Tag: Agents

  • How agents of Oyo monarch attack us with machetes – Witnesses tell court

    How agents of Oyo monarch attack us with machetes – Witnesses tell court

    Two witnesses on Wednesday gave account of how they nearly lost their lives to machete injuries allegedly inflicted on them by agents of an Oyo state traditional ruler, Oba Solomon Akinola, the Oloko of Oko.

    The witnesses, Pastor Owolabi Olusegun and Mr Olufemi Adelakun gave their testimonies before an Oyo State High Court in Ogbomoso.

    The court is sitting on a case of attempted murder, grievous bodily harm, robbery, land grabbing against the traditional ruler of Oko in Surulere Local Government Area of Oyo state, and 14 others.

    Olusegun, a prosecution witness who was led in evidence by a lawyer prosecuting the matter, Mr I.O. Abdulazeez, informed the court that the incident occurred on May 10, 2021 when he was walking in front of the palace of Alagba of Aagba town, a neighboring community to Oko.

    “The assailants who are agents of Oba Akinola were holding cutlasses and they started pursuing me.

    “When they catch up with me, they strike my head with their cutlasses, but I managed to escape.

    He gave the names of those who allegedly inflicted the injuries on him as; Matthew Akintaro, a.k.a.  Paimo, Sheriff Adam, a.k.a.  Adamo, and Timothy Aderinto.

    Olusegun showed the scars from the alleged inflicted injuries to the court.

    Also testifying, Adelakun said he was yet to recover from the machete injuries to his skull because his eyeballs were badly damaged.

    “On that day, I came out of my house, when I heard the cry of Olusegun calling for help while he was being attacked.

    “I hid in the bush, thinking that they would not see me/

    “When they eventually saw me, they inflicted severe cutlass injuries on my head.

    “The injuries badly affected my sight, I cannot see properly again,” Adelakun said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that after hearing the testimonies of the two witnesses, Justice K.A. Adedokun adjourned the trial until Dec. 14 for cross examination by the defense counsel and further hearing.

  • FIFA to push on with new ‘cap’ and rules for agents

    FIFA to push on with new ‘cap’ and rules for agents

    FIFA announced last September a cap that would limit agents of the selling club to 10 per cent of the transfer fee, and 3per cent of the player’s fee for agents of the buying club.

    The new regulations, which are scheduled to take effect in January, 2022, will also force agents to become licensed and undergo an exam conducted by FIFA, as well as make public all transactions, allowing fans to see how much agents are paid on deals.

    FIFA said on Thursday that it is starting its third and final “consultation process” on the new regulations before submitting the reforms to a vote at the FIFA Council with the aim of bringing them into effect next season.

    Leading agents have been critical of the proposals and threatened legal action.

    Emilio Garcia Silvero, FIFA’s Chief Legal and Compliance Officer, told reporters that the ruling body would continue to consult with agents, but was determined to push forward with the changes.

    “If we can’t agree with the agents then we will move ahead. We are committed to this,” he said, adding that the proposals should not be seen as hostile to agents.

    “This is not a project against the agents, this is a project for the agent, that is a very important message,” he said.

    “We would like to work with them; they play a highly relevant role in football.

    “There are hundreds and thousands who are operating in a proper way,” added Garcia Silvero, who said a new Football Agents Disputes Tribunal would help agents who found them not getting paid on international deals.

    “This is not a project against agents, those who see this (as) a project against agents, it is because they are hiding something,” he added.

    “There are a big group of agents who are also happy with the basic principles and we are all committed to reach a final agreement and a consensus.”

    FIFA said that commissions paid to agents involved in international transfers totalled a record $653.9 million in 2019, four times more than they earned in 2015.

    The process of becoming an agent will involve a “character test” and an annual fee as well as continued education and relevant insurance will all be compulsory.

    Agents will be barred from holding any interest, directly or indirectly, in a football club or a federation or other football body.

    Contracts for commissions should be set out in advance in writing under the new system, which aims to end late claims for commissions when a deal is being closed.

