Monday, March 12, 2012

President Goodluck Jonathan condemns church attack


Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan has condemned Sunday's bombing at a Catholic church and reaffirmed his government's determination "to end the spate of mindless attacks and killings".



The comments came a day a suicide car bomber attacked St Finbar's Catholic Church in Jos, killing at least four people and touching off retaliatory violence that claimed an additional 10 lives. 

 

The bomb exploded as worshippers attended the final Mass of the day in Jos, a city where thousands have died in the last decade in religious and ethnic violence.

Security at the gate of the church's compound stopped the suspicious car and the bomber detonated his explosives during an altercation that followed, Pam Ayuba, Plateau state spokesman, said.


Several soldiers were also wounded in the blast.


The bombing sparked retaliatory violence in Jos later on Sunday, with angry youths burning down homes and soldiers guarding the city opening fire in neighbourhoods, witnesses said.


No group immediately claimed responsibility though the city has been targeted in the past by a radical Islamist group known as Boko Haram.


Jos lies in the so-called middle belt region dividing the mainly Muslim north and predominantly Christian south, and hundreds of people have been killed in clashes in the city between Muslim and Christian ethnic groups in recent years.


Boko Haram claimed a series of bombings in Jos on Christmas Eve in 2010 that killed as many as 80 people.


The group also claimed a similar church bombing on February 26 on the main headquarters of the Church of Christ, which killed three people and wounded 38 others.


Al Jazeera's Yvonne Ndege, reporting from Lagos, said that the bombings have the hallmark of Boko Haram, though no one has claimed responsibility for the attack.


"Bomb blasts are becoming a weekly occurrence in Nigeria and people in the affected states are feeling increasingly vulnerable," she said.

Violence blamed on Boko Haram has since 2009 has claimed more than 1,000 lives, including more than 300 this year, according to figures tallied by the AFP news agency and rights groups.


Aljazeera


Related stories:  Video - Anti-bomb squad member gets blown up by Boko Haram IED 


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Friday, March 9, 2012

President Goodluck Jonathan condemns killing of hostages, Kidnappers arrested

President Gooodluck Jonathan has condemned the killing of two kidnapped foreigners - an Italian, Franco Lamolinara, and a Briton, Chris McManus, in Sokoto State on Thursday, March 8, by their Boko Haram captors before they could be rescued by a joint security raid on the kidnappers' hideout.


Describing their death as "sad, unfortunate and regrettable", the President on behalf of the Nigerian government and on his own behalf, extended heartfelt condolences to the families of the bereaved and the people and government of Italy and Britain.


The President, who particularly commended the cooperation and understanding of the British and Italian governments, assured that the perpetrators of the murderous act, who have all been arrested, would be made to face the full wrath of the law.


President Jonathan also assured that the Nigerian government would take every necessary step to protect the lives of foreigners in the country.


Nigeria First


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Thursday, March 8, 2012

British and Italian hostages killed in Nigeria during failed rescue attempt

A Briton and an Italian held hostage in Nigeria were killed by their captors before they could be freed by a rescue mission, Prime Minister David Cameron said on Thursday.


Cameron said he had authorised the failed operation, conducted with the Nigerian government, after being told the men's lives were in "imminent and growing danger".


Cameron said Briton Chris McManus and Italian Franco Lamolinara had been taken hostage in Northern Nigeria in May 2011.


"Preparations were made to mount an operation to attempt to rescue Chris and Franco. Together with the Nigerian government, today I authorised it to go ahead, with UK support," Cameron said.


"It is with great regret that I have to say that both Chris and Franco have lost their lives.


"We are still awaiting confirmation of the details, but the early indications are clear that both men were murdered by their captors, before they could be rescued," he said.


In August a video of the hostages surfaced in the Nigerian capital Abuja with the two men on their knees and blindfolded, with three men wearing turbans and holding guns and ammunition behind them.


"The terrorists holding the two hostages made very clear threats to take their lives, including in a video that was posted on the internet," Cameron said.


"We also had reason to believe that their lives were under imminent and growing danger," he added.


The Italian government said it had only been informed about the rescue bid after it had begun. It said Cameron had called Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti to inform him of the "tragic conclusion" of the operation.


Reuters


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Nigeria deports 42 South Africans

The Federal Government yesterday continued to match its words with action by repatriating 42 South African, who had arrived the country.


Yesterday's deportation brought the number of South Africans who had been deported to 136. The deportation row between Nigeria and South Africa deepened, following the deportation of 125 Nigerians by the South African government last Friday.


THISDAY gathered that the 42 South Africans were deported on board a South African Airways flight 060. However, in an apparent move to retaliate same action, the South African authorities deported five Nigerians-two on board an Arik Air, while the other three were on board a South African Airways.


Nigeria decided to respond on equal measure to the hostile attitude of the South African authorities, following the many reports of how the country maltreated Nigerians who travelled there.


An Immigration official who spoke to THISDAY, before the arrival of South Africa Airways flight, said the Service had not received any directive to back down on the decision of government to deport South Africans who did not meet Immigration conditions of Nigeria.


So immediately the aircraft arrived, the Immigration officials promptly carried out checks and deported the 42 South Africans who did not meet the stipulated conditions.


Last Friday 125 Nigerians were forced back to the country on the allegation of not having authentic yellow fever documentation that showed that they were inoculated against the disease.


The action of South African authorities was seen by Nigerians as hostile because they did not carry out well known diplomatic procedure before deporting those Nigerians there is no indication that yellow fever is prevalent in Nigeria as World Health Organisation (WHO) had designated Nigeria as yellow fever free. Clarifying on the issue, Minister of Health, Professor Onyebuchi Chukwu, had said there was no report of the disease in the country since the past 13 years.


According to the Immigration official who spoke to THISDAY, the action Nigeria decided to take on the issue was instructive because "by reciprocating their action it shows that nobody has all the wherewithal. If they are educated they would have known that everybody that has South African visa must have been vaccinated of the disease."


At the diplomatic level, both countries have been meeting to resolve the matter and also after a crucial meeting on Monday, top officials in aviation agencies and organisation, including South African Airways and Arik Air, which operates to the country decided that they would send emissaries to know that was actually the problem which has led to a soured relationship between the two countries that are the bastion of hope in the continent.


This Day


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South Africa gives Nigeria apology for mass deportation

The Governments of the Republic of South Africa and the Federal Republic of Nigeria are considering implementing a variety of measures to strengthen the historic bilateral relationship between the two sister African countries.


South Africa and Nigeria have long-standing bilateral relations. The two countries share a common commitment to the unity and prosperity of the African continent as well as a just and equitable world – and we continue to work together at various levels to achieve this common objective.


Notwithstanding the above, recent unfortunate events involving immigration matters may have created contrary impressions.


On 02 March 2012, a total of 125 Nigerian citizens were deported from the OR Tambo International Airport (ORTIA) for allegedly being in position of fraudulent yellow fever vaccine certificates.


On this particular day, there was an operation at OR Tambo International Airport to check all passengers arriving from countries which require yellow fever certificates.


Subsequent to that, 28 South African citizens were deported from Lagos, Nigeria, after arriving at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport on a South African Airways flight in the evening of 05 March 2012.


The passengers were deported on grounds of invalid documentation and relevant health certificate clearance. Some passengers were also asked for their letters of invitation, stating their reason for visiting Nigeria.


The governments of South Africa and Nigeria view these developments in a serious light. Accordingly, the two countries have, through diplomatic channels, consulted at the highest levels on ways of avoiding a recurrence of such developments.


Furthermore, the South African government has sent a letter of apology to the Nigerian government following this regrettable incident which the South African government believes could have been handled better.


