Tag: hits

  • Power demand hits 12,800Mw

    Power demand hits 12,800Mw

    Forecast of energy demand as at October 7 was 12,800megawatts (Mw) of electricity, the Federal Ministry of Power has said.

    According to the power statistics placed on its website, the sector also recorded a peak generation 3,3952.70Mw on the same day.

    It also showed that the electricity generation companies (GENCos) maintained a power generation of 3,773.09Mw, adding that of the total power produced, the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) was able to wheel 3,697.81Mw to the consumers, with a record of 75.28Mw stranded power.

    Although the firm claimed a guarantee capacity of 6,000Mw, it maintained only 3,697.81Mw capacity on Tuesday. TCN had on October maintained a wheeling capacity 3,484.69Mw. By September 28, it was able to send out 3,378.19Mw.

    According to the ministry, the highest peak generated power from the sector was that of December 23, two years ago when the sector hit 4,517.6 Mw.

    Asked to explain why there was a gap between generation and transmission, Chairman, Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Dr. Sam Amadi said: “There has been generation and gas constraints for a long time. There has been stranded power. Sometime, some amount of power has problem. Like now, we have to repair damage. It will affect the industry.”

    The Federal Government is now 1,302Mw away from the 5,000Mw it announced on August 2, when it announced a new gas price of $2.50 per standard cubic feet (SCUF) and $ 0.80 per SCUF for transportation.

    It also decided that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) should pay the outstanding N25billion that was owed gas suppliers. The gas debt profile is however expected to hit N36billion this month.

  • Ebola death toll hits 887, says WHO

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) has said the death toll from the worst record outbreak of Ebola has reached 887.

    This is an increase of 158 since the global health body released figures on July 31.

    WHO, in a statement yesterday, said there have been over 1,600 cases of Ebola since the disease emerged in Guinea earlier this year.

    The news comes as Nigeria announced yesterday that it had confirmed a second case in Africa’s most populous nation. The patient is a doctor who treated the man who died in Nigeria last month.

    According to WHO, there have been 358 deaths in Guinea, 255 deaths in Liberia, 273 deaths in Sierra Leone and one in Nigeria.

    The United States plans to send 50 health experts to West Africa to contain the Ebola outbreak that has left hundreds of people dead in three countries.

    “This is the biggest and most complex Ebola outbreak in history,” Dr. Tom Frieden, a director at the U.S. Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a statement.

    “It will take many months, and it won’t be easy. But Ebola can be stopped. We know what needs to be done. CDC is surging our response, sending 50 additional disease control experts to the region in the next 30 days.”

    Frieden said the 50 experts from the CDC will work to combat the outbreak and help implement stronger systems to fight the disease.

    The Ebola virus causes viral hemorrhagic fever, which refers to a group of viruses that affect multiple organ systems in the body and are often accompanied by bleeding.

    Early symptoms include sudden onset of fever, weakness, muscle pain, headaches and a sore throat. They later progress to vomiting, diarrhoea, impaired kidney and liver function – and sometimes internal and external bleeding.

    Though the U.S. had not treated an Ebola patient until last week, the CDC has spearheaded efforts to prepare for the deadly virus. It helped create an isolation unit at Emory University Hospital, which is being used to treat American doctor Kent Brantly, who contracted Ebola in Liberia and was evacuated to the facility in Atlanta over the weekend. A second American patient, Nancy Writebol, is being evacuated from Liberia to the same isolation unit. She is scheduled to arrive today.

    Emory is one of four U.S. institutions capable of providing such treatment.

    But in the nation’s hardest-hit and not as prepared, the reality is grim. Even in the best-case scenario, it could take three to six months to stem the epidemic in West Africa, Frieden said.

    Ebola spreads through contact with organs and bodily fluids such as blood, saliva, urine and other secretions of infected people.

    It has no cure, and the most common approach is to support organ functions and keep up bodily fluids such as blood and water long enough for the body to fight off the infection.

    So far, the outbreak has been confined to West Africa. And it has affected health care providers as well.

    Ebola claimed the life of a director at a hospital in Liberia’s capital, Monrovia. Dr. Patrick Nshamdze tested positive on July 29 after falling sick for two weeks. He died on Saturday.

    In Sierra Leone, where government officials have asked citizens to stay away from work, the military has deployed at least 750 medical officials to 13 locations, military spokesman Col. Michael Samura said.

    Health officials are screening incoming and outgoing passengers at the country’s main international airport with a device that takes people’s temperature from their eyes at a distance.

    Anyone showing signs of fever is taken away to have their blood tested for Ebola.

