Tag: reject

  • Betis reject Hapoel Tel Aviv’s loan for Igiebor

    Betis reject Hapoel Tel Aviv’s loan for Igiebor

    Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Tel Aviv have made an audacious attempt to re – sign Nigeria international Nosa Igiebor, the midfielder’s agent, Atta Aneke has confirmed to allnigeriasoccer.com.

    The leadership of the Reds asked Betis about the possibility of taking Nosa Igiebor on loan instead of paying for his transfer fee thought to be around 1.5 million euros. But the proposal from Hapoel was turned down as manager Pepe Mel still has faith in Nosa’s qualities.

    ”Hapoel Tel Aviv approached us for a loan, but neither we or Betis were interested at all. Nosa is playing in Betis and he’s happy there,” Atta Aneke said to allnigeriasoccer.com.

    Nosa Igiebor is contractually bound to Real Betis until the summer of 2016.

  • Kalu’s kinsmen reject his return to PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leaders and stakeholders in his Igbere Ward, Bende Local Government of Abia State have opposed the return and re-registration of former Governor Orji Uzor Kalu to the party.

    They issued a communiqué at the weekend after emergency meeting at the council headquarters.

    The PDP chiefs described Kalu’s re-registration at his Igbere Ward A as illegal, adding that those who registered him had resigned from the party a week before the former governor’s re-registration.

    They demanded clarification on the identity of those who reportedly re-registered Kalu at the ward.

    But in a telephone chat with reporters, Kalu described the party’s ward leaders as jokers who were massaging the egos of their paymasters.

    They described Kalu as an unrepentant chieftain of the Peoples Progressive Alliance (PPA), adding that as the founder and BoT chairman of the party, the former governor has no intention to abandon the PPA.

    The PDP chiefs alleged that the former governor clandestinely entered the PDP to destabilise it.

    The communiqué was signed by 48 leaders and stakeholders, including two lawmakers from the area – Princewill Onyegbu and Ndukwe Ojukwu – as well as Dr Eme Okoro, Prof S. O. Igwe and Iboko Imo Iboko, among others.

  • Baggies reject Osaze’s transfer request

    Baggies reject Osaze’s transfer request

    West Bromwich Albion have turned down a transfer request from striker Peter Osaze Odemwingie.

    The Baggies rejected a bid from QPR for the Nigeria forward earlier this month and the club insist none of their core players are for sale.

    Sporting & technical director Richard Garlick said: ‘Peter is hugely popular with our supporters and it is disappointing that he has decided to hand in a transfer request.

    ‘It was immediately turned down and has done nothing to change our stance during January.

    ‘Peter is under contract until the summer of 2014 and we have no need or desire to sell our core players.

    ‘We want to keep the squad intact to enable us to build on an encouraging first six months of the season.’

    Odemwingie sent a mixed message to supporters after the final whistle against Aston Villa last weekend and said: ‘It’s normal that players move clubs.

    ‘There has been an offer – I’m 31 now and I was thinking to secure my future in the Premier League which is my desire.

    ‘I had a good talk with the owners of the club, I’m here and I’m happy, this is always my club that I love.’

  • 19 US states reject new health insurance market

    Nineteen states have turned down the Obama administration’s invitation to run the new health insurance markets that will begin serving millions of uninsured Americans less than a year from now. That puts a huge task on the feds, a defining challenge for President Barack Obama’s second term.

    Friday is decision day for states to notify Washington if they will set up their own insurance exchanges under the federal health care law. Monitoring by The Associated Press finds a divided nation moving ahead, despite the misgivings of some state officials. Half the states now say they will participate in some way.

    Still, drafters of the law did not anticipate that so many states would remain on the sidelines at this late stage. Federal control of the new state markets where individuals, families and small businesses will shop for taxpayer-subsidised private coverage was seen as a failsafe, not the standard for nearly half the country. Critics predict delays.

    All of the states refusing are led by Republicans.

    On the other side of the ledger, 17 states and Washington, D.C., say they want to set up and run their own markets. The administration has already started granting approvals. Eight other states have indicated they want to pursue a partnership with Washington, and more may do so. Only six remain undecided.

    Exchanges are the gateway to the new health care law for individuals and families who buy their own health insurance, as well as for small businesses.

    Currently, it’s hard to tell what’s a good plan or a fair price. You can get turned down if you have a medical problem, charged more if you are older or a woman. The health care law forbids insurers from turning away the sick, limits what they can charge older people and bans gender-based surcharges. It also requires virtually all Americans to get coverage or face fines.

