Brand and Marketing

Thursday 6 September 2012

NATIONAL WAR MUSEUM: My Travelogue.


Air Force Outside Gallery: Relic of one of the air crafts during the war. Below it is the famous Biafran Baby, according to the curator, that 'bird' almost changed the course of the war in favour of Biafra.

Its brown rusted roofs, punctuated by few corrugated aluminium roofs, are washed each morning by the rain of dews. The ray of sun that sweeps the city at midday wrings wild fragrances from its towering bushes. And at night, the castanet music of the crickets, the croaking symphony of the frogs and the beautiful glimmers from the fire-flies lull its inhabitants to sleep. This is Ebite –Amafor, the countryside in Umuahia, Abia state that houses the National War Museum.

If you were not around during the civil war, you might never be able to imagine the horrendous effects of a war that tore the fabrics of this nation to shreds. This is because those who wrote it in the textbooks and those telling the stories can hardly capture the true picture with mere words.

The closest attempt to represent the Nigeria’s Civil War in print is the work of the award-winning Chimanmanda Adiche in her Half of a Yellow Sun. But the poor reading culture has damaging impact on Adiche’s efforts to document history in fiction. Hence, we all forget in a hurry.

Nigeria's Oil and Gas Sector: Between New Realities and Opportunities

Olusesan


Oil and Gas are Nigeria’s economic cash cows. The commodities account for about 80% of Nigeria’s external earnings and form a substantial 60-70% of her Gross Domestic Product, GDP. The huge deposit of these resources in the bosom of Nigeria’s soil and the nation near monolithic exploration of oil and gas for economic growth and sustainability, have crooned Nigeria’s economy has an oil-dependent.

Besides her size and projected population explosion of 200 million people in the next two decades; Nigeria is an irresistible global bride because of the huge deposits of oil and gas resources covered by her earth and the essentiality of oil and gas in the global economic marketplace. This essentiality and the quest to rule the world from resources accruable from oil and gas explain the various scales of crises on the global space, especially in the Middle-Eastern nations. The brewing crisis on the Bakassi Peninsular is also metaphoric of what nations can do for the black gold. 

Wednesday 29 August 2012

OBJ blasts Eedris Abdulkareem again for ‘Nigeria jaga-jaga’


http://www.channelstv.com/home/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Former-President-Olusegun-Obasanjo-360x225.jpg
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, has for the umpteenth time expressed his anger at Nigerian rapper, Eedris Abdulkareem for his 2004 track titled, ‘Nigeria jaga jaga’.

Still embittered over the condescending but popular hit track-Nigeria jaga jaga-about the poor state of Nigeria, Mr Obasanjo, claimed that, producing such a song shows that the artiste does not believe in future of the country.

Abati’s unnecessary necessity

Reuben Abati
By: Victor Ehikhamenor

As much as I cringed reading some of Dr. Reuben Abati’s words this past Sunday in The Guardian newspaper, a sense of eiyaaa overwhelmed me. It was so obvious that the task before the erudite ex-columnist was to catch a porcupine with bare hands.

Abati’s piece reminded me of my mother when I was in primary school. I was flogged silly by the labour master for not bringing “handwork” to school one time and hell almost broke loose.
Handwork required tedious work, and it was a necessity and part of the school program. At this particular occasion I came to school empty handed and the labour master could not bear my audacity of hoping he would not ask me for it.

Tuesday 28 August 2012

Holy Laff, Holy Carpet: The Chemistry of Laffing with God. Ha Ha Ha!!


Holy Laff is  Project of the House of Talk. A media outfit that I have watched grow from the scratch as a student at The Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungab-Akoko. If you are around Ondo on this date; I can stake my neck for the organisers.

Holy Carpet... I think I like that! Like Jesus Enter Jerusalem, Abi?

Monday 20 August 2012

Deconstructing a Market Leader: MTN as an Effective Communicator.


 Over the years, the principles and practice of Public Relations have been misconstrued; sadly, even by PR practitioners. It has been misconstrued as press agentry, propaganda, and oftentimes reduced to a mere communication mechanism.
Conversely, PR is the entire communication process of any organisation trying to build reputation through relationship. A strategic PR plan will engage advertising, promotions, media relations and other allied forces as instruments in its communication process.

Engaging Nigeria’s Real Estate for Global Investment: Matters Arising.


