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  • Bayelsa closes schools

    Bayelsa closes schools

    THE rising water level in most parts of the flood-ravaged communities in Bayelsa State has forced the government to declare emergency holiday in schools.

    The indefinite closure of all schools in the state was announced yesterday in a statement by Governor Seriake Dickson’s Chief Press Secretary (CPS), Daniel Iworiso-Mackson.

    The governor’s spokesman said the decision was taken to safeguard the lives of pupils and to keep them away from possible dangers that could arise from the flood.

    The statement appealed to parents and guardians to accept the decision as it was taken in the interest of all.

    It reads: “We want to assure you that normal academic activities will resume as soon as the situation is brought under control.”

    The statement assured the people of the Dickson-led administration’s commitment to “the welfare and well-being of Bayelsans of all ages, especially at these trying times.”

    The Commissioner for information, Mr. Mackson Faafegha, said on the telephone the government was brazing to the challenges in all the 17 camps it established for flood victims in its domain.

    Some of the camps are at the Sports Complex, Igbogene Helipat, Demiari Grammar School and Tombia among others.

    The challenges being faced by inmates range from lack of toilets, food, electricity, fear of epidemic and more.

    But the commissioner, who is a member of the emergency flood committee, said the government is up to the task, pointing out that a major challenge is that of the metropolitan nature of the camps’ location.

    According to him, many residents, who are not flood victims, have been trooping into the camps for free meals and other daily needs.

    He said: “It is a metropolitan area, especially that at the Sports Complex. So, everyone including the disabled are going there to get relief items.”

    The commissioner listed the items provided for the victims to include rice and garri.

    “The government is very conscious of the supply of essential food items, water and medication to avoid cholera or epidemics”, said Faafegha, who announced the provision of customised toilets.

    Accusing political detractors of using the inmates to foment troubles, Faafegha said the protests over congestion and lack of light in some camps have been nipped in the bud.

    He said the government has been trying its best to provide necessary comfort for the victims. He advised them against yielding to incitement from any quarters.

    On the closure of schools, the commissioner explained that it became necessary.

    Besides the desire to avoid loss of lives, the schools in affected areas would not be left behind since the state operate uniform syllabus.

    Dickson had at the weekend expanded and inaugurated the flood management Committee.

    The 20-member committee chaired by Dicksons’ deputy Rear Admiral Gboribiogha John Jonah (rtd) has the Secretary to the State Government(SSG) Prof. Edmund Allison Oguru as its secretary.

    Members include: commissioners, special advisers, all special representatives of local government areas, as well as a representative of the State Commissioner of Police.

    Others are special adviser on security to the governor, House of Assembly Committee Chairman on the Environment, Chief of Staff and the Deputy Chief of Staff (Government House).

    Council helmsmen are expected to serve as chairmen of their respective local Flood Relief Sub-Committees as well as Commandants of their various camps.

    Dickson, who gave the committee a five-point reference, directed the establishment of emergency relief camps in strategic locations.

     

  • Voter cards: Court reserves ruling till Oct 22

    An Akure Chief Magistrate’s Court, presided over by Magistrate J. O. Adelegan, yesterday reserved ruling till October 22 in an application for bail brought by Labour Party (LP) chieftains, Mr. Olaolu Oladipo and Omolade Raphael.

    They were charged to court on Monday for conspiracy and unlawful possession of 1,123 voter’s cards.

    The offence was allegedly committed on October 5 about 4:30pm at the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) office in Ondo West Local Government.

    At the resumed hearing of the case yesterday, the police prosecutor objected to the bail application of the accused on the grounds that by virtue of Section 150(2), it is only INEC or its lawyer that can prosecute an electoral offender under the Electoral Act.

    The prosecutor noted that he could not under the law respond to the bail application.

    He sought for an adjournment to contact (INEC) to take over the case or appoint a prosecutor.

     

  • Uduaghan orders free medical services in affected communities

    Uduaghan orders free medical services in affected communities

    DELTA State Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan yesterday ordered the provision of free medical services for residents of all the affected communities in the state.

