Thursday, 25 September 2014

We have killed Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau — Nigerian Military

The military insists the real Shekau was killed long ago
The military insists the real Shekau was killed long ago

The Nigerian military on Wednesday issued an official confirmation to reports that Abubakar Shekau, the eccentric leader of Boko Haram, whose death the military has claimed repeatedly only to turn out untrue, has been killed by security forces.
Officially, the military insists the real Mr. Shekau was killed by soldiers more than a year ago, but that his character had been assumed by another leader of the deadly group.
The impersonator is the man who appeared in several Boko Haram propaganda videos, claiming he is Mr. Shekau, the military said.
It was that new face of Mr. Shekau that was killed in a fierce clash with the military last week in Konduga, near Maiduguri, Borno State, defence spokesperson, Chris Olukolade, said Wednesday.
That man, Mr. Olukolade said, was Mohammed Bashir, known also with several aliases.
The statement Wednesday was the first official confirmation of the death of Mr. Shekau since news broke last week he had been killed in a confrontation as militants moved to attack Maiduguri.
While the Nigerian military, unofficially, laid claims to the killing of Mr. Shekau, its Cameroonian counterpart also claimed credit for it saying Mr. Shekau was killed at Gamboru near the border.
The Nigerian military rejects that claim.
Mr. Olukolade said the alleged Shekau’s double was targeted amongst other leaders of the group in Konduga when the military’s land and air forces engaged a convoy of combat vehicles conveying several militants.
“Several of the terrorists, including some of their commanders, lost their lives in the encounters which lasted an average of about 5 hours each,” the defence spokesperson said.
“The troops captured some of the terrorists and their equipment. In the course of those encounters, one Mohammed Bashir who has been acting or posing on videos as the deceased Abubakar Shekau, the eccentric character known as leader of the group died.
Mr. Olukolade said after the clash, the identity of Mr. Bashir was confirmed by the locals in Konduga. Mr. Bashir’s other names he said included Abubakar Shekau, alias Abacha Abdullahi Geidam alias Damasack.
“Since the name Shekau has become a brand name for the terrorists’ leader, the Nigerian military remains resolute to serve justice to anyone who assumes that designation or title as well as all terrorists that seek to violate the freedom and territory of Nigeria,” the military said.
Mr. Olukolade said 135 other terrorists on Tuesday evening surrendered along with equipment to troops around Biu Local Government Area.
A group of 88 submitted themselves at Mairiga/Bun – Yadi while another group of 45 terrorists were taken in around Mubi – Michika. They are all being interrogated and processed in conformity with the dictates of standard best practices.
“The Defence Headquarters applauds the gallantry of the Nigerian troops who have remained undaunted and professional in prosecuting this campaign against terror,” he said.

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Wednesday, 17 September 2014

military aircraft missing



A Nigerian air force jet has been missing for two days after disappearing in the country's far northeast, where troops are fighting Boko Haram insurgents, the military has said.
A search and rescue operation was under way for the Alpha jet which was on a routine operational mission on Friday over Adamawa state when contact was lost with the aircraft, the Nigerian armed forces said in a statement.
The aircraft, with two pilots on board, left its base in Yola, Adamawa, at about 0945GMT on Friday and had been expected back by midday the same day.

"Since then all efforts to establish contact with the aircraft have not yielded any positive result," military spokesman Chris Olukolade said in a statement, without providing further details.
Boko Haram has seized territory in Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe states in recent weeks, raising fears about a loss of government control in the far northeast and putting the military under pressure to put an end to the five-year-long armed movement.
Nigeria's military, backed by war planes, has been fighting to push back recent advances by Boko Haram into the north of Adamawa state and also towards Maiduguri, the state capital of neighbouring Borno state. The army said it beat back an attack outside the city of Maiduguri on Friday.
Boko Haram, which has killed thousands since it launched its anti-government rebellion in the northeast in 2009, has in recent weeks captured and held a string of towns and villages in the region, a departure from its usual hit-and-run tactics.
Its leader, Abubakar Shekau, is apparently trying to follow the example of Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, which has declared its own caliphate. Nigeria's government has vowed to take back the seized territory from Boko Haram.