    A previous much looser licence scheme was abandoned by FIFA in 2015.

  • Slave Labour: Parents, Agents are Culpable, By Michael West

    Slave Labour: Parents, Agents are Culpable, By Michael West

    By Michael West

    The unending incidents of trapped young Nigerians in search of greener pastures outside the shores of the country deserve a serious attention. The harrowing experiences they go through in the hands their various “masters” under whose roofs they stay and work are dehumanising. The victims are being blamed for being the architects of their own woes. While many have been lucky to escape and return home, some others are either dead or ‘lost’ in the wilderness of slave labour in foreign lands.

    I do not approve of desperate tendencies and craze for ‘leaving Nigeria at all cost’ among young men and women who think that the grass is lurch and greener on the other side. However, there is no crime in seeking better opportunities elsewhere but it has to be done legitimately. Fast, crooked and illegal or fake processes seem to be their preferred channels. Indeed, many of them are being hoodwinked and swindled by their agents. They become easy preys and vulnerable to the antics of the agents because they are desperate.

    In my opinion, parents and government have the solution to this social malaise. Parents must stop encouraging, indulging or pushing their children into slavery and journey of no return in their quest for money. Government on its part must set up a crack team to track, arrest and prosecute the agents who thrive on the dehumanising business. It is possible to curtail to the barest minimum if our government summons the political will to deal with it. It is cruel to trick fellow human into slave labour under the guise of working overseas.

    The shocking trajectory of the crime is that relations, friends, acquaintances and loved ones are found to be involved in ‘selling’ their kith and kins into slavery by sweet talking them into fake prospects abroad. In many instances, they are promised lucrative wages as domestic workers, shop attendants, nannies, home teachers etc. who will earn hard currencies. As for men, they lure them with rewarding vocational jobs that require skilled and experienced hands like working as commercial or private chauffeurs, artisans and security workers. The victims always realise too late that they have been scammed and ‘sold’ into slavery. Breach of trust and act of betrayal on the part of trusted people involved is a major source of trauma for the victims.

    A teenage girl was deceived into accepting to work as a domestic staff with the sum of N150,000 as monthly pay in Libya. She got baited by the offer and endured a long, dangerous journey through the desert to Libya during which she witnessed how drivers and other men maltreated and raped women and young girls at will.

    The reality of being sold into slavery dawned on the unsuspecting victims when they were asked to offer sex to male clients at the command of their agents. When the girl in question protested that sex to strange men was not part of the deal, reminding her ‘madam’ that she was in Libya to do the job of a “house help.” She was told that was part of her duty in the house. That was the beginning of her journey into dark side of life that nearly cost her life.

    Apart from prostitution, these hapless young women are made to consent to pay heavy sums as “debts” incurred to facilitate their exit from Nigeria. This is aside the money they paid to the supposed agents for the same purpose. Their travel documents will be seized while they disperse them to various “clients” to work in order to pay their “debts.” It is when they groan under the heavy yoke of hard labour, sexual abuse, maltreatment, hunger and ill Health that the victims usually cry out for help.

    In the case of the teenage girl, she was locked up in a room for four days without food for refusing to “service” the male clients sexually. She was told to pay $4,000 to cover her travel expenses, and made to swear an oath that she would not run away. That was how the girl and her co-travellers started having unprotected sex with different men on daily basis. Whenever she got pregnant she was forced to abort. Some of her colleagues contracted sexually transmitted diseases, committed several abortions and a few of them died in the process.

    The girl was later sold to a Nigerian man in the country as “sex slave.” She ran away from her Nigerian “master” and hooked up with another man she thought would rescue her only to be abducted by an extreme Islamist gang, ISIS. They killed her new man but she was spared because she was pregnant at the time but that did not save her from sexual abuse in the camp of the rampaging Islamists. Her captors took her to an underground prison and compelled her to marry their member who raped her. Three years into her ordeal, Libyan soldiers facilitated her escape, and International Organisation for Migration (IOM) repatriated her to Nigeria.

