Friday, July 8, 2011

51 survivors, 127 dead in Congo plane wreck, officials say

An airliner plowed into dense forest as it tried to land during a rainstorm in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo on Friday, killing at least 127 on board, the Congolese transport ministry said.
There were 51 survivors, a ministry statement said.
The accident at the international airport of Kisangani, a commercial center and river port town, is the latest in a string of disasters that has saddled the vast central African country with one of the worst air safety records in the world.
"The pilot tried to land but apparently they didn't touch the runway," Stavros Papaioannou, chief executive of Hewa Bora airline, told Reuters by telephone.
Bad weather Government spokesman Lambert Mende said the plane went down a few feet from the Kisangani airport.
"It was due to the thunder," he said. "We have already helped take out at least 40 survivors and the rescue operation is ongoing."
Hewa Bora, which means "fresh air," in Swahili, is on a European Union list of airlines banned due to security concerns, RTE reported. Congo has one of the worst air transport safety and security records in the world.
Check back for more details on this breaking news story.

new blog post: Home Remedies That really Work

new blog post: Home Remedies That really Work: "Going to the doctor is not anybody’s concept of fun. There are usually long waits required both in the waiting room and then again in the ex..."

Man jailed for trafficking Nigerian girls out of UK

Anthony Harrison, 32,   
Trafficked girls controlled by Juju magic rituals
The first man to be convicted of trafficking females out of the UK, in a case involving two Nigerian girls, has been jailed.
Anthony Harrison, 32, was sentenced to 20 years for four trafficking offences as well as two of false imprisonment.
At Woolwich Crown Court, Harrison, of Stratford, east London, was cleared of two counts of rape.
The charges related to teenage victims who alleged they were subjected to witchcraft and violence.
Judge Philip Shorrock said the sentence was being imposed "to deter others who are tempted by this terrible trade" and "to reflect public disgust".
Juju magic
Harrison imprisoned both girls - aged 14 and 16 - at his home in Albert Square, Stratford, in 2009, before attempting to traffic them to Spain and Greece as prostitutes.
The two had been controlled by Juju magic rituals, the court was told.
One of the girls was gagged and bound in a bathroom One of the girls was gagged and bound in Harrison's bathroom
The case is thought to be the first of its kind in Europe to involve a prosecution linked to such a practice.
Both girls came from small villages in Edo, Nigeria, and were sold into prostitution with the help of the local Juju priest.
Juju is a significant part of West African culture.
Police said Harrison was a key player in a sophisticated network of West African people traffickers operating in the UK.
After Harrison was convicted, the prosecution told the court: "This has been something of a unique case and ground-breaking. It's the first time there has been a prosecution for trafficking out of the UK.
"It's the first time the Crown has been able to persuade victims of these type of offences to give evidence."
Det Con Andy Desmond, of Metropolitan Police, said: "These young women suffered the most terrifying and degrading ordeal - leaving them emotionally, psychologically and physically traumatised.
"Most cruelly of all, they were brainwashed into believing that if they disobeyed their captors by seeking help, they would die.
"They were also told that if they went to the police for help they would be handed straight back to their captors."
A Home Office spokesman said: "We will seek to deport this individual at the earliest opportunity.
"Our priority will always be to protect the public, and we will seek to remove any foreign national convicted of a serious crime.
"Last year we removed 5,235 foreign criminals from the UK."

news/politics: Hollywood's role in South Sudan's independence

news/politics: Hollywood's role in South Sudan's independence: " The Republic of South Sudan will soon be the world's newest nation. Its independence on Saturday will be celebrated in the United States ..."

