Tag: BBC

  • Opioid: NAFDAC, NDLEA respond to BBC’s investigation

    Opioid: NAFDAC, NDLEA respond to BBC’s investigation

    The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have reacted to the BBC’s investigation on the smuggling of opioids to West Africa.

    They spoke in reaction to a BBC investigation uncovering an Indian pharmaceutical manufacturing unlicensed, addictive opioids and exporting them illegally to West Africa.

    India’s Opioid Kings, a new documentary from the BBC World Service’s award-winning investigations team, was privately screened in Lagos on Thursday and released to the public on Friday.

    NAN recalls that the Federal Government banned tramadol sales without prescription in 2018, but smuggling has persisted, with seizures worth over $100 million in 2023.

    The documentary uncovered a network of illegal drug manufacturers and importers revealing that many opioids, including tramadol, were manufactured in India and smuggled into Nigeria and Ghana.

    It noted that the company based in Mumbai, makes a range of pills that go under different brand names and are packaged to look like legitimate medicines.

    According to the investigation, all contained the same harmful mix of ingredients: tapentadol, a powerful opioid, and carisoprodol, a muscle relaxant so addictive it’s banned in Europe.

    It also highlighted the growing problem of opioid addiction in Nigeria, particularly among youths as well as farmers who use tramadol for physical labour.

    Nigeria, with a population of 225 million people, provided the biggest market for these pills, alongside Ghana.

    Yedunni Adenuga, Director, Narcotics and Controlled Substances, NAFDAC, at the private screening of the investigation, said in spite of stiff controls, illegal drugs often entered Nigeria through porous borders, particularly from neighbouring countries.

    She said: “We have strong regulatory processes in dealing with medicines.

    “First of all, any medicine that has to be imported or locally manufactured has to go through a registration process, we all have our processes.

    “We have a strong regulatory process in Nigeria such that any product, any drug product that has to be consumed in Nigeria has to be registered duly by NAFDAC.

    “Then when we come to narcotics, you also have a strong process.

    “Before you can bring in any narcotic products, you must have a permit to import that product, including tramadol.

    “And then when you bring it in, you still need a permit to clear it through the port of entry.

    “And in Nigeria, the acceptable formulations are formulations of 100 milligrams, and those are for medical purposes.

    “It is highly controlled, but you know that these things find their way into the country because of the porous borders, all around.

    “But we, in NAFDAC, we are committed to ensuring our mandate and that whatever medicines that are being taken by our people are safe.’’

    Responding to the situation, the Chairman of National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Brig Gen. Mohammed Buba Marwa, affirmed that opioids are “devastating our youths, our families, it’s in every community in Nigeria.”

    Also, Mr Shaba Mohammed, Director, Investigation and Enforcement, NAFDAC, said that the government was committed to combating this issue and ensuring that unregistered drugs were intercepted and managed effectively.

    The BBC Eye Investigation: India’s Opioid Kings is available in the United Kingdom on BBC iPlayer from Feb. 21.

    International audiences can watch the film on the BBC Africa YouTube channel and read the story on the BBC News website – via bbc.co.uk in the United Kingdom and internationally – on BBC.com, BBC Studios’ global digital news platform.

  • Betta Edu threatens to drag BBC to court, demands $50 million compensation

    Betta Edu threatens to drag BBC to court, demands $50 million compensation

    The suspended Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Betta Edu has threatened to sue the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) for alleged defamation.

    She made this known via a letter signed by her counsel, Chikaosolu Ojukwu, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN)

    In the letter, Edu demanded $50 million compensation from the media organization.

    The letter, addressed to BBC’s Abuja and London offices, claimed that the BBC had reported false information regarding the ongoing investigation by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, alleging that N30 billion was recovered from the suspended minister.

    In the letter titled ‘Request for immediate retraction of defamatory article published on BBC website against Dr. Betta Edu’, the lawyer expressed the harm caused to Edu’s reputation, as well as the emotional distress and suffering endured as a result of the publication.

    Edu’s lawyer claimed that BBC’s publication had caused immeasurable reputational damage, psychological trauma and anguish to Edu.

    The letter reads : “Our client has suffered immeasurable reputational damage, psychological trauma and anguish as a direct consequence of the publication and dissemination of the article,” the letter read.

    The letter further criticized the BBC for its article, stating that it suggested guilt on Edu’s part without allowing for the presumption of innocence.

    It accused the BBC of breaching journalistic fairness and due process by not providing Edu with an opportunity to respond to the allegations before publishing the article.