    Over the years, the mass media have been awash with such horrifying stories of Nigerian women and girls trafficked for sexual and labour exploitation in some Arab countries like Libya, United Arab Emirate, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and European destinations like Italy and Ireland.

    Government should go after the agencies and rings of individuals that engage in this illicit business. Whistle blowing tactics should be employed to arrest the criminals. There should be strident campaign against desperation for overseas jobs if valid and official procedures will not be adhered to.

    Parents, too, should be made accountable. Any parents found culpable in their daughters’ desperate moves that result to problem should be prosecuted. Human trafficking rings around the country are not difficult to identify if there’s genuine willingness to burst the ring. In order to restore human dignity and our national pride, this modern-day slavery must stop.

     

    From the Mailbox

    Re: Let’s Mend Broken Hearts

    Apt. Loneliness kills faster than the coronavirus. I pray God will continue to intervene in human affairs. Well done, sir. – Mrs. O. Adewoyin, Lagos

    I want to state that most of the moves to go back were not for love or sustainable relationship’s sake but for desperate need of sex and companionship which the lockdown aggravated due loneliness, and not genuinely for the sake of peaceful reunion. The reason for separation will erupt again as time goes on after the lockdown and they will be back to status quo. In that case, it cannot be an enduring reconciliation. As for me, I can NEVER succumb to such sentiments as a factor in reconciliation moves. I will never return to my vomit. Lockdown syndrome or not, after lockdown what next? Back to the old self... – Mrs. Doyin Ogunbiyi, Abeokuta.

    We need one another in this life. There is nothing like being with the person you love and he loves you in return. Marriage is meant to be enjoyed but where has the love gone these days? – Mrs. A. Olubunmi

    Well said, the lockdown situation was not easy at all. Imagine how single parents were coping with their children. – Patience Dale, Abuja.

    I read your article entitled: “Let’s Mend Broken Hearts, Strained Relationships.” It is very interesting and advising. Regarding the loan which Liz from Lagos wrote about in your column last week, I wish to apply for the loan to boost my business. Please let me know when another opportunity for new applicants is available. Thank you sir and God bless. Anny, 07034731345.

    May God deliver us quickly! – 08060296266

    Quote:

    “Government should go after the agencies and rings of individuals that engage in this illicit business. Whistle blowing tactics should be employed to arrest the criminals.”

  • FIRS directs landlords, agents to charge six percent Stamp Duty on all tenancy, lease agreements

    FIRS directs landlords, agents to charge six percent Stamp Duty on all tenancy, lease agreements

    The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) has directed landlords and property agents to charge six percent Stamp Duty on all tenancy and lease agreements.

    The landlords/ property agents are to remit such collections to FIRS “so that they do not run foul of the Stamp Duty Act.”

    The tax agency gave the directive through a statement on Wednesday by Director, Communications and Liaison Department Abdullahi Ahmad.

    He said: “Property-related transactions like tenancy or lease agreement fall under the Ad Valorem category of the stamp duty which attracts six per cent duty payable in percentage of the total value or sum of the tenancy or lease,” Ahmad explained in the statement.

    According to him, the burden of payment of the six per cent “lies on the beneficiary of the tenancy or lease agreement, whom the Stamp Duty Act identified as the tenant or renter.”

    He added that “the responsibility of collection and remittance fall on the landlord or agent in charge of the property for lease or rent. The party making the payment shall have the obligation to account for the applicable stamp duties.”

    Some other Stamp Duty types and their rates, according to the statement , are; Appraisement or Valuation of Property , .5 per cent; Certificate of Occupancy and Partnership, N1,000 flat rate; Gift of Land, 1.5 per cent and Legal Mortgage, 0.375 per cent.

    Others are Legal Mortgage (Upstamping), 0.375 per cent; Deed of Conveyance or Transfer on Sale of Property, 1.5 per cent; Memorandum of Understanding (Related to Land, Sales, Joint Venture, Surrender, Subdivision Agreements, 1.5 per cent; Power of Attorney (Irrevocable/Land Related), 1.5 per cent and Sales Agreement, 1.5 per cent.