Amongst other things, the two countries agree that:


1. The Bi-National Commission between South Africa and Nigeria should be revived as soon as possible. There is also agreement that the Immigration Working Group should also be revived.


2. The National Department of Health and the Gauteng Health Department should consider re-opening the vaccination clinic at the OR Tambo International Airport so that passengers without the yellow fever card can be vaccinated upon arrival at the airport, rather than be deported.


3. The South African and Nigerian Health authorities would exchange vaccine batch numbers and details about the official institutions that administer the vaccine for verification purposes at the port of entry. This information would also be made available to the Missions in Lagos and Abuja who issue visas based on the proof of a yellow fever certificate. The airlines will also be informed about the verification process.


4. Immigration officials should be the first officials that deal with the passengers at the port of entry and if they experience challenges, they should invite other units (such as health) to help and not the other way round.


5. When it comes to mass deportations, it was agreed that senior officials at the Department of International Relations and Cooperation (including Protocol) should be consulted by Immigration and Health officials at the airport before undertaking such action. This will provide the Senior Officials to consult with the Department before deporting large numbers of people.


We believe that these measures, when fully implemented, will address the current immigration challenges affecting citizens from the two sister African countries and help us avoid a recurrence of the regrettable incidences we have seen recently.


Related stories: Nigeria criticizes South Africa deporting 125 Nigerians


South Africa deports 125 Nigerians


Nigeria deports 25 Chinese



Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Chevron gas rig accidental fire stops burning after 46 days

 


The fire from an explosion at a new gas well head at Funawa 5 gas platform on the drilling rig KS Endeavour operated by Chevron Nigeria Limited in Bayelsa State has gone out after 46 days of its rage.


Chevron said the fire that killed two workers and destroyed a gas exploration rig off Nigeria's south-east coast stopped burning by itself after rock fragments within the underground natural gas well sealed off the leak.


According to a report on the BBC yesterday, the US oil and gas firm said it would continue work to permanently plug the well back. One month on, flames were reported to be as high as five metres, while the fire burned for 46 days uninterrupted.


Friends of the Earth which said the fire outbreak was the world's worst such accident in recent years, welcomed the news. It however urged Chevron to compensate local Nigerian fishermen for income lost while the fire burned.


Chevron said it would monitor any new gas flow, and once it was declared safe, abandon the problematic well in the next few months.


The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) had stated that a major build-up of gas pressure from the drilling had caused the explosion that set the KS Endeavour rig on fire in the middle of January.


Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, had in the wake of the outbreak, taken stock of the situation at the site along the Koluama River in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area of Bayelsa State.


Her visit had helped the Federal Government establish an on-the-spot evaluation of the condition of the gas leak site in view of its willingness to address the issues of environmental pollution wreaked by the exploration and exploitation of oil and gas resources in the country, especially in the Niger Delta region.


Alison-Madueke's visit was immediately followed by that of President Goodluck Jonathan who was equally accompanied by the Minister of Environment, Mrs. Hadiza Ibrahim Mailafa where he assured angry residents of the community of adequate compensation by the government. Jonathan had said that he is aware of the communities concerns and the impact of the Chevron fire on the environment.


The flames had burned as high as five metres (16ft 4in) in a 40 metre-wide area on the surface of the Atlantic Ocean, 10 kilometres (6 miles) away from the Niger Delta. The fire had not caused any oil spillage, but according to Chevron, scientists are conducting tests to see whether local food and water was contaminated by the gas.


This Day


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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Chevron gas rig explosion is killing the Koluama Community

When Vanguard visited Koluama I, Koluama 2, Temazau, Ebidouama and other communities in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area of Bayelsa State, which were affected by the January 16, 2012 explosion of a gas rig, K.S Endeavour (Panama), near the North Apoi platform/field, west of the Funiwa field, on Wednesday, February 22, it was observed that neither the Chevron Nigeria Limited, CNL, operator of the rig nor the Federal Government, had undoubtedly evaluated the environmental, health and economic implications of the disaster on the people.


Though, the gas wellhead was still burning on February 22 when our reporters visited, that is 37 days after the explosion, the fire had considerably ebbed due to the well drilled by CNL to eat away the combustion.


From Olobia, a sub-community under Koluama II, about five nautical miles from the blazing rig, Vanguard was taken to the tip of the Atlantic Ocean by the vice chairman of Koluama II Council of Chiefs, Chief G. Ekuere-Goli and other leaders, where reporters inspected the conflagration.


For the workers of Fode Drilling Limited, a company contracted by CNL to drill gas at the location, approximately 10 kilometres, off the coast of Nigeria, it is nothing short of a miracle for any of them that survived the massive gas fire. Two of the workers, however, died in the explosion and their remains had not been found.


The chairman, Koluama I, Council of Chiefs, Chief Christian Mungha Bofa-Akpele told Vanguard that the West-African country of Gabon is very close and oftentimes, Koluama indigenes travel to Gabon to do business because Yenagoa, the capital of Bayelsa State is farther from them.


Giving a brief history of the North Apoi and Funiwa oil fields, the traditional ruler of Koluama I, HRH N.E. Ogboin-Mienye said, "It is interesting to note that the first off-shore oil well in this area was struck within the same location, OPL 247, of the explosion by American Overseas Petroleum Limited, AMOSEAS, in 1963. This discovery was reported by the West African Pilot Newspaper of Saturday, September 21, 1963.


An operational licence on OPL 247 was originally granted to Texaco Overseas (Nigeria) Petroleum Company by the Federal Government of Nigeria on April 1, 1975 for the period of 20 years at the relevant Deeds Registry, where it was registered at the time".


"This initial licence was for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating an oil pipeline and approved ancillary installations. This licence expired sometime in 1995 and has since been renewed. However, we do not have copies of the renewed lease for this licence", he said, demanding that the copies of the renewed licence, which was transferred to Chevron Nigeria Limited after the merger of the two companies in the recent past was not made available to the community", he asserted."


Communities express anger over Petroleum Minister's hasty visit


However, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, visited Koluama II last month. She pledged the commitment of the Federal Government to provide lasting solution to the incidents of environmental pollution caused by exploration and production of oil and gas, especially in the Niger Delta region of the country.


But vice chairman of Koluama 2 Council of Chiefs, Chief Ekuere-Goli told Vanguard that the minister was in a hurry when she visited and did not even have time to undertake a tour of the community to see the impact of the explosion on the people.


Chief Bofa-Akpele was incensed that the minister did not bother to come to the community when Vanguard arrived at Koluama I.


A government source, however, said the Minister made an over-fly of eight host communities, spread across Southern Ijaw and Brass Local Government Areas, namely, Koluama 1, Koluma 11, Ekeni, Foropa, Fishtown, Ezetu 1, Ezetu 11 and Sanga.


Mrs. Alison-Madueke stated the readiness of the Petroleum Ministry to galvanise the International Oil Companies, IOCs, as well as the host communities, to ensure that the operating environment is made safe for all concerned in line with international best practice.


In her words: "We have done the aerial survey, we have seen, and also heard from the community leaders and youths; the next thing is to report back to the President and within the next one week to provide response to the community leaders".


Jonathan gives marching orders on relief materials


President Jonathan came himself, Monday, February 27; five days after Vanguard visited the community. He promised to ensure that relief materials and other needs were sent to the people of Koluama community.


Like his minister earlier did, he reiterated the commitment of his administration to environmental management, promising to ensure that erosion and desertification would be checked from the Niger Delta to the Northern parts of the country.


The president also noted that the Federal Government has agencies that will ensure that relief materials were sent to Koluama people and called on the oil companies to follow suit. He promised the communities that the Nigeria Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, will facilitate deployment of more relief materials to them.


He commended them for showing restraint, tact and discipline in the way and manner they have channeled their grievances and assured that government would do its best to address their complaints.


