Friday, July 6, 2012

United Nations begins investigation on smuggled weapons between Nigerian and Libya


United Nations has sent a team of experts on Libya to Nigeria to investigate alleged smuggling of weapons into the country.

The Coordinator, United Nation Panel of Experts on Libya, Salim Raad, who led the panel to the Ministry of Interior, said the team was in Nigeria to investigate the alleged smuggling of weapons into Nigeria from Libya.

Salim urged Nigeria to provide report about illegal weapons as the UN has placed sanctions on weapons entering or going out of Libya.

Responding, Interior Minister Comrade Patrick Abba Moro, said considering the security challenges in the country particularly the Boko Haram insurgency, the government cannot rule out the smuggling of weapons into the country from Libya.

He reiterated the resolve of Nigeria to implement UN recommendations on trafficking of arms.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Super Eagles move up in FIFA rankings


The Super Eagles of Nigeria has moved two spots from 60 to 58 in the latest FIFA rankings released yesterday by the World football governing body. Nigeria has also moved into the top 10 ranked sides in Africa. During the past month, Nigeria recorded a lone goal victory over Namibia and a goalless draw against Malawi both in 2014 World Cup qualifying games.


Then the Eagles defeated Rwanda 2-0 in the Africa Nations Cup qualifier to book a place in the draws for the 2013 editions today. Ivory Coast still remains the number one ranked team in Africa and 16 in the world. Followed by Ghana which is 33rd in the world.


Spain which won their third consecutive international title in the just concluded European championship maintained their first position while finalists Italy moved six places from 12 to six. Semi-finalists Portugal also moved five places from 10 to fifth position while the other semi finalists Germany are now second.



Despite England's disappointing Euros they moved two places from sixth to fourth while Holland which exited at the first round in the Euros without a single point slipped down four places from fourth to eight. Brazil is in the lowest position since the inception of the FIFA rankings as they are 11 down and out of the first 10 for the first time.


A total of 133 international 'A' matches have been played in recent weeks, made up of 31 EURO 2012 matches, 60 qualifiers for the 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazilâ„¢, 15 CAF Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers, and 27 friendlies.


Africa's top 15


1 Cote D'Ivoire (16)


2 Ghana (33)


3 Algeria (35)


4 Libya (39)


5 Mali (40)


6 Zambia (41)


7 Egypt (42)


8 Tunisia (43)


9 Gabon (45)


10 Nigeria (58)

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Americans living in Nigeria warned of Independence Day threat

The US embassy in Nigeria on Wednesday warned its citizens about threats to American targets through the independence holiday week in the west African country grappling with an Islamist insurgency.


"The U.S. Mission in Nigeria is issuing this emergency message to inform U.S. citizens of potential threats against U.S. installations during the July 4 holiday week," said a statement posted on the embassy's website.


Nigeria's capital Abuja was hit by fresh violence late on Tuesday, when a blast went off outside a shopping centre popular with both foreigners and locals.


US citizens in Abuja remain barred from visiting places of worship as well as nearby commercial establishments and must return to their homes by midnight, according to the embassy statement.


The Boko Haram Islamist group, responsible for scores of attacks in recent months, has repeatedly attacked churches, typically on Sundays and holidays.


The embassy "is working with the government of Nigeria to implement additional security measures," through the July 4 holiday week, the statement also said.


Last month, Washington designated three Boko Haram leaders as global terrorists, a move it said was aimed to help stem the violence in Nigeria.


Boko Haram, which has previously threatened to strike US interests, has claimed attacks that have killed more than 1,000 people since the middle of 2009.


AFP


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Nigerian Rotimi Babatunde wins Africa's top literary prize


Described as Africa's leading literary award, the 2012 Caine Prize for African Writing has been awarded to Nigerian Rotimi Babatunde for his short story entitled Bombay's Republic published in the Mirabilia Review.


Chair of the judging panel, Bernardine Evaristo announced Babatunde as the winner of the £10 000 prize at an awards dinner held on the evening of Monday, 2 July 2012, at the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom.


Evaristo said, "Bombay's Republic vividly describes the story of a Nigerian soldier fighting in the Burma campaign of World War Two. It is ambitious, darkly humorous and in soaring, scorching prose exposes the exploitative nature of the colonial project and the psychology of independence."


