President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday queried the Minister
of Interior, Mr. Abba Moro and the Comptroller-General of the Nigerian
Immigration Service, Mr. David Paradang, over the loss of 18 lives during the
NIS recruitment on Saturday.
The 18 died during stampedes at the venues of the NIS
recruitment in different parts of the country. The deaths have generated
national uproar.
The presidential query to the minister and the NIS CG came
as the wife of the Senate President David Mark, Helen, denied reported
relationship with the consultants that handled the exercise.
Mark’s wife, in a statement signed by the Special Adviser
(Media) to the President of the Senate, Mr. Kola Ologbodiyan, said she was shocked by media reports (not
The PUNCH) of her involvement in the exercise. She said the reports were based on
a rumour and “a mere fabrication of the imagination of those behind it.”
“I have no relationships of any sorts and in whatever form
with the said consultant,” she said.
Both Moro and Paradang were on Monday summoned to the
Presidential Villa, Abuja, to explain the circumstances that led to the
incidents, which a presidency source said had portrayed the present
administration in a bad light.
On arrival at the Villa, the two officials first met for
about three hours with the Chief of Staff to the President, Brig.-Gen. Jones Arogbofa
(retd.), in his office.
A source said they used the opportunity of the meeting with
Arogbofa to marshal the arguments they would present before the President.
The CoS later led the minister and the NIS boss to meet the
President for almost an hour.
He also led them out of the President’s office at about
2.30pm.
Neither Moro nor Paradang spoke to journalists after the
session with the President.
Prior to the arrival of the minister and the NIS boss,
Jonathan had met behind closed doors with the Inspector-General of Police,
Muhammed Abubakar.
Another source in the Presidency said the meeting with
Abubakar also centred on the tragedy that attended the NIS recruitment.
Also, Jonathan on Monday said his administration had
commenced investigation into the circumstances that led to the stampedes that
claimed 18 lives at the venues of the recruitment.
Jonathan said this in his preliminary remarks at the
inauguration of the national conference held at the National Judicial
Institute, Abuja.
He described the incident as a sad one coming at a time
preparation was being made for the inauguration.
Jonathan, however, said he would not bore those in attendance
with the details of the investigation his administration was conducting on the
event.
“As we are preparing for this inauguration, a sad incident
happened on Saturday. We are looking into the circumstances of the sad event. I
won’t bore you with the details of that event that left some innocent youths
dead,” the President said.
Jonathan thereafter called for a one-minute silence in
honour of the victims of the stampede.
Meanwhile, the minister has rejected calls for him to step
down after he blamed job seekers for their deaths in Saturday’s stampede.
Moro told the BBC that there had been “poor handling” of the
event by officials, adding that those in the crowd should have been more
patient.
He said his resignation “does not arise” until after an investigation.
Moro told the BBC’s Newsday programme that “unauthorised”
people had broken through the fence into the National Stadium, Abuja, where the
tests were being held, and caused the stampede.
Similar statements over the weekend had led to calls for him
to resign.
Although he said he accepted responsibility for the incident
as only one out of the numerous entrances to the stadium was opened at the
time, he said he would not step down.
One of the applicants, Mohammed Yusuf, told the BBC that he
saw two people crushed to death in front of him, saying it was “very terrible.”
He blamed the officials in charge of the stadium for the
deaths, saying that more than one gate should have been opened.
But the Nigeria Labour Congress in a statement in Abuja on
Monday by its president, Abdulwaheed Omar, said, “The explanation by the
Minister of Interior, Abba Morro, that 520,000 applicants were invited for
screening for 4,556 spaces and that the applicants died in a stampede due to
impatience and non-adherence to laid-down orderly procedure, is rather weak and
untenable.”
Omar wondered why 520,000 applicants were invited for
screening for 4,556 spaces.
“To invite so many applicants for such few spaces, in all
sense of administration, was a call to anarchy and highly irresponsible of the
immigration service,” he said.
Omar urged the Federal Government to investigate the NIS and
query the methods it adopted in the job recruitment.
He also asked the government to probe why the NIS collected
“money from hard-pressed applicants”.
Describing this as a
“rogue method of head hunting,” Omar said the current scale of unemployment was
a challenge, which should get the government worried instead of its agencies extorting
money from the unemployed.
He said, “We condemn in the strongest terms possible, the
recruitment protocol adopted by the immigration department. It is grossly
unfair for the immigration department to have invited several thousands of our
youths to physically present themselves to compete to fill a miserly four
thousand vacancies.
“Nothing but crass opportunism can explain this heartless
scam. A more rational and discerning recruitment process could easily have
reduced the numbers by insisting on raising minimum standards.
“The immigration department refused to employ this option in
order to maximise the opportunity to bleed the applicants, each of whom, was
asked to pay N1,000.
“The spectre of over 80,000 youths in a stadium in Abuja,
assembled, not to watch an A- list football match, but rather, challenged by an
epic hunger to have something to do, must break all hearts.”
Also, the Muslims Rights Concern, in a statement in Lagos,
urged the Federal Government to compensate families of the victims.
The MRC statement was signed by its Chairman, Prof. Ishaq
Akintola.
The group also demanded a public apology by the government
to the families of the victims and called for “immediate compensation for the
families of the victims (at least N10m to each of the family of each victim and N15m to the families of the pregnant women who
died).”
The group said that the exercise should be repeated online
as soon as possible.
The MRC noted that the government obviously underestimated
the high rate of unemployment in the country.
PUNCH
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