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Nigeria’s Folorunsho Alakija Joins Forbes’ World Most Powerful Black Women, 2014

Alakija

A Nigerian billionaire businesswoman, Folorunsho Alakija has emerged in the Forbes estimation, as one of the World Powerful Black Women for the year 2014. Alakija is named along with veterans like American TV mogul, Oprah Winfrey, American singer, Beyonce and other women who have established themselves as leading lights in media, politics, philanthropy and business.

Alakija is the co-founder of Famfa Oil, a privately-held Nigerian exploration and production company that owns a lucrative stake in one of the country’s most prolific oil fields.

This was contained in the annual ranking of the World 100 Most Powerful Women  published by FORBES. It is the definitive guide to the female icons and ground-breakers in business, entertainment, politics, diplomacy and philanthropy who wield the greatest impact on the world stage. Of the 100 women featured, 12 are black, up from 11 last year with the latest being Folorunsho Alakija

Here are the 12 most powerful black women in the world.

Michelle Obama, First Lady, U.S.A

America’s first lady is putting her platform to good use: fighting childhood obesity, promoting healthier eating and launching an initiative that aims to increase the number of low-income American students who go to college. In 2012, she authored “American Grown,” a coffee table book about growing veggies and tomatoes on the South Lawn of the White House.

Oprah Winfrey, Media Mogul, U.S.A

The 60 year-old media mogul is the only African-American billionaire in the world with a net worth estimated at $3 billion. Winfrey hit the big time through her flagship daytime TV show which aired for 25 years between 1986 and 2011, before she bowed out to channel her energies to her own cable network, OWN. The once-struggling network became cash-flow positive in 2013. Winfrey was part of a consortium of billionaires that included Oracle CEO Larry Ellison and billionaire media executive David Geffen who bid for LA Clippers basketball team but lost to former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. One of the world’s most generous women, she has given millions to educational causes across the world, chief among them being the $100 million she has spent on the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls in South Africa.

Ursula Burns, CEO of Xerox, U.S.A

Burns was appointed CEO of Xerox in 2009, and over the last 5 years, she has worked tirelessly towards transforming the company’s image as a manufacturer of printers to a full-fledged services business. And it’s working well. Services now represent 57% of the company’s $21.4 billion full-year revenue and could possibly account for two-thirds by 2017. Burns joined Xerox as a summer intern in 1980 and joined the company permanently in 1981 after completing her masters at Columbia University.

Beyonce Knowles, Musician, U.S.A

2013 was an eventful year for Beyonce. She sang for President Obama, performed at the Super Bowl, and headlined the most profitable tour of the year by shocking the world with a surprise “visual album” in December. It became iTunes’ fastest-selling album ever, selling 828,773 units in the first three days. Along with husband Jay-Z, Beyonce will be co-headlining the On The Run Stadium Tour which kicks off on June 25, and will feature 18 shows across North America.

Rosalind Brewer, President and CEO, Sam’s Club, Wal-Mart Stores, U.S.A

Brewer became CEO of discount membership club and retailer Sam’s club in 2012, becoming the first woman and first African-American to head a Wal-Mart subsidiary. The $56 billion (revenues) division of Wal-Mart has operations in the U.S, Brazil and China, 110,000 employees and boasts over 47 million members. A former executive at Kimberly-Clark, she joined Wal-Mart in 2006 and previously served as president of the retail giant’s Eastern U.S. business division. She is chair of the board of trustees for Spelman College.

Joyce Banda, Former President, Malawi

Joyce Banda failed in her attempt to win a second term in office after losing out in Malawi’s May presidential elections to Peter Mutharika, a brother to the country’s former president, Bingu wa Mutharika. It’s been a humiliating end to what could have easily been a glorious political career for Malawi’s first female president. Banda became Malawi’s ruler in 2012 after the death of Bingu wa Mutharika. She started off relatively well – selling off the presidential jet, announcing a cut to her salary, loosening foreign exchange controls and even devaluing the Kwacha at the recommendation of the International Monetary Fund. But she lost all goodwill in the wake of the infamous ‘Cashgate scandal’, in which millions of dollars were embezzled by top civil servants in one of the most brazen cases of corruption the country has witnessed in its recent history. Banda is the founder of the Joyce Banda Foundation International which supports projects aimed at empowering market women and providing orphans with access to education.

