Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Bayern, Barcelona Do-Or-Die Battle Tonight


There is no doubt that Bayern Munich need a performance of extraordinary measures if they are to overcome Barcelona in the second leg of their Champions League semi-final tonight.

Barcelona were 3-0 winners in the first leg last week, with a brace from Lionel Messi and late Neymar effort leaving the Spanish side as the strong favourites to make an eighth European Cup final.

Injuries have hit Bayern hard in the last couple of months and they will again be without a number of key players in Munich. David Alaba, Holger Badstuber, Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben are all still on the sidelines, but Robert Lewandowski is expected to play once again with a facial mask.

Mehdi Benatia, Xabi Alonso, Rafinha and Manuel Neuer all started the Augsburg match on the bench and should return, while Mario Gotze will be hoping for a spot in the XI.
•Bayern coach, Guardiola (left) and Barca Manager, Enrique go to war tonight in Munich
•Bayern coach, Guardiola (left) and Barca
Manager, Enrique go to war tonight in Munich

Notwithstanding this tough duel, David Olatokunbo Alaba is optimistic that the German champions can overturn a 3 – 0 first leg defeat.
The Austria international sat out the tie at the Camp Nou, and will miss tomorrow’s game at Allianz-Arena even though he has resumed light training with the Bavarians.

“In the second leg, we’ll win 4-0 and I hope I’m fit to play the final in Berlin,” said David Alaba.

Josep Guardiola, Bayern coach is very positive going into the match, he said: “We are happy we are in the semi-finals. We are 3-0 down and we are up against the best team of the last 15 years. We have to defend well first and foremost and then see how the game goes. You never know what might happen – for 77 minutes it was 0-0 in Barcelona.”

Thomas Muller believes Munich can make a statement to the footballing world by surmounting their three-goal deficit to beat Barcelona, saying “I wouldn’t say that we need a miracle. Since we left the Camp Nou we have wanted to make up for it.

“If we go through, it will be a statement which the football world didn’t expect. Whether or not that could be classed as a miracle is up to you, but in football, many things are possible.

“That’s why there’s still hope and we still believe in ourselves. We’re in a similar position to when we were sat here two weeks ago. We can’t expect things to go like they did against Porto, but that’s what we need.”

Italy better than Libya but Nigeria is worst – Nigerian mother

This photo provided by the Italian Navy’s Press Office Monday, May 4, 2015 shows a baby born on a navy vessel Sunday, May 3, 2015. The navy said a woman, in labor when rescued Sunday, gave birth to a girl aboard of its patrol ship ‘Bettica’. Mother and daughter are fine, and the patrol boat, carrying 654 migrants who were saved in four different rescue operations, headed to port. (Italian Navy via AP)

RAGUSA, Italy (Reuters) A Nigerian who gave birth on a warship after the Italian navy rescued her from a migrant boat has said that “Italy is better than Libya and Nigeria is the worst.”
She told Reuters on Monday her new daughter would have a better life in Europe, explaining why she risked the dangerous voyage.

Francesca Marina, named after St. Francis and the Italian navy, was 3.37 kilos (7 pounds, 7 ounces) when she was delivered aboard the Bettica naval vessel in the Mediterranean a week ago. Once ashore, she suffered from seizures and was put in intensive care.

A week on, both Stephanie Samuel, the 24-year-old Nigerian mother, and Francesca Marina have recovered. Doctors at the Sicilian hospital said they would probably be transferred to an immigration centre for families with small children in a few days time.

The story of the migrant baby born aboard a navy ship captured international media attention at the end of one of the busiest weekends for sea crossings from Libya to Europe this year, in which about 6,800 were rescued and dozens are said to have drowned.

Samuel worked for two years in Tripoli as a housemaid to save money to pay smugglers for the trip, but then the boat she set off in with about 90 others stalled after only three hours at sea.
By the time they were picked up by the Bettica off the Libyan coast seven hours later, she was unconscious after suffering epileptic seizures and had gone into labour.

“I didn’t expect the baby, you know, but she just like, she just came,” Samuel said. “I just wanted to leave Libya. Italy is better than Libya and Nigeria is the worst.”
About her daughter, she said: “God decides, not me … but I believe she will have a more good future in Europe.”

So far this year more than 30,000 people have reached Italy by sea from North Africa, mostly Libya. More than 170,000 came last year. The Interior Ministry has said 200,000 might make it to Italy’s shores in 2015.
While many are political refugees like Syrians, fleeing civil war, or Eritreans, escaping forced military conscription, others like Samuel are economic migrants in search of a better life.

She said her husband, who is still working in Libya, was ready to risk the sea crossing to be with his daughter and wife as soon as he could afford to pay smugglers who demand up to $1,500 for passage on an overcrowded, rickety boat.

Bamaiyi: Afe Babalola Chambers deny involvement in N8.6bn fraud

Fred Ajudua
Henry Ojelu
Fred Ajudua
Fred Ajudua

The law firm of Chief Afe Babalola today denied that it received payments from a one-time Lagos socialite, Fred Ajudua, to represent a former Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Ishaya Bamaiyi.

A Senior Advocate of Nigeria and Managing Partner of the firm, Mr Adebayo Adenipekun (SAN), made the denial while testifying at the trial of a court registrar, Oluronke Rosolu before Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo of a Lagos State High Court in Ikeja.

Led in evidence by the EFCC counsel, Mr Seidu Atteh, Adenipekun said he was the chamber’s head of administration during the period of the said transaction.

“Ajudua did not brief our firm to represent Bamaiyi at any time. That is not correct. We did not receive any legal fee from Ajudua in respect of the general.
Afe Babalola
Afe Babalola

“We were never briefed to represent Bamaiyi and we did not receive any money from Ajudua,” Adenipekun maintained.

Following his brief testimony, the court adjourned the matter till May 13 for continuation of trial.
It will be recalled that Bamaiyi had alleged that Rosulu, a former registrar to Justice Joseph Oyewole, collected $330,000 from him on behalf of Ajudua on Nov.20, 2004.

Bamaiyi said the money was given to her as part payment of the legal fees requested by Afe Babalola Chambers to represent him in his murder charge before Justice Oyewole.

