Tag: London

  • Buhari, Tinubu meet in London

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday met with All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart Asiwaju Bola Tinubu in London.

    The President’s Personal Assistant on Social Media, Bashir Ahmad, made this known on his tweeter handle @BashirAhmad in Abuja.

    The presidential aide posted: “President Muhammadu Buhari receives National leader of our great party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu (Jagaban) today (yesterday) in London.’’

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the President, who is on official visit to the United Kingdom, met on Wednesday with the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, in London.

    The President is also billed to hold discussions on Nigeria – British relations with Prime Minister Theresa May before the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) scheduled for Wednesday till Friday.

    A government statement said: “The President will also meet with the Chief Executive Officer of Royal Dutch Plc, Mr Ben van Beurden, in connection with Shell and other partners’ plan to invest $15 billion in Nigeria’s oil industry.

    “These investment ventures will lay the foundation for the next 20 years production and domestic gas supply, bringing with it all the attendant benefits both to the economy and the wider society.”

    Meetings are also scheduled with some prominent Britons and Nigerians residing in Britain.

  • Photos: Buhari meets Archbishop of Canterbury in London

    President Buhari meets the Archbishop of Canterbury and High Commissioner of Nigeria to United Kingdom in London on Thursday.

    President Buhari with L-R: High Commission of Nigeria to United Kingdom Amb. George Adesola Oguntade, Archbishop Justin Welby and Secretary General Worldwide of Anglican Communion Archbishop Josiah Idowu-Fearon

     

  • Protest as Buhari arrives in London

    •Presidency: looters behind it

    SOME Nigerians living in London yesterday protested against President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The protesters stormed the Abuja House in Kensington London, where the President is staying, blaming him for the nation’s ills.

    In a swift reaction, the Presidency said looters were behind the protest.

    The protesters said they would take their action to the venue of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) next week, which the President will attend.

    The protesters were said to have accused the President of not addressing the herdsmen-farmers attack, and not doing anything about the citizens’ welfare.

    The President’s Senior Special Assistant (SSA) on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, said his boss won’t be distracted from his mission in London.

    A presidential source, who does not want his name in print, insisted that the protest was corruption fighting back.

    He said: “Barely 24 hours after President Muhammadu Buhari declared his intention to contest for another term in office, the camps of alleged looters and corrupt elements within and outside the country have been jolted, forcing them to push panic buttons including renting a motley crowd of professional demonstrators to protest against the President on his arrival in the United Kingdom”.

    The source claimed that extremely corrupt Nigerians who are custodians of slush funds stolen from Nigeria, and hiding in UK or are resident cronies of such elements, have colluded to form a league of protesters with a singular aim of distracting and disorganising the scheduled state visit of the President to England, for bilateral talks with Prime Minister Theresa May and other dignitaries.

    He said: “Esteemed Nigerians home and abroad, friends and business investors in Nigeria, should please see through the veil of the motive behind the Abuja House, Kensington London demonstration.

    “It was an orchestrated act of desperation and a ploy to blackmail and hoodwink the President from concentrating on his anti corruption campaign , which is fast gaining grounds locally and internationally.

    “This unpatriotic act is not unconnected to the Federal government policies to name and shame corrupt citizens and looters; to collate database of Nigerians with homes in UK who are not paying the right taxes, and the hot drive to prosecute all financial defaulters through bilateral and multilateral means.”

    Another source said: “The protest was benchmarked on an assemblage of local grievances and national challenges which the government is already tackling head on.

    “Such as the herdsmen versus agrarian farmers clashes, fuel scarcity which no longer exists and trumped up charge of hunger in the land at a time when prices of food items are beginning to drop and inflation on the decrease,” he said

    Another presidency source said: “It is obvious that this is a clear cut incident of corruption fighting back. Many of the beneficiaries of corruption and slush funds cannot withstand another devastating blow of Buhari’s anti corruption sledge hammer.

    “Hence, they are resolute to derail the apple cart in order to save their ugly faces and sit back to enjoy the loot in their personal banks. Some of the protesters  are not even Nigerians but hired hatchet men paid to do the dirty job,” he said

    Some security sources disclosed that the protesters were bent on embarrassing and humiliating the President throughout his stay in the UK.

