Author: The Nation

  • GDP growth must reflect on people’s life – Obasanjo

    GDP growth must reflect on people’s life – Obasanjo

    Former president Olusegun Obasanjo in Addis Ababa on Sunday urged African economists and development experts to address the lopsided Gross Domestic Product growth that failed to add value to the life of the people on the continent.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Obasanjo spoke in the context of the Africa’s five per cent GDP growth rate that placed the continent among the fastest growing global economies.

    The ex-Nigerian leader, who was among members of a panel on the United Nations Development Programme Rise of the South 2013 report, code-named: “The African Renaissance in the context of the Rise of the South,” said it was worrisome that the rate of Africa’s GDP growth of about five per cent annually was not showing by way of improvement on the lives of the people.

    He urged the UN Development agencies, economic experts and Governments of African countries to address the situation before it becomes a serious setback to the continent’s development.

    He said Nigeria had recorded seven per cent GDP growth over the last decade, especially in oil and gas, telecommunication, banking and financial sector and few others.

    “But we need a kind of growth that would reflect on the lives of the people and the environment in terms of water supply to the villages, electricity and infrastructure; that is the kind of growth we want.

    “The economists should address that to change the current situation, where the GDP is growing while the people continue to suffer,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted Obasanjo as saying at the forum.

    He urged the UNDP to reflect on the impact of the GDP growth and find ways of ensuring that it matches or comes to terms with the development of the common man in the rural areas.

    On his part, former Ghanaian President, Mr. John Kufuor, harped on the need for good leadership, prudence in governance and people’s active participation in governance to usher in more sustainable growth that would impact positively on the lives of the common African.

  • Eagles, Adidas XI match off

    Eagles, Adidas XI match off

    Inclement weather in Nuremberg, Germany, on Monday forced the handlers of the senior national team, Super Eagles to call off the much publicized friendly match with the Adidas XI.

    According to the Head Coach of the team Stephen Keshi, the match had to be called off in order not to endanger the boys.

    This, he said would not affect their programmes which has also been hampered by the chilling weather in the European country.

    The “Big boss” said the players would train on Monday afternoon before jetting out to Houston, United States, on Tuesday to round training for Friday’s friendly match against Mexico.

     

  • FG’s ‘war on terror’ records tentative victory

    FG’s ‘war on terror’ records tentative victory

     

    Nuradin Mohammed used to resent and fear the troops who swept past his fish stall in this northeast Nigerian city on the trail of Islamist insurgents Boko Haram. Now, for the first time, he thinks they may be on his side.

    “We are pleased the president has finally recognized our peril and we pray his plan works,” Mohammed said, frying fish by the roadside as a crowd of young children looked on hungrily and trucks packed with troops rumbled past.

    President Goodluck Jonathan took a gamble when he launched a big offensive this month on Boko Haram’s four-year-old attempt to establish an Islamic state in mainly Muslim northern Nigeria.

    The crackdown risks stoking, rather than quashing the rebellion, but has so far met with a surprising degree of support in a region that has long accused the oil-rich Christian south of neglect.

    “We felt let down and ignored. We are afraid soldiers will come bullying the public, which makes people want to join the Boko Haram, but we hope this time is different,” Mohammed said.

    Only a few months ago, Jonathan was telling foreign leaders that Boko Haram was a small problem that would be over soon.

    In declaring an emergency on May 14 in Borno, Yobe and Adawmawa states and ordering thousands of troops and air strikes on suspected Islamist camps, he said they were “terrorists” whose “declaration of war” could not go unanswered.

    Civilians like Mohammed appear to have had enough of being caught in the crossfire of a rebellion that has killed thousands in Africa’s No. 1 oil producer and provoked fears of a descent into chaos in one of the continent’s most dynamic economies.

    Even usually critical northern governors and elders have been cautiously supportive of Christian southerner Jonathan’s new firm tactics, which include the offer of an amnesty to any militants who willingly surrender.

