Sunday, May 1, 2022

How gallant youths rescued Imo PDP ward congress results

 



What would have amounted to monumental electoral fraud was averted in Owerri on Saturday as courageous but angry Imo People's Democratic Party, PDP, youths pressurized members of the electoral panel to produce result sheets after the panel members allegedly stated that they did not come with result sheets and that the sheets were left in the office of the National Secretary of the Party in Abuja.


Following the action by the youths, 25 out of 27 result sheets for the controversial Ward congress of the Imo State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, conducted on Saturday, appeared immediately.


This was confirmed by the  Director-General of the Imo PDP New Media, Collins Opurozor.


He said one of the panel members confessed that the results were hidden somewhere in the car and it was brought out without delay.



According to sources in Owerri, the panel members led by the Chairman, Mr Udensi, were held hostage at the party Secretariat located along Okigwe Road in Owerri by the angry youths.



The reason the youths gave was that the panel told them that they did not come with the result sheets and that they allegedly handed them over to the office of the National Secretary of the PDP in Abuja 


The angry youths stated that they suspected foul play and that  the panel could go to Abuja, and enter a different result from what actually happened at the wards.


According to reports, trouble started when the ward congresses were concluded and the party members arrived at the state secretariat to meet with the panel to start entering the result and when the panel were asked to bring out the result sheets they said they left it in Abuja with the office of the National Secretary.





One of the angry youths, who spoke anonymously with our correspondent said:“We had to block the gate insisting  that nobody will  go out until the result sheets were provided.”




Zenith Bank Plc makes N58.20 billion profit in Q1 2022

 



...income from loan recovery stood at N1.23 billion, a decline from N2.90 billion in Q1 2021.


 by Chidinma Anyalewechi


Nigerian Zenith Bank Plc, has released its Q1 2022 financial result, which revealed a profit of N58.20 billion in Q1 2022. This reflects a 9.68% increase year on year.


The bank also reported earnings per share of N1.85, a 9.47% growth from the N1.69 reported a year earlier in Q1 2021.


The statement revealed that in Q1 2022, net interest income grew by 20.89% from N83.17 billion to N100.54 billion in the current period. Zenith Bank’s profit performance is on the back of margin all growth as income from interest, trading income and fees and commission income all appreciated year on year.

 


Key highlights of its results


The Nigerian lender earned N126.38 billion, from its lending business as Interest income grew by 24.91% from N101.18 billion.


Despite the 75.33% growth in loan losses during the period, net interest income after impairments appreciated by 18.24% to stand at N93.78 billion.


Zenith Bank, however, grew its income from commission and fees rising 23.12% to N41.40 billion year on year and also generating a total of N32.60 billion from trading income as against N12.58 billion year on year, representing an increase of 159.23%.


Income from loan recovery stood at N1.23 billion, a decline from N2.90 billion in Q1 2021.


The group’s e-business income raked in N14.78 billion, representing a 32.79% spike from N11.13 billion in Q1 2021. This indicates that the bank’s use of e-banking channels in the delivery of financial services to its customers has improved.


Also, income from current account maintenance and credit-related fees & commissions stood at N9.27 billion and N5.19 billion, respectively during the period.


In addition, the group also grew its deposits from customers by a whopping 27.83% to N7.25 trillion while its total assets are now N10.32 trillion. Net assets rose 21.85% to N1.33 trillion.


Zenith Bank Plc last traded at N24.55 per share and its market capitalization stands at N770.78 billion as of Thursday, April 28, 2022. Year-to-date performance shows that the share price of the company has depreciated by 2.39%.



Credit: Nairametrics 

Uzodimma shames, silences critics as daughter weds in Omuma, Owerri

 








Following the recent low-key court marriage at an Abuja Marriage Registry, of Oprah Chioma Uzodimma, one of the beautiful daughters of Gov Hope Uzodimma with Mr. Henry Ohaeri, son of Chief and Dr. Mrs. Ohaeri, naysayers and enemies of the Governor, went berserk with wild allegations including running for his life.


