Tag: Geneva

  • UOSSM, Geneva, other demand aid in Al Rukban camp

    Union of Medical Care and Relief Organizations ( UOSSM ) alongside Geneva and Switzerland have demanded for the immediate delivery of food, water and medical aid to the Al Rukban refugee camp.

    This call was made in a press release on Monday, 15th October, 2018 following series of causalities that has befallen the camp and its dwellers in the recent year.

    In the release, it was made known that Aid has been blocked from reaching the camp since January, 2018, hence degenerating the camp to a critical state.

    “The entire population is suffering from severe malnutrition and 15 people have died from preventable conditions in October alone. 150 patients currently require urgent medical attention.”

    Dr. Hussam Al Fakir, The Chairman of UOSSM Intl. and Canadian Dentist expressed his anger towards the blockage of Aid saying that it is ridiculous to deny the inhabitants of the camp the basic necessities of life.

    “It is barbaric and illegal under international law to deny these civilians aid. Children are facing horrific malnutrition and are drinking contaminated water”.

     

    He added “Pregnant women are giving birth in the desert without even the most basic medical care. Those that desperately need cesarean sections have not been allowed to leave the camp and are in a perilous situation. We cannot wait another minute to send aid to Al Rukban.”

    Attesting to the claims of the doctor, the community workers noted that on the 8th of October 2018, in less than 24 hours, two newborns died in the camp.

    “4-month-old Huda Raslan died from malnutrition and lack of medical access while Munaf Al Mahmoud, a one year old baby died due to lack of adequate medical care.

     

  • African Migrants rejected by Italy were tortured, raped – UN

    African migrants rejected by Italy in a standoff with the European Union on Aug. 15, said they had been held by smugglers for up to two years in Libya and many had been beaten, tortured and raped, the UN said on Tuesday.

    The 150 migrants, mainly Eritreans and Somalis, were rescued in the Mediterranean but waited 10 days while
    Italy’s anti-immigrant government refused to let them disembark, until Ireland, Albania and the Vatican
    agreed to accept them.

    A further 27 unaccompanied minors and 13 people needing urgent hospital treatment had earlier been allowed ashore in Italy, whose government had threatened to cut funds to the European Union unless other states took in the migrants.

    The UN International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said its staff had gathered testimony from the migrants.

    All were malnourished and exhausted and said they had been held against their will in Libya for up to two years, IOM spokesman Joel Millman told a UN briefing in Geneva.

    “In Libya they complained that many had been beaten and tortured by smugglers and traffickers seeking ransom money from their families in their countries of origin,” he said.

    “Italian doctors who attended all the women … reported that many of them said they had been raped while in Libya.”

    He said IOM believed thousands of migrants were still being detained – held in safehouses or warehoused, but getting people to the shore had recently become more difficult because of violence in the west of the country.

    A drop in the value of the Libyan dinar had also made it more difficult for sub-Saharan Africans hoping to earn enough in Libya to fund their sea voyage to Europe, prompting the smugglers to look for other nationalities with more resources.

    Italian Interior Minister Salvini, who has led a popular crackdown against immigration since his government took office in June, has said he was under investigation by a Sicilian prosecutor for abuse of office, kidnapping and illegal arrest over the migrant standoff.

  • 152 million in child labour globally – ILO

    Director-General of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Guy Ryder, has said that about 152 million children between the ages of 5 And 17 are trapped in incidences of child labour across the world.

    Speaking at an event to mark the World Day against child labour at the ongoing 107th session of the International Labour conference in Geneva, Ryder said world leaders must take steps to address the rout cause of child labour if incidences of child labour are to reduce across the world.

    The ILO Director General said between 2012 and 2016, there was “almost no reduction in the number of children aged 5 to 11 in child labour, and the number of these most vulnerable, youngest children in hazardous work actually increased.

