Tuesday 29 December 2015

Home News News by Country Top News Sport World Oddly Enough Investing Video AlertNet Humanitarian News About Thomson Reuters Danish rail firm says Sweden border checks will cost 1 million DKK a day

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Border checks on train passengers aimed at curbing the number of asylum seekers entering Sweden from Denmark will cost Denmark's rail operator DSB nearly 1 million Danish crowns (99,370 pounds) a day, the state-owned company said on Tuesday. Travellers have been able to cross borders between the two Nordic countries without passports since the late 1950s but from Jan. 4 all Sweden-bound trains will be stopped at Copenhagen Airport for mandatory identification checks. DBS said in a statement that the identification checks would cost an estimated nine million crowns a month, with an expected fall in passenger numbers likely to result in an additional loss of around 20 million crowns a month. "Combined costs for identification control and lost revenue is estimated to be around 1 million crowns a day in the first month," a spokesman told Reuters. The company also warned that if the checks remain in place for more than a month, "it might result in a fee on tickets to Sweden to cover extraordinary costs". Sweden has tightened border controls and asylum rules to try to slow an influx of migrants from war-torn Syria and elsewhere that it expects to reach 190,000 this year. The country says its traditionally welcoming asylum system cannot cope, and that other European Union states must take in more refugees. DSB said that, from Monday, it will empty all trains at Copenhagen Airport, the last stop before the bridge to Sweden, where all passengers will have to enter the terminal to show identification papers before re-boarding the train. It has established 34 staffed slots at the airport station where papers will be checked. The checks will extend travel time by up to 45 minutes, DSB said -- longer than the 34-minute train journey between Sweden and Denmark which around 16,000 people make every day. source:http://af.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idAFKBN0UC13G20151229?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+reuters%2FAFRICAWorldNews+%28News+%2F+AFRICA+%2F+World+News%29&rpc=401

Thursday 24 December 2015

Tornadoes and severe storms across southern US leave at least seven dead

At least seven people were killed in a storm system that raged across the southern US on Wednesday, as the east coast experienced record high temperatures and persistent rain. The National Weather Service said on Thursday morning that there was a diminished risk of severe storms as search and rescue efforts were underway in regions that endured the most significant storm and tornado damage. At least three people were killed in Mississippi and in Tennessee, officials said. Mississippi governor Phil Bryant declared a state of emergency on Thursday. “Mississippians are resilient in difficult times, and we will meet this challenge head on for those that are in need,” Bryant said in a statement. Michaela Remus, 18, died in Arkansas after a tree crashed into her bedroom, according to the Pope County sheriff’s office. Remus’s one-year-old sister was sleeping in the bedroom with her but rescuers were able to pull her from the home. The stories you need to read, in one handy email Read more “It’s terrible that this happened, especially at Christmas,” said Pope county sheriff Shane Jones. Thousands of people lost power from Mississippi to Michigan during the storms. Though the risk for severe storms diminished in the south, forecasters warned of a lingering chance of flash flooding, heavy rains and winds. Officials said a seven-year-old boy died in Holly Springs, Mississippi when a tornado swept through the city and tossed the car he was in. Two people were also killed and two others were missing in nearby Benton County. In Tennessee, a 22-year-old man died in Rhea County and a 70-year-old man and 69-year-old woman died in Perry County. Mississippi Emergency Management Agency spokesman Greg Flynn said that the agency had recorded more than 40 injuries, including amputations, before dawn on Thursday. Source : http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/dec/24/tornadoes-storms-the-south-holiday-travel-deaths

Monday 21 December 2015

Knife-wielding Santa robs KFC restaurant, police say

Police in England are searching for a Santa Claus that has clearly been naughty instead of nice. A robber dressed as St. Nick climbed through the drive-through window of a KFC restaurant in Alfreton on Saturday, raided the safe and threatened staff with a knife, authorities say. ADVERTISEMENT The masked man, described as being 5 ft. 10 and wearing a red hat, red pants and a red jacket, made off with an unspecified amount of cash, the Press Association reports. "Thankfully, the restaurant was shut and no one was hurt, but we are offering employees any support they need,” a KFC spokesman told The Derby Telegrap Source:http://www.foxnews.com/world/2015/12/21/knife-wielding-santa-robs-kfc-restaurant-police-say.html

Sunday 20 December 2015

Mercury Found In Fog Off California Coast

Fog is a hazard to ships, but it might also be a problem for the food web. Today at the American Geophysical Union's fall meeting, researchers discussed new evidence that the amount of coastal fog is not only increasing, but in some areas of California at least, it contains a surprising amount of a form of mercury called monomethylmercury. Although monomethylmercury can be hazardous to human health, there's not enough of it in the fog to be dangerous. Marine fog typically arrives in the summer months in areas where ocean surface temperatures are cold, but the air above is warmer. Clive Dorman of San Diego State University said that by analyzing the records of ships in the coastal areas in northern California and Oregon, he was able to show that between 1960 and 2007 the number of days with fog on the coast went up by 7.4 percent, a finding that mirrors other high-fog areas around the world, like the Grand Banks off Newfoundland, which also have a considerable amount of fog that has likewise been increasing. The increase matters, not only to ships, but to ecosystems on land. Kenneth Coale of Moss Landing Marine Laboratories and Peter Weiss-Penzias from UC Santa Cruz found that levels of a kind of mercury called monometylmercury were 19 times higher in fog than in rain, even in the same area. Mercury gets into the oceans from smokestack emissions and other industrial sources. It is a public health concern because it tends to build up in the food chain, as animals with low levels of mercury in their bodies are eaten by carnivores. The carnivores, which may eat many mercury-contaminated prey, end up with a lot of mercury in their bodies. The most worrying form of mercury is monomethylmercury, a kind of mercury linked to severe health effects in humans, including kidney failure, birth defects, and neurological impairment. Previous research by the team had found that the fog had just five times the levels of monomethylmercury as rain. Now, in addition to noticing even higher concentrations, they think they may have figured out where the monomethylmercury is coming from. The answer is another form of mercury--dimethylmercury, a gas that is also present in ocean water, and which comes from smokestacks and mining. It turns out that most fog is slightly acidic, and the acid is enough to convert the gaseous dimethylmercury that emerges from the oceans into the more solid monomethylmercury. The fog then carries it inland where it is deposited on various surfaces and eventually enters the food chain. So what does that mean for us? Nothing much right now. The levels of mercury in the fog, though higher than that of the rain, don't reach a level where they are an immediate public health risk. But the results are worrying in a larger sense. Mercury has been measured in terrestrial plants and animals, and might have an impact on land-based food webs. "I would definitely not eat any spiders from foggy areas," Coales joked at a press conference. Spiders in the area have been measured as having mercury levels above the FDA's accepted limit. Humans generally don't eat spiders, but birds and other animals do. Coales and Weiss-Penzias plan to continue their work looking into how mercury from fog affects the food web on land, and hope to eventually be able to use drones to monitor the fog as it comes in. Source http://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/mercury-found-in-fog-off-california-coast/ar-BBnDVct?li=BBnbfcL

Can APC wipe out PDP from the North?

