Thursday, November 10, 2011

China to make Nigeria major manufacturing zone

Nigeria and China yesterday agreed to explore making Nigeria a major manufacturing hub for China's key industrial enterprises according to the Director, Chongqing Liangjing New Area, China.


Mr. Weng Jieming, in a statement from Mrs. Yemi Kolapo Special Adeviser, Corporate Communications to the Minister of Trade & Investment Olusegun Aganga said Chongqing has five key industries, including automobiles and motorcycles, petroleum and natural gas, equipment manufacture, new materials and high-tech industry, which had key investments in many countries of the world.


He said, apart from encouraging companies in Chongqing to export their goods to Nigeria, the government would also "support the companies, especially in the motorcycle and automobiles industry, to make direct investments in Nigeria for local production."


He said this yesterday when the Minister of Trade, Olusegun Aganga, visited Chongqing, the largest and most important industrial city at the upper reaches of Yangtze River and Southwest China. It consists of China's major Free Trade Zones, which contribute about 20 per cent of the nation's Gross Domestic Product.


Jieming noted that the largest investments in Ghana were made by companies from Chongqing, adding that fostering such a relationship with Nigeria would be beneficial to both countries.


Nigeria's trade and investment minister had said, during a meeting with his counterpart at the Ministry of Commerce, China, Mr. Fu Ziying, that making Nigeria a major manufacturing zone for most of China's products would go a long way in correcting the trade imbalance between the two countries and creating jobs for Nigerians.


Aganga said the availability of raw materials and a ready market in Nigeria for "quality" Chinese products would make the deal a win-win situation for both countries.


He urged Chinese companies, to invest in critical infrastructure in Nigeria, noting that local industries in Nigeria would also benefit from the improved business environment that would result from sound infrastructure.


Meanwhile, the Federal Government and the Chinese government have agreed to ensure that the Lekki Free Trade Zone commences full operation in 18 months.


The President, China Railway Construction Corporation Limited, Mr. Zhao Guangfa, during a meeting with Aganga on Tuesday night, urged the Federal Government to remove the bottlenecks hindering the progress of the Lekki Free Trade Zone project, noting that such projects initiated at about the same time in other countries had been completed.


Consequently, a committee, made up of representatives of the Federal Ministry of Trade and Investment, the Lagos State Ministry of Commerce and CRCC, was constituted to review the underlying problems and resolve the issues with a view to completing the project between 12 and 18 months.


Daily Trust


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Nigeria to outlaw same sex marriage

The Senate Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters recently organised the third public hearing on the same gender marriage (Prohibition) Bill 2011. Sponsored by Domingo Obende, Helen Esuene, Mohammed Magoro, Oluremi Tinubu and 20 other senators, the bill is specifically aimed at the outright prohibition of same sex marriage in Nigeria.


The bill defines marriage as a legal union between persons of the opposite sex in accordance with the Marriage Act, Islamic and Customary laws. The Bill also stipulates that any persons who entered into a same sex marriage contract in Nigeria commits an offence and are jointly liable on conviction to a term of three years imprisonment. Equally those who abet or aid the "solemnisation" of marriage between two persons of the same sex are guilty and liable upon conviction.


Beyond the sodomy laws and the unnatural offences between males stipulated in the criminal code in Nigeria, the bill, if passed into law, would have the effect of specifically banning Nigerian homosexuals and lesbians from entering into a marriage contract and from adopting children. It would also prohibit registration of gay clubs, societies and organisations; prohibition of gay publicity, procession and public displays of such amorous relationship through the electronic media or print media and so forth. Without prejudice to whatever rights and protections citizens may seek under the law, we heartily commend the senators for sponsoring the aforesaid bill. Contrary to some views, the same gender marriage (Prohibition) bill 2011 is crucial to national development because it seeks to protect the traditional family which is the fundamental unit of society, especially in our country.


As many of the participants at the public hearing rightly stated, homosexual and lesbian practices are completely at variance with the Nigerian value system and cultural heritage. And since laws are made in consonant with the values of a people, it will be difficult to import practices and lifestyles which are alien to our country and majority of our people and seek to impose them as laws in the name of observing international obligation.


Pursuant to section 4(1) (2) of the 1999 Constitution, our federal legislators are enjoined to make good laws that conform to the social and religious realities in the country. In fact the only way to avoid chaos in a society is for the legislature to make laws that accord with the values and aspiration of the people. Our people are clearly opposed to a sexual liberation which deconstructs the anthropological (and we add, religious) structure of man and woman.


However, to press home their case at the public hearing, the pro-lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBTI) advocates argued that there is a culture of hypocrisy surrounding the practice of homosexuality and lesbianism in Nigeria. According to them, many Nigerian homosexuals and lesbians (in high and low places) are afraid of disclosing their identity in public for fear of persecution and discrimination. They argued further that homosexual and lesbian practices are not unnatural and that Nigerian homosexuals and lesbians should be allowed to freely live their sexual orientation. To therefore punish them for "loving" is to violate their fundamental rights protected under both local and international laws, they said.


While agreeing that opposition to homosexual and lesbian practices in Nigeria sometimes smack of hypocrisy, we would like to state that the so-called "rights" being sought are unfounded under the Nigerian laws and unacceptable in most countries. Sections 37 and 38 of our 1999 Constitution guaranteeing right to privacy and right to freedom of conscience and religion are curtailed by section 45(1) of the same constitution to the effect that nothing in those sections "shall invalidate any laws that are reasonable justifiable in a democratic society in the interest of defence, public safety, public order, public morality or public health".


Homosexual and lesbians practices are considered offensive to public morality in Nigeria. Besides, at no time was any agreement reached that homosexual and lesbian "rights" should become international laws binding on all nations.


This Day


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Man hangs himself 4 days before wedding

What would have turned out to be a joyous mood for the family of Ezeala and the people of Umuezealaegbe, Umuduru in Isiala Mbano Local Government Area of Imo State became a tragedy as their 25- year -old son, Mr. Adindu Ezeala, allegedly hanged himself four days to his traditional marriage to his heartthrob.


An eye witness from the community also informed LEADERSHIP that Adindu had disappeared from his family compound on October 25 without a word to any of his family members.


Thinking that it was one of his usual time out, the witness added that no member of the family suspected anything coupled with the fact that his motorbike, which he goes to a far distance with, was still parked in the compound.


But the bubble burst the following day when his younger brother walked down the hill behind their compound to answer the call of nature and saw the lifeless body of his elder brother hanging helplessly on a tree.


The father of the deceased, Mr. Lawrence Ezeala, who narrated what happened, described his son as a well behaved child and wondered why he could take his own life.


He added that his son had before his suicide mission, kept N100,000 on his table, which was assumed to be the bride price for his wife, a bank note and his motorbike keys.


When contacted, the Imo State Police command, said investigation into the matter was ongoing.


Leadership




Student bathed with acid after rejecting dating request needs N24 million ($151,390) for treatment


A 100 level student of the Federal University of Technology, Yola, Miss Franca Ogbu, who was bathed with acid on May 5, 2011, is still lying critically ill in a hospital bed as a result of the dehumanising treatment meted on her by her fellow student.