Saturday, 13 September 2014

BENJAMIN ADEKUNLE: THE BLACK SCORPION IS DEAD

YEMI OLAKITAN
Retired General of the Nigerian Army, Benjamin Adekunle, popularly known as Black Scorpion died yesterday, Saturday morning. According to reports, his wife, Folake announced his death.  Adekunle was born in Kaduna. His father was a native of Ogbomosho. He underwent secondary education at the government college, Okene , Kogi State. He enlisted in the Nigerian Army in 1958 after completing his school certificate examinations.  He passed the army selection examinations and thereafter was dispatched to the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst in the UK, the British Army's initial officer entry academy. He was commissioned 2nd Lieutenant on December 15, 1960. As a platoon commander, he served in Kasai Province of Congo with the 1st Battalion, Queen's Own Nigeria Regiment.  In 1962, Lt. Adekunle became Aide-de-Camp to the governor of the eastern region, SirAkanu Ibiam. The following year, as a Captain, he was posted back to the Congo as Staff Captain.  In 1964, Major Adekunle attended the Defense Services Staff College at Wellington, in India. When he returned he was briefly appointed Adjutant General at the Army Headquarters in May 1965 to replace Lt. Col. Yakubu Gowon, who was proceeding on a course outside the country. However, he later handed over the position to Lt. Col. James Pam and was posted back to his old Battalion (1st Bn) in Enugu as a Company Commander.
Adekunle  assumed command of the Lagos Garrison as a substantive Lt. Col. When the Nigerian Civil War erupted in July 1967, Adekunle was tasked to lead elements which included two new battalions (7th and 8th) - to conduct the historic sea borne assault on Bonny in the Bight of Benin on 26 July 1968 (carried out by Major Isaac Adaka Boro's unit). This happened after the Federal Government gained confidence of most south western ethnic groups as a direct result of Biafra push to mid-west state and probe into Western region. Adekunle was promoted to Colonel after the Bonny landing.
The 6th (under Major Jalo) and 8th (under Major Ochefu) battalions of the Lagos Garrison subsequently took part in operations to liberate the Midwest following the Biafra invasion of August 1967. The 7th (under Major Abubakar) stayed behind to hold Bonny. Because Major Jalo's Unit was seconded to Lt. Col. Murtala Mohammed's 2nd Division, Adekunle was left with only the 8th Battalion at Escravos. He, therefore, protested to Army HQ and got the Lagos garrison upgraded to Brigade status through the creation of the 31 and 32 Battalions. However, Colonel Adekunle did not think the name "3 Infantry Division" was sensational enough nor did it project the nature of the unique terrain in which his men had to fight. Therefore, without formal approval from Army HQ, he renamed it the " 3 Marine Commando (3MCDO)." The "Black Scorpion" as he came to be known, was easily the most controversial, celebrated and mythologized figure in the war of attrition that laid the foundations for Nigeria's contemporary crisis; and threw a wedge into the national fabric. Benjamin "Adekunle's boys in the Midwest seized Escravos, Burutu, Urhonigbe, Owa and Aladima. They captured Bomadi and Patani, Youngtown, Koko, Sapele, Ajagbodudu, Warri, Ughelli, Orerokpe, Umutu and Itagba".
Benjamin Adekunle was promoted to Brigadier in 1972. After the war Adekunle was put in charge of decongesting the Lagos port that was having a chronic problem of clearing imported goods. He held this position until being compulsorily retired on August 20, 1974.
He attributed his problems during and after the war to his rivals in the army. In various interviews, he said there was always a rumor of coup linked to him until the army authority felt the concern to do something about it. He had large followings in both the army and public at large and was the most popular military commander during the war, apart from Obasanjo, who succeeded him and brought the war to an end with the same 3MC.
Adekunle led the Third Marine Commando Division with such great panache and determination that the foreign media, in looking for a human angle on the Biafran war, found him a ready source of news.
Adekunle was a key champion of the food blockade to Biafra. In a wartime interview he had with Randolph Baumann of Stern Magazine in Igweocha (published on August 18, 1968), he stated:[3]
He died on September 13, 2014.
The late General Benjamin Adekunle who died this morning at the age of 78 has been described as a Soldier’s Soldier, a man of valour and unimaginable bravery, lion-hearted and a leader of men who served his Fatherland devotedly and without question when the country most needed him.   Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, a former governor of Lagos and All Progressives Congress, APC, national leader, paid tributes to Adekunle, alias Black Scorpion, in a statement he issued today.