Ertharin Cousin, Executive Director, World Food Programme, United Nations, U.S.A

Cousin was appointed executive director of the World Food Programme in April 2012. Between then and now, she has fed 177 million people. In 2013, and under Cousin’s leadership, WFP raised $4.2 billion in contributions from governments, corporations, foundations and individual donors. The funding will help WFP’s 13,500 employees who work in 83 countries fight hunger brought on by drought and civil war in Syria, as well as by violent conflicts in South Sudan and the Central African Republic.

Helene Gayle, President & CEO, CARE, U.S.A

Gayle is the President and Chief Executive Officer of CARE USA, a leading humanitarian organization which actively fights poverty in 87 countries by responding to natural disasters, climate change and other causes of global poverty. She was appointed to the position in 2006. In November 2012 when Typhoon Haiyan struck the Philippines, Gayle led CARE on the ground, providing food, shelter and supplies. Within six months, CARE had provided relief to more than 300,000 people.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Minister of Finance, Nigeria

The Nigerian economist is the country’s Coordinating Minister of the Economy. She was appointed by Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan in 2011 while she was a Managing Director at the World Bank. She was previously Minister of Finance during the tenure of former president Olusegun Obasanjo.

Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, President, CEO, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

Lavizzo-Mourey heads the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the largest healthcare foundation in the U.S. She became the CEO in 2003, a position which has her overseeing an estimated 800 grants, a $10 billion endowment and annual disbursements of more than $450 million towards improving health care. Lavizzo-Mourey is the first woman and the first African-American to head the foundation.

Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, President, Liberia

Africa’s first female head of state won the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize for her work in promoting Liberian reconciliation and  in atoning for Liberia’s history of civil war. She was re-elected for a second term the same year, reneging on an earlier promise to run for only one term in office. Today she is ramping up efforts to bring foreign investment to her impoverished nation ($700 GDP per capita and an estimated 64% of its population live below poverty line).

Folorunsho Alakija, Businesswoman, Nigeria

Alaikja, Nigeria’s first female billionaire is a new entrant to the league of the world’s most powerful women. After working as a secretary in a Nigerian merchant bank in the 1970s, Folorunsho Alakija quit her job to study Fashion design in England. She subsequently founded Supreme Stitches, a premium Nigerian fashion label which catered exclusively to upscale clientele, including Maryam Babangida, wife to Nigeria’s former military president Ibrahim Babangida. The President awarded her company, Famfa Oil an Oil prospecting license which went on to become OML 127, one of Nigeria’s most prolific oil blocks. Famfa Oil owns a 60% stake in the block. In 2008, she founded The Rose of Sharon Foundation, which works to help widows and orphans. And in 2013, she was appointed the vice chair of Nigeria’s National Heritage Council and Endowment for the Arts. [myad]

 

 

2022 World Cup: FIFA Probes Qatar Over Bribe, As Australia Waits In The Wings

FIFA Investigator

FIFA investigator, Michael Garcia is expected to lead the Organizers of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar to begin investigation into an alleged bribe which led to the country winning the bid to host the 2022 World Cup tournament, even as the Football Federation Australia has re-submitted its bid to host the tournament in case Qatar is disqualified.

It was widely alleged in the media that a number of football officials took £3 Million in return for support of the Qatari bid.

And there are growing calls for the Gulf state to be stripped of the right to hold the tournament as allegations were rife that payments of millions of pounds were made to officials who supported its bid to host the tournament.

FIFA vice-president Jim Boyce says he would support a re-vote if corruption allegations can be proven even as Qatar’s 2022 bid committee denies “all allegations of wrongdoing.”

New York lawyer Garcia, who is due to meet Qatari officials in Oman, is already conducting a long-running inquiry into the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids, the results of which were announced at the same time.

Prior to Qatar winning the right to stage the 2022 tournament, Russia was voted as host for the 2018 event.