    “I now fully understand the strategy: show strength and be magnanimous at the same time,” previously critical northern opposition politician Alhaji Bashir Tofa told Reuters.

    But it will take more than just firmness to win against a movement that has proved remarkably resilient under the leadership of Abubakar Shekau, a fiery militant who likes to make finger-waving Internet videos holding a Kalashnikov.

    Ousted from Nigeria’s city centres in an earlier crackdown last year, the Islamists, whose name in the Hausa language means “Western education is sinful” withdrew to the remote semi-desert region of the northeast bordering with Chad, Cameroon and Niger.

     

    In this isolated zone, they scared off local officials and took de facto control of at least 10 out of 27 council areas.

    This recalled what happened in 2012 in Mali, where al Qaeda-allied Islamist rebels seized control of the Sahel country’s Saharan north before taking several cities and towns. A French military offensive drove them back earlier this year.

    In the past two months Boko Haram mounted some of their boldest attacks to date, including one that killed 55 people.

    Jonathan’s administration knows that just sending in more troops will never totally defeat a foe that can hide among the civilian population, even if that population has been put off by Boko Haram attacks on churches, universities and markets.

    “In some ways youths had more in common with Boko Haram than soldiers and wealthy politicians,” said Borno public servant Ali Shuwa. Behind him, scrawny goats chew on a rubbish pile.

    “But I think people are tired of the fighting.”

    As with the “surge” of extra United States soldiers that former President George Bush ordered into Iraq in 2007 to prevent the country disintegrating into ethnic and sectarian bloodshed, experts say Nigeria’s military needs a change of tactics that will motivate the population to actively cooperate with it.

    “The major focus should be on securing the local population. It is popular legitimacy that will provide the intelligence necessary to fight insurgents and terrorists,” said Kole Shettima, a Nigerian pro-democracy activist.

    Regarding this, Jonathan agreed to free some detained Boko Haram suspects this week, including all women and children, one of Boko Haram’s top demands. This is a sign he is willing to take steps towards reconciliation with moderate elements.

    It reinforced the message that a panel he set up to try to establish a dialogue with Boko Haram is sincere.

    “This is the most concerted effort yet … They’ve hit it with a big stick and then dangled a carrot in front of them,” said Peter Sharwood-Smith, Nigeria head of security firm Drum Cussac. “They now realize the huge task in front of them.”

    Maiduguri, the once thriving hub of an ancient Islamic trading route, has been decimated by the conflict. Soldiers hunch behind sandbag bunkers on streets strewn with rubble from bomb blasts.

    Traders hang carpets and piles of sandals hopefully outside corrugated-iron roofed shacks, while young boys peddle oranges and watermelons from wooden carts. But there are few buyers.

    Boko Haram has infiltrated so deeply here that some parents don’t know their children are members. Civilians don’t want to turn against insurgents because informants are often killed.

    “It could be him or her watching us,” said Ali, a teenage boy selling jerry cans of fuel, pointing out onto the street. “People have been killed just on a rumor of informing.”

    It was in Maiduguri in 2002 that a cleric called Mohammed Yusuf founded a radical Islamist movement initially tagged ‘Nigeria’s Taliban’, but later nicknamed ‘Boko Haram’ because of its virulent opposition to Western influences.

    A military crackdown against an uprising by the group in 2009 killed 800 people. This included Yusuf, who died in police custody, a catalyst for years of reprisals on security forces.

    Jonathan says he will clamp down on military excesses after reports of human rights abuses by soldiers in the northeast, although rights groups and foreign diplomats think these may continue going unpunished given the secrecy of the operation.

    Rights activists say soldiers carry out extra-judicial killings and torture suspects never face trial.

    “We welcome that Jonathan has finally recognized publicly the abuses but these words must be turned into actions for his operation to have legitimacy,” a western diplomat in Abuja said.

    Security sources say Jonathan’s army faces a tough task in defeating resilient Islamist fighters, who have shown their ability to re-arm and counter-attack and who know the remote southern fringe of the Sahara better than most soldiers.

