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Niger pupils’ abductors increase ransom to N200m

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…reject N11m contributed by community

Angered by the seeming inaction on their demand of N110 million ransom for the release of the abducted 156 pupils of kidnapped from Salihu Tanko Islamiyya School in Tegina, Niger State, the abductors have hiked their demand to N200 million, upping the ransom by a whopping N90 million.

 

Reports have it that the bandits also rejected the N11 million raised by the community, insisting on being paid N200 million before the pupils are released.

Already, two parents of the abductees have reportedly died of heart attack.A

 

Another parent, Malam Ali Mohammed, said the gunmen threatened to kill the children if the ransom demanded was not paid.

 

Mohammed, who is a tipper driver, has five children among the abductees.

 

He said the parents are poor people and cannot afford to raise N200 million.

 

He asked the government to come to their rescue.

 

“We are poor people; we don’t have such money,” he told reporters on Thursday night.

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He pleaded with the government to “come to our aid.”

 

The head teacher of the school, Abubakar Alhassan, yesterday confirmed that the gunmen had raised the ransom from N110 million to N200 million.

“They say I should not even talk about N110 million again but N200 million,” Alhassan said on Arise TV.

He added: “I was begging them, but they didn’t listen. They cut the phone and I haven’t heard from them again.”

His child is also among the abductees.

Alhassan also said two parents of the abducted children have died of heart attack since the Sunday abduction.

 

He said: “All eyes are on me as the head teacher. I have witnessed the funeral prayer of one of the parents, very close to the school. She died. She had one child in the school.

“She was not around when the incident happened. When she came back, they told her that this was what happened, and within 10 to 30 minutes, she fainted and that was the end of her. That was the day before yesterday (Wednesday).

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“One day after the incident happened, another parent, a woman, died, because she had two children and sent one to town. When she heard about the abduction, she died from heart attack.

“Are we not Nigerians that the government cannot intervene in this issue?

“No sympathy at all. None of the government officials extends sympathy to us. Are we animals? No, we are Nigerians,” he said amidst tears.

A mother, Hadiya Hashim, said she could not imagine the terrible condition the children would be now.

Her words: “The situation these children are in, you can’t imagine.

 

“You know they don’t have houses in the bush. Initially, the scanty report we received on Monday said they kept the children under a big tree and they starved them for three days without giving them any water.”

Another parent, who spoke anonymously, said relatives, friends and sympathisers contributed N11 million which they wanted to pay the bandits to release the children.

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He said the gunmen rejected the money and declared that they no longer wanted the N110 million they demanded initially but N200 million.

 

Another parent, Tanko Zagi, accused the government of being insensitive to the plight of the children and their parents, saying: “Since that day up till now, we have not seen anything from the state government.

“The local government chairman has been up and doing so that these children can be rescued. But the state government, we don’t know. No official of the government has come to condole with us.”

Government officials have refused to speak on the issue.

None has also visited the community to sympathise with the parents, sources said.

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Minimum Wage: FG, labour to reconvene next week over negotiation

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The Tripartite Committee on Minimum Wage will reconvene on Tuesday, May 23 to further negotiate a reasonable new minimum wage for workers, after the organised labour walked out of the negotiation on May 15.

 

An invitation letter sent to the labour leaders by the chairman of the committee, Bukar Goni, states that the other members of the committee have agreed to shift grounds from the N48,000 proposal which was made on Wednesday.

 

The letter appealed to the labour leaders to speak to their members and attend the reconvened meeting next Tuesday.

 

The organised labour comprising the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) have proposed a new minimum wage of N615,000, which is way higher than the N48,000 proposal by the government.

 

The organised private sector, on the other hand, proposed an initial offer of N54,000. After dumping the talks, the labour leaders addressed a press conference where they expressed their anger over the Federal Government’s offer.

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They blamed the government and the private sector for the breakdown in negotiation.

 

May 31 Deadline
The Federal Government had failed to present a nationally acceptable minimum wage to Nigerians before the May 1 Labour Day.

The situation has forced labour to be at loggerheads with the government. In the wake of the tussle, the NLC President Joe Ajaero insisted on the N615,000 minimum wage, arguing that the amount was arrived at after an analysis of the economic situation worsened by the hike in the cost of living and the needs of an average Nigerian family of six.

 

Ajaero and labour leaders have given the Federal Government a May 31 deadline to meet their demands.

 

On January 30, Vice President Kashim Shettima inaugurated the 37-member tripartite committee to come up with a new minimum wage.

 

With its membership cutting across federal, and state governments, the private sector, and organised labour, the panel is to recommend a new national minimum wage for the country.

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During the committee’s inauguration, the Vice President urged the members to “speedily” arrive at a resolution and submit their reports early.

 

“This timely submission is crucial to ensure the emergence of a new minimum wage,” Shettima said.

 

The 37-man committee is chaired by the former Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Goni Aji.

 

With the cost of living rising following the removal of fuel subsidy, calls for a new minimum wage have continued to make headlines in Nigeria.

