Tag: Brazil

  • Quadri is Africa’s pride at Rio – ATTF

    Quadri is Africa’s pride at Rio – ATTF

    The continent is still celebrating the feat achieved by Nigeria’s Aruna Quadri at the ongoing Rio 2016 Olympic Games, President of African Table Tennis Federation (ATTF), Khaled El-Salhy believes the 2014 ITTF Star Player is a pride to Africa in Brazil.

    He added that the heroic performance of Aruna Quadri is a confirmation of Africa’s relevance in global table tennis.

    “I must admit that all the African players did their best in the singles, while the extra ordinary outcome was through Aruna Quadri for his superb performance against the top ITTF ranked players like Chinese Taipei’s CHUANG Chih-Yuan and Germany’s Timo BOLL. In my opinion the achievement of Aruna Quadri in Rio will be of great impact to Africa and all players as well as help to break all barriers, raising the ceiling of ambitious player at all World and Olympic title events regardless of their opponents,” the ATTF boss said.

    He added: “Simply, Aruna Quadri is perfect, full of energy and trust his skills with good preparation. He also put his mind in the game to fly the flag of Nigeria and Africa in such Olympic Games.”

    On what young players can emulate from Quadri, he said: “They have to follow the foot step of Aruna Quadri in terms of preparation, dedication in training and with this nothing is impossible.”

  • Rio Olympics: President Buhari commends dream team

    Rio Olympics: President Buhari commends dream team

    President Muhammadu Buhari has commended the performance of Nigeria’s under-23 male football team against their Japanese opponents at the ongoing 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    The president made the commendation in a message to the Team Nigeria contingent on Friday from Abuja, signed by his Senior Special Assistant on (SSA) Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu.

    It said Buhari expressed the hope that the football team’s victory would serve as “an inspiration to the entire contingent of the grand show Nigerians expect from our athletes’’.

    In the message, President Buhari also expressed optimism that the country’s team would put up an impressive showing to delight fellow countrymen.

    “On behalf of the government and people of our great country, I wish to express my support to our athletes who have arrived in Rio for the 2016 Olympic Games.

    “I am particularly delighted by the outcome of the football match early this morning, in which our football team defeated their Japanese counterparts.

    “The sweetness of the victory comes from the fact that it came against all odds.

    “Our team overcame several challenges to put up a sterling performance. This is a good beginning,’’ he said in the message.

    President Buhari also praised the resilience, hard work and patriotism the athletes had put into their preparations.

    He stated that he was aware of the personal sacrifices they made while preparing for the Games.

    “I am already aware that you have made personal sacrifices in your journey to the Olympic Games.

    “The motivation comes from strong discipline and the love of the nation.”

    “As you embark on the search for honours for the nation, I seize this opportunity to assure our Olympians that you have my support and those of all Nigerians.

    “Go! Win and return with laurels, I wish you the best,” the President added.

  • Olympics: Expect surprise from Team Nigeria – Taylor

    Olympics: Expect surprise from Team Nigeria – Taylor

    If there is anyone that believes in the potential of Team Nigeria at Rio 2016 Olympic Games, it is the High Performance Director, Angie Taylor, who spoke confidently on the ability of the West African contingent to spring surprise in Brazil.

    Taylor, a former American athlete and national coach told NationSport that Nigerians should not be sceptical about the ability of Team Nigeria to claim medal unlike what happened at the London 2012 in Great Britain.

    “I can understand that doubt that Nigerians had about their team, but I want to tell you that Nigerian athletes have the potential to claim medals at Rio because it is the majority of athletes that performed well at the 2014 Commonwealth Games that will also be in Rio. So everybody has been training well for the games so we should not be worried. The athletes know what it means to compete at the Olympic Games and they are well ready for the games,” Taylor said.

    She is optimistic that the team would pick medals in Brazil. “I am sure they can win medals so we should not exercise doubt as the team compete with the rest of the world in Brazil. Let us wait and see what will happen.”

     

  • Rio 2016: We won’t be under pressure – Toriola

    Rio 2016: We won’t be under pressure – Toriola

    Captain of the table tennis team to the Rio 2016 Olympic Games in Brazil, Segun Toriola believes the team would not be under unnecessary pressure to perform at the games.

