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Showing posts with label Political News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Political News. Show all posts

Saturday 25 October 2014

POLITICAL NEWS: I fell out with Patience Jonathan because I refused to share Rivers money with her" - Amaechi


Governor of Rivers state, Rotimi Amaechi says the major reason he and the first lady, Dame Patience Jonathan fell out was because he refused to share the state money with her. Gov Amaechi said this yesterday October 24th at the graduation ceremony of the Pioneer graduands of the Ignatus Ajuru University of Education held at Rumuolumeni in Rivers state. He said
"Remember, when I became governor, I fought militancy. Right there where you built a new house used to be a hole where they pass into the river nd escape. The security report reached me and I came here and chased the militants away. I asked them to fence the school premises and block the hole. I have to protect you because it is my responsibility. Some of the militants went to Lagos, Ivory Coast, Ghana etc. Today, they are back because the wife of the President bought them back to protest against me." Continue...
I refused to give them money in Abuja because if I do that, I won't be able to carry out any developmental projects or finish the road from Rumuolumeni to Rumuepirikom. The quarel between me and the wife of the Preseident is because she said I should bring your money, Rivers peoples money and share with her" Governor Amaechi alleges
Governor Amaechi is also quoted to have told the graduands that should they vote for President Jonathan back into power in next year's general elections, rivers state's economy would crumble
"Now that you are graduates, you are eligible voters that can use your voters card to change society. Ask yourself this question that I have always asked Rivers people. What have we (Rivers people) done to President Jonathan that he has refused to bring any project to Rivers state. We had to fight them before they could do the East-West road. I had to abuse the federal government and they abused me back before they could do the work you now see on that road. Our President, from the South-South, has taken oil wells from Soku in Rivers state to Bayelsa state. What about the 41 oil wells in Etche that was given to Abia state? Is the President or his wife from Abia? Why do they want us to suffer? If President Jonathan comes back to power in 2015, Rivers state economy will crash" he said
Source: AIT
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Saturday 13 September 2014

POLITICAL NEWS: White House makes it official: US "at war" with IS

US President Barack Obama speaks at the Pentagon in Washington, DC on September 11, 2014 (AFP Photo/Jim Watson)

Washington (AFP) - The White House declared Friday the United States was at war with Islamic State radicals, seeking to rub out another semantic flap over its Syria policy.

In a series of television interviews Secretary of State John Kerry had appeared to be reluctant to term the expansion of US operations against IS in Iraq and Syria as "war."

But pressed to clear up doubts about how President Barack Obama sees the conflict, the White House and Pentagon left little doubt.

"The United States is at war with ISIL in the same way that we are at war with Al-Qaeda and its Al-Qaeda affiliates all around the globe," said White House spokesman Josh Earnest.

Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby said that the US was not fighting the last Iraq war and used similar language to Earnest.

"But make no mistake, we know we are at war with ISIL in the same way we're at war and continue to be at war with Al-Qaida and its affiliates," he said.
Obama is scheduled to be in Tampa, Florida Wednesday to receive a briefing from top commanders at US Central Command, which oversees American forces in the Middle East.

In interviews on Thursday, as Kerry toured the Middle East building an anti-IS coalition, he was reluctant to use the term "war" in referring to the US campaign, telling people not to indulge in "war fever."

"We're engaged in a major counterterrorism operation, and it's going to be a long-term counterterrorism operation," Kerry told CBS News.

"I think 'war' is the wrong terminology and analogy but the fact is that we are engaged in a very significant global effort to curb terrorist activity," Kerry said.

- 'Different' from last war -

The dispute over wording may seem trivial when American planes and drones have been pounding Islamic State targets in Iraq for weeks in more than 160 operations.

But it indicates the administration is skittish about using language that could alarm Americans weary of years of foreign conflict and who embraced Obama's vow to "end" the US wars in Afghanistan and Iraq during two presidential election campaigns.

"The first thing that's important for people to understand is the president has made clear how the strategy that he is pursuing in Iraq and Syria to degrade and ultimately destroy ISIL is different than the strategy that was pursued in the previous Iraq War," said Earnest on Friday.

Obama's new strategy, announced in a prime-time televised address on Wednesday, expands US air strikes in Iraq against IS and envisages new action against the group in Syria.

In addition, Obama plans to train "moderate" Syrian rebels to take on IS and to reconstitute the Iraqi army, parts of which fled an IS blitzkreig across northern and western Iraq.

But he has insisted that there will be no deployments of US ground troops in the operation -- especially none that would recall the vast US land armies that were targeted by insurgents in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The debate over the word "war" is only the latest verbal kerfuffle to hamper Obama's attempts to clarify his increasingly under-fire foreign policy.

Two weeks ago, the president sparked a political storm by admitting he did not "yet" have a strategy for combating IS in Syria after the beheading of two US journalists.

Critics also accused the administration of seeking to "manage" the problem of Al-Qaeda rather than seeking to decimate it.

On Wednesday, Obama said that his goal was to "destroy" IS.

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Wednesday 2 July 2014

POTICIAL ICON: Prominent Northern politician and former minister, Umaru Dikko, dies

Prominent Northern politician and one time Minister of Transport during the second republic, Umaru Dikko has died at the age of 78. His son, Bello Dikko confirmed his death.

Dikko was said to have died in the early hours of today July 1st at a London hospital where he has been undergoing treatment for an undisclosed illness.