Hollywood's role in South Sudan's independence

Young Sudanese girls in traditional dress participate in a march organised by the Sudan People's Liberation Movement  in Juba on 5 July
 
The Republic of South Sudan will soon be the world's newest nation.
Its independence on Saturday will be celebrated in the United States by Republicans and by Democrats alike, and by Christian conservatives alongside Hollywood liberals.
All have been vocal advocates in the US for an end to war in Sudan that has taken millions of lives and resulted in accusations of genocide.
These advocates include actors Don Cheadle and George Clooney, known to some in the US as "Mr Sudan".
Mr Clooney, convinced by activist friends to use his star power to draw attention to the crisis in Sudan, led a rally in Washington and delivered a speech on Sudan at the United Nations in 2006.
"Everyone feels like this is one issue they can all be on the same side on, and there aren't many of those," Mr Clooney said in an interview.
On the other side, are evangelical Christians determined to stop what they claimed was the persecution and killing of Christians by Muslims from northern Sudan.
Evangelical churches began building hospitals, schools and churches in the mostly animist and Christian south in the 1990s.
Under pressure
In 2004, evangelical groups pressed then-President George W Bush - himself a born-again Christian - to send troops to Sudan.
The president did not go that far but he did impose tough economic sanctions on Sudan and press the Khartoum government to negotiate a peace deal with rebels in the south that was signed in 2005.
George Clooney in Juba in January 2011 George Clooney was in South Sudan for January's independence referendum
But did the lobbying and campaigning by evangelicals and Hollywood celebrities make a difference?
A member of the Bush administration, the former ambassador to Nigeria, John Campbell, thinks so.
"South Sudan captured the public's imagination more than has happened elsewhere in Africa because Christians in Sudan used their grapevine to let Christians in America know that Muslims were persecuting them."
It reminded people, says Mr Campbell, "of the persecution of the Jews in the Soviet Union and elsewhere." Mr Campbell says the role celebrities played was important, too.
"Celebrities made all of this known, in their way, to ordinary people and made it part of the conversation to people who would otherwise not pay much attention to what was happening overseas."
Enoch Awejok, an official at South Sudan's embassy in Washington, also believes the lobbying and campaigning made a difference.
"Without George Clooney and the churches, the CPA [Comprehensive Peace Agreement] would not have occurred," he says.
"And they still have an effective role to play in resolving the outstanding issues in Sudan."
I just wish people would be more open to learn about things instead of looking at because a celebrity is involved and all of a sudden people want to be involved”
End Quote Mari Malek Southern Sudan Initiatives
Sudanese expatriates in the United States have campaigned for their country, too.
But New York-based fashion model Mari Malek, born in southern Sudan, founder of the charity Southern Sudan Initiatives, worries that without the involvement of celebrities many Americans would not have been interested in Sudan, at all.
"I just wish people would be more open to learn about things instead of looking at because a celebrity is involved and all of a sudden people want to be involved," says Ms Malek.
"I think people should be more open-minded instead of looking at it as a cool thing."
Sudan became "cool" to Americans looking for a cause to support in 2003 when the film Lost Boys of Sudan was released.
This was a documentary about the remarkable story of the hundreds of Sudanese boys who fled the civil war, walked for weeks to Ethiopia, where their refugee camps were attacked, forcing them to flee to Kenya, before they were finally allowed into the US.
The film helped make the plight of the people of Sudan known and make it a cause many Americans wanted to be involved in.
Ger Duany is one of the Lost Boys of Sudan. An actor who lives now in Harlem, in New York City, Duany was featured in the Hollywood film I Heart Huckabees.
Duany says he made sure to lobby and tell his co-stars on the film - Dustin Hoffman and Mark Wahlberg - what he faced in Sudan.
All you need to know about South Sudan's independence
"I spoke to a lot of guys and they were very supportive people, Mark Wahlberg mostly, but I think in a way more could have been done. We are not free," says Duany, who plans on being in South Sudan to celebrate its official independence on 9 July.
South Sudan has enjoyed a lot of support in the United States.
But now that it is about to achieve its independence some are concerned that Americans who campaigned and lobbied on its behalf, will find some other "cool" cause to occupy them.
If this does happen, says Ms Malek, then Sudanese expatriates in the US will do whatever they have to to ensure their new country is not forgotten.
"I think that the new generation of South Sudan people who migrated here to the USA are going to keep the momentum going," she says.
"So, with or without the celebrities, I think we are strong enough to keep pushing the momentum."
As for Mr Campbell, the former Bush administration ambassador to Nigeria, he says Americans will be content to turn their attention elsewhere if after 9 July, boundary lines between north and south are respected and there is agreement on how the oil revenue will be divided up.
If, however, says Mr Campbell, "we see the kind of bloodshed we have seen over the past several weeks then I don't think American attention or interest in Sudan and South Sudan will dissipate, at all.

