Tag: Citizens

  • Nigeria to repatriate 18 ECOWAS citizens

    Nigeria to repatriate 18 ECOWAS citizens

    Eighteen illegal immigrants arrested by officers of Nigeria Immigration Service, Ogun Command, at Akonu village, Bode Olude area, will soon be repatriated to their countries of origin.

    The Public Relations Officer of the command, Olaniyi Mobolaji, made the announcement on Sunday in Abeokuta in a statement issued to newsmen.

    He said that 10 of the 18 illegal immigrants were indigenes of Benin Republic while eight were Togolese.

    He added that the illegal immigrants, who are being profiled, are residing and working illegally in Nigeria.

    The spokesperson said the command received intelligence report on their activities based on the directive of the state comptroller, Ajibola Bayeroju.

    He promised that the command would leave no stone unturned to flush out illegal immigrants residing in the state.

    NAN

     

  • Time for a citizens’ commission defending our right to vote by Jesse Jackson

    Time for a citizens’ commission defending our right to vote by Jesse Jackson

    By Jesse Jackson

    Donald Trump’s commission on “election integrity” is meeting sensible resistance.

    The commission issued letters calling on states to provide it with extensive personal information on all voters, including names, addresses, birthdates, party affiliation, the last four digits Social Security numbers, military status and criminal records. This data collection would be targeted by every cyber thief in the world.

    At least 20 states have already indicated that they would not comply completely, including California, New York, Texas and more.

    Mississippi Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann, a Republican, said his reply would be: “They can go jump in the Gulf of Mexico, and Mississippi is a great state to launch from.” Hosemann said, “Mississippi residents should celebrate Independence Day and our state’s right to protect the privacy of our citizens by conducting our own electoral processes.”

    The president’s commission is founded on a lie and perpetuates a fraud. The lie was Trump’s whopper that he would have won the popular vote if 3million to 5 million voters hadn’t voted fraudulently. There is no, literally no, evidence that anyone of any political stripe can find to back up that lie. In fact, fraudulent voting in the United States is rare, isolated and insignificant.

    The commission is perpetuating a fraud because it wants to use fears about voter fraud to suppress voting — to make it harder to register and vote, particularly for working and poor people. The commission is run by its vice-chair, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach. He is notorious for his crusade to push voter suppression laws, as well as to feed fears about illegal immigration.

    The commission is set up to push the new Jim Crow voting laws, which require picture ID’s, curtail early voting, cut back on voting booths, permit no Sunday voting, repeal automatic or motor-voter registration and more. Its posturing about voter fraud is the fraud. The real aim is to make it harder to vote, with impediments that disproportionately impact people of color.

    In reality, voter suppression had a real and direct impact on the 2016 election — a far greater impact than the handful of isolated incorrect or “fraudulent” votes cast, or the hacking allegedly masterminded by Vladimir Putin. The 2016 election was the first without the full protections of the Voting Rights Act. Fourteen states — including swing states like Wisconsin, Ohio and North Carolina — had new voter restrictions in place.

    In Wisconsin, Trump won by 27,000 votes, but an unknown and likely quite large number of eligible voters lacked the newly required forms of ID. (A federal judge ruling in a lawsuit against the state’s voter ID law in 2014 put the number at 300,000.) Turnout in 2016 was the lowest in decades, particularly in Milwaukee, home of 70 percent of the state’s African-Americans. In North Carolina, even after a federal court overturned the state’s anti-voter measures for targeting African-Americans “with almost surgical precision,” Republican officials cut back hours and closed polling places. Early black voting turnout plummeted, according to the Nation, as the 40 counties with the largest African-American populations were allocated 158 fewer polling places.

    Voter suppression works. And so does voter empowerment. As the Nation also reported, Oregon enacted automatic voter registration, which added 250,000 new voters to the rolls. An impressive 79 percent of registered voters turned out in 2016.

    We do not need a commission to investigate Donald Trump’s fantastical excuse for losing the popular vote. We need a commission to investigate the reality of voter suppression — and how to make voting easier, not harder. That agenda would include automatic voter registration, longer early voting, an election day holiday, more polling places, hand-counted ballots to avoid cyber threats and more.

    Both Trump and the Republican Congress are more interested in raising barriers to voting than in lowering them. Democrats would be well advised to create their own independent commission, staffed with the best experts in the nation, to lay out a serious plan to end voter suppression and empower people to vote. Voting is the essential right in a democracy. It needs to be protected, not suppressed.

     

  • Support Akeredolu to succeed as governor, Mimiko tells citizens

    Support Akeredolu to succeed as governor, Mimiko tells citizens

    Governor Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo State has urged citizens of the state to support the incoming administration of Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN) to succeed like he did in his eight year tenure as governor.

    The outgoing governor stated this while speaking during the second anniversary of the Agbebiye Initiative held in Akure, the state capital on Friday.

    He implored the incoming government not to scrap the policies on health made during his (Mimiko) tenure.

    Mimiko said his administration ensured that pregnancy was not a death sentence again in the state through various health policies that were made during his eight-year tenure.

    He explained that the Agbebiye scheme was aimed at reducing high maternal death rate in state and country at large, so that pregnant women and their babies can be adequately taken care of during and after child delivery.

    The governor tasked the workers and other stakeholders in the state to give the incoming All Progressives Congress government to be led by Akeredolu maximum support so that the legacies will be sustained.

    He said, “As God has given us the zeal and commitment to achieve all these feats in the health sector, I pray that God will put in the heart of the incoming government to continue with these good works.

    “Don’t think that Mimiko is no longer the governor, you all have to cooperate with the incoming government to build on these successes for the benefit of our people.

    “I know that the next government too likes good things and I am so sure that he (Akeredolu) will cooperate with you. I too will not relent in the bid to advise Akeredolu on Agbebiye because what is good is always good.”

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that Mimiko’s tenure as governor of the state ends on February 23.