Tag: London

  • World’s first ATM marks 50th ‘birthday’

    World’s first ATM marks 50th ‘birthday’

    The world’s first Automated Teller Machine (ATM), a technology which brought transformation in the way people obtained and used cash, on Tuesday  clocked 50 years.

    According to the Metro News, the world’s first ATM was unveiled by Barclays at its Enfield branch in North London on June 27 1967.

    As a tribute to the golden anniversary, Barclays transformed the ATM at its Enfield branch into gold, added a commemorative plaque and placed a red carpet in front for its users.

    The original ATM was the brainchild of Scottish inventor Shepherd-Barron, and was commissioned by Barclays to create six cash dispensers, the first of which was installed at Enfield.

    English actor Reg Varney, who starred in the British TV comedy show “On The Buses”, was the first person to withdraw cash from the new machine.

    The ATM was designed to transform people’s ability to manage their finances by giving customers access to cash outside bank branch opening hours.

    Despite the rise in other new technologies such as online and mobile banking, the ATM remains popular 50 years on.

    Now there are an estimated three million cash machines across the globe with some 70,000 cash machines in the UK alone which dispensed 175 billion pounds in 2016.

    This month also marked 30 years since Barclays introduced the debit card to the UK, on June 3 1987.

  • Several other tower blocks have combustible cladding-British PM

    Several other tower blocks have combustible cladding-British PM

    British Prime Minister Theresa May said on Thursday that initial tests on other high-rise buildings after the London fire tragedy have shown that the cladding was combustible.

    May, made this known while citing the results of tests conducted after a fire killed at least 79 people in London.

    Flames spread rapidly up the 24-storey residential tower block on June 17, trapping people inside, in what was Britain’s worst blaze since World War Two.

    Exterior cladding added during a refurbishment may have played a part, residents have said.

    The disaster heaped pressure on Prime Minister May, already fighting for her political survival after a snap election saw her party lose its parliamentary majority.

    It has acted as a focal point for anger at government cuts to local authority funding and drawn accusations of criminal negligence.

    “We should, of course, be careful on speculating what caused this fire, but as a precaution, the government has arranged to test cladding on all relevant tower blocks,” May told parliament.

    “Shortly before I came to the chamber, I was informed that a number of these tests have come back as combustible.”

    She said local authorities and fire services had been informed and were taking steps to make affected buildings safe and to inform residents.

    May has launched a public inquiry into the fire and police have announced a criminal investigation.

    May said tests on the cladding of Grenfell Tower where the fire blazed would be made public in the next 48 hours.

    “This has been a wake-up call for the whole country,” said Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the opposition Labour Party.

    “Residents of tower blocks all over the country are concerned, worried and frightened for their own safety. What we need is a step change in our attitude toward housing in this country.”

    After apologising for a slow state response to the fire, May said it was right that the head of the local council had resigned.

    Nicholas Holgate, chief executive of Kensington and Chelsea council, said he was forced out by the government.

  • Aisha back, says Buhari will return soon

    Aisha back, says Buhari will return soon

    Wife of the President, Mrs Aisha Buhari on Tuesday morning returned to the country from London where she visited her husband who is undergoing treatment.

     

    She was received on arrival by officials at the Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport, Abuja.

    According to a statement by her Director of Information, Suleiman Haruna, the President’s wife expressed appreciation to Nigerians for their constant prayers.

    While stating that President Buhari is recuperating fast, she disclosed that he will soon return to the country

    She called on Nigerians to continue to be strong in the face of challenges and to support the Federal Government in implementing the agenda for which the present administration was elected.

    “Mr. President thanked the acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo for his loyalty and called on Nigerians to continue to support the acting President in his effort to actualise the mandate of the All Progressives Congress,” Mrs. Buhari stated.

  • British PM resumes campaigning three days before national election

    British PM resumes campaigning three days before national election

    British Prime Minister Theresa May resumes campaigning on Monday after a deadly militant attack on London Bridge.

    May said Britain must be tougher in stamping out Islamist extremism after three knife-wielding assailants rammed a hired van into pedestrians on London Bridge and stabbed others nearby, killing seven people and injuring 48.

    After the third militant attack in Britain in less than three months, May said Thursday’s election would go ahead but said Britain had been far too tolerant of extremism.

    “Violence can never be allowed to disrupt the democratic process,” May, who served as interior minister from 2010 to 2016, said outside her Downing Street office.

    Islamic State, which is losing territory in Syria and Iraq to an offensive backed by a U.S.-led coalition, said its militants were responsible for the attack, according to the group’s media agency Amaq.

    Islamist militants have carried out scores of deadly attacks in Europe, Russia, the Middle East, Africa, Asia and the United States over the past two years.

    In an early morning raids in east London, British counter-terrorism police detained more people on Monday.