 Three weeks ago, I published an article on this column “Nigeria’s Real Estate: Between Projections and Realities” on www.3investonline.com. The article was a half year review of the Nigeria’s Real Estate Sector; and I concluded in that report that the year under review has been befogged with too many turnings without a movement.

This endemic attitude of ‘talking the work’ has not only mitigated significant progress in the sector; it has aversely midwived a gloom of apathy which industry players are struggling to diffuse in other to reposition the sector in the economic scheme of things.
In spite of the moribund state of the industry, the truth remains it still remains a virile solution to Nigeria’s economic and employment conundrum. The big question therefore is what efforts are too much to unlock a sector which every pundit agrees has immeasurable potentials to significantly drive the nation’s GDP, create employment for the army of unemployed youths and generates wealth for the people?

Wednesday 20 June 2012

Of Jonathan and The E- Presidency.


By Olusesan Ogunyooye (@sesansoulmate)


An eye that will last a life time does not emit cataract at infancy – Yoruba Proverb

I simply don’t understand this noise about the absence of Mr. President and his ‘diplomatic’ duties at Rio, Brazil. Why should anyone care about his where about? Why do we make Mr. President feel we miss him? We do not, at least I don’t: except the condolence messages came a little late and I certainly miss the rage that runs through me when he makes those unintelligible statements; knowing well that he knows he does not mean the promises.   

Seriously, Nigerians should not be those who border about Jonathan’s where about. It should be his cohorts. His presence at home makes no significant difference, except that the condolence messages may be spot on. So who cares if he begins a world tour from Brazil?

The End of The End

Abstract:  This is an article I read late last year. Never mind the currency, just look at the dialectics and situate with with the current Nigerian context. Something has to be done, and done fast!  

By Femi Adesina

 Nigeria has had many beginnings of the end. The 1966 pogrom. The Biafran Civil War, which lasted for three years. Religious and ethnic riots across the country. The crises that attended the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election. OPC/Hausa clashes, in Sagamu, in Lagos. Endless Jos killings. Retaliatory bloodletting. Sharia riots. The Niger Delta uprising. Many more. No country ever lived more dangerously. But somehow, we always manage to pull back from the brink, before the final, fatal crash. We have been like a cat with nine lives.

 We tempt fate sorely, and get away with it. But now, we seem to have used up all our luck, and we’re on borrowed time. Daily Sun columnist, Okey Ndibe, says, “Nigeria is a dying idea.” But I say the situation is worse. Nigeria is a dead idea. In a manner of speaking, Nigeria is dead, all that is left is to sing the Nunc Dimittis. 
Nigeria had been dying for long, but last Sunday, it took its last breath. America had predicted the eventuality for 2015. But it came last Christmas Day, ironically on a Sunday, the day of resurrection.

Tuesday 19 June 2012

The Next Phase of Boko Haram Terrorism – Wole Soyinka




Boko Haram is completely political. But with the toxic element of religion infused into it, it gives them the leg to ally with international terrorist bodies based on religion, who are only too happy to be of assistance.

Let me begin by reminding everyone that Boko Haram has a very long history, whether you describe Boko Haram as an army of the discontent, or even as some people grotesquely try to suggest, “revolutionaries,” or you describe them as, legitimately, this time, as marginalised or feeling marginalised.

Sunday 17 June 2012

Shall We Now Not beg for our lives? (2)



By: Olusesan Ogunyooye (@sesansoulmate)

I struggle each day to agree that this nation is a not failed state. I hate to think our democracy is “A Clueless Government; run by Boko Haram, for the poor people”. I sorrow at the thought that Nigeria; the ‘giant’ of Africa, now appears big for nothing in global perspective. I cannot but agree that life in this country is now brutish, nasty and short; and the only hope is Ola Rotimi’s “Hope of the Living Dead”? 

Yoruba says; “if your mother’s concubine is powerful than your father, you must call him daddy”. This is the ugly reality in Nigeria today. If Boko Haram is bigger, powerful and more ambitious than our government; then, shall we now not beg for our lives?
Today, Nigerians are like the proverbial monkey who strives not to be shamed; and once we are disgraced; we should strive not to die. If we strive not to be shamed as a people, and Boko Haram has made us dance naked in the market: shall we now beg not to die?

