Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Buhari approves CPC merger with ACN, ANPP

Former Head of State, Maj.-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd),
The Board of Trustees of the Congress for Progressive Chang has ratified the party’s merger with the Action Congress of Nigeria and the All Nigeria Peoples Party.
PREMIUM TIMES quoted a highly placed official of the party as saying that CPC’s decision to merge with other parties was approved at the party’s BOT meeting last Thursday in Kaduna.
He said at the end of the meeting, the hardliners within the CPC, who had opposed the merger, soft-pedalled and approved the proposal.
The national leaders of the party such as Maj.-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), former FCT Minister, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, and CPC Chairman, Tony Momoh, were at the meeting.
The source explained that with the ratification, the party would proceed to consumate the merger talks it began with the ACN after the 2011 general elections.
The CPC National Publicity Secretary, Rotimi Fashakin, confirmed that the national executive committee of the party had received the BOT’s nod to proceed on the merger process.
In an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria, Fashakin said the BOT gave the approval because none of the existing opposition party alone could defeat the ruling party.
“It is now clear that opposition parties must merge to be able to improve the educational system, health sector, security and infrastructure, among others for Nigerians,’’ he said.

Human Magnet (Mr. Magnet) !!!!

In Malaysia, 78 years old Liew Thow Lin is known as the Human Magnet or Mr. Magnet . He can make metal objects, weighing up to2kg , stick to his skin without any aid and he is a scientific mystery because there is no trace of a magnetic field around his body. Scientists say his skin is also normal and there is no explanation for his unusual talent.
YouTube : Mr.magnetic Man
 
Mr Magnetic
 

Friday, November 9, 2012

Obama’s uncle feared deportation if Romney won —Report

Onyango
Standing behind the liquor store counter the man quietly and anonymously goes about his job serving customers.
He had arrived for his shift promptly at 3pm after filling up his gleaming silver Toyota Rav 4 with gas and taking out the trash at his modest two-storey yellow clapboard house in a downtrodden Massachusetts neighbourhood.
This a fascinating glimpse into the life of Onyango ‘Omar’ Obama, 68, the half-uncle of President Barack Obama — and an illegal immigrant who Mitt Romney had already signalled should be deported if he won his bid for the Presidency.
A regular customer of the shop where he works in Framingham, said, “Onyango Obama certainly lives a life that is a world away from President Barack Obama. The house he lives in, with its tatty curtains, could do with some sprucing up, it’s clear he doesn’t have a lot of cash.”
Onyango, referred to in President Obama’s 1995 book Dreams From My Father as ‘Uncle Omar’ is the younger half brother of the President’s late father, Barack Obama Sr., a scholar from Kenya who was rarely in his son’s life.
In the autobiography, President Obama said, “He was the uncle who left for America 25 years ago and had never come back.”
Born in Nyang’oma Kogelo, Kenya, his father, Onyango, is President Obama’s paternal grandfather, while his mother Sarah is Onyango Sr’s third wife, who although she is not a blood relative, is referred to by the US President as “Granny Sarah.”
Onyango Jr moved to America in 1963 as part of Tom Mboya’s Airlift Africa project, where Kenyan students were flown to the US to study at American universities.
His life is detailed in The Other Barack: The Bold and Reckless Life of President Obama’s Father by reporter Sally H. Jacobs.
Onyango Obama was accepted at a boys’ school then known as Browne & Nichols, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, according to Jacobs’s book.
Back then, the younger Obama was known as Omar Okech Obama, and he was described in the book as tall and good-natured.
According to the book, he stood out as apparently the only African student at the preparatory school, where boys wore blazers to class.
For reasons that are unclear, Obama left the school after two years and enrolled in the Newton public schools in the fall of 1965.
By then, his older brother had returned to Kenya, and without him, Obama appeared to falter.
He dropped out of school and changed his name to O. Onyango Obama, according to the book.
For a while, he lived in an apartment on Perry Street in Cambridge that became a well known meeting place for Kenyan students.
It is unclear what happened to him next – a relative described him to the future US president during his trip to Kenya as being “lost” according to the president’s memoir.
But Obama resurfaced in 1994, when he was apparently the clerk on duty at a Dorchester convenience store as two masked men burst in, beat him with a sawed off shotgun, and robbed him, according to Jacobs’s book.
He managed to keep a low profile for almost 20 years, until he steered his white Mitsubishi SUV outside the Chicken Bone Saloon last August.
Police said he had a blood alcohol level of 0.14 per cent, which is above the legal limit of 0.08 in Massachusetts.
Parimal Patel, his boss at Conti Liquors, said Obama earned about $1,300 a month and was never any trouble.
Patel said Obama presented a valid Social Security number when he applied for the job and told the Boston News last year, “He never talked about his immigration status. It never crossed our minds, he had a W-2 and everything.”