    Parts of the letter read, “First and foremost, the language used in describing our client’s purported involvement in the alleged corruption case suggests guilt without allowing for the presumption of innocence, which is fundamental in any fair and unbiased reporting.

    “The reckless manner in which the article was crafted, without providing our client with the opportunity to respond to the allegations before its wide publication, is a clear breach of journalistic fairness and due process and demonstrates a complete disregard for journalistic integrity and professionalism.

    “The headline, content, and tone of the article imply guilt on the part of our client, without any concrete evidence to substantiate such claims.

    “This is a blatant attempt to tarnish our client’s reputation and undermine her credibility which she has earned over the course of her distinguished career in both private and public life.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, our client has neither been indicted nor found culpable of any act of financial impropriety in relation to her stewardship of the Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation Ministry in Nigeria.

    “It is also pertinent to emphasize that neither N30 billion nor any amount whatsoever has been traced to or recovered from our client’s bank accounts nor has any proceeds of crime been traced or recovered from her to warrant the scurrilous article under reference.

    “Suffice it to say that in the aftermath of the publication of this scandalous article (which the BBC caused to be disseminated to millions of persons across the globe), our client has been inundated by calls and messages from friends, associates expressing their shock and consternation.

    “Our client has suffered immeasurable reputational damage, psychological trauma and anguish as a direct consequence of the publication and dissemination of the article.”

  • BBC TB Joshua documentary is irritating and Malicious – says SCOAN

    BBC TB Joshua documentary is irritating and Malicious – says SCOAN

    The Synagogue Church of all Nations (SCOAN) on Tuesday, countered the BBC  documentary on the late Temitope Babatunde Joshua, known as  TB Joshua, Founder of SCOAN.

    SCOAN described the documentary as unfounded, noting that  the characters  interviewed in the report were unknown to the church.

    The church in a statement signed by its  Public Affairs Director, Mr Dare Adejumo, said the statement was aimed at  disabusing public minds from the report.

    BBC on Monday, released a highly controversial and  damning documentary on the late TB Joshua, accusing him of various crimes, including  rape against some members.

    SCOAN said;  “BBC world services investigative unit, code-named  Africa Eye came out this week with weird and strange episodes of atrocities against the late  founder of SCOAN.”

    It said that to investigate and publish or broadcast reports was a central kernel in journalism but to do so outside the ethics and fundamental principles of the profession was an aberration.

    According to the church,  journalism as societal watch dog requires fairness, balancing and objectivity in order to command dignity honour and respect as the fourth estate of the realm.

    “BBC has compromised these lofty principles by descending into fictional narratives and propaganda,  thus turning itself into a weapon for a hatchet job as gangsters in the gab of journalism with a destructive ulterior motive for personal gains against a perceived enemy.

    “Only BBC can best explain why it woefully deviated from true journalism and chose to be dishing junks and feeding the public with stones called bread by its offensive and disenchanted reports of disgruntled elements.

    “This to say the least, is insulting to our professional and public intelligence.
    One thing is very obvious, hundreds of BBC charades cannot rubbish the indelible footprints of  TB Joshua’s legacies on earth again.”

    According to the Church,  there are thousands of human beings who has received dumbfounding miracles and tremendously benefited from the anointing and grace the Lord endued with His servant.

    “Those beneficiaries are all over the place and cannot be disputed that are lining up and responding angrily to this imperialist broadcasting station.

    ” Many of them are in the UK the home base of BBC but which its jaundiced investigative eyes cannot see but only the obviously suborned narrators!

    “Myriads of broken homes reconciled by TB Joshua are also crying foul of BBC’s broadcast of iniquity. Uncountable hopeless children drawn from different parts of the world; some brought by their parents while some were picked from drug joints or brothels who have gotten their destinies restored are also pissed off by the offensive reports.

    ” BBC has obviously shot itself in the foot by its compromise and roadside journalism.”

    It said the BBC would not have lost anything if it had gone to the church even to disguise as visitors in order to have direct experience of what was  happening in the church instead of relying on disgruntled and manipulated individuals some of whom were never known before in SCOAN.

    ” Some of those identified there are relics of homosexual and lesbian associates.

    “My findings further show that everything the BBC put together is strange to SCOAN.

    “One other clearly illogical thing in the charade is the BBC categorical statement that the man of God was involved in all the abuse for over two decades!

    ” How can that be in a nation governed by law? It shows the station’s crude disrespect and bizarre perception of Nigeria.