Speaking with newsmen in Makurdi, Nick Eworo, member, representing Obi Constituency in the Benue State's House of Assembly, said Miss Ogbu, who was bathed with acid while she was reading in her school, would need over N24 million to receive medical treatment from Canada to correct the acid burns.


According to Eworo, the victim, Miss Ogbu, was ill treated simply because she turned down an approach from a fellow student who needed her friendship.


Eworo disclosed that even though the police arrested the culprit, information reaching him indicated that he was later released for reasons yet to be made known to the public.


He urged the Benue State's government to liaise with her Adamawa counterpart and investigate the matter thoroughly and bring the culprit to book immediately.


He also urged the law enforcement agencies to intensify efforts in the investigation of the matter and bring the perpetrator of the act to justice.


Eworo further enjoined the government of Benue to immediately intervene and assist the victim with finance to enable her receive good medical treatment.


Eworo also called on his colleagues to do an in-house donation to enable the victim receive some medication and thereafter, prevailed on the executive to do same.


The Moment


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Wednesday, November 9, 2011

80 million phones used in Nigeria


An Information and Communication Technology (ICT) non-profit initiative, African Mobile Application (AMA), has said over 80million phones were used in the country.


Speaking during an international exhibition and presentation event held in Lagos last week, one of the group's advisers, Mr. Tayo Oduwole, said the rate at which technology was going, phones would now be used for multipurpose activities, which would monitor personal health issues as well as finding solution to man's immediate problems.


"From available statistics, I can tell you clearly that over 80 million phones are being used in the country and by value, this means that we are entering an era, where ICT would, if it had not completely taken over the affairs of mankind," Oduwole said.


Speaking further, Oduwole said with the development, which had taken place in the ICT sector, more Nigerians now made use of phones compared to when it first arrived in Nigeria.


He added that very soon, phones would begin to serve the purpose of monitoring personal health issues and provide solutions to man's immediate problems.


He told THISDAY that the objective behind the initiative was to discover gifted young developers and harness their intellectual capacity for the good of man and the society and in achieving this, group has organised a competition in order to achieve this.


"The initiative is out to create beneficial impact on people and provide financial benefit to the people at large as the competition provided opportunities for 20 finalists, who were selected from a recent concluded mobile application competition, where they demonstrated and exhibited their applications after several entries," he further added.


Explaining further the rationale of the exhibition, Oduwole said the group sought to provide opportunities for young people to solve critical socio-economic challenges, through the deployment of appropriate applicators and also to increase awareness.


This Day


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Nigeria on alert as U.S. warns of Boko Haram attacks

Nigeria was on high alert after the United States warned of fresh attacks following a wave of deadly blasts claimed by Islamists that killed 150 people in the northeast of the country.


Friday's attacks in the city of Damaturu were among the deadliest ever carried out by Boko Haram, an Islamist sect based in the north of Africa's most populous country.


The US embassy in Nigeria warned the sect could next strike hotels and other targets in the capital Abuja during the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha.


"Following the recent Boko Haram, aka Nigerian Taliban, attacks in Borno and Yobe State, the US embassy has received information that Boko Haram may plan to attack several locations and hotels in Abuja," the embassy said.


Security was stepped up in Abuja, which has been a target of past attacks, including an August 26 suicide bomb at the UN headquarters which claimed 24 lives.


Embassy staff were told to avoid the venues and US citizens were urged to exercise "additional caution".


As well as normal in-house security checks, police were also deployed to the hotels, while armed soldiers stopped cars driving close to the hotels in the capital and searched their bonnets and trunks.


The country's state security services played down the latest threat, arguing that police had been on high alert for three months.


"The current threat of attack on the three hotels in Abuja is not news, and for over three months the security services have taken pro-active measures to protect the designated critical facilities and others," the president's security advisor, Andrew Azazi, said in a statement.


Some 13,000 policemen and specialist anti-terror squads were nevertheless deployed to mosques and churches and other locations across Abuja on Sunday, police officials said.


Worshippers were screened by metal detectors before they entered some churches.


The British Foreign Office on Sunday also warned of "a heightened threat of terrorist attacks during the Eid ... weekend across northern states in Nigeria."


It advised British nationals to maintain a "high level of vigilance."


Police have been placed on red alert. "We don't want to take chances, particularly in Abuja," said national police spokesman Yemi Ajayi.


A Western diplomat in the capital said: "Obviously what happened in the last few days, and the US warning, has called for extra monitoring."


In the grief-stricken city of Damaturu where the 150 died, thousands of Muslims gathered for Eid el-Adha prayers at an open ground patrolled by dozens of armed police.


Celebrations in the sleepy city, which is under a curfew, were low key and on Monday its streets were almost deserted and businesses shut. Some people went to a hospital morgue to collect the remains of their loved ones for burial.


President Goodluck Jonathan, who described the wave of gun and bomb attacks in the capital of Yobe state as "heinous", appealed to Muslims to pray for peace as they marked Eid, which ended at sundown on Monday.


Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, chief of the world's largest pan-Islamic body the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, "strongly condemned the terrorist attacks" describing them as "criminal ... contrary to all human values and the noble Islamic values."


EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton sharply condemned the "brutal attacks" adding: "Such mindless and heinous acts cannot under any circumstances be justified."


While churches and police were among the initial targets, gunmen fired indiscriminately in the streets. Muslims and Christians alike were among those killed.


Militants from Boko Haram, whose name means "Western Education Is Sin" in the regional Hausa language, have in the past targeted police and military, community and religious leaders, as well as politicians.


The latest attacks point to the group's growing determination to take on the government.


"The truth of the matter is we are (now) faced with armed insurgency," said northern-based rights activist Shehu Sani, of the Civil Rights Congress group.


Boko Haram has claimed to be fighting for the establishment of an Islamic state in Nigeria, whose 160 million population is roughly divided in half between Christians and Muslims.


RNW


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Tuesday, November 8, 2011

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Canada to invest in Nigeria's mining sector

Nigeria's efforts to attract foreign direct investments (FDIs) into the mining industry has started yielding results with the Canadian government indicating interest in the development of the sector.


To this end, the Minister of Mines and Steel Development, Alhaji Musa Mohammed Sada, at the weekend received in audience at the Canadian High Commissioner to Nigeria, Chris Cooter, and the Deputy High Commissioner, Jean J. Gautheir in his office.


Describing the meeting as timely, Sada said the federal government was working proactively at diversifying the economy of the country to other sectors particularly minerals and metal sector.


He noted that the regulatory frameworks, which were being operated in the nation's mining industry were Canadian-based, adding that draft copies of the mining regulations were circulated to prospective mining investors at the last Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada, (PDAC) Forum in Canada.


This is to enable them get additional inputs in order to have regulatory frameworks that conform to international best practices.


The minister informed the delegation that the federal Government had already put in place a Committee on Bitumen for the Country to develop its bitumen belt.


He disclosed that he had directed the Chairman of the committee to liaise with the Canadian Embassy on the way forward for the exploration of the bitumen resources.


He disclosed that the state governments where the solid minerals resources for the economic development of their states and the country.


