Tag: London

  • ISIS Models set to launch in London

    As part of her commitment to place Nigeria on the global fashion and modelling map, Mrs. Joan Okorodudu, founder and CEO of ISIS Models Africa has revealed her plans to set up a branch of the modelling outfit in London, United Kingdom.

    “We may not become a fashion capital like Milan or Paris, but if Africans take the time to sit down for a minute, we can make a New York out of the Nigerian fashion industry, as there are flourishing companies based here worth billions,” the 54-year-old model agency owner, designer and Boston University alumnus said.

    Popularly known as ‘the godmother of modelling’ in Nigeria, Okorodudu has pushed new frontiers and has positively propelled young ladies towards success in their modelling career.

    Come January 2020, the official launch of the modelling agency will take place. She says she believes in change in the fashion industry and she will never give up on it.

  • Scientists working hard to find HIV cure – Don

    Prof. Ravindra Gupta, Professor of Clinical Microbiology, University College, London, on Saturday, said there was hope for HIV cure in the near future.

    Gupta, who said this in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja, noted that scientists all over the world were working hard to find a cure for HIV.

    The professor who boldly spoke on the remission discovery of HIV through stem cell transplant, stressed that though it was a very challenging procedure, it was successful.

    ”We were able to demonstrate remission on the second case till date through a similar approach to the Berlin patient, but there were some important differences.

    “We had a HIV positive individual who also had cancer and would require a transplant because the chemotherapy for this cancer was not successful, so the last option for this patient was to have a stem cell transplant.

    ”Fortunately in Europe we were able to find a donor who matched this patient, we were also able to find the patient a donor who had a deletion in the CCR5 protein. Cysteine-Cysteine Chemokine Receptor 5, a protein on the surface of certain immune system cells.

    “’This was again similar to what had been achieved on the Berlin patient and of course the CCR5 protein is critical for virus entry so that the virus cannot survive without it,” he said.

    Gupta further explained that there was another case of kidney transplant between HIV to HIV positive persons which was also successful.

    “They were both HIV infected, the problem has been HIV positive people cannot donate organs; but this is an example where somebody with HIV could donate an organ because they have a tissue match and are compatible.

    “It was a nice success story, that HIV was not a barrier to donating organs.

    “The procedure was very technical and it was very aggressive. It was complicated but it looks to be successful so far.

    “This case has given a lot of encouragement to researchers in different areas, in different countries to really go for it now.

    “Because they have seen that it has been done twice, there is a lot of momentum. We can see public support behind it. The science is going to be pushed quite forward,” he added.

    Gupta, however, noted that when a person was in remission for HIV, the person was free and did not require HIV drugs.

  • Beckham could face ban over phone use while driving

    David Beckham could face a driving ban after admitting using his phone while driving in London.

    The former England captain will appear at Bromley Magistrates’ Court next month to learn what punishment he faces after being caught on his mobile in a £100,000 Bentley in central London last November.

    The father-of-four pleaded guilty to the charge by post and was set to be dealt with at Lavender Hill Magistrates’ Court this morning.

    MailOnline understands the hearing was moved after Beckham, who is currently in the US, confirmed he would attend his sentencing to accept responsibility for the incident.

    His case was previously set to be resolved via a single justice procedure, a hearing behind closed doors where one magistrate can choose to impose points or a fine as punishment.

    Court officials said it was now listed as a ‘disqualification hearing’, but they admitted they did not have his driving record yet and were unaware how many points were on his licence.

    Driving while using a mobile phone can carry a disqualification penalty as well as a maximum fine of £1,000. The offence usually results in six points on a licence.

    A court official said Wednesday: ‘Although it is listed as “to attend for disqualification” we don’t know if he has enough points for disqualification.’

    She added the court would only have an up-to-date version of his driving record a few days before the sentencing

    A single justice procedure is used to deal with minor offences without the need for a defendant to go to court.

    Defendants are given notices of the charges they face and asked for their plea, which can be made by post.

    Defendants have 21 days to respond to notices and if they do not, a magistrate can make a decision without their involvement.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Nigerian High Commission London changes staff status to ‘self-employed’

    Locally recruited staffers of the Nigerian High Commission London would from April 20th have their employment status changed from “employee” to “self-employed “ the News Agency of Nigeria( NAN) reports on Wednesday.

    This development is contained in a memo addressed to the staff by Mrs. Helen Nzeako, the Commission’s Head of Chancery.

    Nzeako stated that the decision was “sequel to the communication received from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office on tax payment to Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs Commission( HMRC), Embassy Unit’’.

