Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Ikechukwu Uche in shock over World Cup exclusion


Super Eagles striker, Ikechukwu Uche, dropped from the World Cup bound team is said to be in shock over coach Lars Lagerback decision to leave him out team.


We learnt that the striker was stunned on Monday, when the coach informed him alongside six others that he would not be part of the team for the Mundial.


it was learnt that Ikechukwu, covered his mouth with his hand in shock when the coach informed him that he won't be part of the team to the World Cup.


The player was said to have looked on despair, as his dream of making his first appearance at FIFA's biggest football tournament turned into shred at the last minute.


However, his elder brother, Kalu Uche, alongside some senior players like Nwankwo Kanu, Joseph Yobo, Danny Shittu and Osaze Odemwingie, had to play the big brother roles by consoling the former Getafe striker.


"It was an emotional moment for him because he played a big role in making sure that Nigeria qualified for the World Cup until he got that injury that kept him out for about five months. He (Ike Uche) was in shock after the announcement. His brother (Kalu) had to console him while other players like Kanu, Shittu, Yobo and Osaze pacify him. It was a really emotional and painful moment for him because he had hoped to be part of the World Cup team," said a camp official.


But it was not only Ikechukwu Uche, who was shocked by his exclusion, as some officials of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) and other Super Eagles' team-mates also had an expression of astonishment on their faces.


Even other players dropped from the squad could not hide their shock over the exclusion of the younger Uche brother from the Nigerian team to South Africa.


Chairman of the NFF Technical Committee, Taiwo Ogunjobi, said Lagerback has convinced the federation's board and his committee on reasons for leaving out Ikechukwu Uche, Victor Anichebe, Onyekachi Apam, Peter Utaka, Brown Ideye, Terna Suswan and Bassey Akpan from the Mundial's final squad.


"Most of the players were left out for reasons of injuries and lack of fitness as well as inexperience," began Ogunjobi. "From what the coach gave us as explanation we are satisfied and believe that he has picked the best players to represent the country at the World Cup in South Africa."


Daily Independent


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Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Super Eagles off to South Africa

Super Eagles departed London yesterday evening for South Africa for the World Cup after Coach Lars Lagerback unveiled his final 23-man team for the tournament's finals.


The Eagles departed for Durban by a chartered Boeing 767-300 aircraft from Heathrow Airport. The team would be led to the June 11 to July 11 event by NFF President, Sani Lulu.


On arrival in Durban, the Nigerian delegation would be transported on the two-hour bus ride to the Base Camp at Richard's Bay, the Protea Hotel Waterfront.


Some NFF officials, already on ground in South Africa, included Musa Amadu, Deputy General Secretary (General Services) and Idris Adama, Head of Marketing.


The world's biggest soccer event rolls off in Johannesburg's Soccer City on June 11, with hosts South Africa taking on Mexico.


Already, the Kwa-Zulu Natal Province and Durban Municipality are mobilising Zulu dancers among other artistes to welcome the Eagles on arrival in South Africa today.


Many Nigerians have also mobilised to welcome the team when they arrive Durban at 7.50 a.m.


Ms Bongiwe Mkhize, an official in charge of African Activities, International Relations Department in Durban, said that all was set to welcome the team.


She said that there would be little fanfare at the airport because of FIFA arrangements but there would be a reception later to make the team feel at home.


Nigerians have assembled drums, trumpets and other musical instruments to storm the airport to receive the team.


However, it is not clear if they will have much access to them because of FIFA security arrangements.


Daily Trust


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Kanu, Utaka make Super Eagles squad

Super Eagles supremo Lars Lagerback unveiled his 23-man squad for the 2010 World Cup finals in South Africa yesterday. In it the Swede tactician named Nwankwo Kanu as captain of his team despite dwindling form and signs of weariness.


Also named was Kanu's Portsmouth teammate John Utaka, who has been struggling for fitness and form recently.


Similarly, recuperating Chelsea midfielder Mikel John Obi was included by Lagerback in the World Cup squad, while the Swede did not take a chance on fit-again Ikechukwu Uche, the joint-top scorer in the qualifying series.


Mikel is convalescing from a knee surgery and missed four weeks of action in the English Premier League. He only joined up with the rest of the squad Friday morning after he was certified fit by doctors of his London club. Just how serious is Mikel's injury? Nobody could say for sure but Lagerback said after his team's 1-1 draw with Colombia in London on Sunday that Mikel was left out of the World Cup warm-up match so as not to put pressure on his injury.