According to him, the alleged fraud took place between November 2004 and June 2005 while he was on remand alongside Ajudua in Kirikiri Maximum Prison.

Universal Energy commence crude oil production at Stubb Creek

 Stubbs Creek
Universal Energy Resources Limited has announced commencement of crude oil production from its Stubb Creek Field in Akwa Ibom state, following approval to embark on delivery of oil through Exxon Mobil’s Qua Iboe Terminal, which came on-stream in early February 2015.

With this achievement, Universal Energy has joined the league of marginal oil field producing companies in Nigeria, having successfully completed the construction of an Early Production Facility and building of the necessary 23 km pipeline from the Stubb Creek Field to Exxon Mobil’s Qua Iboe Terminal to enable evacuation and delivery.

Commercial oil production from the Stubb Creek Field is at an initial gross rate of 2,000 bpd with plans to increase the processing capacity to 8,000 bpd.
Commenting on this milestone, Bassey Umoh, Managing Director, Universal Energy, said Universal Energy has achieved a major milestone in the long term development plan for the Stubb Creek Field which is the first oil from this marginal field. The marginal field round was executed with the aim of enabling domestic companies to bring smaller marginal fields on-stream and we are proud to have achieved this.

“As a team, Universal Energy wishes to ‎express sincere appreciation and thanks to everyone who provided support and significantly contributed to the successful completion of the Stubb Creek Early Production Facility Project in Unyenge, Mbo Local Government Area; from conceptualisation, through to development and achieving first oil delivery. Particular thanks to our esteemed Board Chairman and Members, Seven Energy International Limited (which owns 62.5 per cent equity interest in Universal Energy), other shareholders, our Joint Venture Technical Partner – Sinopec International Petroleum Exploration and Production Company (Nigeria) Ltd and the current Universal Energy management team and our retired and serving staff,” Umoh said.

He added that: “We also value the immense contribution of Universal Energy project team and the numerous contractors, suppliers and vendors that have all played a part in the accomplishment of this goal in the development journey of the Stubb Creek Field.”

“Universal Energy appreciates the support of the Federal Government of Nigeria and its functionaries, the Akwa Ibom State Government, relevant Government Regulatory Agencies including Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), Federal Ministry of Environment (FMEN), Federal Ministry of Trade and Industry (FMTI), Nigerian National Petroleum Cooperation (NNPC) Commercial Division, Nigeria Content Development Management Board (NCDMB), as well as Nigeria Security Agencies.

“Lastly but most importantly, we would like to commend our host communities in Akwa Ibom State for their support in creating a conducive environment for our operations and granting us access to operate in the immediate and outer communities.”

He then assured Nigerians that the company will maintain the highest standard. “We would like to offer our assurance that Universal Energy will continue to uphold the Industry Best Practices while carrying out its operations and in accordance with the Laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” Umoh stated.

Don Jazzy, Mavins set to join Glo in multi-million naira deal

 Mavin Crew
In a move set to rock the corporate and entertainment world, Don Jazzy and the Mavins look set to ‘port’ from MTN to Nigerian-owned telecommunications giant, Globacom.
The audacious move comes just months before the contract of Nigeria’s foremost producer is due for renewal with MTN.

According to a source close to negotiations, news of Don Jazzy’s availability came up just as Globacom was preparing offers to add Mavin’s rising musicians Di’Ja, Reekado Banks and Korede Bello to their fold of brand ambassadors.

The source added that not only is Glo eager to sign the young ones all at once, they are determined to break the bank by also offering a record -breaking deal to the Mavin Records CEO.
Don Jazzy, who currently has just two months to run on his MTN deal, recently broke the internet with news of his signing with online retail giant, Konga.

He is considered an overlord of social media influencers and played an active role in creating awareness for the All Progressives Congress in the just concluded elections.
Although the other Mavin acts – Tiwa Savage, Dr. Sid, D’Prince – all have individual deals with MTN, any move to Glo by the head honcho would most likely result in a mass exodus which would hit the South African telco hard.

The trio of Di’Ja, Reekado Banks and Korede Bello were signed to Mavin Records a year ago and have already planted their feet firmly in the Nigerian music industry, with hit solos and collaborations.
Sierra-Leonean-Nigerian Hadiza Blell (Di’Ja) is the sonorous voice behind the love song, Awww. Her music career started off with relative acclaim in Canada before she moved back to Nigeria in what has turned out to be a most lucrative decision: joining Mavin Records.

Korede Bello, consistently sets the hearts of his female fans racing with songs like African Prince and Cold Outside. He also has an endorsement deal with Woodin under his belt.

Reekado Banks, hailed by many for not just his good voice but his street cred, is best known for his song, Chop Am. The graduate of the University of Lagos is a favourite amongst young Nigerians.
All efforts to get a statement from Mavin Records PR proved abortive as they declined to comment as at the time of publication.

Ahmadu Ali’s son re-arraigned for N4.5b subsidy fraud

 Mamman Ali
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC today re-arraigned Mamman Ali, son of former Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Ahmadu Ali and two others for alleged complicity in N4.5 billion fuel subsidy fraud.

Ali was re-arraigned alongside another oil marketer, Christian Taylor and his company— Nasaman Oil Services Ltd before Justice Adeniyi Onigbanjo of a Lagos State High Court in Ikeja.
The defendants were previously arraigned on July 26, 2012 and their trial had commenced before their co-defendant, Oluwaseun Ogunbambo, absconded.

This prompted the EFCC to amend the charge against the defendants which led to the re-arraignment.
In the amended charge, counts of conspiracy, obtaining money by false pretences, forgery and use of false documents were increased from nine to 49.

The EFCC counsel, Mr Seidu Atteh said the defendants had fraudulently obtained N4.5 billion from the Federal Government between January 2011 and April 2012.
Atteh said the money was for subsidy payments from the Petroleum Support Fund for the purported importation of 30.5million litres of Premium Motor Spirit.

The defendants were also alleged to have forged a bill of lading and other documents which they used in facilitating the fraud.
The alleged offences were said to contravene Sections 1(3) of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud Related Offences Act of 2006.

The offences also violated Sections 363(a) and 364 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State 2011.
The defendants again pleaded not guilty to the charge.

Following the arraignment, the judge allowed Ali and Taylor to continue to enjoy the N20 million bail which he had earlier granted them after their initial arraignment on July 26.