President Jonathan also enjoined Chevron to provide more relief materials and other sundry relief items to the people. He urged oil companies operating in the country to undertake training of personnel, especially residents of communities within their operational base as part of its compensation and corporate responsibility to the people.


President Jonathan was accompanied to Koluama by Bayelsa State Governor, Mr Seriake Dickson, Ministers of Petroleum, Deziani Allison-Madueke, Environment, Hadiza Malaifia and Niger-Delta, Elder Godsday Orubebe.


Oil companies should preserve ecological system - Dickson


Bayelsa State Governor, Seriake Dickson said the state has been exposed to risk due to activities of oil companies operating within its communities and asked that the companies learn to respect their environment in order to ensure the preservation of the nation's ecological system.


He further disclosed that his administration has set up legal and technical committees to harmonise assessment reports conducted.


Speaking on behalf of the communities, former Bayelsa State House of Assembly member, Honorable Ayaowei listed problems facing the people resulting from the gas explosion to include inability to continue with their fishing businesses, lack of portable drinking water, medical care and electricity, as well as lack of access roads to link the communities.


Chevron Managing Director, Andrew Fawthrop while regretting the incident, promised that the company will commence community and medical development works in the communities soon.


Our real fear - Koluama communities


The real distress of the people, which is the fear that the colossal blast that rocked the underpinnings of their homes could lead to their communities being washed away, has not been apprehended by government and the oil company.


In the words of His Royal Highness, N.E. Ogboin-Mienye, the Amananawei of Koluama II: "The massive explosions shook the foundations of houses in the community, Olobia, Foniweiama, Kiriseigha, Kulaiama, Tikpama, Abikeiwei, etc in Koluama clan.


The story that re-echoed in all the communities of Koluama, which Vanguard visited was the Shell D' Archy explosion in 1953 during the course of seismic activities for oil and gas in the area. They said the ancient Koluama was wiped out as a result of that incident.


According to a community leader, "Koluama used to be one large clan before but because of the 1953 explosion, the clan went under water and that brought about separation of the different communities under it.


Besides the 1953 explosion, there was also a Funiwa (well 5) blow out on January 17, 1980. The Amananawei of Koluama II said, "It is very sad to mention that we suffered the same, if not a worst fate during the incident. The government and Texaco, which was operating the Funiwa oil field as at then, responded very late.


So, the entire Koluama clan is gripped with mortal fear of being wiped away as a result of the January 16 explosion, this time, a case of massive rig fire from Chevron, which took over from Texaco.


Day of incident in Koluama I - Chief Bofa-Akpele, Koluama II


There was a heavy rainfall on February 22, which caught up with the Vanguard team around Igbomotoru I. We had taken off at 8.30 am on that day from Swali market waterside and got to Koluama in the afternoon.


We were received by the community chairman, Chief Bofa-Akpele, who narrated that the people were jolted from their sleep between 4.00 am and 5.00 am by a loud explosion that shook their buildings in the community and neighbouring towns.


"We were frightened, many of us panicked, everybody ran helter-skelter, not knowing the cause of what happened. Later, we found out that it was a massive fire from the rig of our tenant, CNL, at where the company is working in North Apoi platform. As I speak to you now, the fire is still burning.


Our woes


"And since that day, we have been having many problems. We are fishermen; our livelihood is threatened as a result of this explosion. We don't see fish to kill any more; dead fishes are floating here and there on Koluama River. Our river empties in the Atlantic Ocean; you don't fish in our river.


"Many of us have got strange sickness since the gas fire, some have lost their lives and there is no medical team, no treatment of any sort anywhere by Chevron, we are grounded.


"Some people who manage to catch fish at all are afraid to eat them because it is poisonous to us since over a month that our river was poisoned", he asserted.


Chief Bofa-Akpele explained, "Koluama is a kingdom made up of many communities before the 1953 seismic operation in which dynamites that were used by an oil company washed the ancient Koluama. Where they call offshore now is where we use to have the ancient Koluama".


"You can see our community, there is nothing to write home about, the Federal Government takes 40 per cent and the oil company takes 40 per cent, leaving us with nothing", he said.


A community source who shed light on the 1953 tragedy said, "The estuary you see there is what was left of the ancient Koluama, it was washed away, it used to be one community, but now, you hear Koluama I and Koluama II. The little land there is less than 25 metres and that is our fear, the sea is encroaching on us because of seismic activities and our fear is that very soon, our villages will be washed away".


"We have embarkment done by the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC. The cottage hospital in the community was built by Texaco-Chevron, but it is not equipped, no staff and it is not functioning", he added.


On the health challenges since the explosion, he said, "As at now, the air we are breathing now is choking, it is different, we know what we are feeling, we have been asking Chevron to come with medical assistance but they have not come, they only brought us small food to share.


Chief Bofa-Akpele gave the names of the two persons that died as a result of ailments purportedly connected to the explosion as Mrs. Napoleon and Madam F. Olale.


As at the day we visited, more than a month after the tragedy, he said, "Only few bags of rice, 50 kg bags of garri, few cartons of ice fish and chicken were brought to us as relief materials. At the moment, we want Chevron and government to bring us enough relief materials to sustain us, not what will not be enough for us to use as taste".


Social amenities in Koluama 2


"We have been having it very rough", he recounted, pointing out that in Koluama II, "Chevron provided us a generator plant before now but we don't have money to buy diesel to power it and we don't have water to drink. We get water to drink from dug up wells. We have a primary and secondary school that are not well furnished, no laboratories and no teachers' quarters for the few teachers.


"Teachers are like luxury items here because they prefer to stay in urban areas where there is amenities of life than in a place where there is no light, no water and from Yenagoa to this place is about a three-hour journey", he said.


Do women deliver in the hospital since it is not equipped? He said, "God is the One that is saving us, we have our local way of delivery and if you want to go to Yenagoa, somebody can even die before he gets there. Last year, there was a case in which one of my relations got burnt in a kerosene explosion, she died on the way and we had to bring her back for burial".


On staffing of the cottage hospital, he quipped, "We only have a health officer there".


Why we stormed Chevron office


The health officer, Mrs. Edi Epowoitei, who is the wife of the clan head told Vanguard, "Since the explosion occurred, we have not been able to do anything and because the Atlantic Ocean water flow into our river, we are now redundant, sitting down at home with no work, you know our occupation is fishing".


"What they brought to us since the incident in January are some bags of rice, garri and few other things only. That was why we went to protest against Chevron in Warri. Our plan is that since they have stopped our means of livelihood, they should take the responsibility of feeding us.


"Now, ailments such as pneumonia, vomiting, stomach pains, acute asthma are prevalent in the community as a result of the polluted air. We can't eat fish from our river any more. We now send people to Yenagoa to buy ice fish for us to cook, can you imagine, we that are fishermen and women. Fire is still burning in the place, they are yet to put it off, the emissions are affecting our breathing.


"About four or five days ago, somebody came from Port-Harcourt to this place, he came to build a house, but because of the gaseous emissions in the air, his nose was running blood, before then, we observed that most of our children were having such experience, we don't know how long these things will continue, we require urgent help, there are radioactive substances everywhere", she said.


She confirmed that there were no drugs in the health centre, adding, "We have applied for a doctor to be posted to us, but they did not give us doctor".


Mrs. Epowoitei said the women of Koluama II rejected the one plate of garri and one plate of rice each that was shared to them as relief material because it was an insult.


NYSC members lend credence


Two National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, members, Ibama Johnson and Joseph and Popoola Oluwatusin, who Vanguard met in Koluama II said the effect of the rig fire was devastating on the people.


