Tag: beat

  • Lawmaker, others ‘beat’ FRSC woman to coma

    An expectant mother working with the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Anambra State Command, was on Saturday allegedly beaten to coma for booking and impounding a bus allegedly belonging to a lawmaker, Hon Ikem Uzoezie.

    The bus, according to the Sector Commander, Anambra State Command, Mr Hyginus Omeje, was booked for dangerous driving. But rather than explore peaceful means of recovering the bus, the lawmaker allegedly led thugs to FRSC office and beat up the woman, Omeje claimed. The woman is attached to the Command’s Igbo-ukwu unit.

    Omeje deplored what he called political office holders’ abuse of the law they swore to protect and called on the Speaker of the House of Assembly, Hon. Chinwe Nwebili to intervene in the matter.

    Omeje said: “The bus is said to belong to one Honourable Ikem Uzoezie who represents Aguata Constituency in the House of Assembly. The bus was driven by one Hon Okoli, a Supervisory Councillor for Works. This morning, the Honourable carried his thugs to my office, beat up the pregnant woman on duty to coma and forcefully removed the bus. The woman is presently lying critical in one of the hospitals in Igboukwu. Political office holders are not above the law and are expected to be role models.”

    Hon Uzoezie, however, denied the allegation, saying there is no way he would give FRSC pains since he was instrumental to the Corps getting a good place to work in his constituency.

    He said: “I am just coming from a burial outing in Nimo. I was not there and I didn’t know what actually happened, but I got information that my men had a problem and I responded positively. I assured that once I got to the village, we would sort things out because I have not been around.

    “I didn’t go to their office and how could I, when I am the one that used my money to paint their office and make the place habitable? I am still committing resources to their welfare in my constituency. I don’t have any ill intention against any staff of FRSC or office, but if they had a problem with my people and I am briefed, I should be able to intervene and settle things.

    “If a campaign of calumny is what they would specialise in, then no problem; by Monday (today), we will get ourselves in court to get things straightened,” said Uzoezie.

  • Golden Eaglets beat Academy side 6-1

    Golden Eaglets beat Academy side 6-1

    The Golden Eaglets on Wednesday defeated Bob Osim Academy 6-1 in a warm-up match played in Calabar.

    The Nigeria national U17 side scored three goals in each halves, with their visitor pulling one back.

    Wednesday’s game was certainly another victory over Bob Osim Academy that suffered a 5-1 defeat in the hands of Coach Manu Garba boys last year.

    Eaglets will host Botswana on Sunday in Calabar in a friendly as they prepare for the 2013 African Junior Championship billed for Morocco in April.

    Both sides will play another friendly on Tuesday.

    The Botswana U17 side is expected in Nigeria on Friday ahead of the first leg tie on Sunday.

    Last year, the Golden Eaglets won 11 and drew one out of 12 practice matches played.

     

  • Ugbade to Super Eagles: Come all out to beat Mali

    Ugbade to Super Eagles: Come all out to beat Mali

    Golden Eaglets Assistant Coach, Nduka Ugbade has tasked the Super Eagles to come all out like they did against the Elephants of Cote d’Ivoire if they want to nick a spot in the final of the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.

    The Eagles proved bookmakers wrong with a tantalising display against the Ivoriens which fetched them a famous 2-1 victory.

    But Ugbade in a brief chat informed that if Nigeria lowered their guard against Mali and become complacent, their West African neighbours could shock them.

    He said Eagles should be ready to work for the entire duration of the game and ensure they don’t give their opponents an opportunity to express themselves.

    “The Malians are a good side. I took time to watch their game against South Africa and I must say that they were never tired.

    “We should try to assert ourselves on the game and try to pin them in their half. We should be ready too to play the entire duration of the game without losing much steam or enthusiasm.

    “They are also a youthful side and we must play just exactly as we did against Cote d’Ivoire if we are to stand a chance at all,” Ugbade said.

     

  • My sister insists on getting me a wife and says my preferred wife would fold me in her laps and beat me up from time to time!

