Wednesday, October 2, 2013

UN, US, others ask Jonathan to arrest terrorists


President Barack Obama
THE United Nations, Unite States of America and others in their message to Nigeria as the nation marks its 53rd Independence anniversary have asked President Goodluck Jonathan to arrest violent elements in the country, especially members of the violent Islamic sect, Boko Haram, Empowered Newswire reports.
The US asked the Nigerian government “to find and bring those responsible for this deplorable violence to justice.”
The UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, also in a statement from the UN Secretariat late on Monday, called for the “the perpetrators to be swiftly brought to justice.”
The Christian Association of Nigerian-Americans similarly wondered how easy it had become for the terrorists to do damage and “simply vanish into thin air even at a time of emergency rule.”
In a statement from the United States Government, released on Monday night US time, the Americans said,  “As Nigeria prepares to celebrate its 53rd year of independence, the United States stands with all Nigerians to reject the heinous violence that continues to be perpetrated by Boko Haram and other extremist groups. These attacks on innocent civilians have no place in a democratic society.”
“Following last week’s heinous attack in Benisheikh, where more than 160 people were shot and slaughtered, this weekend’s attacks in Yobe State took the lives of more than fifty innocent students and civilians. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families and loved ones of those who lost their lives in these senseless acts of violence.”
While commiserating with the Nigerian government and the victims’ families, the US government declared, “We encourage the Government of Nigeria to work together with the families of the victims and affected communities to find and bring those responsible for this deplorable violence to justice, and to enhance the protection of civilians to ensure respect for the rule of law.”
The UN statement from its secretariat in New York said, “The Secretary-General strongly condemns the murder of more than 40 students and the wounding of several others by gunmen at the College of Agriculture in Gujba, Yobe State, northeastern Nigeria.
“The Secretary-General calls for the perpetrators to be swiftly brought to justice and for increasing efforts to be taken to prevent similar attacks and ensure adequate protection of civilians.”
PUNCH

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

'Pregnant' two-year-old boy gives 'birth' after he has parasitic twin removed from inside his stomach

A two-year-old boy from Huaxi, has undergone an operation to give 'birth' after doctors diagnosed him as 'pregnant'.
Xiao Feng, was brought to hospital after his stomach had become so distended that he had begun to suffer breathing difficulties.
Once admitted, doctors took x-rays and MRI scans and discovered that Feng was carrying the undeveloped foteus of his own twin inside his stomach and they rushed him to surgery.
Surgery: The two-year-old boy had his parasitic twin removed from his stomach in a rare case of cryptodidymus or conjoined twins
Surgery: The two-year-old boy had his parasitic twin removed from his stomach in a rare case of cryptodidymus or conjoined twins

The removed foetus measured 20 cm in width and had a fully formed spine and limbs, including fingers and toes.
The parasitic twin would have developed into a boy and had grown so large that almost 2/3rds of his affected twin's stomach was taken up.

Emergency: The two-year-old underwent the surgery recently in Huaxi after he developed breathing difficulties
Emergency: The two-year-old underwent the surgery recently in Huaxi after he developed breathing difficulties
Pain: The feet of the boys's twin can be seen sticking out from the body of the Chinese boy
Pain: The feet of the boys's twin can be seen sticking out from the body of the Chinese boy


Scan: The doctors discovered that the young boy was carrying his own parasitic twin inside his stomach and needed urgent surgery
Scan: The doctors discovered that the young boy was carrying his own parasitic twin inside his stomach and needed urgent surgery

Identical twins form when an egg splits in half after fertilization.
But conjoined twins or foetus-in-foetu siblings occur when the egg fails to fully separate.
Dr Jonathan Fanaroff, a neonatologist at Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital in Cleveland, said some conjoined twins can survive as 'parasites', but not when one twin absorbs the other.
After Surgery: The young child is carried by his mother following the complicated surgery to remove the twin from his stomach
After Surgery: The young child is carried by his mother following the complicated surgery to remove the twin from his stomach
dailymail.co.uk