    Toriola, who has been celebrated globally for being the first African athlete to feature in seven Olympic Games said they hope to make the country proud in Brazil.

    “It is very important that we put up a good performance and make the country proud at the Olympics. We are preparing ourselves very well and hopefully we will have something to celebrate in Rio.”

    He added: Aruna Quadri is an experienced player and he is the best in Africa for now based of his achievement but I don’t think that he will be under unnecessary pressure in Rio because he is not going to be thinking about the games. It is only when an athlete thinks that he put himself under unnecessary pressure. As a team will not be playing under pressure too as we want to go out there and make names for ourselves and the country.”

    Also, the President of Nigeria Table Tennis Federation (NTTF), Wahid Oshodi believes the players are gearing up to do well in Brazil.

    “‎Our preparation could be a lot better but we all know the problem that is facing sports today. The players have continue to do their best to keep in shape and they are working very hard as you know before the tournament start. We are hopeful, we had high hope, we are confident that we will do well with these players,” Oshodi said.

  • 6th case of Zika virus confirmed in S. Korea

    6th case of Zika virus confirmed in S. Korea

    The Korea Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) on Friday said the sixth case of Zika virus infection in South Korea has been found in a 28-year-old woman who recently came back from Dominica.

    According to the KCDC, the woman, who had stayed in the Central American country from June 2014, came back to South Korea on June 23 via the U.S. and China’s Taiwan.

    She was confirmed positive with the mosquito-borne virus on Thursday after developing a rash, and joint and muscle pains from Monday.

    It marked the sixth case of the country’s Zika virus infection since the fifth one was detected some 50 days ago.

    Among the total, one came from Brazil, one from Vietnam, one from Dominica and three from the Philippines.

    The KCDC said the sixth patient was not pregnant, noting that it has been conducting an in-depth epidemiological investigation.

    Zika is a virus that is primarily spread by mosquito bites, particularly risky for pregnant women as it is thought to be linked to a rare birth defect – microcephaly that causes newborn babies to have unusually small heads and damaged brains.

    The Zika virus is believed not to be spread by ordinary touches between humans, but it can be transmitted through sex and blood transfusion.Cases of sexual transmission from travelers to their sexual partners had been reported from the U.S. and Europe.

    The KCDC has advised pregnant women not to travel to Zika-infected countries, while recommending fertile women delay pregnancy for at least two months after returning from such nations.

    Zika was first found in Africa and spread to Asia and Latin America.

    Ahead of the Brazil Summer Olympics, the World Health Organisation declared the Zika virus outbreak as a global emergency.

  • Abortion requests rise amid Zika fears

    Abortion requests rise amid Zika fears

    The mysterious Zika virus has been detected in 61 countries, the majority in Latin America and more pregnant women are considering abortions out of fear of birth defects in their babies.

    The Zika virus may be driving a surge in interest in abortions in Latin America, according to a new study published by the New England Journal of Medicine.

    According to the study, requests for abortion services in the region through one non-profit provider have jumped more than a third, with increases of close to double in hard-hit Brazil and Venezuela.

    Abortion is illegal or severely restricted in most of Latin America, and so there are no official data on abortion rates.

    Researchers instead examined data from the organisation Women on Web, which offers access to pharmaceutical abortions for women in countries where abortion is not available.

    A comparison of abortion service requests through Women on Web before and after the first public warnings about Zika six months ago showed increases of at least 36 per cent in all 19 countries surveyed.

    The data help to illustrate how much Zika is worrying pregnant women in the region, said Abigail Aiken of the University of Texas at Austin, one of the study’s authors.

    One factor driving the surge may have been government warnings urging women in Zika-affected areas to wait to become pregnant – warnings that may have alarmed women who already were.

    For women whose children were born with the virus, the uncertainty can be devastating.

    At a children’s hospital in the Venezuelan city of Valencia, Sodelis Balboa, 31, cried as she waited for news of her infant daughter.

    “My baby has Zika and now the doctors say there were complications,” she told dpa. “No one can tell me what is going on.