Boyce said: “I certainly, as a member of the executive committee, would have absolutely no problem whatsoever if the recommendation was for a re-vote.

“If Garcia comes up with concrete evidence – and concrete evidence is given to the executive committee and to FIFA – then it has to be looked at very seriously.”

Former attorney general, Lord Goldsmith, a member of FIFA’s independent committee on governance, backed Boyce’s stance, saying: “If it is proved that the decision to give Qatar the World Cup was procured by – frankly one can describe it no other way – bribery and improper influence, then that decision ought not to stand.”

Mark Pieth, a law professor appointed by FIFA president, Sepp Blatter to lead the independent committee on governance, agreed and called the latest revelations “exciting.”

Football Association chairman, Greg Dyke has said that a new vote should take place if it was shown a “corrupt system” led to Qatar’s win, while UK Sports Minister, Helen Grant said it was “essential that major sporting events are awarded in an open, fair and transparent manner.”

Allegations of corruption centre on former FIFA official, Mohamed bin Hammam.

The Sunday Times claims to have obtained secret documents that implicate the former Asian Football Confederation president in corrupting members of football’s governing body to win the right to stage the 2022 World Cup.

The newspaper alleges the documents, seen by BBC sports editor, David Bond, show that Qatari Bin Hammam, 65, was lobbying on his country’s behalf at least a year before the decision to award the country hosting rights.

They also allegedly show he had made payments into accounts controlled by the presidents of 30 African football associations and accounts controlled by Trinidadian Jack Warner, a former vice-president of FIFA.

A statement from the Confederation of African Football said the specific allegations against its president, Issa Hayatou, were “fanciful”, “ridiculous” and formed part of a “smear campaign” against him.

It added that Cameroonian Hayatou, a FIFA vice-prsident, categorically denied the allegations of corruption.

“Mr. Hayatou will not allow journalists once again to attack his integrity and reputation,” it read.

“Such allegations are meant to discredit not only him as a person but the whole continent.”

Qatar’s bid committee and Bin Hammam have always strenuously denied any wrongdoing.

The committee also rejected claims Bin Hammam actively lobbied on their behalf in the run-up to the vote in December 2010.

It added it was co-operating with Garcia, insisting it will “take whatever steps are necessary to defend the integrity of Qatar’s bid”.

Qatar defeated bids from South Korea, Japan, Australia and the United States to win the right to stage the 2022 World Cup. [myad]

 

10 Days To Beginning Of World Cup, Brazil Rushes Stadia

Brazil stadium

With 10 days to go to the World Cup, Brazil has today, started rushing to finish installing seats in stadiums and deal with threats ranging from violent protests to dengue fever. An estimated 600,000 foreign fans and 3.1 million Brazilians are expected to criss-cross the country with 157,000 police and soldiers providing security during the tournament.

The countdown to the June 12 kick-off has been marred by a series of protests, from striking bus drivers who paralyzed Sao Paulo by abandoning their vehicles mid-route to indigenous leaders in bright-feathered headdresses who shot arrows at police in Brasilia, impaling one officer’s leg.

Anger over the more than $11 billion being spent on the event has raised fears of a return to the violence, seen last year, during the Confederation Cup, a World Cup dress rehearsal, when clashes with police broke out as a million people flooded the streets calling for more money for social programs and less for stadiums.

But recent protests have been smaller, with journalists and street vendors sometimes outnumbering those chanting, “There won’t be a World Cup!” In a country that takes great pride in its five World Cup titles, the tournament’s approach is unleashing growing excitement, with local media providing exhaustive coverage of the Brazilian team’s training camp.

That national ambivalence is the target of a meme that has gone viral on social networks. “I see you! You write on Facebook that ‘There won’t be a World Cup,’ but you’ve planned a barbecue with your friends on game day,” says the caption, attached to a photo of President Dilma Rousseff.

Corinthians Arena in Sao Paulo, which will host the opening ceremony and kick-off match between Brazil and Croatia, held a hastily scheduled second test event Sunday but is still under construction.

Temporary seating areas for 20,000 fans — delayed after a worker fell to his death from one of them, one of eight construction accident fatalities at Brazil’s host stadiums — have still not received safety clearance from firefighters.