Family sources say he'd suffered three strokes  in a row. Mr Dikko was a minister during the Shagari Government (from 1979-1983). May his soul rest in peace Amen.
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Tuesday 13 May 2014

White House: No, #BringBackOurGirls won’t sway the kidnappers


Demonstrators hold banners as they protest about the kidnapping of girls in Nigeria, near the Nigerian High Commission in London, Friday, May 9, 2014. Global outrage against the abduction of more than 200 Nigerian girls by Islamist militant sect Boko Haram heated up Thursday, as a social media campaign drew worldwide support. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)
Demonstrators hold banners as they protest about the kidnapping of girls in Nigeria, near the Nigerian High Commission in London, Friday, May 9, 2014. Global outrage against the abduction of more than 200 Nigerian girls by Islamist militant sect Boko Haram heated up Thursday, as a social media campaign drew worldwide support. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)
Benjamin Ekpenyong

The White House on Monday defended the #BringBackOurGirls social media campaign as a valuable part of the global response to the abduction of more than 200 Nigerian girls. But spokesman Jay Carney dismissed suggestions that hashtag activism would lead Boko Haram kidnappers to free their hostages.
“No, I wouldn’t say that,” Carney told reporters at his daily briefing when asked whether the outpouring of support would lead the extremists to set the girls free.

“We're not anything but realistic about the challenge here. It's extremely difficult,” the spokesman said. “The area that the Nigerian government is looking for the girls in constitutes roughly the size of New England.”

Still, I think that highlighting the situation there and the tragedy that the abduction of those girls represents helps focus attention on the matter and helps, I think, focus the attention of those who would want to assist in the finding and recovery of those girls,” Carney said.

That appeared to be a reference to the sluggish response the government of Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan. Carney, Secretary of State John Kerry and others criticized Jonathan’s handling of the crisis sharply last week even as they announced the deployment of a U.S. team to help with search and rescue.
Katie Couric: The international effort to #BringBackOurGirls

In private, U.S. officials said the social media campaign had helped to pressure Jonathan’s government finally to accept repeated U.S. offers of help with the rescue effort — even before first lady Michelle Obama lent her voice to the cause.

View image on Twitter
Carney said the American team includes five State Department officials, including a team leader, two strategic communications experts, a civilian security expert and a regional medical support officer. It also includes 10 Defense Department “planners and advisers” who were already in Nigeria and an additional seven brought in from AFRICOM, the regional U.S. military command in Africa. And the team includes four FBI officials “with expertise in safe recovery, negotiations and preventing future kidnappings,” Carney said.

“They are digging in on the search and coordinating closely with the Nigerian government, and you know, we obviously want to do whatever we can to assist that effort,” he said.

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Saturday 10 May 2014

Nigerian President Jonathan Says “I No Longer Sleep With My Two Eyes Closed”

“Nigerians, I No Longer Sleep With My Two Eyes Closed” – President Jonathan Reveals


President Jonathan today revealed that since the abduction of the Chibok girls on April 14th, he does not sleep with his two eyes closed anymore. The president made this remark during the closing media conference of the just concluded World Economic Forum Africa today. What he said below…
“Let me also use this unique opportunity to thank all of you who have shown commitment and concern those of you in Nigeria and those of you outside this country to continue to press on that these terrorists must bring back our girls and they have no choice because I am quite pleased that the whole
world is signing the same message that they must bring back our girls.
There is no where they will take this girls to, they have no hiding place, we must work with the global community that is quite keen to make sure that we bring back this girls.
We plead with the parents as a father and the President of this country, I feel pained and I don’t sleep with my two eyes closed and I will not sleep with my two eyes closed until these girls are brought safely back to their parents.
I thank you for all the concern, for all the sentiments, communications you are putting across to the rest of the world about what we are doing and of course where the world wants to support us.” he said.
Meanwhile an Amnesty International report
released today, May 9th, states that the Nigerian military was notified of the Boko Haram attack four hours before they arrived the Government Girls Secondary School where they abducted the young girls.
According to Makmid Kamara, the Nigeria
researcher for Amnesty International, indigenes of Chibok community who spoke with Amnesty officials on the condition of anonymity said they had informed military personnel in the area around 7pm that evening of a pending attack by Boko Haram but no one mobilized for military backup until the Boko Haram men came calling at 11:45pm
“We received information and we spoke to a senior Nigerian military officer, who spoke to us on condition of anonymity, that they had received intelligence reports, even before local authorities and politicians got the information, that gunmen were on their way to the Chibok town”
“When I spoke to one of the senior military
officials, they informed me that they [had] informed their superiors, and requested for reinforcement.
But the reinforcement did not come.” By the time the Boko Haram men came, only 17 soldiers were on ground and they could not withstand the emissaries the Islamic sect men came with.
“Only 17 troops were there to face the attack and they were outgunned and outnumbered. They had to flee for their lives together with some other villagers who fled to the bush,” Kamara said.
- See more at: http://akpraise.com/2014/05/10/nigerians-i-no-longer-sleep-with-my-two-eyes-closed-president-jonathan-reveals/#sthash.4jBCydRa.dpuf



President Jonathan today revealed that since the abduction of the Chibok girls on April 14th, he does not sleep with his two eyes closed anymore. The president made this remark during the closing media conference of the just concluded World Economic Forum Africa today. What he said below…

“Let me also use this unique opportunity to thank all of you who have shown commitment and concern those of you in Nigeria and those of you outside this country to continue to press on that these terrorists must bring back our girls and they have no choice because I am quite pleased that the whole world is signing the same message that they must bring back our girls."

There is no where they will take this girls to, they have no hiding place, we must work with the global community that is quite keen to make sure that we bring back this girls.
We plead with the parents as a father and the President of this country, I feel pained and I don’t sleep with my two eyes closed and I will not sleep with my two eyes closed until these girls are brought safely back to their parents.

I thank you for all the concern, for all the sentiments, communications you are putting across to the rest of the world about what we are doing and of course where the world wants to support us.” he said.

Meanwhile an Amnesty International report released today, May 9th, states that the Nigerian military was notified of the Boko Haram attack four hours before they arrived the Government Girls Secondary School where they abducted the young girls.