Illegal UK film downloads up 30%, new figures suggest

A 25-year-old illegal downloader tells Newsbeat why he thinks it's OK
The number of illegally downloaded films in the UK has gone up nearly 30% in five years, new figures suggest.
That research, from internet consultancy firm Envisional, indicates that the top five box office movies were illegally downloaded in the UK a total of 1.4 million times last year.
Film industry bosses say it is costing £170m every year and putting thousands of jobs at risk.
The research also shows a big rise in TV shows being pirated online.
Dr David Price led the the team which conducted the research and said there are four main reasons for the increase.
Graph showing increase in illegal downloads "We've seen increases in technology like faster broadband," he said.
"The methods of piracy have become easier, with quicker downloads and easier to find content.
"We have a generation online now who aren't really bothered about downloading things illegally.
"Finally it's an issue of availability - there's a lot of American content which a lot of people are desperate to download that they can't get hold of legitimately."
It's people like Steve, who's 25 and from Essex, that the film industry says are the biggest threat to its future survival and success.
He illegally downloads and uploads around 10 films per week.
"I think in comparison to the money they make it's a drop in the ocean," he said.
'Creating jobs'
"Also, what I'm actually doing is providing people with new jobs.
"With all these ISPs that are producing super fast broadband we [illegal downloaders] are actually helping create those jobs," he added.

Dr Price on why piracy is rising

  • Broadband speeds have increased
  • Technology has made piracy faster and easier
  • A new generation doesn't think piracy is wrong
  • People illegally download top US shows to see them before they're out in the UK
But movie industry bosses rubbish such claims.
Kieron Sharp works for the Federation Against Copyright Theft or FACT.
"Research for the government has shown that film piracy costs the industry about half a billion pounds a year," he said.
"About a third of that is due to illegal downloading of film and TV content.
"Clearly that is unacceptable."
'Big demand'
But it's not just illegal film downloading that's on the rise - research suggests people are illegally downloading more TV shows too.
The top five most popular shows were illegally downloaded a total of 1.24 million times in the UK last year.
That's a 33% increase from 2006 figures.
"We have a big demand in this country for north American TV shows in particular," Dr Price said.
"Shows like Glee and House are heavily illegally downloaded in the UK.
"We're very eager to get the television shows as soon as they get broadcast in the US.
"But we often have to wait for one month or two months for those shows to be shown legitimately in the UK.
"So people naturally turn to the internet to get that content as soon as they possibly can."
As for a solution, Dr Price says one of the best ideas available to content producers is a controversial one.
"They need to compete with piracy and get their content out there themselves as easily and as quickly and as cheaply as possible," he said.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Yellowtone's deadly mauling by grizzly first in park in 25 years

A killer grizzly is roaming Yellowstone National Park's backcountry after mauling a man who apparently surprised the female bear and its cubs while hiking with his wife, in the park's first fatal grizzly attack in 25 years. Scroll down the article to view a video report.
http://www.grandforksherald.com/event/article/id/209014/

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Our economy in trouble, say Okonjo-Iweala, Aganga, Nnaji