The stadia in Curitiba, Cuiaba, Natal and Porto Alegre are also still incomplete to varying degrees. The original deadline for all 12 host stadiums was December 31.

With preparations plagued by chronic delays and cost overruns, organizers have shelved much of the other infrastructure they had promised, from roadworks to a high-speed train to subway and monorail lines.

Football legend Ronaldo, a member of Brazil’s World Cup organizing committee, admitted last week that only 30 percent of the planned projects would be completed. One of organizers’ biggest headaches has been upgrading the country’s aging airports.

In three host cities — Rio, Belo Horizonte and Recife — the originally planned upgrades will not be done in time, raising concerns over whether airports can cope with demand.

The recent police strikes — and threats of more during the tournament — have raised security fears in a country with one of the world’s worst crime rates. The stakes are high for Rousseff, who is up for reelection in October. The leftist leader is leading in the polls, but her top rivals have been consolidating their support. Analysts say the results on the pitch will probably not affect her chances.

But if the Brazilian team loses, it could fuel anger over the money spent hosting the tournament. The hosts are considered the favorites, but face enormous pressure.

The last time Brazil hosted the World Cup, in 1950, they lost the final to Uruguay, an upset that still haunts the country. This year’s final will be played in the same place, Rio de Janeiro’s Maracana Stadium. “If we do not win this World Cup then the specter of 1950 will become that of 2014 and will haunt us until there is another World Cup here,” Cafu, the captain of Brazil’s last world-champion team, in 2002, told AFP in a recent interview.

There is meanwhile a more tangible threat facing Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal and John Mikel Obi’s Nigeria, whose base camps will be in Campinas.

The southeastern city is in the middle of the worst dengue fever outbreak in its history. Sanitation workers are spraying for mosquitos, which carry the tropical virus. But health officials recommend players cover up and wear insect repellant just in case. [myad]

World Is About To End…Scientists Say Earth’s Sixth Mass Extinction Is On The Way

World ending

Scientists at the Duke University in the United States have given a frightening signal that the world we live in may soon come to an end sooner than we ever expected.

The lead researcher for the study, Stuart Pimm, said in a Journal Science-So Its Pretty Legit (We Think): “We are on the verge of the sixth extinction. Whether we avoid it or not will depend on our actions.”

Pimm believes that the decline of natural habitats in favour of construction is fuelling the rise, though he did not give a time frame.

“We’re guessing it could happen at any moment,” the scientist said.

He emphasized that the world is on course for its sixth great extinction, insisting that the Earth is facing its next mass extinction far sooner than expected.

Another group of scientists in the US has also has also carried out study that looking at species extinction rates, suggests the decline of the world as we know it is happening TEN times faster than expected.

Top of Form

Bottom of Form

The scientists found that species are dying out at a rate of 1,000 in every million each year – far greater than the 100 expected rate.

And before humans came along that rate was only one in one million, according to a similar study in 1995. [myad]

 

Emergency Management Plans Humanitarian Gestures Ahead Of Release Of Chibok Girls

NEMA Boss
Nigeria National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) is currently holding series of meetings with humanitarian stakeholders to develop a suitable plan for the social re-integration of the female students of the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok in Borno state in anticipation of their release from the Boko Haram stranglehold.
This is even as the federal government is intensifying efforts towards rescuing the girls.
Addressing the stakeholders meeting in Abuja, the Director-General of NEMA, Muhammad Sani Sidi said that the Agency is working on validating a draft humanitarian response plan for Chibok and build synergy as well as strengthen coordination mechanisms for humanitarian assistance.
“Our Armed Forces are determined to get the abducted girls and re-unite them with their families. Efforts are on the way to rehabilitate and re-integrate them once they are released. Humanitarian support is also being planned for the Chibok Community.”
The NEMA boss disclosed that the agency has already commenced humanitarian intervention in Chibok and even as he admitted that there are some loopholes in the providing for some affected persons.
He pointed in particular, to some priority sectors such as health, education, emergency food and non-food items, water and sanitation.
Also speaking, the Resident Coordinator of the United Nations in Nigeria, Dauda Toure advised the stakeholders to support the initiative of NEMA by making useful contributions.
The Chairman of Chibok Local Government Area, who was represented at the meeting by Musa Elijah Kolo appreciated the Federal Government for coming to the aid of the people.
He requested for speedy rescue of the abducted girls, rehabilitation and upgrading of public infrastructures in the area. [myad]