Babatunde's fiction and poems have been published in Africa, Europe and America in journals which includeDie Aussenseite des Elementes and Fiction on the Web and in anthologies. He is a winner of the Meridian Tragic Love Story Competition organised by the BBC World Service and his plays have been staged and presented by institutions which include the Halcyon Theatre, Chicago and the Institute for Contemporary Arts. He is currently taking part in a collaboratively produced piece at the Royal Court and the Young Vic as part of World Stages for a World City. Rotimi lives in Ibadan, Nigeria.


Also shortlisted were:



  • Billy Kahora from Kenya for Urban Zoning

  • Stanley Kenani from Malawi for Love on Trial

  • Melissa Tandiwe Myambo from Zimbabwe for La Salle de Départ

  • Constance Myburgh from South Africa for Hunter Emmanuel


Alongside Evaristo on the panel of judges this year included cultural journalist, Maya Jaggi; Zimbabwean poet, songwriter and writer Chirikure Chirikure; associate professor at Georgetown University, Washington DC, Samantha Pinto; and the Sudanese CNN television correspondent, Nima Elbagir.


As the winner, Babatunde will be given the opportunity of taking up a month's residence at Georgetown University, as a writer-in-residence at the Lannan Center for Poetics and Social Practice. The award covers all travel and living expenses and will also be invited to take part in the Open Book Festival in Cape Town in September 2012 and events hosted by the Museum of African Art in New York in November 2012.


Previous winners


Last years' winner, Zimbabwean writer NoViolet Bulawayo has subsequently been awarded the highly regarded two-year Stegner Writing Fellowship at Stanford University, in the United States.


Previous winners are Sudan's Leila Aboulela (2000), Nigerian Helon Habila (2001), Kenyan Binyavanga Wainaina (2002), Kenyan Yvonne Owuor (2003), Zimbabwean Brian Chikwava (2004), Nigerian Segun Afolabi (2005), South African Mary Watson (2006), Ugandan Monica Arac de Nyeko (2007), South African Henrietta Rose-Innes (2008), Nigerian EC Osondu (2009) and Sierra Leonean Olufemi Terry (2010).


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Compensation begins for the bereaved families of Dana Air victims

About nine families of the 153 persons who died in the June 3 Dana air crash, Tuesday collected part payment as compensation from the airline as stipulated by the conventions guiding the aviation sector.


The payment also came on a day the airline received completed insurance forms for 68 victims, four of which were members of staff of the company and had been submitted for verification.


Also, the airline presented cheques Tuesday to the displaced residents of Iju-Ishaga, an outskirt of Lagos, who were affected by the crash as part of efforts to ensure their proper rehabilitation.


Confirming the payment, Dana Head of Corporate Communications, Mr. Tony Usidamen, said the airline was fully aware of the mandatory requirement by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) and the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), for interim benefits to be paid to the families of the victims within 30 days of the accident.


Accordingly, he said the airline's lead underwriter in Nigeria had begun the compensation process by issuing interim benefit cheques to nine claimants yesterday, following the legal verification of their documentation and next of kin status.


While advising claimants to come to the chambers of Yomi Oshikoya & Co, appointed by the insurers in Lagos, in order to conclude advance payment formalities, Usidamen however said the airline was in contact with all other families who have submitted relevant documents to the airline's Crisis Management Centre (CMC) in Lagos and Abuja. Admitting that some of the bereaved families were yet to come to submit their document because they were still mourning, the airline said advance payment claims would be concluded on case by case basis as at when claimants find it convenient to come forward. He said: "We appreciate that the statutory payments cannot compensate for any of the precious lives lost in the accident but we hope that it will lessen the pains of the families knowing that they are not alone in these extremely difficult times.


"Dana Air shares in the pains of the affected families and continues to offer every form of assistance required by the hospital management and overseas laboratory to ensure that the process is completed as soon as possible, so that the families can lay their loved ones to rest.


"Depending on the update from the Chief Medical Director of Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Prof Wale Oke, on Monday, more DNA samples have been collected and will be sent to the United Kingdom for testing shortly."


While noting that investigations are ongoing, he said the airline will continue to co-operate fully with and offer all support to the investigating authorities. However when contacted, Mr. Mike Uchegbu, who lost his brother, Chukwuebuka, in the crash said he was not aware of any compensation by the airline, neither could he identify any other family that has been paid.


He said: "I don't know if people were compensated as the airline is claiming because my family did not receive any payment from them. They cannot say we have not finished documentation because everything required document is with them.


"You just informed me that nine families have been compensated but what is that minute number compared to the higher number of persons that dies in the crash? By law, the families are supposed to be compensated within 30 days and yesterday marked a month of the crash."


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