Tag: Donald Trump

  • Canada to offer temporary residency to stranded U.S travellers

    Canada to offer temporary residency to stranded U.S travellers

    Canada will offer temporary residency to travellers stranded by U.S. President Donald Trump’s orders temporarily barring people from seven Muslim-majority countries, a senior official said on Monday.

    Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen told a news conference he did not know how many people might be eligible but said only a handful of passengers headed to the United States from Canada had been denied boarding.

    Trump on Friday gave an executive order barring citizens from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen from entering the U.S. for the next 90 days

    “Let me assure those who may be stranded in Canada that I will use my authority as minister to provide them with temporary residency if they need it,” Hussen said.

    Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has refrained from criticising the United States, which takes 75 percent of Canadian exports, preferring instead to stress Canada is open to refugees.

    “Every country has the right to determine their policies,” said Hussen.

    The Canadian Council for Refugees and the Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA), called on Ottawa to withdraw from a Safe Third Country agreement with the U.S., under which Canada returns asylum seekers crossing the border.

    “There’s a danger that the U.S. is doing blanket detentions and deportations … and not honouring asylum claims,” said CCLA Executive Director Sukanya Pillay.

    Such a move would be diplomatically insulting and Hussen said the pact would remain unchanged for now.

    Local and national politicians have condemned Trump’s ban and the opposition New Democrats want an emergency debate in the federal Parliament.

    The U.S. Consulate in Toronto said it would suspend services on Monday because of a planned demonstration.

    More than 200 Canadian technology company founders, executives and investors said on Sunday that Ottawa should immediately give temporary residency to those displaced by Trump’s order.

    “(We) understand the power of inclusion and diversity of thought, and that talent and skill know no borders,” they said in an open letter.

    Canada wants to attract tech workers from abroad while retaining those who are often lured away.

    No fewer than 300,000 Canadians work in California’s Silicon Valley.

    Bob Vaez, the Iranian-born chief executive of tech firm Event Mobi, cancelled plans on Sunday to accept an industry award in Las Vegas.

    “Many event organisers could seek alternative locations.

    “Are they going to keep their conferences in the U.S., knowing that so many people are going to be barred?” he said.

  • ‘Doomsday clock’ : Time moves closer to midnight

    ‘Doomsday clock’ : Time moves closer to midnight

    U.S. President Donald Trump’s “ill-considered” comments about expanding the U.S. nuclear arsenal are among the reasons a group of nuclear scientists on Thursday moved their symbolic doomsday clock 30 seconds closer to midnight.

    The scientists, who have been assessing global security for 70 years, said the global security landscape “darkened” last year for a number of reasons, but cited Trump’s statements in particular.

    “The president’s intemperate statements, lack of openness to expert advice, and questionable cabinet nominations have already made a bad international security situation worse,” the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists said.

    Lawrence Krauss, a physicist and member of the bulletin’s board, said moving the clock to two-and-a-half minutes before midnight is historic.

    “The clock has not been closer to midnight in 64 years,” he said in a news conference.

    In addition, they cited his “disturbing comments” about the use and proliferation of nuclear weapons for their decision to move the clock and his questioning of climate change.

    But the scientists also said the international community failed to “come effectively to grips” with both nuclear weapons and climate change last year.

    Beyond the election of Trump, the scientists listed a number of other reasons for their assessment, including strains in relations between the U.S. and Russia, which together possess more than 90 percent of the world’s nuclear weapons, and North Korea’s underground nuclear tests.

    The doomsday clock first appeared 70 years ago as a graphic on the first cover of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists magazine.

    Over the decades the scientists have recognised climate change as an additional threat, and in their report said: “it could change life on Earth as we know it”.

  • U.S. withdrawal: Japan invites China into TPP

    U.S. withdrawal: Japan invites China into TPP

    Japan will invite China to join a pan-Pacific trade pact abandoned by U.S. President Donald Trump, fearing such a step would boost Beijing’s clout and water down what was meant to be the ‘gold standard’ for rules of trade.

