NEWS
Insecurity: Govt Playing Politics With Citizens’ Lives – Adebayo
Leader of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and its presidential candidate in the 2023 general election, Prince Adewole Adebayo, has condemned the carefree attitude and cosmetic approach of the government towards terrorists, bandits and kidnappers.
He lamented that those who have made life a living hell for Nigerians as they kidnap, maim, kill and some times, sack entire village are protected by the government and allowed to go scot-free, while some other Nigerians are decisively dealt with once they appear to have crossed the line.
Prince Adebayo drew a parallel with the case of Nnamdi Kanu who was hunted down and arrested in far away Kenya, brought back to Nigeria, prosecuted and jailed by the same government that has failed or refused to arrest people who roam the country’s forests kidnapping and killing people, including school children in their numbers.
“This is a government that could capture somebody in Nairobi, Kenya, bring him for trial and sentence him to life jail. But, they cannot capture people who are going around, terrorising everybody here in Nigeria. How do you go and carry hundreds of people?
“Have you been a nursery school teacher before?
“To get 35 children to cooperate with you inside the class is not easy. So, how are you going to carry 35 people and take them somewhere without the security personnel doing anything about it?
“So, what I’m letting you know is that the president should stop communicating failure. He should get a grip of his armed forces.
“Remember, one armed robber, Lawrence Anini, was disturbing people in the old Bendel State, and Etim Iyang was commissioner of police. He was coming to the Armed Forces Ruling Council’s meeting, when President Babangida asked him, where is Anini?
“Before you come here and start sitting with us, my friend, where is Anini? And within a short period, they captured Anini.
“So, what I’m saying is that President Tinubu needs to call the armed forces to deal with the terrorists and all of that.
“For kidnappers and all these opportunistic criminals who are taking easy targets, he needs to call the IGP, Egbetokun, and tell him, my friend, where are these kidnappers? And if I hear one more kidnap, you are gone,” he stated.
He also noted that President Bola Tinubu has never been serious about the insecurity in Nigeria, as his government has always treated perpetrators with kid gloves until recently when a tweet from the American President, Donald Trump, awakened him to realise the enormity of the insecurity in the country he oversees its affairs.
“First, he has heated up the whole country by poor economic policies that are making everybody desperate and wild. In terms of security of the country, he has not been paying attention to Nigerians who have been paying ransom everywhere from ‘one chance’ kidnappers and others.
“Do you that if you conduct a public hearing of ‘one chance’ victims, there will be over a million. He’s not paying attention to people being kidnapped in the communities everywhere. T
“The only reason he’s sensitive to it now is because Trump sent a tweet,” he stated.
He implored President Tinubu and his team to rise up to the enormous responsibility of governance and stop playing with people’s lives and only claiming to be serious each time Trump threatens to invade the country.
“They should not be serious only when Trump is tweeting and saying he’s going to deal with them. They should be serious all the time, because you can see now that it is possible for miracles to happen.
“So if you are in doubt before as to whether government is deliberately not doing its duty, now that they have done their duty within a week, we are getting results.
“If they keep this momentum and stop using security as an excuse for mismanaging resources and diverting public funds, if they actually get the job done, nobody can keep our children in captivity, and nobody will be able to succeed,” he said.
He added that Nigerians are among the smartest people on earth and such smart people abound the country’s security agencies but lamented that commander in chief is not in charge.
“The only mistake we made and I say this with every sense of gravity, is that we elected President Tinubu as Commandant-in-Chief. That’s a big mistake because if you get the smartest people in the US Marine, in CIA and other people’s armed forces, they are not as smart as our own officers.
“Nigeria has some of the smartest, most intelligent people asset. Even the police that you look at with common eyes have some of the most intelligent people,” he said.
On the presidential order to the security agencies to cordon off all the forests, especially in states where insecurity had spiked in recent time, he said the order does not excite anybody because that is what the government should have done a long time ago.
He also said making such a security move public would not produce any result as the bandits are also watching the news and would restrategise.
Adebayo also blamed President Tinubu for populating his government with saboteurs, saying, “When President Tinubu came, I said to Nigerians that this gentleman will undo his own government by the people he appoints in his own cabal because he was elected alone and look at all the choices he’s making. Now, he is the cause of his own problem, domestically and internationally.”
On government’s claim that opposition parties were sabotaging Tinubu because of 2027, he said: “How can you say somebody is sabotaging you?
