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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Having a baby boy shortens mother’s lifespan – New study


Stock image

When mothers have children that particularly challenge them, you will often hear some mothers say “this child will be the death of me!” While we can assume that the mothers who say this only say it in a moment of frustration and don’t actually mean it nor believe it, it turns out that they are on to something, especially if the child they are talking about is a boy.

For fathers, it turns out this is not true. A new study claims that having a baby boy can shorten the life of a parent; but only the mother and not the father.
New research shows that they may be right: Having sons can shave an average of eight and a half months off of a mom’s life.

(The affect on dads? None, apparently.)

The study, by evolutionary ecologist Dr. Samuli Helle of the University of Turku in Finland and Dr. Virpi Lummaa of the University of Sheffield in the United Kingdom, was published this week in the journal Biology Letters. He and his team looked at the post-childbirth survival rates of 11,166 mothers and 6,360 fathers in pre-industrial Finland, using records kept by the Lutheran Church there.

“Irrespective of access to resources, mothers, but not fathers, with many sons suffered from reduced post-reproductive survival,” they wrote in the study.

The subjects were born in eight different parts of Finland during the 17th to 20th centuries—a time period when the mostly agricultural society did not have access to modern medical care or birth control. After crunching the numbers, the researchers found that a mother who bore six sons would live on average another 32.4 years after the youngest son’s birth, while a mother who gave birth to girls would live approximately 33.1 years after her youngest daughter came along.

The shorter life expectancy was the same regardless of the mom’s social or financial status, though Helle said that “societal and cultural reasons could also play a factor.”







Source: ynaija.com

Obasanjo should face trial for Odi massacre – CPC


former President Olusegun Obasanjo
THE Congress for Progressive Change on Monday called for the trial of former President Olusegun Obasanjo for genocide over the 1999 invasion of Odi community in Bayelsa State.

Spokesman for the CPC, Rotimi Fashakin, said, sequel to the court description of the 1999 attack on Odi by Nigerian soldiers as genocide, Obasanjo should be arrested and tried before the International Criminal Court.

The CPC catalogued two instances of mistreatment of two communities in the country and concluded that Obasanjo should be tried for the Odi massacre because he “harboured sadistic and malevolent intent” in dealing with the two communities.

A Federal High Court presided over by Justice Lambo Akanbi on February 19, 2013 had ordered the Federal Government to pay N37.6 bn as compensation to the people of Odi over the invasion of their community by armed soldiers during the Obasanjo administration.

However the CPC said the payment of compensation as ordered by the court was inadequate adding that the ex-President should be tried for genocide.

Soldiers on the order of the Obasanjo government invaded Odi on November 20, 1999 and destroyed the community over the killing of 10 policemen by a gang involved in the Niger Delta unrest of the period.

The party’s statement reads, “On 20th November, 1999, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, then President of Nigeria, authorised the invasion and subsequent destruction of Odi community in Bayelsa State by the soldiers of the Nigerian Army.

“After more than 12 years of delayed justice, the Nigerian High Court Judge, Justice Lambo Akanbi, had described the invasion as genocidal, reckless, brutish and gross violation of the rights of the victims to life and ownership of property.

“In addition, the learned Judge ordered the Federal Government of Nigeria to pay N37.6bn as compensation to the victims.

“In 2001, the same PDP-led regime of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, ordered the invasion of Zaki-Biam, a community in Benue State, by soldiers with the same malevolent intent as the Odi invasion.

“Indeed, in a decided case in July 2007, the Federal Government was ordered to pay N4.8 bn as compensation to the victims.

“Undoubtedly, it is clear from these two decided cases that Obasanjo harboured sadistic and malevolent intent in dealing with the two Nigerian communities.

“In the judgment on the class suit No.FHC/PH/CP/11/2000 on the Odi invasion, Justice Lambo Akanbi ruled that the attack on the people of Odi was genocidal, reckless, brutish and a gross violation of the rights of the victims to life and ownership of property.

“In Article 5(1a) of the statute of the International Criminal Court, genocide is a crime under the jurisdictional purview of the Court.”

Fashakin went further to explain that Article 6 (a-c) of the same statute explains that “For the purpose of this Statute, ‘genocide’ means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such (a) killing members of the group; (b) causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group.”

He said that at the time of these infractions, the Nigerian State was not in a state of war with these communities and that the action typified the impunity and excessive show of executive recklessness that he alleged the PDP-led regimes had unleashed on the nation in 13 years.

Fashakin said his party was of the opinion that no amount of monetary compensation could fully assuage the sense of colossal loss of these communities, whose rights to life, he said, were indecently trampled upon by the Obasanjo regime.

He said, “It is equally our belief that, with the establishment of the intent and content of the invasion as genocidal, the course of Justice is best served if the head of the government at the material time, that is, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, is formally arraigned before the International Criminal Court for the crime of genocide.

“The wider implication of the arraignment shall be the institution of constitutional order and decency among the ruling elite so that the inalienable rights of the people to personal liberty and justice shall remain sacrosanct.”

Obasanjo was not available for reaction on Monday.

Efforts to reach the ex-President through his Chief of Staff, Victor Durodola, were not fruitful. At the first contact, Durodola told one of our correspondents on the phone to call back, promising to reach Obasanjo to react.

When our correspondent called Durodola again at 10:20pm, he said, “Baba is at home but he has not responded to my text to him on the subject. May be he has slept but I am sure he will respond by the time he sees the text.”












Source - Punch News

Brutal: How promising US mayoral candidate was beaten, dragged, and set on fire before he died


candidate
Marco McMillian was a young, promising mayoral candidate just one week ago. Now, he’s dead. Also, the conditions of his death have been revealed by his family, who is determined to share the sad details regarding what happened to their child.
According to his family, McMillian was beaten, dragged and set on fire this week before he died. The death has sent shock waves through his community in Clarksdale, Mississippi, and has reminded some of another b****y death in the same state when the late Emmett Till was murdered in an equally-brutal fashion.

“We feel this was not a random act of violence based on the condition of the body when it was found,” the McMillian family said. “Marco, nor anyone, should have their lives end in this manner.”

The family says that the coroner gave them the details of McMillian’s death and the family is asking for a thorough investigation into how the 33-year old man died. Coahoma County Coroner Scotty Meredith, according to the Clarion Ledger, has declined comment on the incident, other than to say that the young man was not dragged behind a vehicle. He says that the man was dragged out of the car to the place where his body was found.

“Of course, being a big man like he is, they couldn’t pick him up and take him,” Meredith said. “This is blown out of proportion.”

The Coahoma County Sheriff’s Department hasn’t responded to the family’s statement on the situation. McMillian’s body was found this week at the Mississippi River after he’d gone missing for a day. The sheriff’s department has charged 22-year old Lawrence Reed in his death. The murder is not being investigated as a hate crime.

One of the theories regarding the murder is that the death involved a dispute in a romantic relationship between the two men, since McMillian was openly gay. The family said that they wanted to dispel this notion by giving details of how he died. Reed was found earlier this week after crashing McMillian’s SUV into another car. McMillian was not in the vehicle at the time of the crash.

The incident took place during an exciting time for McMillian’s family. He had just moved back to Clarksdale in order to run for mayor. Before his death, McMillian served as the international executive director of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, executive assistant and chief of staff to the president of Alabama A&M University, and assistant to the vice president for institutional advancement at Jackson State University.










Source: ynaija.com

Obasanjo breaks silence on late father

ABEOKUTA—Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Monday, broke his silence on his late father, saying, culture almost prevented him from recognizing him before his death.

Obasanjo who called for the removal of any aspect of culture that undermines the roles of youths and women in the process of development of the country, said he was a victim of the barbaric culture during his childhood.

The ex-President who spoke at a regional summit on women and youth in the promotion of cultural security and development in Africa’ at Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library Complex, Abeokuta, submitted that the role of women and culture in cultural security and development is very important.