As the Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja begins hearing in the appeal filed by Governor Darius Ishaku to upturn his removal by the Taraba State Election Petition Tribunal, the question on the lips of many political analysts is: Can the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) survive the attack by the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC)? After losing power in the 2015 general elections, PDP has watched its stature diminish in a matter of seven months, with many Nigerians raising the fear that there is a plan to turn Nigeria into a one-party state by the APC. Since APC came into power in May, virtually all the judgments given by the election petition tribunals have been against PDP. The governorship poll in Rivers State was annulled by the election tribunal and the Court of Appeal upheld this decision on Wednesday. Chief Nyesom Wike, the governor of the state, has vowed to pursue his case up to the Supreme Court to get justice, but his chances are not bright. The latest PDP state to lose at the election petition and the Appeal Court is Akwa Ibom. Governor Udom Emmanuel is equally heading to the Supreme Court to seek justice. Several PDP federal lawmakers, notably former Senate President David Mark, have also lost their cases at the tribunals. The election in Bayelsa was declared inconclusive and the fate of the PDP governor is uncertain. It is against this background and other developments that many were very critical of the November 7 judgment of the Taraba Election Petition Tribunal annulling the election of Ishaku and ordering that Hajia Aisha Alhassan, the candidate of the APC, should be sworn-in on the grounds that Ishaku was not properly nominated by the PDP in the governorship primary. Besides Taraba, the only other state still in the hands of the PDP in the 18 northern states is Gombe. The others are effectively APC – controlled. The Justice Musa Danladi Abubakar-led tribunal ruled that Ishaku was not properly nominated as PDP’s governorship candidate, pointing out that the party did not conduct its primary in Jalingo, the state capital. The tribunal upheld the testimony of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, Head of Election Monitoring Source www.vanguardngr.com/2015/12/can-apc-wipe-out-pdp-from-the-north/

Alek Skarlatos: ‘I saw this guy with an AK-47, tapped my friend on the shoulder and said: Let’s go’

In mid-August, Alek Skarlatos, a specialist with the Oregon army national guard, was on a Thalys train travelling from Amsterdam to Paris, part of a European vacation he’d planned with his friends Spencer Stone and Anthony Sadler to celebrate the end of his tour of duty in Afghanistan. Three hours into the journey, a 25-year-old Moroccan man with Isis connections, Ayoub El-Khazzani, began rampaging through the carriages armed with a pistol, a Kalashnikov, 270 rounds of ammunition and half a litre of petrol, eventually shooting and grievously wounding a Franco-American man, Mark Moogalian, who tried to stop him. What El-Khazzani wasn’t bargaining for was the trio of peppy Americans, who, together with 62-year-old Brit Chris Norman, overcame the attacker, Skarlatos using the butt of El-Khazzani’s own gun to beat him into submission. On the telephone from LA, Skarlatos reveals what he remembers about the attack. “Honestly, it’s really strange. The adrenaline messes with your memory. I do remember certain moments very sharply and very clearly. When I first saw the guy with the AK, that part is burned in my mind. Then I tapped Spencer on the shoulder and said, ‘Let’s go!’ and from that moment to pretty much when I grabbed the handgun was totally blank. I remember the end of the struggle very clearly and then when he was on the ground and tied up. It was 35 minutes between him beginning the attack and when we got to the station.”The all World news The Observer's faces of 2015 Alek Skarlatos: ‘I saw this guy with an AK-47, tapped my friend on the shoulder and said: Let’s go’ The off-duty soldier was one of five passengers who foiled a terrorist attack on a Paris-bound train in August • See the Observer’s faces of 2015 in full here • Nujeen Mustafa: ‘Sometimes it’s good to be unaware. Maybe I was too young to realise the danger’ Alek Skarlatos, Los Angeles ‘The adrenaline messes with your memory’: Alek Skarlatos in Los Angeles. Photograph: Steve Schofield for the Observer Alex Preston Sunday 20 December 2015 09.00 GMT Share Share Share Shares 0 Comments 0 Save for later In mid-August, Alek Skarlatos, a specialist with the Oregon army national guard, was on a Thalys train travelling from Amsterdam to Paris, part of a European vacation he’d planned with his friends Spencer Stone and Anthony Sadler to celebrate the end of his tour of duty in Afghanistan. Three hours into the journey, a 25-year-old Moroccan man with Isis connections, Ayoub El-Khazzani, began rampaging through the carriages armed with a pistol, a Kalashnikov, 270 rounds of ammunition and half a litre of petrol, eventually shooting and grievously wounding a Franco-American man, Mark Moogalian, who tried to stop him. What El-Khazzani wasn’t bargaining for was the trio of peppy Americans, who, together with 62-year-old Brit Chris Norman, overcame the attacker, Skarlatos using the butt of El-Khazzani’s own gun to beat him into submission. On the telephone from LA, Skarlatos reveals what he remembers about the attack. “Honestly, it’s really strange. The adrenaline messes with your memory. I do remember certain moments very sharply and very clearly. When I first saw the guy with the AK, that part is burned in my mind. Then I tapped Spencer on the shoulder and said, ‘Let’s go!’ and from that moment to pretty much when I grabbed the handgun was totally blank. I remember the end of the struggle very clearly and then when he was on the ground and tied up. It was 35 minutes between him beginning the attack and when we got to the station.” France train attack: Americans overpower gunman on Paris express Read more Since then, life has altered unrecognisably for Skarlatos. He found himself an overnight celebrity, on the cover of newspapers and magazines worldwide, the recipient of the French Légion d’honneur and the US Soldier’s Medal, the highest award for actions not taken in combat. Back home in Oregon, he was asked to join Dancing With the Stars, an American reality show similar to Strictly Come Dancing. Advertisement Skarlatos and his dance partner, Lindsay Arnold, came third in the show’s 21st season, their high point a heartfelt and patriotic waltz to America the Beautiful. So how did Skarlatos move from have-a-go-heroism to dancing off against the likes of Chaka Khan and the Backstreet Boys’ Nick Carter? “When they asked me to do it, it wasn’t even a week after the attack and I was just a bit ignorant about the whole thing,” he says. “There was so much stuff going on... For me it was like, what else was I going to do? But I just had to make sure that Spencer [Stone] and Anthony [Sadler] were OK with it. They did take a bit of convincing – they had no idea what Dancing With the Stars was; I didn’t really either.” Skarlatos’s companions on the train have been noticeably less eager to embrace their new-found fame. He remains close to his boyhood friend Stone, who was wounded in the attack and then, shockingly, two months after his return to the US, was stabbed four times outside a Sacramento nightclub, seemingly while trying to protect a young woman. Skarlatos’s voice drops at this point, reflecting on his friend’s misfortune and another attack he was unable to prevent. “While I was busy celebrating stopping a terrorist attack, there was a shooting at my college that I would have been at that day, and then a week later Spencer gets stabbed and I wasn’t there to help him either,” he says. “I felt guilty not being at my college that day and, who knows, maybe if I hadn’t been doing Dancing With the Stars, I would have been at that bar with him and maybe I would have been able to do something.” I ask Skarlatos if being so centrally involved in a terrorist attack gives him a different perspective on the atrocities in Paris and California; if he believes that the war on terror will ever be won. “Anybody who is a terrorist we should just kill,” he says. “I would rather it not be put up for debate.” Now Skarlatos is about to embark on a stadium tour as part of Dancing With the Stars live. After that, his plans are a little hazy. “I have some things in development right now but nothing certain,” he says. “It’s not quite back to square one, but I’m going to go back to Oregon and if I have other opportunities I’ll probably do them, but I’m trying to scale things down a little bit.”
Source http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/20/alek-skarlatos-us-soldier-foiled-paris-train-attack#img-1