“Who sabotaged you to the point where you have no ambassador to the United States, no high commissioner to the United Kingdom, no ambassador to France, no ambassador to China and no representation at the Security Council members?
“Even if you are joking, you don’t want to have an ambassador to Burkina Faso, Estonia, and Australia and leave out Germany. Why would you not have diplomatic representation in the membership of the Security Council?
“You are treating ambassadorial appointment like any other political appointment that you are going to use to force people to come and join you. That’s not going to augur well for your government,” he said.
Foreign News
Court Sentences Ex-Japanese PM Abe’s Killer to Life in Prison
A Japanese court on Wednesday sentenced the man accused of assassinating former prime minister Shinzo Abe to life in prison.
Tetsuya Yamagami, 45, had admitted shooting Japan’s longest-serving post-war prime minister with a homemade firearm during an election campaign speech in July 2022.
Abe’s violent death caused worldwide shock.
Yamagami was overpowered and arrested in front of cameras after the killing.
Yamagami reportedly told investigators that he acted out of hatred for the controversial Unification Church, which was founded in South Korea in 1954 by staunch anti-communist Sun Myung Moon.
It was supported in Japan by Abe’s grandfather, former Prime Minister, Nobusuke Kishi.
Yamagami’s mother had donated large sums of money to the religious organisation, which had left the family in financial ruin.
Abe’s assassination brought to light the connections between the Unification Church and members of his ruling Liberal Democratic Party.
Foreign News
Japan Restarts World’s Largest Nuclear Plant
Japan has restarted a reactor at the world’s largest nuclear plant nearly 15 years after a disaster at the Fukushima power plant forced the country to shut all its nuclear reactors.
Reactor no.6 at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant located northwest of Tokyo was restarted on Wednesday.
It was delayed by one day because of an alarm malfunction and is expected to begin operating commercially next month.This is the latest installment in Japan’s nuclear power reboot, which still has a long way to go.
The seventh reactor is not expected to come back on until 2030, and the remaining five could be decommissioned. That leaves the plant with far less capacity than it once had when all seven reactors were operational: 8.2 gigawatts.Japan, which had always heavily relied on energy imports, was an early adopter of nuclear power. But these ambitions were scuppered in 2011 by what is now remembered as one of the worst nuclear disasters in history.
Triggered by the most powerful earthquake ever recorded in Japan, the meltdown in the reactors at Fukushima Daiichi led to radioactive leakage. It traumatised local communities that were evacuated, and many have not returned despite official assurances that it was safe to do so.
Still the fear and lack of trust fuelled public opposition to nuclear power and Japan suspended its entire fleet of 54 reactors shortly after the Fukushima disaster.
It has now spent the past decade trying to wake up those power plants, as it tries to expand its source of clean energy to reach net zero emissions by 2050.
Since 2015, it has restarted 15 out of its 33 operable reactors. The Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant is the first of those owned by Tepco to be turned back on.
Before 2011, nuclear power accounted for nearly 30% of Japan’s electricity and the country planned to get that up to 50% by 2030. Its energy plan last year unveiled a tamer goal: it wants nuclear power to provide 20% of its electricity needs by 2040.
Global momentum is building around nuclear energy, with the International Atomic Energy Agency estimating that the world’s nuclear power capacity could more than double by 2050. In Japan, as of 2023, nuclear power accounted for just 8.5% of electricity.
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, who took office in October, has emphasised the importance of nuclear power for Japan’s energy self-sufficiency. Especially as it expects energy demand to surge because of data centres and semiconductor manufacturing.
Japan’s leaders and its energy companies have long pushed for nuclear power. They say it’s more reliable than renewable energy like solar and wind, and better suited for Japan’s mountainous terrain. But critics say the emphasis on nuclear energy has come at the cost of investing in renewables and cutting emissions.
Now, as Japan tries to revive its nuclear power ambitions, the costs of running the reactors have surged, partly because of new safety checks that require hefty investments from companies trying to restart plants.
The government could subsidise the costs, or pass them on to consumers – both unpalatable options for Japan’s leaders, who have for decades been hailing the affordability of nuclear power. An expensive energy bill could also hurt the government at a time when households are protesting about rising costs.
The government’s “hands are tied when it comes to financially supporting nuclear power, unless it’s willing to go back on one of the main selling points”, Koppenborg said.
