September 17, 2013

Chicago: Musiliu Balogun, A Nigerian sentenced to 9 years in prison for drug trafficking

Sentencing of onetime network leader highlights seismic shift in heroin trafficking to US

CHICAGO - A longtime fugitive was sentenced Thursday to nine years in prison for his role in leading one of the world's largest heroin networks, which extended from suppliers in Thailand to distributors working out of a boutique in Chicago.
The sentencing of Musiliu Balogun highlights a seismic shift in how heroin gets to the U.S. In the 1990s, when Balogun was in his heyday as a drug trafficker, most of the heroin originated from Southeast Asia and got to the United States through couriers. Now, most of it is smuggled across the southern border by Mexican cartels.
Balogun, of Ogun, Nigeria, evaded capture until his arrest in Amsterdam in 2006 as he sought to fly to Ghana. Dutch authorities extradited him to the U.S. in February.
Balogun initially faced a life sentence on multiple trafficking charges, but under the plea agreement the maximum he faced was nine years. Defence lawyer Raymond Wigell said his client could be out of prison in as little as 2 1/2 years depending on how the Bureau of Prisons decides to factor in his time served in the Netherlands.
While Balogun, 53, trafficked pricey Asian heroin injected with a needle, today's Mexican- and Colombian-made heroin is as potent but cheaper and easier to ingest in its powder form, said Jack Riley, the Drug Enforcement Administration's head in Chicago.
"I'm excited to see Balogun in court," said Riley, who as a young agent in the mid-'90s worked on the investigation that helped bring down Balogun's network. "What's scary is we thought we had heroin licked. And look where we are now."
Based in Thailand and Cambodia in the 1990s, Balogun was adept at recruiting couriers in hotels or airports, and they would then smuggle the heroin to the U.S. aboard airlines — sometimes swallowing it in small bags and expelling it after reaching Chicago, Riley said.
"This guy was a genius, including at recruiting curriers," he said. "He also had ties to the Thai government at the time and with its military."
Among the other key figures in the network were women working out of a Chicago boutique shop; they received the contraband from couriers, then distributed it to local street gangs, who handled street-level sales, Riley said.
The women, like Balogun, were of Nigerian descent, which Riley said was a common feature of trafficking organizations in the '90s. Over the years, Mexicans and their operatives came to dominate the trade, he said.
The investigation of Balogun's crime group, dubbed Global Sea, was one of the largest operations of its kind at the time, Riley said. Dozens of coconspirators were arrested in 1996.
The first breaks for investigators in the 1990s were the capture of some of the network's couriers, who then revealed telephone numbers they were ordered to call upon arrival in Chicago. Authorities used that information to work their way up the chain of command, he said.
Balogun, who holds a business degree from the University of Lagos, elicited smiles by some court officials when the judge asked what career he intended to pursue once out of prison.
"I want to engage in transportation," he said. "I have experience."
Later, his lawyer explained to reporters that the married father of four ran a legitimate trucking company from 1996 to 2006 while on the lam from U.S. authorities.

Man caught with 6.5kg worth of Brazillian cocaine in Lagos



32 year old Francis Bawaba, a Nigerian based in Spain was this weekend arrested by the men of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) with 6.5kg high grade Braziillian cocaine.

Bawaba was arrested at the Murtala Mohammed airport in Lagos as he arrived aboard an Etihad flight. NDLEA officials found 364 wraps of cocaine said to be worth N72million concealed in the luggage of the trafficker. They said he took off from Malpensa Milan and collected the drug on transit while in Abudhabi.

Bawaba told officials that he agreed to carry the drugs because of a promise of N3.3million by his handlers. "This is my first time and I was lured with N3.3million. I used to work at a construction company in Madrid but due to the Economic meltdown, it has been difficult securing a job". he said.

