Tag: satellite

  • NIMASA uses satellite to rescue fishing vessel

    The Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) has launched its satellite surveillance system in conjunction with the Nigerian Navy and the Air Force, and successfully rescued a Ghanaian fishing vessel Marine 711 from suspected hijackers last week.

    The vessel, NIMASA sources said, was hijacked off the coast of Ghana and sailed across Togo and Benin Republic to Nigerian waters when the Embassy of the Republic of Korea contacted the agency to help rescue the vessel owned by its national.

    The Ghanaian Fisheries Authority and the operators of the fishing vessel requested NIMASA to end the attack.

    In an operation coordinated by NIMASA’s  Director of Shipping Development, Capt. Warredi Enisuoh, the source said, the new surveillance system with Cloud penetrating radar capabilities was brought to bear and the incident was resolved within six hours.

    NIMASA, working with the Nigerian Navy through the sea and the Nigerian Air Force through the air, it was gathered, attacked the hijackers who abandoned the vessel and fled.

    The 24-hour surveillance centre, NIMASA said, has the capability to detect boats, ships and objects of predefined cross-section floating on the waters. These include any aircraft that ditches and remains on the surface during satellite over-flight.

    The Director-General of NIMASA, Mr Patrick Akpobolokemi, expressed satisfaction with the cooperation of the Ghanaian Authorities, Navy and the Air Force in the operation and said the agency would continue to utilise cutting-edge technology and partnership with the military to secure the waters to facilitate trade.

    This, according to NIMASA, is the first regional cooperation between NIMASA, Nigerian Navy, Nigerian Air Force and the Ghanaian Authorities in the anti-piracy war in the Gulf of Guinea, which is hinged on the provisions of the Bilateral Agreement on Regional cooperation on anti-piracy in the Gulf of Guinea.

    Nigeria, as a signatory to the International Safety of Life and Sea (SOLAS) and Search and Rescue (SAR) Conventions, is obliged to intervene and provide co-ordination during safety and security-related incidents on her territorial waters and beyond.

    The International Maritime Organisation (IMO) designated Nigeria as one of the five Regional Maritime Rescue Co-ordination Centres (RMRCCs) in Africa. Nigeria therefore provides SAR and Security Co-ordination on the waters of Benin Republic, Cameroon, Congo, Gabon, Sao Tome & Principe and Togo, in addition to its own territorial waters.

  • Airtel, Thuraya partner on mobile satellite connectivity

    Airtel, Thuraya partner on mobile satellite connectivity

    Leading mobile satellite services (MSS) operator, Thuraya Telecommunications Company, and Bharti Airtel International, have signed an agreement to provide the telco’s customers mobile satellite products and services in Nigeria and 16 other African countries.

    According to a statement, the partnership will provide the telco’s customers voice and broadband connectivity through Thuraya’s satellite network across the continent’s most remote areas, adding that with effect from next month, Airtel will sell Thuraya’s products and airtime packages at their retail outlets and through their enterprise account team.

    Extending mobile networks into remote or rural areas presents both geographical obstacles and business challenges for connecting people in Africa. Thuraya’s satellite network helps bridge the digital divide by providing an immediate and cost-effective way for Airtel Africa to extend its coverage, while generating new revenue streams and providing vital connectivity. Thuraya’s mobile satellite service can address the diverse voice and data communication needs of Airtel Africa enterprise users across the mining, energy, media, government and humanitarian NGO sectors.

    Chief Executive Officer, Thuraya, Samer Halawi, said: “Thuraya’s partnership with Airtel Africa is a very positive development in bridging the digital divide in Africa. We recognise the massive impact that access to reliable communications can have on the lives of ordinary people. Thuraya’s robust satellite network will enable Airtel Africa to provide its consumer and enterprise users with reliable, high quality voice and broadband services. Thuraya is well-positioned to support customer-centric mobile operators like Airtel Africa that are looking to extend their network and services with satellite-based solutions.”

    Commenting on the deal, Chief Executive Officer, Airtel Africa, Christian de Faria, said: “Providing reliable connectivity in many remote parts of Africa can be challenging. This partnership enables us to further extend our coverage and services for businesses and general consumers who live or work in very remote areas. Thuraya’s satellite services will be combined with the reliable, high-quality voice calls and broadband access that our customers are accustomed to experiencing in our urban centers.”

     

  • Eutelsat’s $400m satellite for Africa

    Global satellite firm, Eutelsat said it will soon launch another satellite valued at $400 million to provide capacity to Africa and grow the continent’s economy.