According to Makmid Kamara, the Nigeria researcher for Amnesty International, indigenes of Chibok community who spoke with Amnesty officials on the condition of anonymity said they had informed military personnel in the area around 7pm that evening of a pending attack by Boko Haram but no one mobilized for military backup until the Boko Haram men came calling at 11:45pm

“We received information and we spoke to a senior Nigerian military officer, who spoke to us on condition of anonymity, that they had received intelligence reports, even before local authorities and politicians got the information, that gunmen were on their way to the Chibok town”

“When I spoke to one of the senior military officials, they informed me that they [had] informed their superiors, and requested for reinforcement.

But the reinforcement did not come.” By the time the Boko Haram men came, only 17 soldiers were on ground and they could not withstand the emissaries the Islamic sect men came with.

“Only 17 troops were there to face the attack and they were outgunned and outnumbered. They had to flee for their lives together with some other villagers who fled to the bush,” Kamara said.
Benjamin Ekpenyong
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Friday 14 March 2014

Syria conflict: Kicking for hope in Zaatari refugee camp

This is an aerial photograph of the Zaatari refugee camp, situated eight kilometers from the Jordan/Syria border, taken on July 18, 2013. As many as 150,000 people are now living there, with more arriving every day.<!-- -->
</br> This is an aerial photograph of the Zaatari refugee camp, situated eight kilometers from the Jordan/Syria border, taken on July 18, 2013. As many as 150,000 people are now living there, with more arriving every day.

(CNN) -- Amongst the clouds of dust kicked up from the desert by the hundreds of new arrivals who pitch up every day at the Zaatari refugee camp -- just 15 kilometers from the Jordan/Syria border -- Abeer Rantisi is planning her next lesson.

The twenty-six-year old is short, hair tied back, her thick-rimmed glasses sitting wonkyly at the end of her nose. She is standing outside a large marquee where a group of Syrian men is being taught the basics of soccer coaching.

"'Football," she tells CNN, her eyes moving to a group of young children nearby, screeching with laughter as they kick a football around on a sand pitch, "We all speak football."

Rantisi is a star for the Jordanian women's national team, who are preparing for a tournament that could see the kingdom qualify for the World Cup finals for the first time in their history.

But, for now, she has more important work to do. She coaches soccer for Syrian girls and young women who have fled the horrors of civil war and found themselves in what has become one of the biggest refugee camps in the world.
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The sound of a child's laughter is rare in Zaatari.

Since the start of the Syrian civil war-- the conflict marked its third anniversary in March -- this tiny hamlet has been transformed into one of the biggest cities in the country.
As many as 150,000 people live here now. Hundreds come every day, sometimes more, sometimes less, depending on the brutality of the fighting just a few kilometers away.
They have built a life of semi-permanence.

According to the United Nations there are now close to 700 shops in the camp and nearly 60 mosques.
You can buy cable TV from one of the many tents set up to supply the growing population. There's a wedding cake shop, a place to buy wedding dresses and even a pet shop.
It costs $1.6 billion a year to run Zaatari, but the human cost is immeasurable.
Almost every player Rantisi coaches says they have been confronted with the unimaginable: bombings, the death of entire families, assault, rape.

"The main thing we can work on is self-confidence," Rantisi explains of the fragile emotional and physical state her players arrive in.

"To bring those people here and tell them they can achieve whatever they want. We have to make them resilient because they were suffering in Syria."

Dealing with the emotional scars of a civil war is a tough job, but there is also the added obstacle of social conservatism to overcome.

Almost everyone at Zaatari has come from Syria's southern, rural, conservative Sunni population.
Young girls have simply never played football in that environment. The biggest issue in such a sprawling, impersonal camp, according to Rantisi, is privacy.

"They have all come from conservative communities and are not allowed to play in public so we have to make sure that they are hiding all the time," she says.

"It's a really big problem here. Because you can see the camp it's open from all angles so we have to find a safe place for them to play. We have to find private places just for the girls to come."
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In private, away from the gaze of men, Rantisi works with her players, but it takes time for her to earn their trust.

"The women in Zaatari have no idea about sport at all," she explains. "In the first lecture we say: 'We are national team players. We have come here to talk about sport.' They ask: 'What do you mean? What is sport?'"

It is not an uncommon question in the region. While women's soccer has boomed around the world, the game in the Middle East has been fraught with religious and cultural opposition over the past decade.
In Kuwait a nascent women's national team was effectively banned in 2007 after lawmakers decided it was 'un-Islamic' for women to play soccer.

The Palestinian women's national team had to fight social conservatism within its own communities to build a mixed team of Muslim and Christian players.
Saudi Arabia still has no women's team.
But attitudes are changing.

The Jordan team has only existed since 2005 and has been backed with money and support from Prince Ali bin al Hussein, the young half-brother of the king, who was recently elected as a vice-president on FIFA's powerful executive committee.

Fifteen new training centers for young girls have been built and Prince Ali has been instrumental in pushing through a rule change that allows Muslim women to wear a modified hijab to cover their hair during FIFA matches.

Originally they had been prevented from doing so on the grounds that the hijab was a religious symbol. But the change could revolutionize the game in the Middle East and open soccer to millions of women who would otherwise be prevented from playing.
In the past few years alone national women's teams have been set up in the UAE, Qatar and now, finally, Kuwait too.

The greatest success story, though, has been the Jordanian national team with Rantisi, who cites French World Cup winner Zinedine Zidane as her inspiration, in the heart of midfield
"I'm from Amman and started playing when when I was 13," she recalls. "In Jordan we don't have the same problems anymore as say with the Palestinians.