Atteh told the court that the prosecution was ready to continue with the trial following its inability to apprehend Ogunbambo.

The matter was adjourned till June 30 for trial.

APC Tasks Security Agencies On Fraudsters Using Party’s Name


The All Progressives Congress (APC) has challenged security agencies and the telecommunications service providers to help fish out those who have being seeking to defraud Nigerians by asking them to apply for federal appointments under the incoming APC Federal Government through a non-existent APC Screening Committee.

In a statement issued in Abuja on Tuesday by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said the call has become necessary because the scammers have persisted in their fraudulent ways, despite previous warnings by the party for them to desist.

”These ‘419ners’ have a telephone number, 08107400745, an email address (apcscreeningcommittee@gmail.com) and a front (Dr. Favour Idiodie), who is supposedly the Screening Committee Secretary. It should therefore not be difficult for the security agencies, working with the service providers, to fish them out and to make them face the full wrath of the law,” it said.

APC repeated its earlier warning, contained in a statement it issued on April 21st 2015, to Nigerians to beware of such fraudulent claims, saying the party has not set up any committee to which Nigerians should submit their CVs for screening and possible federal appointments.

”As we wrote in our earlier statement, even when it is obvious that those behind this appointment scam are merely seeking to swindle innocent Nigerians, some desperate and gullible persons may still fall prey to their evil machinations, hence we have decided to once again alert Nigerians,” the party said.

It said any information concerning appointments into federal posts will be duly communicated to Nigerians at the appropriate time through the usual communication channels.

Ananta Bijoy Das: Yet another Bangladeshi blogger hacked to death

Attacks on bloggers critical of Islam have taken on a disturbing regularity in Bangladesh, with yet another writer hacked to death Tuesday.

Ananta Bijoy Das, 32, was killed Tuesday morning as he left his home on his way to work at a bank, police in the northeastern Bangladeshi city of Sylhet said.

Four masked men attacked him, hacking him to death with cleavers and machetes, said Sylhet Metropolitan Police Commissioner Kamrul Ahsan.

The men then ran away. Because of the time of the morning when the attack happened, there were few witnesses. But police say they are following up on interviewing the few people who saw the incident.
"It's one after another after another," said Imran Sarker, who heads the Blogger and Online Activists Network in Bangladesh. "It's the same scenario again and again. It's very troubling."

Public killings

Das' death was at least the third this year of someone who was killed for online posts critical of Islam. In each case, the attacks were carried out publicly on city streets.
In March, Washiqur Rahman, 27, was hacked to death by two men with knives and meat cleavers just outside his house as he headed to work at a travel agency in the capital, Dhaka.

In February, a Bangladesh-born American blogger, Avijit Roy, was similarly killed with machetes and knives as he walked back from a book fair in Dhaka.
The three victims are hardly the only ones who have paid a steep price for their views.
In the last two years, several bloggers have died, either murdered or under mysterious circumstances.

Championing science

Das was an atheist who contributed to Mukto Mona ("Free Thinkers"), the blog that Roy founded.
Mukto Mona contains sections titled "Science" and "Rationalism," and most of the articles hold science up to religion as a litmus test, which it invariably fails.

While Das was critical of fundamentalism and the attacks on secular thinkers, he was mostly concerned with championing science, a fellow blogger said.
He was the editor of a local science magazine, Jukti ("Reason"), and wrote several books, including one work on Charles Darwin.

In 2006, the blog awarded Das its Rationalist Award for his "deep and courageous interest in spreading secular & humanist ideals and messages in a place which is not only remote, but doesn't have even a handful of rationalists."

"He was a voice of social resistance; he was an activist," said Sarker. "And now, he too has been silenced."

Taking to the streets

Soon after Das' death, his Facebook wall was flooded with messages of shock and condolence. And hundreds of protesters took to the streets in Sylhet demanding that the government bring his killers to justice.

"We've heard from Ananta's friends that some people threatened to kill him as he was critical of religion," Das' brother-in-law Somor Bijoy Shee Shekhor said.
No one has claimed responsibility for the attack.

"We are ashamed, brother Bijoy," someone posted on Das' Facebook page.

"Is a human life worth so little? Do we not have the right to live without fear?" wrote another.

2 babies die, dozens hospitalized after vaccination in southern Mexico

  Mexican health officials are investigating after two babies died and 29 children were hospitalized from suspected adverse reactions to shots from the country's national vaccination program.

Six of the children hospitalized in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas remain in serious condition, the Mexican Social Security Institute said on Sunday.

The parents of the two infants who died were so outraged at the government that they refused to let authorities perform autopsies, CNNMexico reported.

The illnesses were reported after 52 children from the rural mining community of La Pimienta were given vaccines Friday for tuberculosis, rotavirus and Hepatitis B, the institute said. Later that night, 31 of the children "presented adverse reactions presumably associated with the application of these vaccines," officials said. Two of the children later died.

Authorities haven't said what they think caused the illnesses. They've pinpointed the batches the vaccines came from and have suspended administration of other vaccines from those batches pending the conclusion of their investigation, the institute said. They're also investigating the needles used in the vaccinations and the possibility that a virus or bacteria could have caused the illnesses, Mexico's El Universal newspaper reported.

Residents of La Pimienta told CNNMexico the vaccinations were offered Friday when officials came to the community and announced over loudspeakers that vaccines would be given to newborns.
In the poor, rural area, access to medical care is difficult to come by. There are no hospitals or clinics, only a small cinder block health center with a tin roof where residents go when a doctor passes through the community. A small selection of paracetamol and other pills sits on dusty shelves inside.

On Sunday officials said the state's governor and the director general of the Mexican Social Security Institute visited the hospitalized children, vowing to support their families and to be transparent as they continued their investigation.

Paraguay man arrested in rape of girl, 10, who became pregnant

(CNN)A man in Paraguay accused of raping his 10-year-old stepdaughter and getting her pregnant was arrested Saturday, police said.
Benitez Gilberto Zarate, 42, had fled in the wake of the accusation against him. But he denied any wrongdoing to police and local media, and has demanded a DNA test on the unborn child to back up his claim.

An international rights group is pressing the Paraguayan government to allow an abortion for the girl -- a procedure that health officials in the South American country have so far blocked.