However, Governor Uzodimma and his family, put paid to that with the traditional marriage of his daughter hosted at Omuma autonomous community in Oru East Local Government Area (LGA),  church (white) wedding at Maria Assumpta Cathedral that was officiated by the Archbishop of Owerri Catholic Archdiocese, His Grace A. J. V. Obinna and witnessed by many dignitaries, associates, friends and well-wishers of the couple, while the grand reception took place at Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu Square, Owerri.


 


It was indeed a glamorous marriage and wedding ceremony,  witnessed and attended by numerous prominent Nigerians, including    President Muhammadu Buhari, who was ably represented by the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osibanjo. Other special dignitaries, who graced the occasion with their presence, were the Senate President, Senator Ahmad Ibrahim Lawal; the Deputy Senate President, Senator Ovie Omo-Agege.


Also in attendance were the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi; the Obi of Onitsha, Igwe Nnaemeka Achebe; Comrade Adams Oshomole; the Honourable Minister of Women Affairs, Mrs Paulin Tallen; the Honourable Minister of Justice and Attorney -General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami; the First Lady of Cross River State, Dr. Linda Ayade; the Honourable Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige, Inspector General of Police, Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State, other governors and deputy governors, Chief Engr (Dr) Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, Davido with Chioma, Mr Flavour, Comedian Okey Bakassi and a host of others.



The Nigerian Academic Excellence Magazine congratulates the Governor and newlyweds.


Imo wins!









    

Why I married Yul Edochie - Judy Austin

 




By Nigerian Academic Excellence Magazine


Judy Austin,  mother of one, who hails from Umuoji in Anambra State’s Idemilli North, has revealed what made her decide to be second wife of Yul Edochie.


Speaking on relationships, marriage, and sex, the actress said: “I don’t believe in jumping from one man to another. I’m a relationship kind of person. I believe in having someone, a man that you do this thing with, not giving it out to all men who cross your path simultaneously. You do whatever works for you.



“ I love relationships, and it is how I am created. If a relationship does not work out for you, you can decide to break up and get hooked again or give yourself a break. A relationship is not all about sex or emotional things.


“I love to have normal relationships with intellectual people, people I can learn from. So anything “relationship” with the right person is a welcome idea.”



Judy Austin, whose full name is Muoghalu Uchechukwu Judith is a beautiful  Nollywood actress, movie producer and business owner, who has featured in many Nollywood movies but the ones that brought her fame are ‘Native Girl’ and ‘Fear’.



In an interview with the Tribune about her working experiences with Yul, she said: “I had told him I wanted to produce a movie, and that I wanted him to direct it. He simply told me to find a story that would be both strong and different. When he saw the scripts, he had no doubts. That was how ‘Native Girl’ came to light with the help of my director, Yul Edochie.”


Apart from acting and directing, she also said Yul supported the project financially. She said it cost N4 million to produce the film. She also described him as a “one in a million kind of director that wants everything to go well.”



She has always celebrated Yul on her page, but people assumed it was all about a junior colleague doing the needful for a superior.



In 2017, Oros luxurious French Fragrances unveiled the couple as brand ambassadors.


Until recently, Judy Austin was a regular Nollywood actress based in Asaba, Delta State.


She however became popular when Yul Edochie, formally introduced her to the world as his second wife on Instagram. 


Since then, the voluptuous actress has had to contend with online trolls, who have thronged her page to  lambast her with some reminding her of  statements she made on marriage in recent interviews with Vanguard Newspaper, where she stated that marriage is not an achievement.



Before this time, fans and colleagues knew only about Yul’s marriage to May. The couple celebrated their 17th wedding anniversary in October 2021.


Little did they know that the 40-year-old actor, who wishes to be Nigeria’s president, had secretly taken a second wife.


It was reported that Yul had paid Judy’s bride price recently after she welcomed their son in 2021.

    

2023: Goodluck Jonathan is qualified to run For Presidency – Ozekhome

 

                      Goodluck Jonathan




 


Human Rights lawyer and Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mike Ozekhome has said that former President Goodluck Jonathan, is constitutionally qualified to run for president.


While Jonathan has not declared any intention to run, there have been speculations of his plan to join the race for the top job.


Quoting portions of the Constitution, Ozekhome stated on Friday that if the former president decides to join the race, he is constitutionally permitted to do so.