    “Where were all those shameless interviewees in all the decades? Was it when the man passed on that they suddenly became awake or came back to their senses? Only a fool will have respect for such charlatans.”

    According to it, this is not only shameful to hear but also insulting to see from the work of supposedly well trained reporters.

    It pointed out that it was all to call the dog a bad name so that they could hang it.

    It added that It was obvious that the sponsors of the BBC hatchet job must have been envious of the continued growth of the church like the tree planted by the river side.

    “Thank God your report exonerated his only wife of any wrong doings throughout the decades of your so-called investigated lopsided work.

    “But did you think any wife at all can see and watch all those nonsensical and annoying scenarios you painted for decades and still kept silent? I am yet to read or see such a woman in the universe!

    “This is illogical, irritating, incomprehensible, unfathomable and satanically dubious and malicious.”

    The church condemned the report, begged God to forgive the sponsors, saying persecution of divine envoys or servants of God was not new in history.

    It noted that, for cursed and manipulated false witnesses to arise against the Gospel had been the lot of the Church.

  • BBC Investigation reveals Late Pastor, TB Joshua’s atrocities

    BBC Investigation reveals Late Pastor, TB Joshua’s atrocities

    The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is set to publish a 3-part investigative documentary detailing the atrocities and sexual crimes committed by Pastor Temitope Balogun Joshua, popularly known as TB. Joshua.

    Joshua died on June 5, 2021. As part of the investigation, the BBC interviewed at least 30 former members and workers of the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN). The first installment of the documentary is scheduled to be released on January 8.

    A part of the documentary revealed how SCOAN shielded its congregation from the truth about the collapse of one of the church’s guesthouses in 2014. A video that was shown multiple times to members on Emmanuel TV showed a short clip of the structure with something that seemed like an aircraft flying over it.

    “On television, they were showing us the building had been bombed,” one of the sources who lost her daughter in the collapsed building told the BBC.

    SCOAN is located at Ikotun-Egbe area of Lagos State. The church grew from a local evangelical into a multimillion-dollar church with worshipers from all around the world.

    The aircraft story fed to the members was all a lie, Emmanuel, one of the young men who served TB Joshua told the BBC. Emmanuel claimed the church had a structural defect.

    The foundation of the building was inadequate for the floors built on it, Rae, a Brit who attended the church and was a disciple, corroborated. She added that Joshua insisted that the building be raised despite professional opinions.

    “They told us don’t tell what you know,” Emmanuel, another worker at SCOAN said in the film. “They knew something was wrong with the building, but they were managing it.”

    SCOAN later paid the families of the victims’ cash as compensation which they interpreted to be “hush money”. A church worker who was part of those who handed the money to victims’ families in South Africa said TB Joshua asked that she instruct the grieving families not to speak to the media. Then, Joshua personally threatened families who refused the money, sources told the BBC.

    “The building collapse is a good example of everyday life under TB Joshua. It is just a series of cover-ups. It is just this was so big it was almost impossible for him to make it go away,” Rae said.

    The BBC found that people were dismembered under the rubble and dead bodies were transferred in SCOAN ambulances to shield the reality of the disaster from the press to protect both the image of the church and TB Joshua.

    Survivors of TB Joshua’s sexual exploitation narrated how they were manipulated and silenced even when they knew the relationship they had with “daddy” was abusive. These women were part of TB Joshua’s discipleship. Multiple women narrated how he molested and raped them. A few women who resisted his assault at first were threatened into submission, one of the women told the BBC.

    TB Joshua told the women he was sexually assaulting them for their salvation, all the women said. These women joined the synagogue when they were teenagers and spent years before finally leaving. A woman identified as Abisola said she was in the church for 14 years and was raped throughout her stay. When the women get pregnant as a result of being raped many times, they were forced to get an abortion in a dingy clinic inside the synagogue.

    “We went into his room, and I stood there. He said ‘off your clothes’ so I removed my clothes he just pointed so I lay down and then he raped me. He broke my virginity. I was screaming and he was whispering in my ears that I should stop acting like a baby. I was 17 years old. I was underage,” one of the women said.

    One of the survivors confronted TB Joshua after she managed to escape. She recorded the encounter in videos she shared with the BBC. In the video, a security officer was heard threatening to shoot at the lady. Survivors said they were targeted, beaten, and shot at by thugs suspected of working for the pastor.

    The BBC’s documentary revealed how the church staged managed and exaggerated miracles that were televised. People were told to exaggerate their problems so they could be healed, likewise, their healing so it could be “perfected by God”, a source who worked at the miracle department told the BBC.

