investment into Akwa Abasi Ibom State is concerned (Calculation: it is more profitable to praise than tell the truth).
For those of you reading this article watch how it takes Godswill Akpabio two terms “trying” to bring in investors while multi-billion investment deals are made weekly in financial media like Bloomberg TV or CNBC and the rest of the world.
Clayton “Bane” Udoh
Mesa, Arizona
Edo police boss to pay N140m as damages
Edo police boss to pay N140m as damages A High Court in Benin, has ordered the Commissioner of Police, Edo State Command to pay Mr. Omoruyi Ogundezi and six others, N140m as damages for the unlawful seizure of their vehicles. The order is sequel to a suit brought before the court by Ogundezi and others against the CP and the Divisional Police Officer at the Igarra Police Station, in Akoko Edo Local Government Area. Our correspondent gathered that the vehicles were seized during the State House of Assembly re-run in Akoko Edo in 2009. Justice J. O. Okeaya-Inneh, in his ruling, said the seizure of the vehicles amounted to an infringement on the plantiffs fundamental human rights as enshrined in the 1999 Constitution. Ruling on the application, Okeaya-Inneh said the role of the judiciary in the sustenance of democracy was not in doubt as the constitution vested in it, the powers to check the legislative and executive branches. He said, “Whereas there was affidavit-evidence by the applicants, there was no counter-affidavit by the respondents, even when they were served with all the processes in the suit.” According to him, the respondents either had no defence or were simply not interested in its outcome, “an indication that the applicants facts deposed in the affidavit are true, being unchallenged, uncontroverted and undisputed.” The court further ruled that the CP and the DPO should release the applicants’ vehicles to them forthwith.
Helen Ukpabio’s mum dies of heartbreak after losing 3 sons same day
Ojukwu’s Secret Daughter Traced She lives in Kaduna
Written by SUNDAY TRUST
The secret daughter ex-Biafran leader left behind was brought up by a prominent Muslim family in Kaduna. She lives among the Northern elite and detests any suggestion that links her with the former warlord. This is the extraordinary story of Ojukwu’s mystery daughter. Even in death Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu,
Nigeria’s best known rebel leader, seems to have retained his ability to shock. The revelation that he had a secret daughter — to whom he allocated, in his will, one of his landed properties — shocked even the other members of his family. But perhaps more shocking is the discovery — through Sunday Trust investigation — that the daughter was actually brought up by a prominent Northern Muslim as his own “child”.
Tenny Hamman, as Ojukwu called her, was raised in Kaduna by former Deputy Inspector General of Police Hamman Maiduguri as his own “daughter”. Although she was formally named Aisha (the name she used in school), she is also called Tani (or Aunty Tani by younger relatives). Tani is a traditional Hausa name given to a female born on Monday. Apparently the name Tenny (or Tenni) that Ojukwu called her is the corrupted version of Tani.
Late Hamman Maiduguri was a top police officer who spent a significant part of his life in Kaduna. He hailed from the north-eastern city of Maiduguri, Borno State capital. He was appointed Northern Region’s commissioner of police after the death of the region’s Premier Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto. He later became the Deputy Inspector General of Police (DIG) during the regime of General Yakubu Gowon, the man who led the crushing of Ojukwu’s Republic of Biafra.
mystery child
The story of how Hamman Maiduguri became “the father” of Ojukwu’s daughter appears to be as mysterious to even a section of his own family as it is to the other members of Ojukwu’s family.
Much of it is still shrouded in deep secrecy but Sunday Trust investigation reveals that the late police officer did raise Tenny as his own daughter.
There are conflicting versions of how she came to be late Hamman’s daughter. Some sources told Sunday Trust that she was the daughter of his wife, Mary Theresa (a Christian who later converted to Islam and is now called Inna or simply Hajia); others said Tenny was a daughter of Mary Theresa’s sister and that the family adopted her as their own.
One of the sources said Tenny’s mother gave birth to her before she married Hamman. “He accepted her with her baby and since then she has been bearing the name Tenny Hamman,” he said.
Whichever version is accurate, most sources said she was indeed brought up like a biological daughter of Hamman. Many residents of the area still believe that she is Hamman’s biological daughter. One source said she was among the people who inherited what he left behind when he died.
“It will be very difficult for you to unravel her true story because many knew her as Hamman’s biological daughter,” said the source. “She inherited part of his properties. This story you are trying to open is seen by some as mere tale because they grew up and know her as one of Hamman’s children,” he added.