By HENRY UMORU, CHARLES KUMOLU, INALEGWU SHAIBU& OGECHI OHAEGBULAM
ABUJA—THREE ministers-designate at the heart of the Goodluck Jonathan economic revival team, yesterday, reviewed the Nigerian economy and posited big trouble unless the present consumption pattern is reversed.
Managing Director of the World Bank, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; immediate past Finance Minister and erstwhile Managing Director of Goldman Sachs, Mr. Olusegun Aganga and former Presidential Adviser on Power, Prof. Barth Nnaji; spoke at the Senate screening exercise where they were confirmed as Ministers.
Prof. Barth Nnaji, Olusegun Aganga and Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Okonjo-Iweala who painted a gory picture of the Nigerian economy during a Senate confirmation hearing to return her to her old job as Minister of Finance, asked: “How can we invest in capital if we’re spending all our money on recurrent expenditures.”
The Senate had approved the unanimous opposition by all three Lagos senators to confirm Aganga as the ministerial nominee from Lagos. Other nominees confirmed, yesterday, were Comrade Aba Moro, Benue; Dr. Samuel Ortom, Benue; Senator Idris Umar, Gombe; and Mrs. Viola Onwuliri, Imo.
Screening of nominees
Also confirmed yesterday were Professor Ita Okon-Bassey, Akwa Ibom; and Erelu Olusola Obada, Osun.
The seriousness with which Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala and some of the nominees painted issues were,  however, lacking in the approach of the Senate in the screening of  the other nominees. A number of the nominees were confirmed without as much as a question from the senators who simply asked them to bow and go.
Dressed in a blue blouse and skirt made of African print with black spots and with her landmark headgear, Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala entered the Senate chambers at precisely 12.10 p.m. and was let off at 1.15 p.m.
She was quizzed on several issues pertaining to the economy and for the first time was publicly made to disclose reasons for her unceremonious exit from the Olusegun Obasanjo cabinet.
Noting that Nigeria was eating out of what it should be using to develop itself, Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said: “I am really worried about the issue of making sure our budget is not eaten up by recurrent expenditure. How can we invest in capital if we’re spending all our money on recurrent expenditures. Can we run a budget that is not negative? Absolutely. We can do it, we have done it. We have been able in the past.
Recurrent expenditure
“I strongly believe that we should try as a country as much as possible live within our means. Right now we need to work very hard because the budget that we have is such that the current expenditure is almost 74 per cent of the budget, therefore, there is not as much left for capital, so we need to work hard to put in place policy that will make it possible to continue to implement fiscal policies that will enable us to tackle the various challenges in the economy while at the same time living within our means.”
She noted that the recurrent expenditure was crowding out other necessary investment in infrastructure especially power and as such solicited the help of senators to help the executive branch of government by giving the push to cut down recurrent spending.
Also noting the effect of unemployment on the economy, she said: “I think the main problems in the economy have to do with creating jobs. We have unemployment rate of about 14 to 16 per cent, but very large under-employment and the issue is how to make the economy growing in a way that it will create jobs, so those fiscal policies have to be supportive of sectors that are going to be job creating, because we now have growth, but we need to translate that growth into jobs, so those are the kinds of fiscal policies that we need to encourage. We should privatize sectors that are job creating.”
Noting the declining performance of the federal budget, she said: “When I joined the administration of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, the budget implementation was 30 percent in 2003, we got up to 90 and 85 percent as at the time I was leaving. And that was a good for any country. As at now the implementation is at 53 percent. I don’t see any reason why the budget will not be fully implemented, if it is reasonable and delivered on time. Budget will be fully implemented if the revenue is coming with less expenditure.”
