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Ondo: Three Years After, Inferno At Ororo -1 Well, OML95 Remains Unabated, CSO Expresses Concern

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By Joseph Ebi Kanjo

Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) has expressed concern over the unabated fire at Ororo -1 Well at OML95, in Awoye community, Ilaje Local Government Area of Ondo State.

This is coming after a field visit by the organisation’s team and consequent decomentary which shows that the fire, whose reservoir pressure was 8,000 pounds per square inch (psi) and above, and surface pressure was about 4,600 psi, still “burns viciously day and night, harming the marine
ecosystem and disrupting fishing and other economic activities of the
nearby communities.”

HOMEF in a statement signed by its Media/Communication Lead, Kome Odhomor, said in spite of the burning for over three years, neither the Federal Government of Nigeria nor the company responsible for it deemed it fit to address the situation.

READ ALSO: HOMEF Trains Women On Climate Change Adaptation

Lamenting that the Ororo-1 inferno has become a tragic case of injustice and environmental destruction, HOMEF said the “burning well has now become a symbol of ecocide and outright neglect by the Nigerian state.”

The statement reads in part: “Several Different environmentalists have raised their voices over decades of destructive extraction of petroleum resources that disrupted ecosystems with decades of exploration and have turned a once-thriving region into one of the most deadly and polluted places on Earth. Awoye’s tale is a sad example of a healthy region
turned into a sacrifice zone by the pursuit of fossil fuels.

“It’s a widely held view by a range of technical specialists in the industry that such a highly pressured well should not have been re-entered with a workover rig with less than adequate blowout
preventer (BOP).

READ ALSO: HOMEF Charges Speedy Clean Up Of Ogoniland, N’Delta

“Whatever the case, the raging fire at Awoye needs to be quenched.,
This tragic incident compounds the climate crisis and harms the
communities and ecosystems in multiple ways.”

Calling for an urgent stop to the flaming Well, HOMEF added that “now is the time to end dependence on fossil fuels and leave the oil on the ground while ramping up investment in renewables.”

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World Anti-Corruption Day: Group Decries DSS Impunity, Govt’s Borrowing Habit

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The Foundation for Environmental Rights, Advocacy, and Development, FENRAD, has raised concerns about the impunity of the Department of State Security, DSS, and its disregard for the rule of law in the last eight years.

FENRAD’s executive director, Nelson Nnanna Nwafor, made the observation in Umuahia on Monday on the occasion of the 2023 World Anti-Corruption Day.

According to him, how DSS personnel go about re-arresting people freed by the court has been worrisome.

“Most lamentable is that in the last eight years, the state security service has become an agent of lawlessness. We have witnessed attempts to rearrest someone the court had freed right there inside the courtroom or also instances of inter-agency rivalry,” he said.

READ ALSO: 144, 910 Cases Pending Before Federal High Court In New Legal Year

The group also condemned the purchase of N160 million worth of vehicles for 469 lawmakers and the purchase of a yacht by the Federal Government. It also decried the nation’s habit of borrowing money to fund its budget and turning around to mismanage such funds on frivolities, to the detriment of poor Nigerians.

The group further cited contradictory judgements from courts in post-election cases as another worrying trend in the country.

FENRAD noted that for corruption to be defeated in Nigeria, the federal and state governments must be genuinely resolved to fight the monster.

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NECO Awards Scholarships To Best Performing Candidates In 2022, 2023 Exams

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The National Examinations Council, NECO, has awarded scholarships to a total of 14 best performing candidates in the 2022 and 2023 examinations at all levels across the country.

The Registrar/ CEO of NECO, Prof Dantani Ibrahim Wushishi made the disclosure during the Council’s Productivity Award ceremony held in Minna, Niger State.

According to him, the best performing male and female candidates in SSCE 2022 are Asiru Ahmed Opeyemi from Crescent International High School, Sango-Ota, Ogun State, and Obidibo Chioma Blessing.

READ ALSO: NECO Indicts 93 Schools For Cheating, Blacklists 52 Supervisors

Okafor Chima Christian from Saint Paul Academy, Jos, and Benson Ifebube Chelsea, from Renaissance Garden Secondary School, Ago-Okota, Lagos, are the best performing students for the 2023.

In the Basic Education Certificate Examination category, for 2022, Akintola Samuel Oluwadaresimi of Apostolic Church College, Sango, Ibadan, and Onochie Chiamada Francis of Igbenedion Educational Centre, Benin, topped the chart as the best performing students while Ekwueme Ikechukwu Excellent from Kimota Science College, Gboko, and Owuye Faheeza Oluwakemi of Maryland Comprehensive School (Junior), Lagos, emerged the best in 2023.

Similarly, the best performing candidates for the National Common Entrance Examination are Bokare Lemuel Ogheneyobre of Kingskidies Nursery and Primary School, Warri, and Chika Ugu Anastasia from Nana Primary School, Warri.

READ ALSO: Over 74,000 Candidates Register For 2023 NECO SSCE External Examination – Registrar GCE

Winners in the gifted children category include Njoku Obinna Adrian of Rosai Kid Montessori School, New Owerri, and Anikwu Princess Kamsiyochukwu from Springfield Academy, Awka.

Also, some staff of the Council, who distinguished themselves in their various areas of duty, were also honoured and given awards by the organization.

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144, 910 Cases Pending Before Federal High Court In New Legal Year

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The Chief Judge of the Federal High Court of Nigeria, Justice John Tsoho has revealed that a total of 144, 910 cases are pending before the court in new legal year.

The Court in the last legal year had 15, 025 cases filed before it by litigants out of which 12, 870 were effectively disposed off leaving a balance of 2, 155 suits.

At the opening of the legal year of the Court in Abuja on Monday, the Chief Judge explained that the court carried over 142, 755 cases from 2021 to the 2022 legal year, adding that in the 2023 legal year, 15, 025 fresh cases were filed by various categories of litigants.

READ ALSO: Police Recover Locally Fabricated Firearms In Enugu State, Arrest 4 Suspects

He noted that the Court would be going into the new legal year with the 144, 910 suits but expressed optimism that judges would rise up to the challenge of disposing the cases as quickly as possible.

The breakdown of the carried over cases showed that 42, 784 are civil cases, 36, 061 criminal matters, 41, 447 are motions while 24, 618 are fundamental rights enforcement suits.

Justice Tsoho who put the current number of judges on the bench of the Court at 95, thanked them for the speedy manner pre-election cases of the 2023 general elections were handled within the time allowed by law.

READ ALSO: Bandits Attack FCT Residents, Abduct Woman, Three Children

We must dispense justice with integrity and without bias, we must display utmost competence and courage as well as dispose cases speedily.

“The Federal High Court will surely rise to the challenges of the future with the same tenacity and commitment that have defined its path thus far,” he said.

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