Tag: U.S

  • U.S must protect children – Obama

    U.S must protect children – Obama

    President Barack Obama has said the United States must do more to protect its children in the wake of Friday’s shootings at a school in Newtown, Connecticut.

    Speaking at an inter-faith vigil in Newtown, Mr. Obama said he would use the powers of his office to prevent a repeat of the tragedy.

    He told residents that the nation shared their grief.

    BBC says 20 children and six women died in the assault on Sandy Hook school by a lone man who then took his own life.

    The first funerals for victims will be held on Monday.

    The gunman has been identified by police as Adam Lanza, 20.

    Officials say he was armed with hundreds of rounds of ammunition, and used a semi-automatic rifle as his main weapon. He was also carrying two handguns, and a shotgun was recovered from a car.

    “I come to offer the love and prayers of a nation,” Mr. Obama said, speaking after religious leaders and the state governor.

    “You are not alone in your grief. All across this land of ours we have wept with you.”

    Mr. Obama repeated a call for action against gun crime, saying that in coming weeks he would use “whatever powers” his office held “in an effort aimed at preventing more tragedies like this.”

     

  • U.S recognises Syrian opposition

    U.S recognises Syrian opposition

    President Barack Obama has said the United States now formally recognises Syria’s main opposition coalition as “the legitimate representative” of the Syrian people.

    Mr. Obama told ABC News that the National Coalition was now inclusive, reflective and representative enough for the U.S to take this “big step.”

    The BBC reports that the United Kingdom, France, Turkey and Gulf states have already given their recognition.

    Russia said the U.S had decided to place all its bets on the coalition achieving an “armed victory.”

    Activists say more than 40,000 people have died in the 18-month uprising against President Bashar al-Assad.

    Reports from central Syria on Wednesday said a large number of civilians from the president’s Alawite sect had been killed in a village to the west of Hama.

    The circumstances are unclear but a video posted by opposition activists purported to show a young Alawite boy describing how government forces had destroyed a building where the civilians were being held hostage by pro-government militia.

    The building, in the village of Aqrab, had been under siege from the Free Syrian Army and, according to the boy, as many as 300 civilians were killed,

    There has been no word so far from the Syrian government and it is impossible to verify the activists’ account.

     

  • ‘U.S to help Nigeria eradicate polio’

    The United States government has pledged to continue rendering assistance to Nigeria in the efforts to completely eradicate polio in the country.

    The Country Director of U.S Centers for Disease Control and Preventions (CDC) in Nigeria, Dr. Okey Nwanyanwu, gave the assurance at the U.S Embassy in Abuja on Tuesday.

    Nwanyanwu spoke at a press conference on World AIDS Day with special focus on disease outbreaks and control in Nigeria.

    According to him, the CDC is committed to strengthening polio surveillances in major hospitals in urban areas of the northern states, in poor performing local government areas and in nomad/scattered communities.

    He stressed that CDC has been providing key health data to decision makers in Nigeria in the bids to prevent diseases outbreaks.

    He said: “We will do everything possible to support the Nigerian government. We have to get polio out of Nigeria. We are establishing surveillance systems to monitor health issues in Nigeria through integrated disease surveillance response, animal disease surveillance system and surveillance for HIV.”

    To turn around the poor services in the health sector, he harped on the need for the Federal Government to increase annual budgetary provision for heath in order to make meaningful impact in the sector.

     

     

     

  • ‘UK, U.S have evidence of Syria’s chemical arms  plans’

    ‘UK, U.S have evidence of Syria’s chemical arms plans’

    British Foreign Secretary, William Hague, said the United Kingdom and the United States have seen evidence that Syria is preparing to use chemical weapons.

    Mr. Hague told the BBC there was “enough evidence to know that they need a warning.”

    The foreign secretary did not give details, as he said the evidence had come from “intelligence sources.”

    A Syrian official insisted last week that it would “never, under any circumstances” use such weapons.

    That statement followed a warning on Monday from U.S President Barack Obama that there would be consequences if Syrian President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons against his people.

    Mr. Hague told the BBC: “The president of the United States warned of serious consequences and he means it.”

    Speaking at a security conference in Bahrain, he said he could understand why the public might be sceptical after the blunders made over Iraq’s alleged weapons of mass destruction 10 years ago.

    Separately, western military sources in the Gulf have told the BBC that Syria’s chemical weapons are concentrated at five airbases and are being closely watched.

  • Nigerian gets U.S court appointment

    Nigerian gets U.S court appointment

    A Nigerian woman, Bunmi Awoniyi, has been appointed to the Sacramento County Superior Court in California, United States, the News Agency of Nigeria reports.