    A military source in Maiduguri told Reuters they had found the first days of the latest offensive harder than expected against “an enemy willing to hide anywhere and do anything”.

    Boko Haram is not one cohesive group and new independent splinter-operations are emerging, making negotiations difficult.

    The longer this goes one, the costlier it will be, and not only in human terms. Nigeria spent 700 billion naira ($4.4 bln) on security in the four months to April, the central bank said.

    Porous borders with Chad and Niger have been used to transport weapons from Libyan and Malian conflict zones and Western governments are concerned about Boko Haram’s increasing ties with al Qaeda linked groups in the Sahel – a fact which could draw Nigeria’s neighbors further into the conflict.

    “Even the U.S. government couldn’t contain guerrilla fighters in Afghanistan and Iraq, so do you think we can?” Sakuria Mohammed, a Borno legislator told Reuters in Maiduguri, where his mother was kidnapped by Boko Haram this month.

    “The fighting is a symptom and therefore the military will not solve this. We must create jobs, rebuild this once great region and give youths a better option than Boko Haram.”

     

    Culled from Reuters

  • Junk foods invading homes

    Junk foods invading homes

    Junk foods and take-away restaurants have become extremely popular due to
    the rising demand among people nearly everywhere. A quick bite at a low
    price is a seductive proposition that’s finger-licking good but
    unfortunately comes in a bag with health conditions.
    
    The arrival of convenience foods has led to massive increases in obesity,
    diabetes and heart disease. The skyrocketing rates of these
    lifestyle-related conditions are among the working middle to upper class.
    Supermarkets contribute to these problems by offering shoppers the
    temptation of convenience foods that are high in salt, sugar and animal fat.
    
    Junk foods are filled with preservatives, additives, flavourings,
    artificial colourings, hydrogenated fats, stabilizers, chemicals,
    sweeteners, sodium, sugar and calories that are devoid of any original,
    essential nutrients.
    
    There are nearly six thousand chemicals that food companies add to food
    products that improve colour, taste and shelf life. Nitrates and nitrites
    that are used in meat products such as bacon, sausage and ham have been
    found to contribute to the development of many forms of cancer.
    
    Sodas, sugar-laced beverages and highly processed fruit juices contain a
    compound called benzoate or benzoic acid. This compound has been found to
    increase the risks of obesity, diabetes and a host of conditions leading to
    early mortality.
    
    One of the most dangerous flavourings used is monosodium glutamate (MSG).
    MSG is a common cause of chest pains, depression, dizziness and mood
    swings. The vast majority of pre-packaged foods such as pizzas, pastas,
    snacks, soups, sandwiches, cheeses and meats contain high amounts of sodium
    that is detrimental to one’s health.
    
    Foods such as fried chicken, pizza, burgers, chips, sandwiches and ice
    creams contain excessive amounts of addictive sugars, trans fats and
    calories that bring you back for seconds. Most junk foods are deep fried in
    unhealthy hydrogenated cooking oils that wreck havoc on one’s immune and
    cardiovascular systems.
    
    Highly processed, chemical-laden, ready-to-serve, convenience quick-bites
    offer little-to-no actual nutritional value. They simply fill the stomach
    temporarily and promote overeating as the body demands useful nutrients.
    
    Research shows junk foods make children miss their daily nutritional
    requirements of nutrient-dense fruits and vegetables. This has been found
    to be a leading cause of behavioural misconduct, ADHD, poor school
    performance and other deficiencies.
    
    Obesity, Type 2 diabetes, heart disease and cancer are growing concerns
    that are directly related to the escalating consumption of junk foods. Type
    2 diabetes allows excessive amounts of unusable dietary sugars to circulate
    around the body creating substantial damage. Diabetic complications include
    heart attacks, strokes, high blood pressure, kidney failure and various
    pain disorders.
    