    Hello, am Ebube, 35 years, an Economist from Imo State. I’ve never been in love (I am a virgin). My elder sister whom I cherish so much asked me to let her get me a suitable wife otherwise my preferred wife would fold me in her laps and beat me up from time to time! How true is my sister’s talk regarding my interest in marriage? What’s your advice? Don’t publish please.

     

    Ebube, I’m publishing despite your plea that I shouldn’t. Sometimes, some of the mails I get from some of you are so plain funny, unbelievable or rash or all or all-in-one. Ebube, at 35, a sister of yours is telling you that if she doesn’t get you a wife then the woman you get for yourself would fold you in her laps and beat you. If she wasn’t joking with you and you’re the one taking it seriously, then she must take you to too soft to handle a woman. In fact, for you to have even asked me if she was right at this age of yours means your sister must have seen something in you that makes her fear for you.

    It doesn’t matter if you’re a virgin at 35. What with do with our sex lives are purely our own personal decisions. But if at 35, your sister can still engage you in this kind of discussion and you’re taking it so serious that you’re asking a counselor if your sister was right, then you need counseling.

    If you’re not diminutive and so pocket-sized and easy to fold in one’s laps truly, then you must cut the picture of a pitiable man. Wake up and mix with the right people. Build your confidence and stop letting people look down on you. You claim to be an Economist, carry yourself well and tell yourself you can do all things, including getting a wife whom you will put on your in her laps and love and who will love you in return.

  • We can beat Nigeria and qualify – Bance

    We can beat Nigeria and qualify – Bance

    Burkina Faso striker Aristide Bance says they have a competitive squad to take on Group C opponents Nigeria, Zambia and Ethiopia and qualify for the knockout stages of the African Cup of Nations 2013.

    In an interview with supersport.com after he played a storming match in the 3-0 victory over Swaziland’s national team on Thursday night, Bance said the confidence is back and they are “ready to face” Nigeria and the rest of the group opponents.

    “We have had intense preparations and now we are ready to face Nigeria and the rest,” Bance said.

    “It’s important that we win the first game. I am not saying it will be easy but we have a competitive squad to go all the way,” said the FC Augsburg striker.

    Bance set the ‘Stallions’ off to a romping 3-0 victory with a well-taken goal from outside the big box. He let fly with a stinging shot that rocked the roof of the net in the 36th minute. He gave Swaziland’s defence a torrid time with his off-the-ball runs and close ball control for the remainder of his time out on the field.

    Bance was born in the Ivory Coast but moved to Burkina Faso as a child. He made his debut for the Stallions in 2003 and has been in and out of the national team since then although he has featured more regularly in recent years.

    This will be his second appearance at the African Cup of Nations after featuring in 2012 in Gabon and Equatorial Guinea.

  • Heartland beat Pillars 2-0 to keep Super Cup

    Heartland beat Pillars 2-0 to keep Super Cup

    Heartland will remain Nigeria’s champion of champions for a second straight year after they defeated Kano Pillars 2-0 on Thursday.

    ‘The Naze Millionaires’ beat Dolphin in last year’s Super Cup and they repeated the feat in Port Harcourt on Thursday.

    “We let in two soft goals and did not play to our high standards,” said Pillars spokesman Idris Malikawa told MTNFootball.com

    “This loss simply shows we have a lot of work ahead of us.”

    Happy Akuoka gave Heartland the lead after 35 minutes before experienced campaigner John Owoeri doubled the Owerri’s club advantage on the hour.

    Pillars international defender Umar Zango was sent off in the dying moments of the game for dangerous play.

    Pillars lined up several of their top stars including Gambo Mohammed, Rabiu Ali, Bello Musa Kofarmata and Shehu Abdullahi.

  • Eguavoen boasts: Sharks the team to beat

    Eguavoen boasts: Sharks the team to beat

    New Sharks coach Austin Eguavoen has declared that his club would be the one to beat in the new season.

    Sharks are presently in closed camping in Calabar after about two weeks of training in Port Harcourt.

