Friday, 1 March 2013

Pope Benedict's last day: What's next for the pope emeritus?


Goodbye, Pope Benedict XVI. Hello, pope emeritus.


Pope Benedict XVI stepped onto a white helicopter on Thursday evening at the Vatican and fly off to the summer papal residence, Castel Gandolfo, and into retirement. At 8 p.m. sharp, Rome time, he ceased being Pope Benedict, and become pope emeritus (or Roman Pontiff Emeritus). This is virtually uncharted territory for the Roman Catholic Church — the last pope to abdicate the Chair of St Peter was Gregory XII in 1415. So what happens to a retired pope and the scandal - tinged church he leaves without a leader?
Early Thursday, the pope held a final meeting with the Colledge of Cardinals, urging them to work together "like an orchestra" to harmoniously pick his successor. He greeted each cardinal individually and said he'd pray for them as they deliberate during the upcoming conclave, adding, "Among you is also the future pope, whom I promise my unconditional reverence and obedience." At about 5 p.m. local time, Pope Benedict met with a small group of staff and members of the Swiss Guards who have protected him over the years, then boarded his Vatican helicopter.
When he arrives at Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, the pope made one final public appearance on his balcony, then, "having greeted those gathered below, he stepped back inside and begin his life of seclusion,". The pope emeritus is expected to spend anywhere from a few weeks to a few months in Castel Gandolfo, starting what has been described as a quiet life of prayer and scholarship. Then he will return to the Vatican, to live in a converted convent.
There's an air of improvisation to this whole transition. Benedict, by his own choice, will keep his white garments, his title of "His Holiness," and the name Benedict XVI. He will share the services of his trusted secretary, Archbishop Georg Gänswein, with the next pope. He is giving up his Twitter account, his Swiss Guard protection — he'll be guarded instead by Vatican police — and his famous red shoes, a papal symbol representing the blood of martyrs. (He will wear brown artisan-made shoes given to him in Mexico, the Vatican says.)
Benedict has said he will remain "hidden from the world" in his Vatican retirement, but nobody quite knows what will happen with two popes within shouting distance of each other, and plenty of Catholics are worried. The discomfort is especially acute among cardinals and more conservative Catholics, says Michael mcGough at the Los Angeles Times. "Although a papal resignation is provided for in church law, Benedict's decision undermines the mystique of papal uniqueness," reducing the papacy to just another bishopric. (The pope is also the bishop of Rome, and Vatican officials had suggested Benedict would return to black clerical clothes and use the title Bishop of Rome Emeritus.)
Liberal Catholics long have emphasized that fact, sometimes referring to the pope as the head of the "college of bishops." Conservative Catholics prefer the pre-Vatican II view of the pope as the source of all human authority in the church, akin to a king. Indeed, it is conservative Catholics who have been insisting that the proper term for Benedict's decision is "abdication," not "resignation." An abdication is seen as a rupture is the natural order of monarchy, even when it is necessary. But the less seen of the former king, the better. Britain's Edward VIII became the Duke of Windsor after his retirement, not "king emeritus."... Granted that there is only one actual pope at a time (and only one who can make infallible pronouncements on matters of faith and morals), the existence of two men who are addressed as "your holiness" changes the ecclesiastical atmospherics. For a lot of traditionalist Catholics, two "popes" (even if one is emeritus) is one pope too many. [Los Angeles Times]