    Report says government officials are eager to begin two-way trade talks with Washington, despite Trump’s stated preference for bilateral deals as part of his “America First” economic plans.

    Although some said such negotiations could not be ruled out.

    For now, that has left Japanese Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, in the unenviable position of pledging yet again to persuade Trump that the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is in the interests of both the United States and the global economy.

    Trump signed an executive order withdrawing U.S. from the TPP on Monday.

    The free trade system based on free and fair common rules is the source of growth for the world economy,” Abe told parliament’s upper house on Wednesday.

    “I think President Trump also understands the importance of free and fair trade, and I want to steadfastly seek his understanding of the strategic and economic significance of the TPP agreement.’’

    Asked about talks on a U.S.-Japan trade deal, Abe said he would refrain from speculating about Trump’s trade policy until his cabinet line-up was approved and policies became clearer.

    Australia and New Zealand said on Tuesday they hoped to salvage the TPP by encouraging China and other Asian countries to join.

    Chile had invited ministers from other TPP countries with China and South Korea to a summit in March to discuss how to proceed.

    The TPP cannot take effect without U.S. participation unless rules are changed, so the deal is now in a deep freeze.

    Japan had hoped the TPP would help anchor security ally Washington in Asia and create a rule-based regime that would eventually draw in China.

    Abe also touted the 12-nation pact as an engine of domestic economic reform and growth.

    But inviting China to the TPP table now risks boosting Beijing’s clout while weakening the partnership’s rules of trade on matters from intellectual property protection and principles for currency management to support for state-owned enterprises.

    China has not made clear whether it would be interested in joining the TPP.

    But Beijing is pushing a proposed 16-nation Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) that has less ambitious goals on trade rules.
    Progress so far has been slow.

    “If TPP is diluted by bringing in China, it will not be worthwhile investing energy to achieve that,” a Japanese source familiar with government thinking, said.

    “Negotiating with China with the possibility of changing what was signed is not wise.

    “It will take years and the result may be watering down of ambitions,” the source said.

    [feature_slider display=”tag” tag=”Trump” count=”7″ caption=”on” nav=”thumbs” animation=”crossfade” easing=”easeInOutCubic” timeout=”2000″ arrows=”on”]

  • Trump revokes pro-abortion law

    Trump revokes pro-abortion law

    U.S. President Donald Trump has revoked the Presidential Memorandum on Mexico City Policy and Assistance for Voluntary Population Planning, which allowed voluntary abortion in the U.S.

    Trump, who has made anti-abortion policy one of his campaign promises, announced the revocation, according to the President’s statement issued by the White House.

    “I hereby revoke the Presidential Memorandum of January 23, 2009, for the Secretary of State and the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (Mexico City Policy and Assistance for Voluntary Population Planning), and reinstate the Presidential Memorandum of January 22, 2001, for the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (Restoration of the Mexico City Policy).

    “I direct the Secretary of State, in coordination with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, to the extent allowable by law, to implement a plan to extend the requirements of the reinstated Memorandum to global health assistance furnished by all departments or agencies.

    “I further direct the Secretary of State to take all necessary actions, to the extent permitted by law, to ensure that U.S. taxpayer dollars do not fund organisations or programmes that support or participate in the management of a program of coercive abortion or involuntary sterilisation.”

    Trump said: “the memorandum was not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person”.

    “The Secretary of State is authorised and directed to publish this memorandum in the Federal Register,” Trump’s statement read.

    With the revocation, Trump has barred U.S  federal funding for foreign NGOs that support abortion, relaunching a battle that has long divided Americans.

    The abrogation came just two days after women led a massive protest march in Washington to defend their rights, including to abortion.

    The decision to ban foreign aid to groups that lobby in support of abortion rights is certain to deepen concern among already apprehensive U.S. family planning and women’s rights organisations, according to observers.