    Eguavoen, who landed a hefty deal with the Garden City side months after parting ways with Enyimba, told MTNFootball.com: “With what I have seen so far in camp, I can confidently say we would be the team to beat next season. We have been in Calabar for over two weeks now and with most of the team’s old players returning, we are making steady progress.”

    Sharks management has handed the former Super Eagles handler a continental ticket target for next season. Last season, the Port Harcourt outfit placed seventh on the NPL table.

  • ‘They beat, raped and cut us with blade’

    ‘They beat, raped and cut us with blade’

    What does it feel like to fall victim of human traffickers? Victims tell tales of rape, horror and much more, reports Assistant Editor (Investigations)JOKE KUJENYA, who encountered them at a forum on modern slavery.

    FOR seven years after her husband’s death in 2002, Mrs. Comfort Arinze, 41, and her only son George, then 14, daily went to Lagos Island from their Bariga, Lagos mainland home to sell her wares. One day, she had in her home a visitor, who gave her the impression that she was the angel God sent to liberate her from poverty.

    Arinze said: “Everybody in our Bariga area of residence loved this woman we all call Anty Rosa. She was really nice. And she was a mother of two lovely children, a boy and a girl. They were also well brought up so we had no cause to be suspicious of her. We believed her to be an international businesswoman because anytime she came around, she would bring gifts for us. Then one day, she came to visit my son and me. She commended me for bringing up my son in a good way despite my predicament. She told me how other women in my shoes would have been jumping from bed to bed with men and noted that it was because I was not doing such that she had made up her mind to help us. I was very happy. I actually thought she was going to give us money to boost our trade. But she said she had decided to take my son and me abroad so he could go and study and that I would not only be there to offer him due parental guidance; but that, on the side, I will also be doing business to be able to sustain him.”

    Her joy knew no bounds. Sleep eluded her that night. Her son was all smiles. Within one week, Auty Rosa arranged international passports for them. She took them to Italy. Shortly after their arrival, two ladies and a man came to welcome them and ushered them into a car. That night, they slept and nothing gave them any cause to worry. The next morning trouble began. Some men came to call her son that they were to take him to where he would work. She did not object.

    Barely 30 minutes after her son left, some women came to tell her that Auty Rosa asked her to dress up for work. It soon dawned on her that she had been tricked into prostitution. The son was also to be a gigolo.

    After about one week, when Auty Rosa saw that she would not bend, she sent them out of the house.

    It took the intervention of anti-human trafficking agents for them to find their way back to Nigeria.

    If Mrs. Arinze’s story is touching, then the account of another victim of human trafficking, Ms Isoke Aikpintayi, now 32, the sixth of her mother’s eight children, is bound to evoke emotions. Until her ‘recruiter’ as they are called, came to lure her away from the comfort of her mother’s home, Isoke, who told her story in pidgin English, used to help her mother sell fruits after school in Benin.

    In her narration, presented at a forum on human traficking, entitled: “I just want to be free”, she said: “I am the sixth of my parents’ eight children. We did not have plenty money, but we were content. One day, a woman came with a promise of better life for me. Everyone thinks it is all Benin girls that easily take to prostitution. No; that is not true. But when this woman told me that the fruits I sell in Nigeria cannot fetch me as much money as the one I would sell in Italy, all my family gladly gave their consent. A few days later, we were on board to Tarino Airport in Italy.”

    She and other girls were abandoned at the airport and a supposedly strange woman helped them out. It later turned out she was the one the ‘recruiter’, who brought them from Nigeria, had ‘sold’ them to.

    She added: “The woman offered to give us accommodation for the night. We followed her. The next morning, some ladies came up to us, I mean those of us that arrived the previous night, and said it was time we went to work. I told them that we were not with them but waiting for our own ‘Madam’. Then, they dropped the shocker that they actually belonged to our ‘Madam’. I was about to ask another question when they told me to keep quiet. And that was how my suffering began. They just threw some ‘rubbish clothes’ on me to wear that I must be ready for ‘work’ in a few minutes. The girls who had been there before us were told to offer us ‘lessons on behaviour and comportment. One of them said: ‘Today, you have to go to work in these dresses’, as she threw those crazy dresses, pants and all she had on her on me. And then, they suddenly became unfriendly. And by one week, they had become madly aggressive.

