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Argentine President Undergoes Brain Surgery

Argentina’s President, Cristina Kirchner, is to undergo surgery on Tuesday to drain a brain hematoma, officials said, leaving her party in uncertainty in the run-up to this month’s congressional elections.

Kirchner’s spokesman revealed on Saturday that she had been diagnosed with a brain injury following an August 12 fall. Doctors treating her had initially prescribed 30 days rest.

But a decision to operate was taken after Kirchner complained of tingling and a temporary loss of muscle strength in her left arm late Sunday, the Fundacion Favaloro hospital announced.

“A surgical procedure to drain the hematoma has been scheduled,” the hospital confirmed on Monday. Kirchner was hospitalized on Monday ahead of the operation.

“It does not seem serious,” surgeon Carlos Schwartz said adding that “any act of neurosurgery contains risks; but it’s a simple procedure.”

News of Kirchner’s ailment caught Argentina by surprise.

The 60-year-old showed no hint of ill-health in the weeks following the fall as she maintained a busy schedule and undertook trips to Paraguay, Russia and the United Nations General Assembly meeting.

Kirchner, first elected in 2007 before being re-elected for a final four-year term in 2011, spent Sunday resting at her official residence with her son and close advisors.

Vice President Amadou Boudou will act as interim leader in Kirchner’s absence, but has not officially assumed the presidency.

Boudou has filled in once before, running the country for 20 days in January 2012 when the president underwent an operation to remove a growth on her thyroid which was wrongly diagnosed as cancerous.

International Rights College Debuts In Nigeria

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A Nigerian environmental organisation, the Health of Mother Earth Foundation, HOMEF, is partnering with the Right Livelihood Award Foundation in Stockholm, Sweden to establish the Rights Livelihood Campus, RLC, in the country.

This is in furtherance of efforts to build the capacity of Nigerian students and young people on environmental issues.

The Campus, which is the fifth of such in the world and the second in Africa, is to be hosted in the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Port Harcourt, UNIPORT, in southern Nigeria.

UNIPORT will be formally unveiled as the Nigerian chapter of the RLA Campus on November 25.

The event will witness the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU).

Co-chair of the Board of Trustees, Right Livelihood Award Foundation and a former German minister of environment, Monika Griefahn, Uniport’s Vice Chancellor, Joseph Ajienka and coordinator of the Academy, Nnimmo Bassey, will sign the MoU.

The new partnership will also enable Uniport’s Post-Graduate scholars have access to the corps of Right Livelihood laureates as well as exchange opportunities with four other existing campuses across the globe.

The Right Livelihood College awards annually the “Alternative Nobel Prize”.

It is an opportunity for the awardees of the prestigious prize to share their knowledge with younger people.

The RLC currently has its global secretariat at the Universiti Sains in Penang, Malaysia.

Griefahn welcomes the new development saying, “We are very pleased that a Right Livelihood College campus is being established at the University of Port Harcourt in Nigeria.”

“The College continues to make positive impact in the lives of young scholars and continues to build direct links between academics, laureates and the wider community. We commend the University of Port Harcourt and the Health of Mother Earth Foundation for engaging in this partnership,” she said.

Speaking on behalf of the Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Port Harcourt, Fidelis Allen said the institution sees the opportunity to host the RLC campus “as one that will challenge our scholars as well as connect them with their peers around the world. We are equally pleased with HOMEF for making this partnership possible.”

The director of HOMEF, Bassey, who won the Rights Livelihood Award in 2010, is equally excited at the prospect.

“The Niger Delta region of Nigeria has brought so much petroleum-dollar to Nigeria. Sadly the extraction of the petroleum resources has brought devastation to the environment and livelihoods of the people,” he said.


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“We believe that targeted researches here will generate tools for tackling these problems which will in turn find application in other challenged territories beyond the Niger Delta. HOMEF is proud to collaborate with Uniport in hosting the RLC campus in Nigeria,” he added.

Besides Bassey, the only other Nigerian to have won the award so far is the late Ken Saro-Wiwa, together with his organization the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People, MOSOP, in 1994.