    Exchanges are supposed to make picking health insurance like buying an airline ticket from an online travel site like Orbitz or Expedia.

    There will be a website, and you’ll be able to put in your ZIP code and get a list of available health plans. There will be a section where you can find out if you qualify for subsidies, or for Medicaid. There will be cost calculators to allow you to compare different levels of coverage: platinum, gold, silver and bronze. There will be tools that allow you to see if your doctor or hospital is with a particular plan.

    Middle-class consumers will be able to find out if they are eligible for government help with their premiums for private insurance. Initially, nearly nine of every 10 taking part will get assistance.

    Low-income people can use the exchanges to find out whether they are eligible for expanded Medicaid coverage under the law. In addition to deciding how to implement exchanges, states must also decide whether to accept the Medicaid expansion. There’s no deadline set for that decision, and most are still weighing options.

    Open enrolment for exchange plans starts next October 1, and coverage begins January 1, 2014. Initially about 10 million people are expected to sign up, growing rapidly thereafter. California, New York and Kentucky are among the states that have opted to create their own exchanges. Among those passing are Texas, Georgia and Kansas. Partnership states include Illinois and West Virginia.

    Republican governors rejecting state exchanges have cited a variety of reasons. Some say the administration has not provided enough information. Others say there’s too much federal regulation. Most have concerns about costs. But some Republican leaders have broken ranks, including governors in Idaho, Nevada and New Mexico, and the insurance commissioner in Mississippi.

    In announcing his support for a state exchange this week, Idaho Governor C.L. “Butch” Otter said, “it would be irresponsible of me to simply abandon the field to federal bureaucrats. In the face of uncertainty we must assert our independence and our commitment to self-determination, while fulfilling our responsibility to the rule of law.”

    Indeed, exchanges have a Republican pedigree. The idea was pioneered in Massachusetts under then-Governor Mitt Romney’s health care overhaul.

    “All this is full of irony,” said consultant Jon Kingsdale, who founded the Massachusetts exchange for Romney. “If you had asked many of those (Republican) governors four years ago before this got politicized, it would have been a no-brainer: `We want the states to do it.’”

    The health care law increased the power of the federal government, but states that run their own exchanges retain important roles overseeing insurance plans, addressing consumer issues and coordinating between the new marketplace and their Medicaid plans. That last item may be the most important, since Medicaid is a major component of state budgets.

     

  • Senators reject N9b more for VP’s house

    Senators reject N9b more for VP’s house

    The Senate Committee on the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) yesterday opposed additional N9billion expenditure on Vice President Namadi Sambo’s official residence, which is being built.

    The Chairman of the Committee, Senator Smart Adeyemi, who visited the site, said spending such a huge amount of money was uncalled for, particularly now that Nigerians cannot afford three square meals.

    The Executive Secretary of the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA), Adamu Ismail had told the lawmakers that the project was awarded in 2009 at N7billion.

    The proposed additional N9billion, he said, is needed for furniture, fencing, two more protocol guest houses, a banquet hall and security gadgets.

    Ismail said the proposal was not included in the original scope of work being handled by construction giant Julius Berger Nigeria Limited.

    Adeyemi said: “The National Assembly is not going to appropriate additional N9billion for the project, especially at a period in this country when people cannot get three square meals.

    “The N9billion is far more than the original cost of the project.”

    The Vice Chairman of the Committee, Senator Domingo Obende, however, asked the Executive Secretary to submit the additional scope of work for which the fund is required to the committee for scrutiny.

    Ismail told the lawmakers that the proposed N9billion has been slashed to about N6billion by the Bureau for Public Procurement (BPP).

    He said: “We have worked out the details and passed to BPP for consideration. They (BPP) have sent it back to us with their observation.

    “We requested for N9billion but now it came to about N 6billion.”

    To Adeyemi, the N14 billion is indefensible, “in view of present realities”.

    He said: “Now you are asking us to approve a total sum of about N14 billion and this is just the Vice President’s residence.

    “N14billion, to me, is huge for the Vice President’s house. If you are even talking of N10 billion that would be understandable.

    “The reality is that N14 billion is indefensible and that is our submission. In Nigeria, there are still many people with empty stomach. So, we have to look at budgeting in relation to the needs of the people.”

