Tag: Italy

  • Villa Alero launches new product

    Villa Alero launches new product

    THURSDAY, October 10, Villa Alero red wine was officially launched in Nigeria at the Regent Hotel, GRA, amidst fanfare. Launched in 2011, Villa Alero was founded by Alero Emenike, with her first store opened in Lagos and its vineyard located in Lugo di Rimini, Italy.

    “Villa Alero trust none other than the renowned Cavico group when it comes to all things wine, using vineyard that have more than 100 years planting history. Villa Alero vineyard is set to produce the finest of red wines,” she stated at the launch of its new product.

    Alero, who lived for so many years in Italy, has more than 25 years experience in the business of wine production and distribution. According to her, Villa Alero wines are a fresh approach to Africa wine industry and specially the Nigeria wine market with a flagship store in Lagos and its vineyard in Italy. “We are able to bring our customer a first-class service, whilst creating excellent relationship with various vineyards and wineries across the globe,” she added.

    The star-studded launch was hosted by celebrity comedian and compere, Basorge Tara Jnr. While Helen Paul and De-Don thrilled guests with rib-cracking jokes, DJ Shyshy Shilon dished out exciting music and there were thrilling performances by K-Sax, Lil’jojo, Bcode, flawlezz dancers as well as other shining and rising music and comedy stars.

    Emenike also used the opportunity to announce that Villa Alero is the official wine for the Nigerian Broadcasters Merit Award, NBMA, 2013 which comes up in December.

  • Italy’s boat accident death toll hits 232

    Italian divers have recovered dozens more bodies from a boat carrying African migrants that sank on Thursday, BBC reports.

    At least 38 bodies were freed from the hull, which divers had previously been unable to access. The official death toll now stands at 232.

    Divers “unpacked a wall of people”, a navy officer said, adding that corpses were “so entwined one with the other” they were difficult to pull out.

    The boat caught fire and capsized close to the Sicilian island of Lampedusa.

    There were 155 survivors of the accident, which happened about 1km (half a mile) offshore.

    The operation to recover bodies from the hull was abandoned for the night, but will resume on Tuesday.

    Tens of thousands of migrants attempt the perilous crossing from North Africa to Sicily and other Italian islands each year, and accidents are common – but last week’s shipwreck was among the deadliest on record.

    The wreck is lying about 47m (155ft) below the surface, which means the recovery divers can only stay on the bottom for a short time.

    All the bodies around the ship and on deck have been brought to the surface, police say, however dozens more are thought to remain inside the vessel.

    “I’m sure that the most difficult part of the operation is starting now. Technically it will be much more challenging,” Coast Guard diver Rocco Pilon told Reuters news agency.

  • Rangers Board Chairman to players:  Grab a continental ticket get a trip to China, Italy

    Rangers Board Chairman to players: Grab a continental ticket get a trip to China, Italy

    •Dangles 500k for away win and many more

     

    Enugu Rangers’ Board Chairman, Festus Onu has promised to personally fund the Flying Antelopes’ players pre season trips to China and Italy respectively if they could secure a continental ticket this season.

    Rangers are currently fifth on the log with 51 points from 34 matches but they could get an outside chance of a place on the continent if they win all their remaining home and away matches.

    To ensure that the late push for a continental ticket becomes a reality, Onu and other well meaning allies of the Flying Antelopes have aligned together to ensure that the players and coaches are well motivated between now and the end of the season.

    The first to react was the club’s Board Chairman, Onu who has told them to get a ticket to Africa and earn themselves trips to China and Italy for pre season games.

    Onu revealed that about three clubs have already agreed to engage Rangers in friendly matches as soon as they get to both nations for the pre season.

    Besides, the long term incentives, Onu has also promised to dangle N500,000 for every away win achieved by the club in the remainder of the league season where Rangers are slated to play Sunshine Stars and Heartland away from Enugu.

    The Port-Harcourt based astute businessman also offered N300,000 for every away drawn game and N250,000 for home wins till the end of the season.

    Adding to that was the Coal City side’s General Manager, Paul Chibuzor Ozor who has also promised the players and coaches an unspecified sum of money if they could get a result at Akure against Sunshine Stars on Wednesday.

    Ozor also confirmed that the players and coaches had been paid their outstanding two match bonuses to keep them in the right stead and mood ahead of the tie on Wednesday at Akure.