    Stenny Hoyer, a Democratic leader in the House of Representatives, sharply criticised Trump for using his first week in office “to attack women’s health”.

    “It should be no surprise to the millions of women and men who gathered in protest this weekend across the country and around the world that Republicans are focused more on making it harder for women to access health care than on the serious economic and security challenges we face.”

    The restrictions imposed on Monday prohibit foreign nongovernmental organisations that receive U.S. family planning assistance from using a non-U.S. funding to provide abortion services, information, counselling or referrals and from engaging in advocacy to promote abortion.

    They were first put in place in 1984 by Republican president Ronald Reagan.

    Later eliminated by Democratic president Bill Clinton, they were reinstalled by his Republican successor George W. Bush, and annulled again after Barack Obama took office.

    Galvanised by Trump’s November 8, 2016 election, abortion opponents in states where Republicans held power moved swiftly in December 2016 to adopt draconian anti-abortion measures that in some cases pose challenges to constitutional liberties.

    Trump, meanwhile, has pledged to nominate an anti-abortion justice to the Supreme Court, which could lead to overturning Roe Wade, the emblematic ruling that legalised abortion in the U.S. in 1973.

  • Donald Trump: For Better or worse, a lesson for Nigeria

    Donald Trump: For Better or worse, a lesson for Nigeria

    Founder of Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe Babalola in this piece, highlights what the world stands to gain in the United States’ (U.S’) Donald Trump presidency. 

    Donald Trump, who was inaugurated as the 45th President of the United States of America last Friday, is undoubtedly a very outspoken man who does not bother about how anyone receives his comment. Indeed, why this trait in Trump offends the establishment, it appeals to the vast majority of the “forgotten Americans” who voted him into power.

    During the 18-month campaign, I was the only one in my family and among all my friends and associates that saw victory coming the way of Trump because I believed in his campaign strategy. So, when the news filtered out that he won, I immediately issued a press statement to celebrate the man of the moment and the new policeman of the world.

    I must say for the umpteenth time that Trump’s victory did not come to me as a surprise bearing in mind the thrust of his campaign to make America great again, that he disagrees with the Nuclear Treaty signed by United Nations (UN) with Iran and that he will change America’s immigration policy to ensure that only those who have genuine business in America are allowed into America, which angered and infuriated many.

    Others are that he would address the situation whereby America funds the UN so heavily and yet has become a toothless bull dog, a voiceless entity because some people enjoy the power of Veto and that he would raise the living standard of workers.

    In all, Trump’s unexpected victory was the result of his appeal to nationalism and patriotism and I acknowledge his courage, doggedness and audacity to take on the drug barons, illegal immigrants and minorities, even when some of his party leaders developed cold feet and vowed not to campaign for him.

    To those of us who believe in him, the victory is for the better while to those who do not believe in him, his victory is for the worse. Those who do not believe in him see him as a racist; a showman with little substance; a sexist; uneducated; a man lacking in experience; judgment and temperament and therefore unfit to rule America.

    I hold the firm belief that he will make an extra-ordinary change. What is happening reminds me of the prophetic statement of UK Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan, in South Africa Parliament in February 1960, when he said: “The wind of change is blowing through this continent, and whether we like it or not, this growth of national consciousness is a political fact. We must all accept it as a fact and our national policies must take account of it”. Those remarks were the harbinger of African Nationalism sweeping irresistibly from the North. The wind of change started in Britain in 2015 and has had dramatic effect in France, Philippines, USA and The Gambia.

    Contrary to expectation, the pattern of voting shows that almost two to one voters cared most about who could change the status quo in the United States of America (U.S.A.) in the November 8, last year election. His major focus was the “forgotten millions of American workers” who get paid by the hour. Unlike the previous Presidents and his opponent, Hillary Clinton, he did not paint a bright vision for the future. What he did was to emphasize the divisions of the present, arouse anger and fears within the country and promise opportunities for the millions of “forgotten Americans” who he has now promised to reintegrate.