For me, all hopes that this government will save us are lost, all their options are exhausted and the government is ran, de facto, from the jungles of the northern states. If you think I’m cynical, have you heard the president speak lately? Did you hear him resolve to Psalm 91 as the panacea out of this national harvest of death? I am not against prayers, but I know even King David, the Psalmist, did not write Psalm 91 as a miraculous wand of protection.

Friday 15 June 2012

NATIONAL WAR MUSEUM: Lest We Forget


Air Force Outside Gallery: Relic of one of the air crafts during the war. Below it is the famous Biafran Baby, according to the curator, that 'bird' almost changed the course of the war in favour of Biafra.
Its brown rusted roofs, punctuated by few corrugated aluminium roofs, are washed each morning by the rain of dews. The ray of sun that sweeps the city at midday wrings wild fragrances from its towering bushes. And at night, the castanet music of the crickets, the croaking symphony of the frogs and the beautiful glimmers from the fire-flies lull its inhabitants to sleep. This is Ebite –Amafor, the countryside in Umuahia, Abia state that houses the National War Museum.

If you were not around during the civil war, you might never be able to imagine the horrendous effects of a war that tore the fabrics of this nation to shreds. This is because those who wrote it in the textbooks and those telling the stories can hardly capture the true picture with mere words.

The closest attempt to represent the Nigeria’s Civil War in print is the work of the award-winning Chimanmanda Adiche in her Half of a Yellow Sun. But the poor reading culture has damaging impact on Adiche’s efforts to document history in fiction. Hence, we all forget in a hurry.

OPERATION FEED THE EMPEROR




I am the highest paid Nigerian in public office
Yet you must feed me.
Feed me
Feed my dogs
Feed the fishes in my Village 
Wet my grass
And pay for my concubines.

I have sucked your blood with the straw of your vein
I have eaten your flesh like cassava bread
I have fed your bones to the dogs that live in this rock. 

I ride on elephant
You walk on bare foot.
I sleep on water bed
You have no roof over your head.

Yet you must feed me
I am the emperor of this land
A czar
Commander in Thief of the Corrupt forces
I am a cabal. 

Yet you must feed me
Feed me for doing nothing
Feed me for mortgaging your future
Feed me for killing this land.

You either feed me or I *Boko Harass you! 


Monday 11 June 2012

Tukur, Oyinlola’s power tussle divides PDP





Tukur and Oyinlola

All is not well within the National Working Committee of the Peoples Democratic Party as the   Chairman of the party, Dr. Bamaga Tukur, and  Secretary, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, are  reportedly on warpath.

Our correspondent learnt  that  Oyinlola, in some memos, accused some Tukur’s aides  of working against  the party.

BRIBERY SCANDAL: 'MY Image was Doctored' - Lawan


Chairman of the House of  Representatives Committee on the probe of fuel subsidy mismanagement, Mr. Farouk Lawan
Hon. Farouk Lawan
CHAIRMAN of the House of  Representatives Committee on the probe of fuel subsidy mismanagement, Mr. Farouk Lawan, said on Sunday that the video purportedly showing him receiving a bribe from an oil marketer was  doctored.

The Lawan committee, which discovered that subsidy thieves had stolen N1.7trn from government coffers as a direct consequence of malpractices in the oil sector, had been embroiled in bribery scandal since last week.

Fuel Subsidy Probe: How I Bribed Law Makers, By Otedola

B2304212-Femi-Otedola,.jpg - B2304212-Femi-Otedola,.jpg
Femi Otedola
 The full details of the $3 million bribery scandal involving members of the House of Representatives Ad-hoc Committee on the Fuel Subsidy probe were revealed yesterday, as one of the major actors in the scandal has opened up on what transpired.

In an exclusive interview with THISDAY, chairman, Zenon Petroleum & Gas Ltd, Mr. Femi Otedola, who hitherto was suspected of being behind the $3 million bribery scandal, blew the lid on what transpired and how chairman of the ad-hoc committee, Hon. Farouk Lawan, and the secretary of the committee, Mr. Boniface Emenalo, had collected $620,000 from him in a sting operation masterminded by the security agencies.

Thursday 7 June 2012

DANA Crash Probe: Trust Me, Jonathan Begs Nigerians


President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday urged Nigerians to trust him, saying that firm decisions would be taken over the Dana Air plane crash in Lagos on Sunday, just as he set up a 10-man presidential administrative and technical committee to investigate the remote cause of the crash which claimed over 200 lives.

President Jonathan said he had directed that the fullest possible investigation be conducted into the remote and immediate causes of the Dana crash.