    “ When they realised I was going to prove stubborn, they beat me. Then, they marched us out of the house and made us to accompany other girls to ‘work’ on the street with our so-called working dress. On the streets, a few other new girls and I refused to allow the men that came touch us. When we got back to the house, they beat us and brought in some men to rape us, cut us with blade, poured cold water on us and made us to suffer. The torture was so bad I had to scheme a way to run away from the home. It was in the process of running away that I came across good spirited Nigerians that took me to the organisations that eventually helped me to return to Nigeria.”

    These accounts were some of the revelations made at a two-day workshop organised by the Women’s Optimum Development Foundation (WODEF) held in Ibadan, Oyo State.

    Unlike the duo, a woman whose name was given simply as Genny is slaving her way in Italy to fend for herself and others back home. She has paid off her ‘recruiter’.

     

    Genny’s account from Italy

     

    “I got to Italy when I was 22years of age. I had gone through so many bad situations. The women that brought me here and her mafia gang treated me so badly. They lied to me. But now, I am 30 and I had to change my name to Genny. Today, I send at least between €3, 700 to €5,000 to my family back in Nigeria every three months. I can’t make such back home. A house is being built for me in my village. I deal mostly with white guys because they pay you and are not fraudulent like other men of colour. Again, the white guys love the way we, Nigerian girls, do it. Well, we often jazz it because that helps a lot to get them what they want.

    “At some point, I paid off my ‘Madame’ and now, I am my own ‘Madame’. Men are crazy about me and I am not willing to back off. As I continued to suffer as a victim in the hands of the woman and her gang, I began to do my own research. I got to know that the money I was promised would never come as my ‘Madame’ was using me. I knew I could not go back home empty-handed because life was tough for family and me before she came to promise us help; then, I realised the help was not coming. I am lucky to be alive and smart. Other girls suffer and die and are not as lucky.”

     

    Nigeria tops the list of countries involved in the crime

     

    The Director of Training and a Superintendent of Police (SP), National Agency for Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), Mr. Aondoaver Kuttuh, who said Nigeria tops the list of countries engaged in this illicit trade, shared the experience of a female victim of human trafficking. She, along with an unsuspecting Nigerian girl, had been given the lure of a better life in Europe. The young girl, whose picture was shown on a multi-media at the forum, had been taken through deadly routes to get to somewhere around Egypt. She had been tortured and mass-raped. All her money had been taken from her and she was left with no other option than to get to the end of her journey. Then, they got stuck in the desert. They were made to wait for days on end for the next available ‘vehicle’ or anything mobile to take them into London, according to the lie she was told. Then, one bright sunny morning, one of her ‘recruiters’ had come to her to announce the good news to her that “today, you shall enter London and there begins your dream life”.

    She said her hope was rekindled and she put behind her all the pains of the recent past. She just wanted to begin a new life. Towards afternoon, the ‘recruiter’ came to call them that it was time to board the vehicle. They all rushed out and to her dismay what she saw standing ahead of her was a big lorry with heaps of high bags of loads having human beings tucked in-between the ropes through which they would be hidden across the borders.

    According to Kuttuh, the girl retorted: “Not on my life will I get on this thing…” And that was the turning point for her. Her ‘recruiters’ warned her that if she missed that truck that was the end of their contract with her. But she was ready to die than to be on such a vehicle. Within minutes, the vehicle got loaded and that was how she was left in the desert and she began to trek to nowhere in particular.

    He said: “At the time our agency met her, she was ready for anything even death. But thank God, she was rescued and eventually rehabilitated. And there are many other unfortunate incidents like that. And where these girls don’t have money to pay on the journey again, the ‘recruiters’ turn the girls to money-making machines as men are made to sleep with them for the money that will be collected by the traffickers. That is the prostitution aspect. They will only give the girls some stipend and they dare not complain. These evil recruiters are still on the prowl, deceiving many innocent young men and women across our country.”