Winners and losers in the 3rd Democratic presidential debate

The three Democrats running for president gathered in New Hampshire Saturday night for their third and final debate of 2015 . It was a feisty affair with Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders and Martin O'Malley aggressively attacking each other at almost every turn. I picked a handful of winners and losers from the night that was. They're below. Winners * Hillary Clinton : The former Secretary of State was the only one on stage Saturday night who looked like she could step into the presidency tomorrow. Her knowledge on foreign policy -- from ISIS to Syria and beyond -- was significantly greater than her rivals, and it showed. (ABC moderator Martha Raddatz was the only one on stage confident enough in her own knowledge of foreign policy to go after Clinton.) Clinton also demonstrated her ability to play to local interests -- she touted Market Basket, which is based in Tewksbury, Massaschusetts, for example. She repeatedly turned the focus away from the differences among the candidates on stage and instead pointed out the differences she (and the other Democratic candidates) have with controversial Republican frontrunner Donald Trump. She showed a sense of humor; asked by ABC moderator David Muir whether "corporate America should love Hillary Clinton " "Everyone should," she responded to raucous applause in the room. And, she demonstrated a willingness to whack away at O'Malley (on his acceptance of corporate dollars as chairman of the Democratic Governors Association) and Sanders (on the cost of his proposals) -- showing that she was not content to sit back and play defense. Clinton's performance proved, yet again, how gifted she is as a debater. And, it made me wonder, yet again, why her campaign seems to want to limit debates in this primary. She shines in them -- and did so again tonight. Her closing statement -- invoking the new "Star Wars" movie -- was the cherry on top of a tour de force performance.* Donald Trump : No one loves attention more than The Donald. And, his name was invoked over and over again on Saturday night -- by, most notably, Clinton. I could almost imagine Trump sitting in Trump Tower -- he never leaves there, right? -- grinning broadly every time Hillary attacked him. I guarantee you Trump will weave the amount he was attacked by Clinton into his stump speech as evidence that Democrats are obsessed with him. * Martha Raddatz : Raddatz moderated the debate alongside "World News Tonight" anchor David Muir. But, she was the star of the show. ABC's chief global correspondent did exactly what a good moderator should: She let the candidates mix it up when it made sense for them to and injected herself into the conversation when a candidate said something that she knew wasn't right. Raddatz made a very strong case for the reporter-moderator tonight; she is someone who knows her subject matter inside and out -- a sort of knowledge that allowed her to fact-check the candidates in real time. She made this debate considerably better. Period. * "Jeopardy!": Because I thought the debate started at 8 pm eastern, I tuned in to ABC about 15 minutes beforehand and was treated to "Double Jeopardy! and "Final Jeopardy!". Did you know T.S. Eliot's nickname was "Old Possum"? I didn't either until I watched "Jeopardy!" That is still a damn good show. Losers * Martin O'Malley : The former Maryland governor came into the debate with a plan: Lump Sanders and Clinton into a heap as Washington politicians -- not to mention old -- and distinguish himself as the youthful guy who has never spent a minute in the nation's capitol. The problem with that plan was two fold: (1) it made him too scripted and (2) it felt super-forced. After Clinton and Sanders had a kumbaya moment over the Democratic National Committee data breach that roiled the race over the last 24 hours, O'Malley condemned the bickering between the two. Um, what? O'Malley's low point, however, came when he mentioned that he came from a different generation than the other two candidates on stage -- a not-so-subtle attempt to call Sanders and Clinton old. (Sanders is 74 years old, Clinton is 68; O'Malley is 52 years old.) The crowd got what he was doing -- and booed. O'Malley's status in the race -- way, way, way behind the top two -- makes debates almost too-pressure-filled for him. He looked so desperate to make a mark or make a moment on Saturday night that he couldn't get out of his own way and often came across as unlikable. * Bernie Sanders : Sure, if you already liked the Vermont Senator, nothing you heard in the debate will make you like him any less. But, every Sanders's answer seemed to devolve into shouting and outrage -- not a great look when it comes to persuading on-the-fence voters to be for you. Clinton cut Sanders deeply when she bashed the massive costs associated with his proposals, raising the point -- without exactly raising it -- that Sanders would be a massive risk as the Democratic nominee. On Saturday night, Sanders looked less like a legitimate threat to Clinton and more like a niche candidate operating at the fringes of the party. * Democratic National Committee: There's simply no justification for hosting a debate on a Saturday night six days before Christmas. Unless the goal is to ensure that said debate is lightly-watched and, therefore, any mistakes made by the presumptive frontrunner are lessened. (As I mentioned above, I am not sure why her allies think Clinton needs to be sheltered from debates -- she's outstanding in them.) And, as if that wasn't bad enough, DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz (Fla.) had to sit stone-faced -- with a camera trained on her! -- while Sanders excoriated the party committee over its handling of the data breach. Awkward. * ABC : Look. I am an adult. Just tell me when the debate starts. I, like everyone else who planned to watch the debate, was under the impression that 8 pm eastern was when things got going. Except that the first 30 minutes of ABC's coverage was a roundtable of analysts talking about what might happen.
Source http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/winners-and-losers-in-the-3rd-democratic-presidential-debate/ar-BBnKj7V?li=BBnb7Kz

Saturday 19 December 2015

Action Against Child Labour Could Be Undone

The amendment when made law would allow children under the age of 14 to work in family run enterprises and the entertainment industry. Harpreet Bhullar, a programme officer with Save the Children, told Sky News: "There are no rules or ways to determine whether a particular work is a family enterprise or not, or is it hazardous or not. The law and rules do not clearly mention this. So it is very difficult and in that way it is promoting child labour." Nobel Peace Prize winner Kailash Satyarthi, who gave up his job as an electrical engineer to dedicate himself to protecting and advancing children's rights, described the amendment as "regressive and counter productive". He said thousands of the children rescued by his organisation are from residential areas which under the new law would not be able to be set free. Gudiya, 11, spends all day embellishing clothes with her mother and sisters. In the whole day the family manage to complete three pieces that will fetch them around 100 rupees - that's about £1. Her mother Kanti said: "It's very difficult, my husband gets work off and on, sometimes he's unemployed for weeks... money is our biggest problem. So should I spend money on paying rent or send these children to school?" So, Gudiya and her siblings chip in to earn the extra cash. They are part of an invisible workforce that is unaccounted for.Though the numbers of children working in the formal sector has decreased, manufacturers have found ways of getting around the law. Clothes and other products are outsourced through layers of middle men and finally reach families like Gudiya's where it is finally finished for a pittance. Save the Children runs a study centre in Gudiya's neighbourhood to reach out to this invisible workforce. It's a place where children are familiarised with education. It's been an uphill task for the staff of the charity to convince parents of the children to spare two hours from work. Shamila, 14, told Sky News she fights with her parents to attend a study centre. She said: "I work from 6am till 2pm. I then rush here to study as I really like it. I get back to work at 4pm. The work is back-breaking and my eyes hurt. I will not learn anything from it. I want to study and become a teacher." India is home to the largest number of child labourers in the world - an estimated 13 million, according to government data, but campaigners say the real number is far higher. Years of relentless campaigns by activists and intermittent crackdowns by law enforcing agencies on factories employing children has turned the spotlight on child labour. According to government figures, this number has reduced over the years. But campaigners fear that with the new legislation the gains made might just well be undone. Source : news.sky.com/story/1609287/action-against-child-labour-could-be-undone