    Police arrested 12 people in the Barking district of east London following the attack, though one was later released.

    Police have not released the names of the attackers and British newspapers refrained from identifying the men.

    It was not immediately clear how the attack would impact the election, though the issue of security has been thrust to the forefront of the campaign after the London Bridge and Manchester attacks.

    The campaign was suspended for several days last month when a suicide bomber killed 22 people at a concert by Ariana Grande in Manchester.

    Grande gave an emotional performance on Sunday at a benefit gig in the city for the victims of the attack, singing with a choir of local schoolchildren, including some who had been at her show.

    Before the London Bridge attack, May’s gamble on a June 8 snap election had been thrust into doubt after polls showed her Conservative Party’s lead had collapsed in recent weeks.

    While British pollsters all predict May will win the most seats in Thursday’s election, they have given an array of different numbers for how big her win will be, ranging from a landslide victory to a much more slender win without a majority.

    Some polls indicate the election could be close, possibly throwing Britain into political deadlock just days before formal Brexit talks with the European Union are due to begin on June 19.

    May called the snap election in a bid to strengthen her hand in negotiations on Britain’s exit from the European Union, to win more time to deal with the impact of the divorce and to strengthen her grip on the Conservative Party.

    If she fails to beat handsomely the 12-seat majority her predecessor David Cameron won in 2015, her electoral gamble will have failed and her authority will be undermined both inside the Conservative Party and at talks with 27 other EU leaders.

    May said the series of attacks were not connected in terms of planning and execution, but were inspired by what she called a “single, evil ideology of Islamist extremism” that represented a perversion of Islam and of the truth.

    As a former interior minister, May’s record on security is also under scrutiny, she reduced police numbers and oversaw the domestic intelligence agency, MI5.

    Opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn criticised May, who was interior minister from 2010 to 2016, for cutting police numbers during her tenure in charge of the interior ministry.

    “The mass murderers who brought terror to our streets in London and Manchester want our election to be halted. They want democracy halted,” Corbyn said in Carlisle, northern England.

    “They want their violence to overwhelm our right to vote in a fair and peaceful election and to go about our lives freely.”

    “That is why it would be completely wrong to postpone Thursday’s vote, or to suspend our campaigning any longer.”

  • 12 arrested after seven killed in London terror attack

    12 arrested after seven killed in London terror attack

    British Prime Minister Theresa May blamed “evil” Islamist ideology yesterday for an attack by knife-wielding men who mowed down and stabbed revellers in London.

    Seven people were killed, 48 injured and the police said they had arrested 12 suspects.

    Saturday night’s rampage at the popular nightlife hub around London Bridge, by three men arriving in a van and wearing fake suicide vests, was the third deadly terror attack in Britain in three months and came only days before Thursday’s general elections.

    Political parties promptly suspended campaigns  out of respect for the victims, who included 48 people treated in hospital, some of them in life-threatening conditions.

    No details have been released about the suspects, who were shot dead within minutes by police, and detectives are still investigating whether they acted alone.

    The 12 arrests were made in the ethnically diverse east London suburb of Barking, with Sky News reporting that a property raided by police belonged to one of the killers.

    May said the attack was driven by the same “evil ideology of Islamist extremism” behind last week’s Manchester suicide bombing that left 22 people dead, and the Westminster attack in March, which killed five.

    “The recent attacks are not connected but we believe we are experiencing a new trend in the threat we face,” she said after chairing a meeting of the government’s emergency Cobra committee.

    She warned that perpetrators are inspired to attack “by copying one another”.

    The assailants wore fake suicide vests in a bid to increase the sense of panic as they lunged seemingly at random at the crowds gathered around London Bridge and Borough Market, which is full of restaurants and bars.

    Gerard Vowls, 47, said he saw a woman repeatedly stabbed, and threw chairs, glasses and bottles at the attackers in a bid to stop them.

    “They kept coming to try to stab me… they were stabbing everyone. Evil, evil people,” he told The Guardian newspaper.

    Holly Jones, a BBC reporter, saw a white van speeding into crowds of people walking along the pavement on London Bridge, saying it hit about five or six people.

    Another witness called Eric told the BBC he had seen three men get out and thought they were going to help.

    Instead they “started kicking them, punching them and took out knives. It was a rampage really,” he said, adding that he heard a shout of: “This is for Allah”.

    An Australian and four French nationals were among those hospitalised, their governments said, while a Spaniard was slightly wounded.

    Britain was already on high alert following the attack on a concert by US pop star Ariana Grande in Manchester, northwest England, in which seven children were among the dead.

    Grande, who headlined a benefit concert in Manchester last night alongside stars including Pharrell Williams and Justin Bieber, tweeted that she was “Praying for London.”