Death of pupil stirs controversy over corporal punishment

Bethel (inset) and her mother.

Should corporal punishment be allowed in schools? Some people would argue that when you spare the rod; you spoil the child. In this report by MOTUNRAYO ABODERIN, martinets express mixed views.
The death of a 12-year-old pupil of a secondary school in Awka, Anambra State, Miss Chidinma Ukachukwu, after being allegedly flogged by her teacher for failing to do her homework, came as a shock to many readers.
But that would not be the first time children were being beaten to death either by their teachers or parents/guardians. Some months ago, 34-year-old Becklin Okoro allegedly beat his wife, Esther Uremure, and flogged his five-year old daughter, Bethel to death.
There was another report of an 11-year-old boy who was allegedly flogged to death by his father for disobedience. It was gathered that the suspect, Friday Obot, flogged the victim, Michael Friday, with a cable wire.
There are several unreported cases of pupils injured or deformed after being flogged. While for instance Lagos State Government has already placed a ban on flogging in schools; some schools still engage in the act.
Despite the ban on flogging in Lagos schools, our correspondent observed that some public schools still engage in flogging their pupils. However, the question now is to what extent should a child be disciplined?
A lecturer at the Department of Mass Communication, Anambra State University, Dr. Chineye Nwabueze, said “Flogging cannot and should not be removed from our society. We are not living in the United States. We are Africans. It’s a disservice to the nation if there should be a ban on flogging. However, it is only when flogging is done to the extreme that a ban could be placed.
“There are some children that are stubborn and therefore need to be dealt with. I believe we could change the word ‘flogging’ if need be. We live in a society where corporal punishment cannot be removed. Such punishment is an act of equipping the children,” he said.
Nwabueze said there are three institutions under which a child is moulded. He identified them as –family, church and school. “Each of these institutions has its style of discipline. In schools, flogging happens to be one of the best methods for discipline. Mere cautioning a child is not enough. Flogging saved some of us. We are what we are today because of the few whips we received.’’
A former principal, Mrs. Modupe Jegede, who was in the education sector for over 30 years, said that there were other ways to discipline children aside flogging.
Speaking with our correspondent, Jegede said, “First, a teacher should not flog a child in annoyance. That teacher who flogged Chidinma may have done so in annoyance. I believe flogging should be the last resort. There are several ways to punish a child.
“However, these children could be threatened with beating when they commit an offence. Mere seeing a cane would make them refrain from their wrong acts. We have had so many cases of children who were deformed and maimed after being flogged. As an educationist, you should be able to correct a child without necessarily using the cane. You could ask them to kneel or stand at the back of the class. Also correcting them at school assembly in front of their mates makes them feel ashamed. A teacher should be able to exercise discipline without using a cane,” she said.
Jegede said that it was important for teachers to restrain their anger especially when correcting a child. She said so many parents who had inflicted scars on their children or caused deformity in them were presently living in regret.
A public school teacher, Mr. Akinpelu Olukunmi, said the location of a school is a determinant factor as to whether flogging should be permitted. He added that he does not see any reason why flogging should not be permitted in a school.
He said, “In my school for example, there is just no way a child would listen to you unless you flog him or her. Even if you shout on top of your voice or scold pupils in my school, they would not listen to you. But immediately they see your cane, they will behave themselves. Some children are stubborn and should be flogged.”
Olukunmi, however, said there are other punishments teachers could use to correct children. “You could ask the naughty ones to wear a garment. By the time you make them move around in garments all day, the following day, they would behave. Or you could ask them to pick up dirts in the school premises. It all depends on the teacher. The teacher should use the method that suits him or her most.
“However, my prayer is that the education system in Nigeria gets better. And parents also have a role to play in building the character of their children,” he said.
The National Director, Family Impact Nigeria, Mr. Tunde Fowe, said that educators must realise that punishment as a consequence of wrong-doing and/or defiance should be commensurate with the offence committed.
He said, “To adopt flogging as the one tool that corrects every perceived wrong-doing is both unhelpful and a lazy response to a critical need. The educator’s goal is to discipline and not to instil fear, cause isolation or break the esteem of the child. If that is the goal, personal interaction and instruction should be the priority. In the event of a wilful wrong-doing, the educator should determine the appropriate punishment that is proportionate to the offence committed. In my opinion, flogging should be the ultimate means of punishment. And even at that, it requires a process that makes it meaningful.
“Having established that flogging should be the ultimate punishment for an ultimate offence, it then follows that it should be used sparingly and infrequently. In the event that the educator decides that flogging is the appropriate punishment for a wilful act of wrong-doing, care must be taken to explain to the child or adolescent the reason for the flogging. Under no circumstance should an educator flog a child or adolescent out of anger or annoyance. If that happens, then it is child abuse.
“Flogging is an ultimate instrument to bring the child or adolescent back in line on a journey towards good behaviour; it is not and cannot be an instrument to vent the anger or frustration of the educator on the child. If this happens, then the educator is guilty of child abuse. Let it be noted also that if flogging, either well intended or not, brings physical harm to the child or adolescent, the one who flogs is guilty of instrumental aggression. Educators should be aware of their limits under the Child Rights Act. Flogging then, if it must be done at all, should be carried out under a controlled atmosphere aimed at the good of the child and not to assuage the pent-up anger of the one who flogs,” he said.
A Citizens Rights and Empowerment Advocacy Initiative, a non-governmental human rights advocacy group, which adherently condemned the killing of Chidinma, has called for the establishment of Citizens Rights Club in all schools across the federation to enlighten both teachers and pupils on human rights and promote the need to ensure respect for each other’s right.
The President of the Group, Mr. Rex Saltlove, said, “The teachers are important instrument for nation building and must be treated as special species due to the nature of their job. They are the ones that shape the lives of their pupils from the cradle and must not be neglected in the interest of human capital development.
“We therefore call on governments at all levels to urgently design special empowerment programme for dedicated teachers. This will go a long way in reducing incidents like this one, which mostly is as a result of misplaced aggression induced by poverty in many homes,” he said