    Stamp Duties payment is enabled by the Stamp Duties Act (SDA) 1939, as amended by numerous Acts and various resolutions contained in the Laws of the Federation of Nigeria. The SDA also provides a list of documents in its schedule and the duty payable on each.

    The Finance Act 2019 states that: “the Federal Inland Revenue Service shall be the only competent authority to impose, charge and collect duties upon instruments specified in the Schedule to this Act if such instrument relates to matters executed between a company and an individual, group or body of individuals.”

    The total Stamp Duty collection for 2019 was N18 billion.

  • Atiku’s agents engage Tinubu’s men in plot to win Lagos

    A vigorous takeover of Lagos is a “consolation prize” being considered by the camp of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate Atiku Abubakar after a crushing defeat by President Muhammadu Buhari in last Saturday’s presidential polls, it was learnt last night.

    The move was one of the resolutions at an emergency strategy meeting held by the Atiku team when it became apparent that President Buhari had won by a wide margin, the first being a formal rejection of APC’s victory as announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Buhari polled 15,191,847 votes to defeat Atiku, who scored 11,262,978.

    Even as the PDP flagbearer is still mulling his legal team to challenge Buhari at the tribunal, his strategists believe that taking over Lagos, the nation’s commercial never centre, will enable the opposition party become an effective countervailing force to APC controlling Abuja, the political headquarters.

    A parallel bid was launched for Lagos in April 2015 by the then President Goodluck Jonathan with the deployment of dollars to induce voters after the PDP lost the presidential poll to the APC. The bid was botched.

    “To actualise the new plot, we can confirm that a huge war-chest has been mobilised by Atiku’s camp to finance ahead of the March 9 state election a vicious smear campaign against the National Leader of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, believed to have coordinated PDP’s defeat as the Co-Chairman of the APC Presidential Campaign Council,” a source said last night.

    The source went on: “Specifically, Atiku’s hatchetmen are to spread anti-Tinubu messages in the traditional media and social media, deploying any ‘means necessary’.

    “The first leg of the strategy meeting, it was reliably gathered, held at highbrow Intercontinental Hotel on Kofo Abayomi, Victoria Island, Lagos Saturday night where the PDP governorship candidate in Lagos, Mr. Jimi Agbaje, met with Senator Tokunbo Afikuyomi and a few others to perfect the plan to recruit a faction of Afenifere and willing human rights activists to create a facade that the anti-Tinubu campaign is the initiative of civil society organizations (CSOs).

    “The support of the likes of Olisa Agbakoba, SAN, Mr. Yinka Odumakin has been secured in this connection.

    “In fact, the inaugural press conference is to be addressed by Mr. Agbakoba and Odumakin, whose relentless media offensive against Buhari had failed to sway Yoruba votes to Atiku across the Southest last Saturday.

    “Afikuyomi, described last night as a ‘Judas’ after benefitting politically from Tinubu in APC, was said to have been part of the ‘Dubai retreat’ hosted late last year by the Atiku camp after winning the PDP presidential ticket to draw up a ‘war plan’ against Buhari.

    To avoid public scrutiny or being accused of ‘anti-party activity’ by APC, Afikuyomi was said to have opted out of the Dubai-Abuja flight and rather adopted a decoy by flying to Lagos through Uganda.

    “Interestingly, Afikuyomi had been the chief coordinator of the second term bid by the outgoing Governor Akinwumi Ambode of Lagos which crashed in the APC primaries held in October in 2018.

    “Furthermore, the involvement of another Ambode’s core supporter, Mr. Wale Oluwo, in the latest plot against APC interest in Lagos set tongues wagging again last night.

    “Oluwo, who resigned as the Lagos State Commissioner for Energy, has been described as commander in the anti-Tinubu plot, having superintended over the multi-billion Naira street lights projects exclusively under Ambode and has serially been fingered as the secret ‘emissary’ between Ambode and Agbaje.”