    According to local media reports monitored on Sunday by the North America Correspondent of NAN, Awoniyi, 48, and Steven Gevercer’s appointments were announced by Governor Edmund Brown Jr. of California.

    Awoniyi has served as a principal attorney with a family law firm since 1994 as well as an adjunct professor at the University of Northern California, Lorenzo Patino School of Law from 1997 to 1998.

    She is an associate attorney at the Law Office of Steven L. Wessels from 1993 to 1994 and an associate attorney at the Law Office of Brady and Kent from 1992 to 1993.

    Also, Awoniyi was a law clerk at the Law Office of D. Kapp Nees in 1991 and a crown prosecutor at the Crown Prosecution Service in London from 1989 to 1990.

    She earned a Juris Doctorate degree from the Inns of Court School of Law, a Masters of Law degree from the Leicester University School of Law, and a Bachelor of Law degree from the University of Essex.

    Awoniyi is a certified family law specialist. She fills the vacancy created by the conversion of a court commissioner position on December 3, 2011.

    “I could not be more delighted or excited. It has been a whirlwind 24 hours the fruit of a yearlong arduous interview and screening process and an application that took me the better part of a year to complete.

    “Through all of the many lost hours on the weekends and evenings devoted to this process, to see it come to manifestation is truly marvelous.

    “ I am humbled and God is so good! It is a new season,’’ Awoniyi a Democrat said on her appointment.

     

  • U.S. envoy:Nigerian leaders must not encourage division for selfish ends

    U.S. envoy:Nigerian leaders must not encourage division for selfish ends

    Speaking at a seminar of the Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Alumni Association of Nigeria , United States Ambassador to Nigeria Ambassador Terence McCulley challenged Nigerian leaders at all levels to ensure the diversity of the country is used to its advantage rather than its disadvantage. Excerpts:

     

    By drawing from such a broad pool of talent, the Humphrey Fellowship programme provides a model of what can be accomplished when people with very different experiences and worldviews come together to learn from one another. In a way, that serves as a microcosm of the topic on which you have asked me to speak today: “Fostering Unity in Diversity in Nigeria: Learning from the American Experience.” Now, I have to admit, this title is a bit misleading, because the “American Experience” of finding unity in diversity, while perhaps instructive, is certainly not yet complete because our journey is not yet complete. And that, to some extent, is the point of the experience: there will always be different cultures, races, ethnicities, and viewpoints from which to learn and grow. In this regard, Nigeria and America are – as one of my distinguished predecessors once remarked – “two pilgrims on the same path.”

    America and Nigeria thus offer grand examples of how diverse peoples can come together to build a great nation. Each country is teeming with talented individuals from different backgrounds, cultures, and religions. The Fellowship Alumni in this room carried out their studies all over the United States—at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, Johns Hopkins in Maryland, American University in Washington, D.C., Emory University in Georgia, to name just a few examples—and you are each certain to have been struck by the magnitude of diversity that is a hallmark of our country. From Southern California to the Oregon coast, from Chicago to Florida, all across America you will find people of various races and ethnicities, with different religious views, distinctive cultural norms, and divergent political ideologies. What holds us all together, what unites us, is our strong sense of nationhood. I am reminded of a banner headline in the French newspaper “Le Monde” the day after September 11, 2001. “We are all Americans.” Now, that was an expression of global solidarity from one of our oldest allies in the aftermath of a day of horror. But it is also an expression of how we feel as a people, how we feel as a nation. Regardless of our differences…, we are all Americans. And when we speak of diversity, we speak broadly, of characteristics both obvious and not. Racial and ethnic differences are perhaps more readily observable than other marks of diversity. But diversity is not just about race, to be sure.

    Much of America’s diversity comes from our history as a nation of immigrants. In fact, the United States is often referred to as the “Great Melting Pot,” a metaphor that suggests the blending of many cultures, languages and religions to form a single national identity. But this metaphor fails to capture the slow, complex and frequently turbulent process by which immigrants of diverse backgrounds and beliefs join U.S. society, even as they transform it. I am here to tell you that unity in diversity is hard work.

    The United States may be viewed as “a permanently unfinished country,” because it is continuously being built and rebuilt by immigrants. Indeed, it has been the world’s leading destination country for immigrants from the 19th century to the present. Newcomers pose a recurrent challenge fundamental to American life: enabling communities of very different peoples to learn to act collaboratively under conditions of openness, change and choice, all within the confines of one system.

