Saturday 1 February 2014

Oscar winning actor Maximilian Schell dies at 83!


Austrian-born actor Maximilian Schell, a fugitive from Adolf Hitler who became a Hollywood favorite and won an Oscar for his role as a defense attorney in “Judgment at Nuremberg,” has died. He was 83.
Schell’s agent, Patricia Baumbauer, said he died overnight at a hospital in Innsbruck following a “sudden and serious illness,” the Austria Press Agency reported on Saturday.


Adieu

Sudan orders Red Cross to suspend work!



The ICRC said it had received a letter from the Sudanese authorities citing "technical issues relating to its humanitarian plans for this year", but giving no further details.
Sudan has in the past suspended or expelled humanitarian organisations.
The Red Cross supplies food, water, health care, and other forms of aid, mainly in the western region of Darfur.
Last year it helped more than 1.5 million people affected by conflict in Sudan.
The ICRC said it had halted its work in response to the letter but hoped "to resume our activities as soon as possible".
The UN estimates that more than 300,000 people have died in Darfur since rebels took up arms in 2003.
Although the violence has come down from its peak, clashes between government forces, rebels and Darfur's rival ethnic groups have continued.

Man to die by hanging for killing his wife!





A man in Lagos has been sentenced to death after being found guilty of stabbing and killing his wife.
Edet Okon, has been convicted of the death of his spouse after it was discovered that he stabbed her to death with a spoon at night.
Okon has been sentenced to death by hanging after his plea of insanity failed. 
A three-man panel of the Court of Appeal led by Justice Joseph Ikyegh ordered that Okon be hanged for killing his wife. 
The appellant had appealed the judgement, arguing that the lower court erred in law when it dismissed his plea of insanity. But in a unanimous judgement, the Court of Appeal held that Appeal No. CA/L/553/10 lacked merit and dismissed it. 
Justice Ikyegh, who delivered the leading judgement, said Mrs. Okon’s blood was crying for vengeance and her killer husband should “reap what he has sown; blood for blood.” Okon had claimed at the lower court that he was insane at the time he stabbed his wife to death and two witnesses called by the defence had given evidence that there were cases of insanity in the family of the appellant. However the court rejected the evidence adduced in support of Okon’s claim, convicted him of murder and ordered that he should die by hanging. 
Aggrieved, Okon took his defence of insanity to the Court of Appeal, urging it to upturn the judgement of the lower court. But in their judgment, the Appeal Court justices said the High Court was right in rejecting the plea of insanity. The court further held that the burden of proving insanity rested on the appellant. The appellant, the court added, failed to discharge the burden on him to prove that he was insane at the time of committing the offence.

 Source: Vanguard News

11 killed in Saturday's volcanic eruption in Indonesia!



According to an Indonesian government official, no fewer than 11 people were killed when a volcano erupted on Saturday.  

Mount Sinabung in North Sumatra erupted Saturday morning, disaster mitigation agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said.
Nugroho said that the victims were hit by hot ash clouds and were all found in Sukameriah, a village close to the volcano's crater.
The volcano spewed ash columns 2,000 meters high and hot ash clouds down its slope, Nugroho said.
Local search and rescue teams will go on a recovery operation Sunday morning, he said.






Gunmen Kill Pastor, 10 Others in Fresh Attack!


Information reaching us disclosed that unknown gunmen suspected to be members of Boko Haram again killed a pastor and 10 other persons  in a fresh attack on Friday  night at EYN in the  village of Sabon Garin Yamdula  ,Madagali area of Adamawa state .
This is coming barely a week when the suspected members of the Islamic sect attacked a Catholic church at Chakawa village of Madagali  local government area of Adamawa and killed over 45 person in the area
Confirming   Friday’s night attack, the chairman Madagali local government council Mr Maina Ularamu   said the attackers had attempted to burn down the village head, but was resisted by some youths and other local vigilantes that kept firing local guns to dispel them.

‘’However  they shot  10 persons and the resident pastor  of EYN church who was rushed and later  died in a  hospital at Madagali town.

Illegal arms importation rises as 2015 elections draws near in Nigeria!




As preparations for the 2015 general elections  and  2014 governorship elections in Ekiti and Osun states gather steam, there are strong indications of increase in the smuggling of arms and ammunition into the country.

Saturday PUNCH also learnt that the demand for imported bulletproof cars had increased in the last few months.