“i will call the police”
Indeed, due to the cloud of secrecy surrounding the whole issue, details are hard to come by. When a hint of the story began to emerge following the announcement of Ojukwu’s will, the family mounted a formidable firewall to block any leakage from any possible source. Sunday Trust’s investigation was blocked from many angles and some of its staffers were even threatened with arrest and litigation.
When the leak first came that the woman Ojukwu spoke of as his daughter was a lady living in Kaduna, Sunday Trust search team spent considerable time trying to locate her.
Our correspondents who eventually located her at the house of late Hamman in Kaduna said Tenny is a woman approaching the age of 50. She is living with her aged mother, they said. One of them noted that she is Ojukwu’s “carbon copy”.
Apparently, she got a premonition that journalists, having heard of the will, might be looking for her. So when one of our correspondents knocked on the door to the house to seek an audience with her, she was ready for him.
As soon as he entered the house, she chased him away. “Who are you and why are you here?” she shouted. When he tried to introduce himself, she refused to listen to him.
“Leave here before I call the police,” she said angrily.
Many other family relations approached responded with hostility too. One of them threatened litigation. “If you mention anything about us, we’ll sue,” he warned.
Sources told Sunday Trust that Ojukwu met Tenny’s mother when he was a military officer in the North. He was in charge of 5th Battalion of the Nigerian Army in Kano, where he was also friends with the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero, before he was appointed the Governor of the Eastern Region following the first military coup in 1966.
Apparently, throughout the crisis surrounding the coup and counter-coup of July 1966 and the subsequent civil war that followed them as a result of Ojukwu’s declaration of Biafran independence, Ojukwu and his ex-lover kept the issue of their love child secret.
But as little Tenny grew up, there appeared to be some people who had suspected a link between her mother and Ojukwu.
Sources told Sunday Trust that there was a time when Tenny’s school mates at Queen’s Amina College, Kaduna, spread “gossips” that she was Ojukwu’s daughter. At the college, Tenny was said to be a tough girl and a bully. But when one slim girl called her Ojukwu’s daughter, she broke down in tears.
“Her mates were surprised that she could also be very weak,” the source said.
One of her classmates also told Sunday Trust that Tenny — known in the college as Aisha Hamman — was always uncomfortable with claims that she was Ojukwu’s daughter.
Another said, although she could be nice, she doesn’t tolerate nonsense. “We once fought in the school,” she told Sunday Trust in confidence. “Since then I have not been close to her. She didn’t even attend my marriage”.
They were 30 in their Queen’s Amina College class and they finished in 1978. It is unclear what other academic attainments Tenny got, but her college classmates said she at one time lived in the United States.
Another source also said she had worked at the presidency during General Sani Abacha’s regime.
“She got married and has a daughter, who should be in her 20s by now,” another source said. “But she has since parted ways with the husband”.
The will that outs Tenny
The revelation of Tenny as Ojukwu’s daughter came from the former Biafra leader’s will which was read at the Enugu State High Court penultimate Friday. It was presented to a section of the family by the chief registrar of the court Mr Dennis Ekoh.
The will listed Ojukwu’s children as follows: Tenny Hamman (daughter), Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu Jnr (son), Mmegha (Mimi) (daughter), Okigbo (son), Ebele (daughter), Chineme (daughter), Afam (son) and Nwachukwu (son).
Ojukwu’s widow, former beauty pageant Bianca Onoh but now Nigeria’s Ambassador to Spain, was there, ostensibly to represent both herself and the three children she had with Ojukwu: Chineme, Afam and Nwachukwu.
She reportedly expressed shock over the appearance of Tenny’s name in the will. She said her husband had never told her about Tenny when he was alive.
Apart from Bianca, Ojukwu’s first cousin, Mr Val Nwosu, and another relative, Mr Mike Ejemba, were at the court to witness the presentation. But Ojukwu’s other children were not there nor were they represented by anyone.
Based on the will, Bianca emerged as the biggest beneficiary of Ojukwu’s wealth. She is allocated his Casablanca Lodge located at No 7, Forest Crescent, GRA, Enugu; two of his properties at Jabi and Kuje in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja; and all his money and personal effects.
She is also to replace him as the trustee in the family company, Ojukwu Transport Limited. She was also given two plots of land in Nnewi. But Ojukwu put a strong caveat that Bianca should forfeit the land if she remarries.
His eldest son, Emeka Jnr., got the family house at Nnewi.