Navy Yard: Aaron Alexis 'had mental health issues'



The man who killed 12 people at a Washington DC Navy installation had received treatment for mental health issues, US media report.
Former US Navy reservist Aaron Alexis, 34, was treated for paranoia, hearing voices and sleeplessness, the Associated Press reported.
The military contractor had a valid pass for Washington Navy Yard, where the attack unfolded, authorities said.
Alexis was shot and killed by police during the assault.
On Tuesday, the US capital remained in a state of shock and mourning.
Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel laid a wreath at US Navy Memorial Plaza in honour of the Navy Yard victims.
Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus has ordered a physical security review of all Navy and Marine Corps installations, a Navy official told the BBC.
At the White House, where flags are flying at half mast as a mark of respect for the victims, press secretary Jay Carney said President Barack Obama would continue to push for tighter gun control laws in the wake of the shooting.
The attack took place on Monday morning at Building 197, headquarters for Naval Sea Systems Command, which builds and maintains ships and submarines for the Navy.
Witnesses said the gunman sprayed bullets in a hallway and fired from a balcony down on to workers in an atrium at the heavily secured installation in the US capital.
The attack only ended when police stormed the building and shot him dead.
Alexis was armed with a shotgun legally purchased in Virginia, as well as one handgun authorities say may have been obtained inside the naval installation.
Previous reports suggested he had used an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle. But officials said on Tuesday that although the weapon had been found at the scene, it was neither carried nor used by the gunman.
"There is no question he would have kept shooting," Washington Police Chief Cathy Lanier told reporters on Monday.
In addition to the 12 shot and killed, three people - a police officer and two female civilians - received gunshot wounds, but all were expected to survive. Five others were treated for minor injuries.
'Chequered' past
On Tuesday, authorities said they believed Alexis had acted alone and that all victims - ranging in age from 46 to 73 - had been identified.
As an employee of an IT contractor, Alexis apparently had a card granting him access to the building - even though he had had several run-ins with the law and had been discharged from the Navy under a cloud, authorities said.
"It really is hard to believe that someone with a record as chequered as this man could conceivably get, you know, clearance... to be able to get on the base," Washington DC Mayor Vincent Gray told CNN.
Alexis left the Navy as a petty officer 3rd class, after serving full-time in the naval reserve from 2007-11, under a general discharge, a status that suggests misconduct.
He had been cited for insubordination, disorderly behaviour and excessive absences from work at least eight times during his Navy career, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday.
According to media reports, Alexis was a Buddhist convert who had had previous gun-related brushes with the law.
On Tuesday, his employer, an IT contractor called The Experts, said the military should have made his record known.
"Anything that suggests criminal problems or mental health issues, that would be a flag. We would not have hired him," Thomas Hoshko, chief executive officer of firm, told the Washington Post.
The company confirmed Alexis had worked since July at six different military installations and had only been at the Navy Yard for a few days before the shootin

Mallam Nasir El-Rufai responds to CAN on twitter, dismisses their threat



Sanusi: Electronic Payment Will Curb Money Laundering, Corruption

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The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi,  Monday said the effective implementation of the electronic payment system in both private and public sectors would be "the biggest blow" on money-laundering and corruption often perpetrated as a result of the huge size of cash transactions.
Speaking in Abuja at the opening of an international conference on ‘Payment System and Launch of the Payment System Vision 2020 Strategy (Release 2) Document’, Sanusi said the CBN would over the next few years concentrate on strengthening institutional and regulatory frameworks that would encourage the development of the payment system, increase financial inclusion and promote more usage of electronic payments.
He explained that the revised document would henceforth ensure that no national payments system would invoke the principle of unwind.
He added: “The CBN will formally inform the industry that unwinds must not be invoked in any national payment system. Each payment scheme must define and formally document the exact point at which payments are deemed to be final and irrevocable."
Sanusi further noted that under the updated strategy document for payments system, the implicit role of the central bank as 'lender of last resort' for Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) payment system would be terminated by December 2016 as well as the Deferred Net Settlement system by December 2019.
He said there was need for best practice and improved collaboration across various levels, adding that effective payment system could not be achieved without technology providers and regulators of the communications technology sector.
However, the CBN boss said the country's payment system was still plagued by infrastructure deficit including power and communications network, illiteracy, slow adoption, lack of effective national identity among others.
Sanusi said the draft National Payment System Bill, which is still being considered for approval, would address legal barriers to electronic payment in the country. He added that ongoing implementation of biometric solution as part of requirements for opening of accounts would also solve the problem of unique identifier.
The central bank boss noted that the revised PSV2020 document would further usher in the emergence of a new collateral management for all the deferred net settlement systems.
On her part, the Minister of Communications and Technology, Mrs. Omobola Johnson, said government was working to make the internet safer for the active participation of more Nigerians through the approval of the Cybercrime Bill by the Federal Executive Council (FEC).
She also said efforts were ongoing to deploy critical infrastructure in rural areas to further drive the digitisation process.
Meanwhile, the CBN yesterday reiterated that its Consumer Protection Department was established to ensure that consumers of financial services get maximum benefit from banks.
Addressing journalists in Kano yesterday, the Deputy Director, Consumer Education, CBN, Hajiya Khadijat Kassim, said when the present management of the central bank assumed duty in 2009; the financial system was at the brink of collapse.
She said: “There was crisis in the financial and capital market which had been triggered by the global financial crisis at the time.”
According to her, in line with the mandate of the CBN to promote a sound and stable financial system as enshrined in the CBN Act, the consumer protection department was saddled with the responsibility of regulating the conduct of financial service providers so as to engender trust and confidence in the financial system.
Specifically, Hajiya Kassim said consumer protection department functions amongst others include, enhancing consumer financial capability through consumer education, ensure fair and responsible market and business conduct amongst financial service promoters.
“It is important that the consumers are given reasons to trust the system and therefore be confident in dealing with financial service providers,” she said.