London 2012 Olympics to Stream Live on YouTube.


The International Olympic Committee (IOC) announced that it will live stream the London 2012 Olympic Games in 64 territories on the IOC’s channel on YouTube http://youtube.com/olympic.

During the Olympics Games (July 27 to August 12), sports fans in these 64 territories across Asia and Africa will be able to enjoy live coverage of the events as well as highlight clips on this digital platform — free-of-charge. Viewers from these territories will be able to watch the streams on the IOC’s YouTube channel, accessible online or Internet enabled devices like smart devices/mobile phones and other YouTube-enabled devices.

Wednesday 6 June 2012

DANA CRASH: The Unusual Love Story A Couple

The Anyenes 
 
One of the most tragic stories from the ill-fated flight Dana Air 992 that crashed in Lagos on Sunday revolves around Maimuna Anyene, a Connecticut-based Nigerian woman, who died along with her husband, sister, her four kids, two cousins and her mother, Mrs. Mijindadi.

Ms. Anyene, who is being mourned by friends, relatives and colleagues around the world, was described by several sources as having a boisterous laughter, a happy spirit and an infectiously cheerful disposition.
One of the late woman’s spirits closest friends captured her spirits. “When Maimuna laughed, she was always loud, joyful, and even crazy in the good sense. She laughed spontaneously and excitedly. It was a full-of-life kind of laughter that seemed to come from deep within her belly. She laughed without inhibitions. She was pretty and had cute dimples that made her round face memorable.”

3 Days of National Mourning, Flag Flying at Half Mast ... So, What?

Flags at the Presidential Villa yesterday. Photo: NAN
     “The death that kills one’s peer is only being proverbial to one” – Yoruba Proverb

By: Olusesan Ogunyooye (@sesansoulmate)


I most certainly value human lives. I most definitely understand that the grieve of the bereaved is better imagined than experience. My heart still breaks, it still bleeds at the thought of beautiful lives, promising future; the dreams of fellow Nigerians (and some expatriates) that were avoidably aborted on the flight to death last Sunday. The sight of the scenes still cuts my heart so poignantly.

But forgive me if this sounds callous and inhuman to you: I done no mourning! Even though I saw several flags at half mast; in my mind, I hoist them to fly full mast like every other day. Yes! Please tell the president I rebelled in my mind.

Monday 4 June 2012

History of Air Crashed In Nigeria - DANA Crash was a Disaster waiting to Happen


This is not the first time an air mishap has claimed a large number of people. The history of air mishaps in Nigeria shows that:

1.       November 20, 1969 – Nigeria Airways BAC VC10 crashes on landing killing 87 on board.

2.       January 22, 1973 – Royal Jordanian Airlines flight 707 carrying 171 Nigerian Muslims returning from Mecca and 5 crewmen died in crash in Kano, Nigeria.

3.       March 1, 1978 – Nigeria Airways F28-1000 crashes in Kano killing 16.

Sunday 3 June 2012

LAGOS PLANE CRASH CLAIMS NNPC SPOKES MAN.

 
The Dana Air line crash may have claimed NNPC Spokes Man Dr. Levi Ajuonuma and Director of Mainstream Bank, Shehu Sa'ad; information reaching this blog has said.


A plane carrying 150 passengers and six crew members crashed into a building in Lagos on Sunday, the head of Civil Aviation Authority told AFP, adding that he fears none had survived.
Although a reliable source told said 156 persons were killed, authorities Put the casualty level at 153.
 
"It was a Dana (airline) flight out of (the capital) Abuja to Lagos with about 153 people on board," Harold Demuren said. "I don't believe there are any survivors."
Lagos State police spokesman Joseph Jaiyeoba told AFP the plane went down in the Iju neighbourhood on the mainland of the city, where most of the city's population is concentrated. The crash happened near the airport.

A spokesman for Nigerian airline Dana confirmed one of its planes had crashed but could not immediately provide further details.
"I can confirm that one of our planes crashed today on the outskirts of Lagos," Tony Usidamen told AFP.
"We lost communication with the aircraft. We are going to issue an official statement."
Lagos, the largest city in Africa's most populous nation

Saturday 2 June 2012

Unilag Olodo Vs ASS HOLE ROCK Fisher Man: Who will be the MALU?



