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Misappropriation: Rivers Assembly invites EFCC, ICPC to probe Electoral Commission boss

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Rivers State House of Assembly led by Martins Amaewhule, has called on Economics and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offenses Commission, ICPC, to probe the Rivers Electoral Chairman.

Amaewhule made the call during the plenary at the Assembly quarters in Port Harcourt on Wednesday.

The Speaker said that the Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission, RSIEC, Chairman, Justice Adolphus Enebeli (rtd), should be investigated for alleged misappropriation of the Commission’s fund.

According to him, it is the duty of the Rivers State Assembly, which enacted the state Independent Electoral Commission law and set up the State Independent Electoral Commission, to exercise oversight over it.

Amaewhule reiterated that Enebeli and the Commissioners came before the House of Assembly for screening and confirmation and admitted that they were not going to live above the Constitution or the Rivers’ law.

“It is not only constitutional, but it is the convention the world over.

“And it is usually the practice that questions are put forth to them, asking them if they will come before the House when questions are needed to be asked.

“And they also confirmed to us that they will come before the Assembly to answer questions when necessary.

“Today, we are calling on them and they are refusing to honour the summons of this August Assembly,” he said.

He further stated that the House is vested with the powers in Section 128 of the state Constitution to invite the commission for investigation, for the chairman and members to answer questions put forward to them.

According to Amaewhule, it had become necessary for the house to invite the EFCC and ICPC to assist it, in pursuit of its investigative powers, to find out how funds were spent by the commission.

The Speaker said that the crime commissions should also investigate how public funds were expended by the chairman, who is the chief accounting officer of the commission, in a manner that was unknown to the Assembly.

Amaewhule said that there was no approval, no budgetary allocation, no appropriation law, and billions of public funds went down the drain in futile actions.

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The telling sign Trump is walking back his public feud with Canada

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  • PODCAST: A deep dive into the war plans group chat scandal, plus Trump hates his new portrait – on Welcome to MAGAland. Listen here.

President Donald Trump offered warm words against Canada‘s new prime minister even as the two sides continue to trade threats after Trump imposed new tariffs on auto imports.

Trump cited a ‘very good conversation’ with Canadian PM Mark Carney, who said Thursday that the ‘old relationship’ with the U.S. ‘is over.’

Trump on Friday morning wrote that the two men held an ‘extremely productive call’ and that ‘we agree on many things.’

That was a turnaround from many of his posts about former PM Justin Trudeau, who Trump frequently mocked as ‘governor’ amid his repeated public statements about making Canada the 51st state.

Trump didn’t even mention absorbing the U.S. northern neighbor when asked about the latest tariff spat Friday afternoon.

‘We had a very, very good talk,’ he said, citing his morning phone call with the prime minister.

‘He’s going through an election now, and we’ll see what happens. But we are  – we have Liberation Day, as you know, on April 2,’ Trump said – using his phrase for the day he will impose ‘reciprocal’ tariffs on nations around the world.

‘And I’m not referring to Canada, but many countries have taken advantage of us, the likes of which nobody even thought was possible for many, many decades, for decades. And you know, that has to stop. We’re going to end up with a very good relationship with Canada and a lot of the other countries,’ Trump said.

‘We’re going to end up with a very good relationship with Canada and a lot of the other countries,’ Trump said, hours after a phone call with the new Canadian PM. He issued an order to slap a 25% tariff on auto imports Wednesday

 

Those comments appeared to carve out Canada from taking ‘advantage’ of the U.S. That, too, is a change from previous rhetoric. Last week, Trump said: ‘Here’s my problem with Canada … Canada was meant to be the 51st state … We don’t need their cars. We don’t need their lumber … We don’t need their energy. We don’t need anything.’

Trump on Thursday slapped 25 percent tariffs on car and light truck imports. That prompted statements from Carney to hit back with trade actions. Trump said the tariffs won’t go into effect until April 2, in theory providing an opportunity to roll them back.

Speaking on a trip to Greenland, a territory that Trump said the U.S. must have, Vice President J.D. Vance was asked about how Americans should respond amid the anticipated spike in auto prices. ‘We have to have it,’ Trump said.

Vance, a former Ohio senator, used the same language Trump used when he berated Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office.

‘They just don’t have the cards,’ Vance said.

‘That means we’re going to fight back even against some of our friends and their unfair economic practices,’ he said.

Separating auto ‘imports’ from domestic vehicles is challenging, with parts going in both directions across the borders between the U.S., Canada, and Mexico in a continental supply chain.

The U.S. automakers lobbied against the tariffs and secured a one-month pause from Trump before his announcement this week.

‘The Prime Minister informed the President that his government will implement retaliatory tariffs to protect Canadian workers and our economy, following the announcement of additional U.S. trade actions on April 2, 2025,’ Carney’s office said in a statement.

Carney’s Liberal Party has seen its fortunes improve amid the trade clashes with Trump. Canadian hockey fans have even booed during the National Anthem during hockey games.

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BREAKING: INEC Receives Petition to Recall Federal Lawmaker Martins Oke

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Voters in the Igbo-Etiti/Uzo-Uwani Federal Constituency of Enugu State have taken steps to recall their representative in the House of Representatives, Hon. Martins Oke.

Oke is a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

A petition dated March 27, 2025, was submitted to the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), formally requesting Oke’s removal. The petition, signed by Mr. Ugwuagbo Emmanuel Chizoba, Mr. Clinton Ogbonna, Mr. Sabinus Amah, and Mr. Stephen Okenwa, accused the lawmaker of non-performance as the key reason for the recall move.

This comes amid a similar process against Kogi Central Senator, Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan.

On Wednesday, INEC officially notified the suspended senator of her recall proceedings.

 

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President Tinubu using state of emergency to intimidate governors – Amaechi

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Former Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, has accused President Bola Tinubu of using the state of emergency to intimidate governors who may oppose him in the 2027 general election.

Amaechi, speaking with an international media outlet, alleged that the crisis in Rivers State is rooted in a dispute over the sharing of the state’s funds.

He questioned the legality of the state of emergency, suggesting that President Tinubu’s actions are unconstitutional.

He proposed two solutions to address the issue: that People’s Democratic Party (PDP) governors should challenge the suspension in court and that a national protest should be organized to stop what he termed an “illegal suspension.”

Amaechi said, “The fight between the former governor (Wike) and the current governor (Fubara) is about sharing money. The President (Tinubu) acted outside of the constitution.”

The former Minister of Transportation also claimed that President Tinubu and the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory are the masterminds behind the political crisis in Rivers State.

Amaechi emphasized that, as the constitutional head of security, President Tinubu should not shift the blame to suspended Governor Siminalayi Fubara.

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