Culture and youth

Obasanjo said: “I believe we should eliminate the aspect of our culture that still emphasizes that youth must be seen and not heard. I suffered under this because I was not supposed to look at my father in the face, I didn’t know my father, for many years had tribal marks, who the hell was I to look at my father in the face because the culture says I should look down when my father talks.

Obasanjo
Obasanjo
“Should we continue to uphold the culture that says women have no share in their parent’s and husband’s inheritance? And as we have been told 70 per cent of our food is provided and produced by women who are landless by our culture and have no access to anything that will help them in production and productivity in their farms.

Women and development

“I come to the conclusion that the role of women and culture in cultural security and development is very important, investment in women and youth in cultural security and development in Africa is very important, we must realize that our charity must begin at home particularly in development.

“Culture to me is dynamic and progressive and not everything in every culture is what should be upheld. If culture is dynamic and progressive, we should throw searchlight on our culture, the one that are not going to help us let us throw them away and look at what to help us particularly in the area of development.

“If 75 per cent of our population is made up of women and youth, then there is something in the subject that we have taken for discussion today. I mean that not to give them adequate consideration, not to invest adequately in them, not to identify their role, we can only be undermining our own development.

While describing culture as dynamic and central, Obasanjo said “culture is also central to our identity and if you want to suppress and dominate people, destroy their culture, eliminate their culture and that is why you now have people, black people who have been taken away from Africa who are now Mr. Stone.

Africa and names

“In most African countries, names mean something and you don’t just give a child a name. Culture tells us where we are coming from, where we are and to plot where we are going to. To me, culture is like history, if you have no history, you have no memory and if you say you have no culture, you have no past, maybe you have no present and I wonder how you will have a future.

“I have been very concerned about the destruction, that over the years have been hit on our culture in Africa as an instrument of suppression, domination and enslavement. I grew up being told in school that Yoruba is a vernacular and not a language and I must not speak it in school. “I wonder whether in English schools, English is regarded as a vernacular, I have asked my friends why Yoruba is a vernacular which should not be spoken and English is not a vernacular in England and should be spoken.”

“But if you can see that, and you can see the effect from the children that were brought up on this premise, whatever they may be, they may be able to speak English like the queen of England but then what is expected of them when they are with their peers is that which is authentically theirs, their language, their food, their mode of dressing which, invariably some of them have lost.

“One other thing, agricultural commodities, they say one is cash crop and the other, they don’t even talk about it as if when you produce cassava, maize, yam and these other food crops, when you sell them you don’t get cash.

“Again, you can see the underplay of our culture and the overplay of what they want us to have. I believe the first thing we must identify with is what I called commonalities in cultures so as to use these commonalities to further unity and understanding and to build that constructive relation whether internally within countries or internally within Africa. It also brings close to us the fact that we are one people” Obasanjo said.









Source - Vanguard News

Nigerian kills 67-yr-old Australian lover

Australian police have said a great-grand mother who was found dead in South Africa was murdered by her online Nigerian scammer she met on a dating site. Australian Federal Police officers are already in Nigeria investigating the woman’s death.

The West Australian newspaper reported, Monday, that the body of Jette Jacobs, 67, from Wagin in Australia was found in a Johannesburg guest house on February 9, 2013, more than two months after she reportedly went there to meet a Nigerian, 28-year-old Jesse Orowo Omokoh. Omokoh was the last person to see Ms Jacobs alive and told police he found her body. He has since disappeared.

Australasian police officer, Robert Martin, from the major fraud squad, said police were in contact with Australian Federal Police officers in Nigeria about Ms Jacobs’ death and investigations were in the early stages. He said her death appeared suspicious and he confirmed Omokoh was a suspect.

He said Ms Jacobs forwarded Mr Omokoh $80,000 after they met online and sent him a further $20,000 once she arrived in Johannesburg.

“She actually sold her home believing she was going to be starting a new life overseas and it ended in tragedy. This is the first time we have seen this happen,” he said.

He said relationship scams had become a “massive problem”, costing West Australians between $600,000 and $1 million each month.

The report said Ms Jacobs, a widow who had six children, struck up an online relationship with Omokoh three years ago and travelled to South Africa to meet him in 2010 before he proposed late last year. Over several years she sent $200,000 to Omokoh and another man she met online, known as Isaac.

Despite warnings from family, Ms Jacobs went to South Africa in November to marry Omokoh but he failed to turn up until last month, blaming visa troubles.

Two days after he arrived from Nigeria, Ms Jacobs was found dead, with her jewellery and money missing. It is believed South African police initially thought she had committed suicide, as empty pill packets were found nearby. But the victim’s son, who did not want to be identified, said his mother met with foul play.

The son said: “We tried to talk her out of it but no one could convince her it wasn’t real and there was nothing there for her. But she kept believing there was and unfortunately we weren’t strong enough to stop her going.”

Detectives from Australia’s Operation Sunbird, a joint operation with consumer protection to investigate online scams sent Ms Jacobs a letter warning she might have been a victim of fraud but it arrived after she had left Australia.

The victim’s youngest daughter, who wanted to be known only as Mrs Jackson, told Seven News Omokoh wanted to move to Australia but her mother wanted to settle in Nigeria.

She said: “My mum paid the ultimate price, which no one should have to. We don’t want to see this happening to anybody else.”


 








Source - Vanguard News

Centenary Celebration: Buhari sacrificed his life for Nigeria – CPC

ABUJA-AS the country prepares to celebrate its existence of 100 years in 2014, after amalgamation in 1914, the Congress for Progressive Change, CPC, said former head of State and presidential candidate of the party, Gen Muhammadu Buhari (rtd.) scarified his life for the unity of the country.

The party said this to clear the insinuation of some Nigerians about the presence of Buhari at the recent flag-off of the centenary celebration at the Presidential Villa, Abuja along with other former heads of state.

Buhar
Buhari
Buhari was seen holding hands with President Goodluck Jonathan when both of them were on their way to lit the historic centenary torch to kick-off events lined up for the celebration.

Nigerians saw the presence of Buhari as unusual at the presidential villa among other former rulers of the country, and also to participate in such an event led by the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) government because Buhari since PDP occupied the presidential villa in 1999 to date has never been in attendance of the council of state meeting where follow former heads of state address national issues.

His party, CPC, has come out to clear the insinuations of Nigerians about the presence of Buhari at the flag –H of the centenary celebration events as the country clocks 100 years in 2014 as a nation-state.

The party’s national publicity secretary, Engr Rotimi Fashakin told Vanguard that Buhari has been a true patriot who had laid down his life for the unity of the country turning the Nigerian civil war in 1967-1970, his doggedness in the fight against corruption during his stay in power as the head of state and fight against Chadian invasion, of some Nigerian villages in Northern and occupation Nigeria.

Fashakin said: “Gen Muhammadu is not the typical politician that believes in making enemies totally; he has never said President Jonathan is his enemy, they only contested a position together in 2011 election and that is all. Anything that concerns Nigeria, you will find Gen Buhari there.

You talk about a quintessential patriot that is Gen Muhammadu Buhari for you. He has fought a civil war to keep this nation together, meaning that he risked his life in keeping the Nigerian state together.

“When he was General officer commanding the Chadians invaded 19 Nigerians villages and occupied them. Gen Buhari and in word aside another General saluted and showered encomium sought and got permission and drove away this Chadians, and not only driving them away, he drove them 5o km into Chadian territory.

He has also held juicy appointments in Nigeria to help, and when he declared in2011 he said that he never took one kobo belonging to the Nigerian nation for himself. Since he made that statement nobody has been able to controvert him.

“So when Nigerian is celebrating centenary anniversary, despite all the tempest by irresponsible leaders that have held sway of this nation and a civil war of 42 months ethno-religious sentiment by some political leaders, that union still remain intact, why should Gen Buhari not be there to celebrate that 100 years.

He said the party is not bothered by the views by critics about Buhari presence at the centenary occasion, “We as a party and our leader, Gen Buhari do not give a hoot. What Gen Buhari is concerned about is Nigeria being celebrated, and has to be there.

Gen Buhari ruled the country for 20 months meritoriously, also he was a former head of state and a member of the councils of state, and he is a state man.