Sada reiterated the Federal government's readiness to collaborate with state governments and the private sector in the sustainable growth of the minerals and metal sector.


He assured the delegation that Nigerian Government would do necessary things to facilitate operations of investors in the minerals and metal sector for the benefit of investors and Nigerians.


On the invitation for participation at International Convention, Trade Show and Investors Exchange under the auspices of the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada, (PDAC) in Canada next year, the Minister assured that the ministry would attend.


PDAC is a yearly event that normally attract over 100 countries since its inception 39 years ago to present the opportunity of sharing of ideas and networking on new development in the mining industry.


Cooter, who led the delegation, said the purpose of their visit was to indicate their interest as well as seek for areas of collaboration in the development of the nation's mining industry.


He praised the existing healthy economic relationship between Canada and Nigeria, expressing the preparedness of Canadian Government to foster more cooperation.


Cooter said Canada was the second largest mining country in the world with about 250 mining operators dotted around the globe in countries like Zambia, Tanzania, Liberia, Congo among others.


He extended the invitation of the Canadian Government to the Minister for participation in the forthcoming (PDAC) forum in Canada, stressing that this would go a long way in boosting the economic relationship between the two countries.


This Day


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Trade between Nigeria and China reaches U.S.$10 Billion

rade volume between Nigeria and China will hit $10 billion by the end of 2011, the Chinese government has said.


China's Deputy-Minister for Commerce, Mr. Chen Jian, disclosed this during a meeting with the Nigerian Minister of Trade and Investment, Olusegun Aganga, yesterday in Beijing.


He added that Chinese companies had invested a total of $8.3 billion in Nigeria, noting that they were also involved in engineering projects worth $28.1 billion in the country.


Jian said the Chinese government would encourage Chinese companies to continue to invest in Nigeria if the Nigerian government could pay more attention to improving the business environment, pursue consistent policies and provide security for foreign investors.


He said: "This year marks the 40th year of bilateral relationship between Nigeria and China. By the end of this year, trade volume between China and Nigeria will be $10 billion. This will be record high. Chinese companies also have actual investments worth $8.3 billion in Nigeria.


"We will encourage our companies to step up their investments in your country if the Nigerian government can make the business environment more friendly, ensure consistent policies and provide adequate security for foreign investors."


He noted that the decision to have a ministry oversee investment issues in Nigeria, however, showed that the government was committed to attracting Foreign Direct Investment into the country, adding that China's Ministry of Commerce would cooperate with the Nigerian Ministry of Trade and Investment in the area of capacity building for ministry officials.


According to the deputy minister, going forward, the two countries should focus on further developing bilateral trade and further increasing the quality of trade between them.


Special Assistant to the Minister of Trade and Investment on Corporate Communications, Mrs Yemi Kolapo, added that China said it was willing to take measures to increase the import of oil and non-oil products from Nigeria in order to boost trade.


On his part, Olusegun Aganga, the Nigerian Trade and Investment Minister, noted that Nigeria regarded China as a strategic partner, assuring the Chinese government that the investment climate reform which the Nigerian government commenced recently, would provide the right environment for the Chinese to further invest in critical areas such as infrastructure.


He urged the Chinese government to make Nigeria a manufacturing zone for most of China's products, saying that this would help to create more jobs in the country and resolve the trade imbalance issue.


"Nigeria has the raw materials and the market needed for fruitful investments. Your country (China) has the capital and technology. An enhanced investment relationship will be a win-win situation for the two countries," Aganga noted.


He called on the Chinese government to help reduce the infrastructure deficit in Nigeria by encouraging Chinese companies to invest more in power, rail and road projects, adding that "Nigeria will continue to record double-digit growth every year for the next 20 years if infrastructure is fixed."


The trade and investment minister, however, implored the two countries to sign the Memorandum of Understanding on the trading of quality products to solve the problem of sub-standard goods being imported into Nigeria.


Leadership


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Guests flee hotels in Abuja due to Boko Haram bomb threat

Guests yesterday deserted the three major hotels in Abuja which were listed on the security alert issued by the United States government.


The security alert had indicated that members of the dreaded Boko Haram sect might launch an attack on Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Sheraton Hotel and Towers as well as Nicon Luxury Hotel.


Investigations by LEADERSHIP showed that guests virtually deserted the three hotels during the day, even when extra security measures were put in place to forestall attack on the facilities.


One of our correspondents who visited Transcorp Hilton reported that soldiers guarded the main gates to the hotel while vehicles going into the premises were carefully checked before being allowed in.


Bags and other personal effects of guests, seeking entry into the hotel were also subjected to thorough searches before tallies were issued by the gatemen.


The back gates of the hotel were locked and a Volkswagen Passat car was packed directly behind a stone hedge apparently built by the hotel management.


Our correspondent reported that virtually all the parking bays in the hotel were empty while a few foreign guests were spotted discussing in front of the main lobby of the hotel complex.


He said the Piano Lounge, the Bukka, the Capital Bar and other facilities which enjoy immense patronage in the past were empty.


A guest, who gave his name simply as Dr. John noted that the security alert issued by the US Government has scared a lot of guests, especially foreigners, forcing them to relocate from the hotel.


He said, "I am still here because I can't run away from my country. I know that a lot of foreigners have fled and even Nigerians too. But we will be making these criminals (Boko Haram members) happy that they have caused people to panic and run.


"There is no basis whatsoever for them to attack innocent people. I don't understand why the federal government should allow these people to terrorise the country and get away with it.


At Sheraton, our correspondent reported that soldiers and riot policemen mounted sentry at the main gates and personally checked every vehicle going into the hotel.


The security operatives, who showed high level of professionalism politely, asked visitors to the hotel to open the boots of their cars and their luggage for checks.


After searching a vehicle, the security operatives thanked the driver for being patient with them and waved him to drive on.


However, our correspondent said the parking areas within the complex were almost empty while a few persons where found inside the reception hall.


Fresh security screening was carried out on guests before they were allowed into the swimming pool area.


The main bar, the Obudu Grill and other exclusive areas of the hotel were patronized by a handful of guests while the hitherto busy walkways were deserted.


A guest who pleaded anonymity told our correspondent that the security concern in the capital city was responsible for the low patronage of the hotel.


He said soon after the security situation in Abuja deteriorated, a lot of people who patronised major hotels in the city have moved into smaller and more secure hotels.


He said, "The situation is scary. In fact, nobody would want to experience what happened at the UN House or the Police Headquarters. But we pray that God would help us restore sanity in the country. We cannot go far as a nation with these threats.


At Nicon Luxury, our correspondent reported that operatives of the State Security Service watched over the main gates of the complex from a reasonable distance.


The SSS men who spotted black T-shirts watched the hotel gates from two jeeps they parked slightly behind the security house.


While they were not involved in checking vehicles coming in to the premises, they however, watched as the hotel security men and women frisked cars and passengers before being allowed in.


Apart from the swimming pool area where a few guests were found bathing and dancing to music played by an in-house Disc Jockey, the other facilities were deserted.


Our correspondent reported that the reception area, the Oxygen Bar and the restaurants were empty while a few guests including foreigners were seen moving in and out of the hotel.


