Jun 24, 2018

M.I, Small Doctor Party in Surulere with Football Fans (Pictures)

The Nation can report that it was more than the thrills and frills of live football match on Friday at the Super Eagles Dome at Surulere in Lagos State.
The hundreds of the Nigeria national team fans dazzled to the live performances from the trio of M.I, Small Doctor and DJ BIG N at the 360 exquisite dome set by Nigerian Breweries brand, Star Lager for the match.
It was really after the three time African champion recorded their first victory at the ongoing FIFA World Cup in Russia.
The Eagles victory against Iceland got light up to a full blown rave party after Ahmed Musa-the matchwinner- scored his second goal minutes after the hitting the back of the net for the first goal…
It was more than the rhythmic titillating  echoes of issa Gooallll!!!! Issa Gooaal!!!, Issa Gooaalll!!!, Issa Goalll!!!
The fans stood up from their couch to celebrate the goals, the spontaneously raised their bottles of beers, embraced the one another exchanged infecting smiles, the all dome turned to an open air of jubilation for the World Cup Eagles.
Recall that the Leicester city striker – Musa, who emerged as the Man-of-the Match, scored in the 49th and 75th minutes of the game to set the victory song for Nigeria.
The party could not stop into the night at the dome, in Surulere after the Ahmed Musa’s brace.
The Super Eagles Dome boasts of cutting-edge features such as high-tech and multimedia technology that gives a 360-degree experience, a tunnel showcasing the glorious history of Super Eagles on LED, a VIP lounge, and a mini studio.
It was all a wave of entertainment into the night as the musical performances from the Nigerian artiste kept the evening out with an exciting after-party.
As high-point the Eagles fans also got to win branded items such as generators, freezers and television sets and so much more.
The Super Eagles Dome is also expected to be the scene of exciting football and anticipation from Nigeria fans when the team takes on  the Argentine national team in a make or mar final group game on Tuesday June 26th.

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KENNETH OMERUO: My second appearance in World Cup amazing

