Tag: hits

  • Death toll in Nasarawa communal crisis hits nine

    Nine people have died in the crisis that broke out on Wednesday at Agyaragu, Jenkwe Council Development Area of Obi Local Government Area of Nasarawa State.

    The clash reportedly occurred when a vigilance group attempted to arrest a Migili man for allegedly stealing a motorcycle at Angwan Yakubu.

    The suspected thief allegedly ran into the home of a rival Koro ethnic group in Gwadanye.

    It was learnt that the demand by Angwan Yakubu residents for justice on the suspected thief resulted in a clash between them and a Koro armed group.

    Fifteen houses, including the palace of Agyaragu monarch, were destroyed.

    However, the Zhe Migili, Chief Ayuba Agwadu, escaped.

    The council chairman, Mr Sam Agidi, yesterday confirmed the incident.

    Agidi said he had told the police that a crisis was brewing in the area.

    He said: “I later got information that a group of Eggon ethnic militia, known as Ombatse, had mobilised and was heading to the town with weapons.”

    Deputy Governor Damishi Luka visited the area yesterday in company of the Secretary to the State Government (SSG) Hamza Elayo, the State Security Service (SSS) Director Abubakar Bubuche and Police Commissioner Abayomi Akeremale.

  • Magazine hits newsstand

    Realnews, an online weekly general interest newsmagazine, hits the newsstands today.

    A publication of Realnews Magazine and Publications Limited, Realnews is the first online weekly newsmagazine in Nigeria.

    Realnews centres on investigative journalism and aims to unearth exclusive stories about people and the challenges they face in their daily activities.

    Realnews will focus on oil and gas, environment, vulnerable groups – youth, women and children, and give voice to the voiceless.

    The vision of Realnews is to build a reputable and world class media institution whose watchword is professionalism and integrity. Its mission is to become the cornerstone of investigative journalism in Nigeria and Africa.

  • Niger SURE-P fund hits N2.5b, says Aliyu

    The Niger State Government yesterday said its savings in the state’s Subsidy Reinvesting Programme (SURE-P) has reached N2.5billion.

    Governor Babangida Aliyu spoke in Minna, the state capital, when he received committee members of the fund, led by Alhaji Aliyu Mamman.

    The governor said of the amount, N1.5billion was deposited into the fund for the state government while the balance belongs to the 25 local governments.

    He said a separate bank account has been opened for the fund to ensure that the money is used judiciously and accounted for.

    Aliyu assured that an effective mechanism has also been built into the programme to avoid a duplication of federal projects by the state.

    The governor said three representatives each from the state and the 25 local governments would join the federal committee in Minna to understudy and give technical advice on projects to be undertaken.

    Mamman told Aliyu that about 1,200 indigenes have been employed, adding that the committee would meet the target 3,000 jobs before the end of this month.

    He explained that the committee operates in the 25 local government areas but needs government assistance to get vehicles and renovate its offices.

  • Death toll hits 80 and keeps rising

    Death toll hits 80 and keeps rising

    The death toll from Sandy keeps rising as swathes of the US East Coast battle to recover, three days after being battered by the massive storm.

    More than 80 people are now known to have died in the US, 37 in New York City alone, and others remain missing.

    About 4.5 million customers in 12 states are still without power, and chronic fuel shortages persist.

    The National Guard is to deliver a million meals and bottled water to New Yorkers affected by the storm.

    The number of dead in the US has exceeded the toll from the Caribbean, where 69 people were killed by Sandy.

    The storm could cost the US $50billion (£31billion), according to forecasting firm Eqecat, doubling the previous estimate.

    Climate change fears

    In New York, limited subway services returned yesterday, though four of the seven train tunnels under the East river remained flooded.

    It is day four of the superstorm crisis and the city is shuddering back to life – but slowly. Transport is one of the main problems. Part of the subway system that is the lifeline of the city has reopened but no trains are running in the business hub of Lower Manhattan, where the electricity is still out, or under the East River to the outer boroughs, because the tunnels are still flooded.

    It is taking longer to pump out the water because of the power outage, which is also one of the reasons petrol stations are closing: officials say 50per cent have shut in New York City, 80per cent in New Jersey. So on top of everything else, there is a looming fuel crisis. The power failure has virtually shuttered Lower Manhattan and produced a host of survival stories from residents who have not found shelter elsewhere.

    Fares on commuter trains, subways and buses have been temporarily waived in a bid to entice commuters off the traffic-choked roads.

    Many of the petrol stations in the city and the state of New Jersey remained closed, and fights broke out amid long queues on forecourts.