However, a staff who pleaded anonymity told LEADERSHIP that a lot of guests checked out of the hotel due to what he described as a false security alert.


He said unlike last years, the level of patronage has drastically reduced and blamed the situation on the activities of the Boko Haram sect in some parts of the country, including Abuja.


When contacted, Sheraton's general manager, Mr. Morten Ebbesen said he has no opinion to give on the matter but, however, referred LEADERSHIP to a news item on Reuters web site.


The development came just as the federal government yesterday stepped up security in and around the three hotels, Sheraton, Transcorp Hilton and Nicon Luxury. LEADERSHIP investigations reveal that large numbers of US citizens yesterday heeded the warning by their home government to abstain from the targeted hotels.


But our correspondents observed that some foreign nationals, some of whom were US citizens still went about their normal businesses in the listed hotels despite warnings about their safety. A British businessman who spoke with LEADERSHIP on condition of anonymity, explained that the reason he maintains his residency in one of the luxury hotels was because he had nowhere else to go.


He said: "It's true we heard in the news that there was an alert about a bomb attack, but my reason of being here is to transact my business. We only heard it yesterday in the news. Where else do I go, anyway?" He said.


But the federal government has said that it has taken adequate counter security measures to secure lives and property in the country despite multiple attacks by Boko Haram that left more than 100 persons dead in Yobe and Borno States, with threats to bomb parts of Abuja.


This was disclosed by the national security adviser, General Owoye Andrew Azazi (retd) in a press release made available to LEADERSHIP yesterday in Abuja.


"The current threat of attack on the three hotels [Nicon Hilton, Sheraton and Nicon Luxury] in Abuja is not news. For over three months, the security services have taken pro-active measures to protect the designated critical facilities and others," the Federal Government said.


It also called on Nigerians "to go about their normal business without fear or hindrance".


When asked if the United States Security Service share information with its Nigeria counterpart, the spokesperson of the State Security Service (SSS), Marilyn Ogar, agreed that Nigeria is having security challenges just like other nations but its security system is not overwhelmed.


Ogar said, "We all know that we have internal security challenges and it is nothing new. And of course we all know that the Internet is raw because if you ask 'where did this information come from' they will say it came from the Internet, a tweet, which was something that somebody sent as an email. And we hoped that has been addressed.


"I don't think there is anything that is beyond Nigeria's security agencies because we have deployed men and we have beefed up security everywhere. So whether information was shared or not, I know this very well and I can say very well whether information was shared or not."


Leadership


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Nigerian government dismisses U.S. bomb warning

The Federal Government yesterday dismissed an alert issued by the United States embassy in Abuja that three top hotels in the city may be bombed by the Boko Haram sect that has been carrying out string of attacks against security forces and government buildings for over a year now.


The embassy Sunday in a statement warned its citizens not to visit Transcorp Hilton, Sheraton and NICON Luxury hotels, three resorts of choice for diplomats, foreigners and Nigeria's elite, saying it had intelligence report the sect would strike in those places.


But the National Security Adviser General Owoye Andrew Azazi (rtd) in a statement yesterday in Abuja said the claim by the Americans is far fetched.


"The current threat of attack on the three hotels (Transcorp Hilton, Sheraton and NICON Luxury) in Abuja is not news and for over three months the security services have taken proactive measures to protect the designated critical facilities and others," he said.


He called on Nigerians "to go about their normal business without fear or hindrance," assuring that the government has taken adequate counter security measures to secure lives and property in the country despite multiple attacks by Boko Haram that left about 100 people dead in Yobe and Borno States and threats of bomb attack in Abuja.


Also speaking to the press, the spokesperson of the State Security Service (SSS) Marilyn Ogar, said that Nigeria is having security challenges just like other nations but its security system is not overwhelmed.


Responding to questions after a briefing at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Abuja Ogar said there is nothing that cannot be handled by Nigeria's security.


She said, "We all know we have internal security challenges, and we are sure the threat is from the internet, it was a tweet but somebody who was mischievous sent it as a an email. We know that every nation wants to show that it takes care of it citizens and if America sent a message to their citizens it is nothing strange and does not mean our country is disintegrating."


She urged the media to report issues accurately so as not to cause panic amongst the people.


"If there is a problem anywhere in the country it is not for us to pass judgment and not enough for us to cry that we are overwhelmed, we are only asking the media to report issues that will not cause further panics. We must reduce areas of discontent, journalists must begin to follow State and Local governments to know how and what they are doing for their people and I am sure that would help in ensuring peace, let us report news that will keep us together and not what will tear us apart" she said.


She said the situation in Yobe, Maiduguri and Bauchi is now under control but urged people who have information that will be useful to the agency to come forth with it.


Ogar said that the nation had "a wonderful Sallah celebration with pockets of issues here and there" but it is nothing the nation's security system cannot contain.


She called on the media to hold the state and local governments accountable for what goes on within their sphere of administration because "the federal government cannot be everywhere. We all know that if we begin to engage these youth and take them off the streets and give them gainful employment of course there will be peace."


The nation's security system has come under heavy criticism for failing to stop the numerous attacks on private and public individuals across the country especially in the north.


In the wake of the August 26 suicide bombing of the United Nations House where 27 people died, Azazi had said that the nation's security system is not able to contain the new security challenges posed by Boko Haram.


Azazi had warned that unless adequate arrangements were put in place in terms of training and retraining of security operatives on modern security management that is technology based, and provision of modern equipment, there might not be an end to the growing insecurity across the country, saying that "terrorism has come to stay".


Daily Trust


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Monday, November 7, 2011

University girl bathed in acid for turning down dating request


This are the shocking photos of an innocent girl who was bathed with acid by a male student for refusing to have sex with him.


"What did I do to deserve this? When has turning down a request for a relationship become a sin?”

These are the questions that have been pouring forth from the devastated mouth of Francisca Ogbu, a first-year undergraduate of the Federal University of Technology, Yola, Adamawa State (FUTY), who was recently bathed with acid, allegedly by a man seeking an affair with her.

Looking devastated on her hospital bed at the female surgical ward of the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), Francisca painted the picture of a gloomy future and a jinxed academic career.
 “My education has already suffered and I don’t think there is hope again,” she declared as tears rolled down her disfigured cheek.

Francisca’s ordeal started last year after gaining admission into the department of economics at FUTY. “One boy, called Bright, has been requesting to go out with me. He is not in my department. He was in 500 Level. He even bought gifts sometime ago but I rejected them. I told him I was not interested because I was very new in the school and I saw his request as a distraction,” she told our reporter.

 She said she thought the matter was over. “I was reading in a classroom one day with a candle, because there was no light on campus that night. There were other people in the classroom. At about 11.30 pm, somebody called me to come out of the class but I refused, insisting that it was late and that I was reading. Then, I heard somebody calling my name again from outside. It was a familiar voice and I was encouraged to stand up from my seat and look out from the door. That was all.”

 The decision to look out for the caller through the classroom door was Francisca’s greatest undoing. All she could remember moments later was the unbearable pain from the acid poured on her. With a badly damaged right ear which has since been cut off, the destiny of the young lady, the second in the family of seven, changed. She was rushed to the hospital in Yola and subsequently referred to the UMTH.
 Unable to hold back her tears, Francisca lamented that her education has suffered. “I want to go back to school,” she kept saying. She said the incident, which happened barely a month after her matriculation, had shattered her dreams.