Super Eagles defender, Kenneth Omeruo, is feeling on top of the world for making a back-to-back World Cup appearance. He spoke with TUNDE LIADI before jetting out to Russia.
THE late coach Stephen Keshi had elevated the young Kenneth Omeruo to a regular defender/libero in his team going into the 2013 Africa Nations Cup, where Nigeria won the tournament after 19 years.
His impressive performance at the AFCON elevated him to the 2014 World Cup, and he played in all four matches before France eliminated Nigeria in the second round.
Omeruo informed that appearing at the World Cup a second time is amazing. “It means a lot. It is amazing. I have been to the World Cup before and I knew how magnificent it was. I am really glad to have another chance to represent Nigeria in Russia.
“I want to play every game and I will like to start from the beginning to the end. Nigeria is a country with lots of talents and I am only opportune to be here. Every time I go back home to play football on the streets with my former playmates I am always amazed at what I see. We have good players and it is not that I am the best but just because I am lucky to be selected. And no matter who plays it is the country that we are trying to put in focus, not just myself. Anyone that is selected is welcome by me.”
On his status at Chelsea, Omeruo who is on loan with Kasimpasa in Turkey, said he made the right move by opting to go out on loan.
“For me, I know the situation in Chelsea. We have lots of amazing talents at the club and they are all doing well in their respective positions. It is no longer about playing for Chelsea for some of us. Every player wants to play in a recognised league where they would be mentioned regularly. If I decide to stay at Chelsea not minding if I remain on the bench while waiting for a player to get injured, I don’t think I will have the opportunity I am having now to represent my fatherland at the World  Cup for the second consecutive time.
“I would have loved to stay and fight for a shirt like Victor Moses did, but as I said, I have gone on several loan moves, which has made it possible for me to play more games than I should have been with Chelsea. I will like to see what my involvement with the Super Eagles at the World Cup in Russia brings. It is obvious that I need a (more stable) home. They are aware of this as well and I hope I get a good World Cup and have more options in the summer transfer.”
Omeruo speaks more in the exclusive interview. Excerpts:
Leaving home to play abroad
One of the difficulties we African players face is going abroad to play. It is difficult but I thank God for where I am today.
Parents’ endorsement
Things have changed now than it was when I started playing. My parents are not saying anything to my siblings that have decided to play football because of the success that I have brought to the family in the course of representing Nigeria.
Mother’s belief
I think my mum had more belief than myself because she predicted that I would wear the national team jersey one day. For us, we felt she just wanted the best for us but it worked the way she predicted it. I played and my younger brother was also in the Under 20 camp some years ago. It was amazing because I never believed even when Chelsea called me that they were interested in me. I didn’t believe it. I didn’t take them seriously.
Football family  I don’t really think I had any role to play in their career as footballers because three of us started playing the game almost at the same time. I will say I was just lucky to be the first to really make it but football has been what we do since we were at school.
Nigerian league
I played a lot of games for Sunshine Stars but the one I won’t forget in a hurry was the one with Enyimba because I dislocated my shoulder during the game. It was bad because it affected me later in the future. I had an amazing time with Sunshine Stars and this toughened me up for the challenges ahead. Before playing the Under 17 World Cup which we hosted, I never played any league and it was good for me.
Kasimpasa experience
My form is fine and I can say that I had an amazing season for myself in Turkey. It was good partnering with Oboabona. We won a trophy and I think we can still win more trophies with the present Eagles. I will keep doing what I am doing, which is working hard and also be keeping myself fit and to be ready whenever called upon; whether I start or coming from the bench.
We had a good team. We had a coach who played a pattern that suited me very well. I adapted quickly to his pattern and it helped me to play every week.
2013 AFCON
When I received my invitation to the national team, I was playing at a right back for Den Haag in Holland and when I saw the invite I was actually thinking I was called up to fill the space and that before the team departed for South Africa I would be dropped. But for me when I had the chance to play, I was very focused and it made me do well. I went into the Nations Cup not knowing if I would play any game at all because I was just coming into the team, but when I started the second game, I did that as a centre back and it was different from the position I had been playing before then. It was my position and I was able to cope very well there.
Experience at Chelsea
It was good. Initially, when I signed for Chelsea and I stayed back in Holland there were so many questions I couldn’t answer because young players who were my teammates in ADO Den Haag wanted me to furnish them everything about the club, but I couldn’t provide the answer. They were eager to know about the facilities at the stadium, but I haven’t been there before at that time because I signed for them while in Holland and I remained there. There was a player that kept on teasing me that I called myself a player on a team but I was yet to go there.
I didn’t go to England until after the 2013 Nations Cup and the FIFA Confederation Cup. I was supposed to come into the main team of Chelsea but the injury I copped during the Confederation Cup in Brazil, which was a recurrence of the shoulder injury I had while playing for Sunshine Stars against Enyimba, slowed me down. I had already secured almost everything including getting a work permit but that injury changed a lot of things. After my injury, I went back to England with a view that I could still go with them to the pre-season but I felt the shoulder injury had not been properly treated because of the kind of pain I experienced few days before our departure.
I had to go through a surgery and they recalled Kurt Zouma to take my place. I was out for like four months and I had to go on loan to Middlesbrough because it was a World Cup year. I went there to seek more playing time so that I could be in the Eagles team to the World Cup.
Marriage and career
I feel focused and more responsible. I have more responsibilities now more than before. I am really focused. You said you will like to have a home which means you are not really comfortable with present arrangement of sending you on several loans.
Most memorable game for Nigeria
It is certainly going to be the game against Burkina Faso in the final of the 2013 AFCON. It was my first trophy for the Super Eagles and also my first game for Nigeria’s senior national team. It was a good way to launch my career with the Eagles.
If not a footballer
I really don’t know. It may be probably going to school and becoming a banker.
Football idol
Former Super Eagles captain, Joseph Yobo, was my idol while growing up.
Most troubled striker
I will have to choose between Edin Dzeko and Karim Benzema.
Eagles as youngest squad in Russia
It is a blessing. Only a few of us that have played in the World Cup before and the new ones are determined to prove their mettle in Russia. It will have a positive influence on us.
Difference between current squad and Brazil 2014 team
I will say we are younger now. We are the youngest team this time around unlike 2014 when we had a blend of experience and young players.
Favourite Nigerian dish
I will say okaze soup and eba.
Favourite all-time 11
Enyeama, Omeruo, David Luiz, Xavi, Marcelo, Ronadinho, Coutinho, Ronaldo, Ibrahimovic, Neymar, Victor Moses
Between C. Ronaldo and Messi
Ronaldo.
Favourite colour?
White.
FIFA or PES?
FIFA! It is more mature and real.
Most dressed Super Eagles player
I will pick Uche Agbo.
Team’s pastor
Daniel Akpeyi.
Most jovial player in the Eagles camp
Uche Agbo.
Which will you call the biggest stadium that you have ever played?
I was at Wembley Stadium but I didn’t play. I will say the stadia at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil were amazing.
Will you allow your son to play football in the future?
Definitely, I will and he will also play for Nigeria by God’s grace.

Cholera kills three pupils in Gombe

Three pupils of Tsangaya Islamic School, Madaki, Gombe State, have died of cholera. Twenty-seven others are hospitalised.
Commissioner for Health Dr Kennedy Ishaya confirmed this yesterday during an inspection visit to Madaki Primary Healthcare facility where the victims are hospitalised.
He said within three days, 30 children from the school had contracted the disease of which three had died.
Ishaya added that 15 were treated and discharged while 12 were still receiving treatment at the facility.
According to him, the government has stocked all health facilities with sufficient drugs and advised people to report any suspected case to the nearest facility.
The commissioner also appealed to the health personnel to take necessary steps to avoid the risk of infection.
He said: “Make sure you observe Nightingale principles – no chewing of kola or gum during working hours.
“Come to the hospital with two pairs of clothing. When going home, drop the one you worked with and wear another one.”
He also appealed to Muslim faithful to use water from a pure source for ablution to avoid contamination.