Not that all of Benedict's more liberal critics are happy with his resignation choices. Swiss theologian Hans Küng, a former longtime colleague of the pope who became one of his harshest critics, tells Germany's Der Spiegel that "with Benedict XVI, there is a risk of a shadow pope who has abdicated but can still indirectly exert influence." No one likes to have his predecessor right next door, and "even for the bishop of Rome, it is not pleasant if his predecessor constantly has an eye on him."
Andrew Sullivan is even more offended. "If you were trying to avoid any hint of meddling, of a Deng Xiao Peng-type figure pulling strings behind the scenes, you would not be doing this," he says at The Dish. And the fact that Benedict's longtime personal secretary will live in the convent with him? "This is not the Vatican. It's Melrose Place."
Other Vatican-watchers are more sanguine, of course. "I was somewhat surprised that Benedict would still be called 'His Holiness' and would wear white, but it's akin to the former U.S. presidents being addressed as 'Mr. President,'" Fr. james Martin tells The Associated Press. "It's a mark of respect for the former office he once held."
The next pope will likely be elected sometime in March, as soon as the 115 cardinal electors agree on one and send up the white smoke from their Sistine Chapel conclave. What happens to the Catholic Church in the meantime? "Vatican operations essentially go as still as the characters in Sleeping Beauty — frozen in time as of 8 p.m.," says Cathy Lynn Grossman in USA Today. Essentially, the Vatican will act as if the pope is dead.
All the arrangements are set by the camerlengo (chamberlain of the Church) chosen by the pope. Benedict chose Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, Vatican secretary of State, for that role but there's little for him to do with no funeral to arrange. All the cardinals and archbishops in the curia, the bureaucracy of the Church, lose their jobs on Feb. 28. It's a bit like all the U.S. president's cabinet resigning after a presidential election so the new head of state can name his team. But in the Holy See, many cardinals expect they'll be asked to stay on in the next papacy.... Vatican offices will be run by secretaries who handle ordinary, minor duties. All serious or controversial matters await the next pontiff.... Only three major officials keep their posts in the period between Benedict's resignation and a successor elected: The vicar of the diocese of Rome who cares for the city's pastoral needs; the major penitentiary who deals with the Holy See's confessional needs so there is always access to forgiveness; and the camerlengo, Bertone, who will deal with property and financial decisions for the Vatican for the time being. [USA Tpday]
With nobody really in charge, nothing much will happen in the Vatican until at least Monday, says Grossman. In fact, "for now, the busiest people in Rome may be the tailors at Gammarelli ecclesiastical tailoring shop. They're stitching up the vestments for the new pope in small, medium, and large sizes so that whoever is chosen will fit right in."