    Speaking with SportingLife on why the club promised the players and the technical officials so much despite giving only slightly above average throughout the season, the club’s director of media and publicity, Foster Chime said:” We are doing all within our reach to ensure that we get a continental ticket with nothing yet decided on the table from the top to the relegation zone. We have noticed that proper motivation is the antidote to delivering positive results, hence our decision to do so.

    “The players are raring to go and they have assured us that we should expect more than 100 per cent from them since they do not want to miss out on all the largesse promised them.”

    The Flying Antelopes have four matches more including ties at Sunshine Stars and Heartland. They will also host Sharks and El Kanemi at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium.

     

  • Nigerians, others drown on way to Italy

    Nigerians, others drown on way to Italy

    Italian media yesterday detailed how migrants, including Nigerians attempting to cross into Italy perished off the Libyan coast

     

    Thirty-one migrants, including nine women, drowned off the coast of Libya during an attempted crossing to Italy according to survivors who managed to complete the journey, Italian media reported.

    A dinghy carrying 53 migrants capsized on Friday evening, and witnesses said 31 of those who had been thrown off it drowned in the accident. Some of them are believed to be Nigerians.

    The twenty-two survivors, who come from Nigeria, Gambia, Benin and Senegal, said the dinghy had capsized after three days at sea. They were rescued by a passing merchant ship and taken to Lampedusa Island, the reports said.

    Italian Interior Minister Angelo Alfano called for human traffickers who shuttle migrants across the sea to Italy to be stopped on Sunday, after 31 boat people drowned during an attempted crossing.

    “The traffic of human beings must end. We need to stop the merchants of death. The deaths off the Libyan coast and the terrible stories told by the survivors show the need for a real collaboration between countries to stop this string of tragic events,” Alfano said.

    He called for “the network of collaboration to be strengthened with the countries where the migratory flows begin” and slammed “the wicked commerce of men who place their trust in the death merchants, who are but cynical profiteers of a state of emergency.”

    As the number of boat immigrants attempting the crossing soars in the good weather, rescuers saved another 450 people trying to reach Italy on Friday and Saturday, increasing tensions at the already crowded refugee centre on the island.

    Another 92 migrants — including 16 women — were rescued Sunday morning in the Strait of Sicily after their boat got into difficulty.

    Since 1999, more than 200,000 people have arrived on Lampedusa — which is closer to North Africa than Italy — making it, along with the Greece-Turkey border, one of the biggest gateways for undocumented migrants and refugees into the European Union.

    In nearby Malta, 112 migrants were saved from their drifting dinghy overnight Saturday in a 13-hour operation during which eight of those rescued were airlifted to hospital by helicopter for urgent medical attention.

    That group — which included 20 women and four children — was suffering from exhaustion, dehydration and sun stroke, a Maltese army spokesman said.

    The Pope arrived on a Sicilian island to pray for boat migrants who have died trying to land there – at the same time as nearly 200 immigrants from Africa were being detained.

    Pope Francis was to throw a wreath of flowers into the sea off Lampedusa in memory of those who have drowned over the years.

    The Vatican said he had been “profoundly touched” by the flood of immigration to the tiny island.

    Just as his plane landed on the island in his first trip outside Rome, a large group of immigrants was being escorted into the port on a coast guard boat.

    All were described as in “good” condition before they were taken away by bus to be processed.

    The latest arrivals bring the number of migrants to land on Malta in July to 880 — an all-time record for a month — while 1,200 people in total have landed on the island so far this year.

    Tensions between the migrants, who are held in overcrowded detention facilities while their status is processed, and residents are frequent.

    Pope Francis was also due to meet groups of immigrants who have successfully made the crossing.

    His grandparents emigrated to Argentina from Italy, and as archbishop of Buenos Aires he denounced the exploitation of migrants as “slavery” and said those who did nothing to help them were complicit by their silence.

    The anti-immigration Northern League party is again fanning the flames of racism in Italy, just days after a plea from Pope Francis for greater tolerance in the predominantly Catholic country.

    The pope last Monday flew on his first trip outside Rome to the tiny of island of Lampedusa to “cry for the dead” migrants and refugees who perish trying to cross the Mediterranean to Europe.

    He urged people to heed “the cries of others” on a trip that humanitarian organisations and Italian parliament speaker Laura Boldrini, a former United Nations refugee worker, hailed as “historic”.

    But some politicians, who are little inclined to defend secularism in Italy on issues such as crucifixes in churches, abortion or gay marriage, called for greater “autonomy” from the Church.

    Fabrizio Cicchitto, a deputy from Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party, said there was a difference between “religious preaching” and “a state handling a difficult, complex and insidious phenomenon”.