Wife caught hubby in bed with their daughter, court told

court
An Ikeja Domestic Violence and Sexual Offences Court yesterday heard how a wife caught her husband Folorunso Oluwaseun, 52, sleeping with their daughter on their matrimonial bed.
Oluwaseun, a technician, who lives at 30, Popoola Street, Ishawo, Ikorodu was arraigned on the February 8 on a two-count charge of defilement and sexual assault.
He pleaded not guilty.
Led in evidence by the prosecutor, Mr Babajide Boye, a witness, Sergeant Olakunle Orebe attached to the Gender Unit of the Lagos State Police Command said the victim told the police that her mother caught her father in the act four years after he started sleeping with her.
The witness said the woman was not aware of what was going on until 2016 when she caught the defendant with their daughter.
He said the woman relocated from Lagos to Ibadan with her other children, a boy and a girl because of the incident.
Orebe said when the victim relocated to Ibadan, she started teaching in a school.
When Boye sought to tender the statement of the defendant in evidence, the defence counsel, Mr Worer Obuagbaka, objected to its admissibility on the grounds that it was obtained under duress.
To untie the knot, Justice Sybil Nwaka ordered a trial-within-trial.
During the trial-within-trial, Orebe denied forcing Oluwaseun to write his confessional statement.
He said: “I cautioned him before he wrote the statement and I told him he was entitled to legal representation.  After he wrote his statement, I read the statement aloud to him and he affirmed the contents”.
Orebe said Oluwaseun was neither handcuffed nor chained when he was brought from Ikorodu to Ikeja.
“I did not torture, beat, slap or threaten him, he understood the statement when I read it aloud and he signed it. My superior officer, Abimbola Williams an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) read the statement again to him and he affirmed making the statement and the superior officer signed,” he said.
Oluwaseun gave a different version of how his confessional statement was obtained.
Led in evidence by Obuagbaka, he said was in his house when the police came to arrest him. He said on arrival at the station, he was told to respect himself or he would be handcuffed.
He said when they got to the Police Command, he was given a paper to write his statement about what happened between him and his daughter.
Justice Nwaka adjourned till June 28.

Turk referee picked to handle Nigeria-Argentina match

Argentina
Cuneyt Cakir of Turkey has been picked to handle the Super Eagles’ final Group D fixture against Argentina on Tuesday at St Petersburg, with two other Turks alongside.
The 41-year-old who was in charge of proceedings when Juventus faced FC Barcelona in the 2014/2014 UEFA Champions League final will be assisted by compatriots Bahattin Duran and Tarik Ongun.
Cakir is said to have a high-profile list of players he sent off during his career, including Steven Gerrard, John Terry and Nani, and had earlier officiated the Iran vs Morocco game.
The Turk has as his Fourth Official Bjorn Kuipers of Netherlands and Sander van Roekel, also of Netherlands, as the Reserve Assistant Referee.
His Turk assistants had worked with him during the FC Barcelona vs Juventus game, as well as the Morocco vs Iran game.
The Dutch assistants had handled the Brazil vs Costa Rica game of Friday in St Petersburg, with three other officials.(NAN)

Jun 15, 2018

Shekau’s mum: I’ve not seen him for 15 years

Shakau
Driving west from the city of Maiduguri, Nigeria, the roads get narrower as the towns get smaller. Along the road lie bullet-ridden buildings and security check points as vigilante members patrol gates, all signs of a region where people are trying their best to protect themselves.
After three hours VOA ends up in Yobe State, at a village called Shekau. Here, elders and community leaders take VOA to meet Falmata Abubakar, who they say is the mother of Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau.
His father was a local district imam before passing away a few years ago.
Falmata said she had never spoken to journalists before VOA approached her, and she does not know where her son is hiding.
“I don’t now if he’s alive or dead. I don’t know. It’s only God who knows. For 15 years I haven’t seen him,” she said.
Concealing their hometown
People here say they often hide the fact that they are from Abubakar Shekau’s hometown because others may fear they have Boko Haram connections.
Falmata says her son left Shekau as a boy to continue his Islamic education in Maiduguri, a centre of religious studies for hundreds of years.
Shekau was an almajiri. In the generations-old tradition, almajirai are sent off by their parents to study the Quran in schools locally known as a tsangaya, where a teacher coaches the dozens, sometimes hundreds of male students, to memorise the entire Quran.
Almajirai beg on the streets for food, and it is believed that Shekau did the same. At some point in his studies, Shekau, according to his mother, met Mohammed Yusuf, the founder of Boko Haram, who condemned Western education as sinful. Falmata says her son was brainwashed.
‘Different characters’
“Since Shekau met with Mohammed Yusuf, I didn’t see him again,” she told VOA.
“Yes, he’s my son and every mother loves her son, but we have different characters,” she said. “He brought a lot of problem to many people. Where can I meet him to tell him that these things he is doing is very bad? He brought many problems to many people, but I am praying for God to show him the good way.”
Mohammed Yusuf was killed by security agents in 2009.  Abubakar Shekau then took over as the leader.
Shekau is accused of leading an insurgency that has killed more than 30,000 people in northeastern Nigeria and the Lake Chad region.
Destroying schools is at the heart of Boko Haram’s manifesto, and the group has attacked more than 1,400 schools, according to the United Nations Children’s Fund.
Members of the group invaded the first primary school in northeastern Nigeria in 2010 and 2013. They killed the principal and secretary.
In 2014, Boko Haram killed 59 students at a federal school in Buni Yadi, Yobe State. The school is being rebuilt but the expansive campus is barren, a reminder of one of the bloodiest school attacks in Nigeria’s history.
In February of this year, the sect kidnapped more than 100 students from the girls’ secondary school in the town of Dapchi.
The insurgents returned the students a month later, but held onto Leah Sharibu, reportedly because she refused to convert to Islam in exchange for her freedom. Her mother Rebecca and her brother say they feel in their hearts that Leah is still alive.
It’s the 2014 abduction of the Chibok Girls from their school that brought Boko Haram into the international spotlight for unprecedented condemnation. The Bring Back Our Girls activists are still demanding the freedom of at least 100 Chibok Girls, including Dorcas Yakubu who turned 20 years old this week, marking her birthday while in Boko Haram captivity. In 2016, Dorcas appeared in a proof of life video released by the terrorists.
Falmata says she can never curse her son, but he has become someone who she doesn’t recognise anymore.
“He just took his own character and went away,” she said. “This is not the character I gave him. I don’t know what this type of behavior is. It’s only God who knows.”