At issue is Paraguayan law, which bans abortions except in cases where the pregnancy endangers the mother's life. The Paraguayan Ministry of Health says there's no indication that the health of the girl, now 22 weeks' pregnant, is at risk.
But the girl's family is asking for an abortion, and Amnesty International is backing the family. The group says her age should trigger the health exception and argues that pregnancy poses health risks to young girls whose bodies aren't fully developed.

Amnesty also says the law is too restrictive, noting that it doesn't provide additional exceptions for rape.
"The physical and psychological impact of forcing this young girl to continue with an unwanted pregnancy is tantamount to torture," Amnesty International official Guadalupe Marengo said this week. "The Paraguayan authorities cannot sit idly by while this young rape survivor is forced to endure more agony and torment."

Doctors learned the girl was pregnant after she entered a hospital in the Paraguayan capital, Asuncion, on April 21 for abdominal pain. That spurred a criminal investigation.
Authorities allege that she was raped by her stepfather, and that the pregnancy stems from that crime, according to the prosecutor in charge of the case, Monalisa Munoz.

The girl's mother has also been arrested in connection with the case, Munoz said. She faces charges including breaching her duty of care, Amnesty International said.
Amnesty said the girl's mother has also asked that her daughter be allowed to have an abortion. But Paraguayan Health Minister Antonio Barrios said the pregnancy would continue.

The girl, who has been transferred from a children's hospital to Asuncion's Red Cross Hospital, will be taken to a shelter where the state will oversee her prenatal care.
"The Justice Department will determine later who will have custody of the mother and child after (the birth)," Barrios said.

A 2013 United Nations report said that 2 million girls under age 14 give birth in developing countries every year, many of whom suffer resulting long-term or fatal health problems. It estimated that 70,000 adolescents die each year from complications from pregnancy or childbirth.

Kerry set to meet Putin in first visit to Russia since start of Ukraine crisis




John Kerry, pictured attending VE Day celebrations in Paris on Friday, is meeting Vladimir Putin and Sergei Lavrov in Sochi on Tuesday. Photograph: Barcroft Media/Imago/Panoramic.

US secretary of state John Kerry has landed in Sochi, where he is due to meet Russian president Vladimir Putin later on Tuesday. The trip is Kerry’s first visit to Russia since the start of the Ukraine crisis.
Kerry will also hold talks with Sergei Lavrov, his Russian counterpart. The two laid flowers at a memorial to victims of the second world war in the Black Sea resort before holding talks.

“This trip is part of our ongoing effort to maintain direct lines of communication with senior Russian officials and to ensure US views are clearly conveyed,” state department spokeswoman Marie Harf said in a written statement. Discussion is likely to focus on Ukraine, where sporadic fighting continues despite a ceasefire agreement, as well as on Syria and Iran.

The Russian foreign ministry said: “We continue to underline that we are ready for cooperation with the US on the basis of equality, non-interference in internal affairs, and that Russian interests are taken into account without attempting to exert pressure on us.”
The US has placed several rounds of sanctions on Russia over its actions in Ukraine.
Dmitry Peskov, the Russian president’s spokesman, said a final decision on the meeting with Putin had not been taken yet.
After his stopover in Sochi, Kerry will travel on to Turkey where he is due to attend a meeting of Nato foreign ministers, and will then return to Washington for a summit of Gulf Arab leaders that President Barack Obama is hosting at Camp David.
Kerry has not been to Russia since May 2013, well before the revolution and subsequent Russian intervention in Ukraine began. The conflict has caused the biggest crisis in relations between Russia and the west since the cold war.
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Russia believes that the US is meddling in Ukraine, while Washington has pointed to mounting evidence of Russian military involvement in the east of the country.
“Russia has engaged in a rather remarkable period of the most overt and extensive propaganda exercise that I’ve seen since the very height of the cold war,” Kerry said in February. “And they have been persisting in their misrepresentations, lies, whatever you want to call them, about their activities to my face, to the face of others, on many different occasions.”

On Monday the Russian foreign ministry said that US-Russian relations are enduring a difficult period “because of the targeted unfriendly actions of Washington”.
“Unfairly blaming Russia for the crisis in Ukraine, which was actually in the main provoked by the US itself, Obama’s administration in 2014 went down the road of ruining bilateral links, announced a policy of ‘isolating’ our country on the international stage, and demanded support for its confrontational steps from the countries that traditionally follow Washington.”

Putin has accused the US of organising the Maidan protests that toppled former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych, and has criticised the presence of US military trainers in Ukraine. Although the 300 US trainers are operating in the west of the country, well away from the conflict zone, Russia has questioned their purpose. Interfax quoted an unnamed Russian official as stating that the issue of US military assistance to Ukraine would be raised with Kerry.

During a major military parade on Saturday to mark 70 years since victory in the second world war, Putin criticised “attempts to build a unipolar world” – a clear swipe at the US, though he did not name the country.
“Over the past decade, we are seeing more frequent attempts to ignore the basic principles of international cooperation,” said Putin.

Western leaders mainly boycotted the parade in protest at Russia’s actions in Ukraine.
German chancellor Angela Merkel travelled to Moscow on Sunday to pay her respects at a war memorial, but used a meeting with Putin to criticise Russia’s annexation of Crimea and urged Russia to use its influence over the separatists in Ukraine to encourage them to abide by the ceasefire.
Putin said the Ukrainian government bore most of the responsibility for ensuring peace.

There will be a number of other items on the agenda in Sochi, including Russia’s announcement last month that it would lift a five-year ban on delivery of the S-300 air defence missile system to Iran. Moscow insists the S-300 is a defensive system which will have no negative impact on the security of Israel or other regional players. The White House, however, remains worried about the deal.
After his meeting with Merkel, Putin also criticised what he described as western double standards, comparing the recent events in Yemen with those in Ukraine last year. He said both were coups, but the response from the west was very different.

“If we apply different standards to the same kind of events, we will never be able to agree on anything,” said Putin.

Unpaid salaries: Civil servants beg for money, foodstuffs

Coordinating Minister for the economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Civil servants in Oyo, Osun, Cross River, Rivers, Abia, Benue, Plateau and Bauchi states have adopted different strategies to survive months of unpaid salaries in their states.
The strategies include begging for money from friends and relatives, securing loans from different sources and doing   menial jobs to survive.