To return to school, she would need to undergo more treatment and facial surgery in India and it would cost over N5 million, excluding travel expenses and feeding but then, her parents, who have been supportive since the incident occurred, cannot afford the amount. In fact, her father, Mr. Ogbu, a civil servant, was said to have expended his entire savings on the treatment, which was initially borne by FUTY.

 “The man was here last week and I really pity him. He is totally broke. He has expended his savings on the treatment of his daughter. He said he had sworn that the only legacy he could give his children was education but the man is now sad because he seems to believe his vision has been truncated,” an official at the UMTH told Daily Sun.

 It was gathered that the suspect names Bright, has been expelled by FUTY. He was also said to have been picked up by the police and released later. Francisca is appealing to the government, corporate organisations and well-meaning Nigerians to assist her financially so that she could go for surgery in India as well as realise her dream of going back to school.


Nigeria News


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Video - Nigeria's fight against Boko Haram



A Nigerian armed Islamist group has carried out a series of attacks in the Yobe state capital of Damaturu, leaving more than 100 people dead.

The blasts occurred just before Eid al-Adha, or the feast of sacrifice, celebrated by Muslims around the world.

Boko Haram has been active since 2002, with its fighters killing hundreds of people.

Most Nigerian Muslims are opposed to the group's tactics, but with a high level of unemployment, the group seems to have little trouble finding new recruits.

Many people blame the government for its failed strategy in fighting Boko Haram.


Aljazeera


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30 year old man rapes 96 year old woman

A 30 year-old-man, Lanre Aremu, has been arrested by the Police in Kogi for allegedly raping a 96-year-old grandmother, Ige Samuel in Iyara, Ijumu Local Government Area of the state.


Parading the suspect before newsmen at the state Police Command Headquarters on Friday in Lokoja, Mr Samuel Ojo, the Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) in charge of Criminal Investigation, said the act was an abomination, ungodly and inhuman.


The daughter of the victim told newsmen that the incident happened on Oct. 31, when most of the residents were in Church.


She said the suspect forcefully pushed her mother into the room and raped her, adding that she was alarmed when her mother suddenly started behaving funny and speaking incoherently after the incident.


One of the sons of the old woman, who is in his 60s, said the incident happened because it was on a Sunday morning and the woman's guide had travelled to Ekiti.


He added that the suspect jumped out through the window, leaving behind his pair of slippers with the helpless old woman panting and writhing in pains when he noticed that people were returning from Church.


He said their father died a long time ago, adding that the suspect must have committed the crime for some ritual purposes.


He urged the police to compel the accused to reverse whatever he did to the woman and do everything possible to restore his mother's sanity.


The suspect, who spoke in Yoruba, denied the allegation, saying that the old woman beckoned on him through the window for assistance only for him to be accused of rape.


In a similar matter, one Promise Uche, a businessman of Olobayo Housing Estate, 200-unit, Lokoja was also paraded for allegedly raping his neighbour's 19-year-old daughter on Oct. 31.


The Police said Uche allegedly abducted the girl into his room and raped her, adding that doctors' report confirmed the act.


He said that the suspects would be arraigned after police investigation.


Vanguard


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Migrants to the UK must earn £35,000 annually to Stay

Any skilled migrant who wants to stay in Britain must earn a minimum salary of 35,000 Pounds annually, a new British government report said on Friday in London.


The number of skilled migrants allowed to settle permanently in Britain will be cut by two thirds.


According to the report, only 20,000 foreign workers in skilled jobs such as computing, university teaching and nursing would be allowed to stay on in the country along with family members after their current working visas must have expired.


The report quotes Prof. David Metcalf, Chairman of the UK government's Migration Advisory Committee as saying that there were "sound economic" reasons for the introduction of such restriction.


The proposals also applied to workers covered by "Tier2" of government's points-based immigration system.


Those included under this group are scientific researchers, financial analysts, chefs and management consultants.



More than 200,000 people are currently granted the right to settle in the UK each year.


The Government is seeking to cut net migration to under 100,000 by the end of 2015 and has also targeted foreign student visas for severe cuts.


Government has banned over 450 Colleges, 170 of them in London and the south east of England from bringing foreign students into Britain.


The new crack down on migrants nd related measures are likely to affect many Nigerian including students already in the UK and those who desire to come to the country for studies in the future.


Vanguard


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UK deports 61 Nigerians




Friday, November 4, 2011

Stephen Keshi appointed as new Super Eagles coach


Former Super Eagles captain, Stephen Keshi has been appointed as the new coach of the Super Eagles. The Nigeria Football Federation yesterday confirmed the former Togo national team manager as replacement for Samson Siasia who was sacked last week.


The technical committee of the NFF had recommended Keshi ahead of other applicants including a host of European coaches who were ruled out due to the federation's financial constraints.


Details of the contract include that he will qualify the country for the 2013 Nations Cup and the 2014 World Cup. The mandate also includes to guide the Super Eagles to at least the quarter-finals of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.


Keshi has been given free hand to pick his assistants. The Contract will expire at the end of the World Cup but could be renewed upon a satisfactory performance.


Although details of his salary was not available as at press time, it was gathered that he will earn about N3million, which will be reviewed upwards to Samson Siasia's N5million only if and when his contract is eventually confirmed.


A communique from the executive committee of the NFF stated that Keshi's appointment was unanimous.


Like Siasia, Keshi will be allowed to pick his own assistants, according to the NFF. Keshi himself has insisted he would pick his own staff amid speculations that his Super Eagles teammate Sunday Oliseh will be appointed as his number two man.


'Big Boss' will also not be given the full powers that Siasia enjoyed during his 11-month reign as Eagles manager.


It was gathered that these conditions were forwarded by the technical committee of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) after their meeting Wednesday for the executive committee to ratify.


Daily Champion


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Nollywood steals the show at Kenya International Film Festival

It was a memorable day for the Nigerian motion picture industry in Kenya, as the presence of Nollywood actress, Genevieve Nnaji, her counterparts; Ramsey Nouah, Tina Mba, Kunle Afolayan and Gideon Okeke brought thousands of their East African fans, who desired to catch a glimpse of the actors, to the Prestige Plaza, venue of the Kenya International Film Festival.


Apart from the youths who could be said to be motivated by the Nollywood stars, older Kenyans, among them, University lecturers, students of literaturte and filmmakers where on hand to interact with professor Wole Soyinka, who was the headline personality for the event tagged; Nollywood Road Show.


Organised by the National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB), the event presented two of Nigeria's best movies of recent time- Kunle Afolayan's Figurine, which stars Ramsey Nouah and Mahmood Ali-Balogun's Tango with Me, which featured Genevieve Nnaji and Tima Mba. Both movies had won the selection of the NFVCB as tools of strategic marketing window for Nigeria.


The Nollywood Road Show is a part of the agency's Nigeria in the Movie (NIM) project which, Emeka Mba, Director General of NFVCB says is geared towards redefining the identity, influence, character and image of the country.