    He gave the other at a meeting with political appointees in Asaba, where he said all the hospitals in the state as well as mobile clinics have been instructed to provide free medical services to the victims.

    According to him, his government would bear the burden of medical treatment because the flood has exposed victims to shock and other health hazards they could not cope with.

    His words: “Some of the victims are in a state of shock and they have lost almost everything. The situation has put them into critical health conditions and we have elected to foot the bill of their medical treatment to relieve them of tension.

    The doctors and nurses have been instructed to treat patients free. The hospitals have been adequately stocked with drugs.”

    Uduaghan directed the committee managing the flood situation to take proper statistics of victims, their locations and properties to guide the government in post-flood planning.

    Saying that accurate data would aid planning, the governor described what has been done so far as fire brigade approach to provide as much succor as possible to the victims.

    He said: “Data is important for planning and we should not toy with it. Let us get the proper statistics of men and materials displaced to enable us plan for future. We need it to guide us even now especially for the provision of relief materials.”

    He spoke of his administration’s plan to approach the House of Assembly for budgetary provisions for flood control and relief materials.

    According to him, the government has not released any special fund for the management of the situation.

    Uduaghan expressed the fear that the flood disaster would be longer than expected and predicted that it could go beyond November, as he appealed to residents to prepare for more floods.

    He appealed for donation from public-spirited individuals, corporate bodies and multinational oil companies to enable the state cope with the increasing crowd that have been displaced.

  • New house for rainstorm victim

    New house for rainstorm victim

    One of the victims of last June’s rainstorm in Nru community of Nsukka, Enugu State, Mrs Justina Asogwa, received an unexpected relief.

    Mrs Asogwa, a widow, was presented with a new three-bedroom fully furnished bungalow.

    The house, jointly built by some officials of Nsukka Local Council, was handed over to her by the Chairman, Mr. Tony Ugwu, a lawyer.

    Ugwu said the gesture was to relieve the victim who is ‘the poor of the poor’ among the victims ravaged by the natural disaster.

    “It may interest you to know that we did not use the council’s fund to build this house.

    “Myself and my executive contributed from our personal purse in other that this woman will have a shelter to live in.

    “I am pleased that we have been able to re-echo the slogan of this administration to bring succour and smiles back to residents of Nru community”, he said.

    The councillor representing Nru ward in the council, Hon.  Celestine Ogbu said he was overwelmed at the rare gesture exhibited by the chairman and his executive.

    “I thought the relief materials distributed by the council to the victims were the end of this exercise but I am surprised at these rare act exhibited by the chairman and his executives by contributing from the salaries to bring succour to this helpless widow,” he said.

    The elated widow, Justina Asogwa, thanked Nsukka council for the gift of the house

    “I am happy for the gift of this house and I pray that God will bless all the people who ensured that in wiping my tears away”, she said.

    The Nsukka Local Government gave three bundles of zinc  and a bag of rice were given to each of the  40 victims whose houses were lost to the Nru rainstorm last June.

  • Bakassi: Why Nigeria won’t appeal ICJ verdict, by govt

    Bakassi: Why Nigeria won’t appeal ICJ verdict, by govt

    Failed case will be diplomatically damaging, says Attorney-General

    Advocates of a fresh legal action over Bakassi lost the battle last night.

    The Federal Government last night declared that it will not appeal the judgment of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the ceding of the oil-rich Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon.

    The decision was communicated in a statement by Attorney General of the Federation Mohammed Adoke.

    The nation’s number one law officer said after consultations locally and with an international firm, he decided not to explore the window of appeal because “an application for a review is virtually bound to fail.”

    Besides, a failed application for review by Nigeria “will be diplomatically damaging to Nigeria”.

    The government’s position reflects The Nation’s exclusive story last Friday that the government had decided not to appeal the ruling. It was a day that many newspapers reported that government had decided to appeal the judgement.

    Government said yesterday that it did not have any new evidence to enable it successfully challenge the judgment.