                          Ozekhome


See full statement below.


BY CHIEF MIKE OZEKHOME, SAN, OFR, FCIARB, LL.M, Ph.D, LL.D.


INTRODUCTION


Nigeria is a country of one major news item per day. At times, one scandal per day. The hot issue in the polity currently generating national ruckus, hoopla and bedlam is the presumed intention of Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan to run for the 2023 presidency. I have carefully read the many arguments of those (I call them antagonists) who believe that Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan is disqualified from contesting the 2023 presidential election. According to them, he had already done two terms of 4 years each and will thus be ineligible to contest for a third term. They cite the Fourth Alteration (No 16) Act, which was signed into an Act by President Muhammadu Buhari on the 11th of June, 2018. The section they are relying on is section 137(3) of the said Fourth Alteration to the 1999 Constitution, which provides that “a person who was sworn in to complete the term for which another person was elected as president shall not be elected to such office for more than a single term”.


THE ANTAGONISTS ARE DEAD WRONG IN THEIR LEGAL POSTULATIONS


The truth of the matter is that the antagonists of Jonathan running in 2022, in their strange line of argument, are mainly relying on the above section 137(3). They have probably not adverted their minds to the provisions of sections 141 of the Electoral Act, 2010, as amended; and section 285(13) of the same Fourth Alteration to the 1999 Constitution, as amended, the very Alteration they are relying on. More revealing is that these antagonists are probably not aware of an extant and subsisting Court of Appeal decision where Jonathan was frontallly confronted and challenged before the 2015 presidential election, with the same ground of being ineligible to contest the said 2015 election, having allegedly been elected for two previous terms of office. The very section 137(3) being relied upon by the antagonists, was signed into law in 2018, three years after Jonathan had left office; and 7 years after he took the oath of President upon Yar’Adua’s demise. Can Jonathan be caught in the web of section 137(3) retrospectively? We shall see that anon.


 


The case of Jonathan running had been challenged in CYRIACUS NJOKU V GOODLUCK EBELE JONATHAN (2015) LPELR-244496 (CA). In that case, the Court of Appeal, Abuja Division, held that President Goodluck Jonathan had only taken the oath of office once and therefore upheld his eligibility to contest the then Nigeria’s presidential election slated for March 28, 2015.


The intermediate court held that the oath of office President Jonathan took in 2010 was merely to complete the “unexpired tenure” of late President Umar Yar’Adua, who had died while in office as President.


The appeal had been lodged before the court by one Cyriacus Njoku, who had challenged the ruling of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, which on March 1, 2013, had dismissed the suit he filed to stop President Jonathan from contesting the 2015 polls.


In the lead judgement delivered by Justice Abubakar Yahaya, the full panel of the court unanimously held that President Jonathan had only spent one term in office as President, going by the provisions of the 1999 Constitution.


Recall that the then Vice President Jonathan had been empowered as Acting President on February 9, 2010, following a motion for operation of the “doctrine of necessity”, by the Senate, owing to the protracted stay of late President Umaru Yar’Adua in Saudi Arabia on medical grounds.


When President Yar’Adua eventually died on May 5, 2010, Jonathan was sworn in as president to serve the unexpired residue of office of Yar’Adua. Jonathan was later elected President in 2011 for the first time, on his own merit, after he contested the election.


Mr. Njoku had contended in his suit that Jonathan had already taken the oath of office and allegiance twice and therefore, should be disqualified from contesting the 2015 election, as any victory he secured would amount to being sworn in thrice.


However, the Court of Appeal held that the oath that Jonathan took in 2010 was merely to complete the unexpired tenure of late Yar’ Adua; adding that by virtue of Section 135 (2)(b) of the 1999 Constitution, Jonathan only took his first oath in May, 2011; and not May 5, 2010, when he succeeded late Yar’ Adua. The Court of Appeal further held that disqualification is through election, not oath-taking.