According to Ibama, "it is extremely affecting our health here, there is no drinking water, it affected the fishes, and we can't even drink the rain water because of the fear of the content as a result of the explosion".


Oluwatunsi, who has been in Koluama II for eight months said, "It is an unfortunate incident, it affected us in many ways. Fishes are dying in the river as a result of the effect of the gas fire, when the deputy governor came here, he saw how people were lying down on the sick bed in the hospital, the doctors that came from a Non Governmental Organisation were even afraid to attend to them, when you breathe in here, you are breathing poisonous gas".


"We are surviving here for now by trying to avoid some food we suspect will not be good in our system. We avoid cooking soup since then because we don't want to eat fish from the river here and develop one sickness later. Rather, we eat Indomie", he said.


Vanguard


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Monday, March 5, 2012

IT Crowd's Richard Ayoade giving geekdom a new dimension


Richard Ayoade was born in 1977 to a Nigerian father and Norwegian mother and was educated at St. Catharine's College, Cambridge. Other than being an English comedian and actor, he has also tried a hand in music-related film directing. While at Cambridge, he became president of the prestigious Footlights.


In 2000, he appeared on Garth Marenghi's Fright Knight, a show he co-wrote with Matthew Holness. The show was nominated for a Perrier Award and a year later its sequel which he also co-wrote, won the Perrier Comedy Award. He and Holness took the Marenghi character to Channel 4 later on, and this spawned the spoof horror comedy series Garth Marenghi's Darkplace.


His stage appearances include those in The Mighty Boosh where he played the dangerous villain Dixon Bainbridge. In 2005, he appeared in Nathan Barley as Ned Smanks. He later gained even more recognition in Britain, when he played Maurice Moss on Channel 4's The IT Crowd. He later reprised the role in the American version, produced by the NBC network. Ayoade's role is that of a computer geek who happens to be friends with another computer nerd.


Together they make up the IT function of a small company which banishes them to the basement of their building. Their lives pretty much revolve around technology until they meet Jen, an attractive woman who knows how to make people listen to what she has to say. Little by little she teaches them how to live their lives to the fullest and make the best out of things which are not confined to the basement where they dwell.


However, he co-wrote the stage show Garth Marenghi's Fright Knight with Matthew Holness, appearing in the show at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2000 where it was nominated for a Perrier Award. In 2001 he won the Perrier Comedy Award for co-writing and performing in the sequel to Fright Knight, Garth Marenghi's Netherhead.


In 2004 Ayoade and Holness took the Marenghi character to Channel 4, creating the spoof horror comedy series Garth Marenghi's Darkplace. He directed and also appeared as Dean Learner, Garth's publisher, who plays Thornton Reed, a hospital administrator who bears a trademark shotgun and answers to hospital boss "Won Ton".


Ayoade's Darkplace character, Dean Learner, was resurrected in 2006 to host a comedy chat show, Man to Man with Dean Learner, on Channel 4. The different guests were played each week by Holness.


Ayoade is now a recognisable face in Britain owing to his role as the technically brilliant but socially awkward Maurice Moss in Channel 4's The IT Crowd. In 2008 he won the award for an outstanding actor in a television comedy series at Monte-Carlo Television Festival for his performance.


Also in 2008, Ayoade co-starred with Joel McHale in an unaired Americanisation of The IT Crowd pilot, reprising his character without any changes to his appearance or character.


Since then, Richard Ayoade has appeared on a number of other productions. He was seen on Man to Man with Dean Learner and Snuffbox, before he signed on for a role in Bunny and the Bull.


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Nigeria criticizes South Africa deporting 125 Nigerians


Chairman of House Representatives committee on Diaspora Affairs Rep. Abike Dabiri-Erewa has criticised the deportation of 125 Nigerians by the South African government.


In a statement issued in Abuja yesterday, Dabiri-Erewa condemned the act, describing it as "continuous unwarranted hostilities against Nigerians by the South African government."


The Nigerians were deported from South Africa on Friday over yellow fever vaccination card.


The 125 Nigerians, who arrived in South Africa on Thursday, were deported on Friday. 75 of them went aboard South African Airways while 50 followed Arik Air.


She described the South African government's action as degrading and asked the Federal government to apply the rule of reciprocity to South Africans coming to Nigeria.


"It is pathetic that 125 Nigerians, the highest so far, which include women and children, were delayed for 24 hours without water and food in an inhumane condition before being bundled back to Nigeria," she said in the statement.


The lawmaker recalled various role Nigerians including women and children played in dismantling apartheid in South Africa.


Dabiri-Erewa also recalled how South African businesses like MTN and Multi-Choice owners of DSTV among others are thriving in Nigeria better than any part of Africa without any form of molestation from the Nigerian government.


Daily Trust


Related stories:  South Africa gives Nigeria apology for mass deportation


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South Africa deports 100 Nigerians 





South Africa deports 125 Nigerians

For alleged failure to provide genuine yellow fever vaccination documentation, South Africa Friday deported some 125 Nigerians that arrived the country on Thursday through South African Airways (SAA) and Arik Air.


THISDAY learnt that SAA returned 75 passengers to Nigeria while Arik Air brought back 50 passengers. Among those deported were Nigerians who have been living in South Africa for several years.


Reacting to the action of the South African government, Nigerian's major carrier Arik Air announced the suspension of its flights to that country.


In a statement issued by the airline and signed by its head of communications, Adebanji Ola, Arik said it has taken the decision to temporarily suspend all flight operations between Lagos, Nigeria, and Johannesburg, South Africa with immediate effect.


"The decision to suspend the daily B737-800 service between the two financial hubs was taken due to the ongoing dispute between international airlines operating into Johannesburg and the Port Health Authorities over Yellow Fever documentation being presented to authorities at OR Tambo International Airport by passengers.


"Many of the passengers have been detained and refused entry into the country in recent months. The Port Health Authorities cite the reason being incorrect or un-recognised batch numbers on the documentation which is mandatory proof before entrance to the country."


The airline also said the situation had escalated, culminating in hundreds of Nigerian and West African passengers travelling from the region being refused entry including 50 Arik Air passengers today (March 2, 2012).


"Arik has reached the conclusion that the irregular and obfuscating nature of this protocol is having an impact on its passengers and does not wish to proceed with operations into a country where its customers are at risk of detainment or any other measures meted out arbitrarily by the authorities."


Arik Air also said its top official in South and Central Africa, Rodger Whittle, had been attempting to secure an answer for the decision to refuse 50 of its passengers yesterday morning, but the Head of South African Port Health Authorities had refused to speak to the head of operations of the airline in South Africa.


Group CEO/President of Arik Air, Dr. Michael Arumeni-Ikhide, said, "We are not prepared to stand-by and watch as our passengers reach their destination after an over-night flight only to be met with a protocol and procedure that is at best haphazard and at worst discriminatory to many of our passengers.


"Whilst we are being informed that the current crack-down is not unique to Nigeria and its inbound passengers, we are taking a stand by temporarily suspending this daily operation to show the Port Health Authorities we are simply not prepared for our customers to be treated in this manner.


"I hope that the matter can be resolved so that we can start up operations again as we obviously have a number of passengers booked in the coming days but I think they will agree with our decision and support our stand. Our priority is our passengers and we will ensure that everything is done to re-accommodate them whilst this situation is clarified and resolved in an agreeable manner to all carriers that are involved in this."


The insistence of South African government to demand yellow fever vaccination document, known as Yellow Fever card, from Nigerian passengers has been a recurrent controversial issue, which many Nigerians believe is a way to discourage citizens from Africa's most populous nation from visiting the country that shed off its apartheid regime in 1994.