Wednesday 9 December 2015

A CREED FOR THOSE WHO HAVE SUFFERED

I asked God for strength, that I might achieve. I was made weak, that I might learn humbly to obey . . . I asked for health, that I might do greater things. I was given infirmity, that I might do better things ... I asked for riches, that I might be happy. I was given poverty, that I might be wise ... I asked for power, that I might have the praise of men. I was given weakness, that I might feel the need of God .. . I asked for all things, that I might enjoy life. I was given life, that I might enjoy all things ... I got nothing I asked for--but everything I had hoped for. Almost despite myself, my unspoken prayers were answered. I, among all men, am most richly! Source :www.motivateus.com/stories/acreed.htm

Senate won’t consider any anti-media agenda, says Saraki

President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki, affirmed in Lagos late Tuesday evening that potential press muzzling agenda would not be tabled for consideration by the lawmakers.
Besides, Saraki, who spoke at the Lagos Business School’s end of year dinner, assured that the long awaited Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) would soon be passed into law, to promote the fortunes of the oil sector.
Others, according to him, currently topping the National Assembly’s priority list include the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) Repeal Bill, Road and Transport Reform bills and the Ports and Harbour bills.
On the controversial bill on social media, the Senate President explained that what had been presented to the Upper House was the bill to prohibit frivolous petitions and other matters, saying that when it comes up for debate, any aspect that targets the social media would be expunged at the appropriate time, as consideration for it would undermine democratic principles.
Be rest assured that the Senate will do the right thing. There was no anti-social media bill brought forward to the National Assembly. If there is any, there is need for clarity on that.
Those that led the protest today, we received their letter and will go into the committee work and public hearing, some of these things will come up. But we must understand that when those bills come up, they come as principle of bill.
“The principle of that bill was on frivolous petition; nothing to do with social media. Later, we did find out that there was a section in it that has to do with social media, but that will go away when it comes to third reading when you start doing clause by clause issue,” he said.
Saraki said that the PIB “will ensure greater transparency and efficiency in the oil and gas industry, which are all geared towards opening these sectors to private sector investment and expanding the infrastructure base for the Nigerian economy.
As we speak today, we are on the verge of introducing the first part of PIB for first reading. This sets out a new governance and institutional structure for the oil and gas industry.
The emphasis of the bill is to create a world class oil and gas sector, competitive, open and simple, that would enable the emergence of an efficient oil and gas sector in Nigeria comparable to any other in the world. The new industry, when fully implemented, will see government saving over $4 billion annually on the current joint venture cash call arrangement, thus freeing up funds for critical sectors.
like health, agriculture, education and road maintenance.
“We have targeted also bills aimed at broadening the credit market, lowering credit risk and improving the conflict resolution structures in the system for better commercial dispute resolution.”
He pointed out that “the country, despite the burgeoning revenue inflow, was haemorrhaging from all points. Corruption was elevated to a craft. Six months into the new administration, the mandate to deliver is clear and we will work to deliver.
“You might have heard a lot as regards the politics of the emergence of the leadership in both chambers of the National Assembly, but I will like to reassure you that despite that, we are all committed to bringing about an effective National Assembly, a people- oriented one that is focused on national interest where personal interest will certainly be secondary.
“From the result of the elections, Nigerians spoke clearly that there was no room anymore for business as usual and insisted on getting ‘change’ with particular reference to the fight against corruption, addressing poverty, unemployment and insecurity. Nigerians wanted to see that something was done to curtail wastages in the system.”





Source www.ngrguardiannews.com/2015/12/senate-wont-consider-any-anti-media-agenda-says-saraki/

Previous govt breached the trust of Nigerians, says Buhari

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari has raised the debate on the controversial arms deal when he declared that some officials in the last administration abused the trust Nigerians reposed in them.
The President, who made the observation during a dinner he held for members of the House of Representatives at the State House Abuja yesterday, however sought the understating and support of lawmakers towards addressing the myriads of problems confronting the nation.
Speaking extempore, the President said:”I decided to host this dinner to thank you very much for your support so far. But we still have a long way to go. Our objective is that we first have to secure the country and efficiently manage it because we are all in government.
“In fact, we are the government, you, the executive and the judiciary so nobody should contemplate alienating the other
We have already set our priorities right during our campaigns to secure the country then efficiently manage it.”
The President declared:”Securing the country is obviously dealing decisively with Boko haram. When we came in, the military leadership had to be removed and reconstituted, a new set put in with clear target to reorganize, retrain, reequip and make sure that Boko haram is uprooted and neutralized.”
But unfortunately for us as a people, we uncovered that billions of naira and hundreds of millions of dollars were expended by the previous government to acquire good equipment and ammunition so that the military can use, but unfortunately, there was abuse of trust at various levels which cost Nigeria a lot of lives and goodwill.
So, on this we cannot keep quiet about and it is coming out gradually. It is very unfortunate. It is a known fact that Nigeria earned its respect from Burma to Zaire to Liberia to Sierra Leone. But it reached a stage where the Nigerian military could not secure 14 local councils out of 774.”




Source www.ngrguardiannews.com/2015/12/previous-govt-breached-the-trust-of-nigerians-says-buhari/

Tuesday 8 December 2015

Banks, Others Move to Save Nigeria from Anti-money Laundering Sanctions

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Commercial banks and other financial institutions are currently putting their records in order so as to ensure that they are not deficient in Anti-Money Laundering and Counter Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) rules, as the nation awaits the visit of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) to Nigeria early next year.
FATF is an inter-governmental body established in 1989 by the ministers of its member jurisdictions, of which Nigeria is a member. The objectives of the FATF are to set standards and promote effective implementation of legal, regulatory and operational measures for combating money laundering, terrorist financing and other related threats to the integrity of the international financial system.
FATF had in 2013 removed Nigeria from the list of countries identified as jurisdictions with significant deficiencies in AML/CFT regimes. The action was taken then, following the country’s full implementation of the mutually agreed Action Plan and the exhibition of a clear political commitment to continue the development of its AML/CFT regime.
As  the country awaits fresh visit from the FATF members, the Deputy Governor (Financial System Stability), Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Dr. Okwu Joseph Nnanna, stressed the need for banks and other financial institutions to ensure that the country's rating remains positive. Nnanna, also advised banks' board of directors to ensure that their institutions comply with laid down rules.
"We do not want to be in the books of FATF.  We are expecting them (FATF) to come to Nigeria early next year, to see the level of compliance in our financial system.
We strongly urge you to tell your complaince officers to do their work with all the seriousness it deserves. We shall hold the boards responsible if they come for the surveillance and find any bank wanting, sincerely, it is not just the managing directors of those banks we shall hold responsible, we shall hold the board collectively responsible.
"So, talk to your compliance officers. Your reports, checklists and deposits they receive, they should know where they come from. In recent time, when we banned forex deposits in the domiciliary accounts, we knew how much monies were in the vault of banks. I think we should try to avoid that," the CBN deputy governor warned.
The global anti-money laundering body had in 2013, welcomed Nigeria’s significant progress in improving its AML/CFT regime and had noted that the country had established the legal and regulatory framework to meet its commitments in its Action Plan regarding the strategic deficiencies that the FATF had identified in February 2010.
The FATF had developed a series of recommendations recognised as the international standard for combating of money laundering and the financing of terrorism and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.