    Under the “self-employed’’ status, Nzeako said that staffers would be responsible for their National Insurance Contribution (NIC) and Income Taxes.

    However, they would retain all benefits they currently enjoy such as Holiday, Maternity leave and sick leave.

    Read Also: How 19-yr-old robbed, stabbed Assemblies of God Pastor

    She also said that they would enjoy salary increment as a gesture of goodwill.

    In December 2018, locally recruited staff of the Commission were disengaged from service and their entitlement paid.

    They were further advised to reapply for their various positions as contract staff in a move necessitated by the then ongoing restructuring of the High Commission following budgetary constraints.

    Currently, over 50 locally recruited staff work for the Commission.

  • Wizkid, Drake thrill fans at O2 Arena, London

    Multiple award-winning Nigerian Afro-pop superstar, Ayo Balogun aka Wizkid on Tuesday grace the 20,000 capacity O2 Arena at Peninsula Square, London, U.K and thrilled fans with a scintillating performance that included collaboration with Canadian rapper, Drake.

    This was in completion of his five province tour of Canada in the early hours of Tuesday.

    The tour saw the `Stew’ crooner thrilled fans in Ottawa, Montreal, Edmonton, Vancouver and Toronto

    At the O2 Arena, Drake brought Wizkid out to add more adrenalin to the ocean of crowd already getting serenaded by the `Soco’ crooner.

    As the 28 year-old Surulere-born singer was about to begin the performance for his hit song `Come Closer’, Drake joined him on stage for an epic, energy-filled display.

    Read Also: Wizkid new single ‘Jah bless Me’ surfaces online

    As the performance for `Come Closer’ drew to a close, a visibly thrilled Drake said, “I need one more song’’, indicating his intention to perform another song with Wizkid.

    The DJ duly obliged and the song `Soco’ began to blare from the speakers. Upon completing that performance, Wizkid briefly left the stage.

    It was a perfect delivery by the duo to no fewer than 20,000 fans in the O2 Arena.

    Wizkid and Drake collaborated on two songs – ‘One Dance’ and ‘Come Closer (Remix)’ which topped the charts in 2016 and 2017.

    In a recent interview in Toronto, Canada, the Star Boy Records boss hinted that he would collaborate with Drake to do another song soon.

    While we wait patiently for the new song, the tour of Canada was a huge success.

    This has proven to the world that Nigerians are no back benchers in the global entertainment industry.

  • Dollar set for biggest weekly drop in three months

    The dollar slipped against its rivals on Friday and was set for its biggest weekly drop in more than three months before a U.S. Central Bank meeting next week.

    Policymakers will at the meeting shed more light on the outlook for interest rates.

    While no change in policy rates is expected next week after the Fed paused a multi-year rate hiking cycle in January, officials might strike a more cautious view on the outlook for the global economy after a volatile week in currency markets.

    “We are coming to the end of a very exhausting week in currency markets with the Brexit news and, investors are waiting to get more insights from the Fed,” said Esther Maria Reichelt, an FX strategist at Commerzbank.

    Against its rivals, the dollar fell 0.2 per cent to 96.61 in early London trading. For the week, it is set to weaken 0.7 per cent, its biggest drop since early December.

    READ ALSO: Naira stable at N360.5 to dollar at parallel market

    Antipodean currencies led by the Australian dollar and its New Zealand counterpart were the biggest gainers against the dollar after Beijing said it could use reserve requirements and interest rates to support growth.

    The outlook for both those currencies is heavily correlated with the outlook for the Chinese economy.

    The yen remained firm after the Bank of Japan kept monetary policy steady but tempered its optimism that robust exports and factory output will underpin growth, giving a boost to its perceived safe-haven status.

    Elsewhere, the pound paused for breath but stayed on course for its biggest weekly gain in seven weeks on growing expectations that Britain won’t crash out of the European Union without a deal on March 29.

    Sterling last traded at 1.3217 dollar, below Wednesday’s nine-month high of 1.3380 dollar, but up 1.8 per cent so far this week, the biggest such gain since late January after the UK parliament voted to seek a delay in Britain’s exit from the European Union, following a decision to avert a no-deal Brexit.

    The Chinese currency in the offshore market also remained firm against the dollar at 6.71 yuan per dollar.

    Reuters/NAN

  • African Churches boom in London’s backstreets

    On a cold, grey Sunday morning, in a street lined with shuttered builders’ yards and storage units, songs of prayer in Yoruba ring out from a former warehouse that is now a church.