Some state governments, especially those led by the opposition All Progressives Congress and the Federal Government have been trading blame over the unpaid salaries of workers.

While the states attributed the development to the drop in federal allocations to them, the Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, accused them   of not prioritising salary payments.
In Oyo State, for instance, where the government has not paid salaries for three months, some civil servants skip their lunch daily.

A few others, it was gathered, however report to their duty posts with garri and groundnuts which serve as their lunch.

One of them told The PUNCH at the state secretariat in Ibadan   that the state government   gave them reasons for the non-payment of   their salaries.
He said, “My colleagues are not happy because of the situation. Some of them now skip   lunch break because they have no means to observe it.

“I have seen some junior workers taking garri and groundnuts as lunch. We have been told that   dwindling allocation from the Federal Government was responsible for the salary delay. We hope for a change when(Muhammadu) Buhari takes over.”

A vice-principal in one of the secondary schools in Ibadan also   told one of our correspondents that it had become a habit for some teachers to ask him   for money every day.
He said, “My teachers come to me for money every day but I don’t have enough to give to them. I rely on my wife’s business to keep my home running.I have three children in tertiary institutions and one of them is now at home.

“We only hope that the Federal Government will sort out whatever the problem is and increase what the states get as allocations.”

A secondary school teacher   also lamented the development, saying that   some of her colleagues who have cars no longer drive them to school.
She said, “Those of us who do not have   cars used to   rely on our senior colleagues who have to take us to our nearest bus stops. But now,   we   walk to the bus stops   because they no longer   bring their cars to school due to the high cost of   fuel.”

A non-teaching staff in one of the schools in the city, said he had resorted to taking loans   from a cooperative society which he is a member.
“I took a loan from my cooperative society for the repair of my roof but when salaries did not come, I started spending   it on transport to my office.”

The non-payment of salaries by the Osun State Government for the past six months has also forced many civil servants into ‘forced fasting’ and selling   jewellery as well as household appliances.
Our correspondent in the state gathered that some of the workers who had part time business were now paying more attention to them than before.
Some of the workers also do not go to work more than twice or three times in a week due to lack of funds.

A local government worker, who identified herself simply as Kemi,   said, “ We have a roster in my office. We rotate it among ourselves, some would go on Mondays and others on Tuesdays.   I don’t go to the office more than once in a week because of lack of transport fare.”

The case of Cross River State workers is no less different.   Some of them, who are owed between two and six months’ salaries, told The PUNCH  that apart from getting loans from private individuals and financial institutions, they beg for foodstuffs from their relatives and friends.
A director in the state Ministry of Information, said, “It is different strokes for different folks. Some people get support from their relatives and the well-to-do who understand their plight. Others borrow to make ends meet, especially to pay the school fees of their children and wards.
“For instance, the state government is guaranteeing soft loans from one of the new generation banks in the state. 

We apply for the loans and the government guarantees them.”
Also, the chairman of the state University of Science and Technology   branch of the Academic Staff Union of Universities,   Steve Ochang, said lecturers   were given soft loans to   survive the almost six months of unpaid wages.

A worker with the state Ministry of Education, who asked not to be named, said, “ They have turned us to beggars. We have not been paid for   months now and this has made some of us to be begging for food items. This government has not been treating us well. They are making us to lose our dignity as breadwinners of our families.”

The Chairman of the state Trade Union Congress,   Clarkson Otu, said it was regrettable that the outgoing Liyel Imoke administration did not keep to its   promise of paying all outstanding salaries on May 5.
He said, “Part of our agreement was that government would pay the March salareis on or before May 5. The governor promised to do all within his power not to leave any wage unpaid. He said this during the Workers’ Day on May 1.

“Unfortunately, he has not kept to his promise. How can he now meet up all the payments before May 29? We will ensure they feel our anger if they fail to pay us our accumulated wages.”

Otu also confirmed that many civil servants had become debtors following the development.
In Plateau State, striking civil servants said that their survival had been at the mercy of God.
It was gathered that some of   them   had taken to menial jobs to raise money to feed their families while some had turned their children and wards to hawkers.

One of the workers said, I work in the Ministry of Health but it has not been easy for many of us who are not professionals to survive because we are being owed for many months. Some of us have taken to doing menial work like cleaning the homes of some rich people in order to maintain our families. But I help my big friends to do laundry work every weekend in order to raise money.”
The Chairman of the state chapter of the NLC,   Jibrin Bancir, said that some of them had borrowed beyond their limits from different sources.

He said, “We are in the hands God. It is not true that government is making efforts to pay.   In the last six months, they have been going to Federation Account Allocation Committee meetings and they have not   paid for even one month salary . They have defaulted six months in a row.”
Some workers in Abia State parastatals also expressed displeasure over their unpaid wages   and appealed to the outgoing Theodore Orji government for quick intervention.

An employee of the state Universal Basic Education Board   in Umuahia, who said they had not been paid for the past six months, stated that they had been surviving “by the grace of God.”
He said he had to start up a “ small business centre where I do some photocopying works to keep body and soul together.’’

Similarly, another worker with the ASUBEB   said she   had been “living on credit.”
She said, “I have a huge debt and more than four members of my colleagues have died because they could no longer cope.”
When contacted, the state Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Anthony Agbazuere, said the government had always rationalised its   resources in such a way that no civil servant in the Ministries was being owed.

He however pleaded with workers in the parastatals to exercise a little patience as their salary arrears would be paid as soon as the state’s revenue improved.
A civil servant in Benue State who identified himself simply as Mr. Agber said the state government only paid workers in the state in January this year.

Agber, who described the non-payment of salaries as unprecedented, said many workers had resorted to part-time jobs to make ends meet.
He said , “We started collecting half of our initial salaries; and it got worse this year as we have not been receiving other entitlements.

A teacher with the State Universal Basic Education Board in Makurdi, who identified himself as Akpen Peter, said, “This year, we have not received any salary. The government is also owing us the salary of May last year. We have been doing our work. We would have protested but this has not proved to be a good strategy.We are hoping and praying that the incoming government would address our plight.”
In Rivers State, a worker, who identified herself as Happiness, said she was being owed eight months salary arrears.