"We don't have the same social problems as they have. But we used to, when we started in the past."
In just eight years the Jordan team has gone from nothing to qualifying for the Asian Cup.
Rantisi scored a hat trick in a world record 21-0 victory over Kuwait in one qualification match.
That tournament takes place in May and if Jordan reach the semi-finals they will qualify for the World Cup, the first time a team from the region will have ever made it.
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"I play as a central midfielder so it was fun to score," she says, a little embarrassed at the huge scoreline.
"We have to look at new teams like Qatar and Kuwait and support them. But," she adds, laughing now, "we needed the 20 goals as Uzbekistan were in the same group and they scored eighteen!"

For Prince Ali, the success of the team on the pitch vindicates an investment in the women's game that few others in the region were willing to make.

"Our girls have qualified for the Asian Cup, the first team ever from West Asia and that's down to them and the investment we've put in," he explains of Jordan's recent success on the pitch.

"We chose a coach from Japan, bearing in mind they are World Cup champions, and we hope they can make it to the World Cup."

The Zaatari project is a collaboration between the Asian Football Development Project, set up by Prince Ali, and UEFA, European football's governing body.

The aim is to use football to promote healthier living and also to fill the idle hours that refugee camps provide in abundance. More than 1,000 children and young adults under 20 are in the program, with 80 more being trained to coach.

"All the children that arrive are completely devastated," explains Bassam Omar al Taleb, a 31-year old Syrian who had himself fled his home in Daraa a few months before. Once a keen amateur soccer player, he is now coaching Zaatari's new arrivals.

"They have seen their family members killed before their eyes and the journey to Jordan is a difficult one," he says. "Through football we at least try to remove the sense of fear and regain some sense of normalcy."

Meanwhile as the war in Syria continues. Zaatari's numbers swell every day.
"It is a really difficult job," Rantisi says.
As the coaching class for young Syrian men finishes, the children are still on the sand pitch, shrieking as they chase the ball as a pack. "But," Rantisi adds, "we have to bring them back to life."
Read more ...

Wednesday 26 February 2014

Angry governor: more troops or we’ll all be gone


Angry governor: more troops or we’ll all be gone
Gov. Ibrahim Gaidam with Speaker Yobe House of Assembly, Adamu Dala Dogo

Seething with anger, Yobe State Governor Ibrahim Gaidam yesterday urged the Federal Government to deploy more troops in his state or the people of Yobe and Borno states “will be gradually wiped out” by Boko Haram insurgents.
Speaking on the horrific attack on pupils, he said:
“It is most unfortunate that in the past one year, we have experienced these kind of ugly acts from some insurgents for the fourth time, today.

“The first one was at Government Day Secondary School, Damaturu; the second one was in Mamudo Government School and the third in College of Agriculture, Gujba. In Damaturu Secondary School, the insurgents massacred about nine pupils. In Mamudo, they killed about 24. In College of Agric, they killed about 40 students.

“It is unfortunate. The action is highly barbaric, wicked, inhuman and immoral and it is devastating at the same time. It is unfortunate that up to five-six hours of killing and massacre, there were no security men around to contain the situation. At the same time, I’m aware that the military command in Yobe lacks adequate number of troops. Despite that, they must change their strategy of operation. If you pull out the military in the town and taking them out to operate in another place, there should be some few left on ground to contain any unforeseen circumstances. I believe they should change their strategy.

“I want to use this opportunity to call on the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria or the chief of army staff and chief of defence staff or whoever is concerned to send, as a matter of urgency, more troops to Yobe to contain these insurgents.

“I was made to understand clearly that they don’t have enough number of troops to cover each and every school in Yobe, but at the same time, they need a change in strategy to tackle this problem.
“It is unfortunate that our grand-children are dying for lack of care, perhaps from the Federal Government. These things are happening only in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states in the North eastern part. Whatever it is, we have seen quite a number of troops in Maiduguri, and we need to get more here. We will all die but the circumstance of the death is what matters. How can you just take arms and come and meet defenceless students, kill them, burn them and go away and then move to another school and do the same.

“I think the Federal Government should be more serious to ensure that these inadequacies are arrested; otherwise, I think they will gradually wipe out all the people in Yobe and Borno states. I so observe,” Gaidam said

The governor went on: “We are constrained that the security men are not under the jurisdiction of the state government. The arrangement of police, sss and soldiers is vested in the Federal Government and we are still calling on them to live up to their responsibilities.
“I also want to condole with the families of those who lost their lives and pray for Allah to forgive them their sins,” he said.

The governor gave a cash donation of N100 million to the members of staff of the college.
One of the teachers told our reporter that the attackers came in Hilux vans with some dressed in military uniforms and bulletproof vests.

They came in and started shooting. Some of them were fully kitted in military uniform with bullet proof vests. Only boys were killed and the girls were left unhurt. None of the girls was abducted by the insurgents – to my knowledge,” he said.

A senior teacher who took the governor round the school also lost his son in the attack.
The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) under the aegis of Nigerian Students NANS Zone ‘C’, comprising of Adamawa, Benue, Borno, Kogi, Kwara, Nasarawa, Plateau, Taraba,Yobe states and FCT Abuja, condemned the attack.

A statement signed by Comrade Dauda Muhammad Gombe, Comrade Baba Adamu Muhammad, said: “The attack on innocent students is very serious and an issue of concern to all.”
Read more ...

Fire and fury as Boko Haram kills 43 pupils


Fire and fury as Boko Haram kills 43 pupils
•Gaidam (left) listening to teacher Garba recount the attack ... yesterday. With them are Police Commissioner Rufai Alkali (second left), the SSS director (third left) and others
Pupils were trying to climb out of the windows and they were slaughtered like sheep by the terrorists who slit their throats. Others who ran were gunned down

IT was like a scene from an action-packed movie. A band of insurgents bearing rifles stormed a school. They set fire to the administrative block, moved on to the hostels where pupils were fast asleep and shut the gates. They set the hostels on fire and started shooting. Those who tried to escape were captured, their throats slit.

