CRIME
INEC Faults NASS, Others on Electronic Result Transmission

By Jude Opara, Abuja and Dan Amasingha, Minna
Contrary to the position of the National Assembly (NASS) that electronic transmission of election results in Nigeria is not possible due to alleged poor network coverage, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has said it has the capacity to do so.
INEC National Commissioner and Chairman, Information and Voter Education (IVEC), Barr Festus Okoye said the Commission has the capacity to transmit election results electronically from every remote area in the country.
Speaking at the weekend on Channels Television programme monitored in Abuja, Okoye said the position of the Commission was clear on the issue and it had always been, even when it transmitted election results electronically in Edo and Ondo governorship elections.
“We have uploaded election results from very remote areas in the six geo-political zones of Nigeria, even from areas where you have to use human carriers to access.
“So, we (INEC) have made our own position very clear, that we have the capacity and we have the will to deepen the use of technology in the electoral process.
“But our powers are given by the Constitution and the Law, and we will continue to remain within the ambit and confines of the power granted to the Commission by the Constitution and the law”, Okoye stated.
Last week, the lawmakers in both the Senate and the House of Representatives were sharply divided over the electronic transmission of results.
While the lawmakers of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) were mainly in support of the electronic transmission of election results, their counterparts in the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) were the greatest opposition to the system despite the overwhelming acceptance of the system by a majority of the Nigerian people.
The two chambers of the National Assembly were thrown into rowdy sessions for two days as the lawmakers debated Section 52(2) of the Electoral Amendment Act Bill, which deals with electronic transmission of election results.
While it was a little easier for the APC members to get a version of the bill at the Senate that mandates INEC to get authorization from the NCC and the National Assembly before transmitting election results electronically, it was not so easy for their counterparts in the House of Representatives.
The lower chamber had to adjourn on Thursday after a stalemate and the Friday plenary was even more chaotic as PDP lawmakers had to stage a walk out as the Deputy Speaker, Idris Wase who presided over the Committee of the Whole insisted in forcing the version preferred by the APC on them.
The main argument of the lawmakers opposed to electronic transmission of results is that there is not enough network coverage in parts of the country.
However, Okoye had assured that has the capacity and technological knowhow to transmit election results electronically in every part of Nigeria just as Nigerians in parts of the country do electronic banking with their handsets.
Meanwhile, reactions have continued to trail the National Assembly’s rejection of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to transmit election results electronically.
In his contributions, Senator Shehu Sani stated that by legislating that the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) and the Senate will sanction the eventual electronic transmission of election results means that NASS had created three electoral bodies.
Sani who represented Kaduna Central in the 8th Senate between 2015 and 2019 stated this in a television programme monitored in Abuja.
The senator who is also an activist expressed disappointment at the turn of events, saying it was sad, unfortunate and tragic that the National Assembly could not agree on such issue of national importance.
“The National Assembly is made up of politicians and elected public officials. It is wrong for us to have a law where they would be involved in deciding or approving whether election results should be released or not.
“All they have done simply is that the ruling political party with dominance in the national assembly will decide whether results should be electronically announced or not.
“Another point we need to observe is that during elections, most of the lawmakers are back to their constituencies and it is not possible at that time to have a quorum in the national assembly for the purpose of approving whether election results.
“All they are trying to do is simply to give the ruling party the opportunity to decide whether the result of election is released or not.
“It is better the country does not operate electronic transfer of results than where the NCC headed by the appointee of the President and the national assembly headed by a politician from the ruling party dominating both chambers to decide the processes of an election. It is very wrong to have such a type”, he said.
According him, the legislators were deceiving themselves by hinging their argument on poor network coverage, adding that if they were losing, they would find a way of manipulating the results.
He also said that the announcement of election results was key and one of the problems that had bedevilled previous elections in the country.
“You can have credible elections but the person announcing the results can be compromised but when you have a system where results are automatically transmitted electronically, it is not going to be subjected to anybody’s manipulation and like I have said, people need to know this very well that during elections, there is nobody in the National Assembly, everyone would have left and won’t come back until after election?”
CRIME
Music Teacher Bags Life Imprisonment For Defiling 9-year-old Pupil