They form the basis for a co-ordinated response to these threats to the integrity of the financial system and help ensure a level playing field.  First issued in 1990, the FATF recommendations were revised in 1996, 2001, 2003 and most recently in 2012 to ensure that they remain up to date and relevant, and they are intended to be of universal application.
The FATF monitors the progress of its members in implementing necessary measures, reviews money laundering and terrorist financing techniques and counter-measures, and promotes the adoption and implementation of appropriate measures globally. 
In collaboration with other international stakeholders, the FATF works to identify national-level vulnerabilities with the aim of protecting the international financial system from misuse. The FATF's decision making body, the FATF Plenary, meets three times per year.

source:  http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/banks-others-move-to-save-nigeria-from-anti-money-laundering-sanctions/227480/

Ghana-sacks-20-judges-suspended-over-bribery-allegation

The Judicial Council in Ghana has dismissed 20 of 21 Circuit Court judges and magistrates in the judicial bribery scandal. They were investigated for misconduct after investigative journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, filed a petition for their removal.
Following a two-year investigation, Anas petitioned the Chief Justice for the removal of 23 lower court judges on grounds of misbehaviour, pursuant to Article 151 of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana.
Two were, however, exempted as they had been elevated to the High Court as of April 2015 and could not be removed by Article 151.
Anas’s petition was accompanied by audio-visual evidence of bribery in which the accused judges and magistrates were secretly recorded collecting bribes to pass favourable verdicts.
Following the petition, the judges came under the investigation of a disciplinary committee chaired by Supreme Court justice, Sophia Adinyira and including two past presidents of the Ghana Bar Association, Frank Beecham and Nene Amegatcher; Ambassador James Victor Gbeho, Brigadier General Edward Fiawoo and Justice Elizabeth Ankumah of the High Court.
At a press conference on Monday, December 7, the Judicial Council announced some of the judges and magistrates were removed with end of service benefits and some others dismissed without any benefit.
It explained that those removed with benefits were remorseful when they appeared before the committee and apologized profusely to the people of Ghana for bringing the judiciary’s name into disrepute by their conduct.
 
 
source:  http://www.tribuneonlineng.com/ghana-sacks-20-judges-suspended-over-bribery-allegation

Boko Haram attacks village, loots food supplies, 200 cattle in northeast Nigerian

Boko Haram gunmen have torched almost an entire village near the northeast Nigerian town of Chibok from where over 200 schoolgirls were kidnapped, a resident who fled and a local elder said Tuesday. The raid in Takulashi village happened on Sunday and saw the Islamists loot food supplies, two days after fighters stole more than 200 cattle from the same location.
Recent months have seen a reduction in such hit-and-run raids in rural northeast Nigeria, in an indication the rebels’ ability to strike has been reduced by an army counter-offensive. But sporadic raids still occur and there is concern about an increase in suicide and bomb attacks in urban centres.
A group of insurgents on bicycles and on foot invaded the farming and herding community at about 6:00 am (0500 GMT) on Sunday, shooting indiscriminately and setting fire to homes. “They burnt more than 100 homes in the village. Only five houses were spared the inferno,” said a resident who gave his name as David, after fleeing to the nearby town of Askira Uba.
The attackers loaded food supplies onto four vehicles they took from the village and burnt four more they were unable to take with them. The rest of the supplies were set on fire. “We will have to wait till everybody is back to know if there were any fatalities in the attack,” Ayuba Chibok, a community leader in Chibok, told AFP.
“We are making contacts with the residents who fled to locations where there is a phone network. “We thought the worst had happened after Boko Haram rustled over 200 cattle in the village on Friday.” In April last year 12 people were killed when gunmen attacked Takulashi in the wake of the abduction of 276 schoolgirls from their school in Chibok by Boko Haram.
Fifty-seven girls escaped soon afterwards but nothing has been seen or heard from the remaining 219 in captivity since a video in May 2014.
 http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/12/boko-haram-attacks-village-loots-food-supplies-200-cattle-in-northeast-nigerian/
 
source :

Court adjourns Dasuki’s trial to 2016

Justice Adeniyi Ademola of the Federal High Court, Abuja, has adjourned the trial of the embattled former National Security Adviser, NSA, Sambo Dasuki, to January 20, 2016.
The case was adjourned by the judge after consultation with counsels to the plaintiff and the defendant.
The federal government had on Thursday filed a fresh application seeking to prevent Dasuki from travelling abroad for medical treatment. Counsel to the government, Oluseyi Opasanya, in his fresh application, asked Ademola to stay proceedings in the ruling he delivered on November 3, which granted Dasuki permission to travel abroad for medical treatment and ordered an immediate release of his passport.
“The new application,” Opasanya said, “takes precedence over the earlier application.”
But lawyer to Dasuki, Ahmed Raji, in his brief, countered the new application, arguing that the previous application, which sought to revoke his client’s bail, was yet to be determined.
He then prayed the court for a short adjournment to respond to the fresh application which made the court to fix Monday for hearing of the application.
However, at the resumed hearing on Monday, the court adjourned the matter









Source :dailypost.ng/2015/12/08/court-adjourns-dasukis-trial-to-2016/

Monday 7 December 2015

Appeal Court upholds Buruji Kashamu's election as senator

The Court of Appeal, Ibadan Division, on Monday, upheld the election of Senator Buruji Kashamu.
Details later...




Source www.tribuneonlineng.com/appeal-court-upholds-buruji-kashamus-election-as-senator

Arms Purchase Scam: Investigators Trace N650m To Thisday Publisher Nduka Obaigbena

The team of investigators at the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) looking into how the office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) shared funds meant for fighting Boko Haram has detected another line of payment made to companies linked with Thisday publisher and owner of Arise TV, Nduka Obaigbena.
Nduka Obaigbena of ThisDay and Arise TV
The investigators said Obaigbena received at least N650million from Dasuki for questionable transactions.
They also said that Obaigbena, who is also the Chairman of the Newspaper Proprietors Association Of Nigeria, has dropped out of sight since the discovery and all attempts at reaching him have failed, EFCC sources said.
Today, SaharaReporters reached Mr. Obaigbena, who said he was in New York.  He said that prior to his trip to New York, he had been at meetings in London, and will return to Nigeria when he is through with his visit to New York.
He admitted that his newspaper company received a letter from the EFCC and that a response had been sent to explain what they know about the case involving Raymond Dokpesi’s Daar Communications. Dokpesi was arrested last week, but he and his family have offered conflicting accounts about why he received billions of Naira from Dasuki.
Obaigbena told SaharaReporters he did not receive any monies from the former NSA, a point strongly disputed by EFCC investigators.

Sunday 6 December 2015

Bayelsa polls: Dickson ahead, wins in 4 LGs

YENAGOA—WITH official results from five of the eight local councils, Governor Seriake Dickson of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, yesterday, emerged as the front runner in the Bayelsa State Governorship election having scored 81,929 votes.
He is closely being pursued by the All Progressives Congress, APC, standard bearer and immediate past governor of the state, Chief Timipre Sylva, who got 56,514 votes.
So far, results from 28 polling units in the five councils were cancelled due to electoral skirmishes, over-voting, malfunctioning card readers and violence.
While Dickson won in four of the five councils, Sylva had the upper hand in the battle for Brass, his local council. The councils that Dickson won were Sagbama, Yenagoa, Ekeremor, Kolokuma/Opokuma.
Official announcement of the results will continues today at 10 am. The remaining councils are Ogbia, Nembe and Southern Ijaw.
This came as the PDP alleged, yesterday, that the APC perpetrated violence in Southern Ijaw area of the state and was plotting to manipulate the outcome of the exercise to its favour.
Dickson wins in Sagbama, Yenagoa, Ekeremor, Kolokuma/Opokuma
In Sagbama Local Council, which has 14 wards and where Governor Dickson hails from, the PDP had the upper hand.
Out of the 35,647 valid votes, the PDP got 28,934, the APC scored 5,382 while the PDM got 406 votes.
According to the Collation Officer, Mr. Perekeme Bertola, a lecturer at the Niger Delta University, NDU, results from six polling units at Asamabiri were cancelled due to alleged malfunctioning card reader and electoral violence.
Total registered voters in the council stands at 84,550; accredited voters are 36,892 and 726 votes were voided


Source www.vanguardngr.com/2015/12/bayelsa-polls-dickson-ahead-wins-in-4-lgs/

“Everyday may not be good, but there is something good in every day

Thank God always because your appreciation is an application for more reasons to be thankful.... Even the hen lift her heads towards heaven when swallowing her grain...
I know fully well that you laid and slept off unnoticed yesternight but it took God to wake you up this morning... That's what an alarm clock can never do, if He doesn't
Mind you! Your current level is someone else's prayer request.
Can't you praise the Lord.... It can't but get better.
AIG in a serious thanksgiving mood.














Credit : Adeshina Tunde Adebowale

Saturday 5 December 2015

Don’t Think That ‘TIME’ Will Change Our Life.. ‘TIME’ Only Changes The Expiry Dates Of..The ‘Opportunities: rishikajain.com/tag/good-morning/ ’




Fred Smith | Federal Express
Fred Smith was an undergraduate at Yale University in 1965. As part of the coursework, he wrote an economics paper exploring the process of transportation of goods in the United States. He found that the shippers relied on transporting large packages across the United States by means of truck or passenger airplanes. Smith thought of a more efficient transportation idea. He wrote a last minute paper on how a company carrying small, essential items by plane could be a much better business. He, however, did not go into details about how to actually run such a company. His paper was graded “C”. But Smith did not give up on the idea and launched the company in 1971.
But within three years of the founding of the company, Federal Express was on the verge of bankruptcy. It was losing over $1 million a month, due to the rising fuel costs. At its zenith, the company had just $5000 to its name. Smith made a final pitch to General Dynamics for more funding. The request was turned down.
Most ordinary people would have quit at this point and shut down the company. Not Fred Smith. What he did next is easily the boldest move by the founder of a company. Smith flew to Las Vegas and played Black Jack that weekend with the remaining company funds. Yes, all of the $5000. On Monday, the management of the company had a pleasant surprise lined up. FedEx had $32,000 in its bank account, which was just enough to cover the fuel for their planes and to continue operating a few days more.
Soon after, the company was able to raise significant amounts in funding. Today FedEx is a global giant with operations in more than 220 countries and territories and an annual revenue of US $45 billion




Source yourstory.com/2014/03/inspiring-stories/

MRA, NANS flay social media bill

The Media Rights Agenda and the National Association of Nigerian Students have described the social media bill currently before the Senate as repressive, urging Nigerians and media professionals to be wary of it.
Speaking to one of our correspondents, MRA’s Executive Director, Mr. Edetaen Ojo, said it was erroneous to believe that the bill targets only those criticising politicians and public institutions via social media sites.
He stated, ‘‘The bill seeks to criminalise anybody who publishes any news items on social media platforms or broadcast such on either radio or television without first swearing to a court affidavit. The bill is not against only social media users but users of all forms of media.’’
Part of the bill read, “Any petition and or complains not accompanied by a sworn affidavit shall be incompetent and shall not be used by any government institution, agency or bodies established by any law for the time being enforced in Nigeria.’’
NANS in a statement issued on Friday and signed by its Vice President (External), Oluwatosin Ogunkuade, described the bill as provocative.
According to Ogunkuade, the bill is an infringement on the rights and freedom of the Nigerian masses.
He said, “It has exposed the underbelly of the Nigerian Senate to an unpardonable ridicule that they are not representing their people but themselves.’’
The statement further alleged that the bill was an attempt to subvert ‘Nigeria’s democracy and freedom of expression in any form.’
Many Nigerians have been reacting angrily to the bill titled, “A bill for an Act to prohibit frivolous petitions and other matters connected therewith,” sponsored by a member of the All Progressives Congress from Kebbi State, Senator Bala Ibn Na’allah.


Source www.punchng.com/?p=13367

IG’s position on pro-Biafra protesters stands —Presidency

The Presidency on Saturday has said it stands by the position of the Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Solomon Arase, on the ongoing pro-Biafra protests in some states in the South-East.
The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, disclosed this in an interview with our correspondent.
Adesina was responding to a question on whether President Muhammadu Buhari will or has ordered the deployment of troops in the South-East over the protests.
The presidential spokesman said the nation’s law enforcement agencies know the right thing to do in the circumstance.
He added that they had started doing the right thing.
He said, “The issue of Biafra is a matter of law and order. The law enforcement agencies know what to do, and they are doing it. The IGP (Solomon Arase) has spoken on it earlier this week. That position remains.”
Arase had during the week issued a stern warning to the Movement for the Actualisation of Sovereign State of Biafra and the Indigenous People of Biafra activists to stop threatening public peace or face the full weight of the law.
The IGP noted that the increasing resort to acts of brigandage of this nature was pointing to a clear attempt by the brains behind the protests to test the will of security agencies to restore order and guarantee internal cohesion.
He said the restoration and maintenance of law and public order, and protection of lives and property remain the sacred and statutory mandate of the Nigeria Police.
This mandate, according to him, shall be fully executed in the overriding interests of the nation and vast majority of citizens and residents of the South-East geopolitical Zone.
He then ordered the mobilisation and deployment of Police Mobile Force across the country to reinforce security in the state commands that MASSOB and IPOB are currently attempting to utilise as launching pads for their sinister intentions.
The Assistant Inspectors-General of Police Zone 5 (Benin); Zone 6 (Calabar) and Zone 9 (Umuahia), as well as all Commissioners of Police in the affected states in the South-East and neigbouring states were also directed to henceforth maximally exercise their statutory mandate in relation to prevention and disruption of any gathering that threatens public order and national cohesion.
Meanwhile, a security expert, Mr. Ona Ekhomu, has urged the Nigeria Police and other security agencies to exercise caution in handling pro-Biafra protests.
Ekhomu noted that if these agitations were not handled properly handled by the country’s security agencies, it could result into more violence in the country.
Speaking to our correspondent on the telephone on Friday, Ekhomu said while pro-Biafra agitators were entitled to their opinion and right to freedom of speech, it was wrong for them to do so by a show of force or violence.
He said, “We know there is only one Nigeria. But I think the security agencies need to be very circumspect in the way they handle the protests. And in a modern democratic state, all members of the society who have an organised voice are entitled to their opinion, to speak out against whatever they feel unhappy about. But if those protesting now carry weapons and say they want to attack military/public institutions and military barracks, then taking up violent action against them would be called for.
“Since these protesters are not armed, I think what is needed more now is suasion, because people must be allowed to air their opinions. Those protesting are trying to ventilate and make a statement. But the protests should be done the right way. If it is not handled properly, it could culminate into violence.”
“There should be better training and re-training for our security officials in handling such issues.”

Source :www.punchng.com/?p=13356

Breaking News: INEC declares Yahaya Bello Kogi Governor-Elect

The Independent National Electoral Commission has declared the candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Alh. Yahaya Bello as the winner of the Kogi governorship poll.
APC polled 247,752 votes to defeat PDP who came a strong second with 204,877 votes. In today’s supplementary poll, APC polled 6885 votes to beat PDP which polled 5363 votes.
Declaring the results in Lokoja, the Chief Returning Officer for the election, Prof. Emmanuel Kucha, who is the Vice Chancellor of the Federal University of Agriculture, Makurdi, said having fulfilled all legal requirements, Alh. Yahaya Bello is declared winner of the election and Kogi Governor-Elect.
Kucha declared: “That Yahaya Bello, having polled the highest number of votes and satisfied the law is hereby returned elected”.
The collation of results was temporarily paused when an unidentified agent of the PDP asked about the status of APC running mate. But the Resident Electoral Commissioner said Faleke remains the running mate to Alh. Yahaya Bello. The supplementary poll took place in 18 of the 21 Local Government Areas in the state.
Immediately the results were announced, the streets of Lokoja, Kotonkarfe and Okene erupted in jubilation as people poured into the streets in hundreds to celebrate the victory.
At Isanlu, Bello Support Organization said it is victory for democracy.
Speaking exclusively to Vanguard at Isanlu, Chief Strategist of the organization, Abdulrasaq Ashiru said Yahaya Bello is God-sent for Kogi redemption.
In his words: “This is the moment we have been waiting for; the moment of history. This is the time we have worked for; the hour of renaissance.
Source www.vanguardngr.com/2015/12/breaking-news-inec-declares-yahaya-bello-kogi-governor-elect/

Kogi Supplementary election results

Supplementary election results:
Oboroke ward two APC 110 PDP 0
Apanko poling unit APC 212 PDP 2
Oboroke Uvete II polling unit 10 APC 108 PDP 2. All in Okehi LGA
The only polling unit in Ijumu LGA. Aiyetoro ward 1: APC 86 PDP 102. The first win for PDP in the West so far.
The only unit in Okene local government, Bariki ward APC 201 PDP 2
Again, Thugs Disrupted Voting at Eti Aja 2, Dekina LGA
Again, Eti Aja 2 is in the news again for the wrong reasons as thugs disrupted the voting process. Eti Aja is in Anyigba, the commercial city of Igalaland.
Trouble started when thugs stormed some of the polling units in the area, shooting sporadically into air shortly after accreditation.
However, normalcy was returned to the polling units by security agents.
But as soon as voting started, the thugs stormed the place again and chased the voters on queue away, disrupting the entire voting arena. Electoral officers and prospective voters were seen scampering to safety.

source: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/12/kogi-supplementary-election-results/

Nigeria arrests 9 alleged Boko Haram extremists in Abuja

Nigeria's intelligence agency says it has arrested nine alleged Boko Haram extremists plotting attacks on Abuja, the capital, over the festive season.
Saturday's statement follows a warning Friday from the U.S. Embassy that extremists may be planning attacks on hotels favored by Westerners.
The Department of State Security says one of the nine men arrested was carrying out surveillance of a "high-profile hotel." It says all nine were detained in the past month and had infiltrated the capital in central Nigeria from the country's northeast where most extremist attacks occur.
Boko Haram has claimed previous suicide and car bomb attacks that have killed hundreds in Abuja. Their suicide bombings, village raids and kidnappings continue in the northeast.
Nigeria's 6-year Islamic uprising has killed 20,000 people and spread to neighboring countries.


source; http://www.foxnews.com/world/2015/12/05/nigeria-arrests-alleged-boko-haram-extremists-in-abuja/

Friday 4 December 2015

Poor Living Conditions On University Campuses

Recently, it was reported that the management of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) Ile Ife, Osun State, had closed down the institution indefinitely following prolonged protests by students over poor living conditions on the campus. Students of the foremost ivory tower had during the protest, decried the infrastructural decay in the university, listing overcrowding in the hostels and lecture rooms, inadequate water and epileptic power supply as some of the critical areas where this was most manifest. The students said they resorted to the protest as a last resort, after exhausting other means of attracting management’s attention to their plight.
Though the management of the institution has denied the reported reason for the closure, insisting that the school was closed for a mid-semester break, the fact that the institution, just like many others across the country is in dire need of infrastructure upgrade, is incontestable.
OAU is not the only institution where students are subjected to some of inhuman living conditions which can best be imagined, especially in a country that prides itself as the giant of Africa. In September 2015, students of the University of Lagos protested the invasion of their halls of residence by bedbugs and the general unsanitary conditions of the hostels. This was shortly after a student was electrocuted in the same institution by a high-tension cable that fell on her near her hostel.
A visit to university campuses especially publicly-owned ones leaves bile in the mouth of the visitor on seeing the conditions under which students learn and are expected to excel. The story is the same from the lecture halls that are usually so overcrowded that a good number of students hang on the corridors outside to receive lectures, to hostels where living spaces are shared by double or more the number of persons they are meant for. This is even as the students have to bear the burden of fixing broken doors, replacing torn mosquito nets and louvers on their windows, buying mattresses and fumigating them when infested by insects and fixing electric fittings, all in a bid to make living on the campuses a bit more tolerable. Those who cannot cope opt for off campus accommodation which also has its own challenges, paramount among which are affordability and security.
The situation on the campuses, in our view, is a reflection of poor governance in the larger society. Poor public policy and poor maintenance culture is at the core of the infrastructure challenge on the campuses. The situation in the campuses is a manifestation of years of neglect by successive governments.
Above all, the issue of corruption is pervasive in the nation’s public facilities where officials see budgets as provision for their personal aggrandisement. It is not uncommon for these same officials to retire stolen money as having been used for the purpose they were meant and making available forged receipts as proof. It is a syndicate situation involving officials from top to bottom.
We must however point out that some of what is witnessed on the campuses is a result of abuse by the students themselves. We therefore challenge government and its agencies to step up efforts towards restoring the image of these institutions as centres of excellence that they were designed to be, in all areas, and also urge the students to, as adults, be more responsible and protect facilities provided by the authorities.



Source:leadership.ng/opinions/editorial/480569/poor-living-conditions-university-campuses

Prosecuting authority issues arrest warrant for Pistorius

An arrest warrant has been issued for Oscar Pistorius, a day after the Supreme Court of Appeal found the former athlete guilty of murdering his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, South African media reported Friday.
The ENCA television news channel said the National Prosecuting Authority, which did not confirm the development, would not enforce the arrest until next week when the disgraced Paralympian, currently under house arrest, is expected to apply for bail.
The Supreme Court of Appeal on Thursday found Pistorius guilty of murdering Steenkamp in 2013, throwing out his earlier conviction on the lesser charge of culpable homicide.
“The NPA said yesterday they will look at the judgement. They have now obtained a warrant of arrest for Oscar Pistorius in light of the fact that he is now in limbo,” ENCA reported.
“The state will wait until Tuesday next week, where we understand (Pistorius’s lawyers) will bring the bail application,” the channel added.
Pistorius, 29, is under house arrest in Pretoria after serving one year of his five-year prison sentence for culpable homicide.
The appeal court on Thursday said the original trial judge had made “fundamental” errors in her ruling.
The double-amputee athlete known as the “Blade Runner” now faces a minimum 15-year sentence for murder.
He killed Steenkamp, a model and law graduate, in the early hours of Valentine’s Day two years ago, saying he mistook her for an intruder when he shot four times through the locked door of his bedroom toilet.
Last month he made his first appearance in public since leaving jail in October when he reported for community service at a Pretoria police station.

Source www.punchng.com/?p=12798

11 people sick from salmonella outbreak linked to nut butter


(CNN)Eleven people in nine states have become infected with salmonella believed to be linked to nut butter spread, federal health officials said Thursday. The individuals began feeling ill between July 18 and October 15.
There have been no deaths or hospitalizations.
Symptoms of salmonella include abdominal cramping, diarrhea and fever that begins about 12 to 72 hours after a person is exposed to the bacteria. Most people recover in four to seven days.
The youngest patient identified in this outbreak is 1, and the oldest patient is 79, the CDC said in its formal announcement of the outbreak.
    Oregon has reported three cases while California, Colorado, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, North Carolina and New Jersey are each reporting a single case.
    Health officials interviewed eight of the patients and found all of them had consumed nut butter or nut butter spread in the week before illness. Six of them reported eating JEM Raw nut butter spread.
    On Wednesday, the Oregon based health food company JEM Raw Chocolate, LLC announced a voluntary recall of its full line of nut butter spreads because of potential contamination. They are sold nationally in stores and online. Anyone with these products that were distributed between June and November should throw them out or return them to the point of purchase. The company is asking retailers to pull these products from their shelves.
    source:http://edition.cnn.com/2015/12/03/health/salmonella-outbreak-nut-butter/index.html?sr=fbcnni120415salmonella-outbreak-nut-butter0218PMVideoLink&linkId=19304208

    At least 16 killed in Egyptian nightclub attack

























    A firebomb attack on a small nightclub in Cairo early Friday killed 16 people and wounded three others, authorities said.
    Police were looking for two young men who carried out the attack in the Agouza district because they were previously not allowed to enter, state news agency MENA reported.
    The attack happened at the El Sayad restaurant, which is not officially a nightclub but is among Egypt's small local eateries that skirt taboos around drinking in this predominantly Muslim country by serving food and alcohol throughout the day, then turning into a bar until the early morning hours.
    While alcohol is legal in Egypt, most restaurants and clubs don't have liquor licenses.
    The Ministry of Interior, in a statement posted on its Facebook page, cited an unnamed official with its Security Information Center who said a preliminary investigation showed the attack happened after a dispute between the nightclub staff and some other people, who then threw Molotov cocktails at the entrance.
    Online video posted by newspaper Youm 7 showed thick black smoke pouring through the doorway of El Sayad as onlookers milled outside unable to help. Flames were burning the inside of the building and charring the facade of the restaurant, located on the ground floor of an apartment building             
    .http://www.foxnews.com/world/2015/12/04/at-least-12-dead-5-injured-in-molotov-cocktail-attack-at-egypt-nightclub/
    source :

    Bombs And Ammo At California Attackers' Home

    Police say they found a dozen pipe bombs and nearly 5,000 rounds of ammunition at the home of the husband and wife behind Wednesday's mass shooting in southern California.
    San Bernardino Police Chief Jarrod Burguan said Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik also had tools that could be used to make improvised explosive devices at their Redlands house.
    He told reporters the couple had sprayed between 65 and 75 rounds on Wednesday morning at a social services centre in San Bernardino, killing 14 people and injuring 21 others.
    The victims, ranging in age from 26 to 60, have been named as Shannon Johnson, Bennetta Bet-Badal, Aurora Godoy, Isaac Amanios, Larry Kaufman, Harry Bowman, Yvette Velasco, Sierra Clayborn, Robert Adams, Nicholas Thalasinos, Tin Nguyen, Juan Espinoza, Damian Meins, and Michael Wetzel.
    Farook, 28, and Malik, 27, left behind three connected pipe bombs which were designed to be operated by a toy car remote control, but didn't work.
    The suspects fired another 76 rifle rounds at police in a car chase after the massacre.
    They had more than 1,600 bullets with them when they were gunned down in their rented black Ford Expedition.
    David Bowdich, assistant director of FBI Los Angeles office, would not comment explicitly on reports that Farook may have been radicalised and was communicating with suspected terrorists.
    "There was obviously a mission here," he told journalists. "We do not know why."
    Two officers were injured, one of whom was shot in the leg and another who was hurt by flying glass or shrapnel.
    Farook, the son of Pakistani immigrants, had travelled to Saudi Arabia and returned with his new wife, after meeting her online.
    Malik, a Pakistan passport
    Source:news.sky.com/story/1599426/bombs-and-ammo-at-california-attackers-home

    Thursday 3 December 2015

    Hoping and Deciding



     No body can go back and start a new beginning, but anyone can start today and make a new ending.
    - Maria Robinson

    You probably have met people who know that what they do gets them into serious trouble, and at the same time are really looking for someone else to make a decision for them that would effectively change them. They seem to hope that their life will change without having to make a decision or take action.

    I have met more than one person who desired a change and hoped for a better life but were more than willing to let another decide the best for them. In some cases, the person would change only if another life promised more than they had right now even though that lifestyle saw them confined to jail more often than they were free.

    A Story of a Young Man
    Such was the case of a young man I met while working within the correctional system. In this particular case, this young man had become used to living the high life with all the material things he wanted but these were all acquired through criminal activity. The only flaw with his lifestyle was that he would invariably be caught and given jail time again and again. It wasn't that he had committed heinous crimes but crimes that were subject to frequent arrests.

    I Want To Change My Life
    One day, he called me over to his cell and began to ask me how he could change his life so that he wouldn't end up in jail again. I asked him if he was really serious or if he was only putting in time by using my time? He said he was serious.

    I went through a number of options with him trying to find out what his educational background was, what he was interested in, and if he had support mechanisms in the community that would help him while he attended classes. I was directing him to some possible careers so he could think about what he really wanted and would stick to.

    So, after speaking with him, I went on with my other work telling him I'd return the next day to further discuss plans. I did return and the one occupation he said he was interested in was a plumber. His first question to me was not about what he would have to do to become a plumber, or where he could find out more information, or anything that one would expect. Instead, he asked how much does a plumber make every year?

    I told him. His response was very revealing. He replied with absolutely no hesitation saying' "I make more than that every month with what I do now. I don't mind spending a few months in jail when I can make the kind of loot I make now."

    A Choice
    To hope for a new life or decide what you have is what you got. In this young man's case, he had made a choice - a choice to keep doing what made him money so he could live how he wanted even though the price of his lifestyle, every few months, was to spend time behind bars.

    Is Money Worth Unhappiness
    Unfortunately, there are many like minded people similar to this young man, I am not saying they are criminals - I am saying though that they spend time making money to live what they think is the good life only to find that the price they pay is continual dissatisfaction with their life, continual stress from doing something they really dislike and all for the big bucks. Is there really a big difference between the young man and those who imprison themselves five days a week doing what they dislike just so the big dollars flow in?
    l





    "Happiness is not a destination. It is a method of life."
    Burton Hillis


    source;  www.wow4u.com