    The national threat level was raised to maximum after the Manchester attack and troops were deployed at key public sites, but reduced to its second highest level last weekend.

    May, who served as interior minister for six years before taking office after the Brexit vote last summer, said Britain’s response to the terror threat must change.

    “We cannot and must not pretend that things can continue as they are,” she said.

    She repeated calls for international action to combat extremist content online, a message she took to the G7 leaders summit last week.

    May also warned there was “far too much tolerance of extremism in our country”, promising to review counter-terrorism efforts, including possibly increasing the jail terms handed out in terror cases.

    The ruling Conservatives and the main opposition Labour party suspended national campaign events for the day, although local campaigning will continue.

    “But violence can never be allowed to disrupt the democratic process, so those campaigns will resume in full tomorrow and the general election will go ahead as planned on Thursday,” the prime minister said.

    Saturday’s rampage is the latest in a string of attacks to hit Europe, including in Paris, Berlin and Saint Petersburg, and the French, German and Russian leaders sent messages of support.

    US President Donald Trump offered his help, tweeting “WE ARE WITH YOU. GOD BLESS!” — and highlighting his thwarted ban on travellers from six mainly Muslim countries.

    The Federal Government condemned the deadly terrorist attacks and voiced its deep condolence to the relatives and victims of the attack.The Foreign Affairs Ministry in a statement by its Spokesperson, Dr Clement Aduku, said: “the government and people of Nigeria stand with the government and people of Great Britain in the face of continued terrorist attacks on innocent victims.

    “Our thoughts, sympathy and prayers are with those affected in these latest multiple terrorist attacks and their families,” the ministry stated

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that assailants drove a van into pedestrians at high speed on London Bridge on Saturday night before stabbing revellers on nearby streets.

    Police said armed officers shot dead all three attackers within minutes of receiving reports of the terrorist attack unfolding in central London.

    The three men were wearing suicide bomb vests that were later confirmed to be fakes.

    Cressida Dick, the Metropolitan police commissioner, said on Sunday morning the incident was under control. “We believe there were three attackers and we believe they are dead,” she said

    Police also confirmed the arrest of 12 people in the Barking district of east London in connection with the attack and raids were continuing there

    Several people said they were ordered by police to stay inside pubs and restaurants as the terror raged outside.

    Alex Shellum at the Mudlark pub said a woman had come into the bar “bleeding heavily from the neck”, telling the BBC: “It appeared that her throat had been cut.”

    Italian photographer Gabriele Sciotto, who was watching the football at the Wheatsheaf pub in Borough Market, said he saw three men shot just outside the pub.

    In a picture he took, a man wearing combat trousers, with a shaved head and what looked like a belt with canisters attached to it could be seen on the ground with two more bodies behind him.

    “In two or five seconds, they shot all the three men down,” Sciotto told the BBC.

    The attack had harrowing echoes of the attack on Westminster Bridge in March, when British Muslim convert Khalid Masood rammed his car into pedestrians before crashing into the barriers surrounding parliament.

    He stabbed a police officer to death before being shot dead by a ministerial bodyguard.

  • London attacks: U.S. adopts extra security measures

    London attacks: U.S. adopts extra security measures

    President Donald Trump has called for vigilance and what he termed “extra level of safety” following the multiple terrorist attacks in London on Saturday night.

    Trump was briefed of the incident by the National Security Adviser, Herbert McMaster, according to the White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer.

    The terror incidents reportedly left unconfirmed number of people dead and injured after van ploughs into pedestrians on London Bridge and Borough Market.

    A third incident at Vauxhall, was, however said to be an isolated attack unconnected with the two other terror attacks.

    Trump tweeted shortly after the attacks: “We need to be smart, vigilant and tough.

    “We need the courts to give us back our rights.

    “We need the Travel Ban as an extra level of safety!

    “Whatever the United States can do to help out in London and the U. K., we will be there – WE ARE WITH YOU. GOD BLESS!”

    The New York Police Department (NYPD) Counter-terrorism bureau said it was “deploying officers to heavily-travelled pedestrian locations across the city”.

    NYPD spokesman Peter Donald said: “We’re monitoring the situation in London and we’re in touch with British authorities”.

    NYPD said on its Twitter handle on that: “There are no specific, credible threats to NYC.

    “Go about your Sat. night, NYPD cops are protecting you. Our prayers are with all in London”.

    The U.S. Department of State also said: “We stand ready to provide all possible consular assistance should we become aware of any affected U.S. citizen.

    “We strongly encourage U.S. citizens in the United Kingdom to directly contact concerned family members in the United States to advise them of  your safety”.

    British Prime Minister Theresa May had earlier confirmed the attack as potential acts of terrorism.

    “Following updates from police and security officials, I can confirm that the terrible incident in London is being treated as a potential act of terrorism.