The image-maker of South Africa Airways in Nigeria, Mr. Tope Awe, explained that the national carrier made efforts to ensure that its Nigerian passengers were not deported, including trying to authenticate their yellow fever vaccination documents, the country's government still insisted that those passengers that did not satisfy the expectations of the officials of South Africa's port health must be forced back to Nigeria.


An informed industry source told THISDAY that although the request for Yellow Card was not discriminatory of airline, it could be said to be discriminatory against some countries. The source wondered why some Nigerians resident in that country for some time now were also sent back home.


The source argued that South African government might have contacted the Port Health in Nigeria to be acquainted with the identity numbers of the Yellow Card for the officials to know which ones were not genuine.


The yellow fever vaccination was supposed to be administered by the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) and other health centres in the local government councils which were supposed to issue yellow fever certification, but South Africa argued that most of the Yellow Cards were fake.


An industry operator told THISDAY that there has been a strain in the relationship between Nigeria and South Africa over the controversial vaccination and other visa and immigration issues.


In 2001, the then Minister of Aviation, Mrs. Kema Chikwe, was held hostage by the South African Port Health, which insisted that Chikwe must be vaccinated and quarantined, but the former Minister resisted it and the issue was later resolved by the Nigerian embassy in that country.


Earlier in 2000, former President Olusegun Obasanjo visited South Africa and as he addressed the business community in that country, he told them that he was aware of the way South Africa manhandled and humiliated Nigerians and treated them disrespectfully.


He, however, said he was not going to treat South Africans who wished to come to Nigeria that way but would rather facilitate their visa process, a promise that he kept and which succeeding governments also kept.


Yesterday, the aviation source disagreed with Obasanjo, saying, "Nigeria should introduce the quid pro quo, the principle of reciprocity, by also treating South African citizens who come to Nigeria in the same manner".


This Day


Related stories:  South Africa gives Nigeria apology for mass deportation


South Africa deports 100 Nigerians 


Nigeria deports 25 Chinese


UK deports 61 Nigerians 



Friday, March 2, 2012

Video - Documentary on the militant rebels in the Niger Delta



Current's Mariana van Zeller travels to one of the most unstable regions in the world - Nigeria's oil-rich Niger Delta. She investigates what's behind the growing number of kidnappings and attacks in Africa's largest oil producer and the US's fifth largest energy supplier.


Related stories: Video - Chevron oil drilling disaster in Nigeria enters fourth week 


Video - The Tragedy of oil spills in the Niger Delta of Nigeria



U.S. issues travel warning to Nigeria

Violent crime committed by armed gangs and militants wearing police uniforms remains a threat to US citizens in Nigeria, the US State Department said.


The State Department issued a travel advisory warning of the risks of traveling to Nigeria. "Violent crime committed by individuals and gangs, as well as by persons wearing police and military uniforms, remains a problem throughout the country," the advisory read.


Abuja in December declared a state of emergency in parts of the country because of militant activity attributed to Islamist militant group, Boko Haram.


The advisory noted that Boko Haram took responsibility for a series of attacks in February that killed dozens of people and left many more injured. The group seeks to establish an Islamist state in a country divided along Muslim and Christian lines.


The State Department said kidnapping remains a security concern as well. Five US citizens were kidnapped in Nigeria last year and another was abducted from his vehicle in January.


The advisory said foreigners shouldn't travel to areas designated as conflict areas by the government as Abuja may likely consider such activity illegal.


"The state of emergency gives the government sweeping powers to search and arrest without warrants," the State Department warned.


Daily Trust


Related story: U.S. warns its citizens against trips to Nigeria



Teenager corrects P-Square's grammar on twitter


Hell was let loose on social network, Twitter during the week when a 14 year old kid took on Peter Okoye of the P-Square fame, lecturing him on the rules of  grammar.


Peter  innocently took to Twitter to announce the lucky winner of the P-Suqare’s  Fan of The Month give-away prize. Ok peeps check dis out!…dis person deserve to be my fan of the month. No ojoro, Peter tweeted.


But unfortunately for the superstar, a brilliant 14 year-old girl would not let go of his wrong use of words, as she corrected him out-rightly, especially when  he used the word ‘deserve’ in place of a singular noun of ‘deserves.’


English mistress thank u RT @Hazelavelie: *deserves RT @PeterPsquare: Ok peeps check dis out!…dis person deserve to be my fan of the month. No ojoro, he tweeted again.


Unable to bear the insult after the little girl corrected his  bad English, Peter rained insults on the little girl, wishing that he could see her face to face. Unfortunately, she was nowhere to be found on Twitter.


Barking like a wounded dog, Peter vented his anger this way: I don’t think she’s up to 14yrs old and I don’t knw if she’s on twitter… But of cos her fbook name is Chantal Tcheou.


Thank u my dear.RT @MumcieCJ: @PeterPsquare sum idiots on twitter looking out for people’s mistakes “in english” like dey are perfect. NONSENSE!!!Too know…., Peter blasted out.


Surprisingly, the same fan with the Twitter name Chantal Tcheou won Peter’s Fan of The Month gifts of Ipad2 and other goodies.


Vanguard


Related story: P-Square landlord misbehaving 




Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Nigerian pirates rob cargo ship and hold crew hostage

A maritime monitoring group said Wednesday that pirates have kidnapped at least two members of a cargo ship anchored off the Nigerian coast.


The International Maritime Bureau said eight Nigerian pirates opened fire on the Dutch-owned vessel Tuesday, robbing the 14-member crew before escaping in a small speedboat with the ship's captain and engineer.


It said an additional crew member was missing following the attack and another suffered unspecified injuries.


Pirates in the Gulf of Guinea have become increasingly bold in recent months. IMB says there has been seven reported pirate attacks in the region this year.


Two weeks ago, pirates carried out a deadly hijacking on a cargo ship off the coast of Nigeria, killing the ship's captain and chief engineer.


IMB has warned vessels in the region to keep strict anti-piracy watch, saying at least one group of pirates appears to be preying on ships in the area.


West African pirates are not as active as their counterparts in Somalia, but a rising number of attacks prompted the IMB to post warnings about traveling through the Gulf of Guinea.


VOA


Related stories: Kidnapping culture in Nigeria on the rise


MEND kidnap crew from oil tanker 



Nigerian sentenced to death for illegal truck trafficking in Malaysia


A Malaysian High Court on Monday sentenced a Nigerian man to death after he was found guilty of drug trafficking.


Judicial Commissioner, Mohd Zaki Abdul Wahab said the prosecution had proved its case beyond reasonable doubt against 34-year-old Oluigbo Eric Chimeze.


Mr Oluigbo allegedly distributed 22.159kg of cannabis at a traffic light in Napoh, heading to Bukit Kayu Hitam at about 6.45am on Sept 1, 2010.
He was charged under Section 39 (B) of the Dangerous Drugs Act 1952 which carries a mandatory death penalty upon conviction.


The accused was represented by Counsel B. Murthy while prosecution was conducted by deputy public prosecutor, Noor Fadzila Ishak.
According to the Dangerous Drugs Act 1952 of Malaysia as amended in 2006:


1. No person shall, on his own behalf or on behalf of any other person, whether or not such other person is in Malaysia —


(a) traffic in a dangerous drug,


(b) offer to traffic in a dangerous drug, or


(c) do or offer to do an act preparatory to or for the purpose of trafficking in a dangerous drug.


2. Any person who contravenes any of the provisions of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence against this Act and shall be punished on conviction with death.


The number of people executed in Malaysia remains unknown, even as reported death sentences for drugs appear to be increasing in recent years. While Malaysia is generally not considered to be a high-volume executing state it has sentenced people to death in high numbers, mostly for drug related offences.


