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Good morning! Here Are Some Major News Headlines In The Newspapers Today: Gunmen kill two police officers, two others in Imo

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1. Gunmen on Monday struck at Ohii junction on the Owerri-Orlu Road in Imo State killing no fewer than four persons. Sources said that two of the victims were policemen on duty in the area when the hoodlums attacked. A source from the area told our correspondent that the gunmen in a Corolla SUV opened fire and killed the victims while dispossessing some POS operators around the scene of some cash.

 

2. Vice President Kashim Shettima, on Monday, implored development partners to provide more support for the President Bola Tinubu administration to deliver on the Renewed Hope Agenda. Shettima made the call when he received the Global Managing Director of the Tony Blair Institute, TBI, Michael McNair, who was on a courtesy visit to the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

 

3. Gunmen suspected to be kidnappers on Monday evening killed two traditional rulers in Ikole Local Government Area of Ekiti State. The traditional rulers were the Elesun of Esun Oba Babatunde Ogunsakin and Olumojo of Imojo, Oba Samuel Olatunji.

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4. Daniel Bwala, a former spokesperson to the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in the 2023 general election, Atiku Abubakar, met with President Bola Tinubu in Paris on Monday. Bwala disclosed this in a post on his official X page.

 

5. Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu and other key stakeholders witnessed the arrival of the CMA CGM SCANDOLA on Monday. This LNG-powered container vessel, boasting 14,812 TEUs, marks a historic moment as the first LNG-powered vessel to navigate to West Africa. It berthed at the Lagos Lekki Deep Sea Port, Nigeria’s most advanced and deepest seaport.

 

6. Mali and Burkina Faso said Monday they had sent ECOWAS “formal notice” of their withdrawal from the West African bloc, with Niger expected to follow. The military regimes in all three countries had announced plans to withdraw from the West African bloc, accusing it of posing a threat to their sovereignty.

 

READ  Gunmen invade Kwara community, kidnap three, kill chief

7. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has committed $500 million into the forex market. Hakama Sidi-Ali, Acting Director of the Corporate Communications Department at the CBN, disclosed this in a statement on Monday. Sidi-Ali reiterated the bank’s commitment to “settling all legitimate foreign exchange backlogs within a short time frame.”

 

8. The $20 billion Dangote Refinery has concluded plans to import crude oil from the United States in the coming months. Already, traders familiar with the matter disclosed that Trafigura Group has sold two million barrels of WTI Midland to the Dangote refinery for delivery by the end of February 2024.

 

9. A Federal High Court sitting in Abeokuta, Ogun State capital, has adjourned the case against a former Speaker of the Ogun State House of Assembly, Olakunle Oluomo, and two others till 29th February and 1st of March, 2024. Oluomo, alongside two other principal career officers of the Assembly, Dayo Samuel and Adeyemo Adedeji, were dragged before the court by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, over alleged misappropriation of public funds to the tune of N2.5 billion.

READ  Man Ezemodhe jailed for life for raping 8-year-old girl

 

10. The naira fell to an all-time low of N1348.63/$ on the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market on Monday. This signifies a 51.21 per cent fall from the N891.90/$ the national currency closed last Friday at the official market, according to data from the FMDQ Securities Exchange.

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UPDATED: Act of blackmail — FG says no official demanded $150m bribe from Binance

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The Federal Government has accused Binance of blackmail after the company alleged officials demanded $150 million in cryptocurrency payments as a bribe to settle the prosecution of its executives in Nigeria.

 

On Tuesday, Richard Teng, Binance’s chief executive officer (CEO), said some unknown persons in Nigeria demanded huge payments in digital currency to make their problems in the country “go away”.

 

Teng’s allegation followed the detention of Nadeem Anjarwalla, Binance’s regional manager for Africa, and Tigran Gambaryan, the company’s head of financial crime compliance, in Nigeria, on February 28.

 

The two executives were detained as part of a probe bordering on Binance’s illegal operations in Nigeria and foreign exchange rate manipulations.

 

While criminal charges have been against Binance and Gambaryan, Anjarwalla fled detention on March 22.

However, Anjarwalla was reportedly arrested by the Police Service in April and the International Criminal Police Organisation (Interpol) is working towards extraditing him to Nigeria.