     

  • Nollywood film showcase begins in London

    The inaugural NOLLYWOOD IN HOLLYWOOD event starts today at the world famous Egyptian Theater in Hollywood with a red-carpet opening night that will feature the screening of 93 DAYS, a question and answer series moderated by the chairman of the African-American wing of the Directors Guild of America and an open air, post-screening Nigerian party on the historic Hollywood Boulevard.

    Also screening are THE BRIDGE by Kunle Afolayan and ISOKEN by Jade Osiberu. Afolayan, Steve Gukas of 93 DAYS and Dakore Akande of ISOKEN will be the ambassadors of Nollywood at the event that is co-presented by the giants of the Hollywood film industry, the School of Cinematic Arts at the University of Southern California and The  Grauman  Egyptian Theatre. O2A Media, Inc., the production company of Nigerian-American filmmaker,  Ose  Oyamendan is the other co-presenter.

    In attendance will be top Hollywood film directors and actors, producers, distributors and faculty of the topmost film program in the world, the school of cinematic arts at the University of Southern California. Also in attendance would be celebrities, Nigerian-born actors and filmmakers in Hollywood and consul-generals of some of African embassies in Los Angeles.

    A video by Afolayan  posted on Tuesday night about the event is one of the top trending videos on social media this week. This is the first time that the foremost film program in the world and the most historic of all of Hollywood’s cinema houses are teaming up to bring a film series from Africa to Hollywood. Nigeria joins a select list of seven countries from around the world to be part of the prestigious national screening series.

    “It’s a miracle as miracles go. No one would have thought USC and The Egyptian would be interested in putting Nollywood on showcase. Ose made a strong case and he had the pedigree to back it up,” says Maceo Willis, the operations director for the event. “My biggest shock was that the Nigerian cultural ministry and embassy didn’t see the importance of backing an event that is the biggest showcase in African cinema historydespite months of talking to them. Nations beg for this opportunity that can transform a country’s film and tourism industries and Nigeria almost missed out on it. Thankfully Air France stepped in and flew in the actors and filmmakers. Hopefully, this is the beginning of great things for Nollywood in Hollywood”.

     

     

  • Russian ex-spy, daughter in critical condition in UK

    Russian ex-spy, daughter in critical condition in UK

    Russian former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia remain in a critical condition in intensive care in hospital, British police said on Wednesday as they appealed for witnesses to come forward with any information about the case.

    Skripal, 66, and Yulia, 33, were found unconscious on Sunday on a bench outside a shopping center in the southern English city of Salisbury after being exposed to an unknown substance.

    Police said they were keen to speak to anyone who visited two venues in the city where Skripal and his daughter were thought to have been, the Zizzi pizza restaurant and the Bishop’s Mill pub.

    “The focus at this time is to establish what has caused these people to become critically ill,” said Mark Rowley, head of London’s counter-terrorism police who are in charge of the investigation.

    Police cordons remained in place in several locations in Salisbury, with new cordons added near Solstice Park in the nearby town of Amesbury.

    Our reporters,  reports that on Tuesday, UK warned that it would respond robustly if Russia was shown to be behind the mysterious illness that struck down Skripal.

    Read Also: 71 die in Russian plane crash

    The Kremlin said it was ready to cooperate if Britain asked it for help investigating the incident with Skripal.

    Calling it a “tragic situation,” Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Kremlin had no information about the incident.

    Asked to respond to British media speculation that Russia had poisoned Skripal, Peskov said: “It didn’t take them long.”

    Russia’s embassy in London said the incident was being used to demonise Russia and that it was seriously concerned by British media reporting of the Skripal incident.

    Russia’s foreign spy service, known as the SVR, said it had no comment to make.

    Russia’s foreign ministry, and the Russian counter-intelligence service, the FSB, did not immediately respond to questions submitted by Reuters about the case.

    Skripal was arrested in 2004 by Russia’s Federal Security Service ( FSB ) on suspicion of betraying dozens of Russian agents to British intelligence.

    He was sentenced to 13 years in prison in 2006 after a secret trial.

    Skripal, who was shown wearing a track suit in a cage in court during the sentencing, had admitted betraying agents to MI6 in return for money, some of it paid into a Spanish bank account, Russian media said at the time.