    Commercial Development and Marketing Director, Data and Telecoms, Eutelsat, Philippe Lau who spoke on the sideline with The Nation in Cape Town South Africa, said the firm is rolling out the latest satellite technologies and services to support markets for digital broadcasting, VSAT networks, mobile backhauling, internet protocol (IP) trunking and broadband access.

    He said new satellites will soon be coming to the continent which are designed to provide internet service providers (ISPs), telcos, mobile phone operators, video companies and government service providers with national, regional and continental coverage as well as connectivity with Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia.

    He said: “Over 50 per cent of the 1400 satellite channels in Africa and Indian Ocean islands broadcast from one of Eutelsat’s market-leading video neighbourhoods. Channels have increased by 20 per cent over the last two years with majority of video activity concentrated at two Eutelsat’s position.

    “In addition to these longstanding neighbourhoods, the sub-Saharan Africa footprint of Eutelsat 7A has been selected by Azam Media Limited to broadcast its new TV venture. Azam Tv, starting in East Africa from its base in Tanzania. It will offer over 55 African and international channels including three home-grown channels. Azam One, Azam Two and Sinema Zetu (films in Kiswahili) and premier league matches. In addition to capacity and uplink services, Eutelsat has developed a training programmne for installers called Satellite to ensure that subscribers to Azam Tv receives the best service for the installation of their direct to home (DTH) equipment.”

    According to him, the f2irm has unique portfolio of satellite resources spanning C, Ku and Ka bands equipped to respond to multiple markets and affords a high level of commercial flexibility. C-band capacity is connected to powerful continental footprints offering unrivalled service availability for robust data networks, Kubnad trasponders are connected to high-power regional beams optimised for broadcasting and also for data. In the higher Ka-band range of frequencies, eutelsat has already deployed capacity over North Africa with KA-SAT satellite for broadcast services this capacity will be expanded in 2014 with 38 satellites, he said.

  • Witness accounts, satellite images fuel   concerns of alleged cover-up in Baga

    Witness accounts, satellite images fuel concerns of alleged cover-up in Baga

    Who is lying? The Army said only 36 were killed in Baga and few houses were destroyed, but satellite images analysed by Human Rights Watch said no fewer than 2,275 buildings were destroyed and agreed with residents that 183 people were killed, writes Reuters.

    Satellite images reveal massive destruction of civilian property from a military raid on April 16 and 17, 2013, in the northern Nigerian town of Baga, undermining the military’s claim that only 30 houses were destroyed, Human Rights Watch said on Wednesday. It urged the government to thoroughly and impartially investigate allegations that soldiers carried out widespread destruction and killing in the town.

    Baga residents told Human Rights Watch that soldiers ransacked the town after the Boko Haram militant Islamist group attacked a military patrol, killing a soldier. Community leaders said immediately after the attack they counted 2,000 burned homes and 183 bodies. Satellite images of the town analysed by Human Rights Watch corroborate these accounts and identify 2,275 destroyed buildings, the vast majority likely residences, with another 125 severely damaged.

    “The Nigerian military has a duty to protect itself and the population from Boko Haram attacks, but the evidence indicates that it engaged more in destruction than in protection,” said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “The glaring discrepancies between the facts on the ground and statements by senior military officials raise concerns that they tried to cover up military abuses.”

    Since the attack, the military has restricted journalists’ access to Baga, a remote fishing community on the shores of Lake Chad, 200 kilometers northeast of the city of Maiduguri. Boko Haram has destroyed mobile telephone towers in the area, claiming that security services used mobile phones to track down its members, making communication particularly difficult for survivors of the attack.

    Human Rights Watch interviewed seven residents of Baga who fled the town on the night of the devastation. Many survivors spent several nights hiding in the bush and expressed fear in describing what they saw, fearing military retaliation.

    Military officials publicly said that on the evening of April 16, Boko Haram attacked a military patrol in Baga, killing a soldier and wounding five others. Military reinforcements responded by engaging Boko Haram militants, whom the military said were armed with assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, and improvised explosive devices. There were running gun battles through the town, the military said.

    In a statement released the week following the attack, Brig. Gen. Austin Edokpaye, the commander of the troops in Baga, asserted that “(c)ontrary to media speculation that hundreds of houses were burnt down, instead, it was the explosions from Boko Haram terrorists’” weapons that “triggered fire to about 30 thatched houses.”

    Residents recalled hearing some explosions as well as gunfire on the night of the attack. Many fled the town. One resident, a 42-year-old-fisherman, told Human Rights Watch that while he was fleeing he saw two men in civilian clothes, whom he assumed were Boko Haram members because they were not in uniform, running while firing assault rifles. Residents said that, as they were fleeing the heavy gunfire, they saw bodies in the streets and in front of houses.