    “These children typically begin child labour at the age of six or seven and they commonly perform hazardous work as they get older.”

    while calling for urgent action to tackle the economic root causes of child labour, Ryder said attention must be paid not only to global supply chains, but also to unpaid family workers in agriculture.

    Read Also:FG moves to end child labour, ensure safety in work place

    He said “the challenge is not just about globally-traded garments, tobacco and cocoa; it is also about local markets for sorghum, millet, bricks – and it’s about domestic work as well,” he said, ahead of the World Day against Child Labour, marked on June 12.

    Ryder said the 152 million children in child labour worldwide is partly because of the child labour in agriculture – which is mostly unpaid family work, which has been on the increased.

    The event in Geneva also marked the 20th anniversary of the Global March against Child Labour, which culminated in June 1998, when hundreds of marchers, including children, took to the stage at the International Labour Conference, where delegates paved the ground for the adoption in 1999 of ILO Convention No. 182  on “Eliminating the Worst Forms of Child Labour.”

    Speaking at the event, an Indian children’s rights activist and Nobel peace prize laureate,  Kailash Satyarthi, who had led the Global March against Child Labour, in June 1998, told the panel that much still remains to be done to eliminate child labour across the world..

    he said “If the children are still trapped in the international supply chains, if the children are still enslaved, if the children are still sold and bought like animals – sometimes for less than the price of animals – to work in the fields and farms, and shops and factories, or for households as domestic workers, this is a blot on humanity”.

    General Secretary of the International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers’ Associations (IUF), Sue Longley, stressed the importance of keeping a strong focus on agriculture, which is where about 70 per cent of child labour is.

    On his part, Nazrene Mannie, from the Board of Business Unity in South Africa, highlighted the difficulty of tackling child labour when it takes place in family farms or enterprises, often hidden from public view.

    This year’s World Day against Child Labour also seeks to promote safety and health for young workers. Speaking on that topic, Mariam Kamissoko, of the National Social Security fund in Cote d’Ivoire, pointed out that the rate of accidents is higher among youth than among older workers.

     

  • Nigeria wins re-election into UN Human Rights Council

    Nigeria wins re-election into UN Human Rights Council

    Nigeria has won a re-election into the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva for the 2018 to 2020 term at an election held on Monday at the UN Headquarters in New York.

    The Ambassador/Deputy Permanent Representative of Nigeria to the UN, Amb. Samson Itegboje, told the Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in New York that Ghana and Sierra Leone stepped down for Nigeria.

    Itegboje said: “There were two slots for West Africa in the election and Ghana and Sierra Leone were also contesting.

    “However, we reached an understanding that West African countries could not be antagonising themselves and that we have to reach a compromise.

    “So we got Ghana and Sierra Leone to step down for Nigeria. But even at that, there were a lot of reach out we had to do beyond West Africa.

    “So this election has once again showed that Nigeria enjoyed a lot of goodwill not only among its West African bloc countries but also in Africa and across the world”.

    The UNHRC is a UN system inter-governmental body responsible for promoting and protecting human rights around the world.

    With the re-election, Nigeria, currently serving out its 2015 to 2017 term, would be among the four countries representing West Africa and the 13 countries representing Africa in the 47-seat Council.

    The other two countries on the council with Nigeria are Cote d’ Ivoire and Togo, which tenure expire in 2018.

    Ghana and Nigeria are already serving out their tenure for the 2015 to 2017 term while Ghana, which initially sought te-election like Nigeria, stepped down for Nigeria to get on board of the Council.

    Nigeria has illustriously served the global community on the UNHRC for three terms since the establishment of the Council in 2006.

    These are 2006 to 2009, 2009 to 2012 and currently, 2015 to 2017, and with the reelection, would remain on the Council till 2020.

    NAN reports that the Permanent Mission of Nigeria to the UN hosted a reception party for envoys to launch Nigeria’s country’s re-election bid on Friday in New York to solicit countries’ “firm support” for Nigeria’s re-election bid. (NAN)

  • Nigeria presents copyright treaties at WIPO

    Nigeria presents copyright treaties at WIPO

    Nigeria has presented four key Copyright ratified Treaties to the Assembly of member states of the World Intellectual Property Organization ( WIPO ) in Geneva.