Agents Of Nigeria Breaking Up Phantom By Yusuf Ozi-Usman

American prediction of Nigeria-BreakingA couple of years ago, report had it that America predicted that Nigeria as an entity, would disintegrate by 2015. Of course, when the news came up, many people condemned America for choosing to be a prophet of doom for Nigeria, even as many others took the prediction as one of those American antics, of teasing the so-called third world or developing or under-developed countries.
One or two analysts have since denied, on behalf of America, that what it (America) said had nothing to do with prediction that Nigeria would break up in 2015.
As a matter of fact, what is in contention now is not only the issue of whether or not America predicted that Nigeria would disintegrate in 2015, but also the realities that are gradually manifesting in the nation’s political firmament.
It is becoming clearler that the concept of Boko Haram has been floated and or is been seen in some quarters as, and for the purpose of, rousing up the original agenda by some elements that are still in masquerade uniforms, to actualise the phantom American prediction.
Indeed, by hindsight, the identities of such elements, especially, those that have time immemorial, been looking for an excuse to expouse the break-up of Nigeria, are begining to show, even if slowly, in the horizon.
The identities are showing by the way they talk, by the way they behave and other mannerisms that have the semblance of the promoters of amagedon!
On the one side of the extreme, and perhaps a day-light, unapologetic agent of pull-Nigeria-down is the ex leader of the Niger Delta militants, Alhaji Asari Dokubo. He it was who called on his fellow tribesmen and women, a couple of weeks ago, to prepare for war with the North on some very incoherent and illitrate-infested reasons, using Boko Haram insurgents as alibi.
Asari Dokubo, who has always been enjoying wide publicity for all his adult infantile and juvenile empty threat even went as far as saying that he now had over 20 children and that he had trained any of them that has attained the age of 12 years on how to handle gun and engage in marcial fight…all these for the purpose of preparing for war with the people in the North.
He saw Boko Haram as another Hausa/Fulani feudal invasion of the South South that must be resisted at all costs. He even warned President Goodluck Jonathan (from his own side of the country) that he dare not decline to run for second-term in 2015.
At the other extreme is the Lamido of Adamawa who used his privileged membership of the National Conference to warn that he would pull his emirate from Nigeria if he is pushed to the wall.
And yet at the other extreme is a former Nigerian minister from South West, Femi Fani Kayode who has warned that it is either regional independence or bye bye to Nigeria (as an entity)
In deed, amidst these individuals’ ambitions are fears being expressed in many quarters, especially as the nation gets closer to 2015 and the issue of Boko Haram still looms large in the horizon, that the breaking up of Nigeria is becoming inevitable. This is even especially so as the South West and South South are currently agitating, through the National Conference, for regional independence.
Of course, even though, Lamido of Adamawa’s picture in the break-up of Nigeria nightmare is now in the public, the target of all the agitations for the break-up has been the North.
It is as if the mere break-up of Nigeria would suddenly send the North into political, economic and social oblivion and brighten the prosperity of the other parts.
It is unfortunate that the leadership has remained silence, hiding under the free speech in our own kind of warped democracy in the face of war and or break up drum being beating by those who ordinarily should have been behind bars. Those are they that have come out to show clearly that they are agents of break-up and or America’s phantom prediction.
Those of us that are on the side of a united, solid, peaceful and forward looking Nigeria, and I’m sure we are in majority, believe, like the late Sardauna of Sokoto, Sir Ahmadu Bello said, that we have more things that bind us together than the artificial, politically motivated ones that keep us asunder.
This, I believe, has nothing to do significantly, with the prosperity or otherwise of individual regions, states or councils, whether they are within the same geographical entity called Nigeria or without.