    Junk foods decrease the levels of HDL (good) cholesterol and increase LDL
    (bad) cholesterol that is a leading cause of clogging of the arteries.
    Clogged arteries cause damage to the heart and increases one’s risk of
    body-disabling strokes.
    
    Excessive amounts of salt, sugars, unhealthy saturated fat and trans fat
    also contribute to high blood pressure. The resultant high blood pressure
    is a leading cause of kidney damage and failure. LDL cholesterol, fat, salt
    and sugar can cause excessive damage to the liver as well.
    
    The liver is integral to numerous bodily functions and is the major
    detoxifying organ in the body. Impaired liver function can cause a variety
    of symptoms such as digestive problems, immune disorders, abnormal
    absorption of fats and metabolism complications.
    
    Dr Cory Couillard is an international healthcare speaker and columnist for
    numerous newspapers, magazines, websites and publications throughout the
    world. He works in collaboration with the World Health Organization's goals
    of disease prevention and global healthcare education. Views do not
    necessarily reflect endorsement.
    
    Email: drcorycouillard@gmail.com
    
    Facebook: Dr Cory Couillard
    
    Twitter: DrCoryCouillard
  • PHOTO : What’s on Dame Jonathan’s  mind?

    PHOTO : What’s on Dame Jonathan’s mind?

    SENATE PRESIDENT DAVID MARK (L) WITH THE FIRST LADY,  DAME PATIENCE JONATHAN AT THE DEMOCRACY DAY INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH SERVICE IN ABUJA ON SUNDAY

  • NGF: I won the election – Amaechi

    Rivers State Governor Rt. Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi has said  he contested and won the Nigeria Governors Forum election held on Friday o Friday in Abuja.
    Amaechi spoke on Sunday at an Interdenominational Church Service at Corpus Christi Cathedral in Port Harcourt to mark this year’s children’s day celebration which also coincided with his (Amaechi) 48th birthday.
    According to him “let me say to you, I am the Chairman of Nigeria Governors’ Forum. That we are not talking it’s because we have decided not to talk. They voted, we voted and we won. If they had won, I would have congratulated them”.
    Governor Amaechi also assured children of the state of his administration’s desire to provide good governance and quality education. He also said government was on track to provide adequate security all over the state.
  • ‘Woolwich suspect Adebolajo was held in Kenya’

    One of the suspects in the Woolwich murder case was arrested in Kenya in 2010, the Foreign Office has confirmed.

    It said Michael Adebolajo was arrested there and it gave consular assistance “as normal” in the circumstances.

    The suspect was believed to have been preparing to fight with Somali militant group al-Shabab. He was later arrested and deported, a Kenyan government spokesman told the BBC.

    Meanwhile, police investigating soldier Lee Rigby’s murder have arrested a 22-year-old man in north London.

    The arrest at Highbury Grove, on suspicion of conspiracy to murder, brings the total number made so far in the case to nine.

    Several hundred people have gathered at the scene of the murder, some chanting Mr. Rigby’s name and waving Help for Heroes flags.

    The Met Police said it was aware of a planned community event in which a group of people intended to lay a wreath.

    A small group of English Defence League members have also joined the crowd.

    The Kenyan government had previously denied that Mr. Adebolajo had ever visited the country, but spokesman Muthui Kariuki said there had been some confusion as he was arrested under a different name.

    Mr. Adebolajo was handed over to United Kingdom authorities when it emerged he was a British citizen, he added.

    In video footage of his court appearance which emerged on Sunday, Mr. Adebolajo is heard to say: “These people are mistreating us, we are innocent.”

     

  • My ‘election’ as NGF Chair was the will of God- Jang

    Governor of Plateau state, Jonah Jang has declared that his emergence as chairman Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) was the will of God.

    Officially, Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State was declared winner of the election on Friday, but Jang and 18 other Governors have insisted that the Plateau State governor won the election.