The intermediate court’s luminous judgement read in part:


“In this appeal, it is not controverted by the appellant that the first oath taken by the first defendant (Jonathan) was the oath he took as the Vice President and not as President… But he took the oath in May 2010 to complete unexpired tenure of late Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. Section 37(1)(b) disqualifies a person from contesting for president if he had been elected twice. Disqualification is through election and not oath taking. Election is a process of choosing a person to occupy a position by voting. When election is given its literal meaning, it connotes when a voting is employed to choose a person for political office. This did not take place when Jonathan stepped into the shoes of his Principal who went to the great beyond. To say these things were done is to import words not used by the constitution.‎ Section 146(1) of the constitution cannot be deemed an election for a VP to step into the office of a President. Election involves conducting primaries by party, nomination, election and announcement of results. All these processes were not done. If a VP succeeds a President that dies, that cannot be challenged. It is a mode of stepping into the vacant office provided for by the constitution. When a President dies, the Vice President automatically becomes President as provided for by S130 (1)(2) of the 1999 constitution… It was not election that produced the first respondent in May 2010, the oath he took then was not an oath of elected President as provided for by Section 180 of the constitution. The process of election was followed in 2011. The oath of office taken in 2011 was the first oath taken by the first respondent as an elected President having fulfilled all the process of election.… Again, the succession of a Vice-President to the office of a President who died, in accordance with Section 146(1) of the 1999 Constitution, cannot be “deemed an election”, especially for the purpose of taking away a right that has been vested. As stated earlier, an election under the 1999 Constitution involves primaries, nominations, voting and declaration of results. That is the mode prescribed in electing a President, and once it is so prescribed, it must be followed, and no other method can be employed. All these processes can be challenged in a Court of law and if successful, the election would be annulled. But if a Vice-President succeeds a President who died, that cannot be challenged because it is a Constitutional provision, and the succession cannot be annulled. It is a mode of assumption to the office of the demised President, an ‘appointment’ by the Constitution, as it were, as no letter of appointment is necessary from anybody. The Vice-President automatically becomes the President, by virtue of his being the Vice-President. An example can be found in Section 130(1) and (2) of the 1999 Constitution.” Per ABUBAKAR DATTI YAHAYA, JCA (Pp 40 – 41 Paras E – D)


The Court of Appeal further upheld the decision of the lower court which had dismissed Mr. Njoku’s suit for lack of locus standi. It noted that “it is fundamental that where a party lacks locus, the court cannot assume jurisdiction….We agree with the lower court that the appellant has no locus to sue”.


On the question of the cause of action, the court held that the case of the appellant was “speculative and imaginary as none of the reliefs he sought accrued to him any benefit”.


Indeed, the Court of Appeal had awarded the sum of N50, 000 each as cost to the defendant, President Jonathan.


DID PRESIDENT JONATHAN SATISFY THE PROVISIONS OF THE CONSTITUTION AND THE ELECTORAL ACT WHEN HE SUCCEDED YAR’ADUA IN MAY, 2010?


For a candidate to be declared elected winner, he must have participated in all the stages of the election. These are the words of section 385(13) of the Fourth Alteration to the 1999 Constitution and section 141 of the Electoral Act, 2010, as amended. They provide that “an election tribunal or court shall not under any circumstance declare any person a winner at an election in which such a person have not fully participated in all the stages of the said election”.


Surely, when President Jonathan in May, 2010 stepped into the shoes of late President Yar’Adua, he merely fulfilled constitutional provisions. He did not and could not have participated in all stages of the election such as to be deemed to have been a candidate. It was not an election, but the “doctrine of necessity”, that made him President. In the eye of the law therefore, Jonathan never contested any election. See the cases of MODIBBO V. MUSTAPHA USMAN & ORS (2020) NWLR (Pt 1712)470 (SC); OZOMGBACHI V. AMADI (2028) LPELR-45152 (SC); CPC V. OMBUGADU (2013) LPELR-21007 (SC); PDM & ANOR V. INEC (2020) 17 NWLR (Pt 1753) 303 (SC).


NO ONE IS ASKING FOR TENURE EXTENSION FOR JONATHAN


The case of SENATOR RASHIDI LADOJA V. INEC (2007) 12 NWLR (Pt 1047)119 (SC) is quite distinguishable from the Jonathan scenario. The Supreme Court held in that case that neither it nor any other court has the power to extend the period of four years prescribed for a Governor of a state beyond the terminal date of either 4 years or cumulative 8 years.