    The full text of the Attorney general’s statement is as follows:

    “It will be recalled that on 10th October 2002, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) delivered judgment in Land and Maritime Boundary between Cameroon and Nigeria, which covers about 2000 kilometres extending from Lake Chad to the Sea. It will also be recalled that before the judgment was delivered, President Olusegun Obasanjo, GCFR of Nigeria and President Paul Biya of the Republic of Cameroon gave their respective undertaking to the international community to abide by the judgment of the Court.

    “The commitment and undertakings given by both Heads of Government were confirmed by the establishment of the Cameroon-Nigeria Mixed Commission (CNMC) pursuant to the Joint Communiqué adopted at a Summit Meeting on 15 November 2002 in Geneva. The CNMC is composed of the representatives of Cameroon, Nigeria and the United Nations and is chaired by the Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary General for West Africa.

    “The CNMC has held 29 Sessions since its inception and has peacefully, amicably and successfully:

    (a) brought Cameroon and Nigeria back to negotiation table;

    (b) supervised the handing over of 33 ceded villages to Cameroon and 1 to Nigeria in December, 2003 and received 3 settlements and territory in Adamawa and Borno States Sectors from Cameroon in 2004;

    (c) initiated the Enugu-Abakiliki-Mamfe-Mutengene Road project as part of the confidence building measures between the two countries;

    (d) supervised peaceful withdrawal of Civil Administration, Military and Police Forces and transfer of authority in the Bakassi Peninsula by Nigeria to Cameroon in 2008 in line with the modalities contained in the Greentree Agreement signed by Cameroon and Nigeria in 2006 which the United Nations, Germany, USA, France, UK and Northern Ireland witnessed; and

    (e) commenced the emplacement of boundary beacons/pillars along the land boundary and initiated final mapping of the whole stretch of the boundary. It is instructive to note that about 1800 kilometres of the boundary have so far been assessed for Pillar Emplacement leaving only about 220 km to complete the assessment of the entire boundary.

    “The Greentree Agreement was also signed by H. E. Paul Biya, and President President Olusegun Obasanjo GCFR, on 12 June, 2006, in Long Island, Greentree, New York, USA; reaffirming their willingness to peacefully implement the judgment of the ICJ. The Agreement contains the modalities for withdrawal and transfer of authority in the Bakassi Peninsula by Nigeria to Cameroon in pursuance of the ICJ Judgment.The Follow-Up Committee comprising representatives of Nigeria and Cameroon wasestablished to monitor the implementation of the Agreement and settle any dispute regarding the interpretation and implementation of the Agreement. Nigeria handed over the Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon in 2008.

    “The Statute of the International Court of Justice provides that the Judgment of the Court is final and without appeal. However, following the resolutions of both Houses of the National Assembly calling on the Executive to take steps to apply for a review of the judgment, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan called a Stakeholders meeting comprising the leadership of the National Assembly, the Governors of Akwa Ibom and Cross River States, the Members of the National Assembly from both States, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and Director General, National Boundary Commission to review the situation.

    “The Stakeholders Meeting after due deliberations constituted a Committee comprising the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, the Attorney General of the Federation, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Director General, National Boundary Commission and Members of the National Assembly namely: Senator Victor Ndoma Egba, Dr. Ali Ahmed and Nnena Ukaje to examine the issues in contention and available options for Nigeria including, but not limited to the application for review of the ICJ Judgment, appropriate political and diplomatic solutions.

    “Although the judgment of the ICJ is final and not subject to appeal, the ICJ Statute provides for circumstances under which its judgment can be reviewed. The relevant provisions are:

    (a) Article 61 (1) which provides that the Court can review its judgment upon the discovery of some fact of such a nature as to be a decisive factor, which fact was, when the judgment was given, unknown to the court and also to the party claiming revision, always provided that such ignorance was due not to negligence;

    (b) Article 61 (4) which stipulates that application for revision must be made at least within six months of the discovery of the new fact, and

    (c) Article 61(5), which provide that no application for revision may be made after the lapse of 10 years from the date of the judgment.