“He is not just a leader of our party but naturally he will be invited to take part in such function, and is not an indication of aligning with PDP, but showed up there because Nigeria was involved, and he cannot withdraw his participation from where Nigeria is celebrated,” Fashakin stated.










Source - Vanguard News

Commonwealth visa free regime soon – Ashiru


Foreign Affairs Minister, Ambassador Olugbenga Ashiru
Foreign Affairs Minister, Ambassador Olugbenga Ashiru, says the Commonwealth of Nations is planning to introduce a visa free regime for its member states.

Ashiru stated this in Abuja on Monday at a meeting with the Secretary General of the organisation, Kamalesh Sharma.

As a prelude to accomplishing this, the council of ministers of the organisation is to present a proposal for the exemption of holders of official and diplomatic passports from visa requirements at the next CHOGOM meeting scheduled to hold in Colombo, Siri Lanka.

The minister said, “We also discussed the issue of free movement to promote people to people contact within the Commonwealth.

“In the past, it used to be that holders of Commonwealth passports could travel within the commonwealth countries easily without having to go and queue for visas. We are now thinking for ways to ensure that we bring back this old tradition of the Commonwealth.

“Already, the council of ministers have recommended for approval at the next CHOGOM meeting in Colombo the exemption of holders of official and diplomatic passports within the Commonwealth from the requirement of a visa if they are travelling within the commonwealth.”

When approved, he said, other categories of professionals and businessmen would be recommended for similar privileges.

Ashiru added that he and the Secretary General discussed areas of mutual interest ranging from the strengthening of democratic institutions to education and job creation.

Sharma said there was the need to promote better trade and investment relationship among member nations.











Source - Punch News

Mysterious disease with symptoms of demonic possession striking young women

A mysterious disease condition known as “anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis” that exhibits symptoms similar to demonic possession is increasingly striking young women in the United States of America. Anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis is described as a definitively neurological condition with an external cause.

A recent CBS report revealed that young women who develop the condition may act normally one minute, and the next minute develop extreme paranoia or an inability to control their limbs, which experts admit is a result of antibodies attacking the brain, causing swelling and inflammation.

Two young women from the New England area are cited in the story as having suffered from the condition in recent years, which resulted in both of them developing extreme and bizarre side effects such as uncontrollable seizures, drastic mood changes, paranoia, and an inability to function and communicate properly. And the one thing the two had in common was brain inflammation so severe that one prominent area doctor described it as the brain literally being “on fire.”

The women’s experience with anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis was described as “bizarre” and “abnormal”. One woman who relayed her experience said : “I was a relatively normal person, then the next minute I’m hallucinating and insisting that my father had kidnapped me.”

Another woman who suffered from extreme side effects as a result of the condition said “I was very paranoid and manic. There was something wrong. I thought trucks were following me.”

Anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis is said to be an inflammatory and “mysterious” condition with no known cause or cure. Further investigation exposes vaccines as a likely cause of the condition which, as it turns out, can even occur in young boys.

In a review on Anti-NMDA Receptor Encephalitis, Teresa Conrick from AgeOfAutism.com explains how a 2010 study published in the Journal of Neurology identified a link between the condition and vaccines. Not surprisingly, symptoms of anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis were observed to appear not long after children received routine vaccinations and booster shots, suggesting a likely connection.

“We report about a 15-year-old female patient who was diagnosed with anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis after receiving a booster vaccination against tetanus / diphtheria / pertussis and polio (TdaP-IPV),” wrote the authors of the study in a letter to the editors.

“The onset of prodromal symptoms shortly after the immunization is intriguing and suggests the vaccination as a possible trigger of anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis. Therefore, not only infectious agents and tumor antigens but also vaccines should be considered as a possible trigger of immune response in this recently described disorder.”












Source - Vanguard News

Jonathan splashes N3 billion new grant on Nollywood

President Goodluck Jonathan at a presidential dinner to celebrate the industry at 20, held at State House, Marina, Lagos unveiled a N3 billion package to help turnaround Nigeria’s movie industry, Nollywood, which has seen growth in production and sales within past years, but remains heavily criticized for low content quality.

The president said the package, to be launched as “Project Nollywood”, will include grants for the best film scripts, a capacity development fund, and funds for supporting the industry’s infrastructure”.

L-R Governor Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom state; President Goodluck Jonathan, his wife Patience; Wife of the Senate president Mrs Helen Mark; Nollwood actor Chinedu Ikediezu (aka Aki) and President of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria Chief Kola Jimodu at the Presidential dinner to celebrate Nollywood L-R Governor Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom state; President Goodluck Jonathan, his wife Patience; Wife of the Senate president Mrs Helen Mark; Nollwood actor Chinedu Ikediezu (aka Aki) and President of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria Chief Kola Jimodu at the Presidential dinner to celebrate Nollywood
He added that the scheme will be launched in the first week of April, and will be managed by the Ministry of Finance in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture and Tourism.

“I assure you that my Administration will continue to give Nollywood every possible support and assistance to take the Nigerian movie industry to even greater heights of success,” the president said. “I have invited the private sector to this dinner because I believe that they can also support efforts to further develop our entire creative industry.” said Jonathan.

A previous revolving loan scheme of $200 million (N32 billion), announced by the president in 2010 has been plagued by complaints of inaccessibility.

The president said only N766 million of the loan had been released.

“I have asked NEXIM and the Bank of Industry to redouble their efforts in assisting the industry to access loans,” he said.











Source - Vanguard News

British queen leaves hospital after 24 hours

LONDON – Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II smiled as she left hospital on Monday following a one-night stay, having been admitted for the first time in 10 years after suffering from the symptoms of gastroenteritis.

The illness forced her to call off a visit to Rome this week, which would have been her first overseas trip since October 2011.

The sovereign, wearing a scarlet coat with a silver brooch and carrying a black handbag on her left arm, shook hands with a uniformed member of staff on the steps of King Edward VII’s Hospital in central London.

The queen was driven away in a Bentley, accompanied by a protection officer and police motorcycle outriders.

Britain’s head of state has enjoyed robust health and rarely misses engagements.(AFP)

N’Delta: Experts link infertility to oil/gas pollution

Toxicologists in West Africa have warned against uncontrolled environmental pollution in the Niger Delta, blaming rampant cases of bareness among women under the productive age bracket on oil and gas pollution among others.

The West African Society of Toxicologists, WASOT, which converged at the University of Port Harcourt to discuss the “Global Understanding of Chemicals in Health, Diseases and Economics,“ in the region tasked governments in the region to lead a revolution on affirmative action against increasing health hazards posed by environmental pollution in the area.

The conference, which attracted over 200 experts, met between February 20 and 23, 2013 but their communiqué was released yesterday.

The experts, in the study of poisons and their harmful impact on man, said: ‘’We are being faced with a situation where our young girls and women are increasingly experiencing barrenness or having deformed or abnormal children when they are able to give birth,” in the summary resolution adopted after the conference.

Expanding public knowledge on toxicology at the event, Prof. John Anetor, a Pathologist from the University of Ibadan, said from birth to death, endless exposure to industrial emissions of mercury, cadmium, acids, and drugs as well as toxins from food and other natural agents cost man serious health repercussions of lethal consequences.

In his summation, President of WASOT, Prof. Orish Ebere, said the developing world was exceptionally vulnerable due to ineffective regulations and poor mitigating capacity, adding: “In Nigeria, it is even far grimmer for people living in the Niger Delta for obvious reasons of closer exposure to devastating pollutions from oil and gas operations’’.












Source - Vanguard News

Judases in PDP: Governors move to tame Akpabio over comments

ABUJA- STRONG indications emerged yesterday that some governors under the aegis, the Nigeria Governors’ Forum have resolved to move against the newly elected Chairman of governors of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP and governor of AkwaIbom State, Chief Godswill Akpabio.

Vanguard gathered yesterday that some of the governors will meet in Abuja on Wednesday at a neutral place primarily to fashion out how to respond to the new chairman of PDP governors forum especially with regard to his utterances.