Jun 6, 2018

Southern\Cameroon’s chilling tale

Cameroon
  • Agitation for independence sparks alleged brutality by soldiers

Soldiers are allegedly sacking villages in Southern Cameroon. Agitators for self-determination insist on a constitutional conference without which they would secede, but the government says Cameroon’s unity is sacrosanct, reports PRECIOUS IGBONWELUNDU, who has just returned from an on-the-spot assessment of the crisis.
Thirty-five-year-old Obot Ayuk, a cocoa farmer and father of three in Southern Cameroon town of Kenbong which shares borders with Nigeria, watched helplessly as soldiers wreaked havoc in the community. He saw houses burning with elderly people in them. Farmlands were destroyed, women raped and about 11 unarmed civilians, including three teenagers were killed in one fell swoop.
Now an internally displaced person (IDP) in one of the camps in Douala, Cameroon’s economic capital, Ayuk told our correspondent that his village had turned into a ghost town with goats and other domestic animals occupying homes. He had fled to Douala through the forest and was still searching for his wife and three children.
He said: “They invaded our villages, raped our women, burnt down houses and looted properties. They said we were hiding Ambazonian fighters, and for that reason, they would kill us all. Since October last year, we have not known peace in Kenbong. The village has become desolate and our farmlands have been destroyed.
“Our people now live in forests, dying like chickens. There is no access to good water or medical care. Our streets have been overtaken by shallow graves. Those who die are just covered up in shallow graves without proper burial, while the living continue to move deeper into the bushes.”
Ayuk wondered how a government would do things like these to its people and still claim that the country is one.
He added: “In one fell swoop, the army murdered about 15 people, including three teenagers. People watched helplessly as their loved ones were killed by French-speaking soldiers. The only offence of the murdered people was that they were Anglophones.
“As I speak to you, I do not know where my wife and children are. I do not know where the rest of my family is. What kind of life is this? Why can’t they go after the Ambazonian warriors themselves? Why kill innocent civilians and tag them terrorists? I wonder why the world is keeping quiet to this carnage in Southern Cameroon.
“I came to Douala through the forest in February. These killings started September 28 last year. That was a few days after the secessionists announced breakaway from La Republique Du Cameroun (Republic of Cameroon). The next thing, soldiers invaded our community and started killing people.
“At first, I fled to Bakassi. But when the crisis got worse there, I had to return to Kenbong before leaving for Douala through the bush. I have lost everything I have worked for in my entire life.”
Similarly, on May 14, the traditional ruler of Down Mbeyan, another community in Anglophone Cameroon, Chief Ndip Arrey, was murdered. Arrey, according to natives, was captured by Cameroonian troops while on his way to commiserate with the family of a young man killed by the security agents.
The monarch, it was said, lost his only son and heir to the troops three weeks ago after he was alleged to be sympathetic to the cause of the secessionists.
Our correspondent, who was in Cameroon for four days, gathered that no fewer than 61 communities in the southern region had been completely razed since the Ambazonian Separatist Movement (ASM) declared the secession of the Anglophone region from Cameroon last September.
Angered by the action, Cameroon’s President, Paul Biya, had declared total war against the ASM, tagging them terrorists and enemies of the state. Unfortunately, the war has taken a toll on communities and cities in the south, following allegations of gross human rights violations against Cameroonian soldiers deployed to fish out the rebels.
Most of the communities our correspondent visited had become shadows of themselves with charred, mutilated or decomposing bodies everywhere.
There were also video footages showing some persons in military uniform dehumanising civilians. In one of the videos, about four of the uniformed men said to be Cameroonian soldiers, were beating a young man, dragging him in the mud, pouring water under his feet and whipping him with cutlasses. They marched his head with their jackboots and dragged him on the ground until he died.
According to locals, the soldiers, rather than go after the separatists, descended on unarmed civilians, torturing, killing and maiming them on allegations that they were shielding Ambazonian warriors.
A recent report from the United Nations indicated that at least a thousand persons had been killed and over 167,000 displaced as a result of the crisis. Among the affected towns are Kwakwa, Boa Bakundu, Bole Bakundu, Dipenda Bakundu, Big Ngwandi, Bakumba, Bokosso, Nake, Kombone Mission, Kake I, Kake II, Bekondo, Big Massaka, Nganjo, Foe Bakundu, Ekombe, Small Ekombe, Ediki, Kuke, Ebonji, Etam, Nguti, Mongo ndor, Bello, Anjang, Angin, Anyagwa and Azi.
