Tag: Italy

  •  Buffon apologises over Azzurri misfortune

     Buffon apologises over Azzurri misfortune

     

    Italy goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon has offered Italy an unreserved apology following Azzurri inability to qualify for the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

    The veteran safehand who had hoped to crown his career with another world cup outing confirmed his retirement from international shortly after the nail biting 1-0 defeat in Monday’s play-off against Sweden. He however expressed delight at calibre of team she is living behind with a never-say-die spirit that is almost infectious, predicting that the team will bounce back in a jiffy.

    An emotional Buffon said: “I’m not sorry for myself but all of Italian football. We failed at something which also means something on a social level. There’s regret at finishing like that, not because time passes.

    “Those who’ve played know how hard these matches are. We weren’t able to express ourselves at our best. We lacked the composure to score. Play-offs are decided by episodes and they went against us but you can understand that when you’re at fault.

    “We have pride, strength and we’re stubborn. We know how to get back up again as we’ve always done. I’m leaving an Italy side that will know how to speak for itself. Hugs to everyone, especially those I’ve shared this wonderful journey with.

    The Juventus goalkeeper, who made his Italy debut in October 1997, kept a clean sheet against Sweden at San Siro but his outfield team-mates failed to score the goals that could have overturned the Scandinavians’ 1-0 advantage in the two-legged European play-off, as Italy failed to qualify for the World Cup for the first time since 1958.

  • Table Tennis: Oyebode explains why he chose Italy over Nigeria

    Table Tennis: Oyebode explains why he chose Italy over Nigeria

    Nigerian-born Italian table tennis player, John Oyebode, says his decision to play for Italy is to associate himself with the numerous opportunities available in the Italian table tennis circuit.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Oyebode is representing Italy in the ongoing “Seamaster ITTF Challenge Nigeria Open, holding at the Molade Okoya-Thomas Sports Hall, Teslim Balogun Stadium in Lagos.

    Oyebode, who claimed two gold medals in the Cadet event of the 2017 International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) Italian Junior and Cadet Open, told NAN that his decision was already yielding results.

    “I believe that playing for Italy is the right choice for me and I don’t have any regrets about it so far.

    “The system over there supports players in all areas and gives room for development in both sports and education.

    “Also, there is regular sponsorship to go for training tours and participate in major international competitions to enhance players skills and welfare and many more benefits too numerous to mention,’’ the 15-year-old said.

    Oyebode, whose father, Michael was part of the Nigerian coaching crew to the Rio 2016 Olympics in Brazil, told NAN that his aspiration is to be among the top 10 players in the world.

    On the ongoing Challenge, the player said the event had been competitive so far due to the number of players and countries taking part.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that 95 male and 55 female players are participating in the 46,000 dollars prize money ITTF Challenge.

    Olar Benedek of Finland and Shao Jieni of Portugal won the 2016 men’s and women’s singles event respectively.

    The competition which served-off on Aug. 9 will be concluded on Aug. 13.

  • Badminton: 11 countries for 3rd Lagos Badminton Classics – Chairman

    Badminton: 11 countries for 3rd Lagos Badminton Classics – Chairman

    The Lagos State Badminton Association (LSBA) has said that 11 countries would feature in the 3rd Lagos International Badminton classics from July 26 to July 29 at the Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere.

    The association’s chairman, Francis Orbih, told a news conference on Thursday that the Gov. Akinwunmi ambode has also increased the tournament’s prize money to 20,000 dollars.

    With the increase, the competition becomes biggest ever to be staged in Lagos and in Africa.

    “A total of 20,000 dollars have been set aside as the total prize money for the entire competition.

    “The competition will also have Nigeria’s best players compete among quality international ranked players and get a chance to be ranked as well,’’ Orbih said.

    According to Orbih, the international athletes will Israel’s Misha Zilberman who is ranked 68 in the world.