Expressing concern that the country was not maximally exploiting its oil revenues, she said: “We are losing reserves, it shouldn”t be, we should be increasing our reserves, at the same time. I am aware that part of the reserve maybe due to decision to support the naira, I don’t think is something that is untoward, but if we want to revalue the naira this will not be the time to think about it. I think we should wait until things are more stable, we are growing our economy, we are creating jobs, we make sure our young people are working and the sectors we have are really giving what they should before we think in that direction.”
Investment in oil sectcor
Answering a question on the Joint Venture Companies, JVC, Okonjo-Iweala said: “On the issue of JVC I think there are number of modalities that many countries use to manage the oil sector, exploration in their countries and investment into the oil sector. I think the problem that we have is that our own portion of the joint venture over time we have difficulties meeting that, but I don’t see anything wrong with them per se, I think in the beginning if you are going to go that route, you really need to have strong presence and advise to make sure that what you negotiate really obeys the law that will be of benefit to the country at the end of the day after the whole process.”
Inevitably, she was drawn to why she had to resign from the Obasanjo government after her successful role in erasing most of the country’s debts to the Paris Club of debtor nations.
She said: “I did not run away, I was here. I resigned, I served the country for about three years and when I determined that I could no longer perform and give to the country the way that I would want, I resigned, which is the honourable thing to do, so I did not run away. When the circumstances are appropriate to serve, you serve and if they are not appropriate, you go and do something else. I think three years plus of service is quite substantial, not only in Nigeria, but elsewhere in other countries, it is regarded as a good amount of time to have given the country and I intend to implement and if Iam cleared I will do my job.”
On the usefulness or otherwise of sustaining the subsidy on petroleum, Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said that subsidy was a good instrument needful in narrowing the economic gap between the rich and the poor but lamented that where it is not effectively utilized it becomes wasted.
She said that she was especially touched by the wide gulf between the rich and the poor in Nigeria saying that narrowing it was one of the incentives for her returning to the federal cabinet.
She noted: “We have coefficient of inequality. It is this inequality that is holding us down. People keep asking why I want to come back to work, but the reason is simple. In a country where the rich keeps getting richer and the poor keeps getting poorer, we need to bridge the gap. We live in a country, where the rich can just wake up and decide to travel abroad, just as their children school abroad and have access to good healthcare. On the part of the poor, the reverse is the case.”
In addition, Iweala said: “The children of the poor don’t have good schools to attend to and no good healthcare system in a country of 150 million people. That is the inequality we are talking about. We must change this because I know it is possible to do so. I will ensure that we improve the lot of the common people, in order to prevent our young people from moving abroad.”
Aganga who appeared after Okonjo-Iweala also lamented the lopsidedness of the national budget on recurrent expenditure which he said was responsible for the nation’s economic downturn.
Aganga noted that the Nigeria”s huge personnel cost at 75 percent average is a drain on the nation’s resources which has become a burden and an impediment to infrastructural development.
He said: “The level of expenditure has increased significantly. Five years ago it was N1.6 trillion. In 2009 it went up to N3 trillion. In 2010, N4 trillion and in 2011 it is going to go to N4.4 trillion that is hard given the level of revenue we have today.
“The second challenge we have is the level of our recurrent expenditure. In 2009 it represented 30 percent of total expenditure, in 2010 it represented 73 percent of expenditure and 2011 it is going to be 74percent of the expenditure. What that means is that the amount we are investing in infrastructure and development is less than 30 percent of total expenditure, so how can you develop as a country?
That has been the case for the last ten years. If you look at the figure compared to the revenue, the recurrent expenditure in 2009 extended beyond the total revenue. What is happening then is that it means you are borrowing for recurrent consumption. That is bad.
Recurrent expenditure exceeds revenue
