Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Brazil vs Nigeria friendly cancelled due to Boko Haram

The activities of terror group, Boko Haram, in northern Nigeria have denied the Super Eagles of a high-profile friendly against Brazil.


The Eagles were due to play the former world champions in Nigeria during a FIFA window in September but the recent bombings in some northern states forced the Brazilians to reconsider their proposed visit to Nigeria and sought another African side for the friendly.


The Selacao thus settled for the Bafana Bafana of South Africa, but the match will be played either in Brazil or the USA on September 7.


The Nigeria Football Federation however said the Nigeria versus Brazil friendly would still hold as planned. An official of the football body told The PUNCH that the organisers had not given up on bringing the Samba Boys to Nigeria.


“The friendly has not been cancelled; the organisers are still hopeful of sorting out a few details in order to bring the Brazilians to Nigeria. It is actually Guinness The Match arrangement and the agent that is putting the match together is confident it will hold,” the NFF official said.


Nigeria are looking to play a high-profile friendly as coach Stephen Keshi continue to strengthen the team ahead of their crucial qualifiers for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations and the 2014 World Cup.


The bombings in the north have also affected the hosting of league matches in the region. The Nigeria Premier League was forced to suspend the Week 28 match between Jigawa Golden Stars and Ocean Boys indefinitely due to the crisis in Kaduna. Both sides were scheduled to play in Jigawa on Wednesday.


Ocean Boys were forced to return to Abuja on Tuesday when they turned back from their journey to Dutse, the capital of Jigawa State.


The new date for the match has yet to be decided by the NPL.


PUNCH


Related stories: President Goodluck Jonathan makes way to Brazil for UN Earth Summit


Brazil to Play in Lagos, Nigeria




Kidnapped son of the Secretary to the State Government of Delta freed

Markson Macaulay, son of Secretary to Delta Government, Mr Ovuozourie Macaulay, abducted by suspected kidnappers in Owhelogbo community in Isoko North Local Government Area on Sunday, has been released.


The state Commissioner of Police, Mr Ikechukwu Aduba, made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Asaba.


He said Macaulay was released by his suspected abductors at about 5 p.m. on Tuesday.


Aduba said that the victim was released at Ofoma-Kokori in Ughelli South Local Government Area.


He explained that his release was made easy by the information given to the police by three suspects earlier arrested in connection with the incident.


Aduba said a fourth suspect, a lady, also from Owhelogbo, had also been arrested.


"With the information from the three suspects in our custody, we swung into action, trailing the remaining abductors as they took the boy from one location to another.


"We followed them and when they could no longer withstand the ‘heat’ we unleashed on them, they released him this evening at Ofuoma-Kokori in Ughelli South Local Government Area.


"As we rescued him, we also arrested another suspect, the fourth and a lady, while two of the kidnappers fled,” the commissioner said.


He said that no ransom was paid before the boy was released, stressing that Macaulay’s freedom came “through purely police operation.''


"I repeat and I want to make it clear, no ransom was paid,” he stressed.


Aduba said the command was "tightening all loose ends” in the security network in the state, assuring that with cooperation from the public, criminals would be chased out of the state.


Macaulay, who is a student in a foreign country, was in the village to visit his grandmother.


He was reportedly abducted in front of his father’s house.


Leadership


Related stories: Son of the Secretary to the State Government of Delta kidnapped 


 Former Super Eagle Christian Obodo kidnapped


  


Outrage over President Goodluck Jonathan's trip to brazil during crisis

THE news that President Goodluck Jonathan jetted out of the country amidst violence in Kaduna and Yobe states provoked public outrage on Tuesday.


Jonathan on Monday travelled to Brazil to take part in a United Nations’ Earth Summit, leaving behind killings in Kaduna and Yobe. Opposition parties and other eminent citizens who spoke to The PUNCHon Tuesday described the trip as disappointing.


The House of Representatives also said the President could have delegated the trip to Vice-President Namadi Sambo or any of his senior aides since the trip was “not special or of economic interest.”


The spokesman for the House, Zakari Mohammed, told our correspondent, “A trip like that could have been delegated by Mr. President so that he can stay at home to take charge of security.


“We know that security agencies are supposed to do their job, but we cannot afford to compromise security. If our security is compromised, it is a failure of governance.”


Mohammed added that investors would not come to Nigeria if the country was not safe.


But the Senate said Jonathan was in order since he would need to honour international commitments. Spokesman for the upper legislative chamber, Senator Eyinnaya Abaribe, said it was not the business of the Senate to determine whether Jonathan travelled or not since the Executive and legislature are different arms of government.


The Action Congress of Nigeria, in a statement by his National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, faulted Jonathan’s journey amidst what it described as a “national tragedy.”