The RLC is the global capacity building initiative of the Right Livelihood Award Foundation, based in Stockholm, Sweden. Since inception in 1980, the Right Livelihood Award has been bestowed on 153 laureates from 64 countries.

 

 

 

10 Die In Egypt Bombing, Attack On Troops

Ten people were killed on Monday in the car bombing of the security headquarters of Egypt’s South Sinai province and an ambush of soldiers near the Suez Canal city of Ismailiya, security officials said.

Five people died in the car bombing, which occurred as senior officials were holding a meeting, the officials said.

At least 50 people were reported injured in the blast in al-Tor, the provincial capital.

The security building and the adjoining provincial governor’s office were damaged in the blast as staff fled in panic.

Officials said the bomb was believed to have been concealed in a previously stolen police car.

Also, five soldiers were killed west of the Suez Canal when gunmen opened fire on their patrol, security officials said.

Another soldier was hospitalised in critical condition.

No immediate claims of responsibility for either attack had been made.

Security forces have come under attack west of the Suez Canal and extremist groups have intensified their activity in the Sinai Peninsula to its east since the military’s ouster of democratically elected President Mohammed Morsi in July.

The latest attacks came a day after 53 people were killed as security forces and civilian supporters dispersed marches by Morsi loyalists in Cairo and other cities.

More than 400 people were also reported to have been arrested in the clashes while tens of thousands of supporters of the military-backed interim government celebrated the 40th anniversary of the 1973 Arab-Israeli war in Tahrir Square.

 

 

 

 

 

Let us talk at the confab

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By Eze Onyekpere

Nigerians, over the years, have clamoured for a national conference. During the military era, the agitation was for a sovereign national conference. After the return to civil rule in 1999, the widespread agitation did not go away but abated a bit. The continuation of the agitation was based on the fact that the 1999 Constitution lied about its origin because the Nigerian people did not give themselves a constitution. Rather, the military by the fiat of a decree imposed a constitution on the people. It is a fundamental aphorism that you cannot give what you do not have. Thus, since the soldiers of fortune did not have the consent of Nigerians to craft a constitution, the output and outcome have been this charade going on in Nigeria in the name of governance. Although some advocates continued with the call for a sovereign national conference, the popular agitation however got watered down to a conference without the word “sovereign”. By the 1999 Constitution, the National Assembly claims the right to make laws, amend and alter the constitution and felt it could not give away the sovereign legislative power to any other body of persons. But the truth is that when a structure is built on quick sand, founded on a lie or a misrepresentation of facts, it is bound to run into troubled waters. Such a structure will eventually collapse.

Events in the last few days following President Goodluck Jonathan’s decision to set up a committee to advise on the structure, modalities and legal framework of a national conference seem interesting. The committee is to consult widely with stakeholders, devise a timeframe, make recommendations on representation, etc. Initially, the President was opposed to the idea of a dialogue and David Mark’s leadership of the National Assembly opposed any form of national dialogue which he saw as an affront on legislative  powers. The Senate President had earlier hinted on the need for dialogue during the visit of the splinter Peoples Democratic Party to his office. Whatever may have induced this change of mind in the Presidency and the legislature is welcome and should set the tone for frank, honest and constructive dialogue among Nigerians.

But the challenge is that there are disparate voices opposing the President’s decision to convene a conference; voices that dismiss the idea as a distraction and a waste of time. There are even some self styled progressives and activists opposing the idea before the details have been drawn up by the committee and accepted or rejected by the presidency and the National Assembly. In a democracy, everyone is entitled to their opinion but the voice of the majority should always carry the day. There are so many national questions swept under the carpet which cannot be resolved by mere cosmetic constitutional amendments.  However, the more the sweepers think they have buried the issues, the more the issues resurface. Any pretensions that all is well and that what is needed is the sharing of the proverbial national cake will not bring development to Nigeria. Yes, some critics recall the previous conferences called by the late Gen. Sani Abacha and Chief Olusegun Obasanjo and cynically ask what Nigeria got out of them. But the answer is straightforward. Nigerians got as much as they invested in the conferences. We did not seem to care and were apathetic and so the two leaders had their way. Others have raised questions about whether the National Assembly will still have powers to vet the decisions of the conference for them to become law and binding; the modalities of voting and how the contentious issues will be resolved. Some of the contentious issues include resource control, state police, political structure, etc.