    Speaking on Sunday in Jos during a special church service organized by the state government to offer special prayers to God as part of the program of events marking the 2013 democracy anniversary Jang said ” I did not aspire for the position”

    “We got to Abuja for the NGF meeting, in my morning morning devotion that very day, I prayed to God to allow his will prevail in the meeting, not the will of human. Because I knew the kind of problem we were passing through in the forum, so I commit everything to the hands of God.

    “I never knew God has concluded his plan on me to use me as solution to the problem, I never wanted to be chairman NGF and that was why my name never came out as a contestant.

    “But in the meeting of Northern Governors Forum, two of the contestants from the north; Gov Yuguda and Gov Shema voluntarily stepped down from the contest. Before I knew what was going on, the chairman northern governors forum presented my name as their candidate having been zoned to the north in the North-South rotational base.

    “The position of the NGF was zoned to the ruling party PDP, the PDP governors forum unanimously adopted my name and the Northern Governors forum gave their consent and approval to my name.

    Jang stated further, “I was surprised at the whole thing, and when I was wandering how, my mind took me back to my prayer during my devotion earlier in the morning and I said this is God at work, I am not even in the position to say no to the work of God. So whatever a mam does, God will always have his way.

    “I know as a pastor, before God created you, God has already designed your program in life, whatever that happened in your life is God’s will” said Jang

    On the democracy anniversary, Jang said, “By Wednesday this week, our current democracy will be fourteen years old. I Want to say democracy has come to stay in Nigeria. Because God himself is a democrat. After creating us in his own image, God gave us the right to choose our leader, he gave us the wisdom to lead our people, so God is fully democratic.

    “So therefore, in our democratic journey, we should allow God’s will to prevail because God never fails” said Jang.

  • NGF:  We should work together for Nigeria – Jang

    NGF: We should work together for Nigeria – Jang

    Governor of Plateau State, Jonah David Jang, has called on his rival Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State and all members of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum to work together in the interest of the nation.

    Jang made the call on Sunday on his arrival at the Yakubu Gowon International Airport, Jos, shortly after attending the NGF meeting in Abuja.

    He said, “I have been given an assignment to chair the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) and by the grace of God I will do my best to unite this forum and to make sure the Forum give the right leadership to people of Nigeria because we are the ones that govern the states.

    “I’m advocating that we must work together as leaders of our various states. I am also appealing to my colleagues in the NGF that the election or selection processes, whichever way you may call it, should not divide us as leaders of our people. We have one purpose as members of the NGF and as leaders elected by our people.

    “We have worked with Governor Rotimi Amaechi when he was the chairman of NGF, I now expect him to join his colleagues and work with me now that I am the Chairman of the Forum, so that we continued to give Nigerians the right leadership expected of us,” the Plateau governor said.

    He was received at the airport by top government functionaries in the state led by his deputy Ambass Ignatius Longjan and secretary to the state government Prof. Shedrach Best.

     

     

  • British PM vows to crack down on ‘preachers of hate’

    British PM vows to crack down on ‘preachers of hate’

    British Prime Minister, David Cameron, is has vowed to launch a crackdown on the preachers of hate blamed by the government for the extremism that led to the murder of Drummer Lee Rigby in Woolwich.

    Sky News reports that the prime minister’s fight back will come with the launch of a taskforce to tackle all forms of radicalisation that can lead to violent extremism and terrorism.

    The group will include the most senior members of the Cabinet, including Nick Clegg, George Osborne, Theresa May, Eric Pickles and Chris Grayling, as well the Muslim Foreign Office minister Baroness Warsi.

    In tackling extremism, the task force will aim to produce initiatives on:

    – Disrupting extremist activities

    – Challenging poisonous narratives

    – Trends in radicalization

    – Tackling radicalisation in institutions (mosques, madrassas, schools, colleges, universities and prisons)

    Supporting faith and community leadership to build strong, integrated and united communities

    Writing in The Sunday Telegraph, Mr. Pickles, the Communities Secretary said: “Our answer to the extremists and preachers of hate is to speak out, to show them for what they are.”