Tag: Colombia

  • Brazilian football team in Colombia air crash

    A chartered aircraft with 81 people on board, including a Brazilian first division football team heading to Colombia, has crashed on its way to Medellin’s international airport.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the team was going to Colombia for a regional tournament final.

    Aviation authorities said there are however reports of at least six survivors.

    “It’s a tragedy of huge proportions,” an Associated Press (AP) report from Bogota in Colombia quoted the Medellin Mayor Federico Gutierrez as telling a local radio station.

    He was on his way to the site in a mountainous area outside the city where aircraft crashed.

    Aviation authorities said the British Aerospace 146 short-haul plane declared an emergency at 10 p.m. Monday (0300 Tuesday GMT) due to an electrical failure.

    The plane was operated by a Bolivian charter airline named Lamia,

    Authorities and rescuers were immediately activated but an air force helicopter had to turn back because of low visibility.

    They urged journalists to stay away from the hard-to-access zone and stay off the roads to facilitate the entry of ambulances and rescuers.

    The area has been hit by heavy rains in recent days.

    An ambulance transporting a male passenger with oxygen and covered in a blanket arrived on a stretcher to a local hospital, Blu Radio reported. He was apparently alive.

    The aircraft, which made a stop in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, was transporting the first division Chapecoense soccer team from southern Brazil.

    The team was scheduled to play Wednesday in the first of a two-game Copa Sudamericana final against Atletico Nacional of Medellin.

    The plane was carrying 72 passengers and nine crew members, aviation authorities said in a statement.

    Local radio said the same aircraft transported Argentina’s national squad for a match earlier this month in Brazil, and previously had transported Venezuela’s national team.

    A video published on the team’s Facebook page showed the team readying for the flight earlier Monday in Sao Paulo’s Guarulhos international airport.

    The team, from the small city of Chapeco, was in the middle of a fairy tale season.

    It joined Brazil’s first division in 2014 for the first time since the 1970s and made it last week to the Copa Sudamericana finals after defeating Argentina’s San Lorenzo squad.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Copa Sudamericana is the equivalent of the UEFA Europa League.

     

  • 2016 Olympics: Nigeria, Colombia in quarter-finals

    2016 Olympics: Nigeria, Colombia in quarter-finals

    Nigeria’s Dream Team VI still topped Group B of the Rio 2016 Olympics men’s football event in Sao Paulo in spite of a 2-0 loss to Colombia on Wednesday.

    Nigeria thus advanced to Saturday’s quarter-finals after six points from three matches, having scored six goals and conceded six, with Colombia picking the runners-up spot with five points.

    A first-half strike from captain Teofilo Gutierrez and a second-half penalty kick from Dorlan Pabon ensured the South Americans joined their West African opponents in the quarter-finals.

    Needing a win to secure their place in the last eight, it was Colombia who took an early lead through Gutierrez.

    Pabon’s fine forward ball from the left flank picked out the unmarked Sporting Lisbon striker at the top of the Nigeria penalty box.

    Gutierrez then applied a neat volleyed finish to beat goalkeeper Daniel Akpeyi and give Colombia a fourth minute advantage.

    The early goal gave Colombia the confidence to attack Nigeria’s backline and create more quality chances.

    In the 19th minute, Akpeyi denied Harold Preciado’s close-range header before Pabon caused another scare for Nigeria after getting in behind the defence before shooting wide.

    The Group B winners then created chances of their own before the break, with the best of Nigeria’s opportunities coming in the 28th minute.

    This was when Oghenekaro Etebo put Sadiq Umar’s low cross wide of the far post in the Colombia penalty box.

    Etebo also tested Cristian Bonilla with a well-hit free-kick that was blocked away by the legs of the Colombia goalkeeper.

    Colombia’s determination to reach the knockout stages was reflected in their willingness to extend their lead after half-time.