But it was no movie. The scene was real at the Federal Government College, Buni Yadi, Yobe State where no fewer than 43 pupils were killed on Tuesday by Boko Haram insurgents.
They died either from gunshot wounds, direct attacks through matchettes or as a result of complications from burns.

The death toll was expected to rise yesterday as soldiers were still gathering bodies, military spokesman Capt. Eli Lazarus said.

The attack is the fourth on schools in Yobe. Governor Ibrahim Gaidam was furious.
The figure of the dead from Boko Haram attacks this year is about 300 civilians – two months alone. There are no figures of the military dead.

The sect’s members invaded Buni Yadi – 70 kilometres from Yobe State capital Damaturu – in many Hilux and other categories of vehicles, according to eye witnesses.
They started operating around 2.00a.m and did not leave the school until early morning. There were no troops in sight when they operated.

The insurgents set ablaze a locked hostel, shooting and slitting the throats of those who escaped through windows. Some were burned alive. Forty buildings were burnt down.
A teacher, Adamu Garba, said he and other teachers who ran away through the bush estimate 40 students died in the assault that began around 2 a.m. It was difficult to communicate from the town, because extremists last year destroyed the cell phone tower there.
Garba, who teaches at a secondary school attached to the college, said the attackers first set ablaze the college’s administrative block, then moved to the hostels, where they locked students in and started firebombing the buildings.

At one hostel, he said, “students were trying to climb out of the windows and they were slaughtered like sheep by the terrorists who slit their throats”. Others who ran were gunned down.’’
He said students who could not escape were burnt alive.

Garba spoke to The Associated Press (AP) in Damaturu, where he and other teachers escaped to.
President Goodluck Jonathan, in a media chat on Monday night, said Boko Haram attacks were “quite worrisome”, but that he was sure “we will get over it.”

Thousands of Nigerians have lost family members, houses, businesses, their belongings and livelihoods in the four-year-old rebellion.

Tearful Governor Ibrahim Gaidam suspended his week-long inspection tour of projects to visit the college, which is razed down.

The governor said some of the burnt students had been conveyed to Damaturu by Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) officials. He uttered no word as he moved from one ambulance to the other, looking at the burnt students.
Parents of some of the dead yesterday evacuated the bodies for burial. Three of the injured pupils are on treatment at the Gen. Sani Abacha Specialist Hospital in Damaturu.
Military sources claimed that the insurgents invaded the school overnight through what preliminary investigation described as an “unusual source”.

Some of them were said to have used the bush path to sneak into the school to perpetrate the deadly act.

Troops are said to be on the trail of the insurgents, with the Defence Headquarters ordering troops to either arrest or destroy them en masse.

According to a top security source, most structures in the school were burnt by the insurgents. “A mop-up operation is still in progress as I am talking to you,” he said.

Responding to a question, the source added: “The insurgents came to the school in an unusual manner, using bush path. They trekked to the school under the cover of darkness.

“They invaded Buni Yadi from their bases and cells, which are between Yobe and Borno states. Certainly, they came in from Borno axis.

“Unlike in the past, they did not shoot or use vehicles to attract attention of security men in the college.
“We also discovered that they destroyed the telecommunications masts in the area about two days before the invasion. They brought down the masts to make it impossible for the school management to send distress signal to town.

“As a matter of fact, they changed their tactics but they cannot have the last laugh.”
Asked if there was no military formation or post around the area, the source added: “There were troops in Buni Yadi. They were patrolling other locations in the town as at the time of the incident.”
“The Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, has ordered troops to rout out the insurgents dead or alive. It is not everything we can disclose, but we are tracking them by air and land.”

Defence Headquarters spokesman Maj.-Gen. Chris Olukolade said: “The insurgents are being trailed to locations between Yobe and Borno states. The whole operation is involving air and land counter-attacks.

“It is either the insurgents are arrested or destroyed. We believe that we will get them.”
Read more ...

2014 Budget: IGP faults allocation to police


2014 Budget: IGP faults allocation to police
The Inspector-General (IGP) of Police, Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, said the Nigeria Police may not be able to pay the salaries of its personnel in 2014 due to a shortfall of N14.4 billion in the personnel cost.
Speaking on Tuesday in Abuja at the 2014 budget defence in the Senate, the IGP said the budget office earmarked N279 billion for personnel cost against N293 billion required to pay the police personnel.

The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Abubakar lamented the steady decline in budgetary allocations for overhead to the police despite the increasing security challenges it had to contend with.
The IGP added that the slight increase in the capital expenditure in the 2013 budget was because of the injection of constituency projects.

He, however, noted that out of the N14 billion appropriated for capital expenditure in 2013, only N10.9 billion was released.

The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Police, Sen. Paulinus Igwe ( PDP- Ebonyi), expressed concerns over the reduction in the budgetary allocation for personnel cost particularly at this time of growing insecurity in the country.

He said the committee would assist the police in any way it could.
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Jonathan’s comments on Borno wrong, says APC


Jonathan’s comments on Borno wrong, says APC
Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima

The All Progressives Congress (APC) has condemned President Goodluck Jonathan’s statement on Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima during his media chat on Monday night.

It described it as unwarranted and petty.

In a statement in Abuja yesterday by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said President Jonathan was wrong to have threatened, no matter how subtly, to withdraw from Borno, the troops battling Boko Haram insurgents.