However, he said Mikel will star in the Super Eagles next test game against North Korea on June 6 in Johannesburg.


Ike Uche is struggling to regain his stride after returning to competitive football recently after being out of action for seven months following a major knee injury.


Joining Ike Uche in the lurch are Nice defender Onyekachi Apam, who has been nursing a knee problem.


The other dropped players are Peter Utaka, Victor Anichebe, Bassey Akpan, Terna Suswan and Brown Ideye.


Despite coming back from a long spell with injury just recently, assistant captain, Joseph Yobo is also listed.


As Monaco midfielder Lukman Haruna was rewarded for his enterprise and equalising goal against Colombia with a spot in the final party. He will thus feature in three World Cups - FIFA Under-17 World Cup, FIFA Under-20 World Cup and now the senior World Cup.


Meanwhile, Eagles team coordinator, Emmanuel Attah said that a lot of factors were considered before Lars Lagerback arrived at his final hit list to the Mundial.


"The coach has given the reason and we understand what he wants. Ideye had visa problems and was given some tests in training but could not meet up.


"Victor Anichebe also had some training to confirm his fitness, but we saw that he is injured. The coach said we cannot take injured players to the World Cup.


"As for Ikechukwu, he is still rehabilitating," said the chairman of Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Football Association.


Daily Trust


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Monday, May 31, 2010

Nigeria's agony dwarfs the Gulf oil spill. The US and Europe ignore it

We reached the edge of the oil spill near the Nigerian village of Otuegwe after a long hike through cassava plantations. Ahead of us lay swamp. We waded into the warm tropical water and began swimming, cameras and notebooks held above our heads. We could smell the oil long before we saw it – the stench of garage forecourts and rotting vegetation hanging thickly in the air.


The farther we travelled, the more nauseous it became. Soon we were swimming in pools of light Nigerian crude, the best-quality oil in the world. One of the many hundreds of 40-year-old pipelines that crisscross the Niger delta had corroded and spewed oil for several months.


Forest and farmland were now covered in a sheen of greasy oil. Drinking wells were polluted and people were distraught. No one knew how much oil had leaked. "We lost our nets, huts and fishing pots," said Chief Promise, village leader of Otuegwe and our guide. "This is where we fished and farmed. We have lost our forest. We told Shell of the spill within days, but they did nothing for six months."


That was the Niger delta a few years ago, where, according to Nigerian academics, writers and environment groups, oil companies have acted with such impunity and recklessness that much of the region has been devastated by leaks.


In fact, more oil is spilled from the delta's network of terminals, pipes, pumping stations and oil platforms every year than has been lost in the Gulf of Mexico, the site of a major ecological catastrophe caused by oil that has poured from a leak triggered by the explosion that wrecked BP's Deepwater Horizon rig last month.


That disaster, which claimed the lives of 11 rig workers, has made headlines round the world. By contrast, little information has emerged about the damage inflicted on the Niger delta. Yet the destruction there provides us with a far more accurate picture of the price we have to pay for drilling oil today.


On 1 May this year a ruptured ExxonMobil pipeline in the state of Akwa Ibom spilled more than a million gallons into the delta over seven days before the leak was stopped. Local people demonstrated against the company but say they were attacked by security guards. Community leaders are now demanding $1bn in compensation for the illness and loss of livelihood they suffered. Few expect they will succeed. In the meantime, thick balls of tar are being washed up along the coast.


Within days of the Ibeno spill, thousands of barrels of oil were spilled when the nearby Shell Trans Niger pipeline was attacked by rebels. A few days after that, a large oil slick was found floating on Lake Adibawa in Bayelsa state and another in Ogoniland. "We are faced with incessantoil spills from rusty pipes, some of which are 40 years old," said Bonny Otavie, a Bayelsa MP.


This point was backed by Williams Mkpa, a community leader in Ibeno: "Oil companies do not value our life; they want us to all die. In the past two years, we have experienced 10 oil spills and fishermen can no longer sustain their families. It is not tolerable."


With 606 oilfields, the Niger delta supplies 40% of all the crude the United States imports and is the world capital of oil pollution. Life expectancy in its rural communities, half of which have no access to clean water, has fallen to little more than 40 years over the past two generations. Locals blame the oil that pollutes their land and can scarcely believe the contrast with the steps taken by BP and the US government to try to stop the Gulf oil leak and to protect the Louisiana shoreline from pollution.