By: Olusesan Ogunyooye (@sesansoulmate)

The fact that I renamed you guys MALU doesn’t warrant you all act like animals. You are constituting nuisance and rubbishing our image in the international circle. I paid heavily with the tax payers’ money to appear on Vogue Magazine just last month.

With due respect sir, we are not cows. Cows would have swallowed your bitter pill hook, line and sinker. OccupyUnilag!

Ha ha ha! The only place where human beings live is in this rock. That is why we don’t die like cows when Boko Haram strikes. All of you outside the rock act like cows and die like cows. That’s why I have to treat you like cows. Did you forget how I sent your brothers in uniform after you in January when you refuse to leave the streets? How I told you it is N97 or I’ll send Boko Haram after you?

Wednesday 30 May 2012

WHAT IS SO SPECIAL ABOUT UNILAG?


 

The decision by President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday to rename University of Lagos, popularly called UniLag, as Moshood Abiola University has created a pointless controversy. Some people, especially members of the opposition, have described it as “cheap populism” while many current students and ex-students of the institution have wondered aloud why their school should be renamed “MauLag” - whatever that means. The social media are full of divergent reactions on the matter. But come to think of it, what is so special about UniLag? What makes some people think that the institution is too important to be renamed Moshood Abiola University? Do these critics actually know the role Abiola played in the evolution of the current liberal democracy that most of us are enjoying today? Are they aware of the pain of many years of military rule, which Abiola lost his life fighting against? Perhaps No.

UNILAG WILL BE MAU, No Going Back Says Minister


The Federal government has announced that it will not revert its decision of renaming the University of Lagos after the late winner of the 1993 presidential elections and business mogul, MKO Abiola.
 
Speaking to state house correspondents after Wednesday’s Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting, the Minister of Information, Labaran Maku said  that what the president did was an answer to the outcry of concerned Nigerians who witnessed the events of June 12 and the subsequent demise of the man that was the acclaimed winner of the election.

The Minister called on Nigerians not to allow the protest by some students to overshadow the significance of the president’s decision to immortalize  Abiola.

Students of the University of Lagos have taking to the streets for two days consecutively after the pronouncement to protest the name change of the 50 year old institution.

Tuesday 29 May 2012

BEAT CRAZY LAGOS TRAFFIC: Listen to 96.1

Fashola

Gov. Babatunde Fashola of Lagos State on Tuesday inaugurated the state’s traffic radio station in a bid to rid the roads in the metropolis of gridlock.

Inaugurating the station, Fashola said the FM radio, the first in Nigeria, was part of government's efforts at providing motorists information on traffic situation in the state.

END OF DISCUSSION: MKO Family Hails Jonathan.




 Amid pats and slaps that have trailed the decision of President Jonathan to rename the University of Lagos UNILAG after the acclaimed the winner of June 12, 1993 presidential election, the final struck that breaks the camel's back and a life-line for embattled Jonathan has come, as the family of the late business mogul has said the decision was in order.

Read Full Text Of Jonathan’s Democracy Day Speech

Below is the full text of the nationwide broadcast by President Goodluck Jonathan to mark Democracy Day 2012 .

NATIONAL ADDRESS BY PRESIDENT GOODLUCK EBELE JONATHAN, GCFR, ON DEMOCRACY DAY,  MAY 29, 2012
Fellow Nigerians,
1.  One year ago, I was privileged to stand before you, to take the oath of office as President of our dear country, the third to serve you as President since the return to democratic rule in 1999.
Today, I remember that day and the processes leading to it with profound gratitude to God Almighty and to all Nigerians who have worked very hard to enrich our journey from military dictatorship to inclusive democratic governance.

Sunday 27 May 2012

Disappointing Anniversary: Jonathan Moves To Bribe Nigerian Publishers, Editors

By SaharaReporters, New York

Ahead of a tumultuous first anniversary week, the presidency last week embarked on a subterranean public relations blitz with top members of the mass media, with President Goodluck Jonathan himself meeting with newspaper editors and publishers.

The immediate purpose of the meeting is thought to be to head off public rage and negative reporting of Mr. Jonathan’s poor performance since he was sworn in one year ago this week.

Of Cassava Bread, Agege Bread and the Transformation Agenda.


By Olusesan Ogunyooye (@sesansoulmate)

Ma’am, are you aware we have refuted claims that Cassava Bread is unhealthy for diabetic patients?