Wednesday, 14 May 2014

Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo Floats Billion Naira University

Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo Floats Billion Naira University


Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo
Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo, the senior pastor of Kingsway International Christian Church (KICC), has completed his billion naira KICC University situated at Ode Omu, Osun state.Part of the requirements for the granting of a license for a university by the National UniversityCommission of Nigeria is that at least 250 acres of land be provided for a university campus but the KICC University sits atop over 500 acres.The university which would be structured around six faculties and 22 mainstream departments, has the  Schools of Medical Science and Pharmacy in the College of Medical Sciences as well as the Faculty of Law which are to run faculty/school-based degree programmes.


Initial academic activities would commence in two Schools namely: Humanities, Management & Social Sciences, and Information Science and Technology. Courses to be developed by the School of Information Science and Technology will be central to the teaching programmes in all Departments. In all, the university has 59 academic programmes.

Mrs Obama said what had to be said



The First Lady has presented the weekly presidential address from the White House, in an unusual break from tradition.
Mrs Obama used the radio and live-streamed statement to call for the release of the 276 Nigerian girls who were abducted by Islamist militant group Boko Haram.
"Like millions of people across the globe, my husband and I are outraged and heartbroken over the kidnapping of more than 200 Nigerian girls from their school dormitory in the middle of the night," she said.
"This unconscionable act was committed by a terrorist group determined to keep these girls from getting an education – grown men attempting to snuff out the aspirations of young girls."
She continued: "In these girls, Barack and I see our own daughters. We see their hopes, their dreams – and we can only imagine the anguish their parents are feeling right now.
"Many of them may have been hesitant to send their daughters off to school, fearing that harm might come their way.
"But they took that risk because they believed in their daughters’ promise and wanted to give them every opportunity to succeed."
Mrs Obama added that students in America should look at the Nigeria situation, and realise that they could not take their own educational opportunities for granted.
"These girls embody the best hope for the future of our world…and we are committed to standing up for them not just in times of tragedy or crisis, but for the long haul."
Mrs Obama has accompanied her husband for the presidential address before, but it is the first time that she has given the speech alone.
And although it is an unusual move, it is not unprecedented – Laura Bush, wife of George W. Bush, was the first to do so in 2001, and took the opportunity to denounce the treatment of women in Afghanistan.
Following the kidnapping of 276 girls on April 14, a campaign to secure their return has mushroomed. Activists are urging the Nigerian government to do more, and claim that President Goodluck Jonathan has been slow to respond and uninterested in their fate.
Mrs Obama last week posted a photo of herself holding up a sign reading "#Bring Back Our Girls" to show her support for the campaign.
On Friday night the United Nations Security Council unanimously declared that the mass kidnappings "may amount to crimes against humanity" under international law. But they made no explicit reference to charges in the International Criminal Court.
The 15 members of the council said they would follow the situation and consider "appropriate measures" to take against Boko Haram.
The statement urged their immediate release, without conditions.
Meanwhile, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon announced he was sending his special representative for West Africa, Said Djinnit, to Abuja to discuss ways of helping authorities locate the girls.