    “The implication of the above provisions of the ICJ Statute is that a case for revision of the judgment of the court can only be successful if:

    (a) the application for revision is based on the discovery of a new fact;

    (b) the fact must have existed prior to the delivery of the judgment;

    (c) the newly discovered fact must be of a decisive nature; and

    (d) the party seeking revision (Nigeria) and the Court, must not have known of the fact at the time of the delivery of the judgment.

    “The Committee proceeded to examine the case for revision against the requirements of Article 61 of the ICJ Statute and was constrained to observe from the oral presentations made to it by the proponents of the revision that the strict requirements of Article 61 could not be satisfied. This is because theirpresentation was unable to show that Nigeria has discovereda decisive fact that was unknown to her before the ICJ judgment, which is capable of swaying the Court to decide in its favour.This is more so as most of the issues canvassed in support of the case for a revision of the ICJ judgment had been canvassed and pronounced upon by the ICJ in its 2002 judgment.

    “The Federal Government also retained a firm of international legal practitioners to advise on the merits and demerits of the case for revision. The firm after considering all the materials that were placed at its disposal against the requirements of Article 61 of the ICJ Statute came to the reasoned conclusion that “an application for a review is virtually bound to fail” and that “a failed application will be diplomatically damaging to Nigeria”.

    11. In view of the foregoing, the Federal Government is of the informed view that with less than two days to the period when the revision will be statute barred (October 9, 2012), it would be impossible for Nigeria to satisfy the requirements of Articles 61(1) -(5) of the ICJ Statute.Government has therefore decided that it will not be in the national interest to apply for revision of the 2002 ICJ Judgment in respect of the Land and Maritime Boundary between Cameroon and Nigeria.

    “Government is however concerned about the plight of Nigerians living in the Bakassi Peninsula and the allegations of human rights abuses being perpetrated against Nigerians in the Peninsula and is determined to engage Cameroon within the framework of the existing implementation mechanisms agreed to by Nigeria and Cameroon in order to protect the rights and livelihoods of Nigerians living in the Peninsula. Nigeria will also not relent in seeking appropriate remedies provided by international law such as the invocation of the compulsory jurisdiction of the ICJ; Petitioning the United Nations Human Rights Council and good offices of the United Nations Secretary General which has played pivotal role in ensuring the peaceful demarcation and delimitation of the boundary between the two countries and other confidence building measures and calls on the United Nations to continue to provide assistance to the affected populations.

    “Finally the Federal Government wishes to assure all Nigerians especially the people living in the Bakassi Peninsula of its determination to explore all avenues necessary to protect their interests including but not limited to negotiations aimed at buying back the territory, if feasible, the convening of bilateral meeting of the Heads of State and Government to ensure protection and development of the affected population.In the meantime, we call on all well meaning Nigerians in the Bakassi peninsula to be law abiding and to allow the various initiatives being undertaken by the Federal Government to bear fruitful results.”

     

  • UNIPORT mourns four slain students

    UNIPORT mourns four slain students

    The Vice-Chancellor of the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT) in Rivers State, Prof. Joseph Ajienka, yesterday revealed the identities of the four students lynched at Omuokiri-Aluu in Obio/Akpor Local Government Area on Friday.

    In a strong but emotional tone, Ajienka declared that nobody had the right to engage in extra-judicial killing or resort to self-help, no matter the level of provocation. Whatever was the grievance of the mob, said the professor, it should have been reported to the police.

    A visibly angry Ajienka, at a news conference in UNIPORT, declared a seven-day mourning for the students and cancelled the Students’ Union Week, which was scheduled to have started yesterday. Flags are to be flown at half mast.

    The news conference was also attended by UNIPORT’s Chief Security Officer, Lt. Col. Reginald Isiguzo (rtd.) and other members of the management staff, who expressed sadness over the murder of the young men, for allegedly stealing mobile phones and laptops.

    The four male victims are: Biringa Chiadika Lordson, Year Two, Theatre Arts, U2010/1805036; Ugonna Kelechi Obuzor, Year Two, Geology, U2010/5565149 and Mike Lloyd Toku, Year Two, Civil Engineering, U2010/3010094.