An Ikeja Sexual Offences and Domestic Violence Court on Wednesday sentenced a 35-year-old music teacher and counselor, Anthony Okeh, to life imprisonment for defiling a nine-year-old, JSS 1 pupil name withheld)
That Justice Abiola Soladoye in her judgment held that the prosecution had successfully discharged the burden of proof of the charge of defilement against Okeh.
According to her, Okeh is a pathological liar, soulless man without any iota of shame, and everything a teacher should not be for having unlawful sexual intercourse with his pupil.
Soladoye said the case was a direct evidence as the survivor was in court to narrate her sexual ordeals in the hands of the music teacher; a sexual predator.
She added that the evidence of the survivor was lucid, cogent, unequivocal and compelling and the denial of the convict did not hold waters.
“To the mind of this court, the denial of the convict is a form to distance himself from the crime.
“The convict is a pathological liar whose evidence is an after thought and I do not believe him at all.
“I do not believe the other three defence witnesses as well, because their evidences were devoid of truth and they were tainted witnesses.
“Cases are not won on the number of witnesses presented to testify before the court but on the quality of evidence adduced that are credible, convincing and compelling,” the judge said.
The judge added that the survivor in her testimony had narrated how the convict called her upstairs into the music room, where he showed her different nude pictures, claimed to be a cultist and threatened to kill her if she ever told anyone.
“The survivor recognised the man in the box as her music teacher who defiled her more than two times in the music room.
“The testimony of the Investigative Police Officer (IPO) is corroborated by the testimony of the survivor when she said that the mother of the girl noticed her reluctance to go to school and she later confessed to her mother what the convict had been doing to her.
“The IPO said that the mother of the survivor (nominal complainant) reported the case to the police.
“Statement of the nominal complainant was admitted into evidence,” Soladoye added.
She therefore convicted Okeh of the one-count charge of defilement and consequently sentenced him to life imprisonment.
Soladoye also ordered that the convict’s name be registered in the Lagos State Sexual Offences Register.
She also called on school proprietors and proprietress to recruit teachers with high moral standards to teach in their schools so as to avoid dent on their institutions.
“All stakeholders in the administration of criminal justice must form a strong collaboration in combating sexual violence offences so as to protect the dignity, mental health, physical and psychological trauma of survivors in such cases,” she said.
The State Counsel, Miss Abimbola Abolade presented two witnesses; the survivor and an investigative police officer while the Defence called four witnesses.
Abolade told the court that the convict committed the offence on Sept. 6, 2022 at Lachez O International School, Agege, Lagos.
The prosecution submitted that the convict had unlawful sexual intercourse with the minor by penetrating her vagina with his penis.
According to the prosecution, the offence contravenes Section 137 of the Criminal Laws of Lagos State, 2015. (NAN)
CRIME
Ilesa Prison Break: NCoS Yet To Brief Us – Osun Police

The Police Command in Osun is yet to receive any official communication on the escape of seven inmates from the the Medium Security Custodial Centre in Ilesa, Osun.
The Police Spokesperson for the command, DSP Abiodun Ojelabi, said that the police state command had not been officially briefed or informed of the incident by the Nigerian Correctional Service (NCoS).
“We heard also about the escape, but there is no official report made to the police by the NCoS.
“Our Intel revealed to us that actually, there was an escape.
“The cause of the escape is what we don’t know because our men have gone there.
“From the intelligience report we got, there is nothing we can lay hands on that made the inmates escape.
“The NCoS should inform us about what actually happened,” he said
Ojelabi said: “the police is out to protect lives and property and any criminal we see, we will apprehend”.
The NCoS declared seven inmates missing as a result of rain that damaged the security perimeter of the Medium Security Custodial Centre in Ilesa in the early hours of Tuesday.
The heavy rainfall around 2:00 a.m. caused a breach in the facility’s structure, allowing the inmates to escape.
Confirming the development, the Controller-General of Corrections, Sylvester Ndidi Nwakuche, in a statement signed by Umar Abubakar, Deputy Controller of Corrections, Public Relations Officer, on Tuesday, ordered an immediate investigation into the incident and assured the public that efforts were underway to return the escapees to custody.
“The service is working closely with sister security agencies as well as community leaders to recapture the escapees and bring them back to custody,” the NCoS said in the statement.
“However, the Service solicits the cooperation and support of the public in providing information that may lead to the recapture of the fleeing inmates.”
Authorities have since launched a manhunt to recapture the fugitives. (NAN)
CRIME
Court Remands Man For Allegedly Killing His Father

An Iyaganku Magistrates’ Court in Ibadan on Wednesday, ordered that a 27-year-old man, Musa Lamidi should be remanded in a correctional facility for allegedly killing his father, Rufai,
The police charged Lamidi, whose address was not provided with murder.
The Magistrate, Mr Olaolu Olanipekun did not take the plea of Lamidi for want in jurisdiction.
He directed the police to return the case file to the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) for legal advice.
He adjourned the case until July 10, for mention.
The Prosecutor, ASP Musbau Lawal, told the court that Lamidi committed the offence on May 11, at about 11 p.m, at Eruwa, Oyo State.
He alleged that Lamidi hit his father with a stick on the forehead, which caused his death.
He said the offence contravened the provisions of Section 319 of the Criminal Laws of Oyo State, 2000. (NAN)