This also accords with the case of MARWA V. NYAKO (2012) 6 NWLR (Pt 1296) 199 (SC), where the apex court described the time fixed by the Constitution for doing anything as “immutable, fixed as the rock of gibrata  which cannot be extended, elongated, expanded, or stretched beyond what it states”. See also section 180(1),(2) and (3); and section 182 (1)(b) of the 1999 Constitution.


Indeed, in dealing with the amendment of July, 2010, in section 180(2) (2A), the Supreme Court again kicked against retrospectivity in the same MARWA V. NYAKO (supra), when, coram Adekeye, JSC, it declared: “The amendment of July, 2010, is not meant to be retrospective as the event in this appeal occurred in 2007 and 2008 respectively. The amendment has not changed the law, but is merely a clarification to the existing provision”


RETROSPECTIVITY OF LEGISLATION


Aside Jonathan being completely cleansed of the virus of ineligibility to contest the 2023 presidential election by the still extant Court of Appeal decision in Njoku’s case, as Naaman the leper was, after dipping himself in the River Jordan seven times, Jonathan is also aided by the golden canon of interpretation to the effect that an enactment does not operate retrospectively or retroactively to take away from citizens, enured and vested rights.


We may now ask the question: What is the effect of Buhari signing into law section 137(3) of the Fourth Alteration to the 1999 Constitution in 2018? The answer is found in section 2 of the Interpretation Act which provides that:


“1. An Act is passed when the President assents to the Bill for the Act, whether or not the Act then comes into force;


Where no other provision is made as to the time when a particular enactment is to come into force, it shall, subject to the following subsection, come into force


In the case of an enactment contained in an Act of the National Assembly, on the day when the Act is passed;


 


In any other case, on the day when the enactment is made”.


It is, therefore, clear from section 2 of the Interpretation Act that section 137(3) of the Fourth Alteration to the Constitution took effect from 11th June, 2018, when President Muhammadu Buhari assented to it, and not earlier. Section 137(3) is anchored on section 318(4) of the 1999 Constitution which provides that, “the Interpretation Act shall apply for the purposes of interpreting (its) provisions”.


Section 137(3) is one piece of legislation that can be termed retrospective or retroactive legislation, and it is frowned upon.


On retrospectivity of legislation, the apex court, coram Justice Kekere-Ekun, J.S.C, held in the case of SPDC V. ANARO & ORS (2015) LPELR-24750(SC) at (Pp. 64 paras. B), thus:


“There is a general presumption against retrospective legislation. It is presumed that the legislature does not intend injustice or absurdity. Courts therefore lean against giving certain statutes retrospective operation. Generally, statutes are construed as operating only in cases or on facts, which come into existence after the statutes were passed unless a retrospective effect is clearly intended. It was held inter alia, in: OJOKOLOBO VS ALAMU (1987) 3 NWLR (Pt.61) 377 @ 402 F-H that it is a fundamental rule of Nigerian law that no statute shall be construed to have a retrospective operation unless such a construction appears very clearly in the terms of the Act or Law; or arises by necessary and distinct implication. See also: Udoh Vs O.H.M.B. (1993) 7 NWLR (Pt.304) 39 @ 149 F – G; ADEGBENRO VS AKINTOLA (1963) All NLR 305 @ 308.”


Similarly, in ALEWA V. SOKOTO STATE INEC (2007) LPELR-8388(CA) (PP. 32 PARAS. A), the Court of Appeal, per Ariwoola JCA (as he then was), held thus:


“It is however settled law that, unless the law makers expressly state otherwise, a statute operates prospectively but not retrospectively. It is a cardinal principle of English Law that no statute shall be construed to have retrospective operation unless such a construction appears very clearly in the terms of the Act, or arises by necessary and distinct implications. The position is the same in this Country. In OLANIYI VS. AROYEHUN (1991) 5 NWLR (pt 194) 652, the Supreme Court held that:- “A construction like other statutes operates prospectively and not retrospectively, unless it is expressly provided to be otherwise. Such legislation affects only rights which came into existence after it has been passed.” See also; CHIEF C. ODUMEGWU OJUKWU VS. CHIEF OLUSEGUN OBASANJO & ORS. (2004) 7 SCM 53 at 93; AFOLABI & ORS. V. GOVERNOR OF OYO STATE (1985) 2 NWLR (pt 9) 734; OJOKOLOBO VS. AREMU (supra);