    The fourth person, Tekena Erikena, who earlier did Basic Studies at UNIPORT, according to Ajienka, was yet to be formally identified as a student of the university. Information on his proper identity is to be made available to the public, once his status was confirmed, he said.

    The vice-chancellor spoke of how on Friday morning, the authorities of the Federal Government-owned institution received the news that four persons had been lynched at Omuokiri village in Aluu Clan, which he said was about three kilometres from the university’s main campus.

    The vice chancellor pointed out that no university all over the world, had provides hostel accommodation for all its students, except the new private universities, noting that with UNIPORT’s 30,000 students’ population, providing accommodation for all on campus was not possible.

    He said, initially, each student was paying N2,090 per bed space in the university’s hostels, which was being sold for N30,000, making the authorities to later increase the cost of bed space to N15,000, stressing that private investors would have assisted in building hostels, but for land challenge.

    Ajienka said: “The reported lynching of the four men took place outside the jurisdiction of the university. The university is also not usually consulted by students and staff wishing to reside in any of our host communities.

    “The university bears no responsibility for security outside the campus, even as it accepts the fact that students live and commute to the campus from some of its host communities, including Aluu.

    “Because the incident took place outside the university, where it has no jurisdiction, it would be prejudicial to ongoing investigations for authorities of the university to issue independent statements on the issue, without cooperation from such agencies, which are in the forefront of the investigations.

    “Pre-emptive security measures have been initiated by authorities of the university to secure lives and property on campus. We can confirm to you that the situation on campus is stable, as a joint security patrol team has taken charge of the affected area and is also providing security within the campus.

    “We wish to use this opportunity to reassure staff, students and other stakeholders that the university remains open, very safe and discharging its core mandate of teaching, research and community service in a satisfactory manner.”

    The vice-chancellor also sought the cooperation of all the stakeholders in “these difficult times”, to ensure the supremacy of truth over the rumour mill, while pleading with the security agencies to bring the perpetrators of the heinous crime to book and to unravel the exact circumstances surrounding the unfortunate incident.

    He lauded Governor Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi, an alumnus of UNIPORT, for his timely intervention, which he said prevented the issue from boiling over. Besides, the Vice Chancellor praised the security agencies for promptly arresting the suspects, including a traditional ruler.

    Ajienka lauded the students of UNIPORT for their maturity and understanding, as well as members of the public for their concern.

    He said the university would contact the families of the murdered students to sympathise with them, even as he insisted that an excellent relationship exists between the university and Aluu, as well as other host communities.

    Ajienka, who also marked two years in office as the seventh vice-chancellor of UNIPORT, called on the state and the Federal governments to intervene in the land encroachment by the host communities, who, according to him, are yet to be compensated since 1975.

    He said the Amaechi administration should assist in fencing the large expanse of land and the Federal Government should help the institution to compensate the original land owners for more development projects to be embarked upon.

    Ajienka also said that in 1975, the yearly rent for the value of the land was N8,217. The demand for land/crop compensation by the host communities stood at N5 billion, which the vice-chancellor said the university could not afford to pay on its own.

    He lamented that the university authorities could not access 52 per cent of the institution’s land; the accessible 48 per cent is being encroached on by the host communities.

    The President of the Students’ Union Government of UNIPORT, Soye Maxwell Nyamabo, yesterday in Port Harcourt, also pleaded with the students to be calm and avoid any reprisal.

    Nyamabo insisted that the killed students were not robbers or cultists, urging the security agencies to ensure thorough investigation.

    The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Rivers State chapter, also yesterday decried the lynching of the students.

    The main opposition party, through its Publicity Secretary, Jerry Needam, described the action of the Aluu people as “wicked”, “most unnatural” and “animalistic”.

    ACN said: “For the killers not to pause awhile to confirm their suspicion before recourse to on-the-spot decimation of the four students shows they are more inhuman and devilish than the robbers they claimed to be guarding against.

    “It is unfortunate that this is happening in Rivers State, whose people are in the forefront of the condemnation of similar massacres of hapless innocent people in northern Nigeria by the Boko Haram insurgents.