“In 2010 your recurrent expenditure as a country exceeded your revenue also. That is bad. There are four items in recurrent expenditure, the first is debt servicing, the second is statutory transfer, the third is pensions and all that, that is small. The biggest is what we call the personnel cost. Personnel cost increased from N851 billion two years ago to N1.3 trillion in 2010. Which is an increase of about 61 percent and has gone up to about N1.4 trillion in 2011 that is where the bulk of the money is. So the issue is on personnel cost.
“We have run a budget every year that has a deficit. The deficit in 2011 is about N1.2 trillion that is why the domestic debt has gone up. That is the challenge we have as country.”
Former Special Adviser to the Presiden on Power, Professor Nnaji, while responding to questions from senators confirmed the  tie between industrial production and power but confessed that 90 per cent of the nation’s industries had wound up on account of lack of power.
Noting government’s efforts in the sector, he said that massive investment was needed into the sector but said that government could not do it alone and hence the need to create the enabling environment for investors to come in. he said that was the reason for the increase in electricity tariff. He, however, affirmed that government would continue to subsidise electricity tariff for the next three years before a complete withdrawal.
Responding to questions on the opposition to his nomination by some groups in the power sector, he alleged a collusion between some elements among one of the unions and those he claimed were determined to allow the poor power supply system to continue.
While noting that a total of 10 billion dollars was required yearly for the next ten years to build up the sector, he said the country has an installed capacity of 5,000 megawatts while the current production level is 2,400MW.
Noting that the absence of more investments would spell doom for the nation’s Nnaji also said that Nigeria in its fifty years of existence had not produced a power study.
Outside investment
On the need for outside investment, he said: “There is no way investors will invest if the tariff does not reflect the cost. It must meet international standard of recovery of cost. For those who are poor, there is a way to reduce the tariff. There is cost subsidy that is actually in the electricity act.”
On whether threats by staff of Power Holding will not affect him, he said: “There are three unions in electricity. You have the pension union, they have not opposed. You have the senior staff union, they don”t seem to oppose. You have the junior staff union and it is a segment of the junior staff that is doing the opposition. But it is based on fear. You have two types of fear here, one is fear of change and in any place where there is a reform in the world, this fear will hold the people in that sector and so it is not different here. They are afraid of change.
“The second is fear of job loss. They are afraid that they will lose their jobs. But it does not make sense to us because we cannot manufacture workers from the air, it must be the same workers that are in the sector that will ultimately be co-opted in the sector.
“Also those who are not really competent may upon privatisation of the companies may decide not to keep such workers. Anybody who is operating a business will want the people who are working to be competent. It is just normal. The plan is not to just leave the workers out there in the cold. The plan had been let us ensure that the workers who benefit are taken care of and also apart from state government and the federal government, it is only the workers that are going to have shares in the companies. So it is just fear and which I understand.”
Three of the nominees, Bello, the Acting Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Orotom and Senator Idris were asked to bow and go without answering questions.
‘I was a motor park tout’
Ortom, a nominee from Benue State told the senators that before he struggled to educate himself to finally get his Doctorate degree, he had to engage himself at the motor park from where he got money and registered for the General Certificate of Education, GCE, examination.
According to him from the motor park, he started driving commercial vehicles as a way of boosting his income.
Ortom who is the Chairman, board of the Standard Organisations of Nigeria, SON, told the senators that because of the way he a struggled to achieve what he has achieved, he was qualified to be cleared and made a Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Moved by emotion, Senator Ehigie Uzamere, ACN, Edo South moved that the nominee should be asked to bow and go saying that his presentation and honesty were enough reason to confirm him. The majority of the senate agreed and he was subsequently asked to take a bow and go.