"If this Gulf accident had happened in Nigeria, neither the government nor the company would have paid much attention," said the writer Ben Ikari, a member of the Ogoni people. "This kind of spill happens all the time in the delta."


"The oil companies just ignore it. The lawmakers do not care and people must live with pollution daily. The situation is now worse than it was 30 years ago. Nothing is changing. When I see the efforts that are being made in the US I feel a great sense of sadness at the double standards. What they do in the US or in Europe is very different."


"We see frantic efforts being made to stop the spill in the US," said Nnimo Bassey, Nigerian head of Friends of the Earth International. "But in Nigeria, oil companies largely ignore their spills, cover them up and destroy people's livelihood and environments. The Gulf spill can be seen as a metaphor for what is happening daily in the oilfields of Nigeria and other parts of Africa.


"This has gone on for 50 years in Nigeria. People depend completely on the environment for their drinking water and farming and fishing. They are amazed that the president of the US can be making speeches daily, because in Nigeria people there would not hear a whimper," he said.


It is impossible to know how much oil is spilled in the Niger delta each year because the companies and the government keep that secret. However, two major independent investigations over the past four years suggest that as much is spilled at sea, in the swamps and on land every year as has been lost in the Gulf of Mexico so far.


One report, compiled by WWF UK, the World Conservation Union and representatives from the Nigerian federal government and the Nigerian Conservation Foundation, calculated in 2006 that up to 1.5m tons of oil – 50 times the pollution unleashed in the Exxon Valdez tanker disaster in Alaska – has been spilled in the delta over the past half century. Last year Amnesty calculated that the equivalent of at least 9m barrels of oil was spilled and accused the oil companies of a human rights outrage.


According to Nigerian federal government figures, there were more than 7,000 spills between 1970 and 2000, and there are 2,000 official major spillages sites, many going back decades, with thousands of smaller ones still waiting to be cleared up. More than 1,000 spill cases have been filed against Shell alone.


Last month Shell admitted to spilling 14,000 tonnes of oil in 2009. The majority, said the company, was lost through two incidents – one in which the company claims that thieves damaged a wellhead at its Odidi field and another where militants bombed the Trans Escravos pipeline.


Shell, which works in partnership with the Nigerian government in the delta, says that 98% of all its oil spills are caused by vandalism, theft or sabotage by militants and only a minimal amount by deteriorating infrastructure. "We had 132 spills last year, as against 175 on average. Safety valves were vandalised; one pipe had 300 illegal taps. We found five explosive devices on one. Sometimes communities do not give us access to clean up the pollution because they can make more money from compensation," said a spokesman.


"We have a full-time oil spill response team. Last year we replaced 197 miles of pipeline and are using every known way to clean up pollution, including microbes. We are committed to cleaning up any spill as fast as possible as soon as and for whatever reason they occur."


These claims are hotly disputed by communities and environmental watchdog groups. They mostly blame the companies' vast network of rusting pipes and storage tanks, corroding pipelines, semi-derelict pumping stations and old wellheads, as well as tankers and vessels cleaning out tanks.


The scale of the pollution is mind-boggling. The government's national oil spill detection and response agency (Nosdra) says that between 1976 and 1996 alone, more than 2.4m barrels contaminated the environment. "Oil spills and the dumping of oil into waterways has been extensive, often poisoning drinking water and destroying vegetation. These incidents have become common due to the lack of laws and enforcement measures within the existing political regime," said a spokesman for Nosdra.


The sense of outrage is widespread. "There are more than 300 spills, major and minor, a year," said Bassey. "It happens all the year round. The whole environment is devastated. The latest revelations highlight the massive difference in the response to oil spills. In Nigeria, both companies and government have come to treat an extraordinary level of oil spills as the norm."


A spokesman for the Stakeholder Democracy Network in Lagos, which works to empower those in communities affected by the oil companies' activities, said: "The response to the spill in the United States should serve as a stiff reminder as to how far spill management in Nigeria has drifted from standards across the world."