Transsexual, 44, elects to die by euthanasia after botched sex-change operation turned him into a 'monster'

A Belgian transsexual has chosen to die by euthanasia after a botched sex change operation to complete his transformation into a man left him a 'monster'.
Nathan Verhelst, 44, died yesterday afternoon after being allowed have his life ended on the grounds of 'unbearable psychological suffering'.
It is understood to be the first time someone in Belgium has chosen euthanasia after a sex-change, and comes soon after it emerged that it is now the cause of nearly one in 50 deaths in the country.
Scars
Scarred: Nathan Verhelst, 44, who died yesterday afternoon after finding life unbearable since his sex change operation. The scars from his surgeries on his chest and forearm are visible in this photograph.

Mr Verhelst died after a lethal injection administered by the same doctor who last year ended the lives of congenitally deaf twins who were also going blind.

Born a girl named Nancy, his transformation into a man began with hormone therapy in 2009, followed by a mastectomy and finally an operation to construct a penis last year.
But the procedures did not go according to plan.
In the hours before his death he told Belgium's Het Laatse Nieuws: 'I was ready to celebrate my new birth. But when I looked in the mirror, I was disgusted with myself.
Transsexual
Heartbreaking end: It is understood to be the first time someone in Belgium has chosen euthanasia after a sex-change, and comes soon after it emerged that it is now the cause of nearly one in 50 deaths in the country.

BELGIUM'S CONTROVERSIAL EUTHANASIA LAWS

In 2002 Belgium became the second country in the world, after The Netherlands, to legalise euthanasia.
Since then, an increasing number of people have chosen to die using this method.
In 2012, 1,432 people were allowed to go through assisted suicide indicating a 25 per cent increase in the number of assisted deaths.
Guidelines set out by the country's parliament mean patients wishing to end their own lives must be conscious when they ask to die.
They also have to be under a 'constant and unbearable physical or psychological pain' resulting from an 'accident or incurable illness'.
A survey earlier this year found 32 per cent of assisted deaths are done without request and 47% of the assisted deaths go unreported.
In one case, a 44-year-old woman with chronic anorexia nervosa, an eating disorder, was euthanised, along with a 64-year-old woman who was suffering from chronic depression.
The Belgian parliament is reportedly on the verge of passing legislation that would allow people under 18  to consent to euthanasia.
'My new breasts did not match my expectations and my new penis had symptoms of rejection. I do not want to be... a monster.'
His family learned of his decision this morning via a farewell letter.
Mr Verhelst's decision comes amid a fierce debate over euthanasia in Belgium, where the number of deaths due to the controversial practice soared by 25 per cent last year.'
Official figures showed the numbers opting to end their lives leap from 1,133 in 2011 to 1,432 in 2012, a figure representing about two per cent of all deaths in the country.
Euthanasia is legal under Belgian law if those making the decision can make their wishes clear and are suffering unbearable pain, according to a doctor's judgement.
The Belgian law differs from that of Switzerland, famous for its Dignitas clinic, where only 'assisted suicide' is permitted.
This means patients must play an active role in the administration of the drug that ends their lives.
Wim Distelmans, a cancer specialist who carried out the euthanasia of Mr Verhelst, is the same doctor who last year ended the lives of deaf twins Marc and Eddy Verbessem, who were both going blind.
The 45-year-olds, from the village of Putte, near the city of Mechelen, had lived together their entire adult lives and could not communicate with the outside world.
administering the drug that ends their lives