In touch with Enoch Adeboye


Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye, General Overseer of Redeemed Christian Church of God, RCCG, globally strikes as an oracle of God, being both a pastor and a prophet who relishes simple living. The septuagenarian minister of God who is renowned for unfailing prophesies and words of wisdom had announced a 100-day fasting period for members of the Church starting from January 2 to April 11, 2014. The announcement came as Pastor E.A Adeboye released prophecies for the New Year, during a crossover service held on January 1, declaring that “2014 will be the year of overflowing blessings.” He also said, “Nigerians will see the end of all her enemies, after the fasting period.”
In another service tagged, ‘Divine Placement’ in his honour at the Solid Rock Parish, Lagos Province 40, Ojodu, Adeboye stressed that it had become dangerous to continue to tolerate “our enemies for a longer time, as they are capable of waxing stronger and creating more havoc.
“All those enemies blocking your progress in life and the progress of Nigeria must disappear to pave the way for the much-needed change in our lives and nation. That is one of the reasons for the 100 days’ fasting and prayer period by the church,” he said.
According to the man of God, the 100 days fasting and prayer period are being observed to eliminate all enemies of progress, who have refused to repent and change, for good. He said such enemies of progress would be eliminated in the nation and in individuals’ lives after the 100 days fasting and prayer.
Adeboye is perhaps the greatest pastor in Africa and one of the greatest in the world. According to Newsweek magazine in 2008, Adeboye is one of the 50 most powerful people on earth. The RCCG General Overseer is the pastor of one of the fastest growing churches in Christendom today. He is the national president of RCF (an interdenominational fellowship in all the campuses in Nigeria). He is the Convener of the annual December three-day Holy Ghost Congress in Nigeria with an average attendance of over six million people. He is also the host at the annual March three-day Special Holy Ghost Service with an average attendance of over six million people. He in the same vein hosts the monthly Holy Ghost Service with an average attendance of over one million people.
The story of Adeboye is not one of instant success as he was born into poverty. According to him, he was not born with a silver spoon in his mouth and did not have shoes for the first 18 years of his life. However, he had vision, determination, diligence and a passion for hard work which he considered to be far more valuable than money. Born in 1942 into a humble family in the village of Ifewara, Osun State, Adeboye stated that his family was so poor that even the poor called him poor. In 1956, he was admitted into Ilesha Grammar School, Ilesha, Osun State and as a young man, he discovered a passion for books, and an aptitude for science, particularly Mathematics. This led to an academic journey in the face of numerous challenges.
He eventually obtained a Bachelors (BSc.) degree in Mathematics from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, in 1967, and afterwards a Master’s (MSc.) Degree in Hydrodynamics and Doctorate (PhD) in Applied Mathematics, both from the University of Lagos in 1969 and 1975. Adeboye worked as a lecturer at the universities of Lagos and Ilorin before joining the church.
Initially, his greatest ambition was to become the youngest Vice Chancellor of a prestigious university in Nigeria. It did seem that his ambition would be realised as he was making progress with his plan. However, a divine hand took him into the service of the Lord. He said, ‘‘I came to know God in a fairly dramatic way. I was born into a Christian home and always went to church because my parents said we had to go. But after I grew up and left home, I drifted away from the church until I had a problem that defied solutions and then someone invited me to the RCCG and I came expecting the pastor to pray for me and my problems would just go. But instead, he said I have to give my life to Jesus Christ, that if my sins are gone, my problems would disappear. I resisted, for a while, but eventually, I surrendered and gave my life to Jesus Christ and my problems left me.’’
Adeboye thereafter became an interpreter of the sermons of the then Pastor and founder of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Rev. Josiah Olufemi Akindayomi, a man who though was illiterate, had been endowed with the ability to read the Yoruba version of the Holy Bible. In 1981, he was appointed General Overseer when Papa Akindayomi passed away. He resigned from his university lecturing after three years to devote himself to full-time pastoral work.