    He said the operators of the underground business use force and deception to get their targets. He added that human trafficking, according to the Palermo Protocol, of 2000, Italy, is a high-profit, low-risk criminal activity. He said it is a low-risk but high-profit type of crime.

    Kuttuh said international traffickers earn over $3billion annually and rank number three, that is, coming behind drugs and gun running, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). He said over 5, 000 victims or potential victims have been rescued by NAPTIP and other partners since 2004 to date.

    Convener of WODEF and veteran newscaster Mrs. Bimbo Oloyede appealed to women and girls to be vigilant when being offered chances to travel abroad.

    Oloyede said: “As we all know, the traffickers use deceit at the ‘recruiting’ point. They never disclose their intention to exploit the victims. What the victims often consent to is to go and make more money but not to be exploited. And we also know that little children cannot consent, not just because they are minors but because they are incapable of giving their consent. This is where we must speak out because of the innocent children. Under-age often willingly give their bodies out as a means of not wanting to be hindered from getting to their destinations. In seeking an end to this wickedness of man and humanity, we must all arrive at a mitigating soft-landing that would move up the years of litigation from the now about 14 years to 21years of imprisonment for the traffickers.”

  • Battle of Calabar: How we can beat Lone Star — Egwuekwe

    Battle of Calabar: How we can beat Lone Star — Egwuekwe

    Super Eagles defender Azubuike Egwuekwe has given a recipe of how the senior national team would overcome their Liberian counterparts next weekend in the make-or-mar Africa Nations Cup qualifying match in Calabar.

    The towering Warri Wolves defender told SportingLife that for the team to survive the onslaught of the rampaging Liberians, the team should maintain a high level of concentration all through the duration of the match.

    He said: “In footall, you need over 97 minutes of concentration to survive the threat of your opponent’s attackers. That is exactly what we need against the Lone Stars in Calabar.

    “We conceeded a last-second equaliser in Malawi due to loss of concentration. In Monrovia, same thing happened. Thank God the Coaches have realised this, and are working assidiously to ensure that we play the game all through its duration without losing concentration. This is important because, a second’s loss of concentratiion can lead to a painful defeat.”

    Continuing, Egwuekwe declared that the team is not under any pressure, and that they have ability to over-run the Liberians before the end of the fisrt stanza. ‘For me, I am not under any pressure, we have played them twice and know their abilities, so we are concentrating on exploring their weak points,’ he concluded.

    Egwuekwe is one of the seven home-based players that will do battle for the Super Eagles on Saturday.

  • Keshi squad will beat Liberia — Adepoju

    Shooting Stars Club boss, Mutiu Adepoju, has tipped the Super Eagles squad picked by Team Chief Coach, Stephen Keshi as capable of beating Liberia when two teams battle it out for the 2013 Africa Nations Cup come October 13th in Calabar.

    In a chat with SportingLife yesterday, the former Eagles Captain disclosed, “I am happy with the calibre of players invited by Keshi for the Nations Cup qualifier in Calabar. The blend of the foreign based and home based should provide the needed strong team that is capable of beating Liberia hands down here (Nigeria).”

    He, however, warned that “the team that would do the battle for Nigeria should be fighters, dedicated, resilient and ready to shed blood on the field of play for their father land because it won’t augur well for Nigeria to miss out of the Nations Cup party for the second consecutive time”.

    The former Racing Satander of Spain midfielder while welcoming the inclusion of Mikel Obi and the other returnees in the team, he, however, charged them to put in their 100 percent if fielded to help Eagles achieve the desired victory.

    “It’s a welcome development that Mikel is back in the team and I believe the coach had invited him as well as others that are currently doing well for their various clubs. But my advice to them is to put in everything they have got to help Eagles beat Liberia and thereby qualify for the Nations Cup in South Africa,” he added.