    Lawmakers from the Northern League have gone further, calling on the pontiff to provide “money and land to house immigrants” who land in Europe.

    The debate has taken a sinister twist after the deputy speaker of the Italian Senate, Roberto Calderoli, a leading member of the Northern League, compared Italy’s first black minister to an orangutan.

    The remarks against Integration Minister Cecile Kyenge have been condemned by most politicians, with Prime Minister Enrico Letta speaking of a “shameful chapter” for the country and President Giorgio Napolitano saying they were an example of “barbarism”.

    Calderoli said the jibe was intended as a “joke” and added insult to injury saying he “liked animals a lot”.

    The Northern League on Monday even decided to capitalise on the publicity it is receiving and announced it would hold a demonstration against illegal immigration in Turin on September 7.

    Kyenge, a doctor and an Italian citizen of Congolese origin, says she has received daily threats since being nominated.

    Her reaction has been low-key but she has said the slur shows “a lack of knowledge of others and of the phenomenon of migration, as well as an absence of culture of immigration”.

    The centre-left Democratic Party has been equally critical and leading senator Luigi Zanda said Kyenge’s proposal on a law to allow children of immigrants to acquire Italian citizenship should now be adopted as quickly as possible.

    Historically a land of emigration, Italy’s foreign-born population has increased exponentially over the last two decades ever since the wave of immigration from Albania in 1992.

    Since the revolutions in Tunisia and Libya there has also been an increased influx of migrant workers from sub-Saharan Africa transiting through these countries.

    In 10 years, between 2002 and 2012, the share of immigrants in the population has tripled to reach 7.9 percent, according to figures from the labour ministry.

    At a meeting in Rome on Monday, Letta and his Maltese counterpart Joseph Muscat called for greater assistance from the European Union to manage undocumented migration.

    Muscat, who last week threatened to send migrants back to Libya, said the situation was “unsustainable” since there were no EU rules on the “pushback and push forward of migrants” to other parts of the EU.

    A former member of the Christian Democratic party, Letta said it was “fundamental to apply the pope’s appeal launched in Lampedusa: ‘Never again’.”

    The United Nations says thousands of people have drowned in recent years trying to reach Italian shores and 40 have died so far this year.

    Italy has come under fire from groups as diverse as the Vatican and the European Commission for its strict new anti-immigration laws, which were passed in early July.

    Under the legislation, illegal immigrants are liable to pay a fine of 10,000 euros (£8,700; $14,200) and can now be detained by the authorities for up to six months.

    In addition, people who knowingly house undocumented migrants can now face up to three years in prison.

    The new law also permits the formation of unarmed citizen patrol groups to help police keep order.

    The European Commission is investigating the new laws to see if they comply with existing EU legislation on immigration.

    “Italy is absolutely not a racist country. We just want to be sure that the immigrants who arrive on our land want to be here to work, not to make crimes,” says Paolo Grimaldi, an MP for the right-wing Northern League.

    Mr Grimaldi, whose party leader, Interior Minister Roberto Maroni, ushered the new law through parliament, firmly believes Italy is facing an emergency.

    With nearly 37,000 immigrants arriving on their shores last year, mostly via boats from Libya and Tunisia, many Italians agree.

    “There are too many people. You see in the city, on the streets in Milan, two million immigrants, I think,” says one Milanese man, who did not want to give his name.

    “I want to help people who are poorer than me, but I want to know where they come from and what they are going to do,” says Martina, a 23-year-old Northern League supporter. “It is better if they come here legally.”

    According to Saskia Sassen, an expert on European immigration at Columbia University in New York, Italy’s new laws could be the beginning of “a catastrophic phase” for not only migrants but also Italian citizens.

    “This law really alters the landscape by criminalising the violation,” she says.

    “In the past you were in violation of the law. That doesn’t mean you were a criminal. This law means if you break the law, now you are considered a criminal. That’s a big deal.”

    Mr Grimaldi readily admits that almost no illegal immigrants would be able to pay a 10,000-euro fine. In fact, he says, that is the point.

    European Union laws oblige all 25 countries party to the Schengen Agreement, which allows passport-free travel across the area, to allow illegal immigrants to make two “mistakes”, and the new Italian law makes such “mistakes” more likely.

    “We want to expel these illegal immigrants to their country of provenance,” Mr Grimaldi says.

    “If they have already been arrested for something before, if they don’t pay the fine, we will have recidivism.”