Read More Articles From This Author:  Yusuf Ozi-Usman

[myad]

Youth Minister Lied, Jonathan Has Not Offered Amnesty To Boko Haram-Presidency

Reuben Abati
Reuben Abati

“President Goodluck Jonathan has not declared amnesty for members of the Boko Haram sect.” These were the words of special adviser to President Goodluck Jonathan on media and publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati today at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
Abati, who spoke to newsmen as he reacted to the statement credited to the nation’s Minister of Youth Development, Boni Haruna that the President had offered amnesty to the insurgents said, it is a lie.
Boni Haruna had on Thursday, announced to Nigerians that President Jonathan had offered amnesty to Boko Haram as part of the determination of his government to bring the incesant violent attacks across some parts of the North to an end.
However Dr. Abati dissociated the President from the amnesty offer, saying that the President, who spoke at the occasion after Boni Haruna, did not say anything about the amnesty offer.
The minister had made the announcement during the Democracy Day Presidential interaction with youths at the International Conference Centre, Abuja.
The minister had used the opportunity offered by the occasion to, on behalf of the Federal Government, called on the members of the Boko Haram sect to embrace the government’s gesture and key-in to amnesty programme.”
Abati said that the reality on the ground is that the government had lined up series of integration programmes for the members of Boko Haram that are willing to surrender their arms and embrace peace.
He refered Nigerians to the Democracy Day nationwide broadcast by the President where he never used the term “amnesty,” adding “if you read the speech line by line, you will see that it contains the very message that the President wanted to put across.
“In that speech, if you look at it, I don’t think the President used amnesty, instead he spoke about those who are willing to renounce terrorism; those who are willing to embrace peace, opportunities have been created for them through the fact-finding committee, through the Presidential Committee on Dialogue and Peaceful Resolutions of Conflict in the North Eastern part of Nigeria. So I will refer you basically to the speech by the President.”
Meanwhile, President Jonathan has condemned the assassination of the Emir of Gwoza, Alhaji Idrissa Timta who was killed by Boko Haram on Thursday.
Dr. Abati, who conveyed the message of the President said that the news of the assassination shocked the President.
“What it means is that  these terrorists who are threatening peace and stability in Nigeria, are desperate and they continue to show that desperation. But as the President made it clear in his democracy day broadcast, that was his main message to Nigerians, that at the end of the day, it is the people of Nigeria that will prevail, no matter how desperate terrorists may be.”
He said that the federal government is determined to rid the country of terrorism with the support, solidarity, cooperation and partnership that it has been receiving from neighboring countries, the west African sub-region, Africa and the world.
“All these show that this is the battle that the whole world is prepared to fight. So the days of peace as the President said in his speech is assured because this battle will not end until it is won and the sustainable development is fully guaranteed.”

[myad]

President Jonathan Turns To “Mallams” From Senegal For Spiritual Guidance On Boko Haram, Abducted Chibok Girls