    Others will come from Sri Lanka, Portugal, Republic of Benin, Egypt, Italy, Cameroon, Uganda, India and Ghana.

    He said that Nigeria’s Habib Temitope ranked number 512 in the world will lead the challenge by the national players.

    Meanwhile, Deji Tinubu, the Chairman, Lagos State Sports Commission, has extolled the brilliance and the dedication of the LBSA as one of the best associations working hard.

    Tinubu said the association would always get the backing of the sports commission to carry out their objectives because over the years, it had shown commitment in developing youths through badminton.

    “It is good to know that the classics are back and I want to agree that it is indeed back for good.

    “We at the sports commission are happy about how the LSBA has carried itself and the sport’s fans,’’ he said adding that the governor remained an ardent fan of the game.

    “This is why we have once again partnered this edition and also gone ahead to raise the prize money.

    “We hope at the end of the tournament that Nigerian youths can gain from the international players in the areas of mentoring and maintaining a good relationship,’’ Tinubu said.

    The winner of the Men and Women’s Singles will earn 2,000 dollars each, while the second place winners get 1,500 dollars and the second runners-up 650 dollars each.

    The doubles and mixed doubles winners will get 725 dollars each, while the runners-up and the second runners-up take 400 dollars and 175 dollars respectively.

    He noted that the prize monies would be given as directed by the International BVadminton Federation.

  • Nigeria, Italy to finalise agreement on military, defence cooperation

    Nigeria, Italy to finalise agreement on military, defence cooperation

    Nigeria and Italy will soon finalise a draft technical agreement on military and defence cooperation and operations, the Defence Minister, Mansur Dan-Ali has said.

    The minister said this when he met with that country’s Minister of Defence, Madam Roberta Pinnoti in Rome on Monday.

    A copy of the minister speech was made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja by his spokesman, Col. Tukur Gusau.

    Dan-Ali said that the agreement was expected to facilitate exchange of data and experiences on technical matters affecting preparation and conduct of combined naval operations on counter-piracy awareness and oil platforms protection.

    The other things the agreement will facilitate, according to the minister, are the holding of combined counter-piracy exercises and other maritime security activities in international waters and territorial waters of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “Train Nigerian Navy personnel ashore and on-board of the Italian vessels.

    “Arrange working meetings and briefings ashore and on shore between experts to discuss the implementation of this agreement and results of training and cooperation activities.

    “Take measures to improve the readiness of the parties to conduct combined naval operations; engage some Italian companies in the area of repairs and remodeling of some Nigerian Army self-propelled artillery equipment,’’ he said.

    The minister also said the draft would consider cooperation in any other field of naval activities at practical level.

    “I can assure you very soon that the two countries will sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to strengthen out the cooperation,’’ he added.

    Dan-Ali said that Nigeria and other countries along the gulf of Guinea suffer a lot of criminal activities, from drug and human trafficking, piracy, robbery and other criminal maritime activities.

    He said: “this practice no doubt is a threat to the existence of humanity and economic development of our nations.

    “I therefore solicit for your cooperation so that together we can stamp out crimes in our maritime environment.’’

    The minister also appealed to the Italian Government to help Nigeria by giving humanitarian assistance to the displaced persons in the North-East part of the country affected by the “inhumanity of the Boko Haram terrorists.’’

    He said that since President Muhammadu Buhari assumed office two years ago, a lot has been achieved in the fight against insurgency and other violent crimes across the sub region.

    He noted that Nigeria and Italy had a long partnership economically and security wise, recalling that when the Italian Prime Minister visited Nigeria in 2016, both countries agreed to further strengthen bilateral cooperation.

  • Secretly Solar

    Secretly Solar

    An Italian company is making photovoltaic roof tiles that perfectly mimic materials such as terracotta, stone and wood

    In historic centres and buildings throughout Europe, obtaining permission to install a solar photovoltaic (PV) roof can be complicated. Aesthetic landscape constraints are often so strict that the limitations become prohibitive, unless the solar cells are invisible.