APC urged him to apologise to Borno indigenes and to Nigerians for the presidential indiscretion.
It said the threat, which was in response to a statement credited to the governor that the soldiers need to be better equipped and motivated, showed that President Jonathan did not have a good grasp of what was expected of him as the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces.
“Mr. President, your most important duty as President is to ensure the welfare and security of Nigerians, irrespective of the criticisms you may face or whether or not they voted for you. Therefore, you are not doing anyone a favour by performing that duty. It is the role you swore an oath to perform.

“Even if you feel that the Governor should not have made that statement, it is incumbent on you, as the President and the father of the nation, to take the higher road, instead of choosing a public forum to air your grievances. Wittingly or unwittingly, Mr. President, you have played into the hands of the insurgents, who must by now be gloating at the discordant tunes in government over the battle against them,” APC said.

Using the President’s exact words to the Governor during his media chat, the party said: “A (President) should be mindful of what they say. Yes there are issues, but no matter how frustrated you are you don’t make this kind of statement.”

It said based on the anger exhibited by President Jonathan while commenting on Governor Shettima’s statement, the party was justified in its call on the President not to go ahead with his reported plan to remove the Governor and replace him with a military administrator.
“President Jonathan should know that a leader cannot afford to be taking decisions on the basis of a perceived slight or criticism, because such decisions are most likely to be wrong and counter-productive. He should also use his enormous powers as President for the benefit of the people, not to their disadvantage.

“By his threat to pull out the troops from Borno for one month, he has further victimised the good people of the state, who have been at the receiving end of the senseless attacks by Boko Haram. A retraction of his threat and an apology to the people will be a good starting point for Mr. President to make amends,” APC said.
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Uncertain days ahead for equities, investors


Uncertain days ahead for equities, investors
Jonathan
Nigerian equities lost N354 billion in two days of announcement of the suspension of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi by President Goodluck Jonathan. Capital Market Editor, Taofik Salako, reports that most pundits still expect further capital flight as investors scramble away from the uncertainties foisted by the unprecedented move.

Nigerian financial markets appear to be in the cold and investors appear to be uncertain of the days ahead. The only time-tested certainty for most pundits and investors is the scramble for safety, quick exit to watch the direction of event. Thursday’s suspension of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi by President Goodluck Jonathan is riveting the financial markets. Investors in Nigerian equities have lost N354 billion between Thursday and Friday as sudden upsurge in sale orders on Thursday tripped the hitherto bullish market situation. Market capitalisation of equities dropped by N167 billion on Friday, in addition to N187 billion lost in immediate reaction as the news of the suspension broke out on Thursday.

Aggregate market value of all quoted equities dropped to a low of N12.301 trillion as against its opening value of N12.468 trillion. The benchmark index at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE)-the All Share Index (ASI), indicated a daily average decline of 1.34 per cent, bringing the decline since Thursday to 2.81 per cent. The ASI, which tracks the values of all quoted companies on the NSE and as such serves as country index for Nigeria, had declined by 1.47 per cent on Thursday. The ASI closed yesterday at a low index point of 38,295.74 points as against its opening index of 38,816.19 points. As the news of the suspension filtered into the market on Thursday, aggregate market value of all quoted equities dropped by N187 billion from N12.655 trillion to close at N12.468 trillion. The ASI also dwindled to 38,816.19 points as against its opening index of 39,397.09.

Analysts were unanimous that the downtrend was in reaction to the suspension of the CBN Governor. Aggregate market value of all equities at the NSE had witnessed sustained rally between Monday and Wednesday. It opened the week at N12.427 trillion and built up successively to N12.528 trillion, N12.530 trillion and N12.655 trillion on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday respectively. The ASI had also sustained steady rally prior to the reversal on Thursday. ASI opened at 38,767.29 points and built up to 38,964.75 points, 38,972.56 points and 39,397.09 points within the first three trading days.

The Nation’s review at the weekend showed that market considerations of most equities at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) crashed to their low on Friday. From the banking to manufacturing to downstream oil sectors, most leading equities slipped to their lowest prices this year at the weekend. Most banking stocks fell to their lowest market considerations. Share prices of multinationals, which usually feature largely in portfolios of foreign investors, highlighted the panic among foreign portfolio investors.

“The uncertainty surrounding policy direction and political risk in the economy brought on by the foregoing (suspension of Sanusi) is likely to spur further capital flight to safer regions or safer asset classes. With foreign portfolio investor’s constituting 50.0 per cent of the Nigerian stock market, any significant amount of capital flight is likely to have weighty consequences on the market. Since this development, the NSE ASI has lost a total of 2.8 per cent, due to selling pressures emanating from foreign and local market players reacting to the news. The true impact of this development is however yet to unravel as the news continues to filter across markets and participants,” Afrinvest (West Africa), a major investment firm, stated at the weekend.

According to analysts at Afrinvest, the particular significance of foreign portfolio investors in the economy will be revealed in the days ahead as investors scramble to safety. Blue chip stocks with significantly diversified foreign interest will be the most likely culprits of this capital flight.
Emerging market strategist, Standard Bank, Samir Gadio, said “Sanusi’s suspension is a disruptive move which indicates that the CBN has de facto lost much of its independence.”

The circumstance of Sanusi’s exit and the issue of independence of the CBN are two issues that are of concern to foreign investors rather than the exit or the politics of his suspension. But many foreign investors appeared concerned about the negative view on the anti-corruption record of President Jonathan. The circumstance of Sanusi’s suspension- after the CBN Governor alleged and made public presentations on missing funds-some $20 billion, from the national oil company, has been the headlines for most global media reports, irrespective of the allegation of financial recklessness leveled against the suspended governor.