    Just after the hour mark, they were rewarded with a penalty kick after Akpeyi took down Preciado in the Nigeria penalty box.

    Pabon stepped up to drive the spot kick home and double Colombia’s advantage.

    Colombia could have had a third goal in the 73rd minute but Preciado was unable to find the target from close range after controlling

    Gutierrez’s pinpoint cross from the left.

    NAN reports that Colombia will play their quarter-final clash in Sao Paulo on Saturday, while Nigeria travels to Salvador for their last eight encounter.

  • EU, Colombia lifts short-stay visa requirements

    European Union (EU) and Colombia authorities on Wednesday in Brussels lifted short-stay visa requirements, allowing free movements on visiting one another’s territories.

    The visa waiver agreement was signed on behalf of Colombia by Foreign Minister, Maria-Angela Holguin, Jean Asselborn, Luxembourg Foreign Minister along with European Migration Commissioner, Dimitris Avramopoulos, in the presence of Colombian President Juan Santos.

    Asselborn said this was contained under an agreement signed by both, that citizens no longer required visas.

    He said the visa waiver would provisionally come into force on Thursday.

    “Granting visa-free travel for EU citizens to Colombia and for Colombians visiting the bloc for stays of up to 90 days within a 180-day period.

    “This agreement will bring the people of Colombia and the EU closer together,” he said.

    Asselborn said the deal was expected to boost tourism and business ties between the EU and Colombia.

    He noted that ties between both countries had been wracked by decades of conflict between government forces and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia guerilla group.

    “The two sides are working on a peace accord.

    Santos said the agreement had opened the doors to all Colombians who want to come to Europe legally.

    “They will finally be able to visit relatives living in the EU.

    “For now there is no discussion about Colombians illegally living in the bloc, this is “not an easy issue,’’ he said.

    The president said the decision would be vetted by the European Parliament, a step he described to be a formality.

    Santos said Britain and Ireland are excluded from the deal, meaning that those countries can still set their own visa rules for Colombian citizens, and vice versa.

     

  • Obasanjo, Colombia and Boko Haram

    Obasanjo, Colombia and Boko Haram

    Who knew it could come to this?

    Boko Haram burst onto our national consciousness in 2009, in a sudden explosion of murder and mayhem across many states. Six years later Nigeria’s home-grown terrorist group has become such a trans-border threat that it menaces many other sovereign states. Nothing more illustrates this sad reality than the news a few days ago that hundreds of US troops have been deployed in Cameroon to assist that country confront the problems the group now poses to its security.  No country welcomes foreign troops onto its soil except it deems their presence absolutely necessary.

    The sense of urgency precipitated by Boko Haram’s murderous activities, not only in Nigeria but in neighbouring countries, certainly explains the visit former President Olusegun Obasanjo recently paid to the incumbent, Muhammadu Buhari, at the head of a team of Colombian security experts. The visit was said to be under the auspices of the Copenhagen Foundation, a think-tank Obasanjo leads.

    The name “Pablo Escobar” and a decades-long struggle with drug trafficking cartels usually comes into the minds of most people when they hear about the Central American country. But its 44 million people have also been burdened by an insurgency that has lingered for more than five decades.  The organization long identified with that security crisis is the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish-language acronym, FARC.  The group and its progeny of other less well-known militias operating in that country are steeped in a motley of origins. The most significant of these is that Colombia and other countries like it in the region were battlegrounds of the Cold War between the United States and the defunct Soviet Union, which raged for decades after the end of the Second World War in 1945.

    Unfortunately, like North Korea, Colombia’s FARC survived the collapse of the Soviet behemoth and the East-bloc of communist countries. Though stripped of the patronage it previously enjoyed from the Soviets, FARC did not flounder. It continued to carry out killings across Colombia, along with other acts of violence including kidnappings for ransom.  Like most revolutionary groups in Latin America, FARC has justified its existence on the premise that it fights for the country’s poor.  The group argues that only its struggle and the expected triumph of the revolution could free the poor masses of the country from the alleged clutches of Colombia’s greedy “bourgeoisie” class.   There are, of course, the grim statistics: Colombia’s insurgency has taken a great toll in human lives and infrastructure destroyed. About 220,000 lives have been lost between 1958 and 2013, with most of the dead – about 177,307 – being civilians.