    In the U.S., much of the stability that exists in our nation of immigrants comes from our laws and institutional reforms within our pluralistic democracy. Through legislative actions supported by a transparent, independent judiciary which protects the rights of all including minorities and immigrants, we create, encourage, and enlarge opportunities for education and social mobility. With our system of democracy, we permit and nourish the co-existence of those with differing ideologies, convictions, and interests. As a result, we have immigrants and native-born citizens partnering to create a shared collective and institutional life, both as a national community and as a constellation of local communities marked by differences in class, race, religion and culture. Our nation of immigrants has seen wave after wave of newcomers displaying remarkable creativity and flexibility in adapting to the American pluralistic culture, even as they helped to transform it, adapt it, and make it their own.

    The history of Africa and of Nigeria specifically does not mirror that of the United States in terms of immigration. Yet, like America, Nigeria boasts the co-existence of many ethnic groups in a democratic land. Nigeria’s ethnic groups are 370 strong, with long histories and varying cultural norms. For the Nigerian democracy to continue to work, for it to blossom, conflicts among ethnic groups need to be addressed, and differences embraced. And Nigeria’s leaders – at the local, state, and federal level – need to promote unity, not encourage division for selfish political ends.

    As I mentioned, America is ever adapting in terms of embracing diversity. But again, the key is to strive to come together based on what is shared, not to divide based on what differs among us.

    Our recently re-elected President, Barack Obama, has said that “we must find a way to reconcile our ever-shrinking world with its ever-growing diversity—diversity of thought, diversity of culture, and diversity of belief. In short, we must find a way to live together as one human family.” In America and in Nigeria, the common issues we face, the common hopes we have, are all human issues, all human hopes. We seek stability in our democracies. We desire positive action from our leaders. We expect food security. We look for economic opportunity. We want high-quality education for our children no matter their socio-economic status. We work for a protected environment that will be as safe and useful for our children and our children’s children as it is for us. And we, as Americans, as Nigerians, as human beings, wish for peaceful co-existence that allows us to embrace our backgrounds and our unique characteristics even as we build our societies together. To accomplish this, we must look to what binds us together and work to achieve those common goals.

    But again, the concept of diversity is a broad one. I want to take a moment to discuss the importance of religious diversity and the principle of religious freedom. The freedom to worship is a cherished right in the United States, one that has historical roots older than the formation of the nation itself. In the 21st century, the United States pulses with a unique cultural chemistry which sees followers of more diverse faiths in many communities throughout the country.

    Consider this: Most Americans were Christians when the United States was founded more than 200 years ago, but now the United States is the world’s most religiously diverse society. Between 1990 and 2001, the number of Christians in the U.S. increased by 6.6 percent while the number of those practicing all other religions grew by 69.1 percent. People of different faiths contribute to the fabric, strength and character of the United States, in all walks of life.

    To be sure, there are challenges to religious co-existence. Yet again, the guiding principle is that which binds, not that which divides. In terms of religion, that concept is the desire to worship freely or not at all. For Americans, religious liberty is embedded in the Constitution and reflected in our guiding Constitutional principle of separation of church and state. And I believe Nigerians must also work together to build their nation irrespective of their religious beliefs. If one puts continuous emphasis on differences, rather than working toward overall betterment while co-existing, one risks chipping away at the very fabric of the nation.

    Too often, when we talk about Nigeria and with Nigerians, we hear about the differences: the Muslim North and the Christian South, the Igbo, the Hausa, and the Yoruba. Nigerians deserve better; Nigerians can do better. While you should be proud of your religion, your culture, your background, your beliefs, you can do so in light of the fact that you are all Nigerians, drawing inspiration from the uplifting words of your national anthem. And I have to say that as I travel across your great country, I am inspired by your powerful sense of nationhood.

    And there is much to celebrate in Nigeria. As I said to you last year at this event, I have worked as an American diplomat in Africa since the mid-1980s, when I began my service in Niger Republic. The remarkable changes I have witnessed on this continent over the past 27 years, changes effected by remarkable African men and even more remarkable African women, make me an optimist about Nigeria’s future. Indeed, the people of Nigeria, with their intelligence, drive, ingenuity, and capability, make me an optimist about Nigeria’s future. Leaders like those assembled in this room, particularly the talented Humphrey Fellowship alumni, are those who will enable Nigeria to achieve its potential.

    And as for us, your fellow pilgrims, the United States remains committed to the people and progress of Nigeria. We are committed to helping foster an environment in which this great nation continues its path of becoming a powerful force both regionally and on the world stage, a beacon of what can be achieved in a thriving, diverse, populous democracy. And while we have our history to share by way of example, we encourage you to not only accept but also welcome the fact that finding unity in diversity is an ongoing challenge, a constant work in progress. And it is not just about tolerance, but about enrichment, and dignity, and going forward as one. And, as I have suggested, it is truly challenging, but it is what will make you stronger.