Others include Kumba, Doti Nobi, Kugwe, Ambo, Efah, Kumku, Ashong, Ngie, Ejeke, Mbene, Bati-Numba, Kagifu, Dadi, Gurifen, Muyenge, Bafia, Ekwe, Kumbe-Balue, Ekona Mombo, Batibo, Bafut, Mbalangi, Oshie, Baingo, Bombele Mbonge, Kumu kumu, Bangele, Konye, Guzang, Widikum and Babadiehka.
“For each soldier killed by the rebels, a drone is deployed to level the community where the incident occurred,” said a lawyer who spoke with our correspondent on condition of anonymity.
He added: “Three octogenarian women were said to have been burnt alive in their homes at Kwakwa following their inability to run out when the soldiers ordered people to vacate their residences or risk being burnt with them.
“The government is not handling this issue properly. Rather, it is making us, Southern Cameroonians, to have sympathy for the rebels. I do not support secession, but it is completely unacceptable to kill people, burn down communities and rape women.
“The government has deployed maximum force in the region and the French soldiers sent to the region are too proud. They do not want to work with locals to gain their trust and cooperation. They think they can achieve result by force, and that is why most times, no one gives them useful information.
“The problem did not start today. It is an agitation that has been on for a long time. This agitation is borne out of genuine desire for equal treatment. What the government needed to do was to look at the issues raised and see those that can be addressed immediately. But it chose to deploy maximum force against our people.”
A Cameroonian journalist who led our correspondent round some of the areas said he personally witnessed the dumping of over 80 corpses at the Buea General Hospital mortuary on October 1, last year, adding that the corpses were brought in military lorries.
He said the soldiers seized all the mobile phones of the people at the scene and removed all means of identification from the corpses, most of whom were youths staging peaceful protest with green leafs in their mouths and hands.
To cover up their crime, the journalist said, the soldiers announced that the corpses were those of terrorists who fled Nigeria into the country and were killed in battle.
“I do not think I have seen anything that callous. These were young boys, mostly students, who were staging peaceful protest against marginalisation of Anglophone Cameroon. They had green leaves in their mouths and hands. They had their identity cards in their pockets but the soldiers took them away and passed the deceased off as terrorists from Nigeria.

“The killings have not stopped since then. I get calls on a daily basis on the atrocities of the soldiers against civilians. It is really disturbing. Instead of applying diplomacy, the government has continued to use maximum force against the people. The worst part is that people are not talking.
“Even in Douala and Yaounde, it is a taboo to discuss the issue. If security forces should see images or videos of the carnage in Southern Cameroon on your phone, they will detain you instantly.
“The government has been busy singing unity and oneness. They even built a unification village in Yaounde to mark the Reunification Day celebrated every May 20. Circulars were sent to churches to ensure their services ended latest 8 am on Sunday, May 20. Civil servants across the country were also issued a stern warning to come out that day or risk sanctions.
“This whole tension is crumbling the economy of the country. Our major export is cocoa and much of these cocoa grow in the southern region. With this fight, farmers have fled their homes and farmlands have been destroyed. Nothing is really moving as it should and it bothers me that the government is too proud to consider certain compromises for peace to reign.”
What the agitators want
With the arrest of some government critics by the Nigerian Security forces and their subsequent repatriation to Cameroon on December 31 and February 25, the situation got worse as the people intensified their protest against the regime, demanding the unconditional release of all 48 deportees.
It was gathered that despite the claim by Cameroon’s Minister for Communication, Issah Tchiroma, that the detainees had returned, neither their relatives nor their lawyers have seen or known where they were being kept.
This, our correspondent was told, further worsened the situation, as the rebels were said to have gone after perceived allies of the government in the region.
Locals said the incarceration of alleged separatist leader, Ayuk Tabe, 53, alias Sisiku, and nine others arrested with him in Abuja- Tessang Fombang, 48; Nfor Nfor, 66; Shufai Berinyu, 51; Eyambe Ebai, 49; Fidelis Ndeh-Che, 41; Prof. Cheh Awasum, 50; Dr. Cornelius Kwanga, 47; Dr. Egbe Ogok, 53, and Dr. Henry Kimeng, 50- as well as all those the Nigeria Police rounded up at Gembu, Sarduana Local Government Area (LGA) of Taraba State, was a wrong move.
“The government cannot force unity on anyone. It cannot scream unity from one lip and then use maximum force, intimidation to silence critics. If the government truly wants peace and unity, the first thing it should do is allow those detainees access to their relatives and to lawyers.