    “You’ve got this man who positioned himself as a father with many children and went on to rape, abuse, and molest all these people who call him daddy. How is somebody like that permitted to walk free,” Rae asked. Rachel joined the church when she was 17 because she hoped to be cured of homosexuality.

    Another part of the investigation delved into how TB Joshua maltreated and ostracised the daughter he had out of wedlock. Ajoke, now 28 years old, told the BBC how she confronted her father, about allegations of sexual abuse and, was subsequently thrown out of the church. She narrated how she was isolated and indoctrinated. Ajoke said she contemplated suicide.

     

  • FACT-CHECK: Unearthing misinformation in BBC’s report on Tinubu’s CSU records

    FACT-CHECK: Unearthing misinformation in BBC’s report on Tinubu’s CSU records

    The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has cleared President Bola Ahmed Tinubu of certificate forgery, saying there is no evidence to support the claim.

    The report authored by three persons bearing names that reflect Nigeria’s three major ethnic groups – Chiagozie Nwonwu (Igbo), Fauziyya Tukur (Hausa) and Olaronke Alo (Yoruba), is titled: Bola Tinubu diploma: No evidence Nigeria’s president forged college record.

    In the report, the BBC listed three issues pertaining to Tinubu’s certificate. The first was his June 27, 1979 diploma which the broadcaster claimed was lost when Tinubu went into exile in the 1990s.

    Was it ever lost?

    In the deposition, it was clear that the certificate was never lost because Tinubu never picked the said Diploma.

    CSU Registrar, Caleb Westberg, revealed this fact in a back-and-forth question and answer from Atiku’s lawyer, Angela Liu.

    On page 26 of the deposition, Atiku’s lawyer, Angela Liu, asked him. “So, CSU has determined that it does not have a true and correct copy of the diploma issued to Bola Tinubu in 1979? Correct.”

    Westberg answered: “That’s Correct.”

    Angela Liu repeated the question again: “And how did CSU determine that it did not have a true and correct copy of this?”

    Westberg answered: “We went through every diploma in our possession.”

    She asked him again: “And so CSU after going through every diploma, was unable to find an authentic copy of any diploma that CSU issued to Tinubu in 1979, is that correct?

    Westberg answered: “We did not find any diploma issued by CSU in 1979 to Mr Tinubu.”

    Westberg’s response initially supports the claim that the diploma of Tinubu was not found in the CSU record because it was picked up.

    But shortly after making the bold claim, the CSU registrar changed his stance after Angela Liu expanded the question.

    She asked him: “And you don’t have a copy of Mr Tinubu’s June 22, 1979 Diploma or his June 27 1979 diploma?”

    At this point, Westberg gave a different answer: “We have the June 27, 1979 diploma. It is in our possession,” he said.

    Mr Westberg’s response shocked Atiku’s lawyer because only seconds earlier, he boldly asserted that CSU had no 1979 diploma of Tinubu in its record.

    The new response of Westberg shows that Tinubu’s diploma at CSU was never picked up, hence contradicting BBC’s claim that he lost the certificate in the 1990s when in exile.

    Atiku’s lawyer asked again. “So, why do you have the June 27th diploma in your files?”

    Westberg answered. “While the university doesn’t know that for certain, my speculation would be that it was not picked up.”

    Tinubu’s INEC certificate

    The BBC also cleared Tinubu on the certificate he submitted to INEC, which the broadcaster claimed was a replacement he obtained from CSU. According to the BBC, the replacement diploma is similar to diplomas issued by CSU in the 1990s. However, the BBC failed to show samples of diplomas in the 1990s to support the claim. This makes the claim to lack weight.

    But in the deposition, Westberg was asked by Angela Liu if the university issued the June 22, 1979 (INEC) diploma to Tinubu.

    Hear her: “So CSU has no record of issuing this INEC diploma to President Tinubu in 1979?”

    The registrar answered ‘correct.’

    Identity issues

    In the deposition, Atiku’s lawyers pointed out some discrepancies in Tinubu’s records, including age and gender. The gender part was striking because it was handwritten. She asked how the university came to the conclusion that the same person who graduated from CSU is the president of Nigeria. The Registrar replied that they made the determination based on the transcript and admission application form of Tinubu and nothing more.

  • BREAKING: BBC publishes investigation on Tinubu’s CSU certificate

    BREAKING: BBC publishes investigation on Tinubu’s CSU certificate

    The disinformation team of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in its recent report has stated that there is no evidence to support the claim that President Bola Tinubu forged his Chicago State University (CSU) certificate.

