Tuesday 28 August 2012

Two Bomb Attacks In Maiduguri Leave Several JTF Members Injured


 

A bomb planted at the West End roundabout in Maiduguri has injured several members of the Joint Task Force in Maiduguri according to eyewitnesses.

Saharareporters learnt that the large bomb embedded at the West End roundabout, which was remotely controlled, exploded around 10 AM Nigerian time. A second blast was reported at Sabon Layi area in Gwange Ward. Details of the second blast are sketchy.

The JTF spokesperson, Lt. Col Musa Sagir, confirmed there were explosions in the city but said a full briefing will be made to the media as the JTF was still actively patrolling the city to determine those responsible for the latest attacks.

Buhari Blasts IBB, Obasanjo, Jonathan For ‘Killing’ Nigeria’s Oil Industry


Former Head of State and presidential candidate of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) in the 2011 general election, General Muhammadu Buhari, today blamed President Goodluck Jonathan, as well as former rulers Ibrahim Babangida and Olusegun Obasanjo, for killing the nation’s oil industry.
He also heaped blame for the security challenges now besetting the nation on the insincerity of Nigerian leaders.

General Buhari was speaking in Kaduna while playing host to leaders and members of the CPC, led by the House of Representatives member from Funtua/Dandume Federal Constituency of Katsina State, Dr. Mansur Abdulkadir. They were on a courtesy visit to the party leader ahead of the forthcoming local government elections in Katsina, Buhari's home state.

He said that the administration of General Ibrahim Babangida was responsible for the high level of corruption and destruction in the petroleum industry, and added that the corrupt practices in the oil sector during the eras of Babangida, Obasanjo and Jonathan was to enslave the masses.

Looking forward, he called on Nigerians to come up with trusted leaders to steer the affairs of the nation if she is to move forward and realize its quest for development.

"The biggest challenge of Nigeria is for adequate security to be in place and ways in which we can protect the riches of this country and provide job opportunities for the youths in the country, so that we can build more industries as it was before," he said. "Inability of these industries to work has brought mistrust and corruption to Nigeria. Therefore, our leaders have to be sincere and lead with the fear of God and carry all along for Nigeria to be a better place."

He challenged the nation’s leaders to honour promises made to the people, stressing that Nigeria cannot move forward if things that are supposed to be put in place are not.

In that regard, he stressed that the money which was siphoned in the recent pension scam and the petroleum industry scam must be brought back into the government’s coffers for good leadership.

He warned that all those that want the masses to vote and be voted for should go to the masses and get their mandate, and that the era of using force or bribing the masses to get political office is gone.

"A leader that wants to be a good leader must [look at] the needs of the people, the suffering, and the humiliation, and proffer solution to those problems and together we shall achieve greatness," he said.


Thursday 23 August 2012

Celebrities Shows How To Wear Oxford Shoes

Keri Hilson

Keri styled a crisp white button-down with bold printed pants and wing-tip leather brogues in NYC. The singer accessorized her eye-catching look with white-hot circle sunglasses and a woven black Dolce & Gabbana bag.

Jessica Alba

While strolling around NYC, Jessica accessorized her blue-on-blue look — chambray jacket and cuffed navy trousers — with a Tory Burch fedora, tie-dye shades, and tri-color patent oxfords.


Olivia Palermo

Mix-print master Olivia layered a cropped black jacket over a tropical-print top and matching skirt with silver Sergio Rossi oxfords while out in NYC. Her crocodile Hermés clutch, turquoise rock necklace, jeweled leopard pendant, and orange nail polish completed her late-night look flawlessly.

Behati Prinsloo

Behati took her glam runway style to real life, pairing a black boyfriend blazer, cropped leather top, and chiffon midi skirt with leopard oxfords and a houndstooth bag in NYC.

Pixie Lott


Pixie worked classic black and white in a fresh new way donning a printed minidress with two-tone oxfords and a quilted Chanel clutch in London. She finished off her sweet style with mixed metal accessories and light turquoise nail polish.

'Tompolo, Dokubo Get N5 Billion to Guard Pipes'