    Some residents said they saw soldiers in uniform kill residents and burn houses. A 27-year-old woman, who stayed in her house after the gunfire erupted, described to Human Rights Watch how soldiers went door-to-door looking for any men that remained in her neighborhood.

    “I saw the soldiers drag a man out of another house. They started beating him with their guns. They were beating him severely and he was crying,” she said. “The man then ran, and I saw the soldiers shoot him. I heard the gunshots and saw him fall. On the other side of the road the soldiers were beating other people.”

    Another resident, a 32-year-old fisherman, believes soldiers killed his uncle, whose bad leg kept him from fleeing the town. He discovered his uncle’s badly beaten body after the attack.

    “We had heard the soldiers say before [the attack] that since you people are not cooperating with us and are hiding your brothers, we will treat you as one of them,” the fisherman told Human Rights Watch. “I heard the soldiers say this. Everyone heard them say this. They were saying this in the open.”

    The area where the attacks took place, Borno State, is Boko Haram’s stronghold. Military officials have accused Borno State residents of harboring Boko Haram members. Boko Haram has killed numerous Borno State residents, including community leaders whom it accuses of helping authorities identify group members, which has created a climate of fear in the area.

    There are conflicting accounts as to how many people were killed in the attack. A community leader who participated in the burial of victims told Human Rights Watch that 183 people were buried on April 18 in individual graves within two cemeteries. Other victims were also later buried, he said. The military called these figures “terribly inflated,” and in an April 22 statement, Edokpaye claimed that only 37 people were killed – 30 of them Boko Haram members. He said that only one soldier and six civilians died.

    Senator Maina Lawan, the federal senator representing Baga, told Human Rights Watch, based on a two-day site visit on April 25 and 26, that some 220 people had been buried in three cemeteries, while six others had been buried in separate locations.

    None of the residents interviewed by Human Rights Watch saw how the fires were started on the night of April 16, but they all described seeing parts of the town alight. Two residents who returned to the town the following morning, April 17, said they saw soldiers in military vehicles setting fire to houses.

    “I saw a group of soldiers throw explosive devices into houses,” one of the residents, a farmer, recalled. “They would throw [the explosive] and then fire would come out of it. I saw them do this to about 10 houses.”

    Satellite images analyzed by Human Rights Watch indicate that damaged structures were likely caused by intense and widespread fires. Additional satellite data detected the presence of active fires in the southern part of the town on the night of April 16 and during the day of April 17, consistent with witness accounts and the location of identified building damages.

    Because of the number of buildings destroyed by fire as well as their distribution across large sections of the town, Human Rights Watch believes that such fires were intentionally set and not inadvertently sparked by the detonation of rocket-propelled grenades or improvised explosive devices. Such weapons could not ignite fires on such a wide scale, nor could they set fire to non-attached structures. Small arms and light weapons do not contain the amount of explosive or incendiary material to produce such a scale of damage, Human Rights Watch said.

    “The destruction and killings by soldiers in Baga are serious human rights violations,” Bekele said. “The government needs to investigate and prosecute the perpetrators, regardless of rank.”

    As reports of the Baga attack filtered out, President Goodluck Jonathan ordered a “full-scale investigation into reports of high civilian casualties.” The Defence Headquarters in Abuja sent a military team to investigate the incident.

    Brig. Gen. Chris Olukolade, the director of defence information, and a member of the military team sent to Baga to investigate, told Human Rights Watch after his visit that reports of civilian casualties and homes destroyed were “grossly exaggerated.” He said that “the atrocities, if any, were carried out by the insurgents in an attempt to cause destruction and attack people not sympathetic to their cause.” The military team said they visited two graveyards in Baga but could only identify 32 fresh graves.

    Community leaders, including a senior politician interviewed by Human Rights Watch, allege that the military is trying to cover up evidence of what happened. In the past, Nigerian military authorities have repeatedly denied or even covered up reports of security force abuses, Human Rights Watch said.

    The Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, which in 2010 opened a “preliminary examination” of the situation in Nigeria, has indicated that crimes committed by Boko Haram members might constitute crimes against humanity, and members of the Nigerian security forces might also have committed serious human rights violations in their operations against Boko Haram. This incident in Baga should be added to the prosecutor’s preliminary examination of Nigeria, Human Rights Watch said.

    “There’s a tragic lack of accountability for atrocities with high body counts in Nigeria,” said Bekele. “The government needs to end this murderous cycle of violence by bringing all those responsible to justice.”