    Allegations that President Tinubu’s certificates were faked went viral on social media following the release by Chicago State University (CSU) of his academic records last week.

     

    we have looked at some of the most widely circulated claims.

    The release of the president’s academic documents is the culmination of a judicial case filed in August by one of his main rivals in February’s presidential election, Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Mr Abubakar was hoping to have the victor disqualified after accusing him of falsifying the CSU diploma of Bachelor of Science in Business Administration awarded in 1979 that he submitted to the electoral authority (Inec).

    To obtain evidence for his case in Nigeria, Mr Abubakar approached a US court in August, requesting it to compel CSU to release Mr Tinubu’s academic records through a process called discovery, where the parties exchange information including documents ahead of a trial.

    Mr Tinubu’s lawyers opposed the discovery application, citing privacy concerns, but the US court decided it should proceed.

    The documents requested by Mr Abubakar were:
    1. A copy of any diploma issued by CSU in 1979
    2. A copy of the diploma CSU gave to Mr Tinubu in 1979
    3. Copies of diplomas with the same font, seal, signatures, and wording awarded to other students that are similar to what CSU awarded to Mr Tinubu in 1979
    4. Documents from CSU that were certified by Jamar Orr, who was then a staff member of CSU, in the 12 months from 1 August 2022
    In response to request one, CSU submitted seven diplomas covering different disciplines with the names of the students redacted. According to the university’s registrar, these diplomas had not been collected by the students.
    In response to request two, CSU stated that it could not find the diploma they issued to Mr Tinubu in 1979, because they do not keep copies of diplomas already collected by students.
    In response to request three, CSU stated that it produced for Mr Tinubu a replacement diploma dated 27 June 1979. It also released diplomas awarded to other students that bore similar font, seal, signatures and wordings as Mr Tinubu’s diplomas.
    In response to request four, CSU submitted other academic documents initially attested to and released by Mr Orr.

    In line with the judge’s ruling, Mr Abubakar’s lawyer Angela Liu last week questioned Caleb Westberg, CSU’s current registrar, in a deposition.
    The BBC was given access to the deposition transcript by Mr Abubakar’s spokesperson, Phrank Shaibu.

    Some social media users in Nigeria alleged that the deposition and the diplomas released by CSU confirm that the diploma submitted to INEC by Mr Tinubu was forged. This claim was also repeated by one of Mr Abubakar’s lawyers, Kalu Kalu, at a press conference last week.

    We found there was no evidence to support this claim.

    The CSU released several diplomas issued between 1979 and 2003. We analysed all of them.
    There are three different diplomas for Mr Tinubu that we refer to throughout our analysis:

    • The original one, from 1979, which he has said in the past was lost when he went into exile in the 1990s
    • The second one, that he submitted to INEC – supposedly a replacement diploma from CSU (it is similar to diplomas issued by CSU in the 1990s)
    • Additionally, CSU holds another replacement diploma for Mr Tinubu that they say is probably from the early 2000s that he never collected
    The allegations on social media are based on a comparison between the document Mr Tinubu submitted to INEC and the 1979 diplomas released by CSU.
    During Mr Westberg’s deposition, Mr Atiku’s lawyer focused on the copy of the diploma President Tinubu handed to the electoral commission and suggested that it was unlike any of the diplomas released by CSU.
    However, while Mr Westberg agreed with Ms Liu that the diploma in question does not look like the samples from 1979, he stated that the certificate actually looks like three of the diplomas CSU released to Mr Abubakar. Our analysis confirms this.
    It turns out that the discrepancy in the appearance of the diploma is down to it having been re-issued in the 1990s.
    Mr Westberg said the template of CSU’s diploma has changed several times over the years. He said any request for a new diploma would resemble the current template at that time, no matter when the student graduated.
    As such, if Mr Tinubu had reordered his diploma in the late 1990s, what he would have been given would look like what was obtainable then.

    Three of the diplomas dating from the 1990s that CSU submitted were similar to Mr Tinubu’s.

    One of them, which bears the date 18 December 1998, is identical (aside from the names, class of degree, and dates) to the diploma Mr Tinubu handed over to INEC.

    Mr Westberg also stated that CSU does not keep notes of when a graduate asks for the reissuing of a diploma and therefore Mr Tinubu’s request for a copy of the diploma was not recorded.
    The copy he gave to the electoral commission had part of the university logo missing, which Mr Westberg said in his deposition was possibly “cut off” when it was photocopied.