    Although he is now the President of the most powerful nation in the world, Trump has to appreciate that the world is now a global village where nations complement one another. I agree that he should cure the problems of the American nation, but then, he cannot be an isolationist or a protectionist as any of these concepts will do severe damage to American interests generally.

    Although during his 18-month campaign, he looked like an unpredictable person, but now that he is at the driver’s seat, his perception and appreciation of the situation is bound to be different and perhaps he will find out that it will be pretty difficult for him to carry out some of his tough election talks as governance is a different ball game from election campaign rhetorics. And that may already have started, for soon after his victory, he travelled to Indiana to announce that United Technologies, the 45th largest company in the country had agreed to his demands and would retain 800 career manufacturing jobs in Indiana.

    And in any case, Trump seems to have back-pedalled on some of his statements since his victory. For instance, during the campaign, he was hostile to Mexicans. Now he said “I am for everybody”.  He also appointed a Nigerian as one of his Advisers.

    But, can Trump do without Nigeria like he boasted during his election campaigns and can Nigeria do without America? The answer is obvious: America can do without Nigeria, but Nigeria cannot do without America. Neither can he carry out his threat to drive away Nigerians and Muslims, many of whom are already American citizens, or barricade Mexico away from America. Indeed, the institutional framework of America will not allow him to carry out those threats.

    In any case, Trump’s unpredictability may turn out to be an advantage to Nigeria because peradventure Trump carries out his threat to withdraw from Nigeria; Nigeria will have no choice than to turn to countries like China, the emerging economic lord of the world. Besides, America’s withdrawal from Nigeria will teach the latter a lesson in self-reliance and turn it from a country of mere consumers to start thinking of being producers of what it had hitherto been relying on others for.

    Again, if Trumps makes good his threat of driving away Nigerians, highly qualified Nigerians will come home with their expertise and relocate their investment back home, thereby boosting the Nigeria’s economy. Besides, such a move will prevent people from investing stolen money in America while such already invested money will be returned home. Another bright side of the threat is that it will address the issue of brain drain and get our best brains to return home and boost our education sector. After all, the Yorubas say “Adaniloro fi agbara koni” meaning the one who denies the other assistance or help teaches the latter to work harder.

    On the whole, Trump is a man who has the benefit of practical and business approach to issues. He is a man who has distanced himself from national establishment ways of doing things, a man who has never held any public office before emerging the President of the U.S. The world, including Nigeria, will benefit from these qualities inherent in the new occupant of the White House. The change he has promised may begin from himself without the support of anybody. He has done it before when he courageously and doggedly took on the drug barons, illegal immigrants and minorities even when some of his Party Leaders developed cold feet and vowed not to campaign for him.  His audacity shows that he is a man who can really show the way. I wish him well.

     

  • Trump takes first steps as president, signs executive order

    Donald Trump has taken his first steps as United States President, signing an executive order which targets the signature health care reforms of his predecessor.

    His proclamation ordered agencies to ease the economic burden of the laws known as Obamacare, the BBC reports.

    In Friday’s inaugural address he pledged to put “America first” and to end the “American carnage” of abandoned factories and rampant crime.

    Later, about 200,000 people are due to join a Women’s March in Washington.

    Organisers said they want to highlight racial and gender equality and other issues perceived to be under threat from Mr. Trump’s administration.

    Similar marches are already taking place in Australia and New Zealand and many others are planned around the world.

    The BBC says Mr. Trump has vowed to do what he can immediately using executive action, chalking up early victories before he has to turn to the grinding work of getting bills through Congress.

    His team quickly overhauled the White House website to include his pledge to roll back Barack Obama’s strategy on climate change.

    Shortly after taking office as the 45th U.S president, Mr. Trump sent his cabinet nominations to the Senate for confirmation.