    As Hubert H. Humphrey wrote of the United States, “Just as we welcome a world of diversity, so we glory in an America of diversity—an America all the richer for the many different and distinctive strands of which it is woven.” We do welcome a world of diversity, and we glory in a Nigeria of diversity, one that is all the better due to its vibrant people.

     

  • Tiny northeast town casts first votes in U.S poll

    Tiny northeast town casts first votes in U.S poll

    The first ballots of the 2012 White House race were cast in the tiny northeastern town of Dixville Notch Tuesday, with Barack Obama and Mitt Romney each receiving five votes.

    The first-in-the-nation vote, held shortly after midnight, was tied for the first time in its history, another indication of the knife’s edge separating the two candidates in a race that should be decided by the end of the day, AFP news agency reports.

    Tanner Tillotson, 24, who cast the first ballot at 12:00 am (0500 GMT) in the upscale Balsams Grand Resort Hotel, said he voted for President Obama.

    “I hope it will inspire people to get out and make their voice heard,” he said.

    “I think (the result) is very indicative, that this is the first time in Dixville Notch’s history that there is a tie. We’re still a much divided nation and it will be interesting to see how the rest of the country is.”

    The tiny New Hampshire town, some 30 kilometers (20 miles) from the Canadian border, boasts the first vote in United States elections, but is seen as more of a curiosity than a national bellwether.

    Early voting has been under way for several weeks in some states, and recent days have seen long lines outside of polling stations as the two campaigns have carried out intensive get-out-the-vote efforts.

    The Republican candidate has won Dixville Notch in every election since the tradition began in 1960, except for 2008, when Obama won.

    Polls show Obama as the slight favorite, with the two candidates in a virtual tie in national polls but the president holding a narrow lead in the key swing states needed to win the all-important electoral college.

     

  • Nigeria, U.S. to promote tourism coexistence

    The Chief Executive of Partner Concept, a tourism Marketing and Consultant Firm in the United States, Mr. Paul Cohen, said America will collaborate with Nigeria on tourism development.

    Cohen made this known in Lagos on Wednesday at the just concluded 8th edition of “Akwaaba African Travel Market.’’

    He stressed the need for the two countries to work together to promote tourist centres in Nigeria and spur tourism relations between Nigeria and U.S.

    “Coming together is a beginning, keeping together is progress; working together is success,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted Cohen as saying at the event.

    Cohen said that Nigeria had tremendous tourism products offering natural beauty, wildlife, culture and history.

    “Its limited awareness and distribution in the U.S. had impeded the growth of Nigerian tourism market in the U.S.

    “ Nigeria travel and tourism industry suppliers need to understand the U.S trade and consumers and create the product that will meet the demand of U.S. consumers,’’ he said.

    He said that Africa was one of the fastest growing destination regions for U.S overseas travelers.

    “Most of the popular destinations in Africa are; South Africa, Tanzania, Kenya and Botswana.

    “Before American international travelers choose Nigeria, they have to choose Africa from among the world destination.

    “U.S. travelers tend to visit three countries in Africa per visit; Nigeria does not currently rank among the top five countries,’’ he said.

     

  • Boko Haram is after Nigerian government – U.S

    Boko Haram is after Nigerian government – U.S

    The United State Government on Thursday said it has not designated Boko Haram as a terrorist organisation because the insurgency is principally targeted at portraying the Nigerian government as ineffective.
    The Assistant Secretary for African Affairs at the U.S Department of State, Ambassador Jonnie Carson, disclosed this during a continent-wide teleconference.
    Mr. Carson said Boko Haram is not a homogenous organisation and therefore does not qualify to be labeled a terrorist group.
    “Boko Haram is an organisation trying to discredit the Nigerian government and trying to show the government as ineffective in protecting its citizens,” he said.
    He, however, conceded that the U.S “constantly keep it (Boko Haram) under review” and that is why it has declared three Boko Haram leaders as terrorists.
    In late June, the U.S Government placed Abubakar Shekau, Abubakar Adam Kambar, and Khalid al-Barnawi on its list of global terror.
    “These three leaders were declared as terrorists because we believe they have established contacts and broader network with foreign terrorist organisations. They have sought funding and materials,” he said.
    In the build up to the November 6 U.S Presidential Election, Mr. Carson spoke extensively on U.S affairs in Africa.
    According to him, the U.S’s predominant activities are targeted at helping “Africa deal with its ongoing security challenges” because crises take away resources meant for development. But he said the country’s larger aim is to help Africa grow its economy, especially agriculture.
    On the recent attacks by Islamists on U.S Embassies and diplomats in some African countries, Mr. Carson’s comments suggested
    that the “provocative video” was only a means for the attackers to show their interest, which is not necessarily religious bu
    t to force U.S government out of those countries.