    What is quite surprising against this historical and empirical backdrop is that former President Olusegun Obasanjo, in his wisdom, somehow believes the Colombian conflict mirrors the murderous Boko Haram campaign in Nigeria, such that it should serve as a template for tackling the insurgency that has buffeted Africa’s most populous country.

    A few pertinent facts at this point: first, former President Obasanjo is a patriotic Nigerian, and that is no tongue-in-cheek statement. Given his noted and fervent commitment to the principle of indivisibility of the Nigerian state, it must indeed be painful for Obasanjo to watch how the Boko Haram miscreants have laid waste to vast swathes of Nigeria these past few years, and murdered its citizens. The former president has also not simply watched events from afar. A few years ago, he put himself directly in the line of fire when he contacted a few persons known to be close to the group in an attempt to broker a truce and, ultimately, peace.  One of those Obasanjo visited during the mediation attempt that took him to the northeast, Babakura Fuggu, was assassinated a few days after their meeting, by militants believed to be members of Boko Haram.

    Without any doubt, the former president’s resolve and genuine commitment to rid Nigeria of the Boko Haram problem is obvious and should brook no doubts or second-guessing.

    Nevertheless the Colombian example in combating insurgency that Obasanjo recently urged upon Nigeria’s incumbent president is not one that should readily be embraced. As Obasanjo himself put it the Colombian insurgency led by FARC has lasted for more than five decades.  How does that duration have a correlation with the expectation in Nigeria’s situation, where Boko Haram came into most Nigerians’ consciousness only in 2009 and government is intent on keeping faith with its December deadline for defeating the group? What lessons does an insurgency that has raged for 50 years have for a government now pulling all the stops to ensure its local brand of the insurgency curse is annihilated in far less than that time?

    There is also the issue of approaches and tactics in combating Boko Haram.  Obasanjo is known to have said the group has certain legitimate grievances; he reiterated this position as this past  March, at a global education conference held in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates (UAE).   “Legitimate grievances” on one side, of course, implies the imperative of accommodation, of the other side coming to terms with such “grievances”. And accommodations also often connote taking the route of a negotiated settlement.  Obasanjo does not stand alone in this regard, of course. Even the Buhari government has been known to say it is open to a negotiated settlement of the conflict, with the caveats that it will only negotiate with legitimate representatives of Boko Haram, if such can be identified, and that it would not negotiate from a position of weakness.

    Which is good.

    On the other hand, however, Obasanjo is also known to have endorsed “crushing” Boko Haram, even adding during the meeting of the Colombian delegation with President Buhari that government did not have to take out all the insurgents before declaring victory over the group.

    Beyond the former president’s bevy of paradoxes on how best to deal with Boko Haram, he perhaps realizes more than anybody else that a negotiated settlement is often the best way to eventually resolve any dispute, especially one waged by force of arms.  He is certainly aware that just last month the government of Colombia and FARC both signed onto a landmark agreement in peace talks brokered by the Cuban government, which is expected to finally bring the conflict to an end.

    What best explains the apparent “flip-flop” in Obasanjo’s perception of how the menace should be brought to an end in Nigeria (“crush” vs. “negotiate”) or whether it even mirrors the Colombian insurgency, is his apparent but inexplicable lack of appreciation for what underpins or drives Boko Haram.   The problem in Colombia has roots deep in a conflict that pit two economic models of society against each other for decades, first as an ideological struggle  between a capitalist West and a communist East, and later as a war waged by one side that claimed  it was fighting the “haves” on behalf of society’s “have-nots”.