  • Trump: ‘I think I should keep Twitter going’

    Trump: ‘I think I should keep Twitter going’

    U.S. President Donald Trump has hinted his supporters that he will keep tweeting as president.

    A Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Trump had at one of his Presidential Inaugural Balls on Friday night, asked the audience if he “should keep the Twitter going”.

    “Let me ask you, should I keep the Twitter going or not?

    “Keep it going? I think so.

    “Because the enemies keep saying ‘Oh, that’s terrible’.

    “But it’s a way of bypassing dishonest media,” Trump asked the crowd, who cheered in affirmation.

    Trump also talked about how he broke all the analyses against him and went on to win the presidency.

    According to him, he knew for a long time that he would win.

    “I knew that I would win; about four weeks to the election, I knew that we would win.”

    He explained his campaign team’s strategy to win the election, disclosing that two weeks to the poll, they had 42 rallies adding, “incredible!”

    The president said his support base was no longer just supporters but “a movement”.

    “This (Make America Great Again!) is an incredible movement.

    “I mean, the world has never seen something like this before.

    “There is nothing like this anywhere in the world,” the president said.

    He also said that he would bring jobs back to America again.

    “The jobs are already coming back. Can’t you see it?” Trump asked the cheering crowd.

    According to him, even those who did not like him had told him after the inauguration that “it was incredible!”

    Trump, a Republican, was inaugurated on Friday as the 45th president, succeeding former president Barack Obama, a Democrat. (NAN)

  • Protest rocks Washington after Trump’s inauguration

    Protest rocks Washington after Trump’s inauguration

    No fewer than 95 people have been arrested after anti-Trump protesters clashed with Police in riot gear who responded with tear gas and stun grenades in Washington DC.

    The angry protesters took to the streets after President Donald Trump was sworn in on Friday, smashing stores, car windows and obstructed the free flow of traffic in the city.

    Friday and fought with police in riot gear who responded with tear gas and stun grenades.

    According to Reuters, the number of people who turned out to view the midday swearing-in, on a gray day threatened by rain, appeared to be significantly smaller than the estimated 2 million who turned out for now-former President Barack Obama’s first inauguration in 2009.

    Overhead video of the National Mall showed sections of the white matting laid down to protect the grass were largely empty.

    More people were expected to be on hand when Trump and his entourage travel along Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House later Friday afternoon.

    Earlier, liberal activists with a group called Disrupt J20 intermittently blocked multiple security checkpoints leading to the largest public viewing area for the inauguration. Several were led away by police.