ADESANOYE V. ADEWOLE (supra) at 147 B-C & D-E; West v. Gwyne (1911) 2 CH 1; A.G. Federation v. A.N.P.P. (2003) 15 NWLR (844) 600 at 648 G -H; SA’AD V. NYAME (2004) All FWLR (201)1678; EGUNJOBI V. FRN (2012) LPELR-15537(SC), (PP. 34-35 PARAS. F); ADEGBENRO V. AKINTOLA (1963) 2 SCNLR 216; ADESHINA V. LEMONU (1965) 1 All NLR 233; THE SWISS AIR TRANSPORT CO. LTD V. AFRICAN CONTINENTAL BANK LTD (1971) 1 All NLR 37; ATTORNEY GENERAL EAST CENTRAL STATE V. UGWUH (1975) 5 SC 13″.


 


Indeed, section 4(9) of the Constitution strips the NASS “in relation to any criminal offence”, the power to “make any law which shall have retrospective effect”. Though this section specifically deals with criminal offences, judicial decisions clearly show that it operates with equal force to civil matters.


Thus, in MODU V. FRN (2016) LPELR-40471 (CA), the intermediate court held that:


“The argument that the Interpretation Act applies to civil legislations only is not only untenable but flawed. A legislation is a legislation and there is nothing in the Interpretation Act to indicate that it only applies to civil and not criminal legislations”. Per YARGATA BYENCHIT NIMPAR, JCA (Pp 18-18 Paras C-E)


CONCLUSION


For those who were too young to know that Jonathan left office since May 29, 2015, the oath of office and oath of allegiance which he subscribed to in 2015 were taken prior to the enactment of section 137(3) of the Constitution in 2018. Consequently, as held in MODU V. FRN (supra), all rights, duties, obligations and interests created under section 137 (3) are inapplicable to his rights, duties and obligations which had accrued to or enured in him before the said enactment.


Thus, the court held in the case of the ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE FEDERATION V. ALL NIGERIAN PEOPLES PARTY (ANPP) & 2 ORS. (2003) 15 NWLR (Pt. 844) 600 @ pages 648-649, paras. E-B, that:


“A statute is deemed to be retrospective where it takes away any vested right acquired under existing laws or creates a new obligation or imposes a new duty or attaches a new disability in respect of transactions or considerations already past… Based on the presumption that a legislature does not intend what is unjust, the courts have always leaned against giving statutes a retrospective effect and usually regard them as applying to facts or matters which came into existence after the statutes were passed unless it is clearly shown that a retrospective effect was intended by the legislature. In the instant case the constitution came into being on 29th May, 1999 and all rights, liabilities and privileges as contemplated by the circumstance of the arose as of that day. Consequently, its provisions can only be read prospectively.”


Furthermore, the court held at page 649, paras. C-D; 661-662, paras. F-C; 665, paras. A-B as follows:


“One of the cardinal principles of interpretation of statutes is that no rule of construction is that a retrospective operation is not to be given to a statute so as to impair an existing right or obligation otherwise that as regards matters of procedure, unless that effect cannot be avoided without doing violence to the language of the enactment…”.


The court nailed it when it held at page 667, paras. C-D that:


 


“A constitution, like other statutes, operates prospectively and not retrospectively unless it is expressly provided to be otherwise. Such legislations affect only rights which came into existence after it has been passed.”


A cursory examination of the various provisions of the Constitution and all the appellate court decisions cited above make it crystal clear that the speculated disqualification of Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan is grossly misconceived by the antagonists, as the Constitution must be progressively and not retrogressively construed; prospectively and not retrospectively interpreted. More significantly, the Alteration Act itself does not make any express provision that the said inserted sub-section 137(3) would operate retrospectively. To that extent, the principle of expressio unius est exclusio alterius (the express mention of one thing is the exclusion of others) applies here. See MADUMERE & ANOR V. OKWARA & ANOR (2013) LPELR-20752(SC).