  • June inflation hits 10-month high at 8.2%

    June inflation hits 10-month high at 8.2%

    Nigeria’s consumer inflation rose for the fourth straight month in June to hit 8.2 per cent, a 10-month high, driven by higher food prices, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) has said.

    It said food prices, the biggest contributor to the headline index, jumped 9.8 per cent year-on-year in June, after rising 9.7 per cent the previous month. “Prices were pushed higher as a result of higher prices in the bread and cereals, meats, fish, and dairy groups,” the NBS said in a statement.

    Reuters report showed that consumer inflation rose from eight per cent in May and had crept up from a five-year low of 7.8 per cent in October due to rising food prices.

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said it wants to keep inflation between six and nine per cent this year and has a longer-term goal of reducing it to around five percent by the end of 2015.

    The apex bank plans to hold its monetary policy meeting next Tuesday to set interest rates and is sure to take rising inflation into account. Analysts expect rates to remain on hold at 12 per cent but say the tightening cycle could resume if the inflation outlook worsens. The statistics office said early in the week that it expects the economy to grow by at least 6.2 per cent this year following a solid first-quarter performance.

    Managing Director, Financial Derivatives Company Limited, Bismarck Rewane said the rise in inflation will not change the monetary policy stance of the CBN.

  • Ogbeche hits four for Cambuur

    Ogbeche hits four for Cambuur

    Former PSG striker, Batholomew Ogbeche, is in scintillating form after scoring four goals in Cambuur’s 9-0 mauling of ONB in an international friendly match played in the Netherlands on Saturday.

    The Nigerian was introduced at the beginning of the second half and found the back of the net in the 49th, 50th, 65th and 66th minute respectively.

    Michiel Hemmen scored a stunning brace after 36 minutes, while Calvin MacIntosh and Sander van de Streek added one each as the first 45 minutes ended four-nil in favour of the Dutch Eredivisie campaigners.

    At the beginning of the second half, Ogbeche was introduced to add more bite to the attack and also get his fair share of the goals.

    The 29-year-old striker increased the lead in the 49th minute before adding his second one minute later with a fine strike.

    He followed up with pulled goals in the 65th and 66th minute, while Oebele Schokker completed the rout in the 90th minute.

    A Nigeria international since 2002, aged 18, Ogbeche was picked for that year’s FIFA World Cup, and appeared in two group stage matches in an eventual group stage exit.

    He moved to the Netherlands, signing at SC Cambuur until the end of the 2013-2014 Eredivisie season. In his first match for the Dutch side, Ogbeche scored one goal and made one assist.

  • Omeruo hits Malta to see brother

    Omeruo hits Malta to see brother

    According to leaks gathered by allnigeriasoccer.com editorial staff, Lucky Omeruo, the younger brother of Chelsea stopper Kenneth, is in talks with Maltese Premier League vice – champions Birkirkara.

    The offensive all-rounder was linked with a transfer to Standard Liege this summer,  but  failed to bag a contract after testing with the Belgian club due to work permit problems.

    It is the same red tape rule that prevented him from joining ADO Den Haag in July last year after impressing the club during tests.

    Nigeria international Kenneth Omeruo is currently on his way to Malta to link up with his sibling, and give him all the moral support while he negotiates terms with Birkirkara.

    It is understood that the future of the Super Eagles defender will be sorted out after his vacation.

  • Woman suicide bomber hits military barracks

    Woman suicide bomber hits military barracks

    Two persons, including a suspected female suicide bomber in Hijab and a soldier, were blown up yesterday in front of a military barracks in Gombe, the Gombe State capital.

    Another soldier was injured.

    But, sources said no fewer than three soldiers died, when the time bomb went off as the woman approached the Quarter Guard area of the 301 Artillery Regiment, pretending that she wanted to lodge a complaint.

    She was said to have bombed herself and the three soldiers interrogating her at the entrance.

    There were doubts about the suicide bomber’s sex following speculations that she was probably a man disguised as a woman in order to enter the barracks.

    Last Thursday, the Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) in front of Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo’s residence blew up, killing two security men and injuring six others.

    According to a military source, the bomber was on a mission to attack the barracks around 11am.

    The source said when the bomber got to the gate, she met a long queue of vehicles being checked.

    The source said: “The insurgents are becoming desperate, they are trying to use female bombers thinking that because of the strict Islamic culture in the North, soldiers would not conduct thorough checks on women.

    “When this female bomber in full veil (Hijab) got to the queue at the barracks, the soldiers on guard insisted on no waiver for any female motorist entering the barracks.  It was in the process that the Improvised Explosive Devices (IED) exploded.  She got killed instantly.