Akpabio, Amaechi and Bamanga Tukur
Akpabio, Amaechi and Bamanga Tukur
According to the source, the governors are of the opinion that Akpabio was just one of the governors, and that even if the Chairman of Nigeria Governors’ Forum, NGF and governor of Rivers State, Chibuike Amaechi was removed as chairman in May, the forum will be more united than ever as there was no division among them.

Meanwhile, Vanguard also gathered yesterday that Governor Sule Lamido of Jigawa State Ad-hoc Committee on Adamawa crises has so far received a dozen memoranda, while members of the Committee were presently studying them with a view to submit to President Goodluck Jonathan.

On the meeting against Akpabio, the source noted that nobody can divide the governors and that no amount of money can split them, adding that Akpabio must be checked to avoid making further comments that will polarize the governors having described some of the governors as Judases.

The source told Vanguard yesterday that it was on this basis that the governors who are not comfortable with Akpabio’s utterances considered to be insultive will meet and come up with suggestions on how to check him.

It will be recalled that governor Akpabio during his visit to the PDP National Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur last week Tuesday soon after he became the first Chairman of the new association, had said that if the PDP can put its house in order, it will be better for Nigeria as a country. He also boasted that there were many Judases in the party than the Disciples and his mission was to flush out those he described as Judases, adding that the Party at the moment was facing some challenges and this must end.

Akpabio who was in company of his Bayelsa State Counterpart, Henry Seriake Dickson noted that the problem with PDP has to do with a scenario where the party was engaged in a war with itself, just as he said that PDP was not in a hurry to leave government as it was prepared to win all elections against the backdrop that the PDP belongs to Nigerians and not controlled and owned by an individual.

Akpabio had said, ‘’You know we are having challenges, but the challenges for me with what we have started now have always been a function of PDP, what you saw was an explosion.

‘’PDP is the truly the only national party in Nigeria. PDP cannot lose election because Nigerians have come together to form PDP. PDP belongs to Nigeria and Nigeria belongs to PDP.

‘What has happened to PDP is self explosion and when there is an explosion, there is treachery, and there are more judases than you have disciples. We therefore want to have good disciples. We know that even in Christiandom when Jesus Christ had 12 disciples there was one Judas, but if the Judas were up to nine, then Jesus could have been in trouble, the gospel would have been in trouble today.

‘’What the PDP is trying to do now is to cleanse its house, to try to identify the ones they called Judas and whisper it to them and say go out, the train is moving and you cannot stand otherwise we will crush you.’’









Source - Vanguard News

“He has abandoned the Church”: Angry reverend father burns Pope Benedict XVI’s photo during sermon


Pope farewell
Church chiefs have launched an investigation after an Italian priest set fire to a photograph of former Pope Benedict XVI in front of dozens of stunned worshippers.

Father Andrea Maggi, 67, ignited the picture during a sermon, saying that Benedict had “abandoned” the Catholic Church.

He then went on to compare him to Costa Concordia captain Francesco Schettino, who has been accused of fleeing his post and leaving passengers on the stranded cruise ship.

Father Andrea, a priest for more than 40 years, told the packed service at Santo Stefano church in Castelvittorio near Imperia: “I’m doing this because he has not been a Pope, he has abandoned us. A shepherd never leaves his flock.”

Parishioners including children, looked on amazed as the picture of Benedict, who resigned last week after eight years as Pontiff was enveloped in flames before the priest let it drop to the ground and burn itself out.

Father Andrea is unrepentant, and said: “I’d said that I would burn his picture the day he left and that’s what I did. I’m glad what I did has caused such an outcry – I don’t have maize in my head. We are not in a communist state.

“I’m not interested in his reasons for leaving. The job of Pope is for life. He should not have left. He’s behaved just like (Francesco) Schettino. Where is the proof of his faith?

“The Pope said this was the year of faith and he then leaves his post as head of the church.”

Bishop Alberto Maria Careggio, of the diocese, said: “This was an abominable action. I’m mortified by the actions of Father Andrea who in the past has always been a very generous and sensible priest. I’m arranging a meeting with him as soon as possible.”

Benedict said he made the shock decision – the first time a Pope has resigned in 600 years – because he “felt tired”.

However by stepping down he has angered many Catholics and some senior Church chiefs as the job is for life.

Locals in his parish, which nestles in a picturesque medieval hilltop village, have described him as “very strict and ultra orthodox”.

Before the incident Father Maggi, who has been a priest there for five years, had been complaining bitterly about Benedict’s decision.

Gianstefano Orengo, mayor of Castel Vittorio, who witnessed the incident, said: “Certainly everyone knew Father Andrea was upset and angry at Benedict’s announcement.

“It was a shocking thing to see. I know it may be a difficult time for him but it was still a serious thing to do.”

He pulled out a picture of the Pope and then used a nearby candle to ignite it as he started his sermon.

“It lasted a minute or so and he then said Benedict had acted in a similar fashion to (Francesco) Schettino who left his post when the Costa Concordia struck rocks and with passengers still needed to be saved.

“People were shocked and started complaining and several including myself left the service. There was no justification at all for it even if there are mitigating circumstances.”

Meanwhile cardinals in Rome have begun their discussions ahead of setting a date for the start of the conclave which will elect the next Pope, with the selection process expected to begin in the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel next week.










Source: www.ynaija.com

Benefits of exercise for octogenarians


Octogenarian exercising
In 2009, life expectancy in America was 79.2 years, according to the Population Reference Bureau. The PRB also reported in its February 2011 bulletin that the percentage of Americans over age 85 is expected to rise rapidly. Luckily, physical exercise keeps octogenarians healthy even as they age. Consult your doctor first if you are over 80 and plan to begin an exercise program.


Overall benefits
All types of physical activity are as beneficial for octogenarians as they are for younger people. Exercise helps reduce your risk of heart disease, high blood pressure, colon cancer and diabetes. It can increase endurance and muscle strength for daily activities such as carrying groceries or climbing stairs. Exercise reduces depression, can help you sleep, promotes flexibility and balance, and can help with the swelling and pain from arthritis.

Aerobic exercise

Increasing your heart rate through aerobic exercise is one of the most important kinds of exercise. It improves your body’s ability to take in oxygen and move it throughout your body. Any type of activity that raises your pulse rate and forces you to breathe more deeply counts. Brisk walking, swimming or biking are all possibilities.

Strength training

In the late 1980s, researchers from Tufts University put elderly and frail residents from a nursing home, whose ages ranged from 86 to 96, on a high-intensity strength-training regimen twice a week. The results, published in the “Journal of the American Medical Association” in 1990 reported that the men and women increased their strength by 175 percent and increased their scores on walking speed and balance by 48 per cent.

Concerns for octogenarians

As long as you consult first with your doctor, there is no reason not to exercise. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services makes it official — it is never too late to exercise and every little bit helps. The agency’s 2002 report confirms that the adage “Use it or lose it” reflects scientific fact. The DSHS recommends at least 30 minutes of exercise at least five or more days each week for everyone, including older Americans.

Personal stories

Grace, a 91-year-old woman from California, walks, plays tennis, does yoga and lifts weights. Ruth, who is 87 and from Connecticut, attends exercise and balance class, walks, and lifts dumbbells for 20 to 40 repetitions. Robert, age 80, of Indiana, exercises five times a week at his local gym, using the treadmill, the stationary bike and the stair climber. And William, 85, of Massachusetts, uses aquatic exercise, including deep-water running, to maintain flexibility and stamina.











Source - Punch News

Father ties, locks up six-year-old daughter for witchcraft


Edidiong
A 42-year-old father, Mr. Edet Etok-Akpan, is currently being quizzed at the headquarters of the Cross River State Police Command in Calabar for torturing his six-year-old daughter, Edidiong, as a result of a church prophetess’ pronouncement that the girl was a witch.

Edidiong was beaten by her father and locked up in a room with her hands, mouth and face bound for four days before she was rescued by neighbours.

It was learnt that Etok-Akpan started beating her on February 19 after an unidentified prophetess in their church told him that Edidiong was the witch responsible for the stagnancy in his life.