In 1977 when he was ordained as a Pastor in RCCG, Enoch Adeboye displayed an incredible passion for the gospel, pioneering Bible Study meetings, crusades, revivals, outreaches and evangelistic programmes known as the Congress. When the founder passed away in 1980, RCCG had 42 parishes. The founder left a sealed document pronouncing Enoch Adeboye as the next General Overseer. Adeboye was thus ordained the General Overseer of the Church in 1981.
The Lord has today through Adeboye, built over 5,000 churches all over the world. In Nigeria, and almost all the nations of Africa, the US, the UK, Canada, South America, the Caribbean, Europe, Australia, India, China, Hong Kong, the Far East and even the Middle East, RCCG branches can be sighted.
In the United States alone, there are over 500 parishes and still increasing. In Nigeria alone, it has more than 14,000 branches in cities and rural communities. Adeboye said his vision was to plant a church in every five minutes’ walking distance of developing nations and in every five minutes’ driving distance of developed nations, like coffee shops. According to him, in every family on earth, there must be a Redeemed member. Adeboye founded the Model Parishes which targeted the elite in Nigeria and there are the classical parishes which was more conservative.
The model parishes were an instant success and it helped the Redeemed Christian Church of God to increase astronomically, bringing into the church, a harvest of souls and financial pillars which helped the church in its evangelistic programmes. Adeboye’s deep compassion for souls also push the church into rural communities as there is nowhere the GO is not willing to take the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ to. The Holy Ghost Services which he started in the 80s was a once-a-month revival programme which brings the churches together from every corner of the country. It was initially held on the premises of the church headquarters in Lagos but the place was too small for the huge crowd that was coming. The church then required a change in location.
Under his leadership, RCCG purchased an uninhabited forest land located on the outskirts of Lagos. Adeboye moved his family to this forest and called the place, the Redemption Camp. He constructed a large auditorium and began to hold the monthly Holy Ghost Services there which has continued to draw crowds to this day. Today, the crowds in attendance run in the millions every month. From the Redemption Camp, Adeboye faithfully ministers to the body of Christ all over the world. The Redemption Camp is also the home of the Redeemers University, and the other secular and theological schools which were established by the church. The Redemption Camp is a city as many believers now live and worship there, making the place another religious nation in the like of the Vatican city of the Catholic Church.
On December 18 1998, Adeboye hosted the very first Holy Ghost Festival with an attendance of over seven million people. In 1999, there were no fewer than 12 million worshippers present. This programme has since been replaced with the annual three-day Holy Ghost Congress held every December at the Redemption Camp.
In addition to this is a Special three-day Holy Ghost Programme held in the first weekend of March yearly. At these events, miracles, signs and wonders have become commonplace as the power of God moves to set free, heal, anoint, deliver, bless and empower. Adeboye is a father in the lord to many great men of God. He ordained hundreds of pastors at the Redemption Camp on regular basis. He is also pastor and spiritual father to many heads of governments. He travels to minister to unreached places where others may not go.
Adeboye has been conferred with several honorary degrees and national merit awards in appreciation of his contributions to humanity. In 1999, he received the honorary citizenship and key of Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. In 2000, he dedicated the first chapel in the Nigerian Presidential Villa, Abuja, Nigeria. In 2005, he received honorary citizenship and key of Dallas, Texas, USA. In 2005, he received honorary citizenship and key of Baltimore, Maryland, United States. In 2008, he was awarded a National Honour of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and led the Pre-Summit Prayers at the 64th General Assembly of the United Nations headquarters in New York. He is the author of the globally- distributed daily devotional manual, Open Heavens.

About Ojude Oba festival

 The Ojude Oba festival is an annual celebration by the Yoruba people of Ijebu-Ode, a major town in Ogun State, Southwestern Nigeria. This v...