A group of Niger Delta militants
Former top Niger Delta militants have received about N6.32 billion to protect oil pipelines from attacks in the past year, a report by American newspaper Wall Street Journal said yesterday, quoting an unnamed official of the NNPC.
Tompolo, Dokubo-Asari, Boyloaf and Ateke Tom are being paid respectively N5.1 billion, N1.44 billion, N608 million and N608 million yearly by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation to protect the pipelines from oil scooping, the Journal report said.
Alhaji Dokubo-Asari once stalked the creeks of the Niger Delta, a leaf stuck to his forehead for good luck, as a crew that he ran bled oil from pipelines and sold it to smugglers. "Asari fuel," they called it.
Last year, NNPC began paying him N1.44 billion a year, by Mr. Dokubo-Asari's account, to pay his 4,000 former foot soldiers to protect the pipelines they once attacked.
He shrugs off the unusual turn of events. "I don't see anything wrong with it," said the thickly built former gunman, lounging in a house gown at his home in Abuja.
According to the Wall Street Journal, a senior NNPC official said the corporation is giving about N608 million a year apiece to two former rebel leaders, Gen. Ebikabowei "Boyloaf" Victor Ben and Gen. Ateke Tom, to have their men guard delta pipelines they used to attack.
Another general, Government "Tompolo" Ekpumopolo, maintains a N5.1 billion-a-year contract to do the same, the official said.
A liaison to Mr. Tom declined to comment on the contracts. Mr. Ekpumopolo didn't return phone calls and messages. Mr. Ben, when reached for comment, asked, "How much money is involved in this interview?" and then hung up.
Later, he sent an enigmatic text to the Journal: "Very wel dn im nt dispose bt cnsider 100%al u wnt, we need investors in niger delta absolute peace is guarante."
When Daily Trust contacted the NNPC for comments yesterday, its spokesman Fidel Pepple said he was not aware of these payments.
"I don't have iota of idea regarding that kind of story. That is definitely not true. I will read the story in the journal and get back to you," he told our reporter. But he did not call back as promised.
For his part, spokesman for the Presidential Amnesty Office, Daniel Alabrah, said they were not involved in any such payments.
"The NNPC was alleged in the story to be paying the money, not Amnesty office, so find out from them. We don't make that kind of payments," he said.
Paying to protect oil production
Nigeria is shelling out billions of naira a year to maintain an uneasy calm in the oil-rich delta, where attacks ranging from theft to bombings to kidnappings pummeled oil production three years ago, to as low as 500,000 barrels on some days. Now production is back up to 2.6 million barrels daily of low-sulfur crude of the sort favored by U.S. refineries, which get nearly 9% of their supply here.
The gilded pacification campaign is offered up by the government as a success story. But others say the program, including a 2009 amnesty, has sent young men in the turbulent delta a different message: that militancy promises more rewards than risks.
While richly remunerated former kingpins profess to have left the oil-theft business, many former militant foot soldiers who are paid less or not at all by the amnesty, and have few job prospects, continue to pursue prosperity by tapping pipelines.
Now, oil theft appears to be on the rise again. Royal Dutch Shell Nigerian unit estimates that more than 150,000 barrels of oil are stolen from Nigerian pipelines daily. That is one of the lower estimates. In May, theft from one pipeline got so bad that Shell simply shut it down.
"Everybody seems to believe...that the Niger Delta problem is over," a former government mediator Dimieari Von Kemedi told the Wall Street Journal. "It's just on pause. The challenge is to move from pause to stop."
This year alone, Nigeria will spend about N72 billion on its amnesty program, according to the government's 2012 budget, more than what it spends to deliver basic education to children.
Under the arrangement, the government grants living allowances to tens of thousands of former members of the bandit crews and sends them to vocational classes, in sites ranging from Houston to London to Seoul. These costs are on top of millions of dollars paid at the outset to the crews' leaders for handing in their weapons.
For a few, the program has meant spectacular rewards. To improve ties with former delta warlords, the government invited the top "generals," as they call themselves, for extended stays on the uppermost, executive floors of Abuja's Transcorp Hilton hotel.
For President Goodluck Jonathan, a Niger Delta native, such lavish expenditures have become a political liability.
Yet because four-fifths of government revenue flows from the oil fields, aides to the president defend the high cost of peace by saying the treasury would face an even worse drain if a full-blown militancy in the delta flared up again. "If it's too huge, what are the alternatives?" Oronto Douglas, a senior adviser to Mr. Jonathan, told the Journal.
"For you to address the whole issue of poverty and development, you need some kind of peace," added Mutiu Sunmonu, managing director for Shell's Nigerian unit. "That is what I think the amnesty program has offered."
Enticed by the program, the militants emerged a couple of years ago from the oil-soaked swamps of the delta. Some of the leaders took up residence in the executive floors of Abuja's Hilton and through much of 2010 and early 2011 spent weeks or months enjoying the Executive Lounge's complimentary supply of Hennessey V.S.O.P. cognac, priced at N8,000 a shot on the room-service menu. Over a buffet of fiery Nigerian dishes--gumbos, Jollof rice pilafs, goat stews--they rubbed shoulders with the country's leading politicians and influence peddlers, who often live in the floor's N100,000-a-night art-deco rooms.
"These are young men who came out of the creeks and were given the opportunity to hang out with the crème de la crème, wearing gold watches and drinking from gold-rimmed teacups," said Tony Uranta, a member of the government's Niger Delta Technical Committee advisory group and a frequent Hilton executive-floor guest. "It's a natural thing," he told Wall Street Journal.
Most have since moved out of the hotel. "It's too high-profile," said an aide to one ex-warlord, Mr. Tom.
The story of Dokubo-Asari
While not all of his account of life in the mangrove swamps could be verified, Dokubo-Asari, 48 years old, was one of Nigeria's best-known oil marauders.
About 25 years ago, Mr. Dokubo-Asari left overcrowded university classrooms, he says, to study guerrilla warfare in the Libya led by Col. Moammar Gadhafi. He says he was given $100,000 to stir up trouble back in Nigeria, an oil competitor to Libya.
Fomenting conflict proved easy in the restive Niger Delta he returned to in the early 1990s. From a local governor, Mr. Dokubo-Asari says, he procured weapons and money to build a militia that ultimately was several thousand strong. For years, as he tells it, they broke open pipelines, filling canisters with crude oil and refining some of it through timeworn techniques used by locals to boil palm-tree sap into wine.
The government struggled to lure him out of the mangroves. Mr. Dokubo-Asari responded to one amnesty offer that he considered meager by announcing a death threat against petroleum workers. Shell evacuated hundreds of expatriates and oil derricks briefly slowed to a stop. The next day, oil prices hit $50 a barrel for the first time.
Nigeria's government offered Mr. Dokubo-Asari a truce and $1,000 apiece, he says, for his AK-47 rifles, numbering 3,182. He says he took the deal and used the profits to purchase more weapons and return to the swamp.
There, he recounts he was finally arrested and coerced into another round of negotiations. Fearing assassination, he fled to Cotonou, Benin, where he says he founded a school for Niger Delta children. He showed a video of him teaching kids kung fu at the school.
New warlords quickly took Mr. Dokubo-Asari's place. Marauding under noms de guerre like Gen. Shoot-at-Sight, Gen. Africa and Gen. Young Shall Grow, they formed a loose confederation of gunmen calling itself the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, or MEND, and crippled enough oil infrastructure to bring Nigeria's production on some days to a near-halt.
That was when Nigeria announced the 2009 amnesty. In televised ceremonies, guerrillas dropped off rifles, machine guns, tear-gas canisters, dynamite bundles, rocket launchers, antiaircraft guns, gunboats and grenades to be sold to the government, which also offered the nonviolence training courses and nine-month vocational classes.
Theft fell sharply. Yet now, just as Nigeria's state oil company has begun institutionalizing pipeline-watch jobs for some ex-militants, theft has blossomed again. "It's quite an escalation. If nothing is done, it will continue to increase because more and more people will just come to feel that this is a gold field," said Shell's Mr. Sunmonu. "We're not going to give up on this and run away from it. We believe it can be stopped."
Maclean Imomotimi left an overpacked university four years ago, the muscular 30-year-old says, to rob barges in the Niger Delta swamps. Now, befitting his new career, he is known as Gen. Imomotimi.
He says he accepted the government's amnesty offer in 2011 on the expectation he would be feted, his hotel bills and bar tabs paid; instead, he was disappointed to receive a living allowance of just 65,000 naira a month.
So Gen. Imomotimi has returned to the waterways, this time, he says, not to rob barges but to steal oil.
"I take amnesty's money--what [little] they give me--I take it and I buy other guns," he says. "There's much, much more money in the creeks."
With Agency Report

Dokubo Asari: Boko Haram, Goodluck Jonathan and Me


Ex-Niger Delta militant, Mujahid Asari Dokubo
 
 Mujahid Asari Dokubo, the boisterous leader of Niger Delta Volunteer Force, has declared that he is not linked with the Boko Haram sect, even as he admitted meeting the sect’s deceased leader, Mohammed Yusuf, at the group’s mosque in Maiduguri, capital of Borno State.
Mr. Dokubo made the disclosures in a rambling letter he wrote to President Goodluck Jonathan detailing his conversion to Islam, his activism, and his feelings about the Presidency. SaharaReporters obtained a copy of the letter which is riddled with grammatical errors.

A source close to Mr. Dokubo told SaharaReporters that the former Niger Delta militant turned millionaire government apologist felt pressured to issue the statement in anticipation of a report in the US-based Wall Street Journal to the effect that the Jonathan administration had been paying millions of dollars to Mr. Dokubo and other erstwhile Niger Delta militants. Our source revealed that Mr. Dokubo’s lengthy letter was a tacit reaction to accusations some anonymous informants leveled against him to associates of President Jonathan. "Asari found out that some informants told aides of the president that he, Asari, has no following on ground in the Niger Delta and that he secretly sympathizes with Boko Haram.
In the statement, Mr. Dokubo said he met the slain founder of Boko Haram, Mohammed Yusuf, in 1995/1996 during his quest for Islamic studies, for which he said he converted 23 years ago.

In the letter to President Jonathan, Mr. Dokubo accused some interests of conspiring to get him arrested in connection with Boko Haram’s violent activities. SaharaReporters gathered that some Ijaw youths wrote to Mr. Jonathan and security agencies alleging that Mr. Dokubo maintains connections with extremist Islamist organizations.

Mr. Dokubo wrote: "It is very clear that the sponsors of this group want to link me to the so-called Boko Haram sect, as their founder, financier and sponsor…to give a reason for the government of the Nigerian State to arrest me and throw me back into detention pending when full investigation of my supposed involvement with the group is completed. It is to generate bad blood between me and the aides of President Goodluck Jonathan who, according to the open letter action and inaction have been responsible for the upsurge in the activities of the group, that if they had allowed me access to the president, maybe, the security situation would have been mitigated.

"That the President has not allowed me access to him, I and others in the IYC, and other struggle platforms have different avenues of reaching those in authorities without having to see any particular individual in person, ours is to give sound advice to those who have benefited from our painful sacrifices and found themselves in government, but we would not do this in the public or on the pages of newspapers. To us, the protection of the little gains we have made is greater than our individual gains, interests and access to those in power.

"Even though I did not supported the so-called amnesty deal, I have seen that it has brought some benefits which were hitherto not available to the people of the Niger Delta. I therefore appeal to the government of President Goodluck Jonathan, to remove the criminal tag from this program, by making it a general program for all the combatants in the Niger Delta region who are willing to participate and derive benefit from the program. It will also lead to the end, in the continuous agitation by youth from the region that feels that they have been shortchanged by not being allowed to be involved in the program.

"Also, I want to state that in my course of travels and detention, I have met members of the Jama’atu ahlus Sunnah Lid da’wati wal Jihad, erroneously referred to as Boko Haram. I met the late Malam Mohammed Yusuf, at the Indimi Mosque in Maiduguri in 1995/1996 in my stay in Maiduguri in the course of my Islamic studies. I was also brought and detained at the State Security Service (SSS) headquarters underground detention center and put in a cell where Yusuf was detained in, a few days before my arrival.

"During my stay in the detention, I interacted with other members of the organization who were also detained in other cells. That is the only close contact I have had with members of the organization. My views and relationship with the northern elite and political establishment is well known. I have never pretended or be diplomatic in stating the obvious fact and it will be totally inconceivable to have recruited northern youths into the IYC and NDPVF when most northerners view these organizations as anti north and therefore fighting against the political, economic and social survival of the north. Finally, I will advice members of this body and their sponsors to please find something better to direct their energy and time into and leave me out of their satanic intrigues."

Below is the full content of Mr. Dokubo’s letter to Mr. Jonathan dated August 19, 2012:

My attention has been drawn to a sponsored advertorial titled: "Open Letter to Mr. President, Security Situation in Nigeria Today," by a group who styled itself The Council of Ijaw Youth for the Unity of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (COIYN).

Even though I have no relationship with this body, the sponsors of this body have chosen to make me their undeserved patron because the whole gamut of the open letter to the president was on my person, which to them was so important in resolving the political quagmire that presently confronts the government of President Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan and the Nigerian state. Also contained in the publication are outright lies, misrepresentation of facts and thoughts manufactured from the figment of the imagination of the sponsors of the group. Under the subheading, The Current Situation-Our Position on the Genesis:

The group said: "The ascension of an Ijaw youth of Islamic faith as President of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), a few years ago, may have attracted enormous goodwill and support from the global Islamic community, through vey prominent and high net worth individuals and some Islamic donor agencies and thus, some support from the northern Nigerian youths who joined the IYC in the struggle for self determination."

I hereby make these clarifications:

I, Alhaji Mujahid Abubakr Dokubo-Asari, am a Muslim, and have been a Muslim for the past 23 years…Insha Allah; I will live and die as a Muslim. I have no apology to render to any individual or group of individuals for being a Muslim…this is the only truth contained in the whole open letter.

That during my presidency at the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), that my position attracted goodwill from global Islamic community, prominent Muslim individuals, Islamic donor agencies and support from northern Nigerian youth who joined the IYC in the struggle for self determination…these are absolute lies, manufactured from the figment of the imagination of the sponsors of this group.

As President of IYC, I received no support whatsoever financially or otherwise from any Islamic group or individuals.

No northern youth joined the IYC as the constitution of the IYC provides that only Ijaw youths within certain age bracket can be members of IYC.I also want to state further that even as the leader of the Niger Delta People’s Volunteer Force (NDPVF), no Muslim from outside the Niger Delta region joined, participated or funded the activities of the NDPVF.

Contained further in the open letter, is that after the award of the Nigerian State amnesty to all manners of individuals they tagged militants involved in the struggle for the Niger Delta, these northern youth, I purportedly brought into Niger Delta struggle for self determination became stranded as they were left out of the amnesty deal…this is not only preposterous, but beats all rational thinking, as both the NDPVF and IYC rejected and did not partake in the amnesty.

The NDPVF went further to institute a suit against the Government of the Nigerian State in 2009 at the Federal High Court Abuja, asking the court to annul the amnesty awarded by the government as the President (Umaru Musa Yar’Adua) does not have such power under the 1999 Constitution and the Laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to award amnesty to individuals who have not been convicted on criminal charges in any court of competent jurisdiction. It will then be hypocritical on my part to reject the said amnesty and encourage others to accept same.

Furthermore, my support for the Presidency of Goodluck Jonathan is greater and larger than Goodluck Jonathan himself. Those who know where we are coming from, know the pains, deprivation and exclusion we as Ijaws and people of the Niger Delta, were subjected to…that since 1956 when Nigeria was awarded self governance by her British colonial overlords, the Ijaws and most of the people of the Niger Delta, have been excluded and barred from participating in the so-called self governance project, even though it is resources gotten from our wealth that is used to service and maintain the machinery of this project.

Therefore, it is very trivial for anybody or group to think that my support for Goodluck Jonathan has anything to do with my person. As I stated above, Goodluck Jonathan’s presidency is the collective fulfillment of the aspiration of the people of the Niger Delta to have a say in their affairs and how they are governed…my not gaining access to Goodluck Jonathan as president or otherwise, will not affect my support for him or his government, as stated above in the first place, he was not the reason for my support of the project to make him president."

Statement By Boko Haram's Spokesperson Debunking Reports Of Dialogue With The Nigerian Government

Boko Haram team

SaharaReporters, New York

Glory be to Almighty God, and blessings to Prophet Mohammed (SWT). This is a very important message from Jama’atu Ahlissunnah Lidda’awati Wal-Jihad. Base on the information some cross section of the media have been disseminating that we are dialoguing with, the Federal Government of Nigeria. It is against this back drop that we want to present advise and warning to three sides on this matter.
The media like it is known drag themselves into our war like we did to THISDAY because they have been entering our matter without being just and fair to us. Recently we released a Video and in it our leader, Imam explained thoroughly on the issue of dialogue, but some section of the media because of their conspiracy refused to air it accordingly rather they twisted it.
Instead of giving prominence and stand by the video, they now brought this false story that we are meeting with Nigerian government in Saudi Arabia, with one fake person called Abu-Muhammad claiming to be Imam Shekau’s assistant. It is all an agenda to confused and change the perception people in this region have about this holy war of Jihad we are fighting. By the grace of Allah they will not succeed on us, to us there is no difference between those fighting us with arms and those with pen/tongue.
To those using our name as our representatives, they are using our name and getting money from government. We heard that they are collecting huge amount of money using dubious means. We are calling on them to fear God and repent before they fall into the hands of Allah’s soldiers.
They should stop cheating Islam; we have never attempted any dialogue except that of Dr. Ibrahim Datti even that it was not direct, but via one journalist Ahmad Salkida who we trusted. And since that failed we have not done anything sort of that. We have also heard that Dr. Ibrahim Datti has also entered another plot to that effect; we are calling on elderly people to hold their respect and not dent their image.
To Nigerian government, we are calling on the government to know that once it is not Sharia law that will be adopted in Nigeria, and Quran as book of laws in Nigeria, setting aside constitution that is mainly infidel’s product. Then the government should not dream about peace in Nigeria. There is no single day that Mujahideens will stop fighting in Nigeria until that is achieved and we are hopeful to triumph over Nigerian government.
This release was translated from Hausa

Jonathan Blames Mass Media For His Government’s Poor Performance, Says It Is Unreliable And Politicized


President of NUJ, Pres. Goodluck Jonathan and Nigeria journalists during the last NUJ delegates conference

President Goodluck Jonathan today announced a new rebranding scheme for officials of his government, blaming the mass media for its poor image.
Mr. Jonathan was speaking at the Presidential Villa where he unveiled a new performance assessment scheme for his ministers, a mechanism which, he said, will help highlight government’s targets and achievements in all sectors of governance.
He blamed the necessity for the new performance evaluation mechanism on the mass media, which he said no longer reflects the voice of the ordinary man.
"Before, the media used to be the voice of the ordinary people," he said in his speech. "But now, the media is the voice of those who own the media houses and those who owned the media houses have private jets and those who own private jets are not ordinary people."
The remarks came at a time that Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, who leads the opposition Action Congress (ACN), and who owns newspapers of his own, was describing the government Jonathan leads as a massive bureaucracy suffering from "elephantiasis."
Mr. Tinubu was in Washington DC, and speaking at the Center for Strategic and International Studies on the subject, "Current Developments in Nigeria; The View of the Opposition."
The former Lagos State governor has emerged as one of the most vocal critics of the Jonathan administration. Mr. Tinubu is also known to be working with other opposition parties towards unseating the PDP federal administration in 2015.
He told his American audience that the federal government is too powerful, and that this has led to deeper corruption as well as other problems.
Said Mr. Tinubu, "We are at our worst poverty level, education is degenerating, industries are moving out of Nigeria, we have zero capital development project, the only thing the government is doing is borrowing, and we have Boko Haram."
He spoke about the need to decentralize political power as a panacea for these problems, pointing out how Mr. Jonathan has authority over the federal legislature, a pattern that he said has been the case since the PDP assumed control in 1999.
Mr. Tinubu cited some examples to illustrate how the federal government ignores other political voices in the country, stressing that Mr. Jonathan ignores such suggestions because he is a beneficiary of the system.
"You can’t fight corruption because the government itself is corrupt," he said. "Majority of the perpetrators made financial contributions to ensure the president wins the election, so he cannot prosecute them."
He said that as a result of the record of the PDP, Nigerians have lost faith in government, stressing,
"Enough of PDP in our lives, they have been tagged as Poverty Development Party."
On the current insecurity in the country, he said that as leader of the opposition, the ACN has made proposals to the federal government, including subsiding farming, especially in the North, so that Boko Haram will no longer be able to recruit the unemployed and beggars.
"If they have jobs, they won’t be going about killing people, and it will improve their nutrition value," he said of the militants. "Concerning Jos, all the federal government needs to do is create another local government for the people.
Mr. Jonathan’s blame of the media returns attention to the subject of his performance in office, as he has so far failed to honour any of his electoral promises, including fighting corruption and providing jobs. Only last month, he refused to declare his assets publicly, which gave an additional black eye to his government.
"So the same man who says he does not give a damn about declaring his assets wants to blame the media for not polishing the awful image of his government?" a media analyst asked today. "And now he wants a "performance evaluation" designed and implemented by his government that will make the government an achiever? Why does he not begin by giving a damn?"

Wednesday 22 August 2012

Merkel tops Forbes list of powerful women



German Chancellor Angela Merkel

Forbes magazine ranked German Chancellor Angela Merkel the most powerful woman in the world for the second year in a row in the annual list dominated by politicians, businesswomen and media figures.


'The magazine noted Mrs Merkel's resolve in preserving the European Union'
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton placed second, followed by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, making the top three spots unchanged from last year.
The list named women involved in policymaking, entertainment, technology and nonprofit organizations, among other fields.
They were ranked according to influence, the amount of money they control or earn, and media presence.
"These power women exert influence in very different ways and to very different ends, and all with very different impacts on the global community," said Moira Forbes, president and publisher of ForbesWoman.
The magazine noted Mrs Merkel's resolve in preserving the European Union and her influence over the euro zone's ongoing debt crisis.
Ms Clinton was applauded for her handling of crises such as the release of a trove of diplomatic cables by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks.
Forbes cited Ms Rousseff for her leadership of the world's eighth-largest economy and approval ratings within her country.
The average age of the 100 power brokers from 28 countries was 55. They had a combined 90 million Twitter followers, Forbes said.
Also in the top five were Melinda Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and wife of Microsoft Corp co-founder Bill Gates, and Jill Abramson, executive editor of the New York Times.
Sonia Gandhi, president of the Indian National Congress, followed at No 6. US First Lady Michelle Obama, who had topped the list in 2010, was No 7.
The list featured newcomers such as actress and performer Jennifer Lopez and billionaire philanthropist and widow of Apple founder Steve Jobs, Laurene Powell Jobs.
Republican US Representative of Minnesota and former White House hopeful Michele Bachmann was among 21 women who fell off the list this year.
Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, was No 8. The former French cabinet minister has been on the list since it began in 2004.
"So many of these women are in policy or political roles, and their influence ... is only growing so it's not surprising that someone like Merkel or Clinton would continue to be present on the list year to year," Forbes said.



Ex-Niger Delta Militants Protest In Abuja

Ex-Niger Delta militants on a peaceful protest at the  Federal Secretariat  in Abuja on Wednesday.




Elie Esper Returns to Couture Fashion Week as Official Hair Stylist with Exquisite Designs





Elie Esper, celebrated hairstylist, creative director and founder of Elie Esper Salon and Bridal, and one of Fashion Week’s prominent hair stylists, will return to Couture Fashion Week New York as Official Hair Stylist for the third time. The event will be held September 15-17, 2012 at the world-famous Waldorf-Astoria in New York City.

Mr. Esper began his university studies with a major in electrical engineering, but soon found he had a drive and passion for hair design. He completed his formal stylist apprenticeship at his brother’s salon, in Beirut, Lebanon. He continued his extensive training in Paris, where he mastered up-do’s and began to develop his unique styling techniques. In 2002, Mr. Esper moved to the United States and started his career in the New York City area.

Since then, Mr. Esper has gone on to hone his hairstyling skills and established a fast-growing international reputation. "Traditionalist" and "futurist" are two of the labels often applied to Mr. Esper when it comes to hair design. Elie Esper has brought to the USA his experience and incomparable techniques which have impressed the hairstyling industry for over 10 years. He has worked prestigious fashion runways for L'Oreal in Paris and the Middle East and currently runs a highly successful international salon that serves the entire New York City metro area. He also has clients all around the world. His work has been featured on the covers of Hia from Dubai, Artistic Magazine from Europe, Inclusion Magazine, Moda Style International, 201 Bride, High Style, The Knot, Sayidaty, among other publications.  Mr. Esper has worked on films, music videos and television, including having a weekly spot on a morning television show for three consecutive years.

Elie Esper, being one of New York’s most sought-out hairstylists by Asian and Middle Eastern celebrities, is also the official hairstylist for the 2011 and 2012 Couture Fashion Week in New York City, an event that attracts international haute couture designers from all over the world. When not collaborating with fashion designers on their runway shows or performing his duties as ambassador for A-list Arab celebrities on tour in the USA or styling on the “Stars on Board” luxury celebrity cruise, Mr. Esper holds an annual runway show to display his own new creations in hair design.

Elie Esper is also well-known in the bridal industry as the best couture hair designer, having earned recognition from top stylists, designers and artists in the field.

Mr. Esper’s approach to styling is finding the balance in “exquisite and refined taste designed to suit all levels of glamour,” whether it is for a bride, one of his regular clients, or a model ready for the catwalk. According to Elie Esper, the key to creating superb hair designs is being inspired by the client's individuality and extraordinary qualities. Each hair design is a sum of his total experience, trendsetting expertise, and a look into an intimate modern close-up shared by designer and client. His unique approach brings out structurally refined hair styles, often creating both circular and geometric shapes in the hair. Stylings may include cascading loops and even intense shimmering organic floral brocade transformations. The work and passion put into each design is readily apparent.

The Elie Esper Salon offers a variety of services including Full Bridal Hair and Makeup Styling, Extensions, Color, Body Painting, HD Airbrushing, Theatrical/FX Makeup, as well as styling for music videos, film, television, runway and print. Esper’s salon styles hundreds of brides a year, each with their own unique look.

Elie Esper is at the pinnacle of his craft, always looking for new ways to realize his vision... one client at a time. According to Mr. Esper: “this is only the beginning.”

Madhu to Present Modern Glamorous Collection at Couture Fashion Week New York



Madhu

New York-based fashion designer Madhu Munyal will present her latest collection at the next Couture Fashion Week in New York. Part of the “Jewel of India” collective, the fashion show will be held at 4:00 p.m. on Sunday September 16, 2012 in the opulent Grand Ballrom of the Waldorf-Astoria.

A native of Agra, India, Madhu Munyal attended LSR Delhi University, where she was top of her class in Psychology and went on to become an elementary school teacher. She continued to pursue her passion for fashion, studying fashion designers, working with tailors, and embodying all things fashion. A few years later Ms. Munyal moved to New York and began styling her closest friends, and so her label Charms Couture was born.

Now one of New York's top South Asian fashion designers, Madhu Munyal first made a name for herself by designing trendy, high-quality suits and sarees. She quickly gained a large following by styling her clients in one-of-a-kind pieces tailored to their unique, individual, and idiosyncratic tastes.

As Ms. Munyal worked tirelessly to achieve her singular business goal of creating beautiful, high-quality designs at an affordable price, her client list rapidly grew through enthusiastic word-of-mouth promotion. The collection soon expanded to include bridal couture, the designer's favorite part of the business. "I love designing for my brides. Dressing them in something they didn't think they could ever wear gives me a tremendous feeling of pride and accomplishment," says Ms. Munyal.

Madhu Munyal's creations have a special appeal to all women looking for a modern and chic look that is also glamorous with a South Asian flair.












Giving babies antibiotics could lead to obesity: study

Giving babies antibiotics before the age of six months could cause them to be chubby children, according to a study published Tuesday.

"We typically consider obesity an epidemic grounded in unhealthy diet and exercise, yet increasingly studies suggest it's more complicated," said co-author Leonardo Trasande of the New York University School of Medicine.

"Microbes in our intestines may play critical roles in how we absorb calories, and exposure to antibiotics, especially early in life, may kill off healthy bacteria that influence how we absorb nutrients into our bodies, and would otherwise keep us lean."

The study adds to a growing body of research warning of the potential dangers of antibiotics, especially for children.

Preliminary studies have linked changes in the trillions of microbial cells in our bodies to obesity, inflammatory bowel disease, asthma and other conditions. However, direct causal proof has not yet been found.

This was the first study analyzing the relationship between antibiotic use and body mass starting in infancy.

The researchers evaluated the use of antibiotics among 11,532 children born in Britain's Avon region in 1991 and 1992 who are participating in a long-term study on their health and development.

They found that children treated with antibiotics in the first five months of their life weighed more for their height than those who were not exposed.

The difference was small between the ages of 10 to 20 months, but by 38 months of age, children exposed to antibiotics had a 22 percent greater likelihood of being overweight.

Timing appeared to matter -- children who received antibiotics from the ages of six to 14 months did not have a significantly higher body mass later in childhood, the study revealed.

And although children exposed to antibiotics at 15 to 23 months had slightly higher body mass indices by age seven, there was no significant increase in their likelihood of being overweight or obese.

"For many years now, farmers have known that antibiotics are great at producing heavier cows for market," co-author Jan Blustein, also of NYU, said in a press release.

"While we need more research to confirm our findings, this carefully conducted study suggests that antibiotics influence weight gain in humans, and especially children too."

The study was published in the International Journal of Obesity.

Miss World Pageant Winner Slammed as Fake 'Beauty Contest Gets Political'





This past weekend 116 contestants gathered in the remote town Odros City in China's Inner Mongolia district for the annual Miss World Pageant.
Representatives from countries around the world, including South Sudan, Guatemala, The Netherlands and the U.S., formed a kind of United Nations summit on bathing suits and ball gowns.
So it stands to reason, when China's Wenxia Yu was crowned as the winner on Saturday, not everyone was in agreement.
"I was not surprised at all to see that the winner of the pageant was Miss China given that it was held in a Chinese city with Chinese hosts and a huge group of screaming Chinese fans that erupted into applause every time she was mentioned," one commenter wrote on a Huffington Post article announcing the winner. He also added the hashtags: "#Rigged #Fake #SecondPlaceOlympicsRebound"
A Daily Mail reporter also caught the Olympic connection, cheekily congratulating China on its Miss World win over the U.S., after its London losses last month. Was this really a staged win or are we all just sore beauty pageant losers? A request for a comment from Miss World's London-based staff wasn't returned at press time.
After Wenxia's win, the Miss World Facebook page practically lit up with angry commenters accusing judges of pandering to politics.
"MWO you sold miss world for the Chinese! They poured MILLIONS into the contest, so it is not very surpris[ing] that they won," wrote one commenter among a chorus of hundreds slamming Yu as a "fake" winner.
Wenxia is the second winner from China in the contest's history, after Zhang Zilin's win in 2007. Both Yu and Zilan won their titles when their home country served as host to the awards. For that reason, critics wonder whether Miss World's judges were swayed by China's hosting duties.

China's Wenxia with first runner-up Sophie Elizabeth Moulds of Wales and second runner-up is Jessica Michelle  …
Although news of the Miss World pageant may have passed many Americans by, the contest remains as popular as Donald Trump's Miss Universe across Asia.
Established in 1951 in the United Kingdom, it's the oldest major international beauty contest on the planet with Oscar winner, Halle Berry and Wonder Woman Lynda Carter, among its alumni.
To enter Miss World, contestants in the U.S. and in many other countries are selected by modeling agencies, rather than pageant judges, in order to participate. This year's representative, UCLA student and exotic bird collector Claudine Book, competed in all five categories -- talent, fitness, swimwear, evening wear and the charity-driven "beauty with a purpose" division- and won zilch.
Wales' Sophie Moulds, a Kate Middleton lookalike, took second place. If skeptics are questioning China's win, they should also consider the fact that Moulds and the contest's creators share a British commonwealth bond. The BBC broadcast the contest more prominently, than any network in the States. (It aired on E! On Sunday at 8 am.)
Before the crowning event, Miss Mexico had been the bookie's pick for winner with Miss Philippines earning her own fan base, after her beat-boxing performance during the talent competition went viral.
But it was 23-year-old Wenxia, a music student and dumpling fanatic according to her Miss World profile, who won the talent competition with her vocal performance, and ultimately the year-long Miss World tenure.
The real winner of the competition may have been the host city Ordos, a resurrected "ghost town" that fell short of being "the next Dubai" with the global financial crisis. "I had never heard of Ordos, but I've been very impressed by it so far," said Tapiwa Anna- Marie Preston, Miss Botswana in a press conference.
With the world watching, the largely unpopulated area drew international attention, despite controls on media access.
"It seems Ordos, which has made global headlines for building a giant new city with hardly any residents, is now intent on controlling exactly how it is seen by the rest of the world," writes Women's Wear Daily's Kathleen E. McLaughlin. The fashion trade paper was on location covering a portion of the contest when, according to McLaughlin, "a contingent of threatening men in plainclothes and uniformed police followed and chased a reporter from WWD to the Ordos airport after just 48 hours in the city." Authorities also questioned contacts and sources McLaughlin interviewed for her story.
It's unclear what exactly city officials were trying to protect from the media. But one thing is apparent: Both the city of Ordos, and the new Miss World, have gotten more attention than they bargained for. It's a lesson so many scandalized pageant winners homegrown in the States have learned in years past. Winning isn't everything.

Five celebs who overshare on Twitter



Photos in magazines and gossip blogs are apparently just not enough for some celebrities. Here are five celebs in Hollywood who share a little too much on Twitter, including Kim Kardashian, Miley Cyrus, and Rihanna.


1 Kim Kardashian has a famous body – and she likes to show it off as much as possible. The reality star’s Twitter feed is packed with bikini photos of herself, which she posts on almost a daily basis, sometimes more than once a day. In the past week alone, she tweeted 10, including this one on August 20 along with the caption, “Sandy beach day.” And it’s not just Kim in a bikini – on August 17, she posted a link to photos from her 2007 Playboy photo shoot, even though she once said she regretted posing for the sexy pictorial: “I was uncomfortable." Yeah, right!





2. Miley Cyrus quit Twitter in October 2009 because she said her then-boyfriend, now-fiancé Liam Hemsworth didn’t like it. Two years later, she signed back on … and since then, has been oversharing more than ever. After months of posting photos of her super-skinny body (thanks to all that Pilates) and her collection of dogs, the former “Hannah Montana” star has found a new muse: her bleached, half-shaved pixie cut, which she documented while in stylist Chris McMillan’s chair – and has been tweeting about ever since! In this pic from August 15, Miley uploaded a photo of herself looking in a mirror, showing off her “CUHHH-RAZY” pants – but, unfortunately, all we can focus on is her see-through shirt and black bra.





3. Every day looks like a party judging by Rihanna’s Twitter feed. The “We Found Love” singer certainly keeps her more than 24 million followers up to date on her adventures with oftentimes R-rated photos of herself and pals drinking (like here on August 7 in her native Barbados), sunbathing half-naked … and smoking marijuana. Rihanna’s family business is chronicled, too. On August 18, she tweeted, “Why did I walk into my dads hotel room? Room full of bitches and 2chainz is playing!”




4. LeAnn Rimes doesn’t have nearly as many followers as her oversharing counterparts (she only has 312,000), but that hasn’t stopped her from posting every detail of her life – after all, she has more than 51,000 tweets! The country singer constantly talks about her husband Eddie Cibrian, her ongoing feud with his ex-wife Brandi Glanville, and her physique! On August 13, LeAnn wanted to show off the new bag she bought herself for her 30th birthday, so she took a photo of it strapped across her body – and, oops, she just so happened to be wearing the tiniest pair of shorts ever and a cropped top. Unfortunately for LeAnn, it only garnered two measly re-tweets from fans.




5. Lady Gaga, the most-followed person on Twitter, gave her more than 28 million fans quite an eyeful on August 3. The "Born This Way" singer posted a photo on her new LittleMonsters.com site – which she links to from Twitter – of her and her boyfriend Taylor Kinney skinny-dipping in a pool with the caption, “T and Me.”




IGP Orders Redeployment Of 18 Police Commissioners




IGP MD Abubakar


The Inspector-General of Police, Mr. MD Abubakar, has ordered the redeployment, with immediate effect, of 18 Commissioners of Police to various Commands and Formations of the Force across the federation.

A statement in Abuja by the Deputy Force Public Relations Officer, Mr. Frank Mba, said Mr. Abubakar directed the affected officers to ensure effective policing of their new areas of jurisdiction in line with the administration’s reform policies.

“He advised the newly deployed Commissioners of Police to act as agents of positive change and guide against all acts inimical to the fundamental rights of the citizenry,” the statement said. “He enjoined citizens of the affected States to give the new command helmsmen maximum support so as to guarantee their success in their assigned roles.

Of great interest in the deployments, Mr. Abdullahi Yuguda will now be in charge of Borno, while Mr. Olufemi A. Adenaike will be in charge of Kaduna, two States that have been hotbeds of militant violence in recent times.  It was not clear today where their predecessors were being deployed.
Below is the full list of today’s postings:



S/NORANK       NAME         TO
1 CP               Godfrey E. Okeke CP Adamawa State

2 CP               Sunday A. Ogbonna CP Admin ‘C’ Department FHQ

3 CP               Mgbakor C. Ogugua         CP Criminal Central Record FCID Annex Lagos

4 CP               Mark A. Idakwo, mni Provost Marshal, FHQ Abuja

5 CP               Mohammed Iyanda Sule CP Gombe State

6 CP               Edgar Tam Nanakumo, fwc CP Inspectorate ‘E’ Dept FHQ, Abuja

7 CP              Partick D. Dokumor CP SARS FCID

8 CP              S.L. Gambo, fdc CP Sokoto State

9 CP              Y.G. Ardo, fdc CP MSD ‘F’ Department

10 CP              Adisa Baba Bolanta, fwc CP Imo State

11 CP              Tonye E. Ebitibituwa CP Kebbi State

12 CP              Mbu Joseph Mbu CP Oyo State

13 CP             Abdullahi Yuguda         CP Borno State

14 CP             Mohammed Ibrahim CP Special Protection Unit (SPU)

15 CP             Sylvester A. Umeh CP Border Patrol

16 CP             Suleiman O. Lawal Deputy Comad, Police Academy Kano

17 CP             Idris Faruk Umar        CP Anti-Fraud, FCID

18 CP             Olufemi A. Adenaike           CP Kaduna State

Governor Amaechi And The War On Ogoni By Charles Wiwa

Governor Amaechi


Charles Wiwa


"Our Lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter"

These were Martin Luther King Jr's summation on the injustice suffered by Blacks in America during the Civil Rights era. To many, such an era may be a matter of the past & history, and better imagined; but as of fact, some of the lives lived today in the 21st century are worse than the treatment or privilege enjoyed by domestic pets, particularly in Africa. Ironically, nations like Nigeria that boast of being sovereign and endowed with natural resources treat their citizens in subhuman conditions, thus placing such nations and their citizens at the mercy of other more serious minded polities.

Ogoni had existed independently as a sub African unit before federalism was imposed on the varied nationalities forced into what is Nigeria today. This coercion was for the benefit of British explorers who later colonized, exploited the nation's resources and Balkanized the people along ethnic lines. No doubt, there were, and there is still no contractual agreement signed by these groups to remain under the federation and, especially according to rules that are favorable to them. It is well known that when constitutions of Nigeria were either written or are revised even today, the main ethnic groups have used regular old colonial methods of majority rule in selecting those that write the laws of the country without giving due prominence to the peculiar circumstances, sensibilities and sensitivities of the minority members of the federation. Such laws have, hence, not protected the minority groups, which are never adequately represented. One display of this imbalance is in the disproportionate number of states that make up the federation as more states have always been created for the majority ethnic groups at the expense of resources from the minority tribes. There is inequality in every sense and about everything Nigeria.

Minority agitation started immediately Nigeria gained independence from Britain, and it led to the creation of the Willinks Commission on Minority Concerns - recommendations from which have not been followed till date in spite of their being central to today’s agitations and apprehension among the minorities. The relatively recent Reconciliation Commission headed by retired Justice Oputa has also failed. Aggrieved persons were denied the opportunity of telling their stories, neither were they listened to. Reconciliation remains a collective responsibility of all parties concerned, not an imposed statement on people who are exploited by the system. Ogoni agitation holds nothing against other tribal nations in Nigeria. It calls for the reawakening of all and for the government to fairly allocate resources and improve the lives of citizens. The cardinal focus of the Ogoni Bill of Rights is Political control of Ogoni affairs by Ogoni people; Right to control and use of a fair share of Ogoni economic resources for Ogoni development; adequate and direct representation as of right in all federal institutions; the use and development of Ogoni languages in Nigerian territory; the full development of Ogoni culture; right to religious freedom; & the right to protect the Ogoni environment and ecology from further degradation. These solemn demands were submitted to the Federal Government in 1990, and what the Ogoni people received was military occupation, maiming, rape, detention, torture, razing of villages, killing of unarmed citizens, judicial execution of their leaders and forced exile of activists.

1990-2012 is enough time for any serious government to look into the concerns of its people. Ogoni people remain the most peaceful people in Nigeria. During the Nigeria military occupation periods in Ogoniland, no security agent, visitor, or staff of the oil companies was reported beaten or killed. They remained calm when four of their leaders were mysteriously killed by government agents at Giokoo on May 21, 1993, and another nine framed up and hanged by the government on November 10, 1995. Everyone must have mistaken this civility of the Ogoni for stupidity. The Ogoni have watched their leaders threatened and silenced by authorities and made to speak for the government, not the people. A(n) (s)elected governor of Rivers State, Chibuike Amaechi has demonstrated his contempt for the Ogoni and Ogoniland by throwing the Ogoni flag down on Ogoni day and promising the people a plantain and banana plantation. The governor has proven how hard he thinks he is by seizing sizable land in Ogoni territory for his plantain project by a Mexican Agro company - Union De Iniciativa S.A De C.A. Mr. Amaechi appears to be the only person in Rivers State who fails to recognize that the Ogoni people are in dire need of land. 400 sq miles occupied by over half a million people gives an average of 1300 per sq mile as against Nigeria's national average of 300 per sq mile. Records show it that the Ogoni people gave lands to the Niger Delta Basin Development Authorities and the School-to-Land project. None of these lands has been returned to original owners after the projects failed. Can someone help inform this land-grabbing governor that Ogoni has no land for mortgage? Sadly, this ego project by Mr. Governor has led to deaths of land owners. Amaechi, as the chief security officer of the state, has failed to protect the lives of peaceful Ogonis. I read in the Nigerian dailies that one of the governor's stooges, without an investigation, announced that those who died in Sogho were as a result of cult rivalry. Human lives matter less to this serving governor especially as they resulted from opposition to his dream project for Ogoni. Every life counts, and if this governor had been killed while defending his father's farm as a youth, there would have been no Governor Rotimi Amaech today. Better still, if one of the dead were his son or sibling, the Governor would have received the sympathy of the State. Records show that the Rivers State Government has signed an agreement with the Mexican agro business on percentile of shares while the owners of these farmlands are set against each other and against their will. If this company means well, they will attempt to have one-on-one interaction with the land owners and not a third party land grabbing governor.

Recently, the governor of Rivers State vowed to push Goodluck Diigbo, a factional leader of MOSOP into the bush for declaring independence for his Ogoni people. Amaechi is not the first governor of Rivers State that has worked against its citizens; Dauda Komo also played to the script of the multi- national oil companies. Amaechi is no exception, but he stands before history, his legacy of insecurity, kidnappings, cult rivalry, land grabbing, total lack of progress and political immaturity can be attested to by the absence of the basic infrastructures of life like water, electricity, housing, recreation centers and food. The governor has surrounded himself with advisers who know little about government and development, hence, the governor misconstrues autonomy for secession or independence. Autonomy as declared by Mr Diigbo and demanded in the Ogoni Bill of Rights is simply a system in which a subgroup has control over its own cultural, economic, domestic, & public affairs in recognition of their historical significance. The Ogoni people are, indeed, fed up with nonworking systems and poised on governing themselves. Nigeria, above all, owes the Ogoni people a State of their own where their resources will be used in developing Ogoni. Governor Amaechi should not worry; Ogoni autonomy will not diminish his authority as governor. The UN General Assembly during the 107th plenary meeting on September 13th, 2007 gave credence to Indigenous Peoples rights. Art. 3 of the resolution reads: Indigenous peoples have the right to self determination. By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development. Nigeria remains a member of the UN and this decision is binding on all members.

I sincerely thank honorable members of the 3rd Rivers State House of Assembly who, on April 6th 1993, indicted Shell Oil for environmental degradation of Ogoniland and called on Shell, NNPC & Chevron Nigeria Ltd to:

1. pay a total of 18 billion pounds sterling, representing royalties on petroleum mining in Ogoni since 1958

2. stop flaring gas in Ogoniland

3. take urgent and effective measures to prevent further environmental hazards by burying all pressure oil pipelines which are currently exposed; and

4. pay 4 billion pounds sterling as compensation for environmental pollution & ecological degradation in the area and agree with Ogoni representatives of the Ogoni people on acceptable terms for continued exploration for, and exploitation of, oil in the area.

Speaker of the House was Hon Tuesday Kemeagbeye. To this day, no one has an update on the above resolution by an unbiased Assembly. Gov Rotimi Amaechi, as the Chief Executive of Rivers State, owes the Ogoni people an explanation on who received this money or why the indicted firms have not paid. Such compensatory fee must be paid to an Ogoni Trust and kept in an escrow account for the development of Ogoni. During a time of war with Shell Oil, rather than stand with the people of the State, Gov Amaechi is holding meetings with select Ogoni on how Shell will resume oil operations in Ogoni. My guess is that when the governor's meetings fail, he will resort to same old tactics of driving citizens into the bush in order to allow the exploiting Shell drill Ogoni oil. There is no better duty to a citizen than respect and freedom. This, Gov Rotimi Amaechi has denied the Ogoni people.

Lagos State Proceeds With “Eko Atlantic” Project That Caused Deadly Ocean Surge










The Lagos State Government today fenced out all occupants of the coastline of Kuramo Beach to continue the construction of the Eko Atlantic City that environmentalists blame for an ocean surge that killed more than 16 people unprecedented surge three days ago.The state government also burnt down all the shanties on the shoreline that were used for petty commercial activities.

The Lagos Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Toyin Ayinde, visited the site today and stated that critics of the Eko Atlantic Project were speaking out of ignorance. Claiming that he studied the coast of the Atlantic during his graduate studies, Mr. Ayinde added that the state could not be faulted for undertaking the mega project on the water. He accused those occupying the coastline of doing so illegally.

However, Abbey Edwards, the secretary of the security unit of the demolished oceanfront, asserted that the wooden commercial shops were constructed during the 1999 All African Games hosted by Nigeria. Mr. Edwards, a graduate of bio-chemistry from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ife also stated that the shops had been a source of tax revenue for the state government since then. He bemoaned the fact the government’s demolition of the commercial and residential structures without provision of alternatives would displace more than 25,000 people and increase the crime rate in the state.

“They have no mind for the masses,” said Mr. Edwards. “We all know they are doing this to protect Eko Hotel. And they had been looking for ways to achieve this for long until now that they are taking advantage of the ocean surge which they caused by themselves through the Eko Atlantic Project.”

Mr. Edwards also claimed that more than 16 people were swept away by the recent surge of the Atlantic. “Some of those killed by the ocean tide were those helping to rescue children from the ocean surge,” he said. He added, “We have been guarding this place since 1999 and have assisted the Police Rapid Respond Squad to round up criminals in this place. But now, the surge has claimed Olorunwa Babatunde, Joseph Oke, Benson and some other guys with whom I run things here.” He said several of the victims lost their lives while attempting to rescue drowning children.

Tuesday 21 August 2012

JTF Intercepts Bomb-laden Car In Maiduguri





JTF operation, Restore Order patrol intercepted a heavily bomb-laden car at the Tudan Quarters, Madgumeri area of Maiduguri. The JTF says that they received the information from an  arrested Boko Haram member and a mole within a Boko Haram camp. The JTF recovered 4 cylinders, 4 DAF gas oil cylinders, 3 constructed IEDs, 18 x 9 volts batteries with 2 switches, and 4 x 25 litres Jerricans with incendiary materials.

Gallery:  SaharaReporters.com

Nigeria On The Brink Of Collapse: This Is The End! By Bayo Oluwasanmi



The door of the "newly" renovated airport toilet- Photo by Solomon Eyo 


Bayo Oluwasanmi

Going home on vacation has become annual ritual for me. It’s not only sacred and majestic, but spiritual. Like a pilgrim, the yearly ‘pilgrimage’ renews my faith, hope, and love for my country. It’s also an opportunity to reconnect and reunite where my boyhood was formed and shaped with unrestrained exuberance. It was a land where I imagined Utopia was in process of becoming reality.

Though it’s too soon to forget about summer infatuation, mine ended immediately the Boeing 777 taxied at Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA) in Lagos.

The smooth, bumpy-free, and flawless connecting flight from Houston’s International was punctuated by a downpour that greeted our arrival at MMIA.

Right from the time we set foot inside the airport, visible signs of neglect and decay from the rooftops to the floor of the airport advertised a microcosm of a nation parallaxed to hell.

Drops of July showers that escaped through the leaking roofs of MMIA baptized passengers with the ostensible truth that warned us to fasten our belts for the turbulence ahead.

The airport was partially boarded up and torn down. Looks like an abattoir undergoing some face lift ready for inspectors from department of agriculture.


Everywhere looks mangled, air-thirsty, decrepit, and filthy. Scraps of construction materials compete for space like trees hewed down by the storm: an ironic reminder of MMIA’s vestiges of its former greatness.

By now, the rain had become more violent and unfriendly. The waiting lounge was a bedlam. People waiting for their loved ones were pounded by the rain. The ‘madding crowd’ needless to say, had become inured and enamored with the copious beatings of the rain.

Out of the sea of heads, I managed to recognize my family completely bathed in the pre-noon rains. We collided into each other’s arms with a prolonged hallelujah that I made it safely home!

Thus the one month vacation has begun in earnest. Of course, a month vacation was not enough for me (or any visitor for that matter) to travel extensively and exhaustively to intimate me with the socio-politico-economic problems in Nigeria. Good enough, I’m no stranger to these problems.

The socio-politico-economic mess in the country is well known and well documented. Thus I believe it’ll amount to nauseating redundancy to laundry-list for the umpteenth time the lack of modern conveniences that Nigerians have come to accept as the norm.

These age-old problems make for equal opportunity in all the 36 states of the federation – see one see all. But on this trip, I’m hell troubled by corruption, today’s most lucrative industry in Nigeria.

Of all the social and economic plagues that badly afflicted and deformed our body politic, corruption is the most noxious. If superstitions are vestiges of ancient religion, corruption has become the creative destruction of a modern Nigeria. Poverty, one of its derivates, is on full scale war with our people.


To be a guest of corruption in Nigeria, you needn’t crisscross this huge country looking for hosts.

Corruption is all over the land: you can feel it, smell it, hear it, read it, watch it, and embrace it!

Corruption in Nigeria has assumed a special status with different species. There is collusive corruption and retail corruption. Collusive corruption is a phenomenon whereby the ruling class takes care of each other at the expense of the people who elected them as their representatives.

Retail corruption involves exploitation, scheming, scamming, and ripping of individuals by individuals on one hand, and bribery of individual law makers on the other hand by corporations. According to the World Bank report just released, 80% of businesses in Nigeria paid bribes to government officials on request to remain in business. Both forms and strands of corruption are visible, massive, deadly, and alive in Nigeria.

The scale and scope of stealing, looting, and fraud is riveting to the eyes. One can literally hear the screams of corruption in the banner headlines of the dailies.

From oil subsidy gate to pension scheme fraud, bank fraud, ghost workers, overseas junketing and jamboree of legislatures and their wives, forged and inflated contracts, senseless presidential trips with army of aides, unending meaningless retreats and unproductive seminars, and many other sickening evil and con devices have become intertwined to form a national catechism.

Whether it is collusive or retail corruption, the result is the same: it continues to ebb and eat away our human flourishing. Corruption has effectively abbreviated the exercise of liberty in the pursuit of happiness for our people.

The justified and lasting satisfaction with life is completely wiped clean by this greed and graft. The guarantee and expansion of economic liberty has been stunted and halted by the same malfeasance. Earned success and achievement from different endeavors have been supplanted by these assorted venalities.

It’s like expecting springs in the desert for Nigerians to earn a living for themselves and their families through hard work and own efforts. Finding decent work that not only pays the bill but that people enjoys is a rare commodity of Nigeria’s past.

Corruption has created a humiliating and primitive stagnation of our social life. With corruption, families have been ripped apart. Our children are not raised as proud members of the community with devotion to our culture of ingrained moral values.

Our young ones have become wild and homeless lot, culturally lost, spiritually disinherited, candidates for streets, highway robbery, and prisons. Lost generation, if you will!

The war of exploitation and marginalization of the poor on one hand, and the destruction of the middle class on the other hand, has been renewed with zealous impatience by corruption.

Every intervention of the government’s so called anti-graft agency EFCC to stem corruption has actually transformed corruption into a legalized and respectable profession. Indeed, Mr. Jonathan’s phony fight against corruption erects barriers to decriminalize the bane of the scourge in our national life.

Mr. Jonathan provides a great example of a leader with seriously misplaced passion and policies. The president has lost all bearings in both the corruption culture and the enemy culture of Boko Haram.

Where is the president in all these scandals? Complacency is complicity. As if President Jonathan was calling the shots on corruption, he proudly told Nigerians to shut up when he was asked to declare his assets by saying “I don’t give a damn!”

With the pronouncement, complacency, and complicity of Mr. Jonathan; it is safer to say that his PDP led federal government has fallen victim to the wiles and allure of corruption. Talent is a gift but character is a choice. Sadly, the president doesn’t give a damn for either.

The fastidious corrupt appetites of the ruling class have become the political face of our own brand of democracy. The president and his fellow travelers are obdurately blind to the wreckage and carnage done by corruption to our country and to Nigerians.

The Devil once lived in Heaven and those who have not met him are unlikely to recognize an angel when they see one. If you have not seen real poverty in action, visit Nigeria. Listen to the assessment of a writer on Nigeria’s self inflicted poverty: “Nigerians are living on a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity.”

The jungle dwellings, the mass unemployment and under employment, the open solicitation of prostitution by the young and the old, the biting hunger, the untamed malnourishment, the helplessness and hopelessness of now and the future, put the human suffering of Nigerians on Biblical proportions.

There is no medicine like hope. But it is one thing to speak of hope when things look doubtful. It is fearful to speak of hope when the future is uncertain. It is frustrating to speak of hope when the pestilence of poverty bears all the signs and symbols of satanic verses.

Yes, it is something else to speak of hope when there is no doubt that the present is a disaster, when the future is surely uninviting, when circumstances have consigned you to the gutters. Definitely, hope in the midst of utter turmoil cannot be starry-eyed optimism; it must be built upon bedrock reality.

Wherever you see persecution, truth is often on the persecuted side. How can we explain the inequalities in Nigeria today? The wicked, oppressive, and corrupt ruling class generally goes unpunished. Corruption covers them like a robe. They wear injustice like a turban.

The swindlers prosper, while the honest citizens go bankrupt. Everywhere I looked I saw distorted business ethics, perverted justice, unpunished criminals, and unjust suffering.

Everywhere I looked there was unsettling apprehension of pessimism. The architects of evil, wickedness, and tyranny (and we know them) prosper and enjoy the luxury of their looted wealth. They spend their days in prosperity. They’re spared calamity and they’re buried with honor.

They oppressed the poor and left them destitute. Pictures of utter helplessness and desperation are everywhere. The poor are left cold, hungry, and at the mercy of the elements.

The dying groans for comfort. The wounded cry for help. The Boko Haram continues to consume the poor, the needy, and the innocent just as drought and heat consume snow.

Faced with the prospect of being swept away by the tidal wave of corruption, Nigeria is as good as dead. The choice before us is merely between a grey twilight and total darkness. With corruption on the rise and unabated, Nigeria is headed for total darkness.

 I may sound like a boastful apocalyptist, but I tell you this: Nigeria is closer to the brink of collapse today than yesterday. This is the end!

byolu@aol.com