Narrating her ordeal to PUNCH Metro on Monday, Edidiong said after the beatings which lasted for some days, her father on February 21 tied her hands with a cord and bound her mouth with a piece of cloth.

She said, “He locked me in the inner room of our house and he never gave me food and never allowed me to go to school.”

The girl, who said she is in basic three at Femos Nursery and Primary School located at 24 Etyin Abasi Street, said she was becoming weak after days without food or water.

Luck, however, came her way on February 23, when another child, who lives with her parents in the same 42 Atakpa Street, came to their veranda to look for broom and discovered her.

Giving details of how she was rescued, a lawyer with the Basic Rights Counsel, Mr. James Ibor, said, “The girl went to Edidiong’s veranda to look for a broom and heard the sound of the girl like that of someone battling with her last breath.

“She looked through the louvers of the window and saw Edidiong bound on the floor and raised the alarm. Her parents and other neighbours rushed to the place and saw Edidiong bound inside her apartment.”

Ibor said one of the neighbours called him and he in turn informed the police.

He said, “When the policemen and I got there, we saw a crowd gathered outside. We were able to rescue the child by breaking the door.

“The girl was very weak because she had been without food for days and so we had to give her water first, then after about ten minutes we gave her milk before solid food an hour later.”

Ibor said the culprit and his wife had locked up the girl in the inner room of their two-room apartment and went to church, adding that the girl was presently living with her grandmother in another part of the town.

The state Police Public Relations Officer, Mr. John Umoh, said Etok-Akpan, who is from Akwa Ibom State, had been arrested and would soon appear in court to answer charges of felony.

He said, “To tie a small girl’s hand and mouth and lock her in a room for some days without food is a grievous offence, he shall soon appear in court.”

Umoh, a Deputy Superintendent of Police, warned parents to always treat their children with care, adding criminalities are increasing daily because parents had abandoned their responsibilities to their wards.

He also said the police would visit the church where the father got the prophecy.












Source - Punch News

Dangote now world’s 43rd richest man –Forbes


Dangote
With a net worth of $16.1bn as of March 2013, the President, Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, has moved up in the latest world richest ranking to number 43 from 76 in 2012.

According to the list which was released on Monday by Forbes, Dangote and the Chairman of Globalom, Dr. Mike Adenuga were the only Nigerians on the list.

Dangote, 55, however, retained his position as the richest man in Africa and the richest among manufacturers in the world with a net worth of $16.1bn.

Adenuga, 59, on the other hand, ranked 269 on the list with a net worth of $4.7bn.

The world billionaires, list presented Carlos Slim Helu, a Mexican as the world richest man with a net worth of $73bn, while Bill Gates of United States came second with a net worth of the $67bn.

Others are Armancio Ortega of Spain ($57bn); Warren Buffet, United States ($53.5bn); and Larry Ellison of US with $43bn net worth, coming third, fourth and fifth, respectively.

Forbes said, “To compile net worths, we value individuals’ assets, including stakes in public and private companies, real estate, yachts, art and cash – and account for debt.

“We attempt to vet these numbers with all billionaires. Some cooperate; others don’t. We also consult an array of outside experts in various fields.”

The past year has been eventful for Dangote. In October, he sold off a controlling stake in his flour milling company to Tiger Brands of South Africa and pocketed $190m in cash.

In February, his Dangote Sugar Refineries acquired a 95 per cent stake in Savannah Sugar in a bid to maintain its dominant position in the Nigerian sugar industry.

Dangote started building his fortune more than three decades ago when he began trading in commodities like cement, flour and sugar with a loan he received from his maternal uncle.

He delved into full production of these items in the early 2000s and went on to build the Dangote Group, West Africa’s largest publicly-listed conglomerate, which now owns sugar refineries, salt processing facilities and Dangote Cement.












Source - Punch News

Ezekwezili, others weep as B’Haram victims recount woes


Ezekwesili, others weep as B’Haram victims recount woes
A former Minister of Education and ex-Director-General of the Due Process Office, Dr. Oby Ezekwesili and others, broke down in tears on Monday in Abuja after listening to Pastor Sarana Chinda of All Saints Protestant Church, Hauran Wanki, Barracks, Kano, recount how 17 members of his church were killed for refusing to renounce Jesus Christ.

Ezekwesili also heard from a 45- year-old Deborah Shetima from Borno State how her husband was butchered on April 25, 2012 and how her two children-aged seven and nine-years were abducted by Boko Haram members.

Shetima, who was speaking at a press conference organised by the Christian Association of Nigerian-Americans, said while still moaning over the fate of the abducted children, the sect members came back three months after and killed her third child.

Ezekwesili, wiping tears with her bare hands, described Nigeria as a country that placed no value on human lives.

She said, “Whatever happens to one of us happens to everyone of us. So if we have become a nation that does not put value on human lives, then we are really in a bad place. Listening to these women particularly and seeing what they have to carry alone, you almost feel a sense of abandonment for them. It is almost like they are invisible to the rest of us and that worries me.

“We must get ourselves back to a drawing table and figure out who we really are; what are we and what we have become as a people and as a nation.”

Turning to the journalists present, she asked rhetorically, “Is it right that a mother would watch her husband killed and her two children taken away and does not know where they are up till now and nobody is concerned about them?

“Three months after, they came and killed her son. I know a nation where this thing happened before. It’s called Rwanda and it didn’t end well.”



Pastor Chinda on how Boko Haram killed 17 members of his congregation

“On February 23, 2013, eight out of the 13 people that were killed were my members who worked in a factory. They accompanied one of their relatives to look for work in Kano. It was around 7pm and one of them escaped because he was on night duty. Those who died were on morning shift and as they were relaxing outside that night, four men wearing babanriga (flowing gowns) came in a taxi cab and parked in front of our church.

“They asked, “Are you not supposed to be in church praying? Why are you not in the church with others. They answered that some of them were Muslims. The four men then ordered that Christians should go to one side and Muslims to the other side. So they separated them. They were not satisfied and wanted to make sure that no Muslim was harmed .

“They decided to make inquiry about their names; but the Boko Haram members realised that the names of some of them were Muslim names and they asked, are you people Muslims?We’re you not here when we separated Christians from Muslims. When they finished getting their names, they sprayed bullets on them. But one was lucky to have escaped because he was inside the room.

“After gunning down the 13 people, they ordered that that one that ran inside should come out from hiding or else, they would kill all the women and children in the house. The man became afraid and told them to give him an assurance that if he comes out they won’t kill any woman or child. They swore by Allah that they won’t kill him if he surrenders. The guy came out and they shot him dead.

“The only one that escaped among the 14 factory workers was the one that went to fetch water. He ran to my house and informed me that they had killed our people. As I prepared to drive to the scene, my wife wanted to follow me but I refused. But when I got there, I saw the corpses everywhere . I made some calls and policemen came and took the corpses away. I started looking for the identity of the people and it was then I saw somebody who said he sent for them to come and look for work.”



Jonathan blamed

The Christian Association of Nigerian -Americans berated the Jonathan administration’s lethargy in seeking an end to the spate of bombings and killings by the religious sect.

The President of CANAN, Dr. James Fadele and the Executive Director, Mr. ‘Laolu Akande, who addressed a press conference in company with the General Secretary of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Dr. Musa Asake, in Abuja, therefore advised the government to be proactive and seek foreign intervention in fighting the sect.

Boko Haram, an Islamic fundamentalist group, is believed to have killed over 1,000 persons since it began its onslaught on military formations, places of worship and relaxation centres in 2009.



Government is helpless

Akande, who first spoke, said, “I think government itself has expressed helplessness. President Jonathan had said on several occasions that this(Boko Haram) problem is big. We believe that the Nigerian government cannot handle this problem anymore.”

Buttressing the groups’ belief that the Jonathan administration had not shown the political will to end the sect’s activities, Akande said government should be more determined to prosecute members of the National Assembly that had been found to have links with Boko Haram.