    Witness Accounts

    A 27-year-old woman who lived in the “Hausa Quarters” of Baga told Human Rights Watch that on the night of April 16, soldiers dragged a man out of a house in her neighborhood and shot him: “I was in my house at night, after prayers, when we heard gunshots. Everybody was in a panic and people were running. My husband wasn’t home, so I was very disturbed. I asked my neighbors what am I going to do because my husband isn’t around? My neighbors ran, but I couldn’t carry my two children, so I stayed inside the house.

    “I saw soldiers come into the community. They came in military vehicles. The soldiers were shouting “Come out! Come out!” They asked me if there any men in the house. I said there were none. One of the soldiers came inside and searched the house. He then told us to go outside. When we were outside I saw the soldiers drag a man out of another house. They started beating him with their guns. They were beating him severely and he was crying. The man then ran, and I saw the soldiers shoot him. I heard the gunshots and saw him fall. On the other side of the road the soldiers were beating other people.

    “The soldiers told me to leave the place, pushing me to go. I held one of my children in my arms and the other one I dragged. I was with two other women. We heard gunshots everywhere, so we did not know who was who. When we were running we saw dead bodies on the road and some outside houses. Some [of the bodies] were women and children, but the children were fewer. Army vehicles were passing from here to there, and we saw things with the lights of the vehicles. We were trying to run to save our lives.

    “We went into the bush and were moving without knowing where we were going. There were a lot of people inside the bush. When we went about half a kilometer, we saw fire everywhere [back] in the town. Almost at midnight we reached one place and slept there. The following day we woke up and found our way toward [name of location withheld].

    “Later we heard that all the houses around where we lived were burned…. We lost two people among our family: my brother and my cousin. I was told some people saw their dead bodies in the river. Even my neighbors lost family members – both men and women. I have not gone back to Baga.”

    A farmer described to Human Rights Watch how soldiers set fire to houses in the “Kampala Ward” of Baga on the morning of April 17: “On Tuesday [April 16] around 8 p.m. we heard gunshots in the town. I was in the house. Our house is in the northern part of Baga. I heard gunshots and explosions in the southern part of the town. I also saw fire. I stayed in our house for about two hours. The gunshots started to increase rapidly and we saw that a large part of the town was on fire. When we saw this, I ran to the bush with my family. We spent the night in the bush.

    “The following morning, I came back to the town. I saw about six military vehicles and groups of soldiers in Kampala Ward. The soldiers were putting fire on the houses. It was about 9:30 a.m. I saw a group of soldiers throw explosive devices into houses. It was a military device which as a layman I would not know. They would throw it and then fire would come out of it. I saw them do this to about 10 houses. I was about 100 meters away. I snuck out of the place and ran back to the bush…. I [haven’t gone] back to my house, but my older brother said that that our area wasn’t affected. None of my family members were killed.”

    A 42-year-old fisherman described how he and his family fled their home in “Kalumbu Quarters” of Baga after gunfire erupted on the evening of April 16: “It was on Tuesday, around 7 p.m. we heard gunshots and all of us ran into the house. I live in Kalumbu Quarters. It is in the middle of the town. The gunshots were getting too much and were getting closer to our quarters. We came out and ran helter-skelter everywhere. I was with my family – my wife and two children – and some neighbors. We heard gunshots everywhere. We also heard a lot of explosions. Two of my friends I work with were shot. We were running together with them. They were behind us and we saw them fall. We couldn’t do anything about it. We just ran to escape the bullets.

    “I don’t know whether it was military or Boko Haram [who shot them]. We saw two people with Kalashnikovs [AK assault rifles]. They were not wearing army uniforms. I think they were Boko Haram members. They were running and shooting. We saw some [other] dead bodies by the side of the road. A neighbor of mine and his two children were also killed in the incident. We ran together with them – they were behind us. When we looked back we didn’t see them. The other people who came from that side told us that they were killed. We ran toward [name of location withheld], because it would be safer there.

    “After we left the town, we saw some fires in the town…. I heard that my house has been burned and the houses of most of my neighbors were burned. We were told that 45 percent of the town has been burned. I will never go back there. What will I do there?”

  • The satellite approach to mass education

    The satellite approach to mass education

    Undoubtedly, President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration has made unprecedented progress across the country in the creation of access to quality education amongst less privileged Nigerians. The statistics are clear and the results are nationwide. These are facts that cannot be disputed, even by die-hard critics of the administration.

    A few examples will suffice. Schools for almajiris across the country, special girl-child schools in educationally disadvantaged communities, on-going construction of schools for out-of-school boys in the Southsouth and Southeast and direct intervention in the improvement of facilities in existing schools in the country. At the tertiary level the Federal Government established nine new Federal Universities with eight already on stream, while another three were recently approved. Within the same period, nine new private universities were also awarded licences to operate.