WHEN THE OPERATION GOES WRONG

Suicide rates among transsexuals and those who have undergone gender reassignment surgery are high with some suggesting the rate may be as high as 31 per cent.
Chris Hyde, professor at the University of Exeter, who has studied the issues surrounding sex change operations, told MailOnline: ‘Research we conducted a decade ago found there is huge uncertainty over whether changing someone's sex is a good or a bad thing.
‘While no doubt great care is taken to ensure that appropriate patients undergo gender reassignment, there's still a large number of people who have the surgery but remain traumatised - often to the point of committing suicide.
‘While we haven’t looked at the situation since then, given the difficulties in researching this area, it is likely that the same issues remain today.’
Their brother, Dirk Verbessem, said at the time that they were terrified of never being able to see each other and feared losing their independence in an institution.
Professor Distelmans agreed to end their lives - again on grounds of 'unbearable psychological suffering' - after their local hospital had denied their request for euthanasia.
Dr Distelmans told the Telegraph: 'The choice of Nathan Verhelst has nothing to do with fatigue of life.
'There are other factors that meant he was in a situation with incurable, unbearable suffering. Unbearable suffering for euthanasia can be both physical and psychological.
'This was a case that clearly met the conditions demanded by the law. Nathan underwent counseling for six months.'
Last week it emerged that a staggering one in 30 deaths in the Netherlands are now from euthanasia, after Dutch government allowed mobile death squads to kill sick and elderly people in their homes.
The country became the first in the world since Nazi Germany to legalise euthanasia when in 2002 it approved doctor-administered lethal drugs for terminally ill people facing unbearable suffering.

Deaf twins chose to die after learning they would go blind

The cancer specialist who euthanised Nathan Verhelst is the same doctor who ended the lives of deaf twins who chose their fate after learning they would soon go blind.

Marc and Eddy Verbessem, pictured below, 45, had lived together their entire adult lives and could not communicate with the outside world.

Their brother, Dirk Verbessem, said they were terrified of never being able to see each other and feared losing their independence in an institution.
Marc and Eddy Verbessem, 45, had lived together their entire adult lives and could not communicate with the outside world
Marc and Eddy Verbessem, 45, had lived together their entire adult lives and could not communicate with the outside world
'That was for my brothers unbearable,' said Mr Verbessem, 46. 'They lived together, did their own cooking and cleaning. You could eat off the floor. Blindness would have made them completely dependent.'
The twins, from the village of Putte, near Mechelen, were told they would go blind from a genetically caused form of glaucoma.
The pair communicated with each other using a special sign language understood only by them and their close family.
They died by lethal injection  at Brussels University Hospital in Jette just before Christmas last year, dressed in new shoes and suits, with Mr Verbessem and their parents, Mary and Remy, by their sides.

Mr Verbessem said: 'Marc and Eddy waved again at us. "Up in the sky," they said. "Up in the sky," we replied. And then it was over.'

dailymail.co.uk


Eight persons, including 11-year-old girl feared drowned in boat accident*Eleven escapes death



JULIANA FRANCIS
There was lamentation today at the Apapa area of Lagos State, as eight persons, including an 11-year-old girl were feared to have drowned as a passenger boat overturned and plunged into the lagoon.
Many of the drowned victims were believed to be fish traders, who were on their way to Apapa from some villages in the riverine areas in the state.
The boat mishap was said to have happened after the passenger boat engine developed fault.
It was gathered that about 19 passengers were on board the boat with eight of them feared killed in the boat mishap and eleven others escaped.
It was also further gathered that the boat passenger boat from Sagbokoji had hardly left the village, when the engine of the boat developed fault.
Some apprehensive villagers and occupants of the boat, who could swim, leaped into the water and returned to the village, while others continued with the journey.
The boat operators managed the faulty boat to Apapa area, where it reportedly stopped and capsized, plunging many occupants into the river.
Local divers and others succeeded in rescuing nine persons with eight others, including an 11-year-old girl drowned.
The acting image maker in charge of the state police command,  Damasus  Ozoani, confirmed the incident, adding that information available to him had it that only two persons were suspected drowned while seven persons were rescued. He added that rescue operation was still ongoing.