    “We wonder why the police patrol teams scattered all over strategic points around Port Harcourt metropolis and the UNIPORT axis would not be found around the scene, several hours after the incident, even when a distress call was made.

    “While not holding brief for any of the parties and/or exonerating the dead from any crime alleged, nonetheless, it is most sinful and satanic to subject mere suspects to the kind of torture and excruciating death as done to these students.

    “We condemn it in its entirely and call for a full scale investigation into the incident and plead that this case should not just be handled as one of such cases, as was the case in the past. The lives and future of these students cut short in their prime and sent to their early graves must not be in vain.”

    A prominent Rivers State indigene, Princewill Dike, described the incident as barbaric, gruesome, heinous, inhuman and senseless.

    Dike, who is a former students’ union president of UNIPORT, said the killers must be brought to book.

    Amaechi, on Sunday, at an emergency State Executive Council meeting at the Government House, Port Harcourt, ordered a thorough investigation into the stripping, killing and setting ablaze of four male students of UNIPORT.

    Amaechi, who is also the Chairman of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF), described the mob action as barbaric, sad and unfortunate, warning against lawlessness and impunity. He asked the security agencies to arrest and prosecute those involved in the dastardly act to deter others.

    The Rivers police Spokesman, Ben Ugwuegbulam, on Sunday evening, confirmed the arrest of 13 persons, including a king.

    Most UNIPORT students who could not secure accommodation on the campus reside at Aluu, making the area to be thickly populated, with a lot of commercial and social activities . Aluu is off the ever-busy East-West Road, which is being dualised by the Federal Government through Setraco Construction Company.

    Residents of Aluu are fleeing the ancient community to avoid indiscriminate arrest by policemen, especially of innocent persons.

    Lagos lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) condemned the killing of the UNIPORT students.

    In a statement yesterday, Falana said: “It is a barbaric show of shame. Once again the brutal killing of the boys has confirmed the total lack of respect for life and human dignity in the country. It is not sufficient to announce the arrest of the suspects. Nigerians should be assured of the safety of their lives. The investigation of the case should be sped up so that the suspects are brought to book without any delay. A fortnight ago, a Benin High Court found the police liable for the unlawful murder of an undergraduate of the Uthman Dan Fodio University, who was paraded without trial as a kidnapper and then executed secretly.

    Last year, we got judgment in a Sagamu High Court over the killing of Mrs Funmi Abudu, who was paraded as an armed robber by the police and executed secretly. Like the police other gunmen are now on the prowl. It was Mubi last week. Now it’s Port-Harcourt. The extra-judicial killings of Nigerians by security forces have to stop. I have informed the Attorney-General of Rivers State that my law office is interested in the case. We are going to pursue the case until justice is done.”

  • Stem cell experts win Nobel Medicine Prize

    Stem cell experts win Nobel Medicine Prize

    Two pioneers of stem cell research have shared the Nobel prize for medicine or physiology.

    John Gurdon from the UK and Shinya Yamanaka from Japan were awarded the prize for changing adult cells into stem cells, which can become any other type of cell in the body.

    Prof Gurdon used a gut sample to clone frogs and Prof Yamanaka altered genes to reprogramme cells.

    The Nobel committee said they had “revolutionised” science.

    The prize is in stark contrast to Prof Gurdon’s first foray into science when his biology teacher described his scientific ambitions as “a waste of time”.

    When a sperm fertilises an egg there is just one type of cell. It multiplies and some of the resulting cells become specialised to create all the tissues of the body including nerve and bone and skin.

    It had been though to be a one-way process – once a cell had become specialised it could not change its fate.

    In 1962, John Gurdon showed that the genetic information inside a cell taken from the intestines of a frog contained all the information need to create a whole new frog. He took the genetic information and placed it inside a frog egg. The resulting clone developed into a normal tadpole.

    The technique would eventually give rise to Dolly the sheep, the first cloned mammal.

    Forty years later Shinya Yamanaka used a different approach. Rather than transferring the genetic information into an egg, he reset it.

    He added four genes to skin cells which transformed them into stem cells, which in turn could become specialised cells.

