Tag: Nigeria newspaper

  • FIFA Ranking: Nigeria drop by one spot, now 34th

    Nigeria have dropped by one spot in the FIFA ranking for September, placing 34th on the ranking table.

    In the ranking table on the world football governing body’s website on Thursday, Nigeria garnered 1, 482 points in the month under review as against 1,481 it had in August.

    However, in spite of the drop by a spot, Nigeria still occupy the third position on the continent behind Senegal and Tunisia who have 1,546 and 1,493 respectively.

    On the global scene, Belgium remain top of the FIFA World Ranking after an action-packed number of weeks in international football.

    In the period under review, 78 friendlies, 74 continental qualifiers and 60 FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022™ qualifiers took place.

    Although the teams in the top 10 remain unchanged, there has been some movements.

    France (second, up 1) and Brazil (third, down 1) have traded places, while Spain (seventh, up 2) are the top 10’s biggest movers.

    The Cayman Islands (193rd, up 11) and Grenada (160th, up 13) are the joint-biggest climbers by points, reaping the rewards after their successful showing in the CONCACAF Nations League.

    Read Also: FIBA ranking: Nigeria moves to 23rd

    Indeed, Grenada’s 13-place surge means that they are September’s highest climber by ranks.

    Other notable upwardly-mobile nations include Jamaica (47th, up 5), who have broken into the top 50.

    Others are the Republic of Ireland (28th, up 4), Russia (42nd, up 4), Guatemala (133rd, up 11), Suriname (142nd, up 9), Montserrat (187th, up 9) and Djibouti (186th, up 9).

    Djibouti recently overcame Eswatini (150th, down 11) over two legs to advance to the second round of Africa’s World Cup qualifying for just the second time.

    Meanwhile, Kosovo (119th, up 1) have been rewarded for their impressive performances in UEFA EURO 2020 qualifying by reaching their best-ever position in the FIFA ranking.

    The Cook Islands are not ranked in the latest standings due to not playing an international “A” match in the last four years.

    After their next international “A” match, they will be included in the ranking table again with their points total from July 2019, plus/minus the points won or lost in the new match.

  • Photos: Govs, others at NEC meeting

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Thursday presided over the monthly National Economic Council (NEC) at the State House.

     

    Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, Akwa Ibom State Governor Emmanuel Udom and Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki during the National Economic Council Meeting at the Presidential Villa in Abuja
    Anambra State Governor Willy Obiano, Delta State Governor, Senator Ifeanyi Okowa, Benue State Governor Samuel Urtom and Ebonyi State Governor, Dave Umahi during the National Economic Council Meeting at the Presidential Villa in Abuja
  • Council imposes curfew over cult clashes

    Following incessant cult clashes in Ekete and Ovwian communities of Udu council area of Delta state, a dusk-to-dawn curfew has been imposed on the flash points by the council chairman, Mr. Jite Brown.

    In a statement signed by the council secretary, Elohor Awinoron, the curfew which took effect from Wednesday, lasts from 9pm to 6am.

    According to the statement, the decision was reached after deliberations with Divisional Police Officers and other security chiefs in the council.

    Read Also: Soldier, NSCDC operatives killed as cultists, troops clash in Rivers

    Suspected rival cult groups have recently turned some areas in the communities to hideouts for their criminal operations.
    Residents have been living in fear due to the killings, robberies and other assaults meted on victims.
    Areas affected by the curfew are Ovwian town, Ekete Inland, Ekete Waterside, Owhase town, Express, Mofor and Orhuwhorun Junctions.

    The council chairman stated that the movement of commercial vehicles, including tricycles and motorbikes, commonly referred to as Keke NAPEP and Okada, are also restricted.

    He said anyone found operating within the time of curfew will be impounded and the owner prosecuted.

    Brown further emphasized that security men have been put on red alert to enforce the curfew, urging people in the respective areas to adhere to the directive.

  • JUST IN: kidnapped mother of AIT staff regains freedom

    The abducted mother of Head of DAAR Communications Centre Jos, Plateau state, Mrs. Dinah Ayua, who was whisked away on Saturday in Zakibiam, Ukum local Government of Benue state, area has been freed.