LIFE: DON’T HOPE,…DECIDE

LIFE: DON’T HOPE,…DECIDE: "While waiting to pick up a friend at the airport in Portland, Oregon, I had one of those life-changing experiences that you hear other peopl..."

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Police arrest brothers for facilitating robbery of mother

The Police Ondo State Command on Tuesday paraded 20 suspected robbers, including two brothers, for allegedly aiding their friends to rob their mother.

The State Commissioner of Police command, Mr. Sani Magaji, while parading the suspects, explained that six of them were arrested for kidnapping and five for armed robbery.

He also said three persons were arrested for killing a baby for ritual purposes; four for vandalisation, while a woman was nabbed for breaking into a shop through the ceiling and stealing some wares.

The two brothers, Azuka Okeke and Blessing Okeke, confessed to journalists that they had earlier stolen N1.25m from their mother, Mrs Ayodele Okeke, a petroleum product marketer based in Okitipupa.

The commissioner said the entire amount was recovered from the gang which also included Godwin, Peretu Fredrick, Ugochukwu Nwosu, and Akindele Ogunmusere.

He said they were arrested in a hotel in Okitipupa while planning to rob Mrs. Okeke with the aid of a map, showing security points and residence of their target.

Blessing, a 300 level Political Science student at the Novena University, Kwale, in Delta State, told journalists in an interview that he stole the N1.25m from his mother’s bedroom.

A 30-year-old woman, Mrs. Bosede Johnson, who was arrested with two Ghana-Must-Go bags of expensive clothes allegedly stolen from a shop on Oda Road, Akure also confessed to the act.

Johnson said she sold the stolen items in her shop located at the Alaafia Tayo area of Akure and used the proceeds to take care of her two children, having lost her husband few years ago.

She said, “I used to gain access to the shops through the ceiling, which I will cleverly climb at nights. I used to sell all the stolen materials in my own shops to unsuspecting members of the public.

Will I ever find Wilson?



What can Evangelist Wilson Bala, a retired Chief Superintendent of Police, do again today after several attempts have been fruitless? Not that he has resigned to fate in his search for his missing son but the retired police officer can no longer sleep early. He sleeps late because sleep won’t just come early. To kill boredom, he reads newspapers that he gets from a woman who owns a provision shop near his house at the Anguwan Kashua area in Bauchi metropolis.

When he wakes up in his modest four-bedroom house, he feels a sense of loss. He gets out of bed, calls his wife and children for morning prayers and the head of the family reads the bible and shares the word. The main prayer point remains unchanged: Oh God, let Wilson find peace wherever he is until we see again. Bala, in his late 60s, takes his bath and his breakfast of coffee and bread with some stew. The emptiness creeps in again. he then picks the phone and calls his lawyer or Wilson’s colleagues in the Navy for any word on his missing son.

Bala, who says he puts his faith in God absolutely, wants to know what has happened to his son, who suddenly disappeared from the navy. Is he dead or alive? Why won’t the navy or anybody tell him where Wilson is? But he has not got answers to the questions regarding his son’s whereabouts.
The nearly six feet tall ex-policeman feels let down by a country he served diligently for almost 35 years before his retirement. “It is very painful that even where he worked before he disappeared has not deemed it fit to officially let me know what happened to my son,” he laments.

If you look closely, you will see a tear form in his left eye but he fights to control his emotions, apparently believing that he can handle the pain that the sudden disappearance of his son has wrought on the family.
What’s his next step? Bala tells Daily Sun that he has done everything possible to get answers but has not succeeded. “I have written several letters to the Nigeria Chief of Naval Staff over the mysterious disappearance of my son, who is serving with the navy,” he says. He recalls a letter addressed to the naval chief over his missing son, Lmea Wilson Sunday, who enlisted into the Nigerian Navy on February 9, 1998. He opens a file and brings out the letter entitled: MYSTERIOUS DISAPEARANCE OF MY SON, LMEA WILSON SUNDAY E4080, A NAVAL OFFICER HAILED FROM HONG LGA OF ADAMAWA STATE.” “I am yet to hear any news since I sent this letter dated March 28, 2011,” he says.

The man disclosed in the letter that his son, Wilson Sunday, aged 33, enlisted with SSCE and undertook his basic training at the Nigerian Naval Engineering College, Naval Base, New Port, Ogorode, Sapele in Delta State.
The letter reads in part: “After he finished his basic training, he was then stationed in Lagos. He has served twelve (12) years in the Nigerian Navy. On 23/6/2010, I received a phone call from my brother, who is resident at Kwakwah, my home town in Hong Local Government Area of Adamawa State, informing me that he heard from a friend in Lagos that my son, Wilson Sunday, left his house on June 20, 2010 and had not returned home. He wanted to know whether we heard the news in Bauchi where I am resident with my family after my retirement from the Nigeria Police Force. I did not receive such news from the Nigerian Navy.”