    “This is a fast moving investigation. I want to express my huge gratitude to the police and emergency services who are on the scene.

    “Our thoughts are with all those who are caught up in this tragic event”.

  • Six killed, 48 hospitalised in London terror attack

    Six killed, 48 hospitalised in London terror attack

    Terrorists struck again in United Kingdom on Saturday night leaving Six persons dead and forty- eight people hospitalised.

    The London Ambulance Service in a statement on Sunday according to agency reports confirmed the casualty figures and the injured.

    “We took 48 patients to five hospitals across London and treated a number of others at the scene for minor injuries,” the LAS stated.

    According to a statement by Metropolitan police assistant commissioner for specialist operations, Mark Rowley, the attack began late Saturday night, when a white van stuck pedestrians on London Bridge.

    Rowley said the suspects left the vehicle and “a number of people were stabbed, including an on-duty British Transport Police officer who was responding to the incident at London Bridge,”
    “Armed officers responded very quickly and bravely, confronting three male suspects who were shot and killed in Borough Market. The suspects had been confronted and shot by the police within eight minutes of the first call. The suspects were wearing what looked like explosive vests but these were later established to be hoaxes.”
    Eyewitnesses reported panic as the incidents unfolded in the vicinity of a major transport hub and in an area packed with restaurants and bars.

  • UK police arrest woman over alleged Liberian war torture

    UK police arrest woman over alleged Liberian war torture

    The British police on Thursday said that they had arrested a 51-year-old woman in London on suspicion of torture during the civil war in Liberia over 25 years ago.

    The police said that the woman was arrested in the east of the capital and searches were being carried out at two addresses in east London and central London.

    “Officers were liaising with Britain’s foreign ministry and the prosecution service.

    “The allegations relate to atrocities that occurred during the civil war in Liberia between 1989 and 1993,” police said.

    From 1989 to 2003, up to a quarter of a million people in the West African nation were killed in a civil war, while thousands more were mutilated and raped

  • London Conference on Somalia

    SIR: An international conference on Somalia opened last week in London under the auspices of the UK government and the United Nations as part of efforts to restore peace and put the fragile government back on track.

    The conference’s major theme focused on the security architecture that the federal government must agree with the federal member states including what the future of Somalia National Army should look like and how to counter terrorism while protecting human rights.

    I believe this conference is coming at the right time with the focus on the above mentioned themes but, I think the international community and donor agencies should focus attention on food crisis and peace negotiations with the al-Shabab group more than any other items.

    The Horn of Africa is in dire need of urgent help, there is currently humanitarian crisis that is affecting the lives of thousands.

    CNN reports that fears of famine grow as hundreds have died; and the Somalia President Muhammad Abdullah Farmajo has declared a national disaster for a prolong drought that has forced about half of the county’s population to urgent food assistance and sparked fears of a potential famine.

    According to WHO, more than $4.4bn is needed to the famine catastrophe, and more than 6.2 million people – half of Somalia population needed urgent humanitarian aid, including almost three million who are going hungry.

    This figure is staggering; therefore the international donor agencies most do something now to save the lives of children and other people in need of urgent help!

    While there are reports that the ongoing conflict with the al-Shabab group is further blocking access to food, the conference should find a way of ending the crisis and the UN should call for a ceasefire so that food and medicines as well as other relief materials can be provided.

    It is our hope a lasting peace will be achieved in Somalia and other regions in Africa and the world over.

     

    • Abdullateef Tanko A.

    nayashit@yahoo.com

  • Buhari off to London

    Buhari off to London

    Osinbajo is Acting President

    Doctors to decide President’s return

    President Muhammadu Buhari left last night for London to consult with his doctors, the Presidency said yesterday.

    He has empowered Vice President Yemi Osinbajo to preside over government businesses in his absence.

    The President, according to a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, has also notified the National Assembly of the development.

    After returning on March 10 from a 50-day medical vacation in the United Kingdom (UK), President Buhari disclosed that he would be returning for further medical checks.

    The statement did not specify the length of stay, but it said that the President’s return to the country will be determined by his doctors in the UK.

    The spokesman said that the President, who had planned to leave yesterday afternoon, shifted his flight till the night for the reception of the 82 Chibok schoolgirls, who arrived in Abuja earlier yesterday.

    The statement reads: “”The President wishes to assure all Nigerians that there is no cause for worry. He is very grateful for the prayers and good wishes of the people, and hopes they would continue to pray for the peace and unity of the nation.

    “The length of the President’s stay in London will be determined by the doctors. Government will continue to function normally under the able leadership of the Vice President.

    “President Buhari has transmitted letters about the trip to the Senate and the House of Representatives, in compliance with Section 145 (1) of the 1999 Constitution.”