Monday, 15 September 2014

Lagos Church Building Collapse, Truth Will Be Revealed Soon- T.B Joshua!

Ibrahim Farinloye, the Public Relations Officer of National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), reportedly confirmed in a telephone interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos, that death toll from the collapsed building in Synagogue Church of All Nations, Ikotun, Lagos, on Sunday increased to 41, while people trapped in the building that had been rescued have also risen to 130 with varying degrees of injury.

Debris of the collapsed building

Information given to news men by Ibrahim Farinloye revealed that 80 percent of people rescued after a six-storey building guest house under construction belonging to the Synagogue Church of All Nations collapsed on Friday were women.

According to him, two female children, aged four and eight years, were among those rescued from the collapsed building.

He said the continued rescue exercise has increased the number of dead persons from 17 to 40.

It was gathered that after the collapse, members of the church were said to have at first prevented emergency officials from participating in the rescue, making it difficult to establish a toll for the dead and injured. But NEMA were allowed in on Saturday.

We’re still working at the site,” Farinloye had said, adding he expected the clear-up would extend into today.

There was no immediate explanation for the collapse from the government.
Emergency services officials said the lower three floors of the building located in the large church compound had already been operating as a guest house, and it appeared construction work was underway to add three more floors.

However, the Senior Pastor of the church Temitope Joshua attributed the cause of the collapse to a mysterious helicopter flying repeatedly over the building.

Pastor T.B Joshua reportedly showed a three-minute video clip taken from CCTV cameras to journalists in Lagos on September 13, claiming the helicopter might have been responsible for the collapse of the six-storey guest house.

From the short video clip, a jet was observed to have hovered four times -11:30 am, 11:43 am, 11:45 am and 11:54 am -- before the building caved in.
After the fourth passage over the building, the structure collapsed at exactly 12:44 am.
He said from the video clip, the building might have been collapsed as a result of chemical substances poured on it.
Explaining after the clip, T.B Joshua said the building might have caved in as a result of a terrorist attack: "In a few weeks, the truth behind the collapsed building will be revealed. The last time the Boko Haram issue occurred, the press were against the church including the police but after some weeks, the truth behind the attack was revealed."
Joshua explained his reasons for being quiet initially as: "I do not want to put fear in the minds of Nigerians. We are still battling with the Ebola virus disease, and that was why I have decided to delay my comment till now."
He urged the Pressmen to analyse the video and come to their own conclusion as to what might have happened.
He further argued that building of such solid foundation would not have collapsed in the manner that the six-storey building came down.

Iragi Government Air Strike killed at least 31 civilians, including 24 kids on September 1- Human Right Watch!

Calls have been made for the Iragi government to investigate an airstrike that allegedly hit a school housing displaced people near Tikrit on September 1, 2014. 
Report says the attack killed at least 31 civilians, including 24 children, and wounded 41 others. According to three survivors, no fighters from the armed group Islamic State or other military objects were in or around the school at the time.


The attack occurred around 11:30 p.m. on September 1 on the Al-Alam Vocational High School for Industry in the Alwayi Al-Thawri neighborhood of Al-Alam, 18 kilometers northeast of the city of Tikrit
The area is under the control of Islamic State, formerly known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Sham (ISIS).

“Iraq’s allies in the fight against ISIS need to put pressure on Baghdad to stop this kind of violence,” said Fred Abrahams, special adviser. “ISIS is incredibly brutal, but that’s no excuse for what the Iraqi government is doing.” 
Information revealed by the Human Rights watch revealed that on September 13, new Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi ordered the Iraqi Air Force to “halt shelling of civilian areas even in those towns controlled by ISIS.” 
The unprecedented order could help minimize civilian casualties but accountability for past unlawful attacks is still needed, Human Rights Watch said.
The three survivors and a local resident told Human Rights Watch that they heard an aircraft, most likely a helicopter, fly over the area shortly before midnight, followed by a large explosion at the school. The unidentified munition hit the school courtyard, where dozens of displaced people from Tikrit had gathered.

Based on a list reportedly provided by one of the survivors, the attack killed six men, eight women, and 24 children. Thirty-two people died immediately and six died later from their wounds, the survivor said. Fifteen of the 41 wounded were children.

The member of parliament from Al-Alam, Ashwaq al-Jabouri, said that 31 people died in the attack and 11 were wounded. She called on the presidency of the Iraqi parliament to investigate.

The Iraqi government told Human Rights Watch on September 13 that the pilot involved had targeted a car that the military thought was transporting Islamic State fighters. The car drove near the school and was apparently carrying explosives when the missile struck it, causing an explosion that was “far larger than normal,” the government said.