  • IPOB rally for Trump turns violent

    IPOB rally for Trump turns violent

    • One feared dead
    • No, it’s 11 say organisers
    • It’s all false police
    A rally organised by the separatist groups -the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra MASSOB)- to celebrate the new US President Donald Trump turned bloody yesterday in Port Harcourt. 
    Eye witnesses said one person was shot dead by soldiers deployed to stop the rally.
    The organisers claimed 11 were killed.
    The police denied any death.
    The Police spokesman in Rivers State, Nnamdi Omoni, dismissed the death claim as false, saying the Police only used tear gas.
    Many of the protesters who carried photographs of Trump and waved Biafra, American and Russian flags, are believed to have been brought in from the commercial city of Aba in nearby Abia State.
    The protest caused traffic congestion on many roads in the city.
    As they marched through Aba Road towards Mile One in the Rivers State capital, they ran into some soldiers who asked them to disband.
    The protesters tried to wave aside the disband order but the soldiers insisted that the rally must stop immediately.
    A few shots rang out and then pandemonium by the protesters who scampered for safety. 
    The marchers said they were solidarizing with Trump because according to them, the new US president “loves Biafra” and will support their bid for Biafra.
    Shop owners in the area quickly shut down and took to their heels.
    The IPOB in a statement yesterday claimed that 11 of the protesters were shot dead.
    The spokesman for the group Emma Powerful alleged that 27 other people had bullet wounds while 57 people were arrested.
    “The dead bodies of the people killed were carried by the Nigerian soldiers,” he said and asked the international community to “prevail on the Nigerian soldiers to bring back the dead bodies.”
    He added:“Right now, we are being chased by the Nigeria security agencies and they are going round looking and arresting anybody suspected to be IPOB members.But we are not relenting in our support and solidarity with Mr Trump.”
    However, a security source said: “I saw the press release circulated by IPOB that 11 of their members were killed. It is not true: the information is misleading and should not be accepted by the members of the public.
    “Only one person was killed and that happened at about 10:00am along Okporo Road,  by Artillery junction,  in Obio/Akpor Local Government Area of State.
     “The incident occurred when a joint security operatives shot at the advancing demonstrating youths in an attempt to disperse them.
    “The deceased and those injured were carried away by security men.”
    Also speaking on the rally, the Director of Information, Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) in the State Mr Anuken Anthony said: “over 70 supporters of MASSOB and IPO have been arrested and about 15 of them are in pains due to bullet wounds. “Our members have taken some of them to the hospital; we are praying that nothing should happen to any of them.
    “Our support for Donald Trump cannot be stopped  by military intimidation and harassment.”
     One of the protesters, Benson Paul who got injured told The Nation that he was just “dancing during the rally,” and the marchers got to St. John Junction “we saw soldiers asking us to go back. But we told them that we are matching in solidarity of Donald Trump’s inauguration but they refused to allow us go our way.
    “We cannot continue to be slaves in our country and some of us tried to push through the barricade mounted b y the soldiers. They began to manhandle and brutalise us.
    “Look at my head and my back. They used their guns to hit me. We want our own country.”
     Another victim, Mr Onyema Njoku alleged that the soldiers broke one of his legs with the gun.
    He threatened to go to court to seek redress.
    His words: “IPOB followed due process to ensure that this rally took place today. Some people protested for President Buhari in Abuja yet nobody shot them.  Today, we are carrying out a peaceful rally and the police, the military are shooting at us.
    “One of the soldiers caught me while I was trying to run away, he descended on me until he broke my leg, as I’m sitting down here I cannot walk. I’m waiting for my friends to take me to the hospital, I will get better, I know it is part of the sacrifice for freedom. The spokesman for the  2 Brigade Command of the Army in Port Harcourt, Lieutenant Sokoya could not be reached for his reaction.
  • Trump sworn-in as US President, says it will America first in everything

    Trump sworn-in as US President, says it will America first in everything

    Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th president of the United States on Friday, 6 p.m. Nigeria time, succeeding Barack Obama.

    Trunp, wearing a dark suit with red tie, is taking control of America in a transition of power that he has declared will lead to “America First” policies at home and abroad.

    The president  and First lady, Melania Trump, clad in a classic-styled, powder blue ensemble, then headed into the White House for a meeting with Obama and his wife, Michelle.

    Trump raised his right hand and put his left on a Bible used by Abraham Lincoln and repeated a 35-word oath of office from the U.S. Constitution, with U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts presiding.

    His oath of office was administered by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts.

    Mike Pence was also sworn-in as the 48th Vice President of the U.S at exactly 11:55 a.m. or 5:55 p.m. Nigerian time.

    The Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Pence the Vice Presidential oath of office was administered by Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.

    Trump, in his inaugural address, thanked former president Obama and former First Lady for “being gracious to see the transition went smoothly.

    “We are not taking power from one president to the other or from one party to the other but we are taking power from Washington to you, the people.

    “January 20, 2017 will go into history as a day that the people become the president of this country again,” Trump added.

    He pledged that the people would  be the focus of his administration adding, stressing that he would be the president of all Americans.

    “The oath of office I take today is the oath of allegiance to all Americans,” the president said.

    He also promised to concentrate on the security of the country, lamenting that the America spent trillions of dollars to secure other peoples countries/

    e also promised to make affordable education, healthcare and housing the hallmark of his administration. (NAN)