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In a statement by Rabiu Ibrahim, special assistant to the minister of information and national orientation, the government said the allegation by Binance is an attempt by the cryptocurrency exchange to launder its impaired image as an organisation that does not play by the rules and laws guiding business conduct in sovereign nations.

 

“In a blog post that has now been published by many international media organisations, in an apparent well-coordinated public relations effort, Binance Chief Executive Officer Richard Teng made false allegations of bribery against unidentified Nigerian government officials who he claimed demanded $150m in cryptocurrency payments to resolve the ongoing criminal investigation against the company,” the ministry said.

 

“This claim by Binance CEO lacks any iota of substance. It is nothing but a diversionary tactic and an attempted act of blackmail by a company desperate to obfuscate the grievous criminal charges it is facing in Nigeria.

 

“The facts of this matter remain that Binance is being investigated in Nigeria for allowing its platform to be used for money laundering, terrorism financing, and foreign exchange manipulation through illegal trading.

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“While this lawful investigation was going on, an executive of Binance, who was in court-sanctioned protective custody, escaped from Nigeria, and he is now a fugitive from the law. Working with the security agencies in Nigeria, Interpol is currently executing an international arrest warrant on the said fugitive.”

 

BRIBERY ALLEGATION PART OF ORCHESTRATED INTERNATIONAL CAMPAIGN

The ministry said the bribery allegation is part of an orchestrated international campaign by Binance to undermine the Nigerian government.

 

The ministry said Binance is facing criminal prosecution in many countries including the United States.

 

“Just a week ago, the founder and former CEO of Binance, Changpeng Zhao, was sentenced to prison in the United States, after pleading guilty to charges very similar to what Binance is being investigated for in Nigeria. In addition, Zhao agreed to pay a fine of $50 million, while Binance is liable for $4.3 billion in fines and forfeitures to the US Government,” the government said.

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“We would like to remind Binance that it will not clear its name in Nigeria by resorting to fictional claims and mudslinging media campaigns. The only way to resolve its issues will be by submitting itself to unobstructed investigation and judicial due process.”

 

The ministry said the Nigerian government will continue to act within its laws and international norms and will not succumb to any form of blackmail from any entity, local or foreign.

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‘Act of blackmail’ — FG denies officials demanded $150m bribe from Binance

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The Federal Government has accused Binance of blackmail after the company alleged officials demanded $150 million in cryptocurrency payments as bribe to settle the prosecution of its executives in Nigeria. 

On Tuesday, Richard Teng, Binance’s chief executive officer (CEO), said some unknown persons in Nigeria demanded huge payments in digital currency to make their problems in the country “go away”.

 

More to follow…

READ  Five shot dead, vigilante office burnt in fresh Anambra attack
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Peter Obi condemns cybersecurity levy, says FG more interested in milking dying economy

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Peter Obi, presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP) in the 2023 elections, says the federal government is more interested in milking a dying economy through the introduction of the cybersecurity levy.

 

In a post on his X account on Wednesday, Obi said the policies implemented by the government not only drive the citizens into poverty but also diminish the country’s competitiveness in the economic environment.

 

According to Obi, it is unreasonable to expect the struggling citizens of Nigeria to individually finance all government activities.

“The introduction of yet another tax, in the form of Cybersecurity Levy, on Nigerians who are already suffering severe economic distress is further proof that the government is more interested in milking a dying economy instead of nurturing it to recovery and growth,” Obi said.

 

“The imposition of a Cybersecurity Levy on bank transactions is particularly sad given that the tax is on the trading capital of businesses and not on their profit hence will further erode whatever is left of their remaining capital, after the impact of the Naira devaluation and high inflation rate.

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“It is inconceivable to expect the suffering citizens of Nigeria to separately fund all activities of the government. Policies such as this not only impoverish the citizens but make the country’s economic environment less competitive.

 

“At a time when the government should be reducing taxes to curb inflation, the government is instead introducing new taxes. And when did the office of the NSA become a revenue collecting centre?

 

“And why should that purely national security office receive returns on a specific tax as stated in the new cybersecurity law?

 

On May 6, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) directed banks and other financial institutions to implement a 0.5 percent cybersecurity levy on electronic transfers.

 

CBN said the policy would take effect in two weeks and charges would be described as ‘Cybersecurity Levy’.

 

The apex bank said the charges would be remitted to the national cyber security fund, which would be administered by the office of the national security adviser (ONSA).

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