The three survivors, interviewed by phone, told Human Rights Watch that about 70 people from the extended Jurefat family had been living in the school for about two months prior to the attack. The group had fled Tikrit when the Islamic State took that city in late June. 
ISIS seized control of Al-Alam on June 23 after townspeople fought them for two weeks.

There was no ISIS in the school,” one of the survivors said. “We’re all tribesmen and according to our traditions we don’t let strangers sit with our families.”
Islamic State fighters were in the Al-Alam area and the Alwayi Al-Thawri neighborhood, including at times in a police station 250 meters west of the school, two of the survivors and two local residents said. But the three survivors Human Rights Watch interviewed said there were no fighters or military equipment in or around the school at the time of the attack.

Two of the survivors and one neighborhood resident said Islamic State fighters had fired at an Iraqi government aircraft flying over the town at about 6 p.m. on September 1, approximately five hours before the attack on the school. There was no fighting in the area after that, they said.

The Iraqi military has carried out multiple attacks in Tikrit and nearby areas in its fight against Islamic State. One man who fled Tikrit told Human Rights Watch that a government airstrike on August 27 hit a home where his family and eight others, all from the extended Albu Nassir family, were staying in the village of Samra, eight kilometers north of Al-Alam. The attack killed six members of the man’s family, including two children and two pregnant women, and wounded 20 other people, he said.

In July, Human Rights Watch documented 17 Iraqi airstrikes that killed at least 75 civilians and wounded hundreds of others, including six attacks with barrel bombs. The attacks took place in Fallujah, Beiji, Mosul, Tikrit, and al-Sherqat.

The attacks revealed a pattern of aerial bombardments in residential areas by government forces using helicopters, jets, and other aircraft. The attacks hit areas around mosques, government buildings, hospitals, and power and water stations.
Accounts of the September 1, 2014 Al-Alam Attack 
One survivor of the Al-Alam school attack said he was spared because he was near the bathrooms when the munition hit the courtyard:
Suddenly we saw a huge flame that struck. I was near the bathrooms. There was a lot of flying shrapnel. When I ran toward the flame I found my family killed and wounded. I lost four of my relatives, three of my children, and my wife.
The man said he also lost his brother, nephew, and niece.

Another survivor said he heard what he thought was a helicopter about 11:30 p.m. and then saw a huge explosion in the school courtyard:
I lost my father, brother, and sister, and my mother was severely wounded, which led to the amputation of her left leg. My cousin is still in intensive care. My wife endured two operations. Fourteen members of our family are severely wounded and 15 lightly wounded.
The man had shrapnel injuries in his legs and back and was evacuated first to Hawija and then to Kirkuk, both nearby cities, for treatment.

A third survivor, who was also wounded, said the men were sitting apart from the women and children in the courtyard when the munition struck. He lost his wife, two sons, a daughter, a sister, and a nephew. Five members of his family were wounded, including his son Yazin, who was six months old. “There was no fighting at all before the attack,” he said.

Two men who live near the school said they heard the attack at about 11:30 that night and quickly went to the school. One of them said that when he got there he saw Islamic State fighters keeping civilians away from the school and evacuating the wounded. “I saw no wounded or killed ISIS fighters,” he said.

The man said that he had seen ISIS fighters shooting at an Iraqi plane in his neighborhood at about 6 p.m. A few minutes later a drone flew over the area but the fighters did not shoot at it, he said.

One of the survivors said that the morning after the attack, relatives of those killed traveled in a convoy of minivans to a nearby cemetery to bury the dead. As they approached the cemetery at around noon, a munition fired from a plane struck the ground about 100 meters in front of them in what he believed to be an attack on the funeral gathering. No one was wounded.

The survivor and a local resident who accompanied the group said the relatives sought shelter in a nearby house and then took the bodies to the cemetery one by one for burial.

As of September 10, 13 of the wounded survivors were receiving medical treatment in Kirkuk, one of the survivors said. He claimed that Kurdish authorities controlling the city, fearful of the influx of Arabs from areas held by Islamic State, were not letting him into the city to see his injured relatives. When his son died in the hospital on September 8, he had to get the body at a checkpoint, he said.

Friday, 12 September 2014

Eni Chief Under Investigation By Over Nigerian Oil Deal!




Four months after he took the helm at Italy's biggest listed company, Eni SpA chief Claudio Descalzi has been placed under investigation over alleged corruption relating to a big Nigerian oil deal. 

According to report, Milan prosecutors opened a probe earlier this year and have now widened the net to include Descalzi, in a case relating to a $1.09 billion acquisition of Nigeria's OPL-245 offshore oil block in 2011.


It was gathered that Eni confirmed Descalzi was being investigated after a report in Italian daily Corriere della Sera said he was being probed over the Nigeria deal.
The statement said "Eni is cooperating with the Milan prosecutor's office and is confident that the correctness of its actions will emerge during the course of the investigation,".