    “Apart from mopping up the area, the military is already investigating the botched suicide mission.”

    Director of  Defence Information, Maj-Gen Chris Olukolade confirmed the attack.

    Gen. Olukolade told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on telephone that one soldier died while another was wounded in the explosion.

    He said normal activities had resumed at the barracks in Gombe.

    “Intelligence deduced from credible information earlier received on this plot confirms the vigilance of some members of the public,’’ Gen. Olukolade said.

    He said in a statement:  “Troops mounting a security check point at a Barrack entrance in Gombe this morning (yesterday) intercepted a lady suicide bomber while she was attempting to gain entry into the barracks.

    “The lady suicide bomber who had primed herself with Improvised Explosive Devices (IED) concealed under her Hijab was intercepted when troops acting on intelligence report indicating that a terrorist  group was plotting to attack barracks around Gombe using female suicide bombers, halted her and as she was being searched the bomb detonated, killing the lady.

    “Unfortunately one of the troops conducting the search also died while another was wounded in the explosion.

    “Normal activities have since resumed in the barracks.”

    Immediately the explosion occurred, soldiers cordoned off the road leading to the barracks.

    Also, shops and other business centres were hurriedly shut when the blast occurred as passers-by ran helter-skelter.

    A resident, who did not want his name mentioned, told NAN he was in his house around 11.20 a.m. when he heard the blast.

    He said he also heard soldiers shooting into the air, apparently to scare people.

    The source said he saw some injured persons being conveyed in vehicles from the scene, while soldiers blocked the road and stopped people from going there.

    Troops had a bloody encounter with insurgents in Pitta, a boundary town between Adamawa and Borno states on Saturday night, leaving 30 insurgents dead.

    The encounter led to the recovery of 25 machine guns, Rocket Propeller Guns (RPGs) and more than 50 motorcycles from the insurgents.

    According to Gen. Olukolade, the insurgents wanted to attack some villages along Pitta axis on Saturday, but troops acted on intelligence report and foiled it.

    He said: “The troops successfully repelled the insurgents who suffered heavy casualties.

    “We have beefed up security in the area to protect all the villages and avert reprisals.”

  • Half of a Yellow Sun hits Nigerian cinemas

    Half of a Yellow Sun hits Nigerian cinemas

    Niyi Bandele’s Half of a Yellow Sun, an adaptation of Chimamanda Adichie’s book of the same title, will be showing in all Nigerian cinemas on Friday, April 25, courtesy of FilmOne Distribution.

    The movie made its first outing last September at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), Canada. Though it enjoyed 70 percent finance from Nigeria, it was promoted at the festival as a British movie.

    The film gave the lead character, Chiwetel Ejiofor, the Best Actor’s award at the recently held British Academy Film and Television Awards (BAFTA).

    Shareman Media, the Nigerian producer, and FilmOne Distribution, the Nigerian distributor of the feature film, have announced that sequel to the Toronto premiere, the film had gone to Europe, premiering at the BFI London Film Festival.

    According to them, the movie will also be released in cinemas in Australia from March 27, in the UK from April 11, and in the US in the early summer.

    Other stars in the movie are Thandie Newton, Genevieve Nnaji, Onyeka Onwenu, O. C. Ukeje, Zack Orji and Anika Noni Rose, who led the supporting cast.

    Set in 1960s Nigeria, Half of a Yellow Sun is an epic love story, weaving together the lives of four people caught up in the turbulence of the Nigerian civil war.

    Shot in the Tinapa Studios in Calabar and other locations in Creek Town, Half of a Yellow Sun is said to possess a technical quality that demonstrates the possibility of high quality production in Nigeria, with the appropriate budget and technical input.

    The Nigerian premiere, according to Filmhouse Distribution, is sponsored by Etisalat, Wheatbaker Hotel and Arik Air.

     

  • Credit squeeze hits Chinese steel mills

    In a move that could further erode Australian mineral exports to China, the government there says it is preparing to cut off credit to under-performing steel mills in the hope that they will close, merge or become more efficient.

    China’s banking regulator with control over the country’s lending policy said steel firms with high levels of pollution or problems with overcapacity would be starved of credit.

    In the short term, this could eat into Chinese demand for Australian iron ore and coal, but some analysts think China has to take a tough approach to some dilapidated industries to produce more stable growth.

    The announcement comes as mining bosses from Australia say they are unconcerned with this week’s plunge in ore prices.

    On the sidelines of China’s main annual session of parliament, the National People’s Congress, it was the turn of the central bank and other regulators to speak to the media.