    The doctors just put me off.”

    Treatment is a “disaster,” she said, amid an economic crisis in Venezuela that has led to a shortage of food and medicine.

    Part of the problem is that close to five months after WHO declared Zika an emergency, much about the mosquito-borne virus remains unknown.

    Doctors now know for sure that the Zika virus can cause severe skull deformations in human embryos. The deformations, known as microcephaly, result in babies born with abnormally small heads and severe disabilities.

    But it is unclear why only a fraction of Zika infections in pregnant women result in microcephaly. Additionally, in Brazil there have been more than 1,400 confirmed cases of microcephaly since the outbreak began, but Zika was confirmed in only about one in seven.

    In July, the U.S. and Brazil will begin a wide-ranging study of 10,000 pregnant women in countries with a prevalence of Zika, 4,000 of them in Brazil.

    Tests for a Zika vaccine will begin on monkeys and mice in November, and scientists hope to have a single-dose vaccine for humans by 2018.

    With 1.5 million estimated infections, Brazil is the country hardest-hit by Zika, but abortion is illegal there except in cases of rape or severe risk to the mother’s health.

    The crisis has sparked a public debate about a kind of “Lex Zika” – whereby pregnant women with the money to pay private clinics for abortion services get them, and poor women do not.

    But the Catholic-dominated country of 200 million remains starkly divided on the issue.

    A survey of more than 2,700 people by the Datafolha Institute found a strong majority 58 per cent, against allowing abortions for pregnant women infected with Zika.

  • Brazil set to appoint Tite as new coach

    Brazil set to appoint Tite as new coach

    The Corinthians manager Tite has accepted an offer to coach Brazil but his appointment provoked fury at the club, who accused the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) of underhand tactics and unethical behaviour.

    Tite, who led Corinthians to two Serie A titles as well as Copa Libertadores and Club World Cup triumphs, will replace Dunga, who was fired on Tuesday after Brazil were knocked out of the Copa América at the group stage for the first time since 1987.

    The 55-year-old Tite, whose official name is Adenor Leonardo Bacchi, was expected to sign a deal on Thursday, although details have yet to be hashed out, the CBF said in a statement.

    The Corinthians president, Roberto de Andrade, however, hit out at the confederation. “I am furious with the CBF,” Andrade told reporters. “They didn’t even call us once. It wouldn’t have changed anything if they’d called us and asked for permission to talk to the manager. Of course I’d have said yes.

    “Tite deserves the national side for the work he has done and for the person he is,” Andrade added. “The national side doesn’t deserve Tite. The CBF doesn’t deserve a person like Tite. They aren’t used to dealing with ethical people.”

    The CBF responded by saying they had tried calling Andrade on Wednesday morning after spending three hours in talks with Tite but were unable to reach him via phone or text.

  • “I was afraid of making it to sixth Olympic Games”

    “I was afraid of making it to sixth Olympic Games”

    On records Olufunke Oshonaike is the most successful female table tennis player at the African Games having won more medals than any other player in the continent. Back-to-back she has won the singles title and for four consecutive editions of the Africa’s Olympics, Oshonaike has claimed the doubles title.

    The 40-year-old mother of two is yet to come to terms that she will taking part in her sixth Olympic Games in Rio, Brazil having debuted at the biggest sporting gathering at the Atlanta 1996 Olympics in United States. Despite her inability to win medals at the Olympic Games, Oshonaike says that any athlete that makes it to the Olympics should be appreciated as it remains the biggest stage for the best of the best in the world.

    Oshonaike is edging toward history in Africa as the first female table tennis player to be competing at her sixth Olympic Games and it is a journey the former African champion says she never envisaged when she made her Olympics debut in 1996.

    “When I attended my first Olympic Games in 1996, I never thought I will be able to make it six appearances because then I just wanted to take part in three Olympics. But here I am today looking forward to my sixth Olympics. For me, this is an awesome experience I would cherish in my life. The Olympic Games is a special event and not many people make it there and for me to be going there for the sixth consecutive times is a feat I never dreamed of but by God’s grace I am here today looking forward to another outing at the biggest sporting stage,” she said.