It is my suggestion that there should not be any “no-go” or “settled areas” for the conference. The conference should be free to discuss anything that touches on the country’s governance and take a decision on it. Where decisions cannot be reached, there should be wider consultations and realistic bargains with contenders “giving and taking” until some form of consensus is reached. Any one currently in an elective or appointive position in any tier of government should not be part of this conference. The decisions of the conference should be subjected to a referendum where the people decide on the recommendations that would become law and those to be jettisoned. The power to take fundamental decisions regarding governance structures and their fundamentals even by the 1999 Constitution is vested on the people. Section 14 (1) (a) of the Constitution is unequivocal in its statement that sovereignty belongs to the people of Nigeria from whom government through the Constitution derives all its powers and authority. Sovereignty in Nigeria neither resides in the President or the National Assembly! The agent or delegate cannot be greater that his principal.

In 1999, many of the persons who fought for democracy refused to participate in the process that led to the erection of the current political structures we have today. With the experience of the rigmarole of the military, especially Gen. Ibrahim Babangida’s endless transition, activists and real progressives did not take the idea of participation seriously. Since then, Nigeria has paid dearly for it by handing over power to persons who never spent a minute thinking about how they could improve the livelihoods of their compatriots. Some of the current occupants of power were those who supported Abacha’s murderous gangs. Even Obasanjo was brought straight from prison to play a script. Empirical evidence has shown that he was grossly unprepared for the Presidency and he laid a solid foundation for the rot we have today. So, we must take this conference seriously and invest time and energy into it and direct discussion to areas that touch on the living conditions of the common people. The conference should not just be about the East or West, North or South or Middle Belt and claims of a right to the Presidency. It should also be about duties to the state and baking the national cake before we begin the dialogue of sharing. Nigerians must insist that the agreements of the conference must not become the subject of retrogressive politics.

To the President, I have a clear message. Make no mistakes; if the idea is to buy time and distract Nigerians and you from the PDP divisive politics and the heat turned on the Presidency by a section of the country, then it is better to forget the idea of a conference. But if you mean real business, then continue and I assure you the momentum, interest and passion of Nigerians will overtake any attempts to scuttle the decisions of the conference by any cabal from any quarters whatsoever. Once you let the progressive cat out of the bag, it will be extremely difficult to rein it in. Nigeria is in need of fundamental changes and this conference provides an opportunity to discuss and resolve challenges. If we have fought a bitter civil war, promoted insurrection and the challenges refuse to go away, I am confident that dialogue is the way forward.

•Follow me on twitter @censoj

Terrorists In Kenyan Mall Attack Named

Four men believed to have been involved in the deadly shopping mall attack in Nairobi last month have been named.
The Kenyan military identified them as Abu Baara al-Sudani, Omar Nabhan, Khattab al-Kene and Umayr.
The naming of the men came as CCTV footage was aired showing four attackers calmly walking through a room in the mall holding machine guns.
All  four were believed  killed during the standoff.
“I confirm these were the terrorists, they all died in the raid. Nabhan was a Kenyan of Arab origin and al-Kene a Somali linked to al-Shabab. Further details about Umayr had not yet been verified,” Kenya Defence Forces spokesman, Maj Emmanuel Chirchir said.
Kenyan police chief, David Kimaiyo, told KTN television station it was now believed that four to six gunmen had carried out the attack, not 10 to15 .
“None of them managed to escape from the building after the attack,” he said.
Kimaiyo also said that wanted British woman Samantha Lewthwaite had not been involved.
“We have also established that she was not part of the attackers in the building. There was no woman,” he said.
Lewthwaite, 29, is the widow of one of the four suicide bombers who attacked London on 7 July 2005.
In addition to the 67 people killed in the attack, 39 are still missing, according to the Kenyan Red Cross.
The al-Shabab group said it carried out the attack on the Westgate Mall on September 27.
The al-Qaeda-linked group said the attack was in retaliation for Kenya’s military involvement in Somalia.
About 4,000 Kenyan troops were sent to Somalia in October 2011 to help pro-government forces end two decades of violence, with clan-based warlords and Islamist militants all battling for control of the country.