“I believe that most market operators had factored in the fact that Sanusi’s leaving could lead to some adjustments in monetary policies. The issue to investors in the Nigerian market will be the nature of his exit and whether it has undermined CBN independence. Another factor that will be of concern to investors is the economic and policy orientation of the newly nominated CBN Governor and his pedigree as an independent minded person. These two factors – an affront on CBN autonomy and lack of clarity on Mr. Emefiele’s economic policy orientation may be the reasons for financial market instability with possible exit of some foreign portfolio investors, depletion of Nigeria’s foreign reserve, pressure on Naira exchange rate and increase in fixed income yield in the next couple of days and weeks,” Managing Director, Cowry Asset Management Limited, Mr. Johnson Chukwu told The Nation.

“Foreign investors are likely to sell Nigerian assets more actively in coming days subject to market liquidity constraints. So far Treasury bill and bond quotes are not really being shown by onshore brokers (or the bid-ask spreads are quite wide) which is typical of Nigerian capital markets during periods of pronounced stress. That said, we see yields moving higher in the near term, with the magnitude of the sell-off at the long end potentially being partially mitigated by the bid from domestic pension funds at a later stage,” London-based Gadio said.

Analysts at Afrinvest expect the ripples to move round the financial markets-from equities to bonds and currency exchanges.

According to analysts, there is an expectation that the yields on Nigerian sovereign bonds will cross the 15 per cent mark in the near term and also at the March 2014 bonds auction as investors weigh in on the decision of the Federal Government.

“This development is likely to lead to an increase in the country’s risk premium, thus requiring a re-pricing of yields to incentivise investors. This increase will undoubtedly raise the governments cost of borrowing, exacerbating re-current expenditure (over 65.0% in 2014). The country may also find it tough raising additional funds through Eurobond issuances and may be lured to raise the coupon to compensate for the higher risk perception. Nonetheless, the high yield environment should be attractive to Pension Fund Administrators which are major players in the bond market. This could serve as a buffer in reducing the increased upside pressure on yields over the medium term,” Afrinvest stated.
Market pundits expect further depreciation in Naira as the CBN battles to calm nervous investors. According to Afrinvest, Naira may depreciate by about 2.0 per cent this week, driven by increased demand for foreign currency by foreign portfolio investors seeking a flight to safety.

The capital flight could also have a telling effect on Nigeria’s foreign reserves. The Nigerian foreign reserves shrunk by $2.3 billion or 5.3 per cent from $43.6bn in December 31, 2013 to $41.3bn as at February 19, 2014. This was primarily used to defend the Naira, sustaining it within the CBN’s band N155/US$1 +/- 3 per cent against selling pressure triggered by foreign portfolio investments reversals. According to Afrinvest, foreign portfolio investments constitute 48.8 per cent of the total reserves, highlighting the significant impact of a drastic reversal on the country.

However, analysts at GTI Securities called for caution but expressed optimism that the momentum of the negative reaction might slow down in the days ahead.

According to analysts, the rampaging sell-off could drop significantly in the days ahead as many stocks have entered oversold position, creating attractive buy opportunities for discerning investors.
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Osun bags award in Dubai for Sukuk


Osun bags award in Dubai for Sukuk

Osun bags award in Dubai for Sukuk

Dele Oladunjoye of Kola Awodein and Co., solicitor to the Sukuk deal, Andrew Morgan, the MD of Islamic Finance News and Publisher, Andrew Morgan RedMoney Group, Dr Wale Bolorunduro, Commissioner for Finance, (representing the Governor) and Mrs Hajara Adeola, MD, Lotus Capital Limited.
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1st man to sue Nigerian president "Sanusi sues Jonathan"


Sanusi sues Jonathan
Jonathan and Sanusi

Sanusi sues Jonathan


Suspended Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi has sued President Goodluck Jonathan before a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, challenging his suspension from office.

In a suit filed late Monday by some of his lawyers, including Kola Awodein (SAN), Sanusi is urging the court to, among others, restrain the President and two others from giving effect to his purported suspension, pending the determination of his suit.

Also to be restrained are the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and the Inspector General of Police (IGP), sued with the President.

Sanusi is pleading for an order of interlocutory injunction restraining the defendants from obstructing, disturbing, stopping or preventing him in any manner, from performing the functions of his office and enjoying in full, the statutory powers and privileges attached to the office of the governor of the CBN.
He said the interlocutory a\pplication he filed with the suit was necessitated by the issues raised in the suit.

Sanusi is of the view that delay could occasion irreparable, serious damage and mischief against him in the exercise of his statutory duties as the CBN Governor.

He urged the court to grant the prayers contained in his interlocutory application, on the ground that the President’s alleged unlawful interference with the management and administration of the CBN, unless arrested, posed grave danger to the country’s economy.

He argued that granting his application will encourage parties to maintain the status quo, pending the determination of the substantive case.

In a supporting affidavit, Sanusi averred that in the course of his duties as the CBN Governor, that he discovered certain discrepancies in respect of amounts repatriated to the federation account from the proceed of crude oil sales between the period of January, 2012 and July, 2013 and that he expressed concern in respect of the said discrepancies and had cause to inform the National Assembly of the said discrepancies because they affect the revenue of the federation and the national economy.
He stated that the President’s action, in purporting to suspend him from office, is aimed at punishing him for these disclosures.

Sanusi stated that he is challenging the President’s power to suspend him from office, noting that the President did not approach nor obtain the support of the Senate, based on his discussions with several senators, including Senator Bukola Saraki.

“I have been informed, and I verily believe the information given to me by Senator Bukola Saraki to be true and correct that the Senate did not give the President any support for my purported suspension and removal from office as the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria.”
Sanusi stated that the President’s actions in suspending him from office. Is contrary to provisions of the Central Bank of Nigeria Act relating to the appointment and removal of the CBN Governor and that his purported suspension amounts to unlawful interference in the administration and management of the apex bank and is illegal, null and void. He urged the court, in the interest of justice, to grant his reliefs.