    Vice President Sambo lives in Aguda House, one of the buildings officially designated as Presidential guest houses.

    President Goodluck Jonathan also stayed in the Aguda House when he was vice president in the Yar’Adua presidency.

    At the outset of this Republic in 1999, Vice President Atiku Abubakar stayed in the house which the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) currently occupies.

    During the second term of the Obasanjo presidency – when there was no row between President Olusegun Obasanjo and Atiku, it was then declared that the then VP was staying in the official residence of the CJN according to the Abuja masterplan.

    The former VP then moved to his private residence – shunning the Aguda House where he was told to relocate.

    The Vice President’s residence under construction is a sprawling one-storey building sitting on a wide expanse of land beside the Millennium Park and behind the Yellow House headquarters of the State Security Service (SSS).

    The edifice has a wide outer and inner living rooms and sitting rooms. There is a chapel and mosque on the left and right of the house respectively.

    The building has been plastered with work on the central cooling system still ongoing. The inner sitting room is laid with marble tiles. The sewage and water system has been completed. The doors and windows are yet to be fixed. The landscaping of the compound has commenced but the roads are not tarred and the floor not tiled.

  • Rangers reject Otorogu

    Rangers reject Otorogu

    Enugu Rangers will not sign former Orlando Pirates striker Ezenwa Otorogu, who has been training with them for several weeks.

    MTNFootball.com checks have already revealed that the big striker has already begun training with Rangers neighbours Heartland with the hope to sign for the Owerri club.

    Otorogu, who has also featured for Enyimba, demanded a 12 million Naira fee to rejoin former club Rangers after he was released by another South African club Bloemfontein Celtic.

    He scored a couple of goals but mainly from the penalty spot for Rangers in pre-season training.

    However, there were concerns over his fitness with speculations he is nursing an injury.

    Otorogu had his first training with Heartland on Wednesday.

    “He is now training with us,” said Heartland skipper Chinedu Efugh.

  • Benue ACN lawmakers reject council poll result

    Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) lawmakers in the Benue State House of Assembly have renewed their called for the scrapping of state electoral bodies.

    They rejected the results of last Saturday’s local government election in the state.

    In a statement in Makurdi, the state capital, by Minority Leader Adugu Gbilive and Minority Chief Whip Terkimbir Ikyange, the ACN lawmakers urged Nigerians to call for the scrapping of state electoral bodies through the ongoing constitutional amendment.

    They noted that the “charade” the Benue State Independent Electoral Commission (BSIEC) allegedly displayed during the conduct of the poll has shown that state electoral bodies are tools in the hands of some governors.

    The opposition lawmakers said they encountered several difficulties during their screening after paying N100,000 for councillorship and N200,000 for chairmanship.

    They described the process as a sham.

    The lawmakers said after ACN secured 10 seats in the Assembly, three in the House of Representatives and a senatorial seat, it would be naive for anyone to undermine the spread of the party in Benue State.

    “We distance ourselves from the charade called council election and request our teeming supporters to be law-abiding in the interest of peace,” they said.

  • Assembly to reject fresh bills six months before tenure lapses

    To avoid controversy, the Lagos State House of Assembly has resolved to stop accepting new bills six months before the expiration of its tenure.

    Its decision may not be unconnected with the controversy generated by the passing of the Coroner law by the sixth Assembly.

    At the first Eid-El-Adha get together organised by the Assembly’s Muslim Community, Deputy Speaker Kolawole Taiwo said: “Because of the controversy generated by the Coroner law, the House has made it a point of duty not to accept bills six months before the expiration of the administration.”

    Insisting that the House followed due process in passing the Coroner law, Taiwo said the bill was discussed in haste because of time constraint.

    A participant at the event had complained that the public were not given “adequate access” to the bill and subsequent debate on it by the Assembly.

    “But despite the time constraint, members of the public especially religious groups were allowed to make their contributions during the public hearing on the coroner bill and a thorough job was done,” the deputy speaker said.

    In a lecture entitled: “The roles of Muslim lawmakers in social engineering”, Chairman, House Committee on Judiciary and Public Petitions, Hon. Sanai Agunbiade, said the lawmakers’ roles were generally representative, adding that they should strive to make laws that would be beneficial to their constituents.

    He said as Muslim lawmakers, they must monitor the executive without fear or favour.

    Agunbiade also charged his colleagues to assist the executive by pointing out its mistakes in order to promote love and understanding.