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Inspector-General of Police, Alhaji Abubakar Mohammed
A top Boko Haram commander, Sani Mohammed has reportedly escaped from police custody in Abuja on Thursday.
The suspect who was arrested with another Boko Haram operative, Kabir Sokoto in January, 2012, allegedly escaped from the cell where he was kept with other terror suspects.
Though, the Force Headquarters claimed that no terror suspect escaped, security sources confirmed that Mohammed absconded from custody.
The details of his escape was however sketchy as at the time of filing this report.
A similar incident happened early this year when Sokoto, the alleged mastermind of the Christmas Day bombing of Saint Theresa Catholic Church, Madalla, Niger State, escaped from police custody at Abaji, a satellite town in the Federal Capital Territory.
Arrested at the Borno State Governor’s Lodge, Abuja, Sokoto was said to have escaped while being taken for a search of his apartment 24 hours later.
But Deputy Force Public Relations Officer, Frank Mba, said no terror suspect escaped from its custody, adding that a check of its records showed no such name as Mohammed on its list of detainees.
He said, “The police authority hereby informs the public that the information being circulated by TV Station is totally untrue and should be disregarded in its entirety.”
 
Slain Bridegroom, Ugochukwu Ozuah: Five Lagos Policemen Arrested!




Five policemen have been arrested in connection with the murder of 36-year-old Ugochukwu Ozuah, who was allegedly killed by policemen five days after his wedding.

Following Ozuah’s murder on September 20, 2012, the Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, constituted a team of 12 policemen attached to the Federal Criminal Investigation Department to investigate the case.

It was learnt that the team of policemen, headed by a deputy commissioner of police, Chris Ezike, arrived Lagos on September 30 and immediately began investigation from the crime scene at UPS Bus Stop, Oworonshoki Expressway.

According to police source who craved anonymity, the policemen arrested are attached to the Anthony Division under whose jurisdiction the crime occurred.

The source revealed that the policemen were arrested four weeks ago by the IG’s team and were later taken to the NPF Headquarters, Abuja for interrogation.

The source said, “The policemen were arrested because they could not offer satisfactory explanation as regards their whereabouts as at the time of the incident.

“The police authorities have promised that the investigations would be transparent and it was for the sake of objectivity that the IG said the matter must not be handled by policemen of the Lagos State Command.”

Meanwhile, sister of the deceased, Mrs. Nkechi Nonyelu, told our correspondent on the telephone that the family had yet to receive an update as regards the case despite Ezike’s promise to keep them informed on every development.

Ozuah was killed in the presence of his friend, Irikefe Omene, while trying to get him a taxi.

However, the spokesman of the police force, Mr. Frank Mba, said on the telephone on Wednesday that he was in a training programme and would get details about the arrest as soon as he was free.

If you missed the SAD story, see below

How The Nigeria Police Force Murdered My Brother, Newly Married Ugochukwu ‘Ugo’ Ozuah In Cold Blood!



September 20th, 2012 started like any other for many of us. It was a regular day, albeit a special one, as our Alma Mater, King’s College Lagos (KC) was celebrating its 103rd anniversary. Consequently, many Old Boys spent the day exchanging felicitations face to face, via phone calls and the internet.