    The congregation, almost entirely dressed in white robes, steadily grows to around 70 people as musicians playing drums, a keyboard and a guitar pick up the pace of the hymns. Some women prostrate themselves on the floor in prayer.

    In the sparse formerly industrial building, its interior brightened by touches of gold paint, a speaker reminds the group of a list of banned activities — no smoking, no drinking of alcohol, no practicing of black magic.

    In a street outside, a pastor flicks holy water over the car of a woman who wants a blessing to ward off the risk of accidents.

    The busy scene at the Celestial Church of Christ is repeated at a half a dozen other African Christian temples on the same drab street and in the adjacent roads – one corner of the thriving African church community in south London.

    Around 250 black majority churches are believed to operate in the borough of Southwark, where 16 percent of the population identifies as having African ethnicity.

    Southwark represents the biggest concentration of African Christians in the world outside the continent with an estimated 20,000 congregants attending churches each Sunday, according to researchers at the University of Roehampton.

    Reflecting the different waves of migration to Britain in the 20th Century, Caribbean churches began to appear in the late 1940s and 1950s as workers and their families arrived from Jamaica and other former British colonies.

    African churches opened their doors in London from the 1960s, followed by a second wave in the 1980s.

    Migrants, many of them from Nigeria and Ghana, sought to build communities and maintain cultural connections with their

    home countries by founding their own churches, often founded in private homes, schools and office spaces.

    As the communities grew, the churches moved into bigger spaces in bingo halls, cinemas and warehouses, gathering congregations of up to 500 people where services are streamed online by volunteers with video cameras.

    There is a striking contrast with the empty pews at many traditional Church of England churches where congregations have dwindled for years.

    “We pray for this country,” said Abosede Ajibade, a 54-year-old Nigerian who moved to Britain in 2002 and works for an office maintenance company.

    “People here brought Christianity to Africa but it doesn’t feel like they serve Jesus Christ anymore.”

    Anyone travelling around south London on a Sunday morning will see worshippers,

    often dressed in dazzlingly coloured African clothes, making their way to churches, each with their different styles of worship.

    Hymns are sung only in African languages in some temples, or only in English at others. Some pastors take worshippers for full immersion baptisms in the cold of the English Channel. Others believe that when congregants suddenly start speaking in unknown languages it marks the presence of the Holy Spirit.

    But the researchers from the University of Roehampton found things that many churches have in common, including a drive for professional advancement, a commitment to spend three hours or more at Sunday service and typically very loud worship.

    “That is how we express our joy and gratitude to God,” Andrew Adeleke, a

    senior pastor at the House of Praise, one of the biggest African churches in Southwark, in a former theatre.

    “The church is not supposed to be a graveyard,” Adeleke said. “It is supposed to be a temple of celebration and worship and the beauty is to be able to express our love to God, even when things are not perfect in our lives.”

    For some, the noise from amplified services is a problem, leading to complaints to local authorities from residents.

    But many churches face bigger challenges than unhappy neighbours: Some provide food for people struggling to make ends meet, or work with young people at risk of recruitment by gangs.

    Andrew Rogers, who led the University of Roehampton researchers, said pastors had to juggle retaining the churches’ African identity while appealing to children of first generation immigrants, many of whom have never lived outside Britain.

    They typically have a more liberal world view which can be hard to reconcile with conservative Pentecostal teachings.

    Rogers recalled speaking to one pastor who lamented he was unable to talk about religious miracles to his children.

    • Source: Reuters
  • Air Peace plans flights into Dubai, London, others

    Air Peace yseterday said it has concluded plans to expand flights services on its long-haul routes to Dubai, Sharjah, London, Guangzhou-China, Houston, Mumbai and Johannesburg in South Africa in 2019.
    The new routes, its Chairman, Allen Onyema said are part of the carrier’s plan for next year.
    He said the airline will offer new deals for passengers, urging workers to gear up in raising the bar of flight services in 2019.
    Onyema commended the travelling public for choosing the carrier and staying loyal to its brand during the year, attributing its success in four years to the support of its customers.
    He said the carrier would spare nothing in making their experience truly rewarding, exciting and safe.
    He said the airline was focusing on broadening opportunities to give its customers greater comfort, beginning with the extension of its operations from its hub at the General Aviation Terminal (GAT) of the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos to the Murtala Muhammed Airport 2 (MMA2) on January 2, 2019.
    He confirmed that its Lagos-Kaduna, Lagos-Asaba, Lagos-Akure and Lagos-Port Harcourt NAF Base flight operations would be moved to MMA2 from January 2, 2019
    The facility, he said, would eventually handle all flights under Air Peace Hopper, Air Peace’s subsidiary.
    The expansion, he said, would create more space for it to provide exceptional flight services in an atmosphere of comfort.
    On its international services, Onyema said the carrier would give Nigeria and West Africa a sense of pride in the global aviation industry.
    He said the carrier was in the final stage of doing demonstration flights with its Boeing 777 aircraft to Sharjah, Dakar, Freetown, Johannesburg, Port Harcourt and Kano as part of the process to induct the aircraft into its service.
    Onyema said: “2018 was both challenging and exciting for us. It was the year we upped our record of firsts. We launched a number of domestic and regional routes under our no-city-left-behind project.”