Happiness,   an assistant to a top state government functionary, explained that she tried selling   clothes to make ends meet.

“It has not been easy because even my clothes business has collapsed because civil servants, who are mostly my customers could not pay me. The government is owing them two-month salaries.”
But Mr. Christian Naku, who is a teacher in one of the state-owned model schools, said teacher were being owed two months salaries.

She added that she had been relying on her brothers and other relatives in the private sector to survive.
In Bauchi State, civil servants described as demoralising, the failure of   the     government to pay them.
They wondered why the government   claimed not to have money   when it   was collecting its allocations from the federal account regularly.

A civil servant with the state Ministry of Information, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said, “It is wrong for the state government not to have paid us.
“Sincerely,   the situation is too difficult for us to bear because we usually get our salaries before the end of every month but there are no signs now that we will be paid soon.
“This is strange to us; we don’t know what is happening. We can hardly survive.”

He called on “Governor Isa Yuguda to please pay us our April salaries and the arrears of our January salaries before the end of his tenure.”
He explained that the   government   “divided our January salaries into 10 parts and has so far paid us in only two instalments.”

A secondary school teacher, who decried the situation,     said, “We are not finding things easy because we can barely feed our families.
“In fact, I have taken my family to the village for now until the situation becomes better. I can’t cope with the high cost of living in the town.
“How much   do the entire teachers in the state earn that they can’t pay? What are they doing with our money?

Another   teacher   said he had resorted to borrowing money from people close to him.
“I’ve been expecting salaries and since they are not forthcoming, I have to go to business people that I know to lend me money,” he said.
The   NLC in the state   said it had issued an ultimatum to the   government to pay the workers on Tuesday(today).

Its chairman,   Hashimu Gital, said, “Workers deserve to be paid their salaries and the government has up to Tuesday (today) to do so, otherwise, we will be left with no choice but to withdraw our services.

“We will embark on an indefinate strike until all workers in the state are paid their salaries including the 2, 700 SUBEB teachers who were disengaged and re-engaged. Their nine-month salaries must be paid.”
In Edo State where some   employees, under the Coalition of Unions of State-owned Tertiary Institutions and the Judicial Staff Union of Nigeria are presently on strike, the   government said on Monday that it was “up-to-date” in salary payments.

The state Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Louis Odion, in a statement made available to one of our correspondents on Monday,   described a   report   which listed Edo as one of the states owing its workers as “shocking, misleading and mischievous.”

Odion’s   statement read, “We read with deep shock, claims that the government of Edo State owes workers five months salary arrears. Nothing could be more misleading and mischievous.
“For the records, Edo State Government does not owe workers salary arrears, as the government has fully discharged its obligations. As a matter of state policy, since   2008, pensioners receive their pay first, followed by workers who get paid not later than the 25th of every month. The policy has not changed.”

Meanwhile, the Ekiti State Government has said it will begin the verification of its 48,977 workers   on Tuesday(today).
It said the exercise would end on Monday next week after which the payment of April salaries   would begin on Wednesday.

The Special Assistant to the State governor on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka, made this known in a statement on Sunday.
Olayinka explained that the   verification was aimed at saving about N500m   being lost to ghost workers monthly through the e-payment system.

The statement read in part, “Those insinuating that the verification was meant to delay payment of April salaries are just playing cheap politics because the arrangement is such that the moment the verification is concluded on a daily basis, salaries of those cleared would be paid.

“The implication of this is that those verified on Tuesday, May 12 will receive their April salaries on Wednesday, May 13 while those verified on Wednesday will get paid on Thursday. By Friday, May 14, 70 per cent of the workers would have received their April salaries.

“From Tuesday to Wednesday, staff of core Ministries, Departments and
Agencies, Health Management Board and six local councils will be verified at designated venues.

Buhari may inherit N50bn salaries, allowances
Meanwhile, the Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria has called on   President Goodluck Jonathan   to ensure that “all outstanding salaries and allowances owed public servants are settled before   his   exit on   May 29, 2015.”

The association, in a statement titled “Pay Outstanding Workers Salaries/Allowances,” faulted the claim by   Okonjo-Iweala that the government was not owing its workers.
Although the   ASCSN statement did not contain the amount owed the workers, The PUNCH gathered exclusively from the association’s   Secretary-General,   Alade Lawal, that it was in the range of N50bn.

The ASCSN said the demand for the payment was to allow the incoming administration to start on a clean slate in terms of payment of staff emoluments.
Some of the allowances and arrears were inherited from successive governments and have not been settled since 2007.

For example, the salaries of some workers in federal   ministries, departments and agencies   for the months of July, August, September and October 2013 have not been paid because their names were omitted on the payrolls.

“In the Federal Ministry of Education alone, the arrears of allowances are running close to N2bn while that of Ministry of Defence are close to N1bn,” the association said.
The ASCSN said, “We urge Mr. President to do the needful by ordering thorough investigation with a view to paying all outstanding salaries and allowances to the affected officers before he leaves office on May 29, 2015.

“This will not only allow the incoming administration start on a clean slate in terms of payment of staff emoluments but also further boost the image of Mr. President as a statesman.

“The outstanding allowances owed thousands of public servants include promotion arrears since 2007 to date, first 28 days in lieu of hotel accommodation, Duty Tour Allowance, mandatory training allowance organised by the Office of the Head of Service of the Federation in 2010, burial expenses and repatriation allowance.

“We believe that if Mr. President can pay these outstanding legitimate salaries and allowances to thousands of public servants, he would not only endear himself to the public service employees but also leave his footprints on the sands of time. If he leaves office without paying, public servants will surely have a different impression of him.”

NLC dispatches task force   to states
The NLC has however dispatched members of its task force to states   to ascertain the number of states owing workers.
Its General Secretary,   Peter Ozo-Esan, told one of our correspondents   on Monday that the members of the task force entrusted with the responsibility of resolving the issue of   outstanding   salaries were   sent out   on Monday.

Ozo-Esan said   the NLC would decide the next line of action after getting reports from the members in the states.

He said that the National Administrative Council set up a task force entrusted with the responsibility of looking into the   payment of workers’ salaries in the states in each of the six geopolitical zones.