It is clear that those deliberately or erroneously misinterpreting the clear position of the law may be baying for Jonathan’s blood, possibly as a potential candidate who may subvert the chances of their preferred candidates. I do not view issues from such narrow ad homine prism and blurred binoculars. It will be grossly unfair, unconstitutional, unconscionable and inequitable to deny Jonathan of the right to contest the 2023 presidential election when our extant laws and appellate court decisions permit him to. The question of whether Jonathan really needs to subject his glittering credentials and internationally acclaimed reputation to the muddy waters of a fresh competition with persons, some of whom were his personal appointees as president, is another matter altogether. Only him, and not the present state of the laws in Nigeria, can answer that question and decide his own fate. But, as regards his eligibility to contest, Dr Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan is pre-eminently constitutionally, morally and legally qualified to contest the 2023 presidential election. So, run, run, run, GEJ, if that is your wish and desire. Goodluck to Goodluck.







B12 deficiency: Three signs that signal 'danger'


VITAMIN B12 plays a pivotal role in the body so becoming deficient in it can prove ruinous. In fact, consistently low levels can cause "damage" to your nervous system and the signs can show up on your feet.


By ADAM CHAPMAN



Vitamin B12 contributes to the body in numerous ways but one of the most important is maintaining the nervous system. The nervous system has two main parts: the central nervous system, which is made up of the brain and spinal cord, and the peripheral nervous system, which is made up of nerves that branch off from the spinal cord and extend to all parts of the body. Consistently low levels of B12 can cause "damage" to parts of the nervous system, warns the NHS.




This is known as peripheral neuropathy, which develops when nerves in the body's extremities, such as the hands, feet and arms, are damaged.


According to the NHS, the main symptoms of peripheral neuropathy in your feet include:


Numbness


Tingling


Muscle weakness.


"These symptoms are usually constant, but may come and go," explains the health body.


It's important to see your doctor if you're experiencing any of the above symptoms because they can be "irreversible", it warns.



B12 deficiency: Numbness or tingling in the feet can signal damage


What causes B12 deficiency?


Pernicious anaemia is the most common cause of vitamin B12 deficiency in the UK.


Pernicious anaemia is an autoimmune condition whereby your immune system attacks the cells in your stomach that produce the intrinsic factor, which means your body is unable to absorb vitamin B12.


Some people can develop a vitamin B12 deficiency as a result of not getting enough vitamin B12 from their diet.


The richest sources of B12 are animal-based so vegetarians and vegans are at a greater risk of B12 deficiency.




Credit: Daily Express 

N100m Form: We Don’t Want To Beg – APC Chairman

 


National Chairman of the APC, Abdullahi Adamu


 


The National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Abdullahi Adamu, on Friday defended his party’s decision to charge N100m for its 2023 election nomination forms.


The party had demanded N100m for presidential aspirants and N50m for Governorship aspirants.


Critics have faulted the move, saying it has the potential of hurting the nation’s fledgling democracy and encouraging corruption.




But Adamu, speaking to State House correspondents in Abuja said the APC was justified in its decision because the party needs money to run, especially in an election year.


“We’ve been listening with rapt attention to the hues and cries from our lovers and adversaries,” Adamu said. “We have no regrets whatsoever.


“We did some homework; we know what it takes to go through primaries, go through presidential campaign, go through election to be president; we know what it takes.


“We also do know that there are citizens, who are qualified to contest, but who are not serious contenders, who will just want to take anything cheap by the roadside. Even the enormity of work that has to be done – and this work will be done with money.


“And we don’t want to continue to beg, particularly in an election year. So we want to see that we are able to mobilise sufficient funds to support our efforts to win election.


“The criticism, in some quarters, may be well-founded – I have no quarrel with that, but we wear the shoes for our party and we know where it pinches.”




Bayelsa, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Cross River residents praise Gowon - A rebuttal

 By BENEDICT AHANONU  He’s our hero, say indigenes The coastal aborigines in Bayelsa, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, and Cross River states (BRAC) have ...