A report of the Nigeria Customs Service obtained by the Punch newspapars correspondents on Thursday showed that the records of seizures of arms and ammunition in 2013 by the Nigeria Customs Service were seven times more than those of 2012. The police also gave indications of a rise in the number of arms in circulation even though its spokesperson did not give a definite figure.
The Public Relations Officer of the NCS, Mr. Wale Adeniyi, said in Abuja on Thursday that the service now seizes contraband including arms and ammunition daily.  He said the agency  had beefed up security along the nation’s borders to curtail the influx of arms and ammunition into the country.
“We know the porosity of our borders, we had to change patrol strategies and the patrol strategy that we are using now is yielding dividends, we are making seizures of contraband on daily basis including arms and ammunitions,” he said.
Late Thursday, the State Security Service Operatives intercepted high-calibre ammunition in a 20-foot container at the Port Harcourt  Port in River State.
The vessel identified as MV Iron Trader was carrying 2,700 anti-aircraft and anti-tank bombs, according to security sources.
The Customs report entitled, “2013 Summary of Suppression of Smuggling/Seizures Report,” showed that the arms and ammunition were seized at  airports, seaports, creeks and border stations nationwide.

The report is prepared by the Enforcement, Investigation and Inspection Department of the NCS and it details the general anti-smuggling activities of the agency for a specified year.
Specifically, the report showed that the cases of seizures represented an increase of about 700 per cent when compared with the single seizure recorded in 2012.
Analysts say the increase in smuggling of arms and ammunitions to the country might not be unconnected with the increase in political activities towards the 2015 general elections and other governorship elections this year given the violence that usually accompanied  past electoral activities in the country.
The Independent National Electoral Commission had announced the timetable for the 2015 general elections and  governorship elections in Ekiti and Osun states last Friday.
Though the electoral body is yet to give the go-ahead for the commencement of political  campaigns,  many politicians including the Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, have indicated their interest in contesting in the oncoming elections.
The 2007 governorship election turned bloody in Osun State when thousands of residents, who felt that the election was rigged by the Peoples Democratic Party took to the streets, burning houses and properties. Soldiers and policemen were drafted to quell the uprising, which spread from Osogbo to Ilesa, the hometown of Action Congress of Nigeria candidate in the election, Mr. Rauf Aregbesola, who eventually emerged as governor after three and a half years of legal battle.
No fewer than eight persons were killed in the countdown to the election while about three persons lost their lives on the day of election, which gave a contentious victory to the PDP candidate, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola.
The latest in the series of political violence in Ekiti State was the killing of a supporter of the House of Representatives member representing Ado/Irepodun Ifelodun Constituency, Opeyemi Bamidele, who was shot dead at Emure Ekiti during a political rally.
The 1983 general elections erupted in violence in Ondo State when the Federal Electoral Commission declared the candidate of the National Party of Nigeria, Chief Akin Omoboriowo, as the winner of the governorship election.
A month-by-month analysis of ammunitions seized by the NCS, showed that the agency recorded the highest seizure of 56,570 in May 2013 and the lowest of 49 seizures in April.
Findings by one of our correspondents revealed that the seizure of 56,570 rounds of ammunition was recorded in Oyo/Osun Command of the NCS  and it was the highest ever recorded in the history of the anti-smuggling agency. Oyo State is one of the country’s border states sharing boundaries with the Republic of Benin.
It was gathered that the ammunition, which were neatly loaded in 227 cartons, and conveyed in a vehicle, were concealed in bags packed with dried cassava tubers.
Adeniyi emphasised the importance of intelligence gathering and said it was one of the  viable ways by which security agencies could  effectively stem  the influx of illegal weapons into the country.
He said, “Intelligence plays a very crucial role in interception of smuggled goods particularly arms and ammunition. People must be willing to give us intelligence reports; they should not just abandon the job of   intelligence reports  to the  customs and other security agencies alone.
We will continue to intensify our efforts to ensure that dangerous cargoes that could impede on national security are not allowed into the country. We will continue to count on the assistance of well meaning Nigerians  to give us information.”

Bulletproof cars
Though statistics of the total number of bulletproof vehicles imported into the country  in the last few months could not be obtained from the Customs, a key player in the sector said the demand  for imported bulletproof  cars had risen from about 800 to 1,500 annually.
When you talk about the normal passenger vehicles, I think it is about 500 and 800 in a year. There are Armoured Personnel Carriers imported by the Police and the Customs. By the time you add the ones imported by the military, you will be talking of about 1,500 in a year,” the Chief Executive Officer,  Proforce  Limited, Mr. Adetokunbo Ogundeyin, said.

Ogundeyin explained that demand for bulletproof   vehicles might not be unconnected with political  activities in the country.
We are having another election next year. Politics in this country is a bit of do-or-die. A lot of people just feel that they will be insecure. So, they want to protect themselves. That is one reason.
“The other reason is the level of threat to life in the Northern area. I am talking about the Boko Haram issue. Unfortunately, the situation is escalating; people feel threatened in the North, and it is even spreading to the South. This is the reason why people feel they have to be protected. Armed robbery is also a factor.”