The NLC chief   said, “ Several teams have been dispatched to the states to verify those that are owing. Until we get feedback from the team members, we cannot give you the states that are owing.
“We don’t speculate on issues like this and that is why we are saying that we should hold on briefly for the team members to do their work and give us feedback.

“It is after the teams have done their work and submitted their reports that the NLC would decide on the next line of action.”

Decomposing corpse chases patients out of wards

Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Olajide Idris
Foul odour emanating from a decomposing corpse at the Accident and Emergency Clinic, Orile-Agege General Hospital, Lagos, on Monday, prevented medical workers from attending to patients at the clinic and wards attached to it.

Rather, patients were treated outside a large shed where new patients queued to collect cards before they were eventually taken to different wards for further attention.

When our correspondent visited the hospital on Monday morning, the doors of the clinic, which is located close to the Pharmacy Unit, had been locked and a male ward attendant in purple uniform was seen mopping the lobby with disinfectant. The nurses evicted from their station were also seen shouting at people not to open the door.
A patient who was relocated to the Surgery Ward said it took hospital officials more than two hours to evacuate the corpse.

“I came in here around 5am and there was no power supply at the time. The generator was also not working at the time, but there was no odour. I was already on a drip inside the ward when this foul odour hit the ward. In a matter of minutes, we were all asked to leave the ward. My drip was detached and condemned by the nurses.

“We were all taken outside and we sat on the benches by the Pharmacy Unit. It took them more than two hours to decide what to do with the corpse. I was later dispatched to the Surgery Ward, while others were taken to the Casualty Ward,” he said.

When contacted, the Medical Director, Dr. Afusat Tijani, refused to talk to our correspondent. “I am not allowed to talk to the press,” she simply said.

However, a source who did not want to be quoted because of civil service rule said the corpse was ‘a coroner’s case.’ The source denied that the corpse had been left unattended for three days.

“What happened was that the State Environmental Health Monitoring Unit was supposed to have evacuated the corpse, but they said they did not have fuel to get here. The corpse was a coroner case and there was nothing we could have done. SEHMU only came to pick the corpse this morning.

“Patients are being attended to at the moment. The affected section was just the clinic and the patients were taken to another place pending the time disinfection would be completed. We usually wait for 24 hours after disinfecting an area before patients would be allowed to go back there,” said the source.

Obla faults Kashamu’s lawyer over abduction plot

 Buruji Kashamu
A Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Chief Godwin Obla, has denied leaking an alleged plot by the United States of America to arrest
the Ogun-East senator- elect, Buruji Kashamu, and extradite him to face charges of illicit drug trafficking in the US.

Kashamu had stated in a petition to the National Human Rights Commission that Obla got the information of the plot to abduct him from the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Adoke Mohammed (SAN), and leaked it to his (Kashamu’s) personal lawyer, Mr. Ajibola Oluyede.
But Obla has denied having any information relating to the alleged plot.

He has dragged Oluyede, who authored the NHRC petition on behalf of Kashamu, before the Legal Practitioners Disciplinary Committee, insisting that the story of his involvement in the leaking of the alleged information was a mere fabrication.

Obla maintained that the fabrication by Oluyede was made to make his client’s case look good.
The SAN asked the LPDC “to inquire into the infamous conduct of Ajibola Oluyede with a view to bringing him before the committee to account for the misdeed to save the legal profession of loss of reputation and integrity of its members.”
He said that though he was close to Adoke, at no time did the two of them discuss issues relating to Kashamu’s extradition.

Oluyede had stated in the petition that Obla told him of the plot to forcibly extradite Kashamu to the USA while they were both on a flight to the US.
Oluyede said Obla told him that as a friend to Adoke, he (Obla) witnessed an occasion when former President Olusegun Obasanjo, a political adversary to Kashamu, was mounting pressure on the AGF to ensure the extradition of the senator-elect to the US
But Obla said in his petition to the LPDC that he did not know beyond what was reported in the media about the personality of Kashamu.

He said he had “never had any connection, nor shown any particular or special interest beyond the media effects of consistent reportage on the person of Kashamu and his associates, including the said Prince Ajibola Oluyede, his lawyer, with whom I only had a brief encounter in court in the year 2013 in the course of my professional duties in suits totally unconnected with Kashamu.”

He said he would have ignored “the lies” told by Oluyede “but the mere antic of a desperate lawyer sliding beyond his call of duty to indulge in the old tales on a voyage of fabricating facts in order to earn his brief at all costs, however, I am mindful of the Goebbellian effects of falsehoods donning the toga of truth if unchallenged, and it’s deleterious effects on the integrity of the Bar, hence, this complaint.”
Obla said he had only had few encounters with Oluyede in court and the relationship did not go beyond professional
acquaintance.
He said the encounters “could by no means have translated into such friendship intimacy as to warrant, by any widest imagination, the deluded fancy that he shared such nonexistent information or facts with him as alleged.”

Kashamu’s petition dated April 15, 2015, to the NHRC had read in part, “On a flight to the Federal Capital, Abuja, from Lagos sometime in October 2014, a colleague and friend of our principal partner, R. A Oluyede, Chief Obla (SAN), who is also very close to the AGF, informed Mr. Oluyede of the tremendous pressure that Chief (Olusegun) Obasanjo was bringing upon the AGF for the extradition of Prince Kashamu and that in one discussion between the AGF and Chief Obasanjo, witnessed by him (the SAN), Chief Obasanjo had boasted that he was malting arrangements with some US officials in the region to have Prince Kashamu abducted and flown in a private plane to the US.

“He advised that Mr. Oluyede tell Prince Kashamu, known widely to be his client, to be very careful. Prince Kashamu’senquiry about this information revealed that indeed, there had been moves made by US officials within the region to secure the assistance of the head of the INTERPOL division in Nigeria, Mr. Solomon Arase, a Deputy Inspector General of Police, for the arrest and delivery to the US officials of Kashamu for transportation to the US without following the due process required by the Nigeria Extradition Act.”

APC to Jonathan: Only the guilty should be afraid

 National Publicity Secretary, All Progressives Congress, Lai Mohammed
The All Progressives Congress on Monday said only those who are guilty of crimes against the Nigerian people need to be afraid of the incoming administration.
It assured Nigerians that the incoming Buhari administration will not persecute anyone, contrary to statements credited to President Goodluck Jonathan.