Nigeria's big city razes homes as poor left behind


In this image taken Thursday Feb. 28, 2013 people search through the rubble of demolished houses at Ijora Badia slum in Lagos, Nigeria, Thursday, Feb. 28, 2013.

In this image taken Thursday Feb. 28, 2013 people search through the rubble of  demolished houses at  Ijora Badia slum in Lagos, Nigeria, Thursday, Feb. 28, 2013. The bulldozers arrived at dawn to this neighborhood of shanty homes and concrete buildings in Nigeria’s largest city, followed by police officers in riot gear carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles. The police banged on doors, corralling the thousands who live in Ijora-Badia off to the side as the bulldozers’ blades tore through scrap-lumber walls, its track grinding the possessions inside into the black murk of swamp beneath it. It left behind only a field of debris that children days later picked through, their small hands dodging exposed rusty nails to pull away anything of value left behind. Photo: Sunday Alamba
The bulldozers came at dawn to this neighborhood of shanty homes and concrete buildings in Nigeria's largest city, followed by riot police carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles.
In this image taken Thursday Feb. 28, 2013 a man sits in the rubble of his partly demolished house at  Ijora Badia slum in Lagos, Nigeria,  The bulldozers arrived at dawn to this neighborhood of shanty homes and concrete buildings in Nigeria’s largest city, followed by police officers in riot gear carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles. The police banged on doors, corralling the thousands who live in Ijora-Badia off to the side as the bulldozers’ blades tore through scrap-lumber walls, its track grinding the possessions inside into the black murk of swamp beneath it. It left behind only a field of debris that children days later picked through, their small hands dodging exposed rusty nails to pull away anything of value left behind. Photo: Sunday Alamba
The police banged on doors, corralling the thousands who live in Ijora-Badia off to the side as the bulldozers' blades tore through scrap-lumber walls, their tracks grinding the possessions inside into the black murk of swamp underneath. Days later, children picked through the field of debris, their small hands dodging rusty nails to pull away anything of value left behind.
In this image taken Thursday Feb. 28, 2013 men carry a salvaged refrigerator from the site of  demolished houses at  Ijora Badia slum in Lagos, Nigeria. The bulldozers arrived at dawn to this neighborhood of shanty homes and concrete buildings in Nigeria’s largest city, followed by police officers in riot gear carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles. The police banged on doors, corralling the thousands who live in Ijora-Badia off to the side as the bulldozers’ blades tore through scrap-lumber walls, its track grinding the possessions inside into the black murk of swamp beneath it. It left behind only a field of debris that children days later picked through, their small hands dodging exposed rusty nails to pull away anything of value left behind. Photo: Sunday Alamba
The demolition of this slum neighborhood follows others in Lagos, a city of some 17.5 million inhabitants where a dozen can sleep in a single room and more flock to every day from the countryside. While the city continues to grow, the government has started programs to improve roads and railways, but target poor neighborhoods for demolition and street traders for arrest.
In this image taken Thursday Feb. 28, 2013 residents salvage wood from  demolished houses at  Ijora Badia slum in Lagos, Nigeria. The bulldozers arrived at dawn to this neighborhood of shanty homes and concrete buildings in Nigeria’s largest city, followed by police officers in riot gear carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles. The police banged on doors, corralling the thousands who live in Ijora-Badia off to the side as the bulldozers’ blades tore through scrap-lumber walls, its track grinding the possessions inside into the black murk of swamp beneath it. It left behind only a field of debris that children days later picked through, their small hands dodging exposed rusty nails to pull away anything of value left behind. Photo: Sunday Alamba
Activists say Lagos' government continues to lay sod for parks to beautify a city long thought of as a nightmare of urban planning, but the face lifts often come at the expense of the poor without a thought about what will become of them.
In this image taken Thursday Feb. 28, 2013 children stand on the rubble of a demolished house at  Ijora Badia slum in Lagos, Nigeria. The bulldozers arrived at dawn to this neighborhood of shanty homes and concrete buildings in Nigeria’s largest city, followed by police officers in riot gear carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles. The police banged on doors, corralling the thousands who live in Ijora-Badia off to the side as the bulldozers’ blades tore through scrap-lumber walls, its track grinding the possessions inside into the black murk of swamp beneath it. It left behind only a field of debris that children days later picked through, their small hands dodging exposed rusty nails to pull away anything of value left behind. Photo: Sunday Alamba
"A mega city is not about its physical size or its beauty, but its people," said Felix Morka, executive director of the Social and Economic Rights Action Center, which is contesting the demolitions in court. "The poor also live here."