He added, “There are instances of lack of political will on the part of the Federal Government. There are cases of some supporters of Boko Haram in the National Assembly .

“Government can become more aggressive in going after members of Boko Haram and those supporting this sect. The government is not proactive; the government should be proactive and also seek support from other countries like the United States to deal with Boko Haram because this is an international problem.

“I wish the government can do more in protecting the lives of Nigerians. Some of the cases are not even reported. How can somebody be going to another person’s house to kill . It is sad and it also speaks of the breakdown of law and order in the country. If government cannot provide law and order, it then becomes worrisome.”



$50,000 donation for Boko Haram victims

In his comment, Fadele said Nigerian Christians in the US had taken notice of the impact of the actions of Boko Haram and therefore wanted all Nigerians to “rise up by providing financial and material support to the victims of Boko Haram attacks in northern Nigeria.”

He said, “We are concerned about the widows and are touched by the plight of the orphans. We reckon that many of these individuals are left without a source of livelihood.

“We have heard that CAN is setting up a Relief Fund where Nigerians can donate money and materials to support the victims. For instance, victims’ children can benefit from scholarships taken out from such a fund. Towards such a fund, CANAN is making an initial widow’s mite of $50,000.

“If backers of terrorists are raising the money to perpetuate acts of terror, supporters of and advocates for peace can no longer look the other way. We want to join hands with CAN today to call on Nigerian philanthropists, businesses, and captains of industry, well-to-do individuals and all people of goodwill to consider the apparent financial plight of Boko Haram victims and lend a helping hand.



CANAN not a political group

“CANAN does not conceive itself as a political group. We are an advocate for innocent and helpless people being slaughtered in their places of worship. Christians are being killed, churches are being attacked and destroyed, health workers and doctors are being assassinated, markets are being ravaged, police precincts are being vanquished, and neighborhoods are being tormented. This wickedness must stop. We commend the bold leadership of CAN for speaking up in a categorical and courageous manner.













Source - Punch News

Eaglets wallop Botswana’s Diamond Zebras 9 – 0

Abuja – Manu Garba, Chief Coach of the U-17 National team, Golden Eaglets, on Monday said the team was still in progress in spite of thrashing Botswana by nine goals to nothing.

In a statement signed by the team’s spokesperson, Morakinyo Abodunrin, the coach said the team would not rest on its oars.

“ First and foremost, we thank God for what we have been able to achieve with this team, but we are not going to rest on our oars.

“This team is still in progress and we pray that God should crown our efforts in the end,’’ Garba said.

On his part, Botswana coach, Kagiso Kobedi, said the experience gathered during the friendly match would be useful to his players during the competition in Morocco.

The Eaglets on Monday walloped the Diamond Zebras of Botswana 9-0 in an international friendly.

The match was the team’s second friendly since the Eaglets resumed camping on Feb. 2 in Calabar in preparation for the 2013 African Youth Championship.

The continental championship will take place in Morocco from April 13 to 27.

NAN recalls that the Eaglets had on Saturday defeated Botwana 3-0 on 12-0 aggregate in three days.

The Eaglets had only a goal to their credit in the first 45 minutes of the game but went on in the second half to score eight goals in 45 minutes.

The opener came from Musa Yahaya in the 17th minute and further scored a hat-trick in the 60th and 71st minutes.

Ifeanyi Matthew also joined in the hat-trick with goals in 53rd, 65th and 69th minutes.

Substitutes Chinedu Enedemu and Odigbo Godwin scored in the 75th and 87th minutes respectively.(NAN)

War over Mba: NFF decides

The committee empanelled by the Nigeria Football Federation to resolve the controversy over the ownership of Super Eagles’ Cup of Nations star Sunday Mba will meet in Abuja on Wednesday.

Controversy has been raging among several clubs over the ownership of the nimble-footed marksman who scored the winner against the Elephants of Cote d’Ivoire in the quarter finals and the only goal in the final match against Burkina Faso’s Etalons at the 29th Africa Cup of Nations that ended in South Africa last month.

Already, the committee has invited officials of two-time CAF Champions League winners Enyimba FC of Aba, Enugu Rangers, Dolphin FC of Port Harcourt and Warri Wolves, alongside the player himself.

“The committee will sit on Wednesday and we will look at all papers presented by all parties, and be guided by the rules, without fear or favour.

We will look thoroughly into the matter with the highest sense of responsibility and take just decision, in order for the player to continue his club and national team career with peace of mind and comfort,” said Dr. Mohammed Sanusi, NFF’s Director of Competitions.












Source - Vanguard News

Bail denial: Drama as pension thief, Yusuf, slumps in court

ABUJA—There was a mild drama at the Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, day, as the convicted pension thief, Mr. John Yusufu, slumped inside the dock shortly after trial Justice Adamu Bello deferred ruling on his bail application till March 11.

Yusufu, who was convicted on January 27 after he confessed to have stolen about N23 billion from the Police Pension Fund, had been in Kuje Prison since January 30, when he was re-arraigned over his alleged complicity in another N300 million fraud.

Yusuf after his conviction recently
Yusuf after his conviction recently

Prior to his ordeal, the accused was an Assistant Director of Pension in the Police Affairs Ministry.

He is currently answering to a fresh 4-count criminal charge preferred against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.

The accused was said to have on or about February 14, 2012, knowingly failed to make full disclosure of his assets and liability in the Declaration of Assets Form he filled and submitted, and equally failed to declare that he owns a company known as AY-A Global Services Limited.

He was said to have used the name of the company and lodged in a fixed deposit account with the Zenith Bank, the sum of N250 million, N10 million in a fixed deposit account with the First Bank of Nigeria Plc, and another N29 million which he was said to have instructed one Danjuma Mele to lodge in his company account in the name of Jidag Technical Services Ltd with Diamond Bank.

The offence according to the EFCC, is punishable under section 27 (3) of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (Establishment e.t.c) Act Cap E1 2004.

However, though Yusufu had through his lead counsel, Mr. Maiyaki Bala, begged the court to allow him to go home on the day he was docked, vowing that he would be available to face his trial.

Justice Adamu Bello declined, saying he should file a formal bail application.

Though the court initially fixed March 1 to hear the application, it subsequently adjourned the motion till yesterday to entertain arguments from both the accused and the prosecution.

At the resumed sitting yesterday, the accused person pleaded the court to grant him bail on liberal terms, just as he implored the court to take judicial notice that he has regularly attended his trial with utmost dedication.

In opposition to his bail application dated February 18, EFCC lawyer Chief Rotimi Jacobs, contended that the court must exercise its discretion based on the established principles of facts of the case, saying the court should consider the criminal antecedents of the accused person.

Rotimi emphasised that the accused was previously convicted of criminal breach of trust, stressing that in view of such criminal record, he should not be trusted to return before the court to continue his trial once released from prison custody.

Consequently, he urged trial Justice Bello to allow the accused person to remain in custody pending hearing and determination of the charge against him, adding that he would be ready to conclude the trial within two clear days since his witnesses were all set to testify in the matter.

After listening to the arguments, Justice Bello deferred ruling on the bail application, just as he okayed one of the witnesses who was in court yesterday to mount the dock.

At that juncture, the accused person who was visibly apprehensive all through the proceeding slumped in the dock, a situation that caused commotion in the court room with his lawyers rushing to his aid.

Sequel to the situation, Justice Bello had no option than to adjourn the case till March 11, directing that the Prison authorities should give medical attention to the accused person









Source - Vanguard News

150 cardinals converge on Vatican

Talks by Catholic cardinals to choose a successor to Pope Benedict began, Monday, at the Vatican but the choice of a date when they would shut themselves into the Sistine Chapel to start voting for the new pontiff was delayed to allow more priests to arrive.

The conclave is expected to commence March 11. However, 12 of the 115 eligible cardinals expected to vote have not shown up at press time.

Meanwhile, those expecting a new Catholic Pontiff to be elected urgently may have to wait for couple of days longer as the issue is one of the last items on the agenda of 150 cardinals, who converged on the Vatican, yesterday, for the first pre-conclave meeting since Pope Emeritus, Benedict XVI stepped down last Thursday.