The International Road Show is therefore premised on creating further investment opportunities into the movie sector through the synergy that may arise from a network created by participating and promoting Nigeria at the KIFF for example.


The involvement of Soyinka, the pride of the black race and the only African Nobel Laurete winner only created the bond expected of the African cinema rather than the competition associated with the seeming dominance of Nollywood movies.


The Professor, who shared the podium with KIFF's Festival Director, Charles Akiba noted among other issues, the need for Africa to synergise as a film industry, same way, that effort are ongoing to create a caucus of African literature.


"There is the need to get businessmen to teach the filmmakers how to market their wealth. I have been on the film jury since the 60s and I know that Africa has a long history of filmmaking."


Soyinka who also answered to the question as to why some of his books have not been adapted into movies, said he is disposed to filmmakers who may be willing to do so as much as they have a good understanding of Africaness that his themes deal with.


He noted that one of the reasons the movie on one of his books; Kongi's Harvest was not successful was because the filmmaker, an African American did not understand well enough the African setting, culture, and mythology.


Vanguard


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Nigerian government moves to restrict British airways flights to Lagos

There appears to be no reprieve for British Airways yet as the Federal Government has taken steps to restrict all British Airways flights to Lagos from next week.


Although the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, FAAN, cited operational reasons for the restriction, Vanguard gathered that it might be in connection with the current logjam between the Federal Government and its British counterpart over denial of slot allocations to Arik Air at Heathrow Airport in London.


The Federal Government had, Wednesday, reduced British Airways' weekly flight frequencies into the country from seven to three, citing the Bilateral Air Services Agreement, BASA, between both countries.


The British authorities said it took the decision to protect its airlines, British Airways and Virgin Atlantic Airways, flying into the country.


It was learnt that the restriction was limited only to British Airways, fuelling speculations that the Federal Government's posture is in retaliation to the shabby treatment meted to Arik on its operations to Heathrow.


Arik Chairman, Sir Joseph Arumemi-Ikhide, had raised an alarm last week that he was compelled to pay for slots at London Heathrow, explaining that he had to rent landing slots from British Midland International at 14 million Pounds between 2009 and last year, a development which runs counter to the BASA between Nigeria and Britain.


Consequent upon the alarm rasied by Arik, Aviation Minister, Princess Stella Oduah, issued a statement, Wednesday, slashing British Airways' weekly frequencies to three.


But reacting to the development, yesterday, British Airways said FAAN's plan amounted to a further muzzle of its operations in Nigeria, wondering why the restriction was limited only to its operations.


he British Airways in a statement last night by


an Petrie, the airline's Regional Commercial Manager for Africa, said: "The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, FAAN, has restricted British Airways flights to Lagos from next week. They have cited operational reasons for this imposition. It appears that British Airways is the only airline to be singled-out by these restrictions."


We are doing all we can to resolve this issue.


"The matter is now in the hands of the British Government which is speaking with the Nigerian authorities.


"The distribution of the slots at Heathrow is managed through an independent organisation, Airport Coordination Ltd (ACL). ACL manage slot allocation in a fair and transparent manner, where all airlines have the opportunity to be involved," British Airways said in a statement issued last night.


Ian Petrie, the airline's Regional Commercial Manager for Africa, said further: 'We remain committed to Nigeria and have had a presence in the country for over 75 years. We want to keep serving Nigeria and hope that the two governments resolve this issue with sensibility and as soon as possible.


"While we have robust contingency plans in place, any disruption will have an impact of travellers to and from Nigeria, as well as local suppliers," he said.


Stakeholders in the nation's aviation industry had always lamented Nigeria's ability to reciprocate the BASA between Nigeria and Britain on the London route, following the absence of a Nigerian carrier on the route until Arik Air emerged on the route.


The BASA gave both countries access to 21 frequencies on the route, which only the British carriers, British Airways and Virgin Atlantic, had always exploited, with Nigeria receiving paltry royalties for having no carriers on the route.


Vanguard


Related stories: Virgin Atlantic ending partnership with Nigeria airlines


Adebayo Ogunlesi, 56, acquires London Gatwick Airport




Thursday, November 3, 2011

Video - New bus system in Lagos, Nigeria changing millions of lives



In the United States, Thanksgiving is the busiest travel weekend of the year. But in everyday Lagos, Nigeria, commuters constantly face massive gridlock, and getting around Lagos takes patience and strong nerves. Up to 17 million people live here and 7 million of them are on the road every day, fighting for every bit of space. But since 2008 a new bus system, funded by the World Bank and other donors, is making the way to work a safe, fast, and affordable trip. It has turned the people of Lagos into public transport fans.


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Shell raises concern on unprecedented oil theft in Nigeria

The Shell Petroleum Development of Nigeria (SPDC) has raised  alarm over what it called an unprecedented scale of crude oil theft in the country, saying it has discovered 16 new oil theft points in the “Imo River field alone”.

The oil firm also said 10 additional illegal oil bunkering incidents had been recorded in the Eastern Niger Delta since it shut down production from Imo River field on August 28, following an upsurge of sabotage activities, which had adversely impacted the environment, resulting in deferment of 25,000 barrels of oil per day (bpd).

Shell’s Vice-President, Health Safety and Environment (HSE) and Corporate Affairs, sub-Saharan Africa, Mr. Tony Attah, who made these disclosures in an interactive session with journalists Wednesday, said production from the affected field would “remain suspended until the crude theft and illegal refining activities have stopped”.

He explained that a recent helicopter overfly showed that unknown persons had drilled holes and installed valves to transfer crude to waiting barges and trucks, in the process polluting  farm lands and water bodies.

“We are very disappointed that oil thieves are still at work,” Attah said adding, “This is why we call for concerted efforts to help stop this criminal activity, which not only puts the lives of the perpetrators and the public at risk, but causes severe environmental impact and impacts the communities in the areas. It also wastes badly needed revenue to finance development even in the same areas in which the activities are taking place.”

He restated that more than 75 per cent of all oil spill incidents and more than 70 per cent of all oil spilled from the SPDC facilities in the Niger Delta between 2006 and 2010 were caused by sabotage, theft and illegal refining, adding that since January 1, this year, the company had published data on every spill on the web to further demonstrate the robustness of its oil spill response process.

Attah also revealed that the company was examining ways to bring third party verification to the oil spill investigation process in order to bring further transparency to the assessment of causes and volumes.
To stem the tide, he said the company was deploying new technologies to ensure that new pipelines were buried deeper to prevent vandals from having access to them.

He explained that the deployment of surveillance contract would be maintained to safeguard the existing pipelines.

He said Shell believes in multi-stakeholders approach to the worrisome problem, noting, however, that until sabotage and crude theft spills were stopped or at least curbed, the vast majority of oil spills would continue to impact the environment.

“Nobody else operating in the Niger Delta comes close to this level of transparency. But regardless of how well we run our operations, until sabotage and crude theft spills are stopped or curbed, the vast majority of oil spills will continue to blight large swathes of land and pollute rivers and farm lands,” he said.

He attributed the cause of oil theft to unemployment and poverty, but noted however that these are no excuse for indulging in such sordid acts.