    The presentation was made at a 57th WIPO General Assembly meeting in Geneva on October 2.

    Amb. Audu Kadiri, Nigeria’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations Office in Geneva, said in a statement on Friday in Abuja.

    Kadiri, who presented the treaties to the Director General of WIPO, Dr. Francis Gurry said, Nigeria was committed to the implementation of the treaties in support of the country’s drive to revatilise its economy.

    He listed the treaties to include include the WIPO Copyright Treaty ( WCT ), the Performances and Phonograms Treaty (WPPT) and the Beijing Treaty on Audio Visual Performances and the Marrakesh Treaty .

    He explained that the Beijing Treaty will enter into force three months after 30 ratifications or accessions are presented to WIPO.

    Kadiri also added that others will enter into force for Nigeria on January 4, 2018.

    Gurry said that the accessions represented a major commitment on the part of Nigeria to ensure that its copyright system effective and therefore “its protection for performers and for artists and for composers and authors is at the very highest level internationally.”

    Also, Mr Afam Ezekude, Director- General of Nigerian Copyright Commission ( NCC ), who led Nigeria delegates to the meeting said , “With the ratification of the four treaties, Nigeria is about to witness a new era in its intellectual property protection policy and legislation.

    “The development again underscores the urgent need to enact a new Copyright legislation that will implement the standards stipulated in the treaties,” he said.

    “The Ratification of the treaties affirms Nigeria’s acceptance and its undertaking to faithfully perform and carry out obligations under the treaties.

    “Nigeria stands to derive benefits from this instrument when its provisions are eventually domesticated in the revised Copyright bill being proposed by the NCC.

    “Similarly, the Beijing treaty guarantees prospects of remuneration for performers in respect of residual exploitation of their fixed performances.

    “For Nigeria and its burgeoning film industry ( NOLLYWOOD ), this treaty is particularly germane to the operations of the new system of collective management of rights in audiovisual works.

    “It will strengthen and expand opportunities for players in the industry,“ he said.

    NAN recalled that that President Muhammadu Buhari, following an approval of the Federal Executive Council, signed these four (4) instruments of ratification of the Treaties on August 24, 2017.

  • Addax confirms payment of N11.5bn to settle bribery charges

    Addax confirms payment of N11.5bn to settle bribery charges

    The Addax Petroleum Ltd., on Thursday said it had reached an agreement to pay a 31 million Swiss francs (about N11.5 billion) fine in Geneva, Switzerland.

    Mr Douglas Chene-Bougeries, the Public Relations Officer, Geneva, Switzerland Branch of the company, confirmed this in a statement made available in Lagos.

    Chene-Bougeries said that the fine was a settlement on the bribery charges allegedly levelled against some officials in Nigeria.

    He said that Addax Petroleum had also agreed to the terms set out in the Geneva Prosecutor’s Office’s order dated July 5, 2017.

    According to him, this is relating to case number P/3851/2017, containing the prosecutor’s decision to close the investigation against the company and its employees, following a thorough review of the allegations.

    “Addax Petroleum is committed to conducting its business with the highest level of integrity and in full compliance with applicable laws, regulations and industry standards,’’ Chene-Bougeries said in the statement.

    On March 24, the company’s Chief Executive Officer, in its Geneva Office, Zhang Yi, and the Legal Director were arrested and charged with alleged millions of dollars payments to an unnamed company and some lawyers in Nigeria.

    Mr Henri della Casa, the spokesman of the prosecutors for the Swiss canton of Geneva, had in a statement said that investigation was carried out on Addax Petroleum company, its chief executive officer and legal director.