    The Nobel committee said the discovery had “revolutionized our understanding of how cells and organisms develop.

    “The discoveries of Gurdon and Yamanaka have shown that specialized cells can turn back the developmental clock under certain circumstances.

    “These discoveries have also provided new tools for scientists around the world and led to remarkable progress in many areas of medicine.”

    Prof Yamanaka said it was a “tremendous honour” to be given the award. He also praised Prof Gurdon: “I am able to receive this award because of John Gurdon.

    “This field has a very long history, starting with John Gurdon.”

    It is hoped the techniques will revolutionise medicine by using a sample of person’s skin to create stem cells.

    The idea is that they could be used to repair the heart after a heart attack or reverse the progress of Alzheimer’s disease.

    Prof Gurdon, now at the Gurdon Institute at Cambridge University, said: “I am immensely honoured to be awarded this spectacular recognition, and delighted to be due to receive it with Shinya Yamanaka, whose work has brought the whole field within the realistic expectation of therapeutic benefits.

    “I am of course most enormously grateful to those colleagues who have worked with me, at various times over the last half century.

    “It is particularly pleasing to see how purely basic research, originally aimed at testing the genetic identity of different cell types in the body, has turned out to have clear human health prospects.”

    Prof Yamanaka, who started his career as a surgeon, said: “My goal, all my life, is to bring this stem cell technology to the bedside, to patients, to clinic.”

    The president of the Royal Society, Sir Paul Nurse, said: “I was delighted to learn that John Gurdon shares this year’s Nobel prize for physiology or medicine with Shinya Yamanaka.

    “John’s work has changed the way we understand how cells in the body become specialised, paving the way for important developments in the diagnosis and treatment of disease.

    “My congratulations go out to both John and Shinya.”

    Prof Anthony Hollander, the head of cellular and molecular medicine at the University of Bristol, said: “This joint Nobel Prize traces and celebrates the wonderful scientific journey from John Gurdon’s pioneering early work to the sensational discovery of somatic cell reprogramming by Shinya Yamanaka.

    “It’s fantastic news for stem cell research.”

    Sir Mark Walport, the director of the Wellcome Trust, said: “John Gurdon’s life has been spent in biology, from collecting insects as a child to over 50 years at the laboratory bench. He and Shinya Yamanaka have demonstrated conclusively that it is possible to turn back the clock on adult cells, to create all the specialised cell types in the body.

    “Their work has created the field of regenerative medicine, which has the potential to transform the lives of patients with conditions such as Parkinson’s, stroke and diabetes.

    “This is a wonderfully well-deserved Nobel Prize.”

     

  • 10 die in JTF’s reprisal  for officer’s death

    10 die in JTF’s reprisal for officer’s death

    A military officer was killed yesterday in an attack on a patrol vehicle in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

    Two soldiers, who are also members of the Joint Task Force (JTF), were critically injured in the attack.

    The killing of the officer, a lieutenant, by an Improvised Explosive Device (IED), angered the task force’s men who shot sporadically, leading to the death of no fewer than 10 people.

    The IED was buried on Lagos Street, near the NUJ Press Centre. It went off at about 7.15am as the JTF patrol vehicle was passing by. The lieutenant, sitting in front of the vehicle was killed.

    A few minutes later, another bomb went off in a residential apartment facing the spot of the first blast. Military sources said a middle age man who was believed to be coupling the explosive device was the victim. He died.

    The JTF spokesman, Lt Col Sagir Musa, in a statement said two soldiers were injured. “It is feared that two soldiers sustained injury,” he claimed.

    Soldiers reportedly shot sporadically in the area particularly Gwange Ward adjacent the scene of the blast. Over hundred houses, shopping mall and offices were set ablaze while thousands of residents in the area were displaced. Gwange is believed to be one of the flash points of the Boko Haram activities in the city.

    Heavy shootings were heard in the city as most residents remained indoors. Many of the employees of the University of Maiduguri could not access their offices because the Lagos Street was barricaded.

    Sources said the soldiers “believed many residents were aiding the activities of the sect.