    The 67-year-old was abducted by gunmen in her Zakibiam residence located behind Ukum local government secretariat on Saturday at about 7pm.

    She was blindfolded and forcefully taken away to unknown location in unmasked vehicle

    The son informed our correspondent on phone that her mother was released on Wednesday night at Jootar village, along Zakibiam – Wukari federal highway, in Benue state.

    He stated that he was contacted within 24 hours by her abductors who initially demanded for N10 million ransom.

    Read Also: Three shot as police, vigilante clash in Onitsha

    Ayua, a popular On Air personality and TV was a House of aspirant for Ukum Assembly constituency during the last elections.

    His constituents have invited him to contest for the chairmanship of Ukum local Government in the November local government poll, which has been zoned to his ward.

    He expressed joy over his mother’s released from the kidnappers but called on the state and federal government to save the people of Sankera geo political bloc from activities of hoodlums.

    Insecurity in Sankera comprising Ukum, Logo and Katsina Ala local Government areas known for mass yam farming, has forced residents to relocate to safer zones.

    Benue Police Command said it was investigating the matter .

  • Adopt multi-level policing to address insecurity in Nigeria, Educationist urges FG

    An educationist, Prof. Oyesoji Aremu, has urged the Federal Government to adopt multi-level policing, also known as state police, to address insecurity in Nigeria.

    Aremu, also the Director, Distance Learning Centre, University of Ibadan, made the plea at a two-day 2nd International Conference on Science, Technology, Engineering and Humanities (ICSTEH).

    It was organised by the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnic (ASUP), Yaba College of Technology Chapter, Lagos.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that theme of the conference is: “Technology Applications and Management for Global Security’’.

    Aremu spoke on: “Insecurity and Our Collective Failure: Reappraising Security Architecture for National Stability.’’
    He said insecurity in Nigeria was multi-faceted, adding that the establishment of state police would address the challenge.

    “There is no doubt that ours is a country with daunting security challenges. The insecurity in Nigeria is massive, multifarious and in diverse shades.

    “For over two decades, there has been several calls by stakeholders, especially security experts and public opinions on the need to review the national policing architecture.

    “Given its archaic policing strategies that are at variance with international best practices and current insecurity realities.

    “Nigeria has, for long, deliberately got so many things wrong from independence.

    “One of such crucial things is the floundering nature of unitary police bequeathed to the country which has hindered the nation’s federalism,’’ he said.

    Aremu said many developed countries had adopted multi-level policing to fight crimes and insecurity, urging Nigeria to follow the same vain.

    He said state police was the only way to go in the 21st century to reduce crimes, insecurity, kidnapping, terrorism and other vices confronting the country.

    The educationist said that police in Nigeria were not capable of contending with the gale of terrorism, insurgency and kidnapping in the country.

    “For a long time, the national police, as presently practiced in Nigeria, fractured in many ways, primarily security, and also renders same ineffective given visibility limitations and culture of incompetence, among other things.

     

    Read Also: I’ve solution to end insecurity in Nigeria, says Olumba Olumba

     

    “The federal police is also limited in many ways and not in tandem with the present security challenges and realities of the country.

    “The bad thing is we are in serious security challenge and tension is increasingly building everywhere.

    “One is not even sure of secured places, because the current insecurity discrepancies in our country, places like churches, mosques, higher institutions are no longer secured.

    “The country should begin to address critical policy issues that will culminates in the establishment of multi-level policing.

    “To achieve all these, all hands must be on deck. We are canvassing for the multi-level police.

    “I am an unrepentant advocate of the establishment of a state police,” he said.

    Earlier, Mr Obafemi Omokungbe, Rector of the college, commended the academic union for organising the conference to discuss issues that was relevant and affecting the nation.

    Omokungbe urged participants to come up with recommendations that would help to address insecurity in the country.

    He said insecurity was a mirage that must be quickly tackled.

    Also, Dr Oyeniran Adigun, Chairman, Organising Committee, said that currently, the entire West African region had been facing security challenges and threats, which requires new ways to solve them.

    Adigun said indeed, ensuring sustained peace and security in strategic and essential measures to safeguarding the productive process of stability at the regional level.