The suit is yet to be assigned for hearing.
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Monday 24 February 2014

True Detective: Obama ‘Has Seen My Boobs’ Boasts Show’s Sexpot Alexandra Daddario

Alexandra Daddario
True Detective, if it isn’t the grimmest show on television, is right up there with some of the most downbeat and resolutely humorless programming to seep through your screen in 2014. But that doesn’t mean that the show can’t generate some ridiculous storylines off the air.

This one involved the Commander-In-Chief and one actress’s chief assets.

The story comes courtesy of actress Alexandra Daddario who portrayed Lisa Tragnetti, the sexpot mistress of Woody Harrelson’s Detective Martin Hart character. Daddario recently found out that President Barack Obama lists two HBO shows as his current favorites on TV.

In fact, at a recent state dinner in honor of France’s President Francois Hollande, Obama accosted HBO Chef Executive Richard Pleper and demanded, only half kidding, advance copies of both Game of Thrones and True Detective. That was the weekend before President’s Day, and though Obama had a busy schedule, he nonetheless planned to find time to binge-watch both series.
Now, the 27-year-old Daddario, hearing of the president’s enthusiasm for True Detective, put two and two together.

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In one of her four episodes in True Detective, the Texas Chainsaw 3D star engages in a steamy, leave-little-to-the-imagination sex scene with Woody Harrelson, in which she strips to her birthday suit and seductively straddles the 52-year-old Hollywood veteran.

Knowing that Obama must have watched that scene, probably just as riveted to the screen as anyone else, Alexanadra Daddario realized that the president of the United States has now seen her, well, lets just say he’s seen her.

“The president has seen my boobs,” Daddario, who got her big break as a 16-year-old in 2002 on the soap opera All My Chidren, tweeted on February 17. The tweet came complete with a photo of Obama giving a knowing wink.
Well, we’ve got news for you, Alexandra. He’s seen a lot more than your boobs, and so has everyone else who watches True Detective. But if one rather unbelievable story is to be believed anyway, Daddario’s au naturel turn on True Detective made an especially strong impression on the nation’s top HBO aficionado.
Who knows whether Daddario’s tweet inspired it, but two days later, the always-amusing National Enquirer — which has shown an obsessive interest in the president’s sex life, or what it imagines the president’s sex life to be, anyway — ran a story headlined, “Horndog Obama Hot For TV Nudie Cutie.”
According to the 88-year-old tabloid — which these days is probably read primarily by 88-year-olds — a “White House source” claims that the president became so infatuated with the Squid and the Whale actress after seeing her perform — or shall we say, “perform” — on True Detective, that he has developed an unshakeable fixation on her.
“It’s surprising he doesn’t have a poster of her hanging in the Oval Office,” the alleged “source” allegedly “told” the Enquirer. “He’s totally smit­ten with her.”
While the National Enquirer tale needs to be taken with a healthy, if not overwhelming dose of skepticism, one thing that is not questionable is that Alexandria Daddario gave a performance that True Detective viewers will not soon forget — albeit maybe not entirely for the reasons she would prefer.
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Sunday 24 November 2013

ASUU NEC Meeting Not Postponed Indefinitely – ATBU Chairman

The Chairman of Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, at the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University, Bauchi, Dr Lawan Abubakar has described the media reports that the union had postponed its National Executive Committee meeting indefinitely as false and speculative. This was even as he dismissed the claim that the union had accepted the N1.3 trillion offered by the Federal Government, saying "what the union is agitating for is the full implementation of the 2009 agreement and nothing less." Abubakar said in an interview with Vanguard, yesterday, in Bauchi that the National Executive Committee of the union only adjourned its meeting for seven days to enable it mourn Prof Festus Iyayi who died in an auto crash involving the entourage of the Kogi State Governor, Capt. Idris Wada, adding that the members were awaiting further directives from its national leadership on a new date for the NEC meeting. [Vanguard]
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Sunday 16 June 2013

Tinubu’s Mother, Abibatu Mogaji, Dies At 96

President-General, Association of Nigerian Market Women and Men, Abibatu Mogaji, on Saturday died at 96.
Mogaji was the mother of former governor of Lagos State and National Leader, Action Congress of Nigeria, Bola Tinubu.
A statement issued said she would be buried on Sunday (today), at the Ikoyi Vaults and Gardens, Lagos.
Mogaji recently received an honorary Doctorate Degree from the Ahmadu Bello University during its 50th anniversary.
Governor of Osun State, Rauf Aregbesola, described the death of the matriarch as a great loss to millions of people.
In a statement by the Director, Bureau of Communications and Strategy, Osun State, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon, the governor said Mogaji’s death would leave a big vacuum both in politics and commercial sectors of not only Lagos State but Nigeria at large.
Aregbesola said Mogaji led a life of substance that is worthy of emulation.
He said, “Mama Abibatu Mogaji was a mother in a million. We commiserate with her children, particularly Asiwaju Bola Tinubu for their great loss.
“We commiserate with the Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu; the Mogaji family; the people of Lagos, particularly Femi Okunnu; the party; the government of Lagos; and market men and women in Nigeria and Lagos in particular.
“We pray that God gives them the fortitude to bear the loss and we pray God grants her Aljana Firdaus.”
Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola, said the death was “a great national and personal loss.”
In a statement by his Special Adviser on Media, Hakeem Bello, Fashola said she was a defender of people’s rights.
He said, “She was one of the pioneer traders who ventured into the capital intensive and risky business of importing consumer goods, thereby breaking the monopoly previously enjoyed by foreign tradesmen. Her business acumen attracted the attention of multi-national enterprises operating in Nigeria, then, which had no option but to register her as a business partner and distributor of their consumer goods in Nigeria.”
Also, the state Peoples Democratic Party, in a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Gani Taofik, described the deceased as a dogged fighter for justice.
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