Descalzi could not immediately be reached for comment.
A long-standing executive at Eni and former head of its core exploration and production division, Descalzi took over in May from Paolo Scaroni, himself under investigation for alleged corruption in Algeria, although the company said in January it had found no evidence of illegal conduct by the group in relation to the north African country.
Eni said its Operations and Technology Officer Roberto Casula was also being probed. 
Court sources told Reuters on Thursday that Scaroni was also under investigation in the Nigerian case. However, Scaroni and Casula could not immediately be reached for comment.
Milan brokerage Akros noted Eni had been involved in a similar case in Nigeria in 2009, when it paid around $400 million to settle the dispute.
"We believe that the potential negative impact on Eni may be worth 500 million euros or around 1 percent of the current market capitalisation," it said in a note.
At 1436 GMT shares in Eni, Italy's biggest company by stock market value, were down about 2 percent, under-performing the European oil and gas sector stocks index, with traders citing concerns about the investigation.
IN DISPUTE
Ownership of the OPL 245 field has been in dispute for more than a decade.
Former Nigerian oil minister Dan Etete awarded the block in 1998 for $20 million to Malabu Oil and Gas, a company in which he was a leading shareholder. Malabu however only ever paid $2 million for the stake, in 1999.
The field was eventually sold on to Eni and Shell in 2011 for a total of $1.3 billion, including a signature bonus of around $207 million.
Malabu received around $1.09 billion from the sale, while the Nigerian government kept the rest, a British court document has shown.
Campaigners for greater transparency in political and business dealings, who asked Britain to look into the matter, allege Shell and Eni used the Nigerian government as a go-between to obscure the fact they were dealing with Etete.
Eni, the biggest foreign oil and gas producer in Africa, has always said it dealt exclusively with the government of Nigeria and Shell over the acquisition.
Elsewhere Ebeka Obi, a Nigerian intermediary for Etete, has brought a court case in Britain against Malabu for unpaid fees relating to what he says was his help in brokering the Shell-Eni deal.
A judicial source on Thursday said the London court had seized Malabu funds worth $83 million. This follows the seizure of $110 million from a Malabu account in Switzerland a few months ago, the source said.
Descalzi, who was head of the group's exploration and production (E&P) unit at the time of the Nigerian deal, was appointed chief executive of Eni in May.
Prime Minister Matteo Renzi came to office in February pledging to clean up Italian business and introduce ethics rules at publicly-controlled companies, aiming to eject directors found guilty of financial crimes.
But shareholders at many of Italy's big state-controlled companies, including Eni, threw out the proposals by voting against their inclusion in company bylaws.
OPL 245 could contain up to 9.23 billion barrels of crude oil, more than enough to keep China running for two and a half years.
Eni has operated in Nigeria since the early 1960s and the country accounted for around 8 percent of its total output last year. Chronic oil pipe sabotage in the country has recently affected the group's hydrocarbon production in the country. 

Wednesday, 10 September 2014

Barbaric- Three Elderly Italian Nuns Raped, Murdered in Burundi Convent!

Three elderly Italian nuns were sexually assaulted and murdered in twin attacks in their convent in the capital of Burundi, police said today as a hunt was launched for their killers.
Police initially reported that two nuns were stabbed to death yesterday afternoon. The killer then battered one of the two with a rock, before fleeing the convent.
Italian authorities named the first two killed as 83 year-old Olga Raschietti, and 75 year-old Lucia Pulici, both Roman Catholic nuns.
Hours later, another nun in the same convent was reportedly killed, her body beaten and head hacked off. Colleagues named her as Bernadette Boggia, aged 79.
“After the discovery of the two nuns who were brutally killed... the decapitated body of the third nun was found,” Deputy Director General of Police Godefroid Bizimana told AFP.
According to the diocese of Parma in Italy, they were killed during a botched burglary attempt.
But Burundi’s Police said the motive of the killing was not clear, pointing out that no money was taken.
Father Mario Pulicini, an Italian Catholic Priest working in the same Parish, said after the first two nuns were killed, Boggia had called him in the middle of the night reporting she had heard a noise in the convent.
The body of Sister Bernadette was found lying in a pool of blood, her head decapitated, and her face bore signs of beating,” he told AFP in shock.
“The perpetrators had abused her, as they had violated the other two sisters earlier.”
Burundian Vice-President Prosper Bazombanza said the government was “appalled by such barbarity”, and promised police would do all they could to arrest the killers.
“No one can understand how a third sister was killed late at night... Burundi’s government promises to shed light on this matter as quickly as possible,” he added.
Italian Foreign Minister Federica Mogherini condemned the attacks.
Once again we are witnessing the sacrifice of people who, in total commitment, have spent their lives to relieve the suffering still on the African continent,” she said.
The suspected killer in the first attack was seen fleeing the convent with a knife in his hand, said Damien Baseka, a local government administrator in Bujumbura.
Police sources suggested the third nun was killed by an accomplice who had hidden in the convent.
Police spokesman Colonel Helmegilde Harimenshi said three men were being questioned.
In 2011, a Croatian nun and an Italian charity worker were killed in an apparent botched robbery in northern Burundi.
The small nation in Africa’s Great Lakes region emerged in 2006 from 13 years of brutal civil war and its political climate remains fractious ahead of presidential polls due in June 2015.
Culled