Findings also reveal that the police have sent operatives  to the nation’s ports, where weapons are concealed inside innocuous imports and brought in illegally into the country to be used by desperate politicians.
The Force Public Relations Officer, CSP Frank Mba, who confirmed this in Abuja, explained that the arms embargo policy was a deliberate move to check the flow of illegal arms as the nation prepared for the elections.
Mba could, however, not give data of the weapons so far seized in the last six months. He promised to get back to one of our correspondents but later said he could not get specific figures.
He stated that the Force Intelligence Department had been re-organised for better performance, stressing that the police were better prepared to nip in the bud any threat to public peace and order.
Mba noted that there had not been any report of assassination or cases of threat to life by politicians in recent times.  He said, “We believe that there would always be conflict and political disagreement but not all disagreements lead to violence. In any case, we are watching the political scene and we are ready to call to order anyone that takes any action that may lead to a breach of public peace.”

Meanwhile, human rights activists have reacted to reports of arms increase in the country by calling on the government to take national security more seriously.
A human rights lawyer, Wahab Shittu, said the country “is sitting on a keg of gun powder capable of exploding at anytime.”
Shittu also described the Customs report as “quite worrisome, disturbing, very frightening and constituting a fundamental threat to national security.”  He added that government at all levels had a lot of work to do to guarantee safety of lives and properties.

Attributing the increase in the arms seizure at the borders to multi-dimensional factors, Shittu also suggested multi-dimensional solutions to the problem.
He said, “There are lots of crises taking place in the neighbouring countries and we are beginning to see the effects here. The increase can be attributed to multi-dimensional factors which include the build up to 2015 elections, deep-seated grievances by the ethnic nationalities that constitute the Nigerian federation, poverty, the rising rate of unemployment and the collapsing ethical and moral values.
“The solutions are also multidimensional because there is a little of religious extremism, politics, hunger, poverty and a collapse of values in the society. The situation necessitates collaboration between our country and the neighbouring countries through the exchange of intelligence and information.

Another human rights lawyer, Fred Agbaje, however, blamed the Customs Service for the increasing smuggling of arms and ammunition into the country, describing the agency’s claims as false.
He said, “The figure they are parading is shameful and embarrassing when compared with the level of banditry in Nigeria today. The arms and ammunition that hoodlums are using in Nigeria all came in through the borders, which are patrolled by Customs and other agencies of the Federal Government.
“Customs service has woefully failed Nigerians in terms of checking the sophisticated weapons that are arriving the borders of this country on a daily basis. The situation has created a lot of fear in the minds of Nigerians and come 2015 elections, it’s going to be worse. The earlier the Federal Government addresses the problem of insecurity, the better, particularly with regards to arms proliferation.”

APC unveils first presidential aspirant!


The scramble to be the presidential candidate for the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) has begun with the announcement by the Publisher of Leadership Newspapers, Sam Nda-Isaiah of his intentions to vie in the 2015 elections.
Nda-Isaiah, who is believed to be a protege of one of the leaders of the APC and founder of the now defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, made his intentions public yesterday while paying a courtesy visit to ThisDay Newspapers’ Lagos Headquarters  to intimate the management of his presidential ambition.
When asked about his decision vis-a-vis his political relationship with Buhari considering the fact that many believe the former Head of State still has his eyes firmly locked on Aso Rock, Nda-Isaiah said, “I told him (Buhari) tactically that I am in the race. And he said it was politically correct. I went round all those close to him. I have gone far into the race. So, if he decides to contest, I’m going to contest. I will contest against him. I will try everything to make sure that the relationship remains the same. But I wish it would not happen.”
He, however, maintained that he has no intention to drop his presidential ambitions if Buhari decides to throw his hat into the ring.
While explaining what fueled his ambition to vie for the presidential ticket of the APC, Nda-Isaiah said “It is now we should start doing very big things. We should have the biggest airports and the biggest seaports. Look at the things we achieved when there was no oil.
“Go to the universities now and compare what they did 20 years ago. We need new direction. I don’t believe that there is a magic to it. I believe it is possible to make the difference,” he stated.
He lamented the level of division among Nigerians, saying if he wins in the presidential election, one of his first assignments will be to ensure the unity of Nigeria, which he identifies as the panacea for rapid development.
“The most important thing is to bring people together. We are too divided over small issues. If any leader is sincere, it is the very thing to do. I will not say we are going to fight corruption because that is part of governance,”  he said.

Brief biography:
Born on May 1, 1962, Nda-Isaiah attended Government College, Kaduna. He went on to the then University of Ife, Ile-Ife, where he graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in Pharmacy. He was the national editor-in-chief of the Pharmacy students’ magazine, Student Pharmacist.
Nda-Isaiah became a member of the Daily Trust Editorial Board as well as a member of the committee appointed by the Kano State Government to revive The Triumph, the state-owned newspaper.
The Publisher of Leadership Newspapers is also a member of the Institute of Directors, a member of the Vienna-based International Press Institute, a member of the World Association of Newspapers (WAN), and an executive member of the Newspaper Proprietors’ Association of Nigeria (NPAN).
Story written By Isi Esene