On the report of the study carried out by the United Nations Environment Programme’s (UNEP) on oil pollution in Ogoniland, Attah said Shell was working with the presidential committee to arrive at a desirable action plan for the area.

Towards this end, he said Shell’s representatives last week met with the government and lawmakers to deliberate on what could be “a starting point”.

Last week, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) disclosed that seven Nigerians and two Ghanaians were last month sentenced to 10 years on each of the nine charges filed against them by the commission for illegally dealing in petroleum products.

Stolen crude and illegally poorly refined petroleum products are often exported and sold on the lucrative black market at neighbouring countries.

Spokesman of the Joint Task Force in the Niger Delta, Lieu-tenant Colonel Timothy Antigha, had said on Monday that a ship laden with 5,000 tonnes of stolen oil and 30 barges, also laden with unspecified quantities of crude and illegally refined oil were impounded in Bayelsa State.

A leaked United States diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks recently, fingered some unnamed Nigerian political elite and soldiers as among those who profited from large-scale oil theft in the Niger Delta that might have cost the country up to a 10th of its production.

Nigeria is the world's eighth biggest exporter of crude oil but thieves take a sizeable proportion of its output by drilling into pipelines or sometimes hijacking barges loaded with oil.

In the meantime, the SPDC has lifted the force majeure, which it declared on Forcados loadings on October 10, for October, November and December 2011 cargoes as a result of production shutdown due to a sabotage leak on the Trans Forcados pipeline.

Corporate Media Relations Manager, Shell, Mr. Tony Okonedo, said the force majeure, a legal term that frees a company from contractual obligations due to circumstances beyond its control, was lifted effective from 12 noon, November  1, 2011, following completion of repairs of the affected pipeline.


This Day


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Security forces in Nigeria search house to house in Maiduguri

Nigerian security forces are conducting a house-to-house search for weapons in the northeastern city of Maiduguri in a bid to end attacks by Islamic militants.


The operation started on Nov. 1 after the expiration of a deadline for residents to turn in illegal weapons and explosives at designated centers, Colonel Hassan Mohammed, spokesman for the Joint Military Task Force, said today by phone from the city. More than 1,000 light weapons were handed in at just one collection center, he said.


“We made arrests in large numbers of those that refused to hand in their illegal weapons and they are going to be prosecuted,” Mohammed said.


Authorities in Nigeria blame Boko Haram, a militant group inspired by the Taliban, for a spate of attacks in the past year in Africa’s top oil producer that targeted government buildings and the security forces. The group claimed responsibility for an Aug. 26 suicide car-bomb attack on a United Nations building that killed 23 people in the capital, Abuja.


Boko Haram today criticized the weapons-gathering exercise, describing it as a ploy to disarm residents before a government crackdown.


“The federal government wants to disarm you and later launch attacks on you,” Abu Qaqa, a spokesman for the group, said today in a statement handed to reporters in the city. “Don’t surrender your weapons.”


The joint task force plans to expand the search to the suburbs and villages around Maiduguri, Mohammed said.


Bloomberg


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Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Nigeria is 156th out of 187 countries in UN quality of life index

Nigeria is placed 156 out of 187 countries in a new UN study, which ranks countries on their education, income and life expectancy.


The 2011 Human Development Index (HDI) released on Wednesday by the UN Development Programme (UNDP) put Norway, Australia and the Netherlands on the top three countries to live in.


Nigeria placed 142 out of 169 a year ago, was listed among "least human development" countries in terms of wealth and low educational ranking.


However, the 2011 HDI covered a record 187 countries and territories, up from 169 in 2010 and according to the authors the 2011 country rankings "are therefore not comparable" to last years figures.


The 2011 report entitled "Sustainability and Equity: A Better Future for All", put Nigeria's life expectancy at 51.9, below that of Libya 74, Mauritus 73.4, Gabon 62.7 and South Africa, 52.8.


The UN ranks a country's life expectancy by the number of years a newborn infant could expect to live if prevailing pattern of age specific mortality rates at the time of birth stay the same throughout the infants life.



A country's educational achievements is assessed by combining adult literacy rates along with enrolment in primary, secondary and university institutions.


On education, the index on Nigeria shows that the average number of years of schooling received by people's ages 25 and older is 5.0.


The report puts the highest possible years of schooling for a child in Nigeria at 8.9, if the prevailing patterns of age-specific enrolment rates persist throughout the child's life.


With a Gross national income (GNI) per capita of 2,069 dollars, Nigeria lags behind countries like Equatorial Guinea (17,608 dollars), Botswana (13,049 dollars) and Gabon (12,249 dollars).


However the report shows Nigeria to be among sub-Saharan Africa countries that recorded the highest average HDI improvement over the past decade of any region in the world.


Between 1970 and 2010, countries in the lowest 25 per cent of countries ranked--the majority of them African improved their overall HDI achievement by 82 per cent, twice the global average.


There have been many important gains at the national level.


The report shows that extreme poverty has declined in both Kenya and Nigeria, noting that these advances are attributable in part to improvements in water, sanitation, health and other living standards.


Mauritius is the highest HDI achiever in sub-Saharan Africa followed by Gabon Botswana, Namibia and South Africa.


Nonetheless, sub-Saharan Africa is still home to the 10 countries with the lowest HDI levels of the 187 nations and territories included in the 2011 index.


The 10 countries that place last in the 2011 HDI are all in sub-Saharan Africa: Guinea, Central African Republic, Sierra Leone, Burkina Faso, Liberia, Chad, Mozambique, Burundi, Niger, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.


These low-HDI nations still suffer from inadequate incomes, limited schooling opportunities, and life expectancies far below world averages, partly due to deaths from preventable and treatable diseases such as malaria and AIDS.


The report added that in many of these countries lingering armed conflict had further compounded the problem. 


Vanguard


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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Ship with 5000 tons of stolen oil seized by Nigerian forces

Nigeria's military said on Monday it has seized a ship laden with 5000 tons of stolen oil and 30 barges amid rising cases of crude theft in one of the world's main oil producing regions.


The spokesperson of the Joint Task Force deployed in the Niger Delta, Timothy Antigha, said in a statement they impounded a "vessel engaged in the lifting of illegally refined petroleum products" in Bayelsa state on Friday.


He said they arrested the two-member crew on the Nigerian-flagged ship.


In a separate raid conducted at the weekend along the Imo River which lies on the border of nearby Rivers and Abia states, the military reported seizing 30 barges with unspecified quantities of crude and illegally refined oil.


"The JTF have discovered that there is a booming trade in stolen crude oil and illegally refined petroleum products along the Imo River, which recently caused a multi-national oil company to suspend production in the area," said Antigha.


Stolen crude and illegally refined petroleum products are regularly exported and sold on the lucrative black market.


Thieves often sabotage pipelines in order to gain access to crude, resulting in oil spills.


The military said it has arrested dozens of suspected oil thieves in recent months and destroyed some 2000 illegal make-shift refineries.


Seven Nigerians and two Ghanaians were this month sentenced to 10 years on each of nine charges filed against them by Nigeria's anti-graft agency for illegal dealing in petroleum products.


news24


Related story: Nigeria is the highest exporter of crude oil in Africa 



Newcastle's Shola Amoebi to play for Nigeria Super Eagles


World football-governing body, FIFA has finally cleared Foluwashola Ameobi and Victor Moses to play for Nigeria at the senior level.