    This programmed improvement of education opportunities for Nigerians has been premised on the fundamental goal of creating access to basic and tertiary education of the four-year strategy plan for the development of the education sector, 2011 to 2015.

    Beyond the achievements that have been recorded so far as regards the creation of access to schools for Nigerian children and adults, the Federal Government has resolved to directly involve the private sector in working out novel ways to reach those in remote communities of the nation.

    The novel arrangement worked out between the Federal Ministry of Education and Daar Communications Plc will ensure that education signals in all subject areas in the basic education sub-sector are disseminated to Nigerian children residing in the 774 local government areas of the country.

    Minister of State for Education Ezenwo Nyesom Wike said the Federal Government is ready to partner with stakeholders in the private and public sector to deliver quality basic education.

    Wike announced that of the N29billion needed for the project, the Federal Government would not make any financial commitments, aside facilitating the participation of local and state governments.

    Chairman of Daar Communications, Chief Raymond Dokpesi said his outfit would commit 22 dedicated channels to airing education programmes patterned in line with approved Federal Ministry of Education curriculum.

    Dokpesi added that highly trained and qualified teachers have been recruited to deliver lessons to Nigerian children. The local teachers in the respective schools are also partners of the project as they are expected to assist their wards in using the satellite facilities.

    Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Education, Dr MacJohn Nwaobiala described the project as a landmark initiative to extend the benefits of the Federal Government’s education programmes to all the nooks and crannies of Nigeria.

    Indeed, for the programme to succeed, the states and the local government areas need to buy into the initiative. The Federal Ministry of Education has already opened dialogue with State Education Commissioners and Local Government Education Authorities to ensure effective participation in the deployment of these facilities to schools across the country.

    Daar Communications has the responsibility to reach out to the governors and also source for the financial resources to execute the project. Dr. Dokpesi is already reaching out to the governors.

    Indeed, many more Nigerian children will be reached because of the impact of television on young minds. For the children in rural communities, this would be an entirely new experience that would open up their world.

    A comprehensive analysis of the expected challenges of the project has been conducted by experts in the private and public sectors, with the conclusion that the programme can be executed successfully. If other challenges arise in the course of project implementation, stakeholders insist that they are committed to address such challenges.

     

    •Nwakaudu is the Special Assistant (Media) to Minister of State for Education.

  • NAMA to switch to satellite air navigation soon

    NAMA to switch to satellite air navigation soon

    Barring any last minute changes, the Nigeria Air space Management Agency (NAMA) plans to switch from ground-based air navigation to satellite system soon, its General Manager, Public Affairs Mr Supo Atobatele has said.

    Migration to satellite-based navigation, according to experts, is expected to reduce the work load of some air navigation personnel, including air traffic controllers, as an aircraft fit with the modern technology is supposed to fly without any guidance by air traffic controllers until it gets close to the airport of arrival.

    When the new system comes into force, NAMA will require fewer air traffic controller to assist aircraft in flight.

    To achieve the implementation of the performance-based navigation, NAMA last year urged airline operators and pilots to key into the satellite system.

    Mr Atobatele told reporters that at a meeting between the agency and airlines’ operators and pilots , thelatter were informed about the need to key into the satellite system.

    “Recently, we met with the pilots in the industry and airline operators, just to inform them about the development in NAMA, particularly the satellite-based navigation system also known as performance-based navigational system. As you know, some weeks ago, we migrated from the terrestrial air navigation system to the satellite-based navigation system.

    “So, we need to tell them what we have on ground and what they should do. Particularly, for you to operate within the sphere of the PBN system, your aircraft must be compliance, it must carry the prerequisite gadgets. So, what we are trying to do is to just inform them.”

    He, however, stressed that any moment, NAMA would announce the commencement of the satellite system, adding that the airlines that would operate on the system are only those whose aircraft are compliance with the PBN system.

    “Anytime from now, we will announce a specific date for the commencement of the PBN system in Nigeria, particularly for the major air routes and airports, such as Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcort, and Kano”

    “As you are aware, the test flight has been done by Emirates Airline as the first to carry out the approach test on Global Navigation Satellite System, GNSS, in Lagos while the KLM recorded same in Kano. As at today, South Africa Airways has equally joined. They did it on their own and it was 100 per cent successful. So, we are urging all the local airlines to join too,” Atobatele said.

    On the benefits of the PBN, Mr Atobatele noted that the new system helps aircraft to land faster.