    After his exit from the Lagos cabinet last October, Oluwo declared support for Agbaje’s governorship ambition.

    But Governor Ambode has consistently denied any link whatsoever with the funding of Agbaje’s campaign.

    Party elders, it was further learnt, were enraged following surprising revelations of mouth-watering patronage Ambode had doled out to Afikuyomi even while most of them were shabbily treated.

    “Among Ambode’s largesse to Afikuyomi is an eye-popping mansion located in the highbrow Ikeja GRA, the furnishing of which was said to have cost nothing less than N400 million”, the source claimed.

     

  • BREAKING: Ekiti APC primaries stalled as agents clash over alleged irregularities

    The governorship primaries of the All Progressives Congress in Ekiti State was on Saturday suspended due to alleged irregularities and subsequent outbreak of order by party agents.

    Voting was ongoing and a good number of delegates had cast their votes when suddenly delegates raised the alarm that a candidate, the Minister of Mines and Steel, Kayode Fayemi, was breaching the rules without any caution from the organisers.

    The agents of the other aspirants alleged that the process had been compromised due to some practice allegedly introduced by delegates voting for Fayemi, a former governor of the state.

    The agents immediately disrupted the process, forcing security agents to cordon off the voting area to secure the ballot boxes and papers.

    There was sporadic shooting by security personnel to ensure calm.

    Efforts by the Chairman of the organising committee, Governor Tanko Al-Makura of Nasarawa, to call the primaries to order were unsuccessful as at 5.00 p.m.

    However, Fayemi’s representative, Abejide Adewumi, said other agents realised that his candidate was coasting home to victory and decided to disrupt the process.

    He said the other aspirants should have allowed the process to go through even if they had grievances.

    He also added that the organisers should resume the process and allow the remaining delegates to cast their votes.

    In a swift response, the director general of the Babafemi Ojudu campaign, Ranti Adebisi, said the process could not continue because it had been compromised.

    “The process has been compromised. When there was a rule that you can only bring in two people. He brought in 18 observers. He cannot come here and disrupt what is going on in Ekiti State,” he said.

    Other agents complained that the party had no clear guidelines as to how the process should be conducted, changing the rules intermittently without informing those participating in the process.

    They also alleged that some security operatives close to the voting area were telling the delegates how to vote and to vote for Mr Fayemi.

    They want the process stopped and all their observations considered before the primaries could continued.

    Meanwhile, the organising committee has called for more security reinforcements to ensure that the situation does not degenerate further.

    Two former governors and three former senators are among the 33 governorship aspirants testing their popularity in Saturday’s primaries.

    Fayemi could not, however, be immediately reached for comments as at the time of filing this report.

  • Two MMM agents arraigned for fraud

    Two middle-aged persons, Debora Fojo and Musa Garba on Friday appeared before a Malumfashi Chief Magistrates’ Court in Katsina State for breach of trust and cheating.

    The two were accused of collecting N429, 000 to invest in an online business called MMM.

    Fojo and Garba are residents of Government Girls Secondary School Malumfashi Quarters and Unguwar Danyawa village in Kafur local government area respectively.

    According to the separate First Information Reports (FIR) read to the court, Fojo allegedly collected N229, 000 from one Sani Salisu of Unguwar Sodangi in Malumfashi to invest in the scheme.

    Garba, on the other hand collected N200, 000 from one Adamu Aliyu of Gangarawa also in Malumfashi to invest in MMM.

    The Police Prosecutor, Insp. Sani Ahmed, told the courts that the accused deceived the complainants with a promise that business would provide 30 percent returns within 30 days.

    He said that neither the original money nor the interest was returned to the complainants after the expiration of the agreed period.

    He said that the accused were charged with criminal breach of trust and cheating, offences that contravened sections 312 and 322 of the penal code laws.

    The two accused persons, however, pleaded not guilty to the charges.

    The Chief Magistrate, Lawal Usman adjourned Fojo’s case till April 11, while that of Garba was moved to April 18, for mention.

    He ordered that the two accused persons be remanded in prison custody.

     

    NAN