    We analysed the diploma. It appears in fact that its bottom part was not included during the photocopy process.

    The BBC reached out to Mr Tinubu’s team to get a copy of the diploma in question. They sent what they said was the only existing copy of the diploma. It is a black and white photocopy identical to what was submitted to INEC.

    Another claim, made by a fact-checking organisation in Nigeria, was that the diploma Mr Tinubu submitted was not from CSU as its diplomas do not include the phrase “with honors” under the degree name.

    But the BBC found that while this was not reflected in the other diplomas released by CSU, it does appear in Mr Tinubu’s diploma issued in the early 2000s, which was authenticated by Mr Westberg during his deposition.
    It has the words “with honors” – a match with the diploma with the same detail submitted by the president to INEC.

    Mr Westberg said that the school could authenticate this particular diploma because it was still in its possession as it was never picked up.

    Not every student graduates from university with honours. Mr Tinubu, as attested to by CSU in several court documents seen by the BBC, did graduate from CSU with honours.
    The BBC contacted CSU with questions about its diplomas and it referred us to a statement that read in part: “We are confident and always have been in the veracity and integrity of our records regarding Tinubu’s attendance and completion of graduation requirements”.
    Another allegation making the rounds on social media is that the person who attended CSU with the name Bola A Tinubu is female.

    Mr Tinubu attended Southwest College (now known as Richard J. Daley College) before transferring to CSU in 1976. In Southwest’s transcript, there is an “F” (for “female”) in the column where gender is indicated, leading to claims that it was a woman who attended the school and Mr Tinubu “stole her identity”. Mr Atiku’s lawyer, Mr Kalu, alluded to this in a press conference last week.

    However, in his deposition, Mr Westberg stressed that there was no confusion about the gender of the person who attended CSU as he was a male named Bola A Tinubu. He said the university used other factors other than the name to authenticate the student’s identity.
    According to him, the Social Security Number (SSN) in the transcript from Southwest College matches what it has in other documents in which the student’s gender is clearly marked as male.

    However, the released documents did raise questions about Mr Tinubu’s birth date and the secondary school he attended.

    One of the documents stated that Mr Tinubu attended Government College Lagos in 1970. However, information available on the school website stated that it was only founded in 1974.
    Aside from the gender discrepancy, the birth dates in some of the released documents differ from the official birth date of President Tinubu, which is 29 March 1952.

    His transcript from CSU has his date of birth as 29 March 1954. His undergraduate admissions application form has his date of birth as 29 March, 1955.

    Mr Atiku’s lawyer said during Mr Westberg’s deposition that on the forms submitted to INEC, Mr Tinubu had given his date of birth as 29 March 1952.
    Mr Westberg, during cross-examination, responded that the discrepancies could have been due to human error.

    We contacted Mr Tinubu’s team for comment about these discrepancies and a spokesperson directed us instead to his party – the All Progressives Congress. We then contacted Mr Tinubu’s presidential campaign spokesperson Festus Keyamo, who is also a minister in the government. He did not take our calls or respond to our text and WhatsApp messages.

    We also sent questions to Mr Abubakar’s team. They did not respond.
    BBC/Simeon Ugbodovon

  • Richard Sharp resigns as BBC chair after breaching appointment rules

    Richard Sharp resigns as BBC chair after breaching appointment rules

    Richard Sharp who has been the chairman of the BBC since February  2021 on Friday resigned.

    Sharp resigned after being found to have broken the rules by failing to disclose he played a role in getting former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson a 997,500 million dollars loan guarantee.

    Adam Heppinstall KC’s review found the former Tory donor twice breached the code governing public appointments, risking the perception he was not independent from the then-prime minister.

    Mr Sharp spared forcing Rishi Sunak to decide on his fate by announcing he will stand down from the influential role overseeing the public broadcaster’s independence at the end of June.

    The barrister’s review published on Friday morning said Mr Sharp risked a perception that he was recommended for the role because he assisted Mr Johnson “in a private financial matter’’ ahead of his appointment in 2021.

    Mr Heppinstall also said there was the risk it would be perceived that he influenced Mr Johnson to recommend him by notifying the former prime minister of his application before submitting it.

    However, failing to disclose both issues were found to have caused breaches of the governance code for public appointments.

    In his resignation statement, Mr Sharp insisted that his breach of the rules was “inadvertent and not material”.

    “Nevertheless, I have decided that it is right to priorities the interests of the BBC,’’ the former Goldman Sachs banker added.

    “I feel that this matter may well be a distraction from the Corporation’s good work where I to remain in post until the end of my term.

