Tag: curb

  • Ogba pleads with governments: Use sports to curb crime

    Ogba pleads with governments: Use sports to curb crime

    The President, Athletic Federation of Nigeria (AFN), Solomon Ogba, on Monday urged Federal and State Governments to use sports as a tool to curb crime in the country.

    Ogba told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that sports was a veritable tool which could motivate the youth to stay off crime.

    “Sports is a tool that affects the psyche of citizens, especially the youth and because of this, governments should take it seriously by funding it adequately. For example, during the 18th National Sports Festival in Lagos last year, we did not hear of the Boko Haram crisis. This shows that sports can help to reduce crime.

    He also said that sports helped to reduce dropouts from the various callings in life and also enhanced unity.

    “If you go to countries like the U.S. and Australia, you will notice that entertainment and sports are the major tools their governments use to check hooliganism. Our government should not see sports as a lesser ministry, they should also emulate these countries,’’ he said.

    Ogba also said it was important for athletes to be educated because the AFN was interested in the athletes’ welfare, even after their sports careers.

    “Education must go with sports because when your legs cannot assist you anymore, the brain will continue from there and that is where the certificates come in. In AFN, we are also interested in our athletes’ careers, after their sports days are over,’’ he added.

     

  • US Senate’s votes to curb indefinite detention

    US Senate’s votes to curb indefinite detention

    The Senate voted late on Thursday to prohibit the government from imprisoning American citizens and green card holders apprehended in the United States in indefinite detention without trial.

    A federal appeals court panel approved the detention of Jose Padilla, an American who was arrested in Chicago and accused of being a Qaeda operative.

    While the move appeared to bolster protections for domestic civil liberties, it was opposed by an array of rights groups who claimed it implied that other types of people inside the United States could be placed in military detention, opening the door to using the military to perform police functions.

    The measure was an amendment to this year’s National Defence Authorization Act, which is now pending on the Senate floor, and was sponsored by Senators Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, and Mike Lee, Republican of Utah. The Senate approved adding it to the bill by a vote of 67 to 29.

    “What if something happens and you are of the wrong race in the wrong place at the wrong time and you are picked up and held without trial or charge in detention ad infinitum?” Ms. Feinstein said during the floor debate. “We want to clarify that that isn’t the case — that the law does not permit an American or a legal resident to be picked up and held without end, without charge or trial.”

    The power of the government to imprison, without trial, Americans accused of ties to terrorism has been in dispute for a decade.

    Last year, in the previous annual version of the National Defence Authorization Act, Congress included a provision stating that the government had the authority to detain Qaeda members and their supporters as part of the war authorized shortly after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. But lawmakers could not decide whether that authority extended to people arrested on American soil, and so they left it deliberately ambiguous.

    Ms. Feinstein, arguing that law enforcement officials have proved capable of handling cases that arise on domestic soil, said the amendment was intended to”clarify” that the government may not put Americans arrested domestically in military detention.

    Senator Kelly Ayotte, Republican of New Hampshire, objected to the restriction on security grounds, saying that even American citizens arrested inside the United States on suspicion of planning a terrorist attack for Al Qaeda should be held under the laws of war and interrogated without receiving the protections of ordinary criminal suspects, like a Miranda warning of a right to remain silent.

    From the other direction, an array of civil liberties and human rights groups — including the American Civil Liberties Union and Human Rights First —objected to the amendment because it was limited to citizens and lawful permanent residents, as opposed to all people who are apprehended on United States soil.

    “Senator Dianne Feinstein has introduced an amendment that superficially looks like it could help, but in fact, would cause harm,” said Chris Anders of the A.C.L.U.

    But on the floor, Ms. Feinstein said that she limited the amendment to citizens and green card holders because she believed that language would “get the maximum number of votes in this body.”

    The Senate on Thursday also passed, 94-0, a series of additional American sanctions on Iran. The amendment would impose penalties on individuals selling commodities to Iran that might be used in ship-building or the nuclear program, including aluminium and steel. It also threatened countries, like Turkey, which are buying Iranian oil with gold, in an effort to circumvent banking sanctions.

    The current language does not give the president the power to issue waivers, as he has done for countries like Japan, South Korea and India that buy Iranian oil. The White House has opposed the amendment, with officials saying they fear it could “threaten to confuse and undermine” existing effort to get allies, China and other countries to impose other sanctions already in the pipeline.

    Also on Thursday, the Senate voted, 62 to 33, for a nonbinding amendment calling for an accelerated withdrawal of United States combat forces from Afghanistan. The measure was sponsored by Senator Jeff Merkley, Democrat of Oregon, and was backed by 13 Republicans.

    • New York Times

  • How to curb disasters, by expert

    How to curb disasters, by expert

    The Director, National Center for Remote Sensing (NCRS), Efron Gajere, has said the proper use of the environment would help curb flooding and other disasters.

    Gajere spoke in Jos yesterday as part of the activities marking the world space week.

    He said: “The Nigerian population is completely ignorance on the best way to make use of our environments, we are using the environment negatively and the consequence is heavy on Nigerians and the Federal Government.

    “If the society is adequately informed and enlightened on best practices of managing our environments, we will not have natural disaster like flooding and desertification.

    “All the disaster we called natural disasters are man-made and this is largely due to our ignorance of how to use this free gift from God.

    “So, flooding and desertification can be prevented if we are equipped with adequate knowledge of usage of our environment and this is where the Ministry of Environment should come in and put up serious public enlightenment, educate our children in schools so that we can all together have a better use of our environment.

    “We owe it to our children a befitting environment, if we destroy it now what are they going to inherit tomorrow.

    The director NCRS advised Nigerians living on water ways to vacate before the rain set in next year, those living by drainage channels should clear them as this is the only way to avoid another flooding in the next rainy season.

    “Our negative attitude against the environment should change so that we can enjoy this environment.”