In separate documents on the two players sent to the Nigeria Football Federation yesterday evening, FIFA declared that both players have been cleared based on the entire documentation remitted by the NFF and the Football Association.


Ameobi, of English Premiership side Newcastle United FC, and Moses, who also plays in the Premiership with Wigan Athletic, have been on the verge for some months now and would be glad with the decision of FIFA's Single Judge on eligibility.


"After having thoroughly examined the entire documentation remitted by the Nigerian Football Federation, the Single Judge concluded that the player Victor Moses fulfils the objective prerequisites as provided for in art. 18 par. 1 of the regulations. In particular, the player has never represented the Football Association representative team at "A" international level.


"Furthermore, the Single Judge also took due note of the fact that, based on the document dated 7 July 2011, issued by the "National population commission" in Garki-Abuja, Nigeria, the player in question already held the Nigerian nationality before representing England for the first time in an international match in an U-17 official competition on March 23, 2007 as he is a Nigerian citizen by birth".


The same statement was made in the case of Shola Ameobi.


The decision was made on October 26, 2011 by the Single Judge of the Players' Status Committee, Mr. Chuck Blazer (USA). He underscored: "The request made by the Nigeria Football Federation and the player for change of Association team is accepted".


Daily Trust


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Monday, October 31, 2011

Artist of the day - Ola Onabule



There are two words that sum up Ola Onabule’s career and music – passion and perseverance.


For nearly two decades, Ola has blazed a trail, leaving behind an education in law to become a singer/songwriter. Then he decided to work outside of the mainstream system of big record labels, setting up his own studios and his own record label.


 “Though my music is of a different idiom, I write with the heart of a folk songwriter and the desire for my lyrics to be heard and read.” – Ola Onabule


Ola was born in London, the eldest of six children born to Nigerian parents. When he was seven his parents returned to their homeland where he spent the next 10 years of his life. He was a natural performer, both at drama and with music. His friends called him Gramaphone, such was his love of music and natural talent.


He later returned to the UK to study law, leaving in his final year to take up a degree in art. He bought himself a guitar and did a few gigs around London, inspired by the music of James Brown and Fela Anikulapo Kuti. Electra Records (US) spotted his talents and signed him to an album deal, which ended a year later.culminating in Ola setting up his own label, Rugged Ram Records.


Ola has since released six albums of original, self-produced material, with the latest album, SEVEN SHADES DARKER to be released internationally in the Spring of 2012 which will  take him on tour dates to theatres and Jazz festivals across the world.


Related story: Video - Ola Onabule's hope for Africa



Samson Siasia no longer Super Eagles coach


Almost three weeks after failing to qualify Nigeria for Januaty's Nations Cup finals, the Board of the Nigeria Football Association (NFF) has relieved Samson Siasia of his duty as Super Eagles coach.


The decision was taken at an executive Committee meeting of the Nigeria Football Federation on Friday in Abuja and finally ended weeks of speculation surrounding the fate of the former international striker.


Although the NFF kept the Siasia saga on the front burner by taking ages to reach a decision, in truth Siasia's had already been sealed once Guinea left the Abuja National Stadium with a share of the points courtesy of their late equaliser in the 2-2 draw.


In making Siasia the best ever packaged indigenous coach, with a monthly salary of N5 million, a brand new car and official quarters, the Glass House had insisted that the former junior international must at least reach the semi-finals of CAN 2012 before activating the second part of his contract, which would have ended in 2014.


But by not even qualifying for Equatorial Guinea/Gabon 2012 he did not fufil section 5.5 of the contract.


Perhaps in more advanced climes, Siasia would have done the honourable thing and resigned knowing that he had fluffled his contract, in the end he opted for the more ignoble termination by the football body.


However, with qualifiers for CAN 2013 kicking off in January, the Glass House knows it has to work fast to fill Siasia's boots.


Already news making the rounds indicate that former national team skippers, Stephen Keshi and Sunday Oliseh may be the ones to take charge of the Super Eagles.


Although a highly placed Board member had hinted that they were considering going for a foreign coach.


This Day


Related stories: Nigeria's Super Eagles fail to qualify for Nations Cup


Video - Nigeria vs Argentina goals


Samson Siasia appointed as new Super Eagles coach




Principal flogs student to death

A young man studying at Shiloh Hills Remedial and Advanced Studies Academy located at No. 7 Rumuibekwe Street, near Shell Residential Area in Port Harcourt, Rivers State was allegedly flogged to death by his principal, one Mr Chudi Nwoko.


Rivers State police spokesperson, Ben Ugwuegbulem, who confirmed the incident said the late student, a 13-year-old was subjected to severe punishment until he slumped and died. He said the matter, which occurred on October 20 was not reported to the police until five days later.


"It was only reported after staff from the school went to condole the family of the deceased and a relative of the boy attacked and wounded the principal. That was when the matter was reported to the police," Ugwuegbulem stated.


He said the case was currently under investigation at the state Criminal Investigation Department (CID) and that he did not have the full particulars of the late student but promised to get back to our reporter


When THISDAY visited the school, a staff who refused to disclose his name told our correspondent that the case was already with the police and he would not comment on it.


This Day


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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Video - Nigeria's population explosion





CNN's Christian Purefoy reports on the population boom in Nigeria.

Related stories: Video - The megaslums of Lagos

Nigeria's middle class growing



Canada to invest in Nigeria's power sector

Canada has become the next country hoping to buy into Nigeria's electricity market still caught up in reforms sweeping through the power sector.


Canadian high commissioner to Nigeria, Chris Cooter, said there was "a global awareness that something massive is unfolding in the power industry in Nigeria."


Cooter and his deputy Jean Gauthier met power minister Bart Nnaji on Tuesday to seek specific areas where Canada can take part in Nigeria's power plan, said a release from the power ministry.


Nnaji has stressed the sensitive nature of the industry, saying the federal government would encourage state governments but discourage mutation of state-run power stations that could possibly be mismanaged and draw back gains on power supply.


"We are guarding against mistakes of the past while addressing other institutional lapses through the strengthening of National Power Training Institute and ensuring that World Bank commitment to the issue of bulk trading is not lost," said the minister.


Canada is interested in the bulk trade and wants to focus also on hydropower, where it is thought to have high comparative advantage.


Nnaji said Nigeria was ready to take on Canadian partners for two hydroelectricity projects, Mambilla and Gurara, expected to produce at least 3,300MW combined.


Cooter announced that Canadian companies were scheduled to visit Nigeria and join other multinationals bidding for different aspects of the power industry.


"The air indicates that something is enveloping Nigeria's capacity to lead the world," he told the minister when they met in Abuja.


"We are here to compliment these efforts to resolve your electricity challenges and galvanize your industrial leadership of Africa."


He allayed Labour concerns over reforms, insisting that privatization efforts in the sector had global investors excited.


But the minister assured that grievances behind Labour agitations would be addressed at all costs.


Daily Trust


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Federal Government fails to deliver 6000MW of electricity