Alleged cultist arraigned for killing four



Oriyomi
The police have arraigned 28-year-old suspected cultist, Adigun Oriyomi, before an Ebute Meta Magistrate’s Court for allegedly being responsible for the death of four people during several cult clashes in the Mushin area of Lagos.
It was learnt that Oriyomi led his gang in the Black Axe to confront a rival cult group, on 30 August, 2013.
In the ensuing gun battle, two men – Henry Omonmhenle and Ashy Somade – were killed.
Two other persons, Toheeb Sodiq and Fatai Maja, allegedly sustained permanent gun injury after they were hit in the leg.
It was learnt that after the incident, the Divisional Police Officer was alerted and his men raided the scene of the fight.
Investigation was said to have led to the arrest of Oriyomi.
PUNCH Metro had reported on September 9, that the defendant had in the past, been arrested by the police, charged with murder before another Magistrate’s Court and released through the help of some influential members of the community.
The police told the court on Monday that although the defendant was not arrested with any weapon, he was identified by witnesses and had further made confessional statements.
The six counts read in part, “That you, Adigun Oriyomi, and others at large, on  August 30, 2013, at about 0045hrs, at Martins Street, by Akinyemi Junction, Mushin, Lagos, in the Lagos Magisterial District, did conspire among yourselves to commit felony, to wit; murder and thereby committed an offence punishable under Section 231 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, Nigeria, 2011.
“That you, Adigun Oriyomi, and others at large, on 30 July, 2013 at about 2130hrs, at 43, Ikorodu Road, Jibowu, Lagos in the Lagos Magisterial District, did attempt to unlawfully kill one Fatai Maja, by shooting him with a gun in the leg and thereby committed an offence punishable under Section 228 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, Nigeria, 2011.”
His plea was not taken for the murder charges.
Oriyomi, who appeared in court in a white top and blue jeans, did not have any legal representation.
The prosecutor, Corporal Cyriacus Osuyi, while making application for his remand, said Oriyomi confessed to killing two other people.
He said, “The defendant made a confessional statement that apart from the deceased, he had equally killed one Musibau and one Jummy in 2010, when they had a confraternity conflict in Mushin.
“It is because of these facts that I apply that the defendant be remanded in prison custody sequel to Section 264(1) of the Administration of Criminal Justice, Lagos State, 2011.”
The magistrate, Mrs Y.B Okusanya-Badejo, remanded the defendant in prison pending legal advice from the Directorate of Public Prosecution.
The matter was adjourned till November 19.
PUNCH

Police nab three teenage stowaways at Lagos airport


The teenagers
The Airport Command of the Nigeria Police Force has arrested three teenagers for allegedly attempting to illegally board some international flights in Lagos.
Commissioner of Police for the command, Salahu Waheed, said the suspects, Lateef Popoola, 13; Amadi Joshua, 14; and Ukpabio Onyedikachi, 14, were arrested at different times at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Ikeja.
Waheed, while handing over the suspects to their mothers, said there was a need for their respective state governments to rehabilitate them like the Edo State Government did with teenage stowaway, Daniel Ihekina, who was arrested on August 24, 2013 after sneaking into the tyre compartment of a Lagos-bound Arik plane.
He said, “These boys were found at different times at Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos. Their aim was to get into any plane and travel out of Nigeria.
“I decided to hand them over to their parents so they will be well taken care of and stop dwelling on the fantasy that you can just come into the airport, enter a plane and travel.
“Their state governments should try to rehabilitate them just like Edo State did for the stowaway in Benin.
“Lateef Popoola is from Ogun State; Amadi Joshua is from Ebonyi while Ukpabio Onyedikachi is from Abia State.
“The airport is not a place that you can just come into and travel. There are formalities. We don’t want to see these children here again.”
The teenagers, who spoke to PUNCH Metro, said they had been nursing the idea of travelling abroad, adding that they were not ready to execute their plans yet.
Lateef said he went to the tarmac to observe how aeroplanes take off and land.
He said he was able to gain access to the runaway by sneaking into an airport apron bus, but was arrested shortly after alighting.
He said, “I am not in school, I dropped out in Primary three. I was arrested last week Wednesday. I actually wanted to travel but I have yet to decided where I will go. So, I just went to the tarmac to see the aeroplanes.”
Lateef’s grandmother, Adunni, said she had no idea that her grandson was nursing the idea of travelling out of the country. She said she had been responsible for his upkeep  since his mother abandoned him at infancy.
“I did not know that he wanted to travel. I just did not  see him last week and I started looking for him all over the place. It was on Saturday that I finally found out that he had been arrested,” she said.
Onyedikachi and Joshua were said to have been arrested after asking some security agents where Malaysia flights were boarding.
After being questioned, the boys, who were both in SS1, said they had no travel documents and were immediately arrested.
Police said Onyedikachi’s brother was in Malaysia and it was possible that the teenager wanted to travel out to see his brother.
Onyedikachi, however said, “We were at the departure area of the airport. We did not attempt to travel out. We were just loitering and wanted to see the aeroplanes. We did not want to travel out on that day.”
Onyedikachi’s mother berated her son for his escapade. She said she had warned him and Joshua to be well behaved at all times.
She said, “I had no knowledge of what they did. Onyedikachi is well taken care of and is not suffering. I don’t know what pushed him to do this.”
PUNCH