    on the platform of our subsidiary, Air Peace Hopper. We also made history as the first domestic airline to acquire and register the Boeing 777 aircraft in Nigeria. We have so far acquired four Boeing 777s, with two already delivered.
    ” We also successfully renewed our International Air Transport Association Operational Safety Audit (IOSA) certificate and Air Operator Certificate (AOC) after a very rigorous process. We also diversified the aircraft in our fleet with the inclusion of six 50-seater Embraer 145 jets, which have so far helped our Yuletide operations in no small way. The real big leap came in September when we signed a deal with American planemaker, Boeing for the delivery of 10 brand new Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft, making us the first to achieve the feat on the West Coast of Africa.
    “We are sincerely grateful to our loyal customers without whose support, preference for our brand and patronage we could not have made a success of the target we set for ourselves in 2018. It was quite a challenging year too, given the dire economic situation across the world, but our esteemed customers supported us through it all.
    “In 2019, we are going to implement a series of bolder decisions aimed at giving the flying public a truly exciting experience. Already, we have begun the expansion of our flight operations to the Murtala Muhammed Airport 2 (MMA2) in response to our customers’ wish for a better space to serve them. This becomes effective January 2, 2019 with the operation of our Lagos-Akure, Lagos-Asaba, Lagos-Kaduna and Lagos-Port Harcourt NAF Base services from the facility. All flights under our subsidiary, Air Peace Hopper will eventually be moved to MMA2.
    “We are also going to give the flying public a reliable, safe, affordable and comfortable alternative on some international routes, including Dubai, Sharjah, Guangzhou-China, Mumbai, London, Houston and Johannesburg.”

  • Air Peace makes 2019 projections

    Air Peace has unveiled its plan for the aviation sector in 2019, assuring passengers of  expansion in flight operations on its  long-haul flights to Dubai, Sharjah, London, Guangzhou-China, Houston, Mumbai and Johannesburg.

    A statement issued by Air Peace Corporate Communications Manager, Mr. Chris Iwarah quoted the carrier’s Chairman/Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Allen Onyema as urging staff of the airline to gear up to raise the bar of flight services to the travelling public in 2019.

    Onyema, the statement added, commended the travelling public for preferring Air Peace and staying loyal to its brand in 2018. The chairman attributed the success of the airline in four years to the unflinching support its customers, pledging that the carrier would spare nothing in making their experience truly rewarding, exciting and safe.

    The carrier said it was focusing on broadening opportunities to give its customers greater comfort, beginning with the extension of its operations from its hub at the General Aviation Terminal (GAT) of the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos to the Murtala Muhammed Airport 2 (MMA2) on January 2, 2019.

    It confirmed that its Lagos-Kaduna, Lagos-Asaba, Lagos-Akure and Lagos-Port Harcourt NAF Base flight operations would be moved to MMA2 from January 2. The facility, it said, would eventually handle all flights under Air Peace Hopper, Air Peace’s subsidiary.

    The expansion, Air Peace said, would create more space for it to provide exceptional flight services in an atmosphere of comfort.

    The airline also assured that its main project for 2019 would be in the area of giving the flying public a reliable, affordable, safe and convenient option on major international routes, including Dubai, Sharjah, London, Guangzhou-China, Houston, Mumbai and Johannesburg.

    The international services, Air Peace said, would give Nigeria and West Africa a sense of pride in the global aviation industry. It said it was in the final stage of doing demonstration flights with its Boeing 777 aircraft to Sharjah, Dakar, Freetown, Johannesburg, Port Harcourt and Kano as part of the process to induct the aircraft into its service.