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Police arrest doctor, nurses over missing placenta in Kwara hospital

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The police in Kwara State have commenced an investigation into the disappearance of the umbilical cord and placenta of a newborn baby at Government Cottage Hospital, Iloffa in the Oke-Ero Local Government Area of the state.

The mother, identified as Mrs C. Williams, a class teacher at Orota Secondary School, Odo-Owa, was reported to have had the child on Sunday night but was not given the umbilical cord and the placenta by the hospital’s workers.

 

Five of the workers were later arrested in connection with the missing parts and were being detained by the general Investigation unit of the State Criminal Investigation Department of the command in Ilorin.

The suspects detained by the police include a resident doctor, three nurses and a ward attendant at the hospital.

 

It was gathered that the police were invited when efforts to settle the controversy at various levels failed.

 

It was further gathered that it took the efforts of elders of Odo-Owa community to calm some angry youths who suspected foul play and were about to burn down the hospital on Tuesday over the incident.

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Williams, while narrating her ordeal, said that she was rushed to the hospital while experiencing labour pains on Sunday afternoon and gave birth to a baby at about 7 pm the same day.

 

“I was feeling some labour pains on Sunday and I got to the cottage hospital, some minutes past 1 pm on Sunday, and told the nurse I met on duty that I was having contractions; she was the one that attended to me after confirming that I was truly in labour.

 

“She took me into the labour room and asked me to wait because I still had more time. Not quite long after I came, the doctor also came in and instructed the nurse to usher me into the labour room,” she said.

 

She said that after having the baby, the following morning, she was discharged and allowed to go home.

 

She, however, said that the hospital workers gave her a bag containing her items but did not give her the placenta and the umbilical cord of the baby when they asked her to go home.

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“Although they handed a black nylon bag to me, I discovered that there were two missing items inside the nylon; they are the umbilical cord and the placenta,” she said.

 

Police Public Relations Officer, Ejire-Adeyemi Toun, confirmed the incident, adding that the investigation was ongoing.

 

“The police are investigating the incident and five suspects have been arrested in connection with it,” the PPRO said.

 

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Good Morning! Here Are Some Major News Headlines In The Newspapers Today: 2027: PDP members will decide my fate – Atiku

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1. Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar has said members of his party, the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP would decide his fate, come the 2027 general elections. He said it was too early to decide whether he would vie for the presidency in the forthcoming elections.

 

2. A medical doctor and founder of MedContour Services Ltd., Dr Anuoluwapo Adepoju, who conducted a failed plastic surgery that resulted in the death of one Nneka Onwuzuligbo in 2020, has been convicted by the Federal High Court sitting in Lagos.

 

3. No fewer than 200 people have been killed by a dangerous humid heat that has been experienced from the 1st to the 13th of May in Yola, the Adamawa State capital. Unofficial records at the Yola Cemetery Corporation, YCC, located in the Damare area of the capital city, put the death toll from the unusually experienced excessive heat from May 1 to 13, 2024 at 400.

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4. The Presidential Candidate of the Labour Party in the 2023 election, Peter Obi, has described the judiciary as the biggest danger to democracy in Nigeria. Obi stated that there has been a decline in the judiciary, stressing that the problem of the country is not the Independent National Electoral Commission but the judiciary.

 

5. A tank farm which the Lagos Fire Service said belonged to the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited went up in flames in Apapa, Lagos State. A video of the fire incident surfaced on social media on Friday morning. But the NNPCL denied that the incident happened at its depot, saying it was from a pipeline at Honeywell Oil and Gas.

 

6. Operatives of the Department of State Services, on Friday, went on the rampage at the National Assembly Complex, Abuja as they manhandled two senior staff members, John Nnadi of the Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream) and Chris Odoh, a Deputy Director.

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7. Three children have been rescued from a fire that gutted a storey building on Obi Onuorah Crescent behind Okowe Plaza in Asaba, the Delta State capital. It was reported that a roof and two apartments were razed as property worth millions of naira, lost.

 

8. The Kano State Police Command has confirmed the death of 15 persons from a mosque attack in Gadan village, Gezawa Local Government Area of the state, following a petrol bomb attack on worshippers. A man had on Wednesday allegedly set the mosque after he sprinkled petrol in the mosque and locked its doors, trapping worshippers.

 

9. The Kwara State Police Command, has commenced a discreet investigation into the mysterious disappearance of the umbilical cord and placenta of a newborn baby at Government Cottage Hospital, Iloffa in Oke-Ero Local Government Area of the state last Sunday. Five health workers who are suspects in the matter are currently being detained by the General Investigation Unit of the Criminal Investigation Department of the command in Ilorin.

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10. The Federal Government, on Friday, announced its stoppage of the issuance of electricity regulatory autonomy to state governments as it commenced a review of the policy. Power Minister, Adebayo Adelabu said it appeared the state governments and other stakeholders had no clear idea yet of what it takes to operate an electricity market.

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