    He was pardoned in 2010 by then-President Dmitry Medvedev as part of a swap to bring 10 Russian agents held in the U.S. back to Moscow.

    The swap, one of the biggest since the Cold War ended in 1991, took place on the tarmac of Vienna airport where a Russian and a U.S. jet parked side by side before the agents were exchanged.

    One of the Russian spies exchanged for Skripal was Anna Chapman.

    She was one of 10 who tried to blend into American society in an apparent bid to get close to power brokers and learn secrets.

    They were arrested by the FBI in 2010.

    The returning spies were greeted as heroes in Moscow. Putin, himself a former KGB officer, sang patriotic songs with them.

    NAN

  • Famine: Organisation calls for increased humanitarian aid for Somalia

    Famine: Organisation calls for increased humanitarian aid for Somalia

    An International charity organisation on Monday called on donors to increase humanitarian aid to help avert famine in Somalia where the lives of some 2.7 million people are at risk.

    In a statement issued on the eve of London for Somalia humanitarian conference, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) warned that half a million people today are on the brink of famine.

    “The international community saved thousands of lives in Somalia last year, and helped stop a famine before it could happen.

    “Less humanitarian aid now threatens to throw the country back into a deeper crisis, even towards catastrophe,” NRC Regional Director Nigel Tricks said in a statement.

    The focus of the High-Level Event for the Humanitarian Situation in Somalia is to draw attention to the humanitarian crisis in Somalia and generate political and financial momentum for the 2018 humanitarian response and recovery.

    The Tuesday event will bring together senior decision makers and partners to agree on how to plan and fund the 2018 humanitarian response, address priority gaps, review lessons from the successful 2017 famine prevention response and how these can be applied to best effect in 2018.

    According to the charity, while the country dodged famine in 2017, 2.7 million people today are living in what the UN describes as crisis or emergency phases of hunger.

    “Aid works, as humanitarian aid saved countless lives in Somalia in 2017, but 2018 promises a new year of crisis.

    “Somalia’s forecast includes continued drought for several regions this year,” Tricks said.

    Read AlsoTwo senior UN officials in Somalia to help tackle food insecurity

    “Without a focused effort by government and the international community to maintain support for Somalis at risk, thousands of people may be pushed back over the edge,” he warned.

    According to the charity, the humanitarian community seeks 1.5 billion U.S. dollars for programs to sustain and rebuild the drought and conflict stricken country in 2018 with focus on drought.

    A catastrophe was averted in 2017 as donors, governments and agencies heeded crisis warnings, and acted quickly to help hold off another famine.

    This year the situation is urgent as 5.4 million Somalis will need
    humanitarian aid.

    According to the charity, no fewer than 300,000 children under age five are acutely malnourished, including 48,000 severely malnourished children who face an increased risk of death.

    Some 1.1 million people fled their homes due to drought and conflict in 2017 in Somalia, adding to the one million people who were already displaced within the country from previous years.

    NAN

  • Enwonwu reigns at London auction

    He had died 24 years ago at the age of 77 and prior to his death he was the first Professor of Fine Art at the University of Ife, which is now Obafemi Awolowo University. Aside this, 24 years down the line, one of Ben Enwonwu’s paintings of Ile-Ife princess,  Adetutu Ademiluyi, known as Tutu, has fetched in a London auction £1, 205,000, four times more than expected.

    In naira terms, it was sold for N508, 358, 301, an African record.

    The Nigerian masterpiece, which was found in a north London flat recently, was initially declared missing.

    The painting, ranked by arts collectors with Mona Lisa, was done by Nigeria’s renowned artist, the late Ben Enwonwu in 1974.

    Bonhams, the auction company, announced the record price for the paint, which measures 97 x 66.5cm and was signed by Enwonwu and dated 1974.

    The identity of the buyer of the Lot 47 has not been disclosed yet.

    Other Enwonwu’s paintings were also sold, but none fetched anything near Tutu.

    Paintings like ‘Itachafo Muo’, another of Enwonwu’s painting, was sold for £18,750. ‘A Tree Lined Village’ got £40,000, ‘Negritude’ £100,000 and ‘Female Form’, £110,000, among others.

    Other Nigerian artist whose work was also of great estimate during the auction was Yusuf Adebayo Cameron Grillo. His ‘Evangelists: Cymbal, Triangle and Tambourine’, done in 1964, was sold for £56,250.

    Describing Ben Enwonwu’s portraits of Tutu, Bonhams on his website said it has achieved a high level of celebrity because the paintings were some of the most enigmatic works produced by a Nigerian artist in the 20th century.

    “The violence of the Nigerian/Biafran conflict (1967-1970) was still fresh in the public consciousness, and academic institutions were tasked with promoting a spirit of national reconciliation. Enwonwu embraced this duty, using Negritude ideology and imagery to explore issues of cultural identity and political contestation that the Nigerian civil war had laid bare. The artist created a number of his most famous works during this period, including three portraits – all titled Tutu – of a young Yoruba woman named Adetutu Ademiluyi, a granddaughter of a previous Ooni (king) of Ife.

    “Enwonwu frequently made trips to the countryside surrounding Ife, sketching the landscape and recording cultural traditions and practices. It was during one of these visits that he encountered Tutu. He was so impressed by her beauty and unusual features that he asked her parents for permission to paint her. Enwonwu may have also been motivated by her status as a royal princess of Ife – he was also of royal lineage, descended from the Umuezearoli of Onitsha. In addition, winning the approval of the Ife royal house would offer the artist protection from any problems arising from his Igbo ethnicity, a contentious issue in post-war Nigeria.”

    Okri said Enwonwu was already world-renowned as the greatest living African artist when, in the summer of 1973, three years after the end of the Nigerian civil war, he encountered the princess and was entranced, asking to paint her portrait.

    Enwonwu was a student at Goldsmiths, Ruskin College, Oxford, and the Slade in England in the 1940s. He became more widely known when he was commissioned to create a bronze sculpture of the Queen during her visit to Nigeria in 1956, a work that now stands at the entrance of the parliament buildings in Lagos.

    However, Tutu is regarded as his greatest masterpiece – the image was on display at his funeral in 1994. The whereabouts of the other Tutu paintings remains a mystery. “His works were like his children,” his son says.

    Prints were made of the 1973 Tutu, which now adorn the walls of living rooms across Nigeria, and Enwonwu subsequently painted two more that were sold in an effort to avoid parting with the first. The second version, painted in 1974, was the one discovered in London.

    But in 1994, as Enwonwu was dealing with cancer, his house was burgled and the 1973 Tutu was stolen. “He was devastated. It accelerated his death,” says Oliver.

    Ben Okri, a Nigerian novelist writing in the forthcoming Bonhams magazine, said he hoped Tutu’s rediscovery would help bring about a wider re-evaluation of African art.

    “Traditional African sculpture played a seminal role in the stage in the early years of the 20th century, but modern African artists are entirely absent from the story of art,” he said.

  • Burna Boy thrills at London album release party

    Burna Boy thrills at London album release party

    Days after holding a listening party in Lagos, dancehall artiste, Damini Ogulu, aka Burna Boy, gave a thrilling experience to a number of his fans in a release party at The Curtain Hotel, London.

    He treated his fans to performances from songs off the forthcoming album titled ‘Outside’, which came out on all digital platforms under Atlantic Records.

    The event which was hosted by Eddie Kadi of BBC 1Xtra was attended by celebrities like Wizkid, J Hus, Tiwa Savage, Mr. Eazi, and Mabel to name a few.

    J Hus and Mabel joined Burna Boy on stage to perform their feature tracks ‘Sekkle Down’ and ‘Outside’ to the excitement of the fans.

    Days before, the artiste treated selected guests, close friends and family to an exclusive first listening.

    The private listening party, which took place at WéRé House in Lekki, Lagos, was compered by Beat FM’s Douglas Jekan who led a cheerful Burna Boy through a series of questions about the album.

    The young artiste said every song on the album was inspired by something in his life, revealing ‘Where I’m from’ as his favourite and most personal song. He explained how a trip to Port Harcourt led to ‘City Vibration’ and recounted his experience with Drake that led to ‘More Life’, the album’s opener.

    Signed to Spaceship Entertainment, Burna Boy founded and led a band called ‘Def Code’ in his high school days at Corona Schools.

  • House prices ‘to fall in London’

    House prices in London and the southeast will fall next year as the cautious mood that has gripped the property market in recent months continues into 2018, the body that represents surveyors and valuers has predicted.

    The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) said lower prices were rippling out from central London and would spread to the capital’s outer suburbs and the home counties in the months ahead.

    In a reversal of the UK’s traditional north-south pattern, RICS said only higher prices in areas where houses are more affordable – Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and northwest England – would prevent a nationwide drop in the cost of property this year.

    It added that in each case, house prices (relative to earnings) were comfortably below their levels before the financial crisis of a decade ago, which meant constraints on potential buyers were not nearly so severe as in London and the south-east.

    RICS said levels of activity in the residential property sector had been “a little underwhelming throughout 2017”, with the closing months of the year especially tough. Economic uncertainty meant buyer inquiries had stalled, sales volumes had flattened out and sentiment had turned cautious.

    Tarrant Parsons, RICS economist, said: “Following a pretty lacklustre finish to 2017, the indications are that momentum across the housing market will be lacking as 2018 gets under way. With several of the forces currently weighing on activity set to persist over the near term, it’s difficult to envisage a material step-up in impetus during the next 12 months.

    “However, the fundamentals are not much changed from the end of 2017, so levels of activity should soften only marginally when compared to the year just ending. A real lack of stock coming onto the market remains one of the biggest challenges, while affordability constraints are increasingly curbing demand in some parts. Given these dynamics, price growth may fade to produce a virtually flat outturn for 2018.”

    He added: “That said, despite the recent interest rate hike, mortgage rates are set to remain very favourable, with the prospect of further rises seemingly minimal over the coming year. Alongside this, government schemes such as help to buy should continue to provide some support to sales activity.”

    Britain’s leading mortgage lender, the Halifax, said it thought prices would rise by 0-3percent in 2018, but agreed with RICS that the market would be weakest in London and the south-east.

    Russell Galley, managing director of Halifax bank, said: “At 9.1percent in the third quarter of 2017, the north saw the steepest annual rate of house price growth, followed by the east Midlands and the northwest. London was the weakest performing English region with an annual rate of 2.6 per cent, down from a recent peak of 21per cent in Q1 2016. In the south-east, for the first time in three-and-a-half years, house prices increased at a softer pace than the UK as a whole.

    “As a result of the rapid price growth in the capital, house prices in relation to average earnings are still very high in London; at 8.8 times annual average earnings they are close to the historical high of 9.

    “Additionally, mortgage affordability in London is worse than its long-run average, the only region in the UK where this is so.”

     

    • COURTESY THEGUARDIAN UK.

     

  • “Obama sold the finest embassy for Peanuts,” Trump cancels UK visit

    “Obama sold the finest embassy for Peanuts,” Trump cancels UK visit

    U.S. President Donald Trump canceled a visit to London scheduled for early this year, saying he was disappointed with the “Obama administration having sold” the U.S. embassy in the British capital.

    “(The) reason I canceled my trip to London is that I am not a big fan of the Obama Administration having sold perhaps the best located and finest embassy in London for “peanuts,” only to build a new one in an off location for 1.2 billion dollars,” Trump said in a tweet late on Thursday.

    However, the embassy website showed that the decision to move the location was taken months before Barack Obama took office in January 2009.

    The U.S. Embassy & Consulates in the UK said in October 2008 the embassy would be relocated for security reasons.

    “Bad deal. Wanted me to cut ribbon-NO!,” Trump said on Twitter.

    The Daily Mail earlier reported the cancellation of Trump’s UK visit in which he was expected to inaugurate the new embassy.

    The U.S. is leaving behind an imposing 1960 stone and concrete embassy in London’s upmarket Grosvenor Square, an area known as ‘Little America’ during World War Two, when the square also housed the military headquarters of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.

    Read Also: I would beat Oprah Winfrey in White House race -Trump

    The new embassy on the South Bank is a veritable fortress set back at least 100 feet (30 meters) from surrounding buildings, mostly newly-erected high-rise residential blocks, and incorporating living quarters for the U.S. Marines permanently stationed inside.

    The one billion-dollar-edifice, overlooking the River Thames, was wholly funded by the sale of other properties in London. (Reuters/NAN)