Army Kills 30 Terrorists In Weekend Raid

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Musdapha Ilo -Maiduguri

The Nigerian Army says it killed over 30 insurgents in weekend raids on Boko Haram camps and hideouts in Borno state.

A press statement issued by the acting Army spokesman, 7 Division, Aliyu Ibrahim Danja, a captain, indicated that the insurgents were killed in both air and ground attacks on their bases and hideouts over the weekend.

“In continuation with the fight against terrorism in Borno State, troops of 7 Division launched Pre-emotive attacks on Boko Haram concentration at Izza Town of Borno State in the afternoon on October 6 2013,” the spokesman said.

“The operation which involved air strikes and ground attacks on Boko Haram terrorists was conducted following a report by military intelligence about plans by the terrorists to attack Bama town.”

According to Denja, 5 Hilux vehicles mounted with anti-aircraft guns conveying terrorists’ and one 18 seaters bus conveying the terrorists’ stores were destroyed in the raid.

The statement said further that a related development, “troops of 7 Division pursued and engaged Boko Haram terrorists who fled Damboa town following encounter with security forces on October 5 to Ajigi and Kafa. 30 of the terrorists were killed including a prominent leader (Amir) of the sect who was believed to be leading the attack on Damboa.”

Danja said the 7 division is currently conducting aggressive operations on terrorists’ location along Maiduguri-Damaturu road in order to ensure safety of citizens not only within towns and villages but also those plying roads within the its area of responsibility.

The military said the clampdown was to frustrate a planned attack on Bama town by the outlawed sect.

Centenary Village To Cost N3.2 Trillion

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The proposed Centenary Village, an ultra-modern city within the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, to mark the 100 years of the Nigerian nationhood, will cost N3.2 trillion.

Former head of state, Abdulsalami Abubakar, who is chairman of the board of Centenary Village Plc, disclosed this while presenting a report to President Goodluck Jonathan at the State House, Abuja.

The Centenary Village Plc is a public liability company to be set up by the private sector to finance the project,

The former militaryleader, who led other members of the company’s board to the Presidential Villa, said the Centenary Village would be wholly financed by the private sector.

Abubakar said the board had in the report also requested President Jonathan to grant certain concessions to the private investors who are willing and ready to be part of the project.

“Specifically, government should make the land for the project available with the status of an export free zone. Tax holiday should also be granted to the investors for equipment and materials to be imported for the projects, among others,” he said.

President Jonathan thanked Abubakar and other members of the company’s board for the work done so far.

He said the presentation by Abubakar was not only “fascinating” but reassuring that “our dream that we will get a city better than Abuja is gradually coming to fruition”.

Jonathan said the centenary city would be planned in a way where the infrastructure would be centralised.

“People living there will not need to drill borehole or get personal cylinder for gas, and the management of solid waste and other environmental issues will be centralised,” he said

“It is a big dream but we are hopeful that we are getting close. With the board’s commitment and the commitment of government, we will get there,” the President said.

Jonathan assured that he would consult with relevant cabinet ministers on the requests made by the company’s board before giving approvals and directives.

Police Arrests Zamfara Traditional Ruler For Robbery, Rape

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The Zamfara State Police Command on Monday arrested the acting district head of Keta Village in the Tsafe local government area of Zamfara, for complicity in armed robbery and rape.

The command’s public relations officer, Lawal Abdullahi, a deputy superintendent of police, made the disclosure while briefing newsmen on the incident in Gudau.

He said that the acting district head, Mainasara Yandoto, along with three others, attacked the residences of five persons in Keta Village, robbing them of N115,000 and foodstuff worth N100,000.