    Hence, many have tried hiding or embedding solar roof panels in a material that resembles what is often used for roofing, stone paving or to clad blind walls. Elon Musk’s Tesla, for example, came up with a glass-layered shingle. Products like these are more or less invisible from the street—but from a certain height one can see the dark cells, an unacceptable idea in places such as the renowned Paris roofscape.

    Now Dyaqua, a small family-owned company in Vicenza, Italy, has created a product called Invisible Solar, a PV roof tile unlike anything else on the market. And it has sparked an immediate boom.

    Dyaqua inserts the PV cells inside a polymeric compound that mimics common building materials such as stone or wood so that the solar cells are completely invisible to the human eye.

    “Since we started production a few months ago, we can’t keep up with orders, not only from Italy, but from France, Spain and the United States,” said Giovanni Quagliato, a Vicenza-born artist specialised in creating epoxy resin artwork, who discovered the secret to giving a totally natural look to polymeric compounds, while keeping them transparent to light.

    The compound can be transformed to look like any building material, whether terracotta, stone, cement or wood. It is non-toxic and recyclable, built to withstand high static loads and resistant to atmospheric agents and chemical solvents. “It’s all about density: it has to be enough to fool the eye, but not too much, so as not to block the rays of the sun,” explained Quagliato. Years ago, he launched a production line of LED lights called Medea, based on the same technology. He then went on to create PV systems with his line Dyaqua, launched in collaboration with the Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development (ENEA).

    “The principle is the same: in the lamps, the light comes from the inside and must go outwards, while in PV tiles, the rays of the sun come from the outside and must penetrate the transparent material and reach the solar cells,” Quagliato explained. Applying this theory, however, was no easy task. Achieving the ideal concentration took years of hard work. The prototype’s efficiency was then tested by an independent scientific body. The tests confirmed an impressive performance of 70 peak watts per square meter, or about half the performance of a classic photovoltaic module.

    Invisible Solar is available on the market for 7 euros per watt, against 1-2 euros per watt for standard PV modules. “You have to keep in mind that these are handcrafted products, designed specifically for historical centres: prices can often vary from 1 to 7 euros even for regular tiles and historic centre roof tiles,” Quagliato noted.

    For now, Dyaqua survives on the production of LED lamps. The photovoltaic products are not financially sustainable, because they require an exorbitant amount of manual work. So far, there aren’t any machines capable of replacing the careful hand of man in applying different layers of resin at varying densities, both above and under the photovoltaic cells, with the right curvature for the perfect roof tile. The creation of flat surfaces resembling stone or cement is simpler, but it is still a delicate task that cannot compare to the industrial production of ordinary tiles or solar panels.

    “To accelerate production and keep up with demand, we would have to invent machines that integrate or replace manual work,” said Quagliato. Only in this way can mass production be achieved, contributing to lower prices and increased product competitiveness with large producers, such as Tesla’s Solar Roof.

    But Dyaqua lacks the funds to invest in a machine. Quagliato’s children, Matteo and Elisa, launched a crowdfunding campaign on IndieGoGo, attempting to raise USD 20,000 to pay for one. “Invisible Solar is my dream of a healthy world,” noted Matteo, “where technology has the natural appearance of our landscapes.”

     

    http://www.dyaqua.it/

     

     

     

     

  • 1,000 injured during Turin stampede, Italian police say

    1,000 injured during Turin stampede, Italian police say

    About 1,000 people were injured after a firecracker provoked a stampede on Saturday night in the Italian city of Turin, police say.

    Thousands of football fans were watching a live relay of Juventus’ UEFA Champions League final match against Real Madrid in Cardiff, Wales when a bang was heard.

    Rumours of an explosion quickly spread to worsen the situation and provoke a stampede.

