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Police parade kidnappers of OOU students, doctor and monarch

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Ogun State Police Command on Thursday paraded suspected kidnappers of two students of the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) in Abeokuta.

The students were kidnapped in front of their Mini Campus at Aiyetoro on the 14th of March 2021 and were later released.

Commissioner of Police, Edward Ajogun, while parading the suspects, said when the command intensified efforts towards the release of the two student when it heard of their kidnap.

“Fortunately, two days after, the students were released from the captivity of their abductors.

“The Command kept on trailing the syndicate using all lawful methods. In one week of the efforts, three members of the kidnap syndicate were apprehended.

“The suspects are: Babuga Abubakar, 40yrs; Umaru usman, Mohammed Bello. They claimed not to understand English or other languages except their Fulani dialet but confessed to have had series of kidnapping at Ayetoro, Olorunda, Imeko areas,” he said.

The commissioner said “the suspects also admitted kidnapping a female doctor and a nurse at Olubo Village along Abeokuta-Imeko road on the 7th of April, 2021 and also kidnapped one Mrs. Yemi Ojedapo at Olodo village, who painfully, they had to kill because she recognized them.”

READ  Police arrest man for allegedly luring cousin to kidnap gang

Ajogun said Abubakar is the informant to this syndicate and several other kidnap gangs, as he supplied them information on victims to the gang for ease of operation.

On the kidnappers of the two female students, Babuga explained that the students were not the actual targets, but that a woman who is into wholesale recharge card in the area.

He also stated that it was Bello who invited his gang members for the kidnap of Mrs Yemi Ojedapo and masterminded her killing.

The phone they used in calling for ransom was recovered from them as exhibit.

Also paraded are another set of two members of kidnapping syndicate who were responsible for the abduction of Chief Tajudeen Omotayo, the Olori Ilu of Imope Ijebu on 20 March, 2021.

The two suspects Nura Bello, 21, and Abubakar Bello Amodu, 26 have confessed to a series of kidnap cases in Ijebu area. Other members of the gang are being trailed.

READ  Police arrest five suspected kidnappers in Ogun

Other paraded suspects are Ogunnaike Phillip, 26 and Isiaha Onifade, 22, who robbed a POS operator, Rofiat Wahab of N238,850 and cut her with cutlass.

Recovered from them are the money, a POS machine and cutlass.

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UPDATED: Ikeja DisCo reduces Band A electricity tariff to N206.80/kwh

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The Ikeja Electricity Distribution Company says it has reduced the tariff for customers under Band A classification to N206.80 per kilowatt-hour (kwh).

 

On April 3, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) approved an increase in electricity tariff for customers under the Band A category to N225 per kwh — from N66. 

 

The commission said customers under the classification are those who receive 20 hours of electricity supply daily. 

 

Announcing the slash in a circular on Monday, Ikeja Electric said the new tariff regime will take effect from May 6, 2024.

 

“Please be informed of the downward tariff review of our Band A feeders from N225/kwh to N206.80/kwh effective 6th May 2024 with guaranteed availability of 20-24hrs supply daily,” the circular reads.

 

However, the DisCo said the tariff for bands B,C,D and E are unchanged.

 

On April 4, NERC said the approved tariff increase is expected to reduce subsidy for the 2024 fiscal year by about N1.14 trillion.

“With the newly approved tariffs, subsidies for the 2024 fiscal year are expected to reduce by about NGN1.14 trillion in furtherance of the federal government’s realignment of the subsidy regime,” NERC said.

READ  Army major killed, another missing, as terrorists ambush troops in Niger

 

Musliu Oseni, vice-chairman of the commission, said the new tariff will bolster the nation’s economy.

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JUST IN: Ikeja DisCo reduces Band A electricity tariff to N206.80/kwh

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The Ikeja Electricity Distribution Company says it has reduced the tariff for customers under Band A classification to N206.80 per kilowatt-hour (kwh).

 

On April 3, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) approved an increase in electricity tariff for customers under the Band A category to N225 per kwh — from N66. 

 

The commission said customers under the classification are those who receive 20 hours of electricity supply daily. 

 

Announcing the cut in a circular on Monday, Ikeja Electric said the new tariff rate will be effective from May 6, 2024.

 

Details later…

READ  Abducted Kaduna students: Kidnappers demand N1bn ransom, vows to kill school children in 20 days
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80% of buildings in Lekki have no government approval, says commissioner

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The commissioner for physical planning and urban development in Lagos, Oluyinka Olumide, says 80 percent of buildings in the Ibeju Lekki-Epe corridor have no government approval.

The Lagos government has been facing backlash for the demolition of buildings and shanties across the state.

Tokunbo Wahab, commissioner for environment in Lagos, has repeatedly said the demolished structures were erected in contravention of the city’s masterplan, were never approved by the relevant agencies, and occluded drainage channels.

In an interview with journalists, Olumide said despite the rigorous procedures involved in securing government approval, property developers and owners are still circumventing due process.

 

“Just last Thursday and Friday, my team and I were in the Ibeju Lekki and Epe axis and you would agree that anybody passing through that corridor would see a lot of estates marked,” he said.

“We went there, and I can tell you that from what we saw, over 80 percent of them do not have approval.

READ  Gunmen kidnap three, demand N10m ransom, hard drugs in Ogun

“The procedure to get approval is first to get the planning information, as to what those areas have been zoned for. In this case, what we have is agricultural land, and people now go to their families to buy agricultural land.

 

“Of course, those lands would be sold because those families do not know the use such land would be put to.

“The next thing to do is the fence permit. If you missed the earlier information on not knowing the area zoning, at the point of getting the fence permit, you would be able to detect what the area is zoned for. After that, the layout permits a large expanse of land.

“So, you can see all these layers. But people still go ahead to start advertising. Some have even gone to the extent of displaying the sizes they want to sell. Imagine someone in the diaspora who wants to send money without any knowledge.

READ  Man stabs 'best friend' to death in Ekiti over thirty naira

“Then, no approval is eventually gotten. Even if they pass the assignment and the survey to them, we would not grant the individual permit, because that area is not zoned for that purpose.”

 

On Sunday, Wahab said owners of recently demolished property in Maryland had been served notices since 2021.

 

“We are not just doing demolitions. The law allows us to remove encumbrances on the right of way of the drainage channels,” Wahab said.

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