Poverty is difficult to escape from in Lagos, even on its islands, home to its political and business elite. Those missing limbs or with facial injuries approach cars idling at intersections to beg. People bath naked alongside highways or use ditches for toilets. Even those considered as being in the middle class live in crowded tenements or in informal settlements that spring up in the corners of abandoned properties and even on stilts over the Lagos Lagoon.
Ijora-Badia, alongside a road leading to Lagos' main port and across from its major brewery, sits on marshy soil. The first settlers were moved here when the government started constructing the nearby National Theatre in the 1970s. In the time since, Ijora-Badia grew along the railroad tracks and is now home to thousands of people.
In this image taken Thursday Feb. 28, 2013 a bulldozer levels the site of  demolished houses  at  Ijora Badia slum in Lagos, Nigeria. The bulldozers arrived at dawn to this neighborhood of shanty homes and concrete buildings in Nigeria’s largest city, followed by police officers in riot gear carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles. The police banged on doors, corralling the thousands who live in Ijora-Badia off to the side as the bulldozers’ blades tore through scrap-lumber walls, its track grinding the possessions inside into the black murk of swamp beneath it. It left behind only a field of debris that children days later picked through, their small hands dodging exposed rusty nails to pull away anything of value left behind. Photo: Sunday Alamba
The bulldozers arrived there on Feb. 23, a Saturday morning, along with the police. They tore down the homes quickly, leaving most people to sleep outside afterward. Days later, they were crowded into a community hall, an open-air room covered by a thin tin roof. Others slept in a nearby church, their possessions gathered on top of benches under the watchful eyes of pictures of Jesus Christ near the altar.
In this image taken Thursday Feb. 28, 2013, a woman carries  her child stand in front of a partly demolished house at  Ijora Badia slum in Lagos, Nigeria,. The bulldozers arrived at dawn to this neighborhood of shanty homes and concrete buildings in Nigeria’s largest city, followed by police officers in riot gear carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles. The police banged on doors, corralling the thousands who live in Ijora-Badia off to the side as the bulldozers’ blades tore through scrap-lumber walls, its track grinding the possessions inside into the black murk of swamp beneath it. It left behind only a field of debris that children days later picked through, their small hands dodging exposed rusty nails to pull away anything of value left behind. Photo: Sunday Alamba
A spokesman for Lagos state government did not respond to requests for comment about the demolition.
All the newly displaced people interviewed by The Associated Press described being taken by surprise, with some saying that a local chief may have given his blessing for the homes to be razed. Stella Omogbemi said the police chased her away without a chance to gather anything.
In this image taken Thursday Feb. 28, 2013 a woman empties a bucket from  a  demolished house at  Ijora Badia slum in Lagos, Nigeria. The bulldozers arrived at dawn to this neighborhood of shanty homes and concrete buildings in Nigeria’s largest city, followed by police officers in riot gear carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles. The police banged on doors, corralling the thousands who live in Ijora-Badia off to the side as the bulldozers’ blades tore through scrap-lumber walls, its track grinding the possessions inside into the black murk of swamp beneath it. It left behind only a field of debris that children days later picked through, their small hands dodging exposed rusty nails to pull away anything of value left behind. Photo: Sunday Alamba
"I said: 'I owe the government one bullet, you should shoot it now,'" Omogbemi said in the Yoruba language of southwest Nigeria.
On Thursday, days after the demolition, a single bulldozer continued to grind the remains into the ground. One man, who once ran a used oil shop in the neighborhood, stood barefoot in a swampy patch now completely turned black. With oil up his calves, he bent down with a rag to soak bits of it up, wringing it out into a nearby bucket.
The reason for the demolition is unclear. Some at the site said they believed the area would be converted into an upper-class housing estate, which seemed unlikely as it sits in an industrial area.
This is the latest of a string of demolitions to target slums in the city, most conducted without any prior warning. In July, police and state officials began razing homes in the waterfront slum of Makoko, an iconic neighborhood of Lagos where thousands live in shack homes rising out of the city's lagoon on stilts. The government stopped after a public outcry, but many fear officials could resume tearing homes down at any time. Similar demolitions have occurred elsewhere in the country, including Port Harcourt, where activists say some 25,000 families lost their homes.
The same fear permeates Ijora-Badia, where homes on the edge of the demolitions also saw their walls knocked down. Local activists say they'll challenge the government in court. However, justice from the courts can be incredibly slow in Nigeria. Others worry the same system that allows government corruption to flourish will affect the courts.
Friday Ogunyemi, a 21-year-old university student who lost all his admittance records and paperwork, said people can't expect the government to come to their aid, despite the nation abandoning military rule for democracy in 1999.
"They treated us like we are not Nigerians, like we are not existing," Ogunyemi said. "Our dividend of democracy is a bulldozer."