The police spokesman said that other persons whose name he gave as Zayyanu Amadu, Idi Namarake and Yabo Salisu were helping in police investigations.


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He said that during the operation, the suspects held one of their victim, Muhammad Lawali, hostage and gang-raped his wife.

Abdullahi also said that Yandoto had collected N20,000 from the gang as his share, while 113,000 had been recovered.

G7 Governors Hold Talks With Jonathan

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The seven breakaway PDP governors (G7) met with President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday to resolve the lingering crisis within the ruling party.

At the end of the meeting, a communiqué jointly read by one of the aggrieved governors, Babangida Aliyu of Niger and Cross River governor, Liyel Imoke, who is in the main PDP, stated that both sides remained committed to resolving the crisis.

The statement read: “Sequel to the meeting held September 15 and in line with the agreements reached at the meeting, the governors met with the President, Vice-President Namadi Sambo and the Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Chief Tony Anenih.”

“The meeting which was cordial, resolved that in spite of the unfortunate events that arose after the meeting of September 15, the parties remain committed to the resolution of the differences.”

It said both parties agreed to continue to take steps towards implementing the resolutions agreed on at previous meetings.

“In view of the above, some of the governors resolved that the meeting be reconvened shortly after the Muslim hajj and Christian pilgrimages are concluded,” the communique read.

There were apologies from three of the breakaway governors – Sule Lamido of Adamawa, Aliyu Wammako of Sokoto and Murtala Nyako of Adamawa – who travelled for the Hajj.

The other “New PDP governor at the meeting were Ahmed Abdulfatah of Kwara, Babangida Aliyu of Niger, Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers and Rabiu Kwankwoso of Kano.

Governors Idris Wada of Kogi, Godswill Akpabio of Akwa-Ibom and Ibrahim Shema of Katsina also attended the meeting.

Oshiomhole: Delta Senatorial poll, another test for INEC

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By Jessica Tamaradonye, Warri

Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State has said that the independent National Electoral Commission, INEC has another golden opportunity in Saturday’s Delta Central Senatorial by-election to show its neutrality and independence in conducting free polls in the country.

Oshiomhole said Monday while addressing a large crowd that converged at a mega campaign rally held in Warri by the All Progressives Congress in Warri, for its candidate in the election, Olorogun O’tega Emerhor.

“There would be threat, there would be intimidation, there would be blackmail, but what would live for ever is what we should be remembered for. A system thrives only when those who are in it choose to keep quite. The day you decide to stand on your feet, stop agonizing and start mobilizing the forces of darkness will give way to the forces of light.
“I believe the Federal Government and the security agencies must maintain the law and order; they must ensure that the votes are protected because the world is watching. This is the first test not only for APC but also for INEC. People want to see whether anything is going to change,” Oshiomhole said

According to Oshiomhole, the Delta Central senatorial district has shown by action beyond rhetoric your capacity to stand for what you believe in and to refuse to be tempted, adding that it was the only senatorial district that voted for a candidate different from where other people were going.

“You did not only vote against them, you voted for the late senator and you defended the votes. You have a spirit, a history behind you. You do not need anyone to give you lectures about principle, courage and determination and even the essence of sacrifice. As you leave just go from village to village, remind the people the importance of having a senator of your choice. Urhobo nation could have got much more than they have gotten from Nigeria.

“You need a courageous voice, you need an independent voice, you need an articulate voice, you need a man who cannot be bought. When somebody said O’tega has spent over hundred million on the people, he was not doing that because he needed your votes. He did it because he believed in the cause of the Urhobo people. He did not do it because he wanted to be senator. I ask you to stand by people who are used to giving. These are people who are priceless.” he noted.

Other speakers at the rally include the Governor of Imo State, Rochas Okorocha, Chief John Oyegen, Chief Frank Kokori and Vice Chairman South South of APC, Chief Tom Ikimi.

Comrade Oshiomhole later presented the flag of the APC to the party’s candidate, Olorogun O’tega Emerhor.