Other voices of protest point out that the world has overlooked the scale of the environmental impact. Activist Ben Amunwa, of the London-based oil watch group Platform, said: "Deepwater Horizon may have exceed Exxon Valdez, but within a few years in Nigeria offshore spills from four locations dwarfed the scale of the Exxon Valdez disaster many times over. Estimates put spill volumes in the Niger delta among the worst on the planet, but they do not include the crude oil from waste water and gas flares. Companies such as Shell continue to avoid independent monitoring and keep key data secret."


Worse may be to come. One industry insider, who asked not to be named, said: "Major spills are likely to increase in the coming years as the industry strives to extract oil from increasingly remote and difficult terrains. Future supplies will be offshore, deeper and harder to work. When things go wrong, it will be harder to respond."


Judith Kimerling, a professor of law and policy at the City University of New York and author of Amazon Crude, a book about oil development in Ecuador, said: "Spills, leaks and deliberate discharges are happening in oilfields all over the world and very few people seem to care."


There is an overwhelming sense that the big oil companies act as if they are beyond the law. Bassey said: "What we conclude from the Gulf of Mexico pollution incident is that the oil companies are out of control.


"It is clear that BP has been blocking progressive legislation, both in the US and here. In Nigeria, they have been living above the law. They are now clearly a danger to the planet. The dangers of this happening again and again are high. They must be taken to the international court of justice."


The Observer


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U.S. raises alarm over 2011 poll

United States of America yesterday raised fears over 2011general elections, arguing that the inability of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to produce an accurate time table for the elections could pose a major challenge.


Ms Robin Sanders, the US Ambassador to Nigeria, said this while answering questions at the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Forum in Abuja.


Sanders said: "The big challenge is that you do not know when the elections are going to be held yet, though the decision is in the hands of the National Assembly."


She said her observation emanated from concerns expressed by Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) at the maiden meeting of the US-Nigeria Bi-National Commission (BNC) which ended last Thursday in Abuja.


"Those are the things that we were briefed on your side, and I hope resolutions will be made very quickly. Election date is one of the things to figure out first before everything else.


"I will tell you quite honestly that, the focus of the BNC's first working group was on elections, credibility, clean, unrigged; transparent elections are kind of the order of the day now and the theme of the day.


"You certainly need an election date, a sooner-rather-than-later kind of determination; you need a clear and transparent voter register."


Sanders said for INEC to conduct a credible election, it must ensure that the voter registration exercise was transparent, while the elections should be held according to the time-table when it was eventually put in place.


She expressed the willingness of the US to offer technical assistance to INEC, stressing that the Federal Government must be willing to deliver good governance to Nigerians.


"Certainly, internal political democracy is a big challenge and I think that, that really is not something that any outsider friend can do for Nigeria.


"That is going to come from political will; only Nigerian elements have the role there," she said.


On strategies to ensure implementation of the outcomes of the BNC, Sanders said both sides had engaged senior officials to outline challenges and commitments.


"I think to have a senior member of the US Government lead a delegation shows our seriousness and commitment, and I think Nigeria had an array of ministers during the BNC telling us some of the challenges, where the challenges are; telling us what their commitments are.


"I think that is one of the positive signals," she remarked.


The ambassador said the US Government was willing to work with Nigeria on the BNC's strategic action deliverables.


She said the next thematic group meeting of the BNC, which includes energy and investment, is scheduled to hold from June 10 to June 11 in Washington DC.


It will be recalled that the BNC's major thematic areas are good governance and transparency, promotion of regional co-operation and development toward creating opportunities and benefits for the people of the Niger Delta.


Others are guaranteeing security, countering terrorism and pursuing reform and boosting investment in the energy industry as well as ensuring that Nigeria achieves food security.



Meanwhile, Sanders has challenged the Federal Government to conduct credible and transparent elections in 2011 that its friends and Nigerians will be proud of.


She said the US was concerned as a friend, and urged the Federal Government to endeavour to put in place machinery that would ensure a credible and transparent election. 


The ambassador said she was happy that Nigeria had survived the "very fragile environment of insecurity" which stretched from November 2009 until recently.


"It's been a very fragile environment; there has been a lot of insecurity. I think since you found a way out of this tragic period; I think you can accommodate and talk about elections," she said.


She said Nigeria had the resources, the talent, creativity, innovativeness, intelligence, commitment and dedication to have free and fair elections.


The envoy said Nigeria's democracy was facing challenges, like any other growing democracy, adding that Nigerians had to work hard to overcome the challenges.


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