    Boko Haram’s premise is much less clear-cut, even murky. While some believe the group promotes implementation of the purest form of Islam in society and eschews all forms of Western ideas in favour of Islamic values, others, including President Buhari himself, swear the group’s values are diametrically opposed to that of the Islamic religion. And the President should know since he is a devout Muslim himself.  The closest to a consensus regarding a social and political raison d’etre for the group, if any can be said to exist, is that it is a reaction to the severe problems of development or lack thereof that is endemic in Nigeria’s north-east where Boko Haram is based.

    But that rationale is also seriously undermined by the knowledge that the group’s leadership has sworn fealty to the Islamic State (ISIL) group, an organization that does not exactly have as a priority meeting the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in its areas of operation and occupation.

     

    Since Obasanjo seems to believe Boko Haram should be militarily defeated, he should instead urge on the President the example of Mali.  Like Boko Haram, insurgents there took over major territory in that West African country, killing and maiming residents and destroying historical artifacts, especially in the historic city of Timbuktu. Then the French military struck in a swift and lightning operation.  Just a few weeks later the rebels evaporated.  Mission accomplished.

    It has not been that easy for Nigeria to defeat Boko Haram, of course.  And many Nigerians certainly wish the group’s murderous reign in the north-east did not last for as long as it has. But they will be more than grateful if Boko Haram is at least severely degraded by December, as the president has promised or, better still, totally annihilated.

    This will certainly be a better alternative to the decades of misery Colombians have endured with their own insurgency.

    • Soboyede is a public affairs commentator.

     

     

  • INTERNATIONAL FRIENDLY: NFF woo Colombia for Eagles

    INTERNATIONAL FRIENDLY: NFF woo Colombia for Eagles

    •Nigeria’s side busy in FIFA-free windows of 2015
    •France, Belguim, USA too; proposal still in the works
    •Tasks agents to also search for African countries

    Sportinglife can reveal today that chieftains of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) are proposing four high profile international friendlies for the Super Eagles against Colombia, France, United States of America (USA) and Belgium.

    Although these proposals are still in the work, NFF men feel strongly that such high profile games which would also include top African countries eager to accept the offer would help the new Eagles helmsman to properly evaluate his team and make the desired changes.

    Indeed, SportingLife scooped that NFF chiefs are eager to have the Eagles play in all the FIFA-free windows for 2015, in a bid to keep the technical crew led by Sunday Oliseh very busy.

    Interestingly, discussions on the likely opponents for the Eagles are in hush tones since offers have not been made fromally to some of the countries penciled down for such  games.

  • Colombia attack kills six police officers

    Colombia attack kills six police officers

    Six Colombian police officers have been killed while on patrol in the south-west of the country in an ambush blamed on left-wing rebels, officials told the BBC.

    The officers were shot dead in Cauca province by suspected FARC guerrillas, local police said.

    The killings come as the Colombian government and the FARC prepare for the next stage in peace talks, due to get under way next week in Cuba.

    The talks began earlier this month in Norway but there has been no ceasefire.

    President Juan Manuel Santos has said he wants to avoid the mistake of the previous peace talks in the late 1990s, when the rebels were given control of a vast demilitarised zone and used the opportunity to regroup.

    The latest peace attempt, the first direct contact in a decade, was formally launched in Oslo on October 18.

    The two sides are due to hold preparatory meetings in Havana next week, with the negotiations proper beginning on November 15.

    The talks are due to focus on five key areas: the end of armed conflict; land reform; guarantees for the exercise of political opposition and citizen participation; drug trafficking; and the rights of the victims of the conflict.

     

  • U-17 Women World Cup: Nigeria through to quarterfinals

    U-17 Women World Cup: Nigeria through to quarterfinals

    Nigeria has qualified for the quarterfinals of the on-going U-17 Women World Cup tournament beating Colombia 3-0 on Saturday.

    The flamingoes will now meet France in the next round.