Provisions of the Dangerous Drugs Act also give Malaysian authorities the power to detain drug trafficking suspects without warrant and without a court appearance for up to sixty days. After such period, the Home Ministry can issue a detention order, which entitles the detainee to an appearance before a court to argue for his or her release. Without the court’s release of the suspect, the person can be held for successive two-year intervals. An advisory board reviews the suspect’s detention, but such a process falls far short of the procedural rights of a court proceeding. It has been alleged that police detain people under this Act after they have been acquitted by the courts.


Only High Courts have the jurisdiction to sentence someone to death. Juvenile cases involving the death penalty are heard in High Courts instead of the juvenile court where other juvenile cases are heard. Appeals to the Court of Appeal and the Federal Court are automatic. The last resort for the convicted is to plead pardon for clemency. Pardons or clemency are granted by the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri (Governor) of the state where the crime is committed or the Yang di-Pertuan Agong if the crime is committed in the Federal Territories or when involving members of the armed forces. Death sentences are carried out by hanging as provided in Section 281 of the Criminal Procedure Code. Pregnant women and children may not be sentenced to death.


Malaysia sentenced 50 people to death for drug offences in 2009 – more than double the figure from 2008.


Channels Television


Related stories: Two Nigerian drug traffickers excrete 160 wraps of Cocaine while in custody


NDLEA Arrests 103 Drug Traffickers 



Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Former Delta state governor James Ibori pleads guilty to money laundering

Former governor of Delta State, Chief James Ibori, pleaded guilty to 10 charges of fraud and money laundering in a London court Monday, paving the way for the British police to confiscate his assets and return them to Nigeria.

Under the plea bargain agreement he entered with his British prosecutors, he is expected to get a lighter jail sentence which he may serve in Nigeria under the proposed UK Prisoner Transfer Agreement with the Federal Government.

Monday, with his trial at London's Southwark crown court about to begin, Ibori changed his original plea and admitted stealing money from Delta State and laundering it in London through a number of offshore companies.

Ibori admitted to fraud totalling more than $79 million (N12.6 billion), said to be part of total embezzlement that could exceed $250 million (N40 billion).

He will be sentenced at the same court on April 16 and 17.

Prosecutor Sasha Wass told the court Ibori had accepted he was involved in "wide-scale theft, fraud and corruption when he was governor of Delta State".

When he ran for the governorship of Delta State, Ibori allegedly used a false date of birth to conceal previous convictions because a criminal record would have excluded him from taking part in the election.

"Mr Ibori tricked his way into public office. He had tricked the Nigerian authorities and the Nigerian voters. He was thus never the legitimate governor of Delta State," said Wass.

"We are pleased with today's guilty pleas which mark the culmination of a seven-year inquiry into James Ibori's corrupt activities," said Detective Inspector Paul Whatmore of the Metropolitan police. "We will now be actively seeking the confiscation of all of his stolen assets so they can be repatriated for the benefit of the people of Delta State."

Ibori, whose address in England was given as Primrose Hill in north London, was working as a cashier in a branch of a DIY store in Ruislip, Middlesex, when he moved to Nigeria and worked his way up through the political ranks to become a state governor in 1999, the court was told.

The court also heard that as governor of Delta State, Ibori racked up credit card bills of $200,000 a month and owned a fleet of armoured Range Rovers.

He was trying to buy a plane for $20 million at the time he was arrested in 2010 in Dubai at the request of the Metropolitan Police and extradited to London last year.

His wife, Theresa Ibori; sister, Christine Ibori-Idie; associate, Udoamaka Okoronkwo; and London-based solicitor Bhadresh Gohil have all already been convicted of money laundering.

Britain's Department for International Development (DfID) funds the Metropolitan police's proceeds of corruption unit (POCU), which investigated the case, at a cost of approximately £750,000 a year. The unit began investigating Ibori in 2005, working alongside the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

The British police had earlier dropped corruption charges levelled against Ibori, leaving him to face money laundering charges.

A source had told THISDAY at the weekend that both the prosecution and Ibori had become trial weary and were looking forward to a quick resolution of the case, which began about seven years ago.

According to the source, the investigators had not made much progress in their search for evidence that has cost the British taxpayers over £14 million.

In June 2010, a Southwark court in London convicted his sister, Ibori-Ibie, for money laundering and mortgage fraud.

The 12-member jury held that she was guilty as charged for helping her brother to embezzle about $101.5 million while he was in office.

Ibori-Ibie and Okoronkwo-Onuigbo were later sentenced to 21 years in prison in London for their different roles in the case.

This Day

Monday, February 27, 2012

Bomb blast rocks Church in Jos

The police in Jos have said that "at least" six persons were killed by the bomb blasts that rocked the Church of Christ in Nigeria (COCIN) headquarters on Sunday.


The command's spokesman Samuel Dabai, who disclosed this, however he said he was not sure of the total number of those injured.


Some of the cars affected by the blast


But the Plateau Chapter of the Red Cross, who also declined to be specific on the number of those killed, put the casualty figure at 50.


According to the chairman of the Red Cross, Mr Manasseh Pampe, the figure comprised victims taken to Plateau Specialist Hospital, Sauki Hospital and the Jos University Teaching Hospital (JUTH).


"The Red Cross took 35 victims to Plateau Specialist Hospital, 10 were taken to JUTH and five were taken to Sauki Hospital.


"But the Plateau Government later directed that all the casualties hospitalised at Sauki Hospital be moved to the State Specialist Hospital. That we have done," Pampe said.


He said that three of the victims taken to JUTH had been treated and discharged while seven were still at the hospital.


Pampe, however, said that he could not comment on the figure of those killed in the explosion as he declared that "it is not part of the responsibility of Red Cross".


Dabai, while speaking on the number of those killed, said that the two suicide bombers were killed in addition to four others including two women who died at the scene.


Two others died at the Plateau Specialist Hospital, he added.


He confirmed that one of the bombers died in the vehicle that conveyed the explosives, while the other was killed at the scene of the blast by the angry worshippers.


Dabai, however, refused to react to reports that some suspected Boko Haram members were arrested with explosives around Gada Biu area of Jos.


"I will get back to you on that. For now, I have been busy handling the explosion situation."


He said that the police were on top of the situation and urged members of the public to go about their lawful activities but warned against taking the laws into their hands.


Efforts to speak with the military Special Task Force (STF) maintaining security in the state proved abortive as the spokesman, Capt. Mdahyehya Markus, did not answer several calls to his phone.


Vanguard


Related stories: Video - Bomb blast near Church in Suleja


Boko Haram attack Churches on Christmas day - 40 dead




Man discovers wife's body in freezer

Chief Sa'adu Abdullahi, an Auchi-based legal practitioner, on Friday told an Abuja High Court how he and two of his in-laws discovered the corpse of his wife, Afshatu, in her deep freezer.


Mrs Abdullahi, a mother of three and a top NNPC staff, was murdered on Nov. 5, 2011 in her house located off Ladoke Akintola Boulevard, in Garki II.


The office of the Inspector-General of Police on Feb. 16, arraigned Chiwendu Hart-Amanya, 30, Kenneth Chigozie, 21, and Ejike Igbe, 18, before Justice Hussein Baba-Yusuf on a six-count charge including felony and murder of Mrs Afshatu Abdullahi.


The prosecution counsel, Sam Lough told the court that Hart-Amanya was the driver of the deceased, while Chigozie was the steward.


Igbe was arrested for being in possession of the deceased's cars.


The prosecution said the offence contravened Sections 315, 316, 317 and 318 of the Penal Code.


It would be recalled that all the three accused persons pleaded not guilty to the charges.


At the resumed hearing on Friday, Abdullahi, husband of late Afshatu, told the court how the corpse of his wife was discovered in the kitchen freezer with deep cuts on her neck and other parts of her body.