    The city authorities are only permitting vehicles with three passengers or more to cross into Manhattan.

    Amtrak plans to restart its East Coast service – the busiest train line in the US – on Friday.

    In lower Manhattan, where Sandy brought a record 14ft (4.2m) tidal surge, subway services are still closed and hundreds of thousands of homes without power.

    New York Governor Andrew Cuomo yesterday ordered the National Guard to help deliver some 30 tractor trailers of supplies to one million residents.

    He has told relief workers to prioritise the elderly and poor, especially those living in high-rise blocks.

    Meanwhile, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced his endorsement for President Barack Obama yesterday, saying he had shown leadership on climate change, which he said could be causing severe storms such as Sandy.

    Mayor Bloomberg said the devastation wrought by the cyclone had “brought the stakes of Tuesday’s presidential election into sharp relief”.

    The death toll rose overnight as the extent of destruction became clearer in the south-western New York City borough of Staten Island, where at least 15 bodies have been recovered.

    The storm, one of the biggest to hit the US in decades, swamped the low-lying district with tidal surges, lifting whole houses off their foundations.

    Many residents in that community ignored official evacuation warnings and stayed behind to guard their homes.

    Air-mattress protest

    Two boys, aged two and four, are missing after they were torn from their mother’s arms by floodwaters, as they emerged from their vehicle.

    Police searching the area found a body yesterday morning, the New York Post reports.

    An 89-year-old woman died after spending 12 hours in her deluged Staten Island home, reports the New York Daily News.

    Many residents on Long Island have had their homes destroyed

    Her 65-year-old daughter was unable to save her. Helpless neighbours heard their screams for help but could not reach them.

    Also on Staten Island, John Filipowicz, 51, and his 20-year-old son John were found dead under debris in the basement of their home.

    Breezy Point, in New York City, where fire razed 111 homes, was described by one onlooker as resembling a war zone.

    Emergency crews are working to reach the most badly hit areas.

    In Hoboken, New Jersey, across the Hudson River from New York City, some 20,000 people were still trapped in their homes amid sewage-tainted floodwaters.

    The National Guard is helping with evacuations and meal distributions.

    One frustrated householder reportedly inflated an air mattress and floated to Hoboken city hall to find out why supplies had not yet arrived.

    Jersey City has issued an overnight curfew as well as a driving ban.

    On Wednesday, Mr Obama took an aerial tour to inspect the damage to New Jersey’s shattered Atlantic coastline.

    He put campaigning for next week’s US election on hold for three days to manage the disaster response.

    The cyclone also caused havoc further inland.

    The state of West Virginia has seen up to 5ft of snow in some areas, after Sandy collided with two winter weather fronts.

  • Usain Bolt’s coach hits Nigeria

    Usain Bolt’s coach hits Nigeria

    Just one week after the Presidential Retreat on Sports, the Delta State government is following suit with a Sports Summit in Asaba, holding tomorrow at the Grand Hotel. Unlike the Federal government’s retreat which was on sports generally, the Asaba summit which is an initiative of the Delta State governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan will be focusing on aquatic sports and track and field.

    Interestingly, the man in the driving seat of the new world power in athletics, Jamaica’s Track and Field Coach, Bertland Cameron is among the resource persons expected at the summit. He will be joined by coach of the South African Olympic gold medal-winning Rowing team, Barrow Roger, among other renowned sports personalities.

    When contacted for the summit, Cameron was ecstatic and happy to be called. “I am really thrilled because when I was competing, Nigeria was at the same level with Jamaica,” he recalled, asking, “what happened to Nigeria? It will be my pleasure to come down to Nigeria and discuss with you how Jamaica is excelling in athletics.”

    Top sports personalities like former Nigeria international, Adokiye Amiesimaka, Chairman of the Vanguard Newspapers Editorial board Ikeddy Isiguzo, Paul Bassey, Dr. Ojeme Emmanuel, the Managing Director of Complete Communications, Mumini Alao, Managing Director Mastersports International, Ejiro Omonode, Vanguard Group Sports Editor, Onochie Anibeze are among those who will submit papers at the summit.

    The idea to hold a sports summit was conceived by Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan when Nigeria’s athletes were crashing during the London Olympic Games. He decided on the summit after a heart-to-heart discussion with Blessing Okagbare whom a country of 150 million people relied on for a possible gold medal.

    It was conceived before President Jonathan thought of the Presidential Retreat that took place last Monday. Delta decided to go ahead with it as was originally scheduled to be their contribution to national sports development, to complement the efforts of the federal government.

