Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Japanese surgeon says Nigeria olympic football team would have received $390K reward even if they lost



The Japanese surgeon who gifted the Nigerian Olympic football team nearly $400,000 said they would have received the money even if they didn't win a medal.

Katsuya Takasu said he was so taken with the spirit of the Nigerian side that he planned to give each player $10,000 even if they failed to win a medal in Rio.


He told CNN: "I didn't tell anybody. I didn't want to diminish the morale and I told them you have to win."

Takasu said he wept after Nigeria won the bronze match against Honduras in Mineirão on Saturday.

"Although it was a close game all the way till the end. I was so happy and cried for their winning. Japanese are sentimental," he told CNN with a laugh.

The plastic surgeon said he was impressed by their resilience after they emerged victorious in the Olympic football group stage, despite being stranded at the airport in Atlanta due to inadequate transport preparations.

They arrived in Rio just seven hours before their opening match against Japan-- which they won 5-4.

After the players received their medals last week, Takasu presented two checks amounting to $390,000 to their coach and captain, Samson Siasia and Mikel John Obi.

"I've always wanted to help people who are bravely trying their best without any support," Takasu said.

Takasu took to Twitter to promise he would reward the team after hearing about their payment woes. Nigeria's coach Siaisia was owed five months salary and the players threatened not take part in the quarterfinals after wrangles over allowances payments.

He declared his support for the team and promised to give them $200,000 plus an additional $30,000 bonus to each player if they won gold.

The surgeon who has been president of Japan Society of liposuction surgery since 1987 is known for his philanthropic acts.

In 1995 when Japan experienced the Great Hanshin earthquake, which killed more than 6,000 people and injured thousands more, Takasu created a volunteer group of surgeons to carry out plastic and reconstructive treatment to the earthquake victims for free.

But the payment has not been without controversy, some players accused the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) of hijacking the money awarding process and demanded that the money should go directly to team members.

The NFF president Amaju Pinnick took to Twitter to deny the allegations saying the money had to go through "integrity checks" before it could be released.

He said: "Nigeria is a sovereign nation and such a donation must go through a process. If we get the go-ahead, it will go directly to the team, to say NFF has 'hijacked' the money is outright mischief.

"The checks must be concluded and we are given go-ahead to collect by government. Nobody has collected any money.

"We have duly informed the Minister and integrity checks are on presently," he added.

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Video - U.S. Secretary of State to hold talks with President Buhari




U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is expected to arrive in Nigeria today on the second leg of his African trip. Kerry has already met with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and several regional foreign ministers in Nairobi. They've discussed the instability in South Sudan and al-Qaeda-led terrorism in East Africa.

Air strike kills Boko Haram commanders

Nigeria's army says it has killed several commanders of the Islamist group Boko Haram in an air strike and seriously wounded its disputed leader.

An army spokesman told the BBC's Hausa service that Abubakar Shekau's shoulder was badly injured in the strike on Friday in north-eastern Borno state.

There has been no independent confirmation of the strike.

Claims by the army that it has killed Shekau have turned out to be false on at least five previous occasions.

The reports should therefore be treated with caution, says the BBC's Africa Security correspondent Tomi Oladipo.

Boko Haram is fighting to overthrow Nigeria's government and establish an Islamic State in the north.

An army spokesman said warplanes struck as the militants met for Friday prayers last week at a village deep within the Sambisa forest in Borno State.

The army's announcement coincided with the arrival of US Secretary of State John Kerry in Nigeria on a two-day visit.

Speaking in the northern city of Sokoto, Mr Kerry urged Nigeria to address the root causes of the Boko Haram insurgency.

"Building public trust in government also requires cooperation from the military and law enforcement. Extremism can't be defeated through repression or fear," Reuters news agency quotes him as saying.

The Sambisa forest, which covers a vast area, is thought to be one of the places where the more than 200 abducted Chibok schoolgirls are being held by the group.

A split in Boko Haram emerged earlier this month, when the Islamic State group, to which Shekau had pledged allegiance in 2015, said he had been replaced as leader by Abu Musab al-Barnawi.

Al-Barnawi is reported to be the son of the group's founding leader, Mohammed Yusuf, who was killed in police custody in 2009.

In the last 18 months Boko Haram has lost most of the territory it had controlled after being pushed back in an offensive by the forces of Nigeria and its neighbours.

Monday, August 22, 2016

Video - Boko Haram militants kill at least 10, abduct 13 near Chibok



In Nigeria, Boko Haram militants have reportedly killed at least 10 people and abducted 13 others in a raid on a village near the north-eastern town of Chibok. Locals say armed men on motorcycles invaded Kubrrivu at dawn on Saturday, attacking residents as they were sleeping. They looted food supplies and set several homes alight before fleeing with 13 women and children. A community elder in Chibok, some 20 kilometres away, confirmed the attack. It's the second time Boko Haram has raided Kubrrivu in the past two years.

Video - Former militant group calls for Avengers to be denounced




Nigeria's Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta --or MEND -- has spoken out against the resolution reached by Niger Delta stakeholders. Efforts are under way to end militants' vandalism of the oil infrastructure in the region. Militant groups, including the Niger Delta Avengers, are calling for a more equal share of the oil wealth among local communities. MEND is angry as the Niger Delta stakeholders have failed to denounce the Avengers' activities. The group is preparing to tour the region to solicit support for President Muhammadu Buhari's administration.