Abdullahi told the court that during the last Eid-el Kabir holiday on Nov. 6, 2011, Afshatu had called to say that she would be in Auchi for the celebration with her family.


He said she had called to tell him that she would come to see the family, and that after waiting for three days without hearing from her, he decided to come to Abuja to check her.


"When I got to Abuja, I went straight to the NNPC where she works and was told that no one had seen her."


Abdullahi told the court that a search party that was organised, found only the security man, Ali Alpha in Afshatu's house, while the first and second, who live in the boy's quarters, were nowhere to be found.


He said that Alpha said he had not seen his madam for a few days and assumed that she had traveled.


"We broke into the house and found the place in disarray, with many expensive furniture missing and her jewelry gone; it was obvious the house had been burgled.


"While searching, my brother-in law, Tahiru Momoh, opened a deep freezer in the kitchen and we discovered my beloved wife's body inside it.


"We called the Police and in the cause of their investigations, neighbours told them (Police) that they saw the driver driving my wife's Infinity Toyota SUV some days earlier.


"The security man also told the Police that the driver (first accused) came back on the same day to take away the second 2011 brand of Toyota SUV."


Abdullahi said that he was hospitalised for three days after the corpse of his wife was found in the freezer.


"I was shocked and shaken to my bone marrow," he said.


During cross-examination by counsel to the three accused, Mr Paul Esewomo, Abdullahi debunked any rumours that he and his wife were separated.


Abdullahi also told the court that he loved his wife "100 per cent".


Justice Baba-Yusuf adjourned further hearing in the suit to Thursday and Friday, March 8 and 9.


Leadership


Related stories: Two Kids Found Dead in Mother's Freezer


Employee kills boss and hides body in family freezer



Wife beats husband to death

Tears flowed freely Friday from a 13-year-old boy Steven Imagbe, as he watched with disbelief his mother allegedly beat his father to death during a heated argument over payment of school fees.


The argument, according to report, was prompted by the refusal of the victim to play the traditional role of a father when he turned down request by his wife, Mrs. Stella Imagbe to pay the two terms school fees of their only child.


The victim, Andrew Imagbe, a casual worker with a wood treatment factory Sapele, Sapele Local Government Area had bluntly told his wife that he had no money for the school fees of his child following a pending case of an allegation of infidelity against her when the woman allegedly threw the first punch.


Mr. Andrew Imagbe who was said to be having a meal of Eba and Okro soup stood up and was advancing towards the woman obviously to teach her a lesson of her life when the woman allegedly hit the man on his head with a broken wooden door.


Weekend Champion gathered that the victim who reportedly slumped, and died instantly before medical attention could be provided for him.


The woman Mrs. Stella Imagbe, a petty trader and a politician attempted to escape when she observed that her husband was bleeding through the nostrils and mouth but was over-powered by neighbours who were attracted to the scene by the alarm raised by the child.


Already, the suspect has been handed over to the Delta State Police Command for prosecution.


The home of the couple at Okpe road, Sapele was completely deserted yesterday when our correspondent visited.


Delta State Police Public Relations Officer Assistant Superitendent of Police, ASP Charles Muka said investigation on the incident had commenced.


Daily Champion


Related story: 69-year old man beats wife to death over rent money 



Friday, February 24, 2012

419 scammers scammed by Australian woman

Sarah Jane Cochrane-Ramsey, 23, was employed by the Nigerians as an "agent" in March 2010 but was unaware they were scam artists, the Brisbane District Court heard today.


Her job was to provide an Australian bank account through which they could funnel any payments they received through their dodgy account on a popular car sales website.

Cochrane-Ramsey was to keep eight per cent of all money paid into her account and forward the rest to the Nigerian scammers.

However, the court heard she kept the two payments she received - totalling $33,350 - and spent most of it on herself.

The car buyers who were ripped off reported the matter to police, who traced the account to Cochrane-Ramsey.


Police inquiries found her employers were based in Nigeria but had been using a web server in New York to run their dodgy car sales listings.

Cochrane-Ramsey pleaded guilty to one count of aggravated fraud on Thursday.

Judge Terry Martin described her as having a "dishonest bent" after hearing she had a history of stealing and property offences.

He adjourned the sentence to allow her time to provide further details of money she claimed was in a bank account that would allow her to make some repayments.

Cochrane-Ramsey will be sentenced next month.

She was allowed bail until then.


Courier-Mail


Related stories: 10 indicted in $1.5M Nigerian 419 e-mail scam


Video - Hacker attempts to help woman recover money from 419 scammers



Militant group set school ablaze in Maiduguri, Nigeria

Unknown gunmen on Wednesday night set ablaze some classrooms and a store at Budun Primary School in the outskirt of Maiduguri metropolis.


Residents said there was a similar incident at Kulagumna Primary School along Ali Kotoko area of the metropolis on Tuesday.


No group has claimed responsibility of the attacks and this is the first time that a school was set ablaze by some people.


Resident Dahiru Musa ruled out the possibility of electrical fault at Budun Primary School. "There was no electricity in the school and no one sleeps in any of the classes," he said.


Musa said four classrooms and a store were set ablaze at the school shortly after Isha'I (night) prayer and the raging flames lasted for over three hours. "The fire burnt everything in the affected classes," he said.


Daily Trust


Related story: Video - Boko Haram attacks keeping Christians in hiding




KBR former CEO sentenced to 30 years in prison for bribing Nigerian officials


The former head of US construction company KBR was sentenced to 30 months in prison over the bribing of Nigerian officials to win contracts, the US Justice Department said Thursday.


Albert Stanley, the former chief executive officer of the engineering giant, also must pay his former company $10.8 million in restitution under the judgment handed down in a Houston federal court.


Stanley, 69, pleaded guilty to violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud.


KBR and its parent company, Halliburton, have also agreed to pay a $579 million fine after pleading guilty to corruption charges in Nigeria.


Stanley was accused of participating in a bribery scheme between 1995 and 2004 to obtain construction contracts worth more than $6 billion, according to a US Justice Department statement.


KBR was part of joint venture TSKJ — which also included French firm Technip SA, Dutch and Italian firm Snamprogetti Netherlands BV and Japanese firm JGC Corporation — to build a liquefied natural gas facility on Bonny Island in the Niger Delta.


The joint venture allegedly paid $183 million in bribes to a variety of Nigerian government officials, according to the Justice Department.


Stanley, who was fired by Halliburton in 2004, cooperated in the investigation in exchange for a lighter sentence.


The case sparked criminal investigations in France, Switzerland, Nigeria and Britain.


Two British men, attorney Jeffrey Tesler and businessman Wojciech Chodan, also were sentenced on criminal charges by a Houston judge. Tesler is getting 21 months in prison while Chodan is sentenced to one year of probation.


Last month, Japanese trading house Marubeni, which the TSKJ joint venture hired to help get the engineering contracts, agreed to pay a $54.6 million fine in the United States, the Justice Department said.


In 2010, Technip and Snamprogetti each agreed to pay $240 million fines while JGC settled for a nearly $219 million fine.


Vanguard


Related stories: Nigeria to charge Dick Cheney in $180 million bribery case, issue Interpol arrest warrant 


EFCC drops charges against Dick Cheney




Thursday, February 23, 2012

Chevron's disastrous gas well fire in Nigeria may burn for months

  


A gas-fuelled fire, with flames as high as 5m, may burn for months in waters off the Niger Delta in south-east Nigeria.


Two workers died after January's explosion at the KS Endeavour exploration rig, owned by the US firm.


Friends of the Earth says this is the world's worst such accident in recent years.


Chevron spokesman Lloyd Avram says, despite the fire, the situation is now under control and no oil is leaking.