“We are constrained to ask whether this President is getting quality advice from a myriad of aides surrounding him, or whether, like his benefactor, Olusegun Obasanjo, he has decided he may not even take any advice from his advisers. In other climes, the usual thing is for leaders to cancel foreign trips or rush home from such trips when their countries suffer tragedies,” the ACN said.


It described the President’s decision to travel “two days after innocent Nigerians, including women and children, were killed as a sign of insensitive and confused leadership.”


The ACN said that Nigeria’s paramount interest should make the President stay at home and oversees efforts to prevent the precarious situation in Kaduna from degenerating into an all-out religious war.


The Congress for Progressive Change also faulted the President, saying it was wrong for him to leave the country at the moment. It said the President’s trip was disappointing.


According to the National Publicity Secretary of the Party, Mr. Rotimi Fashakin, who spoke with one of our correspondents, Jonathan ought to put off his scheduled travel because of the crises in the country.


He said, “President Jonathan got a mandate to defend or enhance the interest of the State, including diplomatic visits. However, it is impolitic for the President to leave the shores of the land at this time for any meeting, irrespective of the emergency situation in the nation.


“There is a dire security challenge in the nation. The President promised the nation that Boko Haram insurgency shall end in June. But with the recent escalation of the problem, that promise of Mr. President appears to be of no effect.”


Lawyer, Itse Sagay, noted that although the constitution permitted the President to travel anytime he wished, the timing of his Brazilian trip was wrong.


Sagay expressed concerns that Jonathan’s pronouncements on the activities of the Boko Haram sect suggested that he had lost control of the situation.


Sagay said, “Honestly, I don’t know. The situation in the country is very serious. He should sit down and face it.


“The impression one has now is that he has lost control; his responses have been weak. We expected something more forceful. We expected a decisive attitude towards a very serious problem.


“I don’t think it is the right time for him to travel because the situation is very critical.”


PUNCH


Related stories: President Goodluck Jonathan makes way to Brazil for UN Earth Summit


24 hour curfew re-imposed in Kaduna as fresh violence breaks out 


Another bloody Sunday - Suicide bombers attack 3 churches as youths launch reprisal 




24 hour curfew re-imposed in Kaduna as fresh violence breaks out

The Kaduna state government has re-imposed the 24 hour curfew it relaxed yesterday.


This follows fresh reports of violence in several areas this morning.


A statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media Reuben Buhari said the curfew affects all the 23 local government areas of the state.


"In view of certain new security challenges that came up today, and based on the need for the state government to continue with its responsibility of safeguarding


the lives and properties of it citizens, the state government is hereby re- imposing a 24 hours curfew in all parts of the state.


"As unpalatable as this decision is the state government is doing it in the best interest of the state. Consequently, everybody is strongly advise to go back home


now, while security agencies continue with the task of ensuring total peace in the state," he said.


Christian and Muslim youths launching reprisal attacks around Tudun Wada, Badarwa, Kawo, Barnawa and others have reportedly burnt cars and houses. There are also yet to be confirmed reports that many people have been killed.


Soldiers have moved into some of the troubled spots to try to restore order but are seriously hampered in their operations because some of the attacks are taking place in streets that are not easily accessible. Military helicopters are also hovering overhead trying to provide support to the soldiers on the ground.


Daily Trust


Related stories: Another bloody Sunday - Suicide bombers attack 3 churches as youths launch reprisal


Suicide bomber attacks church in Jos, Nigeria 




Africa's richest man billionaire Aliko Dangote re-instated as head of Nigeria's stock exchange


Nigerian billionaire Aliko Dangote will assume leadership of the governing board of Nigeria's stock exchange after an appeal court overturned the annulment of his 2009 election.

"We are a law abiding organisation and since the court has reinstated him (Dangote), we will surely abide by that," Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) spokesman Dante Martins said by telephone.

Martins said there would be a meeting of the board on Tuesday and Dangote will be there as its president.

Dangote, Africa's richest man currently with an $11 billion fortune and a cement empire stretching from Senegal to Ethiopia, was elected to head the bourse's board in August 2009.

But just before his tenure was to begin in March 2010, shareholders of a fuel importer Forte Oil Plc obtained a High court ruling preventing him from taking it up.

They had accused the billionaire of manipulating Forte Oil's share price on a day in which it fell the maximum 5 percent allowed. The stock exchange regulator had previously cleared Dangote of any involvement in manipulation, but the court upheld the case against his election nonetheless.

Dangote owns three companies listed on the bourse -- Dangote Cement, which makes up a quarter of the exchange's market capitalisation, Dangote Flour and Dangote Sugar.

Reuters

Related stories: Aliko Dangote's cement company to be listed in London Stock Exchange

Aliko Dangote is Africa's Richest Man

Billionaire Aliko Dangote denies interest in Arsenal investment