Faced with a heap of scandals, including sexual misconduct and child abuse among the clergy, the cardinals have a lot of issues on their plate aside electing a new pope.

This handout picture released on March 4, 2013 by the Vatican press office shows Cardinals  Angelo Sodano (C) and cardinal chamberlain Tarcisio Bertone (R) opening talks ahead of a conclave to elect a new pope after Benedict XVI's resignation, as an absent British cardinal admitted to sexual misconduct with priests. The Vatican meetings will set the date for the start of the conclave this month and help identify candidates among the cardinals to be the next leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics. AFP PHOTO / OSSERVATORE ROMANO/HO  RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / OSSERVATORE ROMANO" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS
Cardinals meet ahead of conclave to elect a new pope after Benedict XVI’s resignation,  AFP PHOTO
While all cardinals are expected to partake in deliberating on the challenges facing the church, only 115 cardinals, who are under 80 years, will elect Benedict’s successor.

During the pre-conclave meetings, the cardinals will set a date for their conclave to choose a new pope but before they get to that, there are plenty of other businesses to discuss.

The cardinals said they have so much hard talking to do, many say these discussions could take a week or longer before they are ready to move to the Sistine Chapel to begin voting on a new pope.

The meeting is coming as Cardinal Keith O’Brien, a top Scottish cardinal who amid sexual abuse allegations, issued an apology yesterday and said there had been times his sexual conduct “has fallen below the standards expected of me as a priest, archbishop and cardinal.”

Cardinals arrive

At the appointed hour yesterday, the cardinals began to emerge from the nooks and crannies of the Vatican for the pre-conclave meeting. Some came in groups, some came by taxi and others by private car and minibuses.

They are not in Vatican City at this stage to vote on a new pope, but to discuss the many problems facing the1.2 billion Catholic faithful, from the ongoing child abuse scandal to financial mismanagement.

Chicago Cardinal, Francis George, said the church has obvious troubles it cannot avoid. There are questions on how much of a role the scandals will play in the discussions now and whether or not they have essentially usurped the intended aim of these initial meetings.

‘Scandals won’t affect deliberations’

But Cardinal George insists the intended aims have not been usurped. “I don’t think they’ve been usurped, but they do create context for our discussion. We follow the press, sometimes happily and sometimes no,” he said.

With the papal election so wide open this time, people hang on every word of the cardinals— and there are few words. The unwritten rule in the Vatican is, “never say you want the job.” And if you find your name circulating on lists of potential candidates, say you’re unworthy.

Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet is seen by many as a compromise contender, but he knows what often happens to favourites in the conclave.

“There is this famous saying, the one that gets in as pope, gets out as cardinal,” he told Canadian television.

“A Latin American Pope is possible. Everything is possible!” said Portuguese Cardinal Jose Saraiva Martins, as he entered.

The core agenda item is to set the date for the conclave and set in place procedures to prepare for it, including closing the Sistine Chapel to visitors and getting the Vatican hotel cleared out and de-bugged, lest anyone try to listen in on the secret conversations of the cardinals.

A date for the conclave, according to the dean of the College of Cardinals, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, won’t be finalised until all cardinals have arrived in Rome.

Cardinal O’Brien apologises

The first day of discussion was again rocked by revelations of scandal, with Scottish Cardinal Keith O’Brien admitting that he had engaged in sexual misconduct not befitting a priest, archbishop or cardinal.

Cardinal Keith O’Brien had been Britain’s highest-ranking Catholic leader until he resigned last Monday from his position as archbishop of St. Andrews and Edinburgh, a departure prompted by a newspaper report about unnamed priests’ allegations that he acted inappropriately toward them.

O’Brien, 74, resigned last week following published reports that he made unwanted sexual advances toward four priests in Scotland in the 1980s. The cardinal initially denied the claims, but said last week he would not participate in the conclave to choose Benedict’s successor because the allegations were a distraction.

However, O’Brien reversed course yesterday, issuing a statement asking for forgiveness. He said: “In recent days certain allegations which have been made against me have become public. Initially, their anonymous and non-specific nature led me to contest them.

“However, I wish to take this opportunity to admit that there have been times that my sexual conduct has fallen below the standards expected of me as a priest, archbishop and cardinal. To those I have offended, I apologise and ask forgiveness.”

The Vatican appears to be aiming to have a new pope elected next week and officially installed several days later so he can preside over the Holy Week ceremonies starting with Palm Sunday on March 24 and culminating in Easter the following Sunday.

‘The pope Catholics need’

High on the agenda at the general congregations will be the daunting challenges that will face the next pontiff, including the sexual abuse crisis that has rocked the Church and last year’s Vatileaks scandal, which exposed corruption and rivalries in the Vatican’s bureaucracy.

“We need a man of governance, by that I mean a man who is able, with the people he chooses to help him in an intimate way, to govern the Church,” Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, the former Archbishop of Westminster in London, told BBC radio.

“Among the things we will be talking about out here are precisely the need in looking for a new pope for these failings that have happened again to be treated, to be faced strongly,”he added.

The cardinals are expected to hold one or two meetings a day. The Vatican seems keen to have only a week of preliminary talks so the 115 “cardinal electors” can enter the Sistine Chapel for the conclave next week. The exact date for its start has not been decided.

“We have meetings all this week to get to know each other better and consider the situations that we face,” said Cardinal Andre Vingt-Trois of Paris as he entered. He said he could not say at this stage “who will be the best one to respond to them.”

Cardinals expect to be briefed on a secret report to the pope on the problems highlighted by the Vatileaks scandal, when documents, which alleged corruption in the Vatican and infighting over the running of its bank, were leaked to the media.










Source - Vanguard News

Parents, cyber cafes appeal to JAMB on registration

WARRI— CONCERNED parents and JAMB registered cyber cafe owners in Warri, Delta State, have appealed to the Registrar of JAMB to open more centres urgently to save the future of candidates wishing to write the 2012/2013 Universal Tertiary Matriculation Examination, UTME.

The association said in a statement by its Chairman, Iwetan Solomon and Secretary, Richard Ijakpimi that “since the middle of January, all centres in Edo, Delta, Rivers and Bayelsa states, had been filled up.”

It added that some towns, which previously had more centres were reduced this year, while more people from Nigerian Defence Academy, NDA, polytechnics, part-time Navy and others have been compulsorily made to write UTME examination.

The association said that when JAMB decided to open one centre each in Asaba and Benin, it took just two hours to fill the centres and “there are many more candidates that are waiting for centres, whose finger prints had been captured already.”

It called on JAMB authorities to create more paper, pencil, test centres, so “candidates do not see the examination as punishment.”










Source - Vanguard News

FG targets 3.5m new jobs

Federal Government, Monday, said it has mapped out strategies to create 3.5 million jobs across the country through the development of the micro, small and medium enterprise, MSME, sector, just as it kicked off the National Enterprise Development Programme, NEDEP.

Minister of Trade and Investment, Mr. Olusegun Aganga, said NEDEP had been developed with the objective of harnessing the opportunities in the MSME sector to drive inclusive economic growth through skills training and development, job creation and wealth generation.

The minister, who spoke during the first stakeholders’ meeting on NEDEP, also added that the Federal Government would set up an MSME Council, comprising the Federal, state and local governments to streamline and harmonise all MSME development activities across the country to achieve maximum impact.

He said: “If we are going to develop our economy and turn our quantity advantage into productive advantage, one of the most important sectors that we have to focus on is the MSME sector.”

“Despite the little support the MSME sector has received over the years, the sector currently contributes to about 75 percent of Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product and employs more than 45 percent of our people.

“Even developed economies rely heavily on MSMEs for job creation, wealth generation and inclusive economic growth. NEDEP is an initiative spearheaded by the Federal Ministry of Trade and Investment and its three parastatals.”










Source - Vanguard News

Will Eko Atlantic, city rising from the sea, turn the tide?

LAGOS (AFP) – A Nigerian city is rising from the sea, swelling the country’s hopes of one day turning back the tide of negative impressions and serving as a showcase to the world.