This was contained in a statement signed by the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed.
APC said, “Those who have played poker with the nation’s destiny must be willing and eager to clear their conscience before man and God.

“That the President-elect is a man of integrity is not an issue for debate, and he has made it clear that he will not be bogged down by endless probes.
“However, the hands of the incoming government will not be tied by those who have chosen to play the victim and exhibit a persecution mentality.
“Whoever has any reason to be afraid must lay bare such reason before Nigerians.
According to the party, under the climate of change which Nigerians have ushered in with their votes, only the guilty needs to be afraid. Those with a guilty conscience, on account of their actions in the public sphere, must clear such so they can be at peace with themselves.

“The last time we checked, this does not fit the definition of persecution,” APC said.
The party wondered why the President chose a public forum to express his fears when he could have done so privately during his meetings with the President-elect.

It noted that since the presidential election was won and lost, the President and the President-elect have met privately a number of times. He therefore wondered why President Jonathan failed to express his apprehensions during those meetings.

The party also said, “Even if the two have not met, the President could have reached out to the President-elect over any fears that he may be nursing, instead of engaging in an action that seems like he was being pre-emptive and seeking to curry public sympathy.”

APC insisted that the priority of the incoming government will be the welfare and security of the long-suffering people of Nigeria. He enjoined all citizens to support the administration in charting a new path for the country – away from the rapaciousness and impunity of the past years.

Another earthquake hits Nepal, magnitude 7.3, strikes near Everest


A deadly magnitude 7.3 earthquake has struck Nepal, two weeks after a devastating quake killed more than 8,000 people in the Himalayan nation, the USGS has reported.

Police said at least 13 people had been killed in the new quake, which the USGS initially reported as magnitude 7.1, before later upgrading it to magnitude 7.3.
The quake, which struck 18km southeast of Kodari, near the base camp for Mt Everest, was measured at a shallow depth of about 18km. A series of aftershocks – including one 6.3 magnitude tremor – later hit in the same area, the USGS reported.

A spokesman for the International Organization for Migration said four people were killed in Chautara, Nepal, after the earthquake destroyed several buildings there.

“The situation in Chautara is that several buildings in the town have collapsed,” spokesman Paul Dillon told the Reuters news agency by telephone from Kathmandu. “There are four fatalities.”
Emergency officials told Al Jazeera that three people had been killed in Kathmandu, three had been killed in Sindhupalchowk district, five were killed in Dolakha district and one person died in both Sarlahi and Dhanausha districts.
 
At least 300 people injured in the Kathmandu Valley, police said, and at least four buildings are believed to have collapsed in the east of Kath Police issued a public warning, calling for people to stay in open areas and to send text messages instead of making calls, to prevent the network from becoming jammed.

‘Utter panic’
Al Jazeera’s Annette Ekin, reporting from Kathmandu, said that there was “utter panic” in the capital following the quake.
“The earth just started rolling. Everyone ran out onto the streets and all of the shops are now shuttered,” she said, adding that the quake seemed to last about 30 seconds.

A woman who works for a finance company in Thamel, in Kathmandu, told Al Jazeera that she had clung on to a pillar inside her building when the quake struck.
“I was screaming. It felt like the house was falling,” she said.

Al Jazeera’s Andrew Simmons, also reporting from Kathmandu, said the quake was so powerful that it made the building he was in “feel like jelly”.

watch video: https://youtu.be/rZz7T8Pg7JI

Salaries: Rivers’ assembly dares Amaechi, summons nine aides

 Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi
THE Rivers State House of Assembly appears to be on a head-on collision with the state Governor, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi, over civil servants’ unpaid salaries.
The lawmakers, who expressed shock at the contrasting reports on the unpaid salaries of workers and the state’s economy, summoned nine of the governor’s aides to appear before the House by 10am on Tuesday (today) to make clarification on the issues.

Those invited, according to the lawmakers who sat on Monday, are commissioners for Information, Finance, Tourism, Health, Power, Works, Agriculture, Budget and Transport.
Also, heads of ministries, departments and agencies summoned by the House include the Accountant-General, Chairmen of Board of Internal Revenue, Rivers State Assembly Service Commission and Secondary School Management Board.
The House had observed that while the state government was insisting that it had paid salaries of civil servants up to March 2015, there were reports that were contrary to such claim.



Meanwhile, the state House of Assembly has suspended three local government caretaker committee chairmen.

The lawmakers said the suspension became necessary following reports of financial recklessness and insecurity within the chairmen’s council areas.
Those suspended are Cassidy Ikegbidi (Ahoada East), Ojukaye Flag-Amachree (Asari-Toru) and Derick Mene (Khana).

An ad hoc committee was immediately set up to investigate allegations against the affected council chairmen.
However, prior to the assembly’s decision to summon the commissioners and heads of MDAs, the Deputy Leader of the House, Mr. Nname Ewor, had during the 169th legislative session presented two motions.
Ewor, who represents Ahoada East Constituency 1, had raised the alarm over the level of insecurity and mismanagement of public funds, adding that the situation was common in the three affected local government areas.
The lawmaker said, “In these three councils, human lives have been rendered insignificant and financial frugality has been jettisoned to the waste bin. The local government areas are drifting to the Hobbesian State of Nature.”
Also, the Deputy Speaker, Mr. Leyii Kwanee, explained that the decision of the House was not aimed at witch-hunting anybody.
Kwanee, who presided over the sitting of the House, expressed worry that reports on the state’s economy was not encouraging.

He added that the development necessitated the invitation of some top government officials to the House for some explanations on the issue..
“As an arm of government, we are not out to witch-hunt the executive. But we are out to strengthen things.
“You are aware that the seventh Assembly is gradually coming to an end. I want to tell you that it is better started than never. We have been seeing a lot of conflicting reports.

“The other day, the Commissioner for Information (Mrs. Ibim Semenitari) was on air saying that they (workers) have been paid up to March. So, we feel very embarrassed as an arm of government.”
Describing the motion on suspension of the caretaker committee chairmen as timely, Kwanee pointed out that the council chairmen should be held accountable for whatever happened in their various areas.