“The government should also implement UN Resolution 1608 of 1961, as submitted by the Fourth Committee, A/4737.
“By virtue of the fact that the confederation deal was never conclusive, everything that has been done in Cameroon in the name of unity is null and void ab initio, and must be considered not binding on Ambazonia (Southern Cameroon), which has clearly and effectively proven that there were unpardonable discrepancies in the unity process that has led Cameroon to treat Anglophone Cameroonian masses as second class citizens, and above all, refused to be lawful and accountable to/on the acts of government.
“The non-implementation of UN Resolution 1608 is a glaring proof of a material breach of treaty and requires that the UN actively takes part in terminating the now too falsified relationship between Ambazonia and Cameroon before the situation turns into a bloody war of liberation,” said Ayuk Obot, a Cameroonian lawyer.
In a letter to Cameroon’s Attorney General dated May 15, counsel to the 46 deportees, Abdul Oroh, sought access to them under Article 14(3) of International Convention on Civil and Political Rights,1966, which provides that an accused person must be told his offence and given a fair trial with access to counsel of his choosing.
Oroh said: “Assuming without conceding, that our clients engaged in criminal acts against the law of Cameroon, it is important that they be treated with dignity and in accordance with the rule of law and international instruments with regards to their status.
“In line with the above mentioned international instruments and several others adopted and domesticated by Cameroon, we demand access to our clients as their counsel. This is in line with Article 14(3) of the International Convention of Civil and Political Right. This has been reaffirmed by the provisions of Article 7(1)(C) of African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which provides that every individual shall have his caused heard.
“This comprises the right to defence, including the right to be defended by counsel of his choice.
“We demand that the Cameroonian authority should ensure their fair treatment in line with international practices and conventions, and that the authorities in Cameroon ensure that our lawyers are safe during their visit to Cameroon.”
Faulting their deportation to Cameroon by the Nigerian government, Oroh said the detainees were recognised refugees, registered asylum seekers or legal residents of Nigeria, adding that the action violated all known international humanitarian and refugee laws.
“As counsel to the detainees, we are worried and our fear is fuelled by the continued silence of Cameroonian authorities on the welfare and safety of our clients, coupled with the fact that they have been denied access to their families, doctors and lawyers.
“The Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948, recognises the inherent dignity and the equal inalienable rights of all members of the human family as the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world. It is the main component of the Declaration expressing its main objectives and ideals.”
Efforts by our correspondent to obtain comments from the Cameroonian authorities did not succeed as calls made to the Communications Minister Issha Chiroma’s lines went unheeded; he also did not respond to the text message sent to his phones.
However, in a statement obtained online (see box on Page 17), the government defended that its troops, in spite of provocation from the agitators, have always stuck to rules of international engagement in the handling of the Southern Cameroon situation.

Wizkid, Davido, Falz others make 2018 Forbes Africa under 30 list

Popular Nigerian singers, Davido and Wizkid have made the list of the 2018 Forbes Africa under 30 individuals that are making waves in their industries across the continent.
The list is divided into three: Creative, Technology and Business.
Other celebrities across Africa that made the list are Sarkodie, Nasty C, Cassper Nyovest, Falz, Yemi Alade, Beverly Naya, and Sonia Irabor among others.
Also, fashion entrepreneurs Adebayo Oke-Lawal of Orange Culture and Tania Omotayo of Ziva Lagos; beauty entrepreneurs Anita Adetola Adetoye of Anita Brows, Joyce Jacob were also named.
In its fourth edition, the analysts described the list as “our authentic and most definitive list of Africa’s most promising young change-makers.”
They say they are, for the first time, inspired by the growing number of young men and women entrepreneurs, hence they have expanded it to bring 30 game-changers, all under the age of 30, in each of the three sectors – business, technology and creative.
The 90 in total are challenging conventions and rewriting the rules for the next generation of entrepreneurs, creatives and tech gurus.
“We put in months of rigorous research, sifting through over 600 nominations, vetting them for weeks, verifying and investigating them. We favored entrepreneurs with fresh ideas and took into account their business size, revenue, location, potential, struggles, social impact and resilience. A panel of judges then debated the final 90. You may not know many of their names now and they may not be richest people in Africa, but they could be the billionaires of tomorrow gracing our future covers. This compilation is exciting, inspiring and offers a sneak peek into Africa’s future,” said the researchers.