    The report will be submitted to president Jonathan and the National Sports Commission.

  • Chinese Super League: Utaka hits brace

    Peter Utaka, a former OB Odense hero, is delighted to end his recent barren spell in front of goal. His last strike before Saturday’s game was in August against Changchun Yatai.

    He told the newspaper: ”I know my wife and daughter came to watch me, and it is my daughter’s first time watching a football game. I felt motivated, would also like to thank my teammates, we have scored a victory, this is the most important.”

    Utaka’s wife and two-and-a-half-month old daughter were in attendance to watch the 27th round of matches in the Chinese Super League between Dalian Aerbin and Beijing Guoan.

    Dalian Aerbin were victorious against their opponents by 3-1, with the out-of-favour-Super Eagles ace accounting for two of the goals.

    After the game, Chinese media Peninsula Morning News – Haili Network quoted Utaka’s wife as saying: ”She was very well-behaved, rarely crying. She was her father’s Lucky Star; the week she was born, her father scored three goals (last goal was later cancelled, ed.) Today, for the first time, she came to watch a game and her father scored two goals.”

    With 18 hits in 25 matches, Peter Utaka is the second highest goal scorer in China’s elite league.

  • Re:Crisis hits Paul University

    The attention of the management of Paul University, Awka, has been drawn to a fabrication published in your CAMPUSLIFE Column on pages 29 and 31 of September 27, 2012 edition of your Newspaper – The Nation.

    The issues published in your paper are not only outlandish but definitely incorrect.

    For instance, your paper carried that last week (16th to 22nd September) our students, especially in the Department of Business Administration and Management were asked to register their courses within one week, failing which they will pay a penalty of N5000.00 for late registration.

    May I state here that students of Paul University have been on long vacation since 1st September 2012 and will resume on October 2012. Secondly Paul University, Awka does not offer Business Administration as at now.

    Your paper also carried that “the other day, students of Paul University pulled down the school gate because they were not mobilized for NYSC, two years after they graduated”

    Paul University, Awka was licensed by the National Universities Commission (NUC) on November 2009 and the University started its academic programme in 2010. The University is in its third year and has not graduated its Pioneer students. The University gate has never been pulled down by anybody/group of persons/ students.

    The issue of poor facilities your reporter said the students complained about is again a feeble imagination of your correspondent.

    The facilities in the University are by every means very standard; very large rooms in the halls for four students, individual wardrobes, reading table and desk, two functional boreholes, stand by generator etc. The students he said spoke to him last week have been on holidays since first September 2012

    Talking about the few retired Professors in the University without bringing in the younger lecturers working under them, is a clear indication that Mr Emeka Odogwu was on a mischief mission, more so when no Paul University student really spoke with him.

    The reporter grossly misrepresented the 55 Bishops of the Anglican Communion, east of the Niger, as what he credited to them to have said, was neither raised nor discuss at their meeting which Mr. Odogwu was neither invited nor attended.

    The interview the Correspondent had with the Vice Chancellor about one year ago, part of which he reproduced, was thoroughly distorted in his vengeful mission of running down an Anglican University.

    Paul University, Awka is at the centre of the town. This reporter has access to the Public Relations Officer of the university and even the Vice Chancellor, but he never cared to cross check whatever information he may have or imagined. Deliberately omitting this elementary principle of journalism, confirms that Mr Odogwu was out for callous mischief, intended to cast aspersions on this young university, owned by the Anglican Church, a communion, Mr Odogwu professes to be a member.

     

    Ikechukwu is the Public Relations Officer of Paul University

  • Yak hits seventh goal

    Super Eagles and Guangzhou striker Yakubu Aiyegbeni continued his goal-scoring ritual in the Chinese Super League with an 80th minute strike against Guizhou Renhe at the Yuexiushan Stadium Sunday.

    The M. Kosanovic-led Guizhou Renhe, currently placed 5th in the 16-team league, took the game to their hosts but failed to convert any of their chances.

    Aiyegbeni, who was tomentor-in-chief to the visitors, finally got his break in the 80th minute which turned out to be the only goal of the enounter .

    An elated Guangzhou coach Sérgio Farias was quick to give the former Portsmouth and Blackburn ace a pat on the back for, again, rising to the occassion.

    Aiyegbeni, who scored 17 goals in his last season in the English Premiers League before heading for China, is only ten goals from re-enacting the feat he achieved while with Blackburn Rovers in the 2011/2012 season. The former Macabi Haifa and Everton forward has so far netted seven goals for Guangzhou who currently occupy the 3rd position with 41 points in 26 matches.