Unknown to many of us, this was the last time we would only associate that date with the anniversary of the founding of our dear school, for on the day in 2012, King’s College Lagos lost Ugochukwu ‘Ugo’ Ozuah, to the cold hands of death. It wasn’t a normal death due to sickness or negligence on his part, but death in the form of an execution carried out by men of the Nigeria Police Force who randomly decided to shoot him in the chest at point blank range.

Ozuah and the rest of our set graduated from KC in 1993. Upon graduation he went on to the University of Ibadan for his undergraduate degree. Having completed his education in the 90s, he returned to Lagos to join the work force and begin his professional life. He also had a lot to look forward to in his personal life as he got married to the love of his life exactly a week ago, Saturday the 15th of September 2012, and had just returned from his honeymoon on Wednesday, the day before his tragic death.

It was with immense shock that those of us on our set’s mailing list received a message on the morning of September 21st stating that he had been shot and killed the day before by the police. With disbelief many of us asked follow up questions to the person who originally sent out the message, trying to ascertain if he was sure it was indeed ‘Ozuah’ (as many of us called him) who had been murdered, within an hour we had another member of our set confirm that Ozuah was indeed the one.


As details emerged, it turned out that one of our former classmates who is now based in the UK had come into Nigeria for Ozuah’s wedding. This classmate had gone to visit the new family after they returned from their honeymoon, and at 10pm had been driven to the Gbagada Expressway (in front of the UPS office) by Ozuah to catch a cab home.

As they were waiting for a taxi to pass by, a Police pickup truck with intoxicated but uniformed policemen in it pulled up about 10-15 feet from them, and a policeman fired a shot directly into Ozuah’s chest, with the bullet going right through.

The classmate who was with him immediately ran for cover, as he did not want to be shot too. By the time he returned a few minutes later, Ozuah’s bleeding body was on the ground, with a plethora of policemen, including the DPO from the Anthony Police Station gathered around it. He was late transported to a private hospital in Ikeja where he was confirmed dead, even though the Gbagada General Hospital was nearby.

Thus a young man’s life was snuffed out by a police force that was created to serve and protect him and his fellow citizens.

I’m still in shock, angry, bitter, disappointed and dejected, but I’m determined to play my part to ensure his death would not be in vain. The Nigeria Police Force must arrest and prosecute the policemen responsible for his cold blooded murder. I’m also putting this narrative out now, so that tomorrow we won’t hear how Ugochukwu Ozuah was resisting arrest, or got shot during an armed robbery operation gone wrong, or some other ridiculous story that the NPF is notorious for concocting when they shoot innocent people down in cold blood.

I pray the Lord grants his family the fortitude to go through this terrible time, and his new bride strength as she mourns a man she had barely been married to for one week.

To Ugochukwu Ozuah, the self styled ‘Wizard of Oz’ from our KC days, I say Floreat and adieu my brother, one day we shall meet again in a much better place.
Photo: PHOTO-TALK: Give a title to this picture.

MATSE & CHUKS

Ileya Palaver
Funny Nigerian Media Headlines Today After Elections If USA Was Nigeria (Please Don't Laugh)



If USA was Nigeria, today's headlines will read:

•Don't celebrate yet, Romney tells Obama (TELL magazine)

•Concede defeat, Obama urges Romney (Punch newspaper)

• 20 opposition cadres riot (The Sun newspaper)

• Romney Demands Vote Recount (Vanguard newspaper)

• Elections rigged (Guardian newspaper)

• No evidence of manipulation (NTA news)

• The Church declares elections free and fair (News Line)

• There will be violence if we lose; Romney declares (LTV 8 news)

• Election results for Arizona awaited (Channels news)

• Trucks with suspected ballot papers crosses into USA from Mexico (Tribune newspaper)

• Romney is an opportunist - Go back to your farm (AIT news)

• I will not accept results, Romney tells Obama (STV news)

• McCain heads to Election Petition Tribunal (MITV)

• White Majority rejects results (PM News)

• EXPOSED: How Romney Lost US Election Due To Alleged Sex Scandal With Mistress
(Nigeriafilms.com)

• Kenyan Big Boy Senator Obama Throws Lavish Party to celebrate Election Victory (City People)

• Free for all fight at Obama rally in Grant Park (Channels TV)

• Northern elders, Arewa and Sultan rejects results (ThisDay)

• Republicans and Democrats supporters clash in Ketu and Ajangbadi, 14 dead, Romney threatens more heads will roll. (Sahara Reports)

• The people behind Obama's victory: True story uncovered (Newswatch)

• Ope baje fun Romney, ijoba te siwaju lowo arakunrin dudu Obama, gidi gidi ba oyinbo....(Alaroye Newspaper)

Funny. But Let's Be Objective This Would Have Been The Report If USA Was Nigeria.

Food For Thought.
Learn And Change
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