    At least two people, including a seven-year-old child, were seriously hurt in the incident.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that title-holders Real Madrid of Spain beat Juventus of Italy 4-1 to win the Champions League for the 12th time.

    With 10 minutes of the second half remaining, crowds rushed away from the centre of Piazza San Carlo, crushing people against barriers.

    Bags and shoes were left scattered on the ground as people ran screaming out of the square.

    A seven-year-old boy is reported to be in critical condition in hospital with head and chest injuries.

    Some of the injuries occurred when a barrier around the entrance to an underground car park gave way.

    For some Juventus fans, the incident brought back traumatic memories of the 1985 Heysel stadium disaster in Brussels, where 39 people were killed, with most of them being Italian fans.

    A wall had collapsed on them before the European Cup final match against Liverpool.

  • Pope to elevate five Roman Catholic prelates

    Pope to elevate five Roman Catholic prelates

    Pope Francis is to elevate five Roman Catholic prelates from outside Italy and the Vatican to the rank of cardinal, the elite group of churchmen who are his closest advisers and can enter a conclave to choose his successor.

    The pope, making the surprise announcement during his weekly Sunday address, said the men came from Mali, Spain, Sweden, Laos and El Salvador.

    The new cardinals were named as Archbishop Jean Zerbo, 73, of Bamako, Mali, Archbishop Juan José Omella, 71, of Barcelona, Spain, Bishop Anders Arborelius, 67, of Stockholm, Bishop Louis-Marie Ling Mangkhanekhoun, 73, of Pakse, Laos, and Bishop Gregorio Rosa Chávez, 74, of San Salvador.

    The ceremony to elevate them, known as a consistory, would take place on June 28.

    The fact that none of the five are Italian and none hold Vatican positions underscores Francis’ conviction that the Church is a global institution that should become increasingly less Italian-centric.

    Naming new cardinals is one of the most significant powers of the papacy, allowing a pontiff to put his stamp on the future of the 1.2 billion-member Roman Catholic Church.

    Since only cardinals aged under 80 can enter a secret conclave to choose a new pope from their own ranks after Francis dies or resigns, the new members will join the ranks of prelates known as “cardinal electors”.

    Francis, the former cardinal-archbishop of Buenos Aires, was elected in such a conclave on March 13, 2013 as the first non-European pontiff in 1,300 years.

    It will be Francis’s fourth consistory and he has used each occasion to show support for the Church where Catholics are in a minority, in this case Sweden, Mali and Laos.

    The naming of a cardinal for Sweden was significant because Sweden is where the Lutheran World Federation was founded in 1947 and because this year marks the 500th anniversary of Martin Luther’s Reformation.

    Francis, who visited Sweden last year, is keen to further Catholic dialogue with Protestant churches.
    Sweden is also one of the world’s most secular countries and the naming of a cardinal there will boost the morale of the tiny Catholic population.

    Including the current batch, Francis has named nearly 50 cardinal-electors, or about 40 per cent of the total of 120 allowed by Church law.

    Francis, like some of his predecessors, bent the rules. With the latest appointments, there will be 121 cardinal electors until February, when one Vatican-based Italian cardinal turns 80.

  • Italy builds new detention centres

    Italy will open new detention centres across the country in the next few months as part of its push to speed up deportations of illegal migrants, inspite of critics saying that the centers are not only inhumane but also do not produce the desired result.

    Violent protests and difficulty identifying migrants has led to the closure of similar centres over the past few years, but on Tuesday the Interior Ministry asked regional governments to provide a total of 1,600 beds in such centres.

    Interior Minister Marco Minniti says migrants must be detained to stop them from slipping away before they can be sent home.

    The plans include reopening one for men at Ponte Galeria on the outskirts of Rome where migrants had sewed their mouths shut in protest before it was destroyed by interned migrants in 2015.

    Over the weekend, Reuters journalists visited the still-open female section of the Ponte Galeria center, and spoke to three Nigerian women.