Group gives Falz 7-day ultimatum to withdraw ‘This is Nigeria’ video

Falz
The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) has given a seven-day ultimatum to Folarin Falana popularly known as Falz, to withdraw his ‘This is Nigeria’ video and apologise to Nigerians, or face legal action.
According to a statement issued on Tuesday by Ishaq Akintola, MURIC’s director,  the dancers in the video in no way depicts the situation of the Chibok girls.
Recall that Falz had earlier explained that the girls dressed in hijab dancing the “shaku shaku” dance were a representation of the abducted Chibok girls still in Boko Haram captivity.
MURIC also condemned “a character that dressed like a Fulani man, who suddenly abandoned his traditional guitar and beheaded a man” featured in the video.
The  group described the video as “thoughtless, insensitive and highly provocative,” pointing out that the video could brew religious and ethnic crisis.
The statement reads:
“MURIC rejects Falz’ explanation that the girls in hijab in his ‘Shaku Shaku’ dance symbolize the Chibok girls because nothing in the video indicates that the girls represent the Chibok girls,”
“At least none of the Chibok girls have been seen dancing like a drunkard. They are always in pensive mood. Do they have any cause to be dancing? Are they happy?
“The video manifests ethnic bias against Fulanis while it ignored the criminal activities of ethnic militia of the Middle Belt who have also massacred Fulanis and rustled their cattle in their thousands.
“It is a hate video. This video has the potential of causing religious crisis of unprecedented dimension.
“It is an assault on the self-dignity of every Muslim. It is freedom of expression gone haywire.
“We therefore demand its withdrawal and an apology to Nigerian Muslims within seven days or the authors and their agents will face legal action if they fail to comply.
“Only the scenes portraying police brutality and the money-swallowing snake in the video are near the truth.”
The group also called on security agencies and the National Film And Video Censors Board (NFVCB) to clamp down on the video.
“We call the attention of security agencies to this hate action,” the statement continued.
“We remind Nigerians of the outcome of similar provocative actions in the past and their unpalatable outcomes.
“The National Film And Video Censors Board (NFVCB), a regulatory agency set up by Act No. 85 of 1993 to regulate films and the video industry has a case to answer. ‘Shaku Shaku’ video was shot and released under its watch.
“Instead of going violent, Nigerian Muslims should take those behind the ‘Shaku Shaku’ video to court in order to serve as a deterrent to others.
“We therefore give notice of impending legal action against the artist behind the ‘Shaku Shaku’ video unless the latter is withdrawn and an apology is widely published within seven days.

I know my starting xi, Rohr declares

Rorh
Ahead of the 2018 FIFA World Cup, German tactician, Gernot Rohr has declared that he knows his Super Eagles’ starting XI, NationSport has learnt.
In recent warm-up matches, Nigeria has lost two and drawn one out of three and will be involved in another friendly against the Czech Republic on tomorrow before flying to Russia.
However, the former Burkina Faso Coach, who announced his 23-man final list for the Mundial after the 2-1 friendly loss to England on Saturday, is confident of a good outing in Russia, especially as he is armed with the vital knowledge of Eagles’ group opponents heading to the Mundial.
‘I know my starting 11 for the first game of the World Cup,’ Rohr said. ‘I have kept faith with the players that helped us during the qualifiers. I can only change in case of injuries. I collect videotapes of our opponents’ friendly matches and constantly watch them.’
Nigeria plays in Group D alongside Croatia, Iceland and Argentina at the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

Jun 5, 2018

Men’s slim fit party wear

A BLAZER is one fashion item a man should have in his wardrobe. It goes well with several occasions these days; it fits perfectly with jeans, pants, ankara and any other trousers you can name.  When it comes to building a basic wardrobe for men’s formal or semi-formal occasions such as interview, wedding, or a date; every man needs at least one well- tailored blazers for special occasions that arise, even if it just once a year and it will, of course, save you from feeling humiliated and cheap when everyone else is suited up.
Gone are the days when only a few guys go for blazers. They are soaring high and gaining popularity at socials, events and parties. They are trendy and eye-catching.