    Shang Fulin is the chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission. In this role he is not only a watchdog, but is able to tell China’s state-owned banks to whom they should and should not be supplying credit.

    And he delivered some bad news to Chinese steel firms that are not up to scratch.

    “We’ll take measures with over-producing and backward industries. We’ll encourage them to merge, to reorganise or even close down,” he said.

    “And, using our methods, some of them will actually increase efficiency.”

    For a long time, parts of the steel industry have created major headaches for China.

    They have overproduced steel and stockpiled it, thinking that the infrastructure-led economic model there would last forever.

    They have churned out this steel using loans from non-official or shadow banking sources which have a blasé attitude to handing out finance, fanning fears of a string of defaults to come.

     

     

     

    Banks could be environmental saviour

    In addition to all this, their massive production – sometimes in rather clapped-out factories – has created huge air pollution problems.

    So Mr Shang wants to make China’s banks the country’s environmental saviour.

    “For those enterprises which cause high pollution and consume a lot of energy … if they can’t pass environmental assessments, the banks will simply not give them a loan,” he said.

    The broad economic message coming out of this Congress is that the Chinese government is prepared to allow considerable pain in order to clean up and modernise industry.

    Hebei, China’s largest steel-producing province, has already been ordered to cut production by a third.

    Less steel means less need for Australian iron ore and coking coal.

    But if you sat down with China’s premier, Li Keqiang, for a chat about this over tea, he would say that Australian companies should not be panicking because consolidated production is going to be better production.

    There may be a dip in demand initially, but eventually he wants his country to have stable, good-quality growth.

    China preparing to open economy to private banks

    Meanwhile, some time this year China will start a pilot program for private banks.

    Initially there will be five allowed in Tianjin, Shanghai, Zhejiang and Guangdong. Currently, nearly all lending is controlled by state-run institutions.

    With tight control over official bank loans, a system of unregulated so-called shadow banks has flourished.

    But on the sidelines of Congress, a change has been flagged.

    Mr Shang said some joint investors have already been selected for this first batch of private banks.

  • Bomb death toll hits 90

    Bomb death toll hits 90

    Military arrests Boko Haram explosions ‘mastermind’, 30 others

    SECURITY agents are holding an elderly man who was found last night allegedly with eight guns hidden in his pick up van in Maiduguri, the troubled Borno State capital.

    No fewer than 90 – up from 35 reported yesterday – people died at the weekend in Boko Haram attacks in the city.

    The identity of the suspect was not immediately known.

    Rescuers are still searching for more bodies under the rubble at the scene of explosions.

    The suspect was arrested at the military check point on Lagos Road by soldiers who used anti-weapons scanners to detect the arms.

    Eye witnesses said the arrests caused pandemonium as people rushed towards University Road, thinking another bomb had exploded.

    Youth volunteers, popularly known as Civilian JTF, were combing the scene of the blasts. They were seen on major roads, such as Lagos, Customs, Damboa, Kashim Ibrahim, Bank Road, Post Office, GRA and Polo Extension – all in the Maiduguri metropolis – searching vehicles to fish out suspected insurgents who are believed to have infiltrated the town.

    Mr Innocent Andrew, who is the chairman of the Association of Nurses and Midwives at the University of Maiduguri, said the hospital was besieged by many residents searching for their loved ones among the dead or injured.

    The death toll in weekend’s twin explosions in Maiduguri, has increased to 51.

    A Red Cross official said 51 bodies had been recovered there and many more victims of the Boko Haram attack were believed buried in the rubble.

    Fifty bodies were retrieved, said Hassan Ali, leader of an anti-terror vigilante group.

    It also emerged that while the car bomb was going off in the state capital, insurgents were on the offensive in Mainok, a village 60 kilometres away. They killed no fewer than 39 people.

    Dozens of attackers dressed in military uniforms fired rocket propelled grenades and Kalashnikovs as people prepared for prayers.

    Resident Yahaya Umar said yesterday: “They came in around 7pm and opened fire indiscriminately with RPGs, explosives and AK-47 rifles.

    “They killed 39 people who were buried this morning and destroyed the whole town.”

    Another resident, Abdullahi Gana, gave a similar account of the incident.

    “We were just lamenting the twin blasts in Maiduguri … when the Boko Haram gunmen arrived and started firing volleys of RPGs and guns,” he said

    Corroborating the account, taxi driver Mansu Buba said he returned to Mainok village yesterday to find victims being buried. Mainok has been attacked many times in the past year.

    A State Security Service agent said no huts were left standing. All the thatched-roof huts were gone, he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorised to speak to reporters.