The massive project taking shape along the coast will see a new, privately run city built on land reclaimed from the Atlantic Ocean.

However, the Dubai-like project, called Eko Atlantic, is not without controversy since it will be privately administered throughout, including providing its own security, steady electricity supply and clean water.

Such services are largely unavailable to average Nigerians, with the government so far unable to provide them reliably in a country that ranks as Africa’s most populous nation and largest oil producer.

Construction on the edge of Lagos, Nigeria’s largest city, has drawn high-profile attention, with ex-US president Bill Clinton among dignitaries at a recent ceremony marking the halfway point of land reclamation.

Gilbert Chagoury, one of the powerful businessmen behind the project, has contributed between $1 million and $5 million to the Clinton Foundation, its online records show.

Developers say the 10-square kilometre city, expected to be home to some 250,000 people, will restore the coastline to where it was before erosion gradually peeled it away.

“You have said, ‘Let’s protect ourselves and build something beautiful, something that will last, something that will create opportunity and employment and advance aspirations, and … brand this nation as a nation of the 21st century,” Clinton said at the event.

Land reclamation began in 2008 and work is now far enough along that it is possible to envision a city rising from what used to be the sea. Some five square kilometres of rebuilt land now stretches out like a moonscape.

Sand has been dredged from the ocean and transported to the site, protected by a giant sea wall — dubbed the Great Wall of Lagos — partly made of five-tonne interlocking blocks and designed to guard against erosion and flooding.

It will include a mix of residential and office buildings, clearly designed for an elite segment of Nigeria’s largely impoverished population.

While it will not be a gated community, it will be policed by private security with the help of strategically placed cameras.

In addition to the planned 250,000 residents, the city is also intended to serve as a workplace for another 150,000 people.

The developers are South Energyx Nigeria Limited, a subsidiary of the Nigeria-based Chagoury Group, a sprawling industrial and financial empire run by a family of Lebanese origin with major influence.

The multi-billion dollar project in some ways resembles those carried out in places like Dubai, where islands have been constructed from reclaimed land and developed.

David Frame, head of South Energyx, said plans called for it to be privately administered since it needs to be constructed according to international standards to attract global investment.

While it has been promoted as a signature project for the country and for Lagos, a city of some 15 million people, activists have questioned whether it will stand as another symbol of the gap between a corrupt elite and the masses of poor in Nigeria.

Most in the country of 160 million people continue to live on less than $2 per day and eke out a living where they can. Some expressed hope that the project would lead to other forms of development to benefit average Nigerians.

“The government must play a key role in certain areas — security, infrastructure,” said Auwal Ibrahim Musa Rafsanjani of the Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre, Transparency International’s local partner

“We cannot hand over the development of Nigeria to individuals and to private agents.”

Tragedy as DPO dies after crashing into stationary truck

WARRI – THE Divisional Police Officer, DPO, in-charge of the Nigerian Ports Authority, NPA, police station Warri, Deputy Superintendent of Police, DSP, Solomon Ohaka crashed into a stationary articulated truck at the port area and died on the spot.

He was driving a Mercedes Benz car with number plate LAGOS AJ180 FKJ and allegedly left his living quarters of less than 300 metres away only to crash into the parked trailer crossing the expressway leading into and out of the Port on top speed.

According to reports, almost half of the car went under the truck from the drivers’ side.

Policemen from the NPA station immediately clamped down the front tyres of the truck on the day of the ghastly accident before towing it to their station pending when the driver would show up.

Port workers, drivers, petty traders and other business persons around the spot of the accident thanked God that the trailer was there to stop the car, otherwise some of them would have been sent to their early graves.

No officer of the NPA police station was ready to comment on the issue while the chairman of the NPA workers Union popularly called Skippo and Chairman of the trailer owners association, Mr. David Iwere, promised to get back to Vanguard at the appropriate time after due consultation.

A real cross to bear: Globetrotting Christian carries 12ft crucifix around the world for 26 YEARS

Lindsay Hamon has spent almost half his life trekking through 19 countries including India, New Zealand and Sri Lanka, with his giant 12ft by 6ft cedar wood crucifix.

Christian Lindsay Hamon carries his cross near Taunton, Somerset, on the latest leg of his journey (SWNS)

Globetrotting Christian Lindsay Hamon really does have his own cross to bear - after hauling a 12ft crucifix thousands of miles round the world for 26 YEARS.

Lindsay Hamon has spent almost half his life trekking through 19 countries including India, New Zealand and Sri Lanka, with his giant cross.

The committed preacher has been thrown out of St Peter's Square in Rome, shot at in Bangladesh, and attacked by angry zealots, but insists he won't give up his one-man quest.

Mr Hamon, a part-time care worker, has taken 'spreading the word of God' to a whole new level since starting out with his 12ft cedar wood cross in 1987, and has only spent a handful of weeks without it since.

He carries the huge cross, which has a wheel on the foot of the upright, over his shoulder for up to 12 hours a day, and often has no idea where he will sleep that night.


Lindsay carries the cross through Red Square, Moscow in 1992. (SWNS)

And Mr Hamon, from Camborne, Cornwall, admits he has feared for his life over the years during his journey.

He said: "There is a reaction from people straight away, you end up talking and connecting to people you wouldn't normally talk to.


"People start opening up about there own lives and you end up sharing with them something that is most personal.

"I find people often want to talk, but if people don't want to know I walk on.

"The love you get from it all is amazing, people will just stop and ask you questions, offer you food and sometimes a place to stay."


Lindsay smiles for the camera while carrying his giant crucifix through Walthamstow, north London in the mid-1980s …


"There is fear there sometimes because I have a wife and kids and you don't want to put yourself in danger. It is really trusting in God, knowing he will protect you."

Lindsay first took up the 12ft by 6ft tall cedar wood cross in 1987 and has only spent a handful of weeks without the crucifix.

He manages to get the giant cross overseas by dismantling it into three 6ft long pieces of wood and declaring it as extra luggage on flights.


Since 1987 he has traveled to Bangladesh, Belarus, Belgium, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Holland, Hungary, India, Ireland, Italy, Nepal, New Zealand, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Sri Lanka and the
United Kingdom.

He receives generous donations from supporters to help him stay on the road, but with a mortgage, car insurance etc, he stops to carry out carework in his home town in order to pay the bills.

"I tried giving up my full time work and doing this full time instead but I didn't get enough money to make ends meet," he added.
Journey: Lindsay with his large cross in St Peter's Square, Rome in 2008 (SWNS)

It is estimated Lindsay has spoken to thousands of curious people during his treks around the world and has shaken hands and prayed with many more.

He often finds himself ministering to prostitutes or invited to brothels, and will regularly spend nights in bus shelters or basic accomodation with only a sleeping bag, and a hole in the floor for a bathroom.

Even language barriers do not hold the preacher back and he regularly finds himself mobbed by hundreds of locals wanting to hear him speak, even if they do not understand.

He said: "As you can expect in the UK language isn't a problem. I walk into town centres and try and say hello to everyone I can but I realise that some people don't want to talk.

"You shake hands with people a lot and some ask you to pray with them. Oddly some of the best conversations I have had have been at pubs where people are willing to sit down and give the time to talk to you.

"I can speak a bit of Spanish and French but other than that it can be a bit of a problem.

"When I'm in countries where I don't know the language I try to write out a prayer in the language so I can show people that, and often I will just pray in English anyway.

"Sometimes you get people who translate for you, I had one young boy who came out of no where when I was talking to around 20 or 30 people and he just translated everything.


Lindsay also trekked through Nepal in 2011 on his epic cross-carrying journey (SWNS)

"When it was done he just disappeared, I never knew who he was or where he came from, it's amazing."

He is currently on the road in England, travelling from Taunton, in Somerset, to Bristol, before heading south to Exeter and finally onwards to see his wife and dog at home in Cornwall.

His next trip abroad will be to Latvia in May, before he will move on to Cambodia after the rainy season has ended.








Source: Yahoo News