Lagos Warns Against Stigmatisation of Survivors and Contacts!

Lagos State Commissioner for Health: Dr. Jide Idris
Lagos State Government on Tuesday warned residents against stigmatizing survivors of the deadly Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) or those placed under surveillance .
The state Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris gave the warning while briefing newsmen on the efforts of the government to contain the virus.
He said the government had received complaints of stigmatization from some of those who had been treated of the virus, as well as from contacts under surveillance.
Idris explained that the complaints ranged from eviction from accommodation,sack and suspension from work.
The Commissioner said that two survivors who had been disengaged by their employers had petitioned the state government ,seeking redress.
He warned that the state government would take legal actions against those culpable of the practice, even as he said it was doing its best to re-integrate Ebola survivors into the society.
"The social problem being faced by discharged cases has been reported severally. This ranges from stigmatization, eviction from their accommodation, being asked to stay away from work and termination of employment.
"We've had cases of employers just terminating the employment of their staff who were just mere contacts, not even suspected cases.
" We believe this is unfair and we feel this impedes on their fundamental human rights.
"One thing I want to emphasize again is that the Ministry of Justice will take the matter up. Anybody, whether a discharged patient or a contact followed up, who feels stigmatized, can petition the Ministry of Justice and the Attorney General of Lagos State and they would take that matter up on their behalf because it is not fair and it is not right". he said.
Idris said stigmatization of survivors and contacts undermined the fight against the disease, and it has discouraged those with suspected symptoms from coming out for help.
He appealed to residents of the state to join efforts with the government to ensure that all cases and contacts that had been given a clean bill of health were reintegrated into the society
The commissioner said a total of 366 contacts had been traced since July 22, explaining that only 19 of these contacts were yet to conclude the 21-day surveillance.
On the First Consultants Hospital, where the first case was recorded, the commissioner revealed that the facility had been decontaminated and also certified to reopen for business.
He said, "We urge those who use the First Consultants Hospital to support them; it remains a flagship medical centre. They have been given a clean bill of health..
Adding that the state government was doing its best to contain the spread of the virus, and stressed that the disease would be defeated faster through collective efforts.
He urged residents not create panic about the disease but take the right precautions against it.
Listing some of the precautions, the Dr. Idris advised against unprotected contacts with corpses, monkeys, bats and other things traced to the Ebola Virus.
Source: Vanguard News

Another Nigerian Ebola Positive!

Minister of Health Professor Onyebuchi Chukwu has confirmed that Nigeria has recorded one more case of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD), .
The latest victim, according to the Minister, is a fiancé of a primary contact of the virus.
While one more Ebola victim was being confirmed, another was declared successfully managed and discharged from the hospital.
The discharged patient, who was treated in Port Harcourt, is a sister of the late doctor who attended to the contact that fled Lagos for the capital of Rivers State.
The Minister added that the total number of confirmed cases of Ebola in Nigeria now stood at 19, with seven deaths - five in Lagos and two in Port Harcourt, the River State Capital.

20 Police Officers Still Missing After Gwazo Attacks- IGP!

The acting Inspector-General of Police, Suleiman Abba, said that the Police officers still missing after the attack by the Boko Haram sect on Police Training School, Gwoza, Borno State, were fewer than 20.
After the insurgents had invaded and launched a massive attack in August, 35 police officers were declared missing from the school.
Acting Inspector-General of Police: Suleiman Abba
Abba, told journalists after a meeting with Vice President Namadi Sambo at the Presidential Villa that some of the missing officers had been found, and vowed that his men would stop at nothing to ensure all the missing officers were traced and rescued.
He said, "Well, I must tell you that the turnout of those missing is still impressive because we have been able to trace some of the officers who have reported either back to their bases or their families. When you go through what they went through, the likelihood of you knowing what to do is not very tenable.
"There is a possibility that the decision of what to do may not be easily comprehensible. So some went back to their homes, but our concern is that once they are in safety we are satisfied, and the process of bringing them back to their units has already commence".