I’m Now ‘Relaxed and Relieved’, Eagles Manager Reveals

Super Eagles Manager, Gernor Rohr on Sunday afternoon said he just had the chance to watch the replay of the tension soaked Nigeria versus Zambia match and that Eagles got a victory from the tough match was a breathe of life.
A number of Super Eagles players and coaching staff including Rohr were sighted at the Akwa Ibom Airport on Sunday afternoon to jet out to Lagos and Abuja.
Alex Iwobi, Ola Aina, Leon Balogun, William Troost-Ekong, Ahmed Musa, Abdullahi Shehu and Chidozie Awaziem were among some of the players sighted  as they make their way back to Europe.
Before the Dana Air plane left the airport, manager Gernot Rohr reiterated that the Zambians pushed his team all the way, but the Super Eagles defence soaked their attacks and the contribution of Chelsea wing-back Victor Moses and Anorthosis Famagusta midfielder Abdullahi Shehu in the far front  gave Alex Iwobi the assist to score.
” Zambians gave us a tough match. Not that it was not expected, but I just watched the replay now, we defended well, Eagles did well. Alex Iwobi came on and changed the game, Victor Moses did well to dribble and Shehu’s cross went straight to Iwobi who scored.”
”I am now relaxed and relieved,” the 64 year old Eagles coach said with a smile. he added that “greater task still lies ahead.”
This can however be well understood going by the tension and pressure that soaked not just the player both also the technical crew from the start to finish of that Saturday game in Uyo.
The Zambians played the match as if there was no tomorrow says one of the Nigerians fans at the capacity filled stadium, he however breathe relieve that a decisive goal eventually came through Iwobi.
Meanwhile, about 13 countries have already booked their place for the 2018 World Cup in Russia with final qualifying matches still to be played.
See the Countries below:
Europe: Belgium, England, Germany, Russia (as hosts), Spain
Africa: Nigeria
Asia: Iran, Japan, Saudi Arabia, South Korea
 North, Latin America: Costa Rica, Mexico
South America: Brazil

Who Will Help A Troubled Wilson Oruma? … from the Pitch to the Street



These are not the best of times for former Nigeria international, Wilson Oruma.
Oruma held sway in the midfield for the Super Eagles in the mid-90s. Do you remember him?
But, between then and now a lot has happened.
It’s disheartening that in the last six years, the maverick footballer has been bogged down by some sort of mental disorder. His heroics story changed since he suffered the ailment.
The present day football enthusiasts in Nigerian and beyond have forgotten the goal spree of the professional footballer.
He has changed from being a handsome and boisterous young man to unprintable words as he takes his shelter on the street.
There are fears the mental relapse has revisited the one-time cool and calm Ex-Super Eagle star without help in sight either from residents in Lekki axis of Lagos State where he is seen or from good Samaritans.
“In fact, people in the neighbourhood and those in government hardly recognize him as Nigeria international and ex-footballer. People see him as somebody who needs medical care and help,” a resident of the area told out this reporter
The resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity, feared that the mental relapse has revisited the one-time cool and calm Ex-Super Eagle star.
 “He has deserted his house. He walks from day to night on the highway ; not going to any particular place. I am not sure he has gone home to sleep for days,” he said.
On Thursday, our reporter sought to know the daily routine of Oruma as he no longer returns to his Victoria Garden City (VGC) residence
“Nigerians have forgotten Oruma. Even people on the street don’t recognize him again. It is a shame no group or persons have come to his aid in his trying times. This mental disorder came after he was duped by one pastor like six years ago,” a neighbourhood watch officer, Abubakar Usman, who joined our reporter in search for Oruma in the Lekki axis, said.
Our reporter was led to a local canteen at Igboefon- along Lekki- Ajah Express Road where he eats regularly.
“This is where he eats. Most people around this Lekki area don’t really know who he is but I do. But, when you see him, you will know that this person needs help and he is no longer the football hero that Nigerians know,” the elderly security man said.
He continued, “He had even paid some people’s bills here before. He eats here often and greets people, saying, “Do you have Jesus, bro?’ and I will answer, “Yes, I have Jesus bro.”
“But, sometimes he walks on the street in poor clothing, in slippers, often talking to himself alone and all that… it is also common to see him carrying bags of pure water, taking it to nowhere. Sometimes, he laid his head on bags of pure water after waking all day under the scorching sun.
 “But, I think with right people around him and regular medical care from professionals, he would get better.”
During his career days, Oruma featured for RC Lens, Nancy, Samsunspor, Nimes, Servette, Sochaux, Marseille and Guingamp, and Kavala FC of Greece before he retired at the age of 33 on November 26, 2010.
The midfield maestro also featured for Nigeria’s U-17, U-23 and the senior national team winning the FIFA U-17 World Cup in 1993, the Olympic gold in 1996 and two bronze medals at the African Cup of Nations in 2002 and 2006.
It was reported that the Delta State-born professional was duped by an unknown pastor in 2012. Since then, the Ex-Nigeria international, who played alongside Austin JJ Okocha and Kanu Nwankwo, is now BROKE!
It was learnt that Oruma lost a whopping sum of N1.2 billion in an investment deal with the clergyman and some fake oil businessmen.
UPDATE
Meanwhile, the General Secretary, National Association of Nigerian Professional Footballer, Austin Popo,  who hinted on efforts made toward helping Oruma said meetings and consultations with some of Oruma’s colleagues had been held.
He said, “We have had series of closed-door meetings to see how we can address the issue. I have discussed with Sam Sodje who confirmed to me that he had put a call to the Chairman of Delta State Sports Commission.
“Two days ago, I also had discussion with Clement Temile and Joshua Khator and Ann. These are ex-internationals from Delta State, the same state Oruma hails from. We only hope we can coordinate all relevant stakeholders to help him,” he shared the comment on Facebook with Desmond Ekwueme; a social and sport commentator on Thursday.

Protest against face-mask in London

Hundreds of anti-mask activists have marched on London’s Hyde Park wearing plague doctor costumes to protest against compul...