    “My first appearance at the Olympic Games was an experience I would admire forever because I met the best in the world and I rubbed shoulders with them and this for me is an experience every athlete would desire. It is only the best that attends Olympic Games and every athlete that competes at the Olympic Games qualified based on their performance. Most of the participants were not given easy tickets to be at the games.”

    Despite her participation in several international tournaments across the globe, Oshonaike still believes that the Olympic Games remains the ‘icing on the cake’ for athletes.

    “It is the dream of every athlete to make it to the Olympics because it is the best among the best that attend Olympic Games and I have been privilege to be among these best. This for me is a feat I will cherish more than any medals I might have won at the African Games or championships.

    “You cannot compare the experience with any other events because you meet with other top athletes across the globe while the atmosphere is most times unique and this is what endeared the heart of many globally. Olympic is not all about medal even some athletes who must have won medals in several international competitions do not make it to the Olympics as only few make it there,” the athlete said.

    With few weeks to the Rio 2016 Olympic Games, Oshonaike admits that with the new format, the dominance of China may be halted in Brazil. “For us representing our country very well in Rio is our priority and we must strive to be good ambassadors in terms of our conduct on and off the arena. We want to go to Rio and exhibit the virtues synonymous with Nigeria. We are not going to be promising any medal but anything can happen but we will surely give our best. For me, this might be my last Olympic Games and I want to cherish every moment I am going to spend in Brazil and I hope I can achieve something.”

      On the dearth of quality female players, Oshonaike is pained by this development but blamed it on indiscipline and interest on the part of the athletes. “When we started playing, discipline was made very important and we were also passionate about the sport. Money was not our priority as we also have training schedule that we follow.

    “But unfortunately, things are quite different these days as athletes are not as disciplined, and the passion for the sport has not been there. I am so sad that our players are not showing enough interest in the sport but I hope and believe with the efforts being made by the Nigeria Table Tennis Federation (NTTF), we can have more players coming through.”

  • Impeachment vote for Brazil’s Rousseff back on after reversal

    Impeachment vote for Brazil’s Rousseff back on after reversal

    Impeachment proceedings against Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff were back on track on Tuesday after a legislative leader reversed his decision from the day before to annul the process.

    Waldir Maranhao said that the impeachment process could go on, meaning there would likely be a vote in the Brazilian Senate on Wednesday.

    Maranhao, the interim head of the legislature’s lower house, the Chamber of Deputies, had only on Monday annulled the April 17 vote to seek impeachment, citing procedural problems.

    He said that if the Senate votes by a simple majority to consider the impeachment, Rousseff would be suspended for 180 days, during which time the Senate would investigate the case.

    However a two-thirds majority would be required in the upper house to permanently remove her from office.

    Report says Rousseff stands accused of tampering figures to disguise the size of Brazil’s budget deficit during her 2014 re-election campaign.

    Rousseff and her supporters have called the impeachment vote an attempted coup and have pointed out she has not been charged with any crime.

    However, Rousseff’s presidency has been battered by a recession brought on by a drop in commodities markets and slowing global economy.

    Meanwhile, unemployment in Brazil rose to 9.6 million in 2015.

  • Brazil: Rousseff faces impeachment threat

    Brazil: Rousseff faces impeachment threat

    Members of the congressional committee in Brazil’s lower house have voted in support of impeaching President Dilma Rousseff.

    Majority of the 65-member special committee voted in favor of the impeachment: 38 lawmakers voted yes, while 27 voted on Monday.

    Lawmakers accuse Rousseff of hiding a budgetary deficit to win re-election in 2014. Her presidency has been rocked by a massive corruption scandal, accusations of cronyism and a deepening recession.

    According to the brazil constitution, if  impeachment is approved by at least two-thirds of the 513 members of the lower house, it will then be sent to the Senate, where the president of the Supreme Court will oversee the process.

    Rousseff has claimed that the impeachment process against her is a coup by the president of the lower house, Eduardo Cunha.

    However, the impeachment is not approved in the lower house, the process is nullified.

    If she is impeached, Vice President Michel Temer would assume the presidency.