    He said lawmakers should recognise that they were elected by votes from their constituents, urging them to subsume their interests to others during their stay in the Assembly.

    He also advised Muslim legislators to abide by the injunctions of Allah while carrying out their duties, saying: “any Muslim lawmaker who knows the injunctions of Allah and does not follow them is not a true Muslim.”

  • Delta, Edo, Ekiti, Ondo reject sale of PHCN firm

    Delta, Edo, Ekiti, Ondo reject sale of PHCN firm

    Governors of four states that lost the bid for the Benin Electricity Distribution Company (DISCO) have vowed to stop the winner, Vigeo Power Consortium, from taking its prize.

    The four states bidded for the Benin DISCO, one of the offspring of the behemoth Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), through their technical partner, Southern Electricity Distribution Consortium, but lost the bid to Vigeo.

    Governors Adams Oshiomhole (Edo), Emmanuel Uduaghan (Delta) and Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti) spoke at a news conference in Abuja yesterday.

    The governors said their states, along with Ondo State, bidded for the company.

    Oshiomhole, who spoke on behalf of the others, described the bid process, as conducted by the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), as fraudulent. It failed the credibility test, he said.

    But the BPE and Vigeo Power Limited denied the allegation of lack of tranparency and incompetence.

    The governor said: “The entire process was a racket that’s inconsistent with running a transparent government. The BPE used a set of criteria that have never been used before.

    “The figures put forward by Vigeo were shady and we observed that funny things started happening, even before the bids were opened.

    “A number of technical issues are at stake in this exercise. The winners of the bid have little knowledge about the environment in which they want to operate. The BPE manipulated the process in favour of the preferred bidder.”

    The protesting state executives maintained that besides lacking the technical know-how to operate the company, Vigeo sponsors do not have the required financial capability to handle the project.

    According to them, having invested huge taxpayers’ money from their various states in the electricity distribution projects, they are not going to sit idly by and watch their people’s investments go down the drain.

    The governors wondered how Vigeo’s technical partner, NDPL, with operational scope of 510 square kilometers, won a bid to operate a 57, 000 square kilometres service territory in an area like the Niger Delta without any knowledge of that volatile area.

    “They (Vigeo) do not even know the area, yet they want to do something in five years that they have not been able to do in 11 years in an urban 500-kilometre territory they are currently operating in.

    “Our consortium is led by the industry leader in India, covering 4328 villages and 43 towns. It won the Gold Shield Award for the Year 2011 for utility excellence, posting the highest loss reduction ever in Asia (6.6 percent in 2010) and (10.12 percent in 2011),” the governors emphasised.

    They lamented what they described as an attempt by the BPE to further cripple the power sector by manipulating the bid process in favour of individuals with the “right connection” but without the required financial muscle and technical know-how to operate the project.

    They insisted that the winners of the bid quoted forged figures and cooked up the books just to win, adding that the people in their states will be made to suffer if the “manipulation” is allowed to stand. The government of the day will also suffer the backlash, they said.

    Oshiomhole went on: “In our region, you cannot succeed in operating the utility without the participation of the state governments, knowledge of the environment and relationship with the different stakeholders like the youth, community leaders and others. Our consortium passed all these tests, but others did not.

    “Our states have invested heavily in power generation, transmission and distribution across the length and breadth of our respective states as we recognise the importance of power as the precondition for socio-economic growth and industrialisation of our states.

    “It was for this reason that we participated in the bid process and came out as the most technically competent with the consortium that is most suited to the peculiarities of our region. The BPE should not play with our collective future.”

  • Salami: Acting Appeal Court president urges court to reject NJC’s stand

    The Acting President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Dalhatu Adamu, has urged the Federal High Court to reject the National Judicial Council’s (CJN’s) position on the recall of Justice Isa Ayo Salami.

    The NJC has asked the court to declare that its decision on Justice Salami is final and that the President has no role in the matter.

    The position of Justice Adamu, who is a member of the National Judicial Council (NJC) by virtue of his is positiuon, is against the suit by the Registered Trustees of Centre for the Promotion of Arbitration.

    Filed by 11 Plaintiffs before the Federal High Court, the suit is seeking the reinstatement of Justice Salami to his duty post.

    The NJC, acting on the recommendation of three-member panel, decided to reinstate Justice Salami and has communicated its decision to President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The plaintiffs are: Mr. Jitobo Akanike, Idris Musa, Allens Agbaka, Ibrahim Bawa, Princewill Akpakpan, Obruche Ayeteni, Nosa Ihaza, Timothy Odumosu, Stewart Salomi, Egogo Lawrence and Maxwell Adeniran.

