Friday, 20 September 2013

Hurricane Hits Mexico

Dozens of people are missing after a mudslide that buried homes as Manuel pounded the country's Pacific Coast, Mexico's president said Wednesday.
At least 58 people are unaccounted for in the municipality of Atoyac de Alvarez, Mexican Pesident Enrique Peña Nieto told reporters Wednesday, describing damage there as "catastrophic."
The mayor of Atoyac, which is about 50 miles west of Acapulco, told CNNMexico that 15 bodies had been recovered and at least 70 people remained trapped under mud that buried 20 homes.
Peña Nieto said hundreds of people have been rescued from La Pintada, the community in Atoyac hit by the mudslide. It's unclear how many people remain buried, he said.
Manuel, which strengthened into a hurricane Wednesday evening, was one of three storms bringing devastating deluges and flooding to Mexico. At least 80 people were killed in the storms, Mexico's interior ministry said.

Ibori Gave Me $15 Million Bribe In Bag- Ribadu

Desperate to halt a probe into his finances, former Delta State Governor James Ibori tried to bribe anti-corruption boss Nuhu Ribadu in 2007 with $15m in cash in a bag so heavy one man alone could not lift it, Ribadu told a London court on Thursday.
Reuters quoted Ribadu as telling the court that he pretended to take the bribe because he wanted the cash as evidence to use against Ibori in a prosecution, but rather than keep the money for himself he had it taken straight to the Central Bank of Nigeria to be kept safe in a vault.
Ibori was governor of oil-producing Delta State in southern Nigeria from 1999 to 2007. In 2012, he pleaded guilty at London’s Southwark Crown Court to 10 counts of fraud and money-laundering and was jailed for 13 years.      – The Punch

Nigerians Protest The New Police Registration Exercise

Nigerians are voicing out their displeasure over the new police vehicle registration. Many say they were being forced to bear an unnecessary burden - even after the Police declared on their Facebook page that the registration fee of N3, 500 for vehicles and N1, 500 for tricycles and motorcycles will be paid only once.
They say that it made no sense to bear the burden of a fresh vehicle registration exercise, whereas the data required from them had been captured in the Federal Road Safety Corps ongoing renewal of driving licences and vehicle number plates.
They described it as a misplacement of priority, being unable to figure out why the police wanted another exercise.
Tony Umaru, who visited the Facebook page of the exercise, warned that failure on the part of the Federal Government and the National Assembly to restrain the body from continuing with the exercise, other agencies connected with security and safety would adopt same and commence extortion of the populace.
As the primary agency responsible for internal security, the police should have conducted the registration exercise free of charge,  he noted.
He said, “This is absolute nonsense. Very soon the Fire Brigade will launch digital fire extinguishers that will come with a bio-metric chip to capture our data. The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps may also decide to create its own data base. The same thing may apply to the Nigeria Customs Service and the Nigeria Immigration Service.
“Assuming all the processes are free of charge, is the time free? Why can’t all of them go to a central data base and retrieve whatever information they want? If it is not N30,000 for number plate, it will be N3,500  for police bio-metric registration. There is another N2,000 for VIO e-coding. Whereas we still have water, waste and electricity bills to foot. How much do I collect as salary? If I am paying government all this money, what is the government giving me in return?”

VIDEO: Davido AT 12 Years Old (Click To Watch)

Obviously, Davido has been chilling since way back. Lucky him. For the video, click HERE

Cult Attack: YABATECH Campus Shut Down By Students

There was commotion on Thursday morning at the Yaba College of Technology, Lagos, as academic programmes were grounded, while movements were restricted.
The development was as a  result of a protest by the students of the institution, who were expressing their displeasure at an attack on a student by suspected cult members on Wednesday night.
Some policemen, who attempted entering the campus to quell the unrest, were turned back at the gate by the students, who held everyone within the campus hostage for hours.
When our correspondent visited the campus, he observed that two fully loaded staff buses were prevented from entering the institution.
It was learnt that a clash between the cultist and some students the previous night had kept everybody awake.
A source in the Department of Mass Communication explained that the clash started after an unnamed student was attacked by some cult members  with machetes and was wounded.
Our correspondent learnt that the student had a misunderstanding with a suspected cult member.
Another source who pleaded anonymity said, “The student had ignored the cult member when that one told him to do something for him. He was later beaten, clubbed and cut with matchetes.
“Somebody alerted the victim’s friends and they also came out and faced the cult members.”
It was said that in the Wednesday rampage, security men on the campus were assaulted, while some school facilities were damaged.
On Thursday, the students took over the gates of the school and chased away security men to protest the Wednesday night attack.
One of the students at the gate told PUNCH Metro that the security men guarding the campus had failed in their duties.
He said,”Two weeks ago, they (the cultists) stormed the Art Block and wreaked havoc while our security men were merely watching. So the students decided to take over the security of the school.”
It was observed that a few of the security men had changed into mufti, while some of the students who tried to record the riot with their camera phones were assaulted.
The school’s major road was also barricaded. The students said they were awaiting the Rector to give an address on the way forward.
Later, the Dean of Students Affairs, Mr. Omobayo Raheem, addressed the warring youths, urging them to calm down.
He said, “Like many of you, I have not been able to sleep as a result of this development. I apologise to every one of us as a result of the injury one of us sustained. There is no doubt that injury to one is injury to all.
“I can assure you that the management has set up a high-powered panel to look into this and none of the culprits will go unpunished be they students or lecturers.”
He said the wounded student was being treated  at the school’s medical centre.
The Rector, Dr. Kudirat Ladipo, later came to address the protesters. She capped her address with a prayer for peace on the campus.

SHOCKING: Men Who Tried To Kidnap Yar'Adua's Daughter

On Thursday, it was reported that the State Security Service (SSS) paraded two suspects alleged to have plotted the abduction of one of the daughters of late President Umaru Yar’Adua.
The suspects, Hamza Abubakar (27) and Dennis Okoro (43) on August 21 allegedly attempted to abduct the unnamed daughter of the late president at a construction site at Kado, Abuja, said to be owned by the lady.
It was revealed that one of the suspect, Abubakar, cultivated the friendship of a security guard at the construction site and ask Okoro and the other accomplices to carry out the abduction but their attempt was foiled by members of the SSS.
 

Thursday, 19 September 2013

Kelvin The Militant's Photo: How I See it.

Kelvin: 3rd From Right
There was something different about the way I felt when I saw this picture for the first time today. Something that suggested its uniqueness, in relation to the others of these Niger Delta militants, kidnappers or whatever other name we choose to call them depending on the issue at hand.

I will start my synopsis from the obvious models in the foreground of the picture. The aura around these militants depicts a kind of confidence one who is legally employed in the services of the nation's armed forces would have. Beyond those masks, I can't say there is no sense of uncertainty, but a kind of boldness fueled by the evil powers of chaos, neglect, misgovernance, anarchy and deliquency. These men have the stance of those who think they run the show, and have truly struck terror in the hearts of many. I don't blame them for that assumption.

The next on the list are the others in the background. I don't want to believe they were all kidnapped. They sure don't look kidnapped to me. I can even see admiration in most eyes, the type you see in someone suffering from the Stockholm Syndrome - a situation in which captors win admiration and support from those held captive by them. This picture is an analogy explaining the present situation in Nigeria, not only in the sense of the Niger Delta militant palaver but moreso, in the idea of having the suppressed citizenry sing praises and appear in photos with their suppressors. Kelvin and company have only helped in explaining the chaos which seems confusing to many.
                                                                          - Lagos Parrot