    “I have therefore this morning resigned as BBC chair to the Secretary of State, and to the Board.’’

    The review was ordered after it emerged he introduced his friend Sam Blyth, a distant cousin of Mr Johnson who wanted to help him with his financial troubles, to Cabinet Secretary Simon Case ahead of being recommended for the role by the Government.

    The BBC Board said: “we accept and understand Richard’s decision to stand down.”

    BBC director-general Tim Davie thanked Mr Sharp for his service to the BBC and “the drive and intellect he brought to his time as chairman’’.

    “Working with him over the last two years has been rewarding and Richard has made a significant contribution to the transformation and success of the BBC,’’ Mr Davie said.

    “The focus for all of us at the BBC is continuing the hard work to ensure we deliver for audiences, both now and in the future.’’

    Labour’s shadow culture secretary Lucy Powell said Mr Sharp had “caused untold damage to the reputation of the BBC and seriously undermined its independence as a result of the Conservatives’ sleaze and cronyism’’.

    “The Prime Minister should have sacked him weeks ago. Instead it took this investigation, called by Labour, to make him resign,” she added.

    In a letter to Mr Sharp, Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer said that he his “held in high regard’’ by the BBC board but added that “I understand and respect your decision to stand down’’.

    “You have clearly demonstrated your commitment to public service and I especially applaud the work you did during the pandemic,” she said.

    “Your decision to step down in the wider interests of the corporation is further testament to that commitment.

    She accepted the decision that he should remain in post until the next board meeting on June 27 when a temporary replacement will be appointed.

    Mr Heppinstall’s report considered how Mr Sharp had told Mr Johnson that he wished to apply for the role ahead of his application in November 2020.

    And it considered how he met Cabinet Secretary Simon Case the following month regarding the introduction to Mr Blyth over the then prime minister’s financial affairs.

    Mr Sharp “failed to disclose potential perceived conflicts of interest to the panel which interviewed candidates and advised Ministers’’, the barrister ruled.

    He formally took up the four-year appointment in February 2021.

    The outgoing chairman insisted he made the introduction “with the best of intentions’’ to ensure all rules were being followed.

    He said he believed by reminding Mr Case he was in the running for the job that he had removed any perceived conflict of interest.

    “I understood this recusal to be absolute. This was my error,’’ Mr Sharp said.

    “I would like once again to apologise for that oversight, inadvertent though it was and for the distraction these events have caused the BBC.’’

  • Moaning sound on Live Show: BBC apologises to the general public

    Moaning sound on Live Show: BBC apologises to the general public

    Following the sounds of copulation heard by presenters and viewers of a live football show, which eventually cut off the coverage of the match between Wolverhampton vs Liverpool’s third-round match on January 17, The British Broadcasting Corporation has now issued an unreserved apology to its numerous viewers and ardent listeners who could have felt embarrassed by the moaning sound.

     

    Before the Wolverhampton vs Liverpool game on January 17 at Molineux Stadium, the noise cut off Gary Lineker’s broadcast. Later, the former England striker shared a photo of a cellphone on Twitter, claiming it was “taped to the back of the set” inside the stadium. “As sabotage goes it was quite amusing,” Lineker wrote.

    Lineker, Paul Ince and Danny Murphy continued their broadcast and made an effort to minimise the disruption. Speaking to audience members, Lineker said, “I don’t know whether you heard it at home.”

    “We apologise to any viewers offended during the live coverage of the football this evening,” the BBC issued a statement. According to a spokesperson, the BBC is looking into the situation.

    Lineker clarified that, at first, he believed a video had been delivered to one of the experts’ phones. Then he realised the incident was a prank because it was “too loud,” as he put it. He said that it was “quite difficult” to continue with the pre-match build-up since he couldn’t hear what people were saying in their ears when he was asked how loud the sound effect was in the studio.

    According to a video uploaded to YouTube, the stunt appears to have been the work of YouTube prankster Daniel Jarvis. Five years earlier, he performed a similar act on the BBC, which was also recorded and uploaded to his YouTube channel. How the YouTube prankster placed the phone in the BBC studio is still a mystery.

  • “Longevity of marriage should not be the prize”- Aisha Yesufu talks on divorce

    “Longevity of marriage should not be the prize”- Aisha Yesufu talks on divorce

    Popular Nigerian activist and social critic, Aisha Yesufu, has called on women to learn to be comfortable with divorce, stressing that the longevity of marriage should not be the prize.

    According to her, the focus in marriage should be the happiness of the couple.