    All have applied for asylum from behind bars.

    Of the 63 women now being held in the centre, more than two thirds are awaiting asylum request responses. Twenty-seven are Nigerian, many of them victims of sex trafficking.

    Isoke Edionwer, 28, said she was a prostitute for five years, but two years ago paid off her debt and lived in Naples until she was brought to the center a few weeks ago.

    “I’m a changed person. I’m no longer a prostitute,” she said. She wants to go back to Naples and earn a living from selling soaps and other items from a shop she opened.

    Mass migrant arrivals by sea are putting Italy under increasing pressure.

    Numbers are up almost 40 per cent this year after a record 181,000 came in 2016, and more than 175,000 are being housed in shelters for asylum seekers.

    Sen. Luigi Manconi of the ruling Democratic Party said the new-style detention centres had been phased out previously because officials working there had failed to determine the real identity and nationality of most migrants for deportation.

    “If they didn’t work before, the solution isn’t to create a bunch of new ones,” he told Reuters outside the Ponte Galeria center’s gate, which is guarded by soldiers and police.

    In particular, victims of sex trafficking should be helped, not locked up, Manconi said: “Why aren’t they being protected? Are they a threat to the state? No!”

    Between 45 to 50 per cent of those held in the new centers were likely to be deported, officials said.

    Others either cannot be identified or are not accepted by their countries of origin and must be released.

    Some 4,000 were deported in 2015, but there are no official numbers yet for 2016.

    Happy Idahosa, 20, was picked up by police in the city of Perugia on New Year’s Eve and sent to Ponte Galeria.

    She said: “I didn’t do anything wrong.

    “I came to Italy because there is peace and freedom here, and I want to stay.”

  • 200 killed in migrant shipwrecks

    Almost 200 people are feared to have died in two Mediterranean Sea migrant shipwrecks during the weekend, according to reports on Monday.
    The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) in Libya said that seven people were rescued off the north-western city of Zawiya, and one of them said 113 others were missing.
    The information was posted on Twitter and confirmed by an IOM Spokesman in Rome, Flavio Di Giacomo.
    Separately, 80 people died on Saturday after the rubber dinghy they were travelling on overturned, according to the ANSA news agency, which sourced its report from survivors’ accounts to Italian prosecutors.
    The sea channel between Italy and Libya is the world’s busiest and most dangerous sea migration route.
    More than 6,600 people were rescued there between Friday and Sunday.
    On Sunday, the Head of the UN Refugee Agency UNHCR, Filippo Grandi, said more than 1,150 people died or went missing since the start of the year in sea crossings to Europe.
    Grandi added that the mortality rate on the Libya-Italy route was one in 35.
    He praised efforts by non-governmental organisations (NGOs), noting they had carried out one third of rescue operations since January 1, and renewed calls for EU authorities to open legal migration channels to spare people from dangerous sea journeys.
    NGO involvement in sea rescues has become controversial since an Italian prosecutor accused them of acting in cahoots with Libyan people smugglers.
    The prosecutor says he has suspicions but no proof; the NGOs have rejected all charges.

     

  • Italy calls for release of journalist held in Turkey

    Italy has called for the release of an Italian journalist who has been held in custody in Turkey for more than a week since he was detained while doing research for a book.

    Gabriele Del Grande was arrested on April 9 close to Turkey’s border with Syria and transferred to a migrants centre in the city of Mugla.

    The Italian foreign ministry said it was working to ensure that Del Grande, who has not been charged with any crime, can receive legal assistance, a visit from the Italian consulate, and be allowed to communicate with his family.

    “But obviously this is not enough, because the foreign ministry requests that Del Grande be released, in full respect of the law,” it said in a statement late on Tuesday.

    There was no one immediately available for comment from Turkey’s foreign ministry on Wednesday.

    Amnesty International has said it is concerned by Del Grande’s situation and that Italy has not done enough to get him freed.