Kidnappers abduct 5 Lagos bound passengers along Benin-Shagamu road




ABDUCTION of persons by suspected kidnappers has taken a new worrisome dimension in Edo State following the kidnapping on Wednesday morning of five Lagos-bound passengers by gunmen on the Lagos-Benin road near Ogbemudia farms.
It was gathered that the passengers were among occupants of a Greener Line space wagon Sienna bus travelling from Warri, DeltaState to Lagos when they ran into a barricade along the Benin-Ore- Sagamu-Lagos road.
The suspected kidnappers were said to have blocked the highway with a truck, and the bus driver on sighting the barricade, slowed down.
Soon after, some gun-totting men were said to have emerged from the bush and took the passengers hostage after allowing the driver and one passenger to go and give information about the incident.
It was further learnt that one of the victims who lives in Lagos, was said to be returning to the state after a naming ceremony of his new-born baby in Warri when he was abducted along with other passengers.
The father of the victim, a retired army colonel, told newsmen that the kidnappers had made contact and demanded N3 million ransom to set his son free, even as he pleaded with them to release his son unhurt, saying that it was difficult for the family to raise the amount they demanded.
When contacted, Edo State Police Command Acting Public Relations Officer, Awhara Ejiroro, said he was yet to be briefed on the incident.

LASPOTECH student buried.

Lagos:

The remains of Olayinde Bournes has been buried, amist tears.
The part-time Business Administration Student of Lagos State Polytechnic, Miss Olayinde Bournes, 22, was allegedly been beaten to death by her 24 years old boyfriend,  Abuchi Cyril.
The incident happened last Thursday February 21st at Shorinmade Street, Aguda-Ogba area of Lagos State, southwest Nigeria.
the deceased: Olayinde and her boyfriend
According to reliable sources, she always complained that her boyfriend, Abuchi always beat her at the slightest provocation. it was gathered that Olayinde had reported abuchi's beating to his mother, but it obviously has no effect. 
it was gathered that on Thursday when the tragedy occurred, Abuchi invited Olayinde to his house Shorinmade Street, to see his travel documents.  as he was slated to travel to Malaysia the next day.  Nobody knew what happened when the lovers were together but it is believed that they had a misunderstanding which may have led to a fight. 




Olayinde bournes is the last of three children born to Mr Akindele Bournes; a 59 years old retired civil servant. she also worked part time with cadbury Nigeria plc. 

Music producer Samklef involved in auto crash





Nigerian producer, Samklef is in good spirit after surviving an accident earler on the Feb 28th. Here are the visuals to his hit single, The Rain ft Jesse Jagz.Enjoy!
  

In the wee hours of today 28th February, ace producer Samklef survived an auto-crash which left his car greatly damaged. Thankfully though,neither him nor the other occupant of the car, his driver was injured.


   

Uche Jombo's Hubby Kenny Rodriguez Arrives Nigeria For Her Movie Premiere





Uche Jumbo's Puerto Rican-American husband touched down Nigeria via Delta Airlines this morning to honour the premiere of her movie “My Life, My Damage.”

My Life My Damage Poster1 Uche Jombo's Hubby Kenny Rodriguez Arrives Nigeria For Her Movie Premiere + Official Teaser Trailer.



The premiere which holds today Friday March 1, 2013 at Ozone Cinemas in Yaba, Lagos.
Synopsis of “My Life, My Damage”:
The movie’s essence touches greatly, the consequences of drug abuse and HIV/AIDS. It depicts the life of young Dora (Tonto Dikeh) who is caught up in repercussion of reckless living abroad as a drug addict and then, left with the torture of seeking redemption after she discovers that she is a carrier of the dreadful HIV/AIDS virus.
The movie features Tonto dikeh (as star actress), H Thomas , Dani palmer, bukky wright, Tia diggs and others, and was directed by Moses Inyang.
The movie is Uche’s second off her damage trilogy advocacy movies.


Uche Kenny Rodriguez Uche Jombo's Hubby Kenny Rodriguez Arrives Nigeria For Her Movie Premiere + Official Teaser Trailer.  

Uche's wedding pictures:


Shade Okoya honored!


              

Tuesday, February 19, 2013, all roads led to Oke Ona, Egba, Abeokuta, Ogun State Nigeria, as the youngest wife of the Aare of Lagos, Multimillionaire real estate mogul Chief Rasaq Akanni Okoya, 

MD+6 Exclusive photos: Shade Okoya gets Chieftancy Title

in the person of Shade Okoya was decorated with a chieftancy title.

The very fashionable wife of the Eleganza boss is one of the 3 that was honored





The capital of Ogun State, Abeokuta was agog and in celebratory mode as friends and family members of the Okoyas gathered in large numbers to rejoice with Shade as his royal majesty, the Osi-le Oke-Ona, Oba (Dr. Adedapo Tejusoho made her an honorary Chief of his domain, Oke Ona Egba. 



MD+2 Exclusive photos: Shade Okoya gets Chieftancy Title


The title of Ajisewa of Oke-Ona Egba land was confered on her by HRM Oba Adedapo Tejuoso.

   MD+5 Exclusive photos: Shade Okoya gets Chieftancy Title








“The power of finding beauty in the humblest things makes home happy and life lovely.” ― Louisa May Alcott