    “2018 was both challenging and exciting for us. It was the year we upped our record of firsts. In the year under review, we launched a number of domestic and regional routes under our no-city-left-behind project on the platform of our subsidiary, Air Peace Hopper. We also made history as the first domestic airline to acquire and register the Boeing 777 aircraft in Nigeria. We have so far acquired four Boeing 777s, with two already delivered. We also successfully renewed our International Air Transport Association Operational Safety Audit (IOSA) certificate and Air Operator Certificate (AOC) after a very rigorous process. We also diversified the aircraft in our fleet with the inclusion of six 50-seater Embraer 145 jets, which have so far helped our Yuletide operations in no small way. The real big leap came in September when we signed a deal with American planemaker, Boeing for the delivery of 10 brand new Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft, making us the first to achieve the feat on the West Coast of Africa.

    “We are sincerely grateful to our loyal customers without whose support, preference for our brand and patronage we could not have made a success of the target we set for ourselves in 2018. It was quite a challenging year too, given the dire economic situation across the world, but our esteemed customers supported us through it all.

    “In 2019, we are going to implement a series of bolder decisions aimed at giving the flying public a truly exciting experience. Already, we have begun the expansion of our flight operations to the Murtala Muhammed Airport 2 (MMA2) in response to our customers’ wish for a better space to serve them. This becomes effective January 2, 2019 with the operation of our Lagos-Akure, Lagos-Asaba, Lagos-Kaduna and Lagos-Port Harcourt NAF Base services from the facility. All flights under our subsidiary, Air Peace Hopper will eventually be moved to MMA2.

    “We are also going to give the flying public a reliable, safe, affordable and comfortable alternative on some international routes, including Dubai, Sharjah, Guangzhou-China, Mumbai, London, Houston and Johannesburg. Already, the Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of Air Peace, Mr. Allen Onyema has prepared members of staff for the task ahead. Our staff have been wonderful with their commitment and dedication to duty through the years, but 2019 is one year all hands must be on the deck to give our customers the best flight experience on the domestic, regional and international routes and make our dear country, Nigeria and West Africa truly proud in the global aviation industry,” Air Peace said.

     

  • Dollar weakens as cautious Fed leads to rate-hike rethink

    The dollar weakened against other major currencies on Thursday as markets took Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s comment that U.S. interest rates were just below neutral as a signal that a three-year rate-hiking cycle is nearing an end.

    The dollar index, which measures the value of the greenback against a basket of other major currencies, fell 0.2 per cent to 96.64 — its lowest level in almost a week.

    Powell took markets by surprise on Wednesday when he noted that the policy rate, at 2 to 2.25 per cent, is now “just below” the broad range of estimates of neutral which in September was 2.5 to 3.5 per cent.

    That marks a departure from comments in October when Powell said rates were a “long way from neutral at this point”.

    “Clearly, Powell’s comments about where the neutral interest rate is has created a shift in market expectations with respect to Fed policy,” said Jane Foley, a senior currency strategist at Rabobank in London.

    “That is a dovish factor for the dollar and is positive for risk appetite.”

    That shift was reflected in money markets where expectations of Fed rate increases declined to around 47 basis points over the next year from 52 basis points earlier this week.

    The dollar was also weaker across the board and was last down 0.4 per cent at 113.25 yen and a quarter of a per cent weaker against the euro.

    The euro fetched $1.1394, having touched $1.13975 – its highest in almost a week.

    Benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yields fell to their lowest level since September at 3.013 per cent on Thursday, adding to the bearish sentiment towards the dollar.

    Read Also: Naira loses marginally against dollar at investors’ window

    Focus now turns to the release this session of the October U.S PCE price index, the Fed’s favoured inflation gauge, for more clues on the outlook for U.S. interest rates. Minutes from the Fed’s November meeting are also released later in the day.

    Analysts said the minutes were likely to reaffirm market expectations for a rate hike in December, but were unlikely to have a significant impact, since market focus has now turned to whether the Fed will pause the tightening cycle next year.

    Dollar weakness in the wake of Powell’s comments was expected to be limited, given a note of caution ahead of the G20 summit on Friday and Saturday where U.S. President Donald Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping are scheduled to discuss contentious trade matters.

    Rodrigo Catril, senior currency strategist at NAB, said safe-haven buying could return if there were no signs of a truce between Washington and Beijing over the course of the G20 summit.

    Elsewhere, sterling rose to $1.2830, but weakened 0.2 per cent against the euro to 88.81 pence, reflecting uncertainty about whether British Prime Minister Theresa May be able to get her Brexit deal approved by a fractious parliament.

    The Bank of England warned on Wednesday that Britain risked a bigger hit to its economy than it suffered from the global financial crisis a decade ago if it leaves the European Union in a “disorderly” manner, which would include a 25 per cent crash in the value of the pound.

    NAN