Nigeria is the largest oil producer in Africa.


A fire is burning in a 40m-wide area on the surface of the Atlantic Ocean, 10km off the Nigerian coast.


The company is trying to put out the fire by piercing a hole in the original gas well - through which cement will be poured.


"There'll be 10,000ft of drilling and interestingly we need to hit an area that is approximately 12sq inches," Mr Avram told the BBC.


"It is going to take some time, but I cannot predict how long that is going to be - conceivably months," he said.


Scientists are conducting tests to find out if local food and water has been contaminated by the gas in the ocean - after local people raised concerns.


Almost 100 people have left towns close to the fire and local chiefs are asking Chevron to relocate more.


A major build-up of gas pressure from drilling caused the explosion that set the rig on fire in the middle of January, according to the Nigeria's state run oil company.


BBC 


Related stories: Video - Chevron oil drilling disaster in Nigeria enters fourth week 


Video - The Tragedy of oil spills in the Niger Delta of Nigeria





Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Disaster if Chelsea fail to make it into top 4 - John Obi Mikel


Chelsea midfielder John Obi Mikel has admitted that it would be a "disaster" if the Blues fail to attain a top four spot come the end of the season. The west London side currently lie fifth in the Premier League, 17 points behind leaders Manchester City, and face a difficult task away from their domestic worries in the Champions League.


Their status in next year's tournament is being threatened by their poor domestic performances and the Blues have won just once in their last five games.


But the Nigeria international insists the Blues must finish in the top four to ease the pressure on the club and, from there, they can look to establish a fresh title bid next season. Mikel told The Sun: "We must finish in the top four, anything less than that is a disaster. That will ease the pressure off us to look forward to a better season where we can think of winning the title."


Leadership


Related stories:  John Obi Mikel frustrated at Chelsea


Video - John Mikel Obi's family speak about kidnapping




Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Boko Haram attack leaves 30 dead in Kano market

Security forces patrolled an extensive market in Nigeria's northeastern city of Maiduguri on Tuesday where an assault by suspected Islamists killed some 30 people, vendors and residents said.


Gunmen believed to be members of the Islamist sect Boko Haram on Monday afternoon stormed the fish section of Baga market and sprayed stallholders and vendors with bullets, traders said.


The market opened on Tuesday but security forces shut all entry gates except one directly overlooking a police station.


"Most traders in this section of the market have not opened largely out of mourning for their colleagues killed in the attacks of yesterday. We have lost many colleagues," Bunu Ahmad said on the phone.


Witnesses and medics said some 30 people died when the gunmen opened fire and set off bombs inside the market, in what appeared to be a retaliatory attack for the arrest of a suspected Islamist inside the market last week.


The military denied there were any civilian victims, saying it shot eight of the attackers.


Lieutenant Colonel Hassan Mohammed, spokesman of a special military unit in the city said the military "immediately came to the rescue of the situation and safely detonated three bombs planted by members of the sect and shot and killed eight members of the sect."


Some funerals of civilian victims of the attack took place on Tuesday.


One fish vendor who asked not to be named said he lost two brothers in the attack. He said there was an explosion but he and his brothers chose not to run away at that stage.


"A few minutes after, one of my brothers shouted 'Oh! they have killed me', then another one similarly shouted, 'they have also shot me'. That was when I fled," he said shortly after burying the brothers aged 29 and 31.


"More than 25 people were killed," he said.


Due to the emergency rule imposed on Maiduguri on December 31, only the military responds to any emergency situations in the city, but a relief agency source said from accounts given by witnesses "the death toll from the attack is around 30."


A nurse at Maiduguri hospital on Monday told AFP "the number of dead could not be less than 30," adding it was difficult to establish a precise death toll as security forces did not take the bodies to the morgue but allowed relatives to claim their loved ones for immediate burial.


Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state and the home base of Boko Haram, has seen some of the worst violence blamed on the extremist sect, which has focused its attacks on the mainly Muslim north.


The insurgency blamed on Boko Haram has killed more than 200 people already this year, including at least 185 in coordinated gun and bomb attacks in Nigeria's second city of Kano on January 20, its deadliest ever strike.


The shadowy sect has said it wants to create a Islamic state across Nigeria's deeply-impoverished mainly Muslim north and some analysts believe the Islamists are tied to like-minded extremist groups such as Al-Qaeda.


Other analysts insist the sect is pursuing a narrowly domestic agenda.


AFP


Related stories: Video - Bomb blast near Church in Suleja 


Video - Anti-bomb squad member gets blown up by Boko Haram IED 




Power generation in Nigeria has increased by 40 percent

The Minister of Power, Prof. Barth Nnaji, says the nation’s current power generation is 4, 400 megawatts, representing more than 40 per cent of the expectation in 2012.


Nnaji disclosed this on Monday at the opening ceremony of a gymnasium built for workers at Egbin Power Station in Lagos.



He said that the power generation had increased by more than 40 per cent since President Goodluck Jonathan was elected in May, 2011.


“So, this is a tremendous achievement for the president and the government to have improved power supply that way.


“That is why you see people all over the country saying there is availability of power and that they are receiving power now better than before,’’ he said.


Nnaji said that Nigerians should not bother about the amount of power generated, stressing that there were many things to show for it.


He said that discussions were going on between government and electricity workers union in respect of their severance packages and salary increase.


It will be recalled that the minister, had on Feb.17,  said that the nation could achieve 9,000 megawatts by December.


Nnaji had also said that the country was losing 1,500 megawatts of electricity due to gas shortage (NAN).


Vanguard


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Monday, February 20, 2012

Video - Bomb blast near Church in Suleja



Five people were injured in a bomb blast near a church in the Nigerian town of Suleja. 

Soldiers cordoned off the area maintaining a high profile presence on the streets.

Officials say the region has been infiltrated by militants from the Boko Haram Islamist
sect which is waging an insurgency against the Nigerian government.


Related stories: Boko Haram attack Churches on Christmas day - 40 dead


Video - Boko Haram attacks keeping Christians in hiding




Friday, February 17, 2012

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab "Underwear Bomber" sentenced to life in prison


A Nigerian, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who is being prosecuted by a United States federal court for trying to blow a Detriot-bound airline on December 25, 2009, has been sentenced to life imprisonment


Delivering his judgement yesterday over the matter, Judge Nancy Edmunds held that the convict, who pleaded 'guilty' in October last year to about eight -count charge, deserved to be put behind bars for the rest of his life for terrorism.


Judge Edmunds added that the courtroom had "heard some moving testimony" yesterday but noted that Abdulmutallab did not show remorse for his actions. "This was an act of terrorism that cannot be quibbled with," Edmunds said.


According to Edmunds, the court will have no ability to control Abdulmutallab from further acting on his intentions.


"I believe he poses a significant ongoing threat to safety of American citizens everywhere. There is no rationale, no excuse for blowing up a plane and trying to kill hundreds of innocent people," the US Prosecutor Cathleen Corken argued on Thursday.


During the sentence hearing in the court, passengers aboard the Christmas Day 2009 flight confronted AbdulMutallab who entered the courtroom wearing khaki clam diggers, white socks, slip-on shoes, a white skull cap and handcuffs, telling him he had failed as a terrorist.


Though the convict ignored the dramatic statements from fellow passengers aboard the flight, one of them named, Shama Choper from Montreal shouted and said: "I'm standing here today to see goodness win over evil,"


When contacted, the Nigerian Ambassador to the United States, Prof. Ade Adefuye declined comments, saying he would not want to comment on the sentencing without the directives from the appropriate quarters.


Leadership


Related stories: Umar Farouk 'Underpants Bomber' Abdulmutallab pleads guilty 


Defiant Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab calls U.S. a cancer


Video - Trial of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab