Tuesday 25 March 2014

RUSSIA HAS BEEN SUSPENDED FROM G-8.... PUTIN DOESN'T CARE THOUGH.


U.S. President Barack Obama and other world leaders have decided to end Russia’s role in the group of leading industrialized nations, the White House said Monday.

The move to suspend Russia’s membership in the G8 is the latest direct response from major countries allied against Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

“International law prohibits the acquisition of part or all of another state’s territory through coercion or force,” the statement said. “To do so violates the principles upon which the international system is built. We condemn the illegal referendum held in Crimea in violation of Ukraine’s constitution.

“We also strongly condemn Russia’s illegal attempt to annex Crimea in contravention of international law and specific international obligations.”

LATE REEVA WAS SCARED OF ATTACK BY OSCAR PISTORIOUS, WHATSAPP MESSAGES SHARED IN COURT REVEALS.


Reeva Steenkamp told Oscar Pistorius she was “scared” of his jealous tantrums just weeks before he shot her dead, a court heard today.

In a series of WhatsApp messages read to the court, the athlete’s former girlfriend complained about his behaviour and said: “I can’t be attacked by outsiders for dating you AND be attacked by you – the one person I deserve protection from.”

The Olympic and Paralympic athlete is on trial for the murder of 29-year-old model and law graduate Steenkamp on Valentine’s Day 2013.

He has pleaded not guilty to murder, saying he was deeply in love with Steenkamp, whom he had been dating for a few months, and that he mistook for an intruder hiding in a toilet at his luxury Pretoria home.

Read the WhatsApp messages shown in court:

THE IMMIGRATION TRAGEDY & JONATHAN'S HOLLOW RESPONSE.


Those who might have expected a far-reaching response from the government to the shabby conduct of the recent ill-fated Nigeria Immigration Service recruitment interview that claimed 23 lives, including that of four pregnant women, cannot but be deeply disappointed at the half measures announced last week. However, in a country where people get away with all manner of heinous crimes – from mass murder to electoral fraud and treasury looting – it is only reasonable not to place much hope and expectations on government actions and decisions.

After the Federal Executive Council meeting last week, all the Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, had to say about the incident was that three members of each family of the unfortunate victims would be rewarded with a job at the NIS. He also announced employment for each of the numerous others that were injured in the stampedes resulting from overcrowding at the interview venues. Surprisingly, he was silent on the brains behind the sham interview, which is where his briefing should have started.

Although Nigerians have become so used to losing innocent lives in their scores on a daily basis, there is no justification for the government to pretend as if it is normal for 23 lives to be gratuitously wasted. And having done that, those responsible, namely the Interior Minister, Abba Moro, and the Comptroller-General of NIS, David Parradang, are left with a pat on the back and the usual admonition to “go and sin no more.” This is wrong.

CREDIBLE CANDIDATES WANTED FOR 2015 ELECTIONS.


Unless we do a lot more than we are doing now, the 2015 elections would produce the same unsatisfying outcomes as we have had since 1999 and for which we have loudly complained without addressing our concerns.

The results, and the lengthening complaints about politicians and their ways, have little to do with political parties. Almost everything boils down to quality of candidates – the quality, in high numbers, is regrettably poor.

Across the parties, candidates who offer themselves for elections, those who are mostly pressed to run for office and those who support them within the system, have created  methods that leave voters with minimal knowledge about candidates. While we are supposed to vote for candidates with character and credentials.

AS BOWEN SETS THE PACE FOR PROTEST IN NIGERIA'S PRIVATE UNIVERSITIES.


Student unrest is as old as university education in Nigeria, but there has been little or no recorded protest or agitation in the privately owned universities, which, many say, are in business to give their state-run counterparts a run for their money.

Indeed, many stakeholders hold the view that the coming of the private institutions is to teach the state-run ones how to manage effectively their schools in terms of providing the right learning environment.

However, this incentive, as it were, does come at a price. The fees in such institutions are usually prohibitive. In fact, whether primary, secondary or tertiary institution, such schools are not financially comfortable places for the poor or anyone struggling with finances to send his children or wards to for schooling. Indeed, the tuition in a private tertiary institution in the country ranges between N500, 000 and N2m per academic session.

With this, the expectation of parents and their children are high with regard to the provision of infrastructure and other learning conditions.

HOW TO HONOUR DEAD "NIS STAMPEDE" APPLICANTS - OKONJO IWEALA


The Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has said that the best way to remember Nigerian youths who lost their lives at the recent recruitment exercise into the Nigeria Immigration Service was to create more jobs for the unemployed.

She spoke at the Housing Stakeholders Summit in Abuja, yesterday, where she reiterated the determination of the President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration to create more jobs for youths in several sectors, including the housing, agriculture and ICT sectors, among others.

Her words, “the best way to honour the memory of the youths who died during the immigration exercise is for us to work harder to create more jobs.

Read more from Vanguard below:

OUR EXPERIENCE IN BOKO HARAM'S DEN.


Not everyone lives to recount a gory experience in the camp of one of the world's most notorious terrorist group, "BOKO HARAM". 

Punch reports that two women abducted by Boko Haram insurgents  in the North-East have given a rare account of life as captives. While one who  was held captive for 15 days, said she had a marriage proposal from one of the Islamist militants, the other said she was almost turned into a killer.

“They asked me if I am Christian or Muslim. I said I am a Christian,” said 23-year-old Liatu, as she recounted her ordeal   in the hands of Boko Haram members to the British Broadcasting Corporation. “On the 11th day (in captivity), they brought a man to me and said that he liked me and that  I should convert to Islam so that he can marry me,” she added in the report published by the BBC on Monday.

THE UK POLICE IS INCOMPETENT - AFTERMATH OF NAOMI ONI'S ACID ATTACK.

 

Naomi Oni, who was left scarred for life after being attacked with sulphuric acid has accused Scotland Yard of incompetence, saying police initially claimed she had poured it over herself.

Naomi, a Victoria's Secret shop assistant, was left with severe burns on her face and chest in the incident in Dagenham, east London, in 2012. Her former friend, Mary Konye, 22, who disguised herself in a Muslim veil before throwing the acid, was jailed for 12 years last week.

Miss Oni told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme that police were slow to act on information she gave them about the attack. She said it almost felt like she had 'been accused of lying', adding that she had suffered 'pain and backlash for her (Konye's) actions and other people's incompetence'.

Monday 24 March 2014

NEW VIDEO - MY WAY - WANDE COAL


Former Mavin Artiste and now "Black Diamond" Boss, Wande Coal, presents visuals of his song titled "MY WAY" produced by Maleek Berry...

Enjoy the song.

Sunday 23 March 2014

IMPERATIVES OF PRIVATIZING NIGERIA'S REFINERIES.

PETROLEUM Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke’s curious claim that the fears of workers’ agitation were holding up the planned sale of the country’s ailing refineries betrays an attitude of a government willing to justify its deliberate refusal to act in the overall interest of Nigerian citizens. This is hardly a tenable explanation for inaction, especially in a major oil-producing country where the importation of refined petroleum products is preferred to local refining, a choice that has resulted in periodic artificial scarcity in the midst of plenty.

Although workers have threatened to oppose the sale, which is natural, this should not be enough to cow the government into submission. If the government could not give in to electricity workers’ threats and opposition to the sale of another notoriously corrupt and inefficient public organisation — the Power Holding Company of Nigeria — there is no reason for the situation to be different now.

Nigeria’s four refineries at Port Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna, under the management of a government firm, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, have been perennially producing at an average of 22 per cent capacity. Rather than further the interest of the nation, the refineries, initially designed to take care of Nigeria’s local fuel consumption and even spare some for export, have been turned into conduits for siphoning public funds.

HUMAN PARTS MARKET UNCOVERED IN IBADAN.


Human parts dealers are usually brutal and without the minutest mercy.

To both passers-by and residents of Soka, a satellite community of Ibadan, along the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, the scene could have been right out of a horror movie.  They were Saturday shocked by the discovery of human skulls, decomposed bodies and dismembered human parts in a site so close to the ever-busy arterial highway.

The circumstances leading to the discovery of the underground house of horror – known as Ajaale in Yoruba language – were still unclear at the time of filing this report. Onlookers converged around the scene in their thousands, confounded by the gory sight. Littered all over the grounds were identity cards (apparently belonging to the victims) as well as discarded clothes and shoes.

Among the unsettling discovery made in the area yesterday were containers of dried dismembered human parts. Several human parts and skulls littered the scene corroborating the allegation that people were being butchered here. Some bodies were also discovered in deep dried wells, where their captors could have dropped them.

A derelict factory building in the area was suspected to be where the captives were slaughtered and sold in parts to their clients.  This was corroborated by bloodstains on the floor and what could have been wooden slaughter slabs.
About 18 emaciated males and five females, chained on their legs, were also freed from captivity in the site. Among the captives freed from the gory abode of horror was an aged woman, who was kidnapped and kept in the dungeon since 2008.
Another female captive, said to have been delivered of a baby early Saturday but the infant was sold, was also released with bloodstains on her. Asked how she found herself in the area, she managed to utter a few words and then fainted. There were also about nine captives lying on the ground, too weak to speak.

More skulls, bones and dismembered parts were discovered in the neighbouring bush. Also discovered were open graves, where bodies were dumped.

It was gathered that the forest was a market of sorts for human parts with buyers visiting the area at night. Eyewitness accounts confirmed that many high-profile people usually patronised the area especially at night. 

A source also revealed that some Fulani herdsmen had often been seen in the area grazing their cattle.

One Akeem Isiaka, 38, was arrested at the scene and taken away by security agents to Sanyo Police station.

When contacted, the Oyo State Police Command spokesperson, Mrs Olabisi Clet-Ilobanafor said some arrests were made Saturday, but the prime suspect is still at large. The police spokesperson also said some security personnel have been detailed to cordon off the scene to prevent people from taking the law into their hands.

It would be recalled that a cobbler was in June last year arrested for the alleged murder of a commercial motorcycle (known as Okada) operator of Northern Nigerian extraction in the Soka area.

The cobbler, Kazeem Bamidele a.k.a. Kazzy International Shoe Works, was arrested with human parts. The police, who had reportedly taken him to the shack, which served as his workshop, discovered the decapitated head and dismembered legs of the victim hidden inside a bush behind the wooden shop.

Bamidele was said to have been apprehended with an accomplice in the act by two members of a vigilante security outfit by around 1 am. The security men were suspicious of their late night activities and had interrogated them.

Nothing has since been heard of this case after the suspects were taken into custody by the police. 

Saturday 22 March 2014

MARY KONYE WHO THREW ACID AT HER FRIEND'S FACE HAS BEEN JAILED FOR 12 YEARS.


A woman who threw acid in the face of a friend while wearing a veil as a disguise has been jailed for 12 years. Naomi Oni, 22, suffered burns to her face and chest in the attack near her home in Dagenham, east London, in December 2012. 

Mary Konye, 22, of Canning Town, allegedly attacked Ms Oni because she had called her ugly. In a victim impact statement, Ms Oni said she had at times felt suicidal since the attack due to her appearance.

Judge David Radford told Konye the consequences of her "deliberate" and "wicked act" had been "devastating to Miss Oni".

It was a "premeditated and callous" plan to "burn and disfigure" her victim, he added.

Friday 21 March 2014

CHAMPIONS LEAGUE QUARTER FINALS DRAWS.


Draws for the Quarter final matches of the Uefa Champions League was held today. Below are the pairings.

Barcelona vs Atletico Madrid

Real Madrid vs Borrusia Dortmund 

PSG vs Chelsea

Manchester United vs Bayern Munich

D'BANJ'S "KOKO GARRI" IS OUT, SOAK YOURS TODAY.


D'banj has launched his branded garri called "KOKO GARRI" and the commodity is expected to hit the market soon. The launching took place at the One Do Agric Campaign in Abuja on Thursday.


NIS STAMPEDE TRAGEDY AND OUR HYPOCRISY.


Outrage is raging against the death of 19, among them four pregnant women, at the Nigerian Immigration Service, NIS, recruitment exercise. Minister of Interior, Abba Moro, in reaction to calls for his resignation, said he needed to stick around to fix the problem. Nigerians seem aghast at the disregard for life. Why the hypocrisy?

Is this the first time people died during NIS recruitments? What happened about the screaming headlines? When did lives become so unimportant in Nigeria?Morro may be sacked or keep his job. None of the options scratches the problem; none would ensure there is no repeat next year with more casualties.

The only gain from his sack could be that government would start punishing those who allow things go wrong under their charge. It would open a chapter of responsibility in our national life and expectedly new challenges. Who would be punished for thousands of lives lost to Boko Haram attacks? Everybody or nobody, some would argue, since terrorists took those lives. There seems to be a selective appreciation of life.

THE US CORRUPTION REPORT ON NIGERIA - TOTAL TRAGEDY.


THE United States government’s recent report on the role of the government in the proliferation of corruption in Nigeria offers a fresh and undeniable insight into why graft is so deeply entrenched in the Nigerian system. If the government that should stamp out corruption is now actively protecting corrupt individuals, then no amount of posturing will produce results.

However, for a government that is responsive to constructive criticism – a government that means well for the people – the report is an opportunity for the Goodluck Jonathan Administration to act by taking firm, honest and decisive steps to rid Nigeria of the perennial tag of one of the world’s most corrupt nations.

In a detailed and frank assessment that could only be described as stating the obvious, the report, entitled, “Corruption and Lack of Transparency in Government,” confirmed the often-stated view that the efforts of the anti-graft agencies are deliberately stymied by the government. The allegation of deliberately emasculating the anti-corruption agencies brings to mind reports last year in which the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission confessed that it was broke.


In one of such reports, the EFCC Secretary, Emmanuel Adegboyega, told the Senate Committee on Drugs, Narcotics, Financial Crimes and Anti-Corruption in December last year, “We (EFCC) have been complaining that no money has been released to us for operations. As of now, we don’t have up to N2 million. If we can afford to pay salaries this month that is all.” For an agency whose functions are defined by the number of arrests and prosecution of corrupt individuals across the country, how can those functions be effectively discharged without money for legal fees and travel expenses? How can they be motivated if salaries are not paid?

Interestingly, one of the other cases of corrupt practices the US report cited was the curious state pardon granted a former Bayelsa State governor, Diepriye Alamieyeseigha. Aside from his conviction for treasury looting and money laundering, Alamieyeseigha, who is still a wanted person in the United Kingdom, served time in Nigeria and also had his tenure as governor truncated, paving the way for Jonathan, then his deputy, to replace him. The state pardon implies that the former governor, who, as an ex-convict, could not occupy public office, whether appointive or elective, can now do so. Indeed, Jonathan has nominated him to the ongoing National Conference. That is a dangerous signal to the outside world for a government that professes commitment to fighting corruption.

In a similar damning report last year, the then US Ambassador to Nigeria, Terence McCulley, reportedly told the Nigerian government to demonstrate more courage and conviction in its crusade against graft, insisting that it was the only way to “send a clear signal that the country is indeed committed to good governance, to the security of its citizens, and to its rightful place as a significant actor on the global stage.”

Unfortunately, corruption has been identified as the major reason for the arrested development in the country. It is responsible for reduced public spending, which results in huge infrastructure deficits, especially poor roads, lack of electricity, inadequately-equipped hospitals and low quality of education. It is also fingered in the pervasive insecurity in the country, low quality of governance and general poor standard of living. 

Under the current administration, corruption has become particularly daring, even more than anytime before. Even when the President stated clearly his readiness to fight corruption, the government had been less than convincing in its manner of handling corruption cases. For instance, after ordering a series of probes into stolen oil subsidy money in which the country lost more than N2 trillion, an amount far in excess of Nigeria’s capital budget for this year, nobody has been convicted more than two years after.

Faced with brazen and self-evident corruption case in the purchase of two cars for N255 million for a former Aviation Minister, Stella Oduah, it still took the President four months to reluctantly fire her. He initially set up a committee to investigate a straightforward case, apparently to find a way to avoid sacking the minister.

The US report alleges that, in Nigeria, “Massive, widespread and pervasive corruption affected all levels of government and the security forces.” While alleging that judges were not left out of the massive corruption ring, the report accused the government of not implementing the law on corruption effectively, thus deliberately allowing “officials (to) frequently engage in corrupt practices with impunity.” These are, possibly, part of what the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, saw when he cried out that the President’s “body language” encouraged corruption.

Indeed, the US report went far, but only to the extent of the period it covered, which was 2013. Since the beginning of this year, there have been allegations of missing funds, meant for the Federation Account, and for further distribution among federal, state and local governments. But, for alleging that about $12 billion – later $20 billion – had not been accounted for, the Central Bank Governor, Lamido Sanusi, was placed on suspension and a forensic audit ordered later. Why the hurry in suspending the CBN governor instead of investigating his allegations first? The government says the suspension will pave the way for the investigation of allegations of financial recklessness against the CBN governor.

Although both the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation and the government said only $10.8 billion was unaccounted for, it is still a huge sum of money. Only a fraction of that money can build the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, the East-West Road and the Second Niger Bridge. It is money that could have staved off the prolonged university teachers’ strike that nearly cost the institutions a full academic session.

The Nigerian government owes the people a duty to tackle corruption boldly by adequately funding the EFCC and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission. Besides, corrupt individuals should never be allowed to go scot-free; that is the only way to stem the tide of impunity in the country.

REPS PROBES DIEZANI'S( MINISTER OF PETROLEUM RESOURCES) N10B EXPENSE ON PRIVATE JET.


The House of Representatives on Thursday passed a resolution to probe an alleged spending of N10bn by the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, to charter and maintain a jet for her personal use.

The resolution indicated that the minister spent 500,000 Euros or N130m monthly to maintain the aircraft in the last two years.

“Thus, in the last two years, the minister has committed at least N3.120bn to maintaining the private jet, which is used solely for her personal needs and those of her immediate family, which is an appalling act”, the sponsor of the motion, Mr. Samuel Adejare, told the House.

MEGA ENDORSEMENT DEALS OF NAIJA ENTERTAINERS.


A good number of Nigerian brands, especially in the telecommunications and banking sectors are now associating with creative personages in music and acting, to make their brands more endearing to their targeted audiences.

The trend which started a little over five years ago, has gained more relevance as a result of increasing exposure to television.

The popularity of  the entertainment industry is also giving fillip to brand ambassadorship. Top celebrities in the Nigerian creative industry have, in the last five years, found this growing business a new way of making huge earnings. Some Nigerian top stars who have bagged major endorsement deals include;

NIS STAMPEDE: FOUR SURVIVORS SUE NIS, FG AND MINISTER OF INTERIOR AFFAIRS.


The dust emerging from the NIS nationwide recruitment tragedy last Saturday where about 18 Nigerians including 4 pregnant women lost their lives is yet to settle.

Four survivors of the recent recruitment exercise of the Nigerian Immigration Service, NIS, that resulted in the death of eighteen persons nationwide, yesterday, dragged the Federal Government to court.

In an originating summons they entered before the Abuja Division of the Federal High Court, the plaintiffs, Charles Ugwuonye, Friday Danlami, Chinedu Onwuka and Samson Ojo urged the court to declare that the conduct of the recruitment exercise was illegal, unwarranted and amounted to a gross violation of the applicants’ fundamental rights to life.

Thursday 20 March 2014

AMAZING!!!!! BREEDER SELLS 2 DOGS FOR N495M ($3M).


A Chinese dog breeder said that a property developer paid him 18 million yuan ($3 million) for Tibetan mastiff twins, highlighting how the breed has become a status symbol for China's rich.

The large, slobbery dog with massive amounts of hair used to be best known for herding sheep in Tibet, but has now become a luxury for the ultra-rich who want to spread their wealth beyond stocks and real estate.
Breeder Zhang Gengyun said he sold the 1-year-old twin male dogs to a single buyer at a luxury dog fair Tuesday in wealthy Zhejiang province, located on China's east coast. The sales were reported by the local Qianjiang Evening News.

One of the twins — a golden-haired Tibetan mastiff — was sold for $12 million yuan, and his red-haired brother went for $6 million yuan. Zhang said the buyer, from eastern Shandong province, paid him the 18 million yuan with his credit card.



Zhang denied the sale was a ploy by breeders to hype the price of Tibetan mastiffs and said he was reluctant to sell the twins. "It's a real deal," he said.

The more expensive golden-haired dog was 80 centimeters (31.5 inches) tall and weighed 90 kilograms (200 pounds).

"His hair is bright and he has a dead-drop gorgeous face," said the breeder. "Usually he's quiet and gentle, but when a stranger shows up, he could bark endlessly and bite."

Zhang said the unnamed buyer might start breeding Tibetan mastiffs himself.

"The Tibetan mastiff is as treasured in China as the giant panda, so people consider it a symbol of higher social status," he said.

Liu Na, organizer of a Tibetan mastiff fair in Beijing, said the average price for one of the dogs is several hundreds of thousands of dollars. The price tag usually depends on the breeder's expectations, the buyer's appreciation of the dog and the bargaining between the two, she said.

"It's just like deals done when buying antiques," Liu said. "But it isn't uncommon for a breeder to hype a price in order to raise his profile in the industry, just like a celebrity can inflate his or her