    The immigrant will have made two “mistakes”, and “so then we can make the expulsion”.

    Italy issues very few visas to people who are already living in the country, and demand for work permits from potential immigrants greatly outstrips supply.

    It quickly becomes a Catch-22 situation – illegal immigrants who have no visa are unable to get a job; those without a job are unable to get a visa.

    As a result, both illegal and legal migrants have become an increasingly obvious presence on the streets of Italian cities.

     

  • Italy grabs Confeds Cup bronze

    Italy claimed third place at the Confederations Cup with a 3-2 penalty shootout victory over Uruguay after a 2-2 draw in an entertaining third-fourth place play-off at Arena Fonte Nova in Salvador.

    Davide Astori slotted home Italy’s opener after an unfortunate deflection off the goalkeeper, before Edinson Cavani’s fine finish restored parity, Goal.com reports.

    Two brilliant free-kicks, from Alessandro Diamanti and Cavani late in the second half added to the score, before an entertaining match was settled on penalties after a competitive extra-time period.

    In the shootout, Diego Forlan saw his effort saved by Gianluigi Buffon, and further misses from Walter Gargano and Martin Caceres handed Cesare Prandelli’s men the bronze medal.

  • Human trafficking: Nigerian girls sold into sex slavery in Italy

    Naples mafiosi were convicted last week of forcing a Nigerian cancer patient into prostitution. Barbie Latza Nadeau on the African girls trapped in Italy’s sex-slave trade.

    The Domitiana highway was built in 95 A.D. as a thoroughfare, leading north up the boot of Italy from the bay of Naples. Now it is something like a one-stop sex supermarket where up to 600 Nigerian prostitutes can be found at a time along a 30-kilometer stretch of the pot-holed road.

    Across Italy, Nigerian women are forced into the sex trade, essentially kept as slaves who are bought and sold and moved according to a moribund supply and demand. Some of the prostitutes are young girls, just 13 or 14 years old. Others are in their 20s or 30s. Many have children. Some are still married to men in Nigeria. They usually sit on white plastic chairs under umbrellas to protect them from the rain in the winter and the harsh sun in the summer. The highest concentration of Nigerian forced sex workers is in and around Naples, but they are not limited to the southern reaches. On Thursday, in the central region of Abruzzo, four Nigerian gang members and an Italian taxi driver who allegedly procured prostitutes across the country were sentenced to between nine and 15 years in prison for making 23-year-old Nigerian Lilian Solomon prostitute herself even though she was in the late stages of lymphoma cancer. The court in Teramo ruled that the Nigerian band prohibited the young woman from seeking treatment and should be held responsible for her death. She was represented in court by members of “On the Road” association against sex trafficking, which alerted authorities about her plight. Solomon testified under oath against the band before she died in 2009. The sentence, four years after her death, won’t bring her back, but it is one small step toward holding the sex traffickers accountable.

    According to Renato Natale, a local Neapolitan doctor who is a former anti-mafia mayor of Casal di Principe, the majority of the Nigerian girls and women who are sex slaves were sold for around $50,000 by their parents or husbands in Nigeria, often to pay loan sharks or to get families out of debt. Some women paid sums of more than $13,000 out of their own pockets in exchange for the promise to find legitimate work in Italy with the goal of sending money home or even eventually bringing their entire families over. Natale says when they arrive in Italy, they are often raped into submission and plied with drugs and turned into prostitutes. Many of the women have scars on their bodies from a voodoo-style initiation ritual where they pledge allegiance to their pimps out of fear of torture. “Frida,” 26, is a former prostitute who now works at a shelter for abused women in Rome. She says her initiation included vaginal penetration with a hot candle. She has scars on her inner thighs from the hot wax. She worked on the Via Domitiana for three years before she ran away with one of her clients who she befriended. She said many of the women on the Neapolitan highway try to convince the clients to take them away, but they often get caught and the men are threatened never to return. “Even the police sometimes pay for sex,” she told The Daily Beast. “There is no protection there from anyone. There is no one you can trust.”

    She says she was required to pay the Nigerian mafia dons $400 a month for one-square-meter of highway to work off the $50,000 investment. Natale says the Nigerians, in turn, pay a fee to the Casalesi clan of the Camorra organized-crime syndicate, who run the sex trade around Naples. Natale says the women are not allowed to charge more than $13 a trick—the market rate for street sex in the impoverished south—and they are not allowed to refuse customers. Frida says they were afraid to charge more. “They watched us all the time,” she says. “They would drive by or send spies to make sure we stayed in line.”