Beyond the fear of another disaster like Fuksuhima, a series of scandals have also rattled public trust.
The Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant in particular found itself embroiled in a couple of them. In 2023, one of its employees lost a stack of documents after placing it on top of their car and forgetting it there before driving away. In November, another was found to have mishandled confidential documents.
A TEPCO spokesperson said the company reported the incidents to the Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA), adding that it aimed to continue improving security management.
These revelations are “a good sign” for transparency, says Koppenborg. But they also reveal that “Tepco is struggling to change its ways and the way it approaches safety”.
Hisanori Nei, a former senior nuclear safety official said he was “surprised” by the scandal at Hamaoka, he believed the harsh penalty dealt to its operator should deter other companies from doing the same.
What happened at Fukushima turned Japanese public opinion against what had been hailed as an affordable and sustainable form of energy.
Thousands of residents filed class action lawsuits against Tepco and the Japanese government, demanding compensation for property damage, emotional distress and health problems allegedly linked to radiation exposure.
In the weeks after the March 2011 disaster, 44% of Japanese thought the use of nuclear power should be reduced, according to a survey by Pew Research Center. That figure jumped to 70% by 2012. But then polls by the Japanese business publication Nikkei in 2022 showed that more than 50% of people supported nuclear power if safety was ensured.
But there is fear and mistrust. In 2023, the release of treated radioactive water from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant sparked anxiety and anger both at home and abroad.
And many still remain opposed to restarting nuclear plants. In December, hundreds of protesters gathered outside the Niigata prefectural assembly where Kashiwazaki-Kariwa is located, voicing safety concerns.
Last week, ahead of Kashiwazaki-Kariwa’s restart, a small crowd gathered in front of Tepco’s headquarters to protest again.
Nuclear safety standards have been ramped up after Fukushima. The NRA, a cabinet body established in 2012, now oversees the restarting of the country’s nuclear plants.
At Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, 15-metre-high (49ft) seawalls have been built to guard against large tsunamis; watertight doors now protect critical equipment at the facility.
“Based on the new safety standards, [Japan’s nuclear plants] could survive even a similar earthquake and tsunami like the one we had in 2011,” says Nei, the former senior nuclear safety official.
But what worries Dr. Florentine Koppenborg, a senior researcher at the Technical University of Munich is, “They’re preparing for the worst they’ve seen in the past but not for what is to come.”
Some experts worry that these policies are not planning enough to account for rising sea levels due to climate change, or the once-in-a-century megaquake that Japan has been anticipating.
“If the past repeats itself, Japan is super well-prepared,” Koppenborg said. “If something really unexpected happens and a bigger than expected tsunami comes along, we don’t know.”
Foreign News
Germany Overtakes U.S. as Top Buyer of Brazilian Coffee
Germany has become the world’s largest buyer of coffee from Brazil in 2025, overtaking the United States (U.S.), which slipped to second place after imposing steep import tariffs.
Germany imported 5.4 million 60-kilogram bags of Brazilian coffee last year, accounting for 13.
5per cent of Brazil’s total exports, the Brazilian coffee exporters’ association Cecafé said on Wednesday.The U.
S., traditionally Brazil’s largest coffee customer, fell to second place with imports of 5.3 million bags, down 33 per cent from the previous year.Márcio Ferreira, Cecafé head, said the decline was largely driven by temporary tariffs of up to 50 per cent imposed by U.
S. President Donald Trump.Ferreira said shipments to the U.S. fell by 55 per cent during the period from early August to late November when high tariffs were imposed on all Brazilian coffee varieties.
Trump had imposed tariffs on a range of Brazilian food products in response to criminal proceedings against former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro, a political ally of the U.S. president.
Bolsonaro has since been convicted and is serving a prison sentence of more than 27 years for attempting a coup.
As food prices in the U.S. rose, Trump largely rolled back the tariffs in November.
Brazil exported a total of 40 million bags of coffee last year, down about 20 per cent from the previous year.
In spite of the lower volume, export revenues jumped 24 per cent to a record 15.5 billion dollars.
Ferreira said weaker shipments also reflected lower stockpiles after record exports a year earlier and weather-related losses, adding that stronger global prices more than offset the decline.
Brazil is the only producing country that exports coffee to more than 120 countries and accounts for over one-third of the global market.
After Germany and the U.S., major buyers include Italy, Japan and Belgium.
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