    “The 2nd annual academic conference was to explore how technology, entrepreneurship, science, engineering and humanities can be effectively deployed in solving insecurity and economic development of our nation,” he said.

    Earlier, Mr Nureni Yekini, ASUP Chairman, Yabatech chapter, said that the conference was organised in the interest of members of the union and the college community.

    Yekini said all the papers presented in the maiden edition in 2018 were available online, adding that some were used for promotion from one cadre to another.

    He said the conference had gone a long way to promote visibility of the college globally, as search for information on Internet, using any of the keywords of the paper presented at the conference.

    “The keynote of this year conference was chosen by the union, as the national development and unity of the country were being threatened by insecurity of life and property,” he said. (NAN)

  • UPDATED: Court winds-up P&ID, local affiliate

    Upon their conviction on Thursday, a Federal High Court in Abuja ordered the winding-up of a controversial engineering firm, Process and Industrial Development Limited and its affiliate in Nigeria, P&ID Nigeria Limited.

    The court also ordered the forfeiture of their assets and properties to the Federal Government.

    Justice Inyang Ekwo, before whose court the firms pleaded guilty to an 11-count charge of fraud and tax evasion, gave the orders after convicting them on Thursday.

    The charge filed on behalf of the Federal Government by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is in respect of the firms’ unlawful conduct in relation to the controversial Gas Supply Project Agreement (GSPA), over which an arbitration tribunal that sat in London awarded damages estimated at about $9.6billion against Nigeria.

    They were, among others, accused of fraudulently claiming to have acquired land from the Cross River State Government in 2010 for the Gas Supply Project Agreement (GSPA).

    The two companies were represented at the arraignment earlier on Thursday by Mohammad Kuchazi, described as Commercial Director, P&ID Ltd, Virgin Island, and Adamu Usman, identified as representative of P&ID Nigeria Limited.

    The two men pleaded guilty to the charge. While Usman, who is a lawyer represented himself, Kuchazi was represented by a lawyer, Dandison Akurunwua.

    Upon the defendants’ guilty pleas, the prosecution, led by Bala Sanga called its sole witness, Usman Babangida, an EFCC investigator, who mounted the witness box, for the review of facts, which the defence team did not object to.

    Also, the defence did not object to the prosecution’s tendering of documents relating to the 2010 GSPA and EFCC’s investigation activities, which the judge admitted in evidence.

    At the conclusion of the prosecution’s presentation, Justice Ekwo proceeded to convict both firms.

    Read Also: P&ID agents admit fraud, tax evasion charges

    Akurunwua, while praying the court to be lenient with his client, urged the court to consider “the forthrightness and candour” of P&ID by pleading guilty and not wasting the time of the court in the trial.

    Usman, representing the P&ID Nigeria Limited, both as its personality and lawyer, equally spoke in similar manner.

    Responding, Sanga prayed the court to order the winding-up of the firms in sentencing them.

    In his judgment, Justice Ekwo held that the position of the law, in view of the facts, evidence and the defendant’s guilty plea, the orders for the court to make are for the winding up of the companies and forfeiture of their assets.

    The judge proceeded to order the forfeiture of “the assets and properties” of the two firms to the Nigerian government.

  • How Adamawa varsity survived adversities to attain 98% course accreditation

    The management of Adamawa State University, Mubi, has recounted how the institution emerged from Boko Haram occupation of its campus between 2014 and 2015 besides two other crippling challenges to attain 98 percent of its courses duly accredited by the National Universities Commission (NUC).

    The acting Vice Chancellor of the university, Prof Kaletapwa Farauta, spoke when the leadership of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) paid a courtesy call on the university management.

    He stated that Boko Haram invasion and destruction of facilities was followed not long after resumption of academic activities in 2015 by long drawn disharmony between management and staff over entitlements and reduction in allocation to the university in 2017.

    She added that the university has weathered the storms through innovation and personal sacrifices by all members of management and staff.

    “This is the only university in the country where the insurgents gained entrance and sat where we are sitting today (Senate Building). The entire university was overrun, with buildings badly damaged and office equipment, furniture, vehicles destroyed or stolen,” she recounted.

    Farauta, who became acting VC in 2017, said she and other members of management who were appointed in place of a dismissed management team at the time over unending conflicts that involved management, staff and even students, met a polarized university.