    Prostitution is not illegal in Italy as long as the sex workers are over 18, but it is illegal to pick up a prostitute on the street. Recently, police have been enforcing the client crackdown on roadside prostitution by fining the clients, so the mob has started buying up apartment blocks along the Via Domitiana and in other parts of the country. They have started moving the women off the streets and into the villas where drugs are sold in the basement and sex is sold upstairs. Natale used to visit the women on the streets and give them medications for STDs. He says the move to put the women in the houses is far more dangerous and life-threatening. “These people are treated like merchandise,” he says. “Now they are being kept in these houses that are protected by armed guards. They were somewhat safer on the streets because at least there we could check on them.”

    There is little hope to stop the illegal sex-trafficking racket, says Natale, because most of the women are illegal immigrants and do not have documents and are not in the Italian state system and therefore “nonexistent” in the eyes of the authorities. But there is also a bigger problem in that there is no authoritative government entity currently involved in stopping sex trafficking in Italy. All the work is done by non-governmental organizations with limited funds and virtually no power. “We are like ghosts,” says Frida, who recently legalized her living status in Italy and wants to help other Nigerians get off the street. “We are literally shadows on the highway.”

    • Source: The Daily Beast

     

  • Ogude hopes to quit Norway

    Ogude hopes to quit Norway

    Super Eagles ace, Fegor Ogude, has said he hopes to quit Norway in the summer with Italy or Germany his preferred destination.

    The versatile player was prominent in Nigeria’s midfield in the team’s first three games at the recent Africa Cup of Nations in South Africa.

    He told MTNFootball.com:”I am really hopeful that this would be my last season in Norway.

    “I believe my performance at the Nations Cup would have earned me a move away from Norway. My agent said he is getting some offers, but I would not disclose the clubs for some reasons.”

    The former Warri Wovles star noted that he would love to take his battling midfield style to either Italy or Germany.

    The 25-year-old player, who could play anywhere in defence as well as in defensive midfield and attack, joined Norwegian club Valerenga in 2010.

    He has made over 40 appearances and scored nine goals for the top Norwegian club.

     

  • Ambassador Aworabhi steps out in Italy

    ON October 18, Ambassador Plenipotentiary and Extraordinary, Eric Tonye Aworabhi, the Nigerian envoy to Italy, presented his Letter of Credence to the President of the Italian Republic, Mr. Giorgio Napolitano.

    The Ambassador was accompanied on the visit by top level diplomats from the Embassy of Nigeria in Rome, including the Deputy Head of Mission, Ambassador (Mrs) M. Gereng-Sen, a Minister at the Mission Mr. Folorunso Isola Elutilo and the Head of Chancery, Mr. Mustapha Tunde Mukaila.

    The Nigerian Ambassador inspected a guard, while President Napolitano held dialogue with the envoy on matters of mutual interests.

    Ambassador Aworabhi, who is concurrently accredited as the nation’s envoy to Albania, travelled in August to the capital, Tirana where he also presented his Letter of Credence to President Bujar Faik Nishani.

    Since his arrival in Rome on July 31, 2012, the Ambassador has met with members of the Nigerian community in Italy. During the nation’s 52 independence anniversary celebration, he had the opportunity of meeting with Nigerians and underlined the need to continue to hold the country together as an indivisible entity.

    “Our unity and progress as a people, as one indivisible Nigerian nation, sharing a collective destiny, must be held as a sacred, sacrosanct duty for all, never to be doubted, prevaricated upon or by any means negotiated from the stand point of pessimism, no matter what challenges we face today,” he noted.

    He reminded his compatriots that: “On the African and global levels, Nigeria has invested heavily and continues to invest in the interest of freedom, liberty, peace and progress for humanity.”

    While saluting the resilience of every Nigerian, he implored each one “to demonstrate commitment to the lofty ideals of our compatriots that have passed on in the process of concretising Project Nigeria.”

    Among prominent Nigerians in the gathering were Cardinal Francis Arinze, Nigeria’s envoy to the Vatican, Ambassador Francis Okeke and Dr. Kanayo Nwanze, President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development, IFAD.

    The healthy ties between Nigeria and Italy led to the invitation to Italy of 10 middle ranking diplomats from the Foreign Affairs Ministry, who were awarded scholarship by the Italian government to undergo further training in the country. In addition, some 36 ex-fighters from the Niger Delta are presently undergoing various professional and vocational trainings in the city of Genova.