How does that concerns me? I am not diabetes and I am not eat cassava bread. I see it only on News papers and TV when they pose with it at the Federal Executive Council meetings. I also remember that Joe once said he has changed his menu to cassava bread. Well, maybe he now eats out.
Do you mean you don’t serve him cassava bread?

Ask your head.

Saturday 26 May 2012

NIGERIA: THE MESSIAH

By: Oluwaseun Fakuade @seunfakze

It’s 2012. Already, the cacophony of what will be in 2015 has begun. From PDP, to the opposition parties in CPC, ACN, ANPP, ACCORD, other smaller parties & talks of alliance of the opposition: the journey has begun. Only weeks ago, I wrote about the burdening curses of leadership at all tiers in Nigeria. That has not changed, in fact it may not change. Why? Nigeria’s low expectations and an elitist ideal sense of looking for a SAINT/SAVIOUR will keep re-creating the vacuum that exist in Nigeria.

“I am Gay” – Charlie Boy

by: Jide Ladipo
 
Controversial maverick entertainment personality, Charles Oputa, better known as Charly Boy, has set another record with his confession that he is gay. By so confessing, he becomes only the second publicly known gay man in Nigeria.This is a record that only Pastor Rowland Macaulay beat him to by being the first Nige-rian to openly come out of the closet and even establish a church that catered to only gays. Those who know CB well however say he’s not someone who likes being a follower. He’s always a leader in everything he does and he’s now ready to take his rightful leadership position in the gay world.

Thursday 24 May 2012

WHO IS KILLING MASS HOUSING IN NIGERIA?



Housing deficit in Nigeria is being put at between 12 to 18 million. This perennial shortage witnessed today has bloated over the years due to increasing population, rural-urban migration, unemployment and inaccessibility to reasonable funds for developers and buyers; and of course, insufficient and skewed government policies. Professionals and government alike have identified these problems, proposed solutions and maps out, almost on daily basis, intervention programmes and advocacy fora. But in all these, all we see are many turnings without a movement. Olusesan Ogunyooye takes a look at the challenges of mass housing in Nigeria; and writes...

Saturday 12 May 2012



The Tongue of a Shattered S-K-Y: A Realist’s Poetic Fantasy.


By: Olusesan Ogunyooye

The decadence in the polity, the rot in the politics and the rusty image of Nigeria in global perception form revolutionary concerns of Tosin Gbogi in “Tongue of a Shattered S-K-Y”.

Though it is commonplace to hear that “the worst democracy is better than the best military rule”, I agree. But the truth remains that under the current political dispensation, Nigerians do sometimes, silently cry for the return of the khaki ‘boys’. 

Monday 30 April 2012

AY survives tragic car crash

A-list comedian, Ayo Makun, popularly known as AY of the AY show was on Sunday, April 29 involved in a car crash in Abuja.


According to reports, the accident occurred between This Dome and Nitel at the central district Abuja,  involving a Peugeot  406 and Sienna.

AY was reportedly resting at the front seat in his car after a church event at Hilton Hotel, Abuja, when the auto-accident with a 406 Peugeot car occurred.

His manager has confirmed the accident stating that AY is alive and that no serious injuries occured.

CP Escapes Death As Sucide Bombers Hit Taraba State.


A round of suicide bomb attacks on Monday led to the destruction of a portion of the Taraba State Ministry of Finance in the state capital, Jalingo, and consumed valuable documents and property.
The News Agency of Nigeria quotes the spokesman for the state police command, Ibiang Mbasike, as saying that the blast affected a large part of the building and a nearby market.
The bombs exploded at about 8.45a.m when workers were resuming for work after the weekend break.
The blasts were triggered by two suicide bombers riding motorcycles and were apparently targeted at the Commissioner of Police, Taraba State Command, Mamman Sule, as he made his way to his office.
There was no information about the state of the CP but some reports said he escaped unhurt. However, three police officers and the two suspected suicide bombers were among those killed while a dozen others were injured.
One of the explosives hit the rider leading the police commissioner’s convoy.
The police headquarters in Taraba is 40 metres away from the main entrance to the finance ministry. The ministry’s premises forms part of the entrance into the building leading to the police commissioner’s office.
“The Police Commissioner usually has to go through the Ministry of Finance to enter his office.
“He was passing by that usual route when the explosives were thrown. So the Police Commissioner’s convoy was clearly the target,” a top police source, who preferred anonymity, told NAN.