Atiku Condemns Police Harassment of Amaechi

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Former Vice-President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, Monday said it was both incomprehensible and outrageous for the police to subject the Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, to harassment and humiliation.
Reacting to the incident in a statement by his media office in Abuja, the former vice-president said he was highly embarrassed by the excesses and open political partisanship against a democratically-elected governor who is also the chief security officer of the state.
Atiku also reiterated his call for the police to halt their siege against the 'New PDP' headquarters in Abuja, which has entered its second week.
"Nothing justifies the advocacy for the decentralisation of the police by allowing states to set up their own more than this," he said.
According to him, there is nowhere in the world the police would take sides in private political conflicts at the expense of its constitutional role.
The former vice-president regretted that the persistent harassment of the governor had gone too far to be tolerated by decent public opinion and other leaders.
Atiku argued that the partisanship of the police force would ultimately strengthen agitation for state police.
The former vice-president also noted that considering the heavy expenditure state governments make to equip and support the police, the harassment of Amaechi could undermine such cooperation, especially the current one per cent contribution each state is requested to make towards the funding of the police, which will be deducted from their subventions.
According to him, police partisanship must stop immediately because it poses a threat to our nascent democracy. Our police force must concentrate solely on providing safety and security for Nigerians who face ongoing daily threats of violence and kidnappings.
"Nigeria continues to head in the wrong direction. We face chronic joblessness and now a crippling, three-month long Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike preventing students from attending school. That is where the federal government's focus must be, not on launching partisan police actions."

Fight Breaks Out in N’Assembly Between Warring PDP Legislators

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National Assembly

A fight broke out between warring members of  the Peoples’ Democratic  Party (PDP) in the House of Representatives at about 4pm Tuesday.

Sources said   the fight erupted when  the   Chairman of the splinter group, Alhaji Abubakar Baraje and other loyalists paid courtesy  visit to their  members in the House.

The fight started  following  an attempt  to prevent those  who   are not part of the splinter group  from taking part  in the courtesy  visit.

South Africa’s firm buys into Nigeria’s Mr Biggs



South African dining and fast-food giant Famous Brands has secured a deal to buy a 49-percent stake
in the restaurant subsidiary of Nigerian conglomerate UAC, it announced Monday.
The deal with UAC Restaurants will boost Famous Brands’ presence in Africa’s most populous nation, where it has operated under franchise agreements for the past 11 years.
The value of the deal, which takes effect on October was not disclosed.
UAC Restaurants operates leading Nigerian fast-food brand Mr Bigg’s and has 165 franchised restaurants in 32 cities across Nigeria and Ghana.
The UAC group also has interests in property development, logistics and agro-processing. Big stake bought by SA firm form a part of its strategy, Famous Brands is seeking to
entrench its presence across Africa.
The group, which operates popular fast-food chains such as Wimpy, Steers and Debonairs Pizza, has 172 restaurants across the continent, mainly in neighbouring countries but also as far afield as
Sudan. Companies in South Africa, the continent’s economic powerhouse, are increasingly searching for opportunities abroad amid slowing growth at home
By Deola Philips