    “A four-month investigation found that the payments were not sufficiently documented and doubts remained on their legality, but no criminal intent was established,’’ the Geneva Prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

    It said that Addax acknowledged possible organisational shortcomings and had taken measures to improve internal anti-corruption procedures.

    “With this settlement, the cases against the company chief executive officer and legal director have also been closed,’’ the spokesman for the prosecutor, was quoted as saying.

    NAN also reports that Addax was bought by China’s state-owned Sinopec, Asia’s largest oil refiner in 2009.

  • UN rights chief calls out uncooperative council members

    UN rights chief calls out uncooperative council members

    A number of countries that sit on the UN Human Rights Council are not cooperating with international experts who want to shed light on abuses, UN rights chief Zeid Al-Hussein said Tuesday in Geneva.

    Zeid’s unusual finger-pointing at the start of a UN Human Rights Council session came shortly before a highly anticipated address by the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, to the 47-member body.

    The U.S. administration of President Donald Trump has been reviewing its future engagement with the council, and Haley was expected to lay out Washington’s criticism and reform demands.

    Zeid called out members such as Venezuela, Egypt, Nigeria and the Philippines for blocking multiple UN expert visits to these human rights hot spots.

    “Most astonishingly, in spite of having been elected to this council in 2015, Burundi continues to commit some of the most serious human rights violations dealt with by this council,” Al-Hussein said.

    Al-Hussein said China has let in rights monitors but they have not been able to move freely.

    Washington has questioned the legitimacy of the UN rights council, pointing not only at serious violations committed by some members, but also at the council’s strong focus on Israel and its occupation of Palestinian territory.

    In his speech, the human rights chief made a point of highlighting the suffering that both Palestinians and Israelis have had to endure in their conflict.

    “Maintain the occupation, and for both peoples there will only be a prolongation of immense pain,” he said.

    NAN reports that the U.S. threatened to withdraw from the UN Human Rights Council unless reforms are ushered in including the removal of what it sees as an “anti-Israel bias”, diplomats and activists said.

    U.S. Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, who holds cabinet rank in President Donald Trump’s administration, said on Friday that Washington would decide on whether to withdraw from the Council after its three-week session in Geneva ends this month.

    Under Trump, Washington has broken with decades of U.S. foreign policy by turning away from multilateralism.

    His decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement last week drew criticism from governments around the world.

    The Council’s critical stance of Israel has been a major sticking point for its ally the U.S.
    Washington boycotted the body for three years under President George W. Bush before rejoining under Barack Obama in 2009.

  • World Communication Forum 2017 moving from Davos to Geneva

    During the week of 13-17 March 2017, the World Communi-cation Forum will be held again in Switzerland, for the 8th time. However, this time the Forum is planned to be very different. Compared to its previous 7 editions that took place in Davos, the upcoming WCF will offer a larger scale of content, hosted by the global capital of the world – Geneva.

    The main aim of the World Communication Forum and the WCFA association (www.WCFA.ch) is to increase all communicators’ influence on the future of humanity, on the development of the business in different countries, on their nations, and on each person in particular. Therefore, Geneva, the ‘global capital’ that hosts the highest number of important international organizations within the world, is the perfect location. Starting from 2017, the C4F Awards ceremony will also take place in Geneva. The motto of the Awards is ‘Communication for future’, and Geneva is the cradle of the world’s future.

    Moving to Geneva, the World Communication Forum has also changed its format. The 8th addition will last longer and will be far more intensive. Additionally, the Forum will be held in cooperation with various international organizations.

    Yanina Dubeykovskaya, Founder and Content Director of the World Communication Forum and President of the WCFA association, shared: “During the past 7 years, the Forum in Davos helped us shape a global community of communicators who view our profession as a mission – the mission to make this world more connected, more open, and more trusted. We believe that, especially today, communication is the key driver for the future development of the world, of humanity, and of each individual. We have created a new format for holding a business event and we have accepted representatives of more than 58 countries in our WCF family. Over 263 speakers have stepped-out in Davos during these 7 years. In the offline and online media, there have been 110 publications of the last edition – the WCF’2016. We launched the regional WCF format back in 2013 and we have already held over 15 regional forums in different countries. What is best of all is that we have made a lot of friends!”