khalifah sheikhPresident Goodluck Jonathan has turned to Senegalese “Mallams” for special prayers and spiritual guidance over the unceasing spate of Boko Haram violent attacks and the return of female students of the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok in Borno state abducted by Boko Haram on April 14.
The “Mallams were in the State House, Abuja today to offer the special prayers for the lasting solutions to the intractable carnage by Boko Haram. The President has been under increased pressure from local and foreign observers over the abduction of school girls in Chibok, Borno State as well as the increasing spate of killings perpetrated by the Boko Haram sect.
The group of clerics, numbering about 10, was led by Khalifah Sheikh Ahmad Tijani Inyass, the grandson of Late Shehu Tijani Ibrahim Inyass, the founder of the Tijjaniya sect.
Others in the group were Sheikh Muhammadul Makky Inyass, Sheikh Mansur Inyass, Sheikh Ahmad Tijjani Inyass, Sheikl Bashir Inyass, Inyass Mustapha Inyass, Abdullahi Muhammad Maigemu, Sheikh Ibrahim Dahiru Bauchi, Aliyu Ibrahim, Khalifah Shehu Nasiru Hamisu etc.
Also present at the special prayers were Vice President Mohammed Namadi Sambo, Chief of Staff to President, Brig- General Jones Arogbofa (rtd), Head of Service, Bukar Goni Aji; Ministers of the Federal Capital Territory, Bala Mohammed; Justice, Mohammed Bello Adoke; Sate for Health, Khaliru Alhassan; Women Affairs, Hajiya Zainab Maina; State for Agriculture, Asmau Mohammed, etc
The Mallams met the President for about an hours at the First Lady’s Conference Room where they offered the special prayers for an end to the security challenges facing Nigeria as well as peace and stability in the country.
The clerics had been in Nigeria originally to attend the Maulud celebration of Ibrahim Inyass in Gombe and received Presidential invitation to the villa for spiritual support.
Speaking to State House Correspondents after the meeting, spokesman for the group, Ahmed Tijani Sanni Alwalu said it was a historic meeting since former leaders, Yakubu Gowon and Late JTU Aguiyi- Ironsi had also invited the sect to pray for the country in the past.
“It is a historic visit because it has been done by his father with the then President, General Yakubu Gowon and General Aguyi Ironsi. So the history is repeating itself and we came for the Maulud of Ibrahim Inyass Gombe and on our way going home, the President requested for a courtesy visit and our Shehu granted it.
“We must come together, all Muslims and non- Muslims to achieve peaceful co- existence. We must pray so that we can all fight this insecurity in this country.
“The main purpose of coming here is part of the prayers for peace in this country.”

[myad]

Prominent Northern Political Leader After Us, Nigeria Army Cries Out

bADEHThe Nigeria Armed Forces has cried out against an un-named prominent political leader in the North that is planning to cast its men and officers fighiting members of the deadly Boko Haram in parts of the North in bad light.
In a statement today, the spokesman of the military, Major General Chris Olukolade said the aim of the faceless political leader who he called “apologist of terror group” is to “cast the Nigerian military and security forces in bad light.”
He said that the Defence Headquarters has been alerted of a plot by some interest groups to embark on a renewed campaign aimed at attracting international condemnation and indictment of  the Nigerian military and its operations in the Northern part of the country.
“The campaign, which is to rely heavily on doctored and falsified audio visual materials, some of which are already trending in the social media, is to be coordinated and funded by a prominent political leader whose state is presently under the State of  Emergency.
“The details of the plan which is already being fine-tuned by a group of media practitioners,  is to be presented for the final ratification and funding by the political figure. The design is expected to forcefully whip up sentiments of genocide allegedly targeted against a particular religious group.
“The planners of this multi-media crusade also hope to use it to gain some mileage in the drive to secure international attention as they have not achieved this sufficiently despite previous efforts.”
General Olukolade said that the programme is also meant to reinforce the ongoing media campaign against the military which he said, has been adopted as an alternative by those who are bent on politicizing the ongoing counter terrorists operations in the northern part of the country.
He recalled that a newspaper, apparently testing the waters, last week published some of the doctored pictures which the Defence Headquarters instantly repudiated, pointing out that they do not represent activities or operations of the Nigerian military.
“This Headquarters wishes to reiterate its rejection of pictures and video footages from unverifiable sources claiming to reflect activities or so- called atrocities purportedly perpetrated by Nigerian security forces.
“They do not reflect or depict the true state of affairs or operations of Nigerian military or any of the security forces.” The armed forces spokesman asked members of the public to watch out and not allow themselves to be hoodwinked by these acts of what he called “infamy” orchestrated by this desperate group.
He made it clear that the dastardly acts of terrorism would remain against all Nigerians and all peace loving people all over the world, stressing that no amount of propaganda by apologists of terror group can justify the evil acts of terrorism.

[myad]

Troops Discover Hide Out Of Gunmen In Jos, Arrest 23

NIGERIAN ARMYNigerian military, fighting under the banner of Special Task Force in the north-central part of the country have raided camps and criminal hideouts located in Bukuru, Jos South and Barkin Ladi general areas.
Information from the armed forced today said that the raids had led to the  arrest of 23 members of armed gangs terrorizing the region.
It said that the suspects were made up of criminals and a hard drugs supplier who are currently undergoing preliminary investigation before they will be handed over to appropriate prosecuting agency.

[myad]

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