    Additional information yesterday on the Maiduguri blast indicated that some buildings collapsed. Others were set aflame with smoke billowing for hours. A resident who worked at the scene through the night but insisted on anonymity, said the victims include children dancing at a wedding celebration and people watching a soccer match at an outdoor cinema. The Associated Press (AP) reported.

    The first blast came from a pickup truck carrying firewood and did not cause many casualties, said Ali. Most of those killed had run to the scene to help when a second explosion blasted from a passenger car, he said.

    Survivors said they captured a man who jumped out of the car, grabbed a tricycle taxi and tried to make off. He was badly beaten and taken to nearby Umaru Shehu General Hospital, where a security guard said all the wounded brought in had died. Most survivors insisted on anonymity for fear of reprisals.

    Some bodies were blown apart, said market trader Mallam Sumaila. An AP reporter saw a body burnt beyond recognition at a hospital where wailing families were collecting bodies for immediate burial in the Muslim tradition.

    The attackers chose a densely populated area with narrow alleyways that maximized the blasts and a Saturday night when the market was open late.

    It was not known how many wounded are being treated in three hospitals in the city.

    More than 300 people were killed in extremist attacks last month in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states, among them pupils of the Federal Government College, Buni Yadi.

    Outnumbered soldiers are accused of abandoning checkpoints and leaving civilians at the mercy of extremists in two attacks last week that killed about 100 people, including one on a high school.

    Maiduguri has suffered only two attacks in the past six months: a January 14 bomb that killed about 40 people and a bold assault December 5 on the Air Force base and an army barracks on the outskirts in which all five aircraft on the runway were destroyed.

    There are fears that the Boko Haram conflicts could spread. Boko Haram militants already operate in Cameroon, Chad and Niger Republic and lately there have been reports the extremists are threatening to get involved in Central African Republic, where French and African troops are trying to end fighting between Muslim and Christian militias.

    North’s governors yesterday urged people in distress not to despair, predicting an end to the killings soonest.

    Northern States Governors Forum (NSGF), through its Chairman Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu, urged all stakeholders to continue to pray to God to end the scourge of what they described as “senseless killing of defenceless citizens”.

    The statement by Aliyu, signed by his spokesman Danladi Ndayebo, said: “The Northern States Governors Forum (NSGF) condemns the murderous terrorist attack which killed several persons at the heavily populated Ngomari-Bulumkutu area of Maiduguri, Borno State.

    “The forum deeply regrets this utterly heinous descent to new depths of terror by the perpetrators at a time when security agencies are doing their best to put an end to the scourge of senseless killing of defenceless citizens”.

    The forum urged members of the dreaded Boko Haram to embrace dialogue, because “the surest way to resolve grievances is through dialogue and not violence”.

  • CAF CONFEDERATIONS CUP: Wolves hits Doula

    CAF CONFEDERATIONS CUP: Wolves hits Doula

    A 29-man Warri Wolves team led by Emeka Inyama and Davidson Owumi touched down in Doula on Thursday afternoon in readiness for their clash with Union Doula Football Club on Saturday.

    The team comprising 18 players and 10 officials left the Murtala Mohammed Airport, Ikeja, Lagos at 11.10am and landed at 12.30pm with official of the Cameroon Football Federation on hand to lead them to their hotel.

    However, Wolves were shocked to discover that the hotel, Akena City Hotel situated in Akwa area, Commercial Avenue of the town has no water with the beds confirmed to be too small for an adult.

    The President of the host team, Frank Happy expressed dissappointment with the hotel arrangement but claimed it was the FA that provided the accommodation which was nothing to write home about.

    The players who travelled with the team include goalkeeper Okiemute Odah, Ambrose Vanzekin, Goodluck Onamado, Ike ThankGod, Ojo Mine, Oke Ogagotewho, Uche Ossai, Egbeta Michael, Ikechukwu Ibenegbu, Musa Najare and Achibi Ewenike.

    Others are Oghenekaro Etebo, Dimgba Stanley, Joshua Obaje,Efe Yarhere, Bright Akpojuvwewo and Kola Anubi while the officals are Davidson Owumi, Lawrence Omowho, Coach Paul Aigbogun, Sam Okpodu, Moses Etu, the Media Manager, Team Doctor Edike Ifeanyi, and Matthais and an official of the Sports Commission, Mrs Mercy Awolor while Emeka Inyama and Danladi Alanana came from the Nigeria Football Federation.

    Speaking on the antics of the host Federation, Owumi urged the players to remin focussed and get ready for the battle ahead;

    “I am used to this type of antics but we should not allow this to distract us as we are here for a crucial assignment. I am not used to failure and I know that you will not fail me,” said Owumi.