Tenny, who is apparently his eldest daughter, got Jubilee Hotel, located in Zaria, Kaduna State. Other children too have their own shares.
The hotel Ojukwu gave Tenny
Sunday Trust investigation traced the hotel Ojukwu allocated to his daughter to a lively area in Zaria. The investigation revealed that late warlord does indeed own a house and a hotel located on Hospital Road in Sabon Gari, Zaria.
The hotel used to be a very popular inn where people visited mainly to have drinks.
It is a one-storey building where the top floor is left open with burglars surrounding it perhaps for the safety of the customers.
However, when Sunday Trust’s correspondent visited the place, he observed that it is no longer functioning as a hotel: it has been turned into a warehouse.
A 65-year-old resident of the area confided to Sunday Trust that recently a son of Ojukwu, who resides in Germany, had visited the place and probably ordered for the change.
“It was after the visit of Ojukwu’s son to the area that the status of the hotel changed to a warehouse. What we learnt was that the place has been sold but I don’t know the details of the transaction.
“Of course, the hotel belonged to Ojukwu before he died. I can authoritatively confirm this to you because I know virtually all the owners of the properties in most areas of Sabon Gari,” he added.
“The place was very popular before the recent change of status. But as you can see, the place has now turned to a warehouse where provision items are stored,” he said.
Hospital Road, where Ojukwu’s house and the former hotel are located in Zaria, is predominantly occupied by people from southern part of Nigeria.
The hotel was located at the heart of the street while Hospital Road is one of the famous streets in Sabon Gari area. The hotel’s location, observers said, added to its popularity.
Apart from that, according to those interviewed by Sunday Trust, Sabon Gari houses most of the hotels that exist in Zaria.
Despite the popularity of Jubilee Hotel, though, some residents told Sunday Trust that they were not aware that it belonged to Ojukwu.
“Honestly, I heard it recently that Ojukwu owned the hotel. Of course, I know Jubilee Hotel for quite some time now but I never knew that it belonged to Ojukwu.
“When pub activities stopped taking place at the hotel, somebody told me that the place belonged to Ojukwu and his children have decided to change the status of the place.
“I learnt that before the demise of Ojukwu, the hotel was run by his brother but after his death, according to what I learnt, Ojukwu’s children took over,” another resident, Idris Tijjani, told Sunday Trust.
The controversy over the will
It is unclear whether Tenny will claim the hotel Ojukwu allocated to her. If she plans to do so, she may not face much trouble, despite the controversy that trails the presentation of the will.
Although the will itself has deepened the conflict among other members of Ojukwu’s family, the contending sides appeared to have accepted the allocation of the hotel to Tenny.
Bianca did not reject it and the first son, Emeka Jnr, too, said his father did have a will that mentions Tenny as his daughter and has awarded her landed property.
Emeka Jnr had rejected the will presented at the Enugu State High Court and claimed that the genuine will of his father has not yet been presented. But he admitted that in the genuine will, Tenny has her share.
The other controversy about the will is the omission of Ojukwu’s look-a-like son, Debechukwu Odumegwu-Ojukwu.
Debe has persistently claimed to be Ojukwu’s eldest child and is currently engaged in legal battle with other members of the family.
But his name did not feature in the will.
Ojukwu’s lawyer said that the former Biafran leader did not include Dede because the latter failed to prove that he was indeed his son.
Ojukwu’s randy past
The emergence of Tenny in Ojukwu’s will has once again brought to the fore his playboy lifestyle.
Although his admirers tend to play down such aspect, it keeps reverberating. At an event held last year ahead of his burial, majority of the speakers focused mainly on Ojukwu’s heroic deeds and boldness as a soldier.
But Nollywood actor and ace broadcaster, Chief Pete Edochie, surprised the huge audience when he talked about Ojukwu’s randy past.
“Ojukwu was a human being; Ojukwu loved women. As a matter of fact, I would describe him as H. G. Wells described Mr. Paully.
“H.G Wells said that Mr Paully was congenitally disposed to the worship of women. Well, those words may sound harsh but I will describe Ojukwu like that. Ojukwu loved women with a passion,” Edochie told the gathering.
When Sunday Trust contacted Edochie over Ojukwu’s revelation of Tenny as his love child and the property he reserved for her, he said he had no doubt about it.
“Ojukwu knows the number of children he had when he lived. If he had written such thing in his will, there is no point questioning the wish of the dead,” he said.
Journalist beaten to coma at Governor Akpabio’s birthday bash