    Deputy Governor Zanna Mustapha inspected the area. He appealed to Boko Haram members to lay down their arms. “If they say they are fighting for the sake of Allah, people are suffering and if they say they are fighting for people, our people are still suffering. Just see what they have put people into now. It is really sad.”

    He said government would assess the extent of loss by the people and see how it could be mitigated.

    There was heavy security around the construction site of a Chinese firm in the city yesterday following the killing of one of their colleagues and his aide at Gubio, north of Borno state.

     

  • Resettle people in Dayspring, Kwa Island, Ita-Giwa pleads

    Resettle people in Dayspring, Kwa Island, Ita-Giwa pleads

    A  Political leader of the Bakassi people, Senator Florence Ita-Giwa, has urged the Federal Government to resettle of the people rather than pursue a review which, she said, is coming “suspiciously” late and not likely to have a headway.

    She spoke in Calabar, the Cross River State capital, yesterday, urging the Federal Government to consider compensating Cross River State and Bakassi people in perpetuity for the loss of their land and its attendant resources.

    Mrs Ita-Giwa said: “You are aware that the Nigerian media space for the past three months or thereabout has been awash with the Bakassi issue.

    “At about this time 10 years ago, the ICJ gave a landmark judgement which handed over the sovereignty of Bakassi to the Republic of Cameroon. This judgement triggered lots of events, with far-reaching consequences on the lives of the Bakassi people.

    “Starting with the Green Tree Agreement, the judgement culminated in the mass exodus of the Bakassi people who refused to surrender their sovereignty to the Republic of Cameroon.

    “Many well-meaning Nigerians, organisations and groups have severely advocated for the revisit of the ICJ judgement. Quite recently, the National Assembly even passed a resolution asking for a revisit of the judgement. We equally remember that two members of the National Assembly representing Cross River State namely Hon Essien Ayi and Senator Prince Bassey Otu, at different times moved relating motions on the floor of the National Assembly sometime in 2006. As we speak, all these efforts seem to be in futility.

    “While acknowledging these efforts by these spirited Nigerians and the press, for bringing the plight of the Bakassi people to the front burner, we wish this issue of ICJ revisit had come much earlier.

    “We the Bakassi people have had to contend with becoming Internally Displaced People in our country for the past six years with no particular place of proper relocation and settlement. The purported place for our resettlement was impossible as it meant fostering us on a densely populated and landlocked area.

    “We unequivocally reject to be treated as slaves in our country, believing and knowing we have a right to be treated with dignity. By the Grace of God Almighty, in our quest to restore our dignity and fundamental human right, we registered our right to vote and indeed voted at Dayspring 1, 2 and Kwa Islands to reflect the traditional 10 wards of Bakassi. We duly registered and voted in these wards as Bakassi Local Government Area in the state House of Assembly, National Assembly and presidential elections, only to be disenfranchised in the rescheduled election of February 2012 by some spurious court injunction.”

    “Arising from Independent National Electoral Commission delineation, we urge all political parties to continue with the political structures in Dayspring 1, 2 and Kwa Islands to enable our people partake in all political activities.

    “While standing on the promise of the former president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, to relocate and resettle the Bakassi people with their economic, social, political and traditional institutions intact, we appeal to the federal government of Nigeria to immediately commence the process of developing the Dayspring 1, 2 and Kwa Islands to enable the Bakassi people to properly resettle putting roofs over their heads.

    “We know that no amount of monetary compensation can make up for the loss of our homes and ancient/cultural value, prizeless artefacts, shrines and our expansive land rich in flora and fauna, but at least developing the islands will bring succour to the people.”

     

  • Joanthan to make national broadcast

    Joanthan to make national broadcast

    President Goodluck Jonathan will address Nigerians this morning.

    Presidential Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati said yesterday.

    The statement reads: “President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan will address the nation at 7 am tomorrow, Tuesday, October 9, 2012.

    “All television and radio stations in the country are advised to hook up to the network services of the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) and the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN) for the broadcast.”

    The last time the president addressed the nation was on October 1, the country’s 52nd Independence Anniversary.