Tanzanian police arrest Nigerian woman over illicit drugs

Tanzania vnolly

A Nigerian woman travelling to Europe has been nabbed at the Julius Nyerere International Airport, Tanzania’s main gateway, after she was found to be carrying 99 pellets of suspected illicit drugs in her luggage.
According to the airport police, the 25-year-old businesswoman from the Nigerian capital city of Abuja was taken into custody late Wednesday after an electronic monitor at the check-in counter revealed pellets in the luggage.
Airport police commander Renatus Chalya said the lady entered Tanzania on 30 Aug. 2013 after travelling from Abuja, and she was on her way to France.
Her flight ticket showed she was headed for Paris on Ethiopian Airline and from there she would connect to Rome before taking another flight back to Abuja.
Without revealing her name, the police officer said that she carried a Nigerian passport with serial number A03306799.
She purportedly came to Tanzania “in search of a market for shoes and handbags,” he said.
According to Chalya, the pellets which were stuffed in body lotion and baby powder containers would be taken to the Chief Government Chemist to establish their type, weight and value before further action could be taken on the suspect.

PDP Accuses APC of Feeding on Rivers Resources

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The Rivers State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has described the All Progressives Congress (APC) response on Governor Chibuike Amaechi’s claim of being denied access to the Government House, Port Harcourt by the police as a justification of its funding by the state governor.
The party accused Amaechi of wasting billions of naira belonging to Rivers people on the formation, maintenance and funding of APC’s activities in his quest to secure a platform to actualise his 2015 political ambition.
The PDP in a statement signed by Jerry Needam, the Special Adviser on Media to the state Chairman, Mr. Felix Obuah, said it was unfortunate that the APC had reduced itself to a weapon of political war for Amaechi.
“The statement credited to the Publicity Secretary of the APC, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, in respect of the claim by Amaechi of being stopped by the police from entering Government House is a product and manifestation of financial relationship between the governor and the opposition party.”
The party said it was not surprising that APC was attacking the police for doing their legitimate duty, stressing that the entire plan of action by the APC was founded on blackmail and destruction of President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.
It also called on Amaechi to stop squandering the resources of the state in pursing his ambition and blackmailing the president, the state police command and leaders of the PDP.
But in a related development, a faction of the state PDP loyal to the Abubakar Kawu Baraje-led New PDP has described as “shameful, gross ingratitude to God and show of frustration” the comments by the Minister of State for Education, Chief Nyesom Wike, at Omoku last Sunday in which he claimed to know the PDP won the 2011 general election in the state.
The Publicity Secretary of the Chief Godspower Ake-led faction, Mr. George Ukwuoma-Nwogba, said in a statement yesterday in Port Harcourt, that Wike was not grateful to God for his being retained in Jonathan's cabinet “even when his abysmal performance is enough to get him out of the way.”
He said: “The Obuah-Wike team cannot win any election in Rivers State and for the record, the success recorded by the PDP during the last general election was based on the amiable and humane qualities of Amaechi and the other candidates the ruling party presented for the various elective positions. For us, therefore, Wike’s outburst shows how naïve and too forgetful he could be. May be, his memory is beginning to suffer sharp depreciation.”
He said it was Amaechi’s pleas that saved Wike from political death when the state women took to the streets accusing the minister of being a bad influence on youths and children in the state.

Akpabio: G7 Govs Backing Down on Jonathan 2015

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  Governor Godswill Akpabio•Says APC will be known as 'Panadol' in 2015   •Amaechi’s suspension to be lifted
•President to determine Tukur’s fate

Ibori hid assets in Oando – British prosecutor

Convicted former Delta State Governor, Chief James Ibori, hid some of his assets in an indigenous integrated oil company, Oando Plc, according to a British prosecutor.
The prosecutor was quoted by Reuters in a report on Monday as saying that the former governor, who is serving a 13-year jail term in the United Kingdom for fraud and money-laundering, hid some of his assets in the oil firm; adding that money passed from Oando’s accounts into Ibori’s Swiss accounts                                                                                           