    She said this while reacting to reports that actors Patrick and Iretiola Doyle’s marriage is over.

    "Longevity of marriage should not be the prize"- Aisha Yesufu

    “We should learn to be comfortable with divorce. The longevity of a marriage should not be the prize. The prize should be happiness, fulfillment and mental well being of the couple involved. Where it is no longer optimal, people can decide to go their separate ways and be happy,” she tweeted.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that Aisha co-founded the #BringBackOurGirls movement, which brought attention to the abduction of over 200 girls from a secondary school in Chibok, Nigeria on 14 April 2014, by the terrorist group Boko Haram.

    Aisha was a prominent member of the End SARS movement, which began in 2017 and drew attention to police brutality in Nigeria,  from a controversial police unit in the Nigeria Police Force called the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).

    A photograph of her wearing hijab at an End SARS protest became an iconic symbol of the movement.

    "Longevity of marriage should not be the prize"- Aisha Yesufu

    The activist had said of the End SARS protests, “I will not be an irresponsible parent and leave this fight for my children. I am ready to sacrifice my life for my children to live. I brought them to this world, and I need to fix the world I put them in.”

    She was among BBC’s 100 Women in 2020. She was included in a list of the Top 100 Most Influential Africans by New African magazine in 2020.

    Aisha married her husband, Aliu, in 1998. They have two children.

  • Argentine football star, Lionel Messi named BBC World Sport Star of the year

    Argentine football star, Lionel Messi named BBC World Sport Star of the year

    Argentina’s professional striker, Lionel Messi, has been declared winner of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) World Sport Star of the Year, after leading Argentina to World Cup glory in Qatar.

    Messi received the prize as part of the BBC Sports Personality of the Year awards, with the 35-year-old’s latest honour confirmed a day after Argentina’s triumph.Argentina secured their first World Cup in 36 years by beating France 4-2 on penalties, following a thrilling 3-3 draw at the Lusail Stadium.

    The triumph saw Messi emulate fellow Argentine legend Diego Maradona in inspiring their respective sides to become world champions.

    According to BBC, the World Sport Star of the Year is awarded to an athlete who has ‘achieved the most notable sporting success on the world stage during the course of the year’.

    Argentine football star, Lionel Messi named BBC World Sport Star of the year

    Messi has won the award for the first time in his legendary career, which has already seen the Argentine win seven Ballon d’Or titles and scored 793 goals. He becomes just the fifth footballer to receive the award, which was introduced in 1960 under its previous name of Overseas Sports Personality of the Year.

    Portuguese great Eusebio and Brazil’s three-time World Cup winner Pele are among the recipients, winning in 1966 and 1970 respectively.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that Messi plays as a forward for Ligue 1 club Paris Saint-Germain and captains the Argentina national team. He has won a record seven Ballon d’Or awards, a record six European Golden Shoes, and in 2020 was named to the Ballon d’Or Dream Team.

    An Argentine international, Messi holds the national record for appearances and is also the country’s all-time leading goalscorer. At youth level, he won the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship, finishing the tournament with both the Golden Ball and Golden Shoe, and an Olympic gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics.

    After his senior debut in August 2005, Messi became the youngest Argentine to play and score in a FIFA World Cup in 2006, and reached the final of the 2007 Copa América, where he was named young player of the tournament.

    As the squad’s captain from August 2011, he led Argentina to three consecutive finals: the 2014 FIFA World Cup, for which he won the Golden Ball, and the 2015 and 2016 Copa América, winning the Golden Ball in the 2015 edition. After announcing his international retirement in 2016, he reversed his decision and led his country to qualification for the 2018 FIFA World Cup, a third-place finish at the 2019 Copa América, and won the 2021 Copa América, while winning the Golden Ball and Golden Boot award for the latter.

    Argentine football star, Lionel Messi named BBC World Sport Star of the year

    In 2022, he captained his country to win the 2022 FIFA World Cup, for which he won the Golden Ball for a record second time, and broke the record for most appearances in World Cup tournaments with 26 matches played.

    According to France Football, Messi was the world’s highest-paid footballer for five years out of six between 2009 and 2014, and was ranked the world’s highest-paid athlete by Forbes in 2019 and 2022. He was among Time100 most influential people in the world in 2011 and 2012.

    In February 2020, he was awarded the Laureus World Sportsman of the Year, thus becoming the first footballer and the first team sport athlete to win the award. Later that year, Messi became the second footballer and second team-sport athlete to surpass $1 billion in career earnings.