Monday, April 19, 2010

Pregnant woman swallows 350 grams of cocaine

Apart from the criminal implication, tell me, what could be more undignifying for a woman to ingest hard drugs for whatever reason, knowing full well the health implication?" queried the Murtala Mohammed International Airport Commander of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) Alhaji Hamza Umar.


The anti-drug agency boss continued, "This drug barons and couriers have no respect for their own lives; neither do they respect the dignity of their children. This is the height of desperation by drug barons and their associates."


Ms Osatohamwen Esohe was arrested by operatives of NDLEA at the airport while passengers were being screened for Alitalia flight to Rome. Incidentally, Osatohamwen in Bini translation means "God have mercy on me", but in this present situation, it is doubted whether the same God will have mercy on her, having gone contrary to the ordinance of God.


At the departure lounge of the airport, the 29 years old expectant mother had submitted her luggage for screening, optimistic that she may never be detected. But the scanning machine proved her wrong as some black spots were spotted in her intestines.


She was promptly asked to excuse others for profiling. Initially, the woman was said to have screamed at the officers operating the machine that she was pregnant and therefore, should not be disturbed. Her shout did not however make any meaning to the officers who told her gently that she had to be examined.


After observation, she expelled 27 wraps of substances that tested positive to cocaine weighing 350 grammes.


At the airport office of the anti-drug agency, Osatohamwen who was visibly full of remorse, broke down in tears, attributing her ordeal to poverty. She claimed she was once jilted by the man who had promised her marriage but gave in to the present one whom she said was responsible for her pregnancy because he promised to take her to the altar shortly.


Continuing, Osatohamwen said, "I discovered again that the man responsible for my pregnancy changed overnight, saying he was no longer interested in the relationship. At that time, I discovered that I was three months' pregnant, and since the man who put me in this condition refused to take responsibility and I am jobless, that was why I had to go into this drug deal.


The people that gave me the drugs promised me Euros 2000 and to me, that is a big money. This is the first time I am smuggling drugs. I only need enough money to take care of my unborn baby. That is all."


Related stories: Couple arrested for concealing cocaine in twins 


Drug traffickers stuff cocaine in roasted chicken


Nigerian drug enforcement agency arrest 50 year old woman with 585g of cocaine 



Friday, April 16, 2010

South Africa deports 100 Nigerians

A group of 100 Nigerians has arrived back in their country after being expelled from South Africa for violating immigration laws, an airport official said on Thursday.

"The Nigerians, consisting of 99 men and one woman, arrived the Murtala International airport Lagos on a chartered flight from Johannesburg yesterday," Wale Dada told AFP.

He said they were accused of living in the country without valid resident and work permits.

Last December, some 325 Nigerians were deported from Libya for similar reasons.

Hundreds of Nigerians use north Africa as a transit route to Europe and America in search of jobs.


News 24


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Thursday, April 15, 2010

Years after death, Fela nears mainstream appeal


Fela, the late Nigerian musician and political agitator, fascinated millions and had fans around the world, including legends like Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder. Yet he was, and still is, largely unknown to popular audiences, especially in the United States.


That's slowly changing. More people are starting to know the name, music and struggle of Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. His story is reaching thousands through the Broadway musical ``Fela!'' In addition, his albums are being rereleased and a film about his life is planned.


But during his life, Fela wasn't interested in becoming a global star. His songs would last 10, 20 or 30 minutes long — not suitable for regular radio play. He also toured with a band that had 70-plus members. And Fela didn't want to compromise to fit the mold of the pop sensation.


``He used to say, 'I don't care what you do but don't (expletive) around with my music man,''' said Rikki Stein, Fela's last manager before the singer-composer died of AIDS in 1997 at age 58.


``(Fela would say), 'I'm writing African, classical music, and you don't (expletive) around with Tchaikovsky so why you going to mess with me?' And that's something that reverberated through me over the years,'' continued Stein.