    She added that the crisis-ridden environment was made worse by a cut in the subvention by the state government to the university.

    She recalled: “Before July 2017, the percentage of allocation coming to this university was 5%. From the day I walked in here as the acting vice chancellor (July 20, 2017), it was reduced to 3%.

    Explaining some of what have been the university’s surviving strategies, she mentioned prudent management of resources and innovation with accreditation by which the university uses internal staff to conduct mock accreditation exercises in preparation of courses for NUC’s accreditation, among other strategies.

    Read Also: U.S. ICT university to boost ICT in Adamawa

     

    She disclosed that of the 2% of courses yet to be accredited by the NUC, seven are set for NUC’s visitation, namely Mass Communication, Biochemistry, History, languages, Micro Biology, Biochemistry, Geology and Business Administration.

    The state Chairman of the NUJ, Mr Ishaka Dedan, who led other executives of the union on the courtesy visit to the university, appealed for admissions for members of the union seeking such opportunity.

    He pleaded they be granted rebate to enable them take advantage of the favour.

    “We have about 400 members in the state council of the NUJ. Many of this number got into the profession with diploma certificates. Those who may wish to come for higher qualifications, please open your doors to us,” Dedan said.

    He promised the university fair reporting of its events and issues by NUJ members in line with the union’s resolve to partner the university for a mutually benefitting relationship.

  • JUST IN: Osinbajo presides over National Economic Council

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Thursday presided over the monthly National Economic Council (NEC) at the State House.

    In a tweet by Mr. Laolu Akande, the spokesperson to the Prof. Osinbajo, NEC is the constitutional body that advises the President on the coordination of the economic affairs of the country.

    He noted that Governors, the Central Bank of Nigeria governor and some members of the Federal Executive Council were in attendance.

    “Vice President Yemi Osinbajo is now presiding over the monthly National Economic Council, NEC meeting with state governor, CBN governor and some members of the FEC,” he tweeted.

    He then added that, “NEC is the constitutional body that advises the President on the coordination of economic affairs of the Nigerian federation.

    NEC under the leadership of Prof Osinbajo between 2015 to April 2019, passed 173 resolutions in 38 meetings.

    Read Also: Osinbajo raises panel to recover N5tr AMCON debts

    Some of the them include: the approval of $650 million seed funding as the Federal Government established Presidential Infrastructure Development Fund.

    NEC also approved Community Policing in Nigeria as well as synergy among security agencies in a bid to improve intelligence gathering and end internal security crisis which included kidnapping.

    The Council approved the National Transformation Livestock Plan (NLTP) which was launched by the Vice President in Adamawa on September 10.

    NEC under Osinbajo’s leadership approved Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) clinics to help MSME with loans, materials and to make the process of doing business easy.

  • BREAKING: FIBA ranking: Nigeria moves to 23rd

    After the sterling FIBA World Cup outing, Nigeria Basketball Federation has moved up 10 places in the latest FIBA ranking. Nigeria is now ranked 23rd.

    D’Tigers who became the first country in the world to qualify for the World Cup won three games and lost two to finish on the 17th spot out of the 32 teams in China.

  • Xenophobia: Malawian repatriates displaced nationals from South Africa

    The Malawian Government announced on Wednesday that it had hired two buses to repatriate nationals, who were displaced, following xenophobic attacks on foreigners in South Africa.

    The buses left Johannesburg on Tuesday evening and the repatriated Malawians would be back home on Thursday, Secretary for the Department of Disaster Management Affairs, Wilson Moleni, said in a statement.

    Moleni said the repatriation was decided after the government received a report from the Malawi High Commission in South Africa that 113 Malawians had been displaced.

    The displaced Malawians were being kept in temporary shelters set by the South Africa’s disaster management authorities in Katlehong town, 35 kilometres east of Johannesburg, the secretary said in the statement.

    Read Also: Xenophobia and Onyema’s patriotism

    He added: “Out of the 113 displaced Malawians, 76 expressed willingness to return home’’.

    Upon arrival, the repatriated Malawian nationals will be provided with temporary shelter in the commercial city of Blantyre before travelling to their various destinations, according to Moleni.