Ibori
James Ibori
Ibori had in February 2012 pleaded guilty to 10 counts of fraud and money-laundering worth £50m.
Prosecutor Sasha Wass was quoted as telling the court that she would be presenting evidence that Ibori had “asserted ownership of a large part” of Oando, Nigeria’s biggest home-grown oil firm, which is listed in Lagos, Johannesburg and Toronto.
 “The Crown will assert that Oando is a company where James Ibori has hidden assets,” Wass said, giving no further details.
One of the biggest embezzlement cases seen in Britain, the successful prosecution of Ibori was also a rare example of a senior Nigerian politician being held to account for the corruption that blights Africa’s most populous country.
At the time of Ibori’s sentencing in April 2012, Judge Anthony Pitts said the £50m that he had admitted to stealing might be a “ludicrously low” fraction of his total booty, which could be more than £200m.
 The confiscation hearing will shed further light on the scale of Ibori’s wealth and determine whether he emerges from jail impoverished or still in possession of a large enough fortune to regain a position of influence in Nigeria.
Ibori could be released as early as 2016 because he spent two years in custody before his sentencing and because he will be eligible for parole halfway through his prison term.
 He was not in court on Monday and his lawyer, Ivan Krolick, said Ibori did not wish to attend the confiscation hearing although he would come to court to give evidence if necessary.
 In May, the Court of Appeal had rejected Ibori’s appeal against the length of his sentence.
 During his sentencing hearing, the court heard that Ibori had acquired six foreign properties worth £6.9m, a fleet of luxury cars including a Bentley and a Maybach 62, and that he had tried to buy a $20m private jet. His three daughters were attending a private school in rural England.
However, the Head, Corporate Communications, Oando Plc, Mr. Ainojie Irune, who spoke with our correspondent in Lagos, denied the report that the jailed ex-governor owned a larger part of the oil company.
He said, “We state categorically that Mr. James Ibori does not own ‘a large part of Oando’ and that this statement is incorrect and misleading. Oando is a publicly traded company listed on the Nigerian and Johannesburg Stock Exchanges and does not and cannot control the trading in its securities on the floor of the respective Exchanges.
“Based on our current shareholding register, Mr. James Ibori’s shareholding stands at 443 shares out of a total issued and paid up share capital of 6.8 billion ordinary shares, which is clearly insignificant, and cannot be considered as ‘a large part of Oando.’
“Oando also stated that it does accept that sometime in 2004, in the normal course of its business, it sold some of its foreign exchange earnings for naira and the recipient of the US dollars was a company, which has now turned out to be one controlled by James Ibori.
“At the time of the transaction, this information was unknown to Oando. The total amount was $2.7m made in three separate transactions over a period of about seven months. This amount was insignificant considering the company’s turnover of approximately $800m in 2004.”

Nasarawa: Soldiers kill Ombatse leader, arrest others

Nigerian soldiers

Troops deployed to contain the violent communal clashes in Obi Local Government Area of Nasarawa State have killed the leader of the Ombatse militia group who allegedly led the attack that claimed over 30 lives in some communities in the area, a police source told The PUNCH on Monday.
The body of the militant leader whose name could not be ascertained as at the time of this report, and three other assailants were said to have been deposited at an undisclosed hospital in Lafia, the state capital.
The deceased was said to have been killed when he went to demand for the release of his men that were detained by the police.
Three Ombatse militants who were on the same mission with the slain leader were said to have been apprehended by the police and detained at the State Criminal Investigation Department in Lafia.
Scores of warring Eggon and Alago youths were also arrested by the police and detained at the state command headquarters
The Nasarawa State Police Public Relations Officer, Cornelius Ocholi, who confirmed the incident on the phone, explained that three unidentified assailants were killed in the crisis and that four others who sustained injuries had been taken to Dahaltu Specialist Hospital, Lafia, for treatment.
Detachments of policemen were seen at the police command headquarters, waiting to be deployed in the flashpoint where violent clashes between the Eggon and Alago ethnic groups had claimed many lives and property. Many, mostly women and children, were also displaced.
The Army authorities had deployed soldiers to contain the violence and wanton killings by the Ombatse militia group and the reprisal attacks by Alago youths in Obi Local Government Area.
Armed troops have also taken over strategic parts of Lafia and other parts of the state to prevent a possible surprise attack on the town by militants identified as Ombatse members.
Meanwhile, the National Youth Service Corps has said it will not redeploy corps members serving in the state.
No fewer than 30 persons were feared killed in renewed skirmishes between Eggon and Alago ethnic groups in Obi, headquarters of Obi Local Government Area of the state, on Saturday.
The NYSC State Director, Mrs. Bolanle Olabanji, told one of our correspondents that NYSC had evacuated affected serving corps members to safety.
She said there was no plan to post them out of the state.
“We cannot redeploy them because that will mean posting them out of the state. The only thing is that we can repost them within the state if the crisis continues. We just moved them out of the crisis. By tomorrow (Monday) we will meet to discuss our next plan,” she said.