Fela, who was born Olufela Olusegun Oludotun Ransome-Kuti, was known as the founder of Afrobeat music. He created that genre in the 1960s by combining African sounds with a fusion of rock, R&B, jazz and soul music. He performed at his nightclub in Lagos, The Shrine, and also around the globe.


But Fela, who's father was a Protestant minister and mother an activist, didn't just want to be a musician — he also wanted to be the voice of the oppressed. In 1979, he formed the political party Movement of the People and over the years, he repeatedly staged unsuccessful runs for president.


His songs and lyrics battled what he saw as corruption and oppression by the Nigerian government at the time. He paid a price for his activism, though. He was beat and jailed over 200 times, while soldiers threw his mother out of a window; she died from the injuries.


Michael Veal, the author of 2000's ``Fela: The Life and Times of an African Musical Icon,'' called Fela ``one of the most important musicians of the post-World War II era, and one of the most important musicians in the world of black music.''


``He's as important as James Brown or Bob Marley and it was a story that had to be told,'' continued Veal, who is also professor of music at Yale University.


Veal says that Fela is ``as popular as he needs to be.''


``People want to try to force these artists into the model of the Western pop star, and that's not (Fela's) model. His career basically unfolded the way he wanted to. He never wanted to cut his songs down to be popular on the radio, he wanted to present his music the way he presented it ... and it stood the test of time, and people are appreciating his music on his own terms.''


Fela's dramatic life was recently introduced to a large audience in the United States when the musical about him debuted off-Broadway in Sept. 2008. A year later, it arrived on Broadway to mostly positive reviews.


``There's been more publicity, more attention, more recognition of him in the last four months than there has been in the previous number of years,'' said Stephen Hendel, a lead producer and co-conceiver of the play.


Jay-Z and Will and Jada Pinkett Smith signed on as producers-investors when the play joined Broadway. ?uestlove of the Roots has been actively promoting it on his blog, and big names like Madonna, Denzel Washington, Sting and Robert De Niro have gone to see it. The play is also set to run in London later this year.


Knitting Factory Records released ``The Best of the Black President'' in November. The first batch of his album catalog arrived in February; the second batch will be out May 11.


Many top artists like Nas, Missy Elliott, Fatboy Slim, Common, Mos Def and the Roots have sampled Fela's music for their songs. Ian Wheeler, the label manager for Knitting Factory, hopes their fans will catch on and recognize Fela's influence.


``It's the sort of thing where kids, younger kids, younger audiences especially, are hearing the kind of intricate hooks and I'm hoping one day the dots will come and connect and they'll realize, 'Hey, that's Fela,''' he said.


A film on Fela, who had more than two dozen wives and numerous children, is in the works with Focus Features. It is being adapted from Veal's book. Film producer Lydia Dean Pilcher said production is expected to begin in the fall with a hopeful release in 2011.


This year PBS also featured Fela in a segment of the new program ``Music Without Borders,'' also highlighting his youngest son, Seun, who released his debut album in 2008. Fela's oldest son, Femi, is also a performing musician.


Fela's brother, Beko, an activist and doctor, was recently honored in Lagos with a statue. According to the Nigerian newspaper The Vanguard, Lagos State Governor Raji Fashola described the Kuti family as the Kennedy family of Nigeria, commending the family for providing the country with great heroes.


``When he died I remember sitting on his first wife Remi's bed in Lagos and reading these letters from the top, top people, the top in the administration and they weren't just letters of condolences, they were testimonies to a great man,'' Stein said.


``At the time, I said, '...All his life you gave him nothing but grief and now he's gone and you're calling him a great man.' But anyway I think the time is coming now where they're starting to recognize the need to pay tribute.''


Valley Morning Star


Related stories: Hollywood making Fela movie


 FELA! on broadway


Femi Kuti nominated for a grammy


Nigerian authorities shut down Afro Beat Mecca


Femi Kuti answers sensitive questions pertaining to Africa



Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Janet Napolitano on Nigeria security



 


CNN's Christian Purefoy sits down with Dept. of Homeland Security Sec. Janet Napolitano to discuss her recent visit to Nigeria.


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