JONATHAN PRESENTS CERTIFICATES TO 14 NEW OWNERS OF PHCN •WORKERS PROTEST, LOCK OFFICES


AS the country marks 53 years of Independence, President Goodluck Jonathan, on Monday, assured Nigerians that better days are coming.
This was as he handed over share certificates and licenses to 14 generating (GENCOs) and distribution (DISCOs) companies, the successor companies of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), in a ceremony he described as historic.
Performing the ceremony at the State House Banquet Hall, President Jonathan said moving from a government-owned and operated electricity sector to a private sector-driven industry was the right thing to do for the nation’s economy.
The GENCOs handed over to new owners included Geregu, Ughelli, Olorunsogo and Egbin power plants, as well as Kainji and Shiroro hydro electric plants, while the DISCOs were Abuja, Benin, Eko, Ibadan, Ikeja, Jos, Kano, Port Harcourt and Yola.
“For this administration, today’s ceremony is, indeed, a major step forward in our concerted efforts to ensure efficiency, competitiveness and best practices in the country’s electricity sector,” he said.
Recalling that the journey towards the complete privatisation of the power sector began in 1999, the president observed that the process had been adjudged by both local and foreign investors as transparent, well organised and fair.
He said the success recorded so far in the exercise had prompted government to commence the privatisation of the generation assets of the new National Integrated Power Projects (NIPP) of the Niger Delta power Holding Company of Nigeria (NDPHC), jointly owned by the three tiers of government.
The president said indeed, there had been challenges, but such challenges, he, said, were being tackled, especially the payment of severance benefits of the disengaged staff of PHCN.
“To the Nigerian people who have demonstrated such great patience and confidence, putting up often with darkness, noisy power generating sets, the related pollution and the daily disruption in their lives, I say better days are coming.
“Today, we embark on a new journey, a journey that will usher us to a destination of enduring gain and fulfillment,” he said.
He urged labour partners not to feel displaced, tasking them to, instead, dwell on the tremendous possibilities that the revitalisation of the sector would hold for them.
Jonathan expressed confidence that his administration would provide the necessary elements for private sector partners to succeed in providing Nigerians with uninterrupted power supply.
In his remarks on the occasion, Vice President Namadi Sambo, who is the chairman of the National Council on Privatisation (NCP), described the formal handing over as a new beginning, adding that it marked another major landmark in the implementation of the transformation agenda.
“Today, I am proud to say that with the support, encouragement, dogged determination and commitment of President Jonathan, we were able to pull through to this stage of the process,” he said.
Chairman of Mainstream Power, Colonel Sani Bello (retd), who spoke on behalf of the new investors, congratulated the president for overseeing the privatisation process through to a logical conclusion within a reasonable time frame.
Workers protest, lock offices
Workers of PHCN, however, staged a peaceful protest throughout the country, against an alleged non-payment of their severance benefits.
In Abuja, the entrance of the headquarters of PHCN was locked.
The zonal organising secretary of the National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE), while addressing newsmen, said though the union was not against the privatisation of the company, it was, however, disturbed by the decision to go ahead with the official handover of the company to the investors, without resolving all the labour related matters.
According to him, some of the agreements reached between the union and the Hassan Sunmonu-led negotiating team in July 2012 were not observed.
Iworiwa said currently, almost 40 per cent of PHCN staff had not received their severance benefits.
He appealed to the government to reconsider its steps and pay all dues to the workers.
Also, chairman of NUEE,  James Adeyemi, while speaking to the Nigerian Tribune, said the protest was just to send a signal to the government.
“We protested peacefully and would ensure that all PHCN installations be shut down all over Nigeria so that the government can come and ask us what is happening, so that you would know who is lying,” he said.
Adeyemi said only 25 per cent of the workforce had been settled, adding that “the government just paid their severance package, they have not paid the pension, they are supposed to go to Pension Fund Administrators.”
He added that “the investors that are coming cannot inherit our liabilities, because we didn’t work for them. Even if we go to any law court, we can’t win that kind of case.”
In Gombe, PHCN workers locked up the company’s offices in protest.
The workers, carrying placards with various inscriptions, said they would not allow the handover of the company to private investors until their entitlements were settled.
Addressing workers in Gombe, leader of the state NUEE, Mr Yakubu Dung, urged the Federal Government to settle the labour issues.
Also in Kano, the zonal chapter of the NUEE held a peaceful demonstration over the matter.
In a speech, the general-secretary of the union, Mr Joe Ajaero, said the demonstration was because of alleged silence on their entitlements.
Chairman of the Kano chapter of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Malam Yunusa Danguguwa, pledges support to NUEE, saying it was determined to ensure the resolution of the stalemate with the government.
In Ilorin, Kwara State capital, placard-carrying workers locked up the PHCN offices at Challenge and Baboko business units as early as 8.00 a.m, preventing anyone from gaining entrance to the premises.
Also, many unsuspected customers who had come to pay their electricity bills could not do so.
Speaking with the Nigerian Tribune, the vice chairman and the secretary of the union, Aderinto Adekunle and Mr Opeyemi Adeyeye respectively, said outstanding claims of the workers were yet to be paid, more than seven years after the agreement was reached on the issue between the union and the Federal Government.
The NUEE leaders also said hundreds of casual and contract staff were yet to get appointment letters that would facilitate payment of their benefits, adding that they would not allow any take over by the investors until all the benefits were paid.
They promised to ground all activities if their issues were not resolved by tomorrow, saying that 50 per cent of the workers had not received their dues against the claims of the government.
It was a similar situation in Ibadan, Oyo State capital, as PHCN locked up all their offices as early as 8.00 a.m.
From the Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company, Ring Road, to the Dugbe branch office, the workers said they wondered why the Federal Government went ahead and handed over the company to the private investors, while their entitlements were yet to be paid.
Some of the workers, who spoke with the Nigerian Tribune on condition of anonymity, posited that they were on strike and decided to lock up the offices for as long as the Federal Government was ready to pay them.
At Dugbe business unit, the man who manned the main gate informed the Nigerian Tribune that “the Federal Government had failed to fulfil its promise of paying our severance packages, pensions and gratuities. We will not allow any take-over until they pay us.”
At the Ring Road office, some members of staff were locked outside the gate.
In Lagos, workers, led by the general secretary of NUEE, Joe Ajaero, held their protest.
Offices of Eko Electricity Distribution Company and Ikeja Distribution Company were shut down completely by the workers.
Ajaero told the Nigerian Tribune that until all labour-related issues were resolved, the new owners would not have access to the privatised firms.
A visit to the Eko company by the Nigerian Tribune revealed that the workers were aggrieved because the Federal Government had only paid about 25 per cent of its workforce.
The unit chairman of NUEE, Segun Folorunsho, told journalists that the Minister of Power, Professor Chinedu Nebo and the Director-General of Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), Benjamin Dikki, misled the public by saying the workers had been paid.
“We are not saying they should not privatise, but they should honour the agreement with us, by settling all labour matters before new owners take control,” he stated.
PHCN offices in Lagos and Ogun states became deserted by staff, while some offices were occupied by armed policemen and soldiers, to prevent presumed protests by the PHCN staff.
At the undertaking branch at Babio, in Ota, Ogun State, it was not business as usual, as the office was deserted and void of any official activities.
Speaking with one Mr Dare Coker, members of staff embarked on strike based on the fact that a great number of them were yet to be paid off, as promised by the Federal Government.
Nigerian Tribune also gathered that those who had been paid were randomly selected, as several officials were yet to be paid as well.
It was also noticed that people who came to the office for issues such as payment of bills were referred to make payments at banks.
Soldiers take over Lagos office
The PHCN head office at Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos, was deserted, while the premises was occupied by armed soldiers.
Aggrieved workers of PHCN in Osogbo, Osun State capital, locked up gates of their offices in protest on Monday.
Nigerian Tribune reliably gathered that workers in three undertaking offices situated in Osogbo vowed to prevent the handing over of the company by the Federal Government to new investors, citing unpaid severance packages as major reason for their action.
During a visit to undertaking offices of the PHCN on Station Road, Oke-Fia; Osogbo Control Centre, Powerline Osogbo and Ayetoro, gates to the offices were under lock and key.
Credible sources also hinted that PHCN office in other communities such as Ede, Ikirun and Ife were locked by the workers.
Reacting to the development, the public relations officer of Osogbo PHCN business district unit, Mr Timothy Adesanya, said “the workers decided to lock up the gates to PHCN offices because they have not received their severance packages and this action would continue until the Federal Government decides to accede to their demands.”
In Jos, Plateau State, PHCN workers trooped out in their hundreds to protest the non-payment of their severance allowances.
The workers, as early as 9.00 a.m, stormed the zonal office of PHCN on Rwang Pam Street, Jos and disrupted activities at the zonal office for few hours before they were addressed by the zonal organizing secretary of NUEE, North West zone, Anthony Sule.
Speaking with newsmen, Sule said despite several negotiations and assurance, the staff were not fully paid and wondered the handover when not up to 40 per cent of the workers had been paid.
He said the union would protect the interest of its members to the end, adding that it would not allow the handing over until all the entitlements were paid.
Members of NUEE  in Ondo State protested over the handing over of PHCN to private investors.
The protest, though peaceful, was said to have been organised to express grievances of the workers over the failure of the Federal Government to pay their entitlements before the handing over.
The workers locked the gate of the PHCN district headquarters in Akure and warned private investors not to enter into any agreement with the Federal Government until their outstanding entitlements were paid.
Speaking on behalf of the protesters, chairman of Akure chapter of the union, Mr Clement Daudu and the vice president, Senior Staff Association of Electricity and Allied Companies, Mr Neke Nwanchukwu, said the union members would not resume work until their entitlements were paid to them.
Reacting to the development, Minister of Power, Professor Nebo, said the event was unfortunate.
“I think to be just, fair and equitable, they need to get severance packages, but you know that in the civil service, you cannot be severed and be able to retain a pensionable job, so we need to work out the legal ramifications of paying off their severance package,” he said.
The minister said it was not easy to have about N100 million paid easily by any bank, adding that “it would cause a run on the bank, so we have been doing all the due diligence to take care of the problem.”
More jobs for Nigerians at power stations —Okonjo-Iweala
Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, said more jobs would be created for Nigerians from the Zungeru Hydro-Electric Power Project.
Apart from adding 700 megawatts to the national grid, she said the Zungeru Power Project would also create thousands of jobs for Nigerian engineers, technicians and artisans during the construction phase, while it would also boost the local economy in Zungeru as well as its environs.
TRIBUNE