    Ms Dubeykovskaya added that the Forum has grown and is ready to move from a Global Village to a Global Capital. Geneva is the best place where, for 5 consecutive days, the participants will “touch globalism and feel global culture at their very fingertips.”

  • Sack of bank staff: Labour, NECA disagrees on unionisation

    Organised Labour made up of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC) are heading for a coalition course with employers of labour over the recent mass sack of workers in the banking sector and non-unionisation of workers by some banks.

    The Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige had asked the banks to put on hold the mass sack of workers, threatening that the government “know what to do” to any of the banks that fail to comply with the directive, while asking the unions not to picket the banks.

    President to the NLC, Comrade Ayuba Wabba and his TUC counterpart, Comrade Bobboi Kaigama told newsmen at a news conference in Geneva that they were ready to engage the banks frontally and do everything within their power to protect the interest of workers in the banks.

    They accuse the banks of undermining the principle of collective bargaining agreement which require employers to engage the unions before taking decisions to lay off workers.

    But Director General of the Nigeria Employers Consultative Assembly, Segun Oshinowo said the union leaders were being economical with the truth and challenge them to come out with evidence of any bank denying their workers the right to unionise, and faulted the position of government for the banks not to sack workers.

    President of the Trade Union Congress, Bobboi Kaigama said organised labour was ready to prove to the bank that has sacked their members that they don’t have a monopoly of disobeying collective bargaining agreement and the laws of the land.

    He said: Just like the employer has the right to hire and fire, they should also know that they must play by the rules. The rules are very clear and in every industry, there is a collective bargaining procedure in place where issues like that are addressed.

    “You are aware that while we are here, some of these banks have gone ahead to retrench their workers and the minister has made a kind of position that the government frown at that. Probably, the government cannot impose its position on the employers.

    “But you should know that the government is a referee and as tripartite partners, organised labour wants to observe the rules. But if the rules regarding redundancy are not followed, obviously, we will frown at that.

    “This thing happened while we are here and when we get back to Nigeria, we will sit down and address it. We assure you that we will do something about it. Even if it means picketing these banks, just as they disobey the laws of collective bargaining when it comes to retrenching our members, we will also show them that they don’t have the monopoly of disobedience of law.

    “If the employer feels that it is in monopoly because of the downturn, simple courtesy demand that you call for a review of some of these collective bargaining agreements so that you all jointly own up to this and make sure that this problem of retrenchment and underemployment will be addressed.

    “If these things which are in place are not followed, obviously, they should expect the wrath of organised labour.”

    President of the NLC said the unions will not sit back and watch the workers being treated like slaves in their own country, adding that as workers, organised labour must protect the interest of the workers.

    Wabba said “these workers are Nigerians and they need our protection. The fact that people wants to exploit any loophole and take advantage of them is uncalled for.

    “There is a difference between mass sack and the issue of hire and fire. In this case, it is mass sack and we can’t allow a situation where these workers are exploited or their rights denied. We are aware of what is happening in the banking sector because they refuse their workers from being unionised.

    “They refused unionisation and the issue is on the table and so, you can’t come back and say these workers are not unionised. We must respect our laws because that is the major issue.

    “As a union, we have human and trade union rights and it is a matter we have discussed here. It is within the context of human and trade union rights that this issue is situated. Therefore, as workers, we must protect them.

    “Already, we are discussing how best to protect these workers because they are Nigerians? Do we allow employers to continue to exploit them? In one of the banks, those that they disengaged last year are yet to be paid their entitlement. Do we allow the situation to continue?

    “Was it not the same banks that got bailout from the government few years ago when they were in trouble. Was the money not from public coffer? We know that the employers must protect their members and we must also defend our members.

    “We are working together and whatever it will take to protect these poor workers, we will do it because it was not their fault that they were denied unionisation. We have many of the banks that we are having pending cases with.

    “We have written them officially that the workers want to unionise and they were dilly dally. The point now is how to protect these workers who have been thrown out of their jobs. Government should be concerned about any Nigerians who will be thrown out of the job.

    “So, what the ministry did is right to say, wait and let us discuss this issue first. How can that be an issue that will not be accepted? Except there is something hidden there.

    “Otherwise, I think the pronouncement of the minister is what is expected because when they had difficulty, it was government that gave them a bailout from our collective wealth”.

    Reacting to the development, NECA Director General,  Segun Oshinowo said; “I have been on the ground for long to fault that submission. When the current governor of Edo state, Adams Oshiomhole was the President of the NLC, we had this issue in the banking industry with one of the very big banks whom the unions had accused of de-unionisation. We were able to sit down and agree on the resolution of the matter.

    “In fact the ministry of Labour was involved in it. One of the options we were to consider then was to create an environment where individual workers in the banks will anonymously express whether they want to join the union or not. But we didn’t have to go that far because it was not necessary.

    “It is the responsibility of the unions to organise their members where ever they are. If the union should experience any obstacle in the course of that, they have the right to take the employer to court by making the point that the employer has denied their members being unionised. The question we should be asking them is whether they have tested this in court.

    “One would have expected them to take any employer that deny their staff the right to unionise to the National Industrial Court so that the court can make a pronouncement on it. Until they provide that evidence, every statement they are making is an allegation which they cannot substantiate”

  • Outrageous off-roaders at Geneva Motor Show

    Outrageous off-roaders at Geneva Motor Show

    As demand grows for crossovers and Sports Utility Vehicles (SUVs), so does the need for the well-heeled buyer to stand out from the crowd as some of the most startling concepts at this year’s Geneva Motor Show demonstrate.

     

    Mansory Sahara Edition

    Subtlety is not a word associated with Mansory, a tuning company that takes cars that are already expensive, exclusive and exotic and dials everything up to 11.

    When it’s not squeezing 1000bhp out of a Lamborghini or making limited edition iPhone cases, the Swiss firm focuses on SUVs. The Mansory Sahara Edition started out as a stock Mercedes G Wagon but the company has upped the engine to 838hp and lowered the ride height.

    It has got a camouflage paint job and inside the leather seats carry falcon motifs including feathers. In the rear, there is only room for two as the company has put a fridge between the back seats.

     

    Kahn Design Flying Huntsman 110WB 6×6

    British company Kahn Design also started with a venerable modern-day off-road classic, the Land Rover Defender 110 but has binned the car’s original powerplant in favor of a 6.2-liter GM-sourced V8.

    To make room for the bigger engine, the company had to make the front end of the car 400mm longer, but that is nothing compared to the trickery at the rear. The Flying Huntsman 110 WB has three wheels, not two, on either side, and is a true 6×6, with power going to every wheel individually. Other changes over the stock Land Rover include a beautiful leather interior, a panoramic glass roof and the option of full armour plating.

     

    Mercedes-Benz G500 4×42 Concept

    But perhaps the most outrageous custom SUV is one that comes directly from the manufacturer. The Mercedes G500 4×42 could be the ultimate in off-road performance and on-road ostentation. Under its hood, it has the same twin-turbo V8 that powers Mercedes’ current flagship supercar the AMG GT.

    At each corner it has a 22-inch wheel wrapped in a proper off-road tire, meaning it has ground clearance of nearly half a meter. It’s wider too — 299mm across because of the wheels and suspension setup. It stands so high that even Shaquille O’Neal, would need a ladder in order to clean its roof. And while it might look like a road-legal monster truck, the form is all about function. The way the car is set up it should be able to tackle potentially any type of terrain. Mercedes likens it to driving a rally car.

    Though just a concept at the moment, if the demand is there, Mercedes will give the car the green light.