    The Defendants are Jonathan, the Attorney General of the Federation and Justice Minister, NJC, Salami and Justice Adamu.

    While Jonathan and AGF were yet to file their responses as at the last sitting, NJC, in its response, agreed with the Plaintiffs that the power to recall suspended Justice Salami solely and exclusively belongs to it without any recourse to the direction or authority of any other person outside the council including the President.

    But Justice Adamu has asked the court to discountenance the council’s position and dismiss the suit in its entirety.

    Contrary to the argument of the NJC, Justice Adamu said the council was wrong to say that it has absolute power to reinstate Justice Salami without the approval of the President. That will “amount to usurpation of the powers of the President,” he said.

    His assertion is contained in his written address filed by Sebastin Hon (SAN) in opposition to the Plaintiffs originating summons.

    Justice Adamu said: “It is not correct, as urged by the Plaintiffs/Respondents’ Counsel that by the clear wordings of paragraph 21(b) of Part 1 of the Third Schedule to the Constitution, the 1st Defendant (Jonathan) has no disciplinary powers to exercise over a Judicial Officer.

    “Since both suspension and dismissal mean temporary or permanent removal, respectively, from office on disciplinary grounds, it then means that the NJC, having in this case recommended to the President of Nigeria the suspension of the 4th Defendant, the President was right to have suspended the 4th Defendant; and it is no more within the competence of the 3rd Defendant(NJC) to turn around to overreach the President and or torpedo his action on the said recommendation, by unilaterally recalling the 4th Defendant (Salami). This will, with respect, amount to usurpation of the powers of the President.

    “The power of the President to exercise such disciplinary powers over the 4th Defendant on the recommendation of the NJC is akin to the powers of the Governor over other named judicial officers.

    “We further submit that there is no constitutional provision which binds the 3rd Defendant to implement any recommendation relating to the recall of the 4U Defendant.

    “It our submissiçn that even if there is a recommendation by any panel of the 3rd Defendant to recall the 4th Defendant, such recommendation cannot be binding on the 1st Defendant to act upon.

    “..,,the President of Nigeria has constitutional powers to exercise disciplinary powers over the President of the Court of Appeal. Mr. President having not yet lifted the suspension of the 4th Defendant in this case, it is futile to posit, with due respect, that with the so called recommendation of the 3rd Defendant’s three-man panel that the 4th Defendant be recalled (which in any case is not proved), all issues relating to the suspension/recall of the 4th Defendant have been put to an end.

    Justice Adamu, through his counsel, also submitted that Plaintiffs’ evidence on the recommendations of the NJC three-member panel chaired by the incumbent Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Mariam Aloma-Mukhtar, is “hearsay evidence and therefore inadmissible to form the basis for the determination of this Issue”.

    But the NJC, in its written address to the Plaintiffs’ originating Summons stated that “the exercise of disciplinary power and recall of a suspended Justice of the Court of Appeal is exclusively vested in the NJC by the Constitution.

    It also stated that the extension of Justice Dalhatu Adamu’s appointment as the Acting PCA is unconstitutional, illegal, null and void by virtue of section 238(5) of the 1999 Constitution.

    The NJC argued that Justice Adamu cannot be re-appointed by President Jonathan after the expiration of the three months in office without its recommendation.

    “By the combined provisions of Sections 153, 158 (1) of the Constitution, and the National Judicial Council’s power to exercise disciplinary control over Judicial officers contained in paragraph 21 (1) of the part 1, third schedule of the Constitution, the 3rd Defendant is to Unilaterally and Exclusively exercise disciplinary control over the Judicial officers.

    “The only instances the 3rd Defendant exercises its powers in conjunction with the President is in appointment and removal of judicial officers and do not extend to the 3rd Defendant’s disciplinary control over the Judicial officers and reinstatement/recalling of suspended Judicial officers; these, we submit, are residual powers exercisable by the 3rd Defendant exclusively.

    “The foregoing submission is strengthened by Section 158 of the Constitution as amended which states that the 3rd Defendant “shall not be subject to the direction or control of any other authority or person”.

    By the provision of Section 158 (1) of the Constitution, the NJC argued that it needs no recourse at all to the President in exercising its powers as expounded above.