Bala is sad that since the mysterious disappearance of his son last June, the family has not received any official report from the Nigerian Navy. He opines: “I had asked one of my sons to travel to Lagos to where he was working for the past 12 years to find out the true situation of my missing son, Wilson Sunday, but no useful information has been supplied to him by the naval authorities. He had to come back to Bauchi. After some time, he went back to Lagos, yet no tangible information about my son’s whereabouts up till this time of writing. Since June 20, 2010. Nothing was heard or received about my missing son.”
The retired policeman says after pressure was mounted on the Nigerian Navy, the only response the family got from them was that they were investigating the case. He’s shocked that the result of the investigation was yet to be communicated to the family.

Bala says after all efforts to get information from the Nigerian Navy failed, he wrote another letter to the Chief of Naval Staff, Abuja, with reference number ISBC/MI/2010 through the family’s lawyer on October 22, 201O.
The letter was copied to the Chief of Defence Staff, Nigerian Army Headquatres, Abuja, the Commissioner of Police, Lagos, the Senate, the House of Representatives and the Adamawa State House of Assembly.
He says: “By this letter, we in the family thought that the Chief of Naval Staff would look into the case and order for appropriate investigation to bring to light the truth of the case. But to my greatest surprise, until the time of writing, there was no response from the Chief of Naval Staff, Abuja.

“Now it is with a heavy heart that I am writing to notify the Nigerian Navy through the national dailies of the trauma we in the family are going through in respect of the search for my son, LMEA Wilson Sunday, who mysteriously disappeared about 10 months ago“Yet as if nothing had happened, the navy kept silence about it since then. And the result of the purported investigation is yet to be made known to members of the family. In this respect, Nigerians would agree with me that there is no trauma that is more than an emotional/psychological one.”

The aggrieved dad queried: “The question we in the family are still asking is: Where is the whereabouts of Wilson Sunday? What happened to him? I feel we in the family are entitled to receive answers to these questions. And if he is dead, I think the family members are also entitled to know and to receive possibly a letter of condolence from the Nigerian Navy. I pray for the intervention of Almighty God.”

'My father made me marry a man I don't love'


Olachi was the apple of her father's eye. Being the first and only girl amongst four boys, her father, Sir Louis Ukaegbu, never hid this fact-Anything or person who touched Olachi indirectly touched him. He gave her everything she wanted- she attended the best of schools and he spoilt her rotten.
The only thing that brought a semblance of balance to Olachi's life was her mother, Lady Cecilia Ukaegbu. This, her mother did with quite a bit of caution for she dared not incur the wrath of her husband in trying to inculcate discipline in her only daughter. Olachi equally loved her father and did everything possible to always please him-she must not fall short of her father's expectations. But despite all the affluence she was exposed to, she grew up to be a beautiful, loving and respectful person. She was humane, always thinking about the welfare of her fellow human beings.
She had hoped to work for a few years after graduation from the university before finally settling down but her boyfriend of four years, Uche quickly proposed marriage to her on the last day of their youth service year. She had no doubt in her mind that Uche was the one but she didn't expect marriage to him to be so soon. She, however, gave in and made the necessary introductions to her parents. While her mother was over the moon, her father's elation ended the moment Uche stepped out of the door. He told her point blank that she couldn't marry him.
Not that Uche was below the standards expected of him; after all he was a handsome and industrious young man with an enviable parentage. Her father told her that he had someone else in mind, who, he wanted her to be married to; a young man whom he claimed was like a younger brother to him, someone he took under his tutelage when he was still in paid employment.
Now the said man, Simon, had risen to an enviable height in his career and had grown to become a fine young man-envy to not a few women. Olachi was heartbroken; she couldn't understand why her father would prefer she married someone she felt nothing for. She tried to dissuade her father from carrying out his plans but her pleas and that of her mother's fell on deaf ears.
Due to her overwhelming love and respect for her father, she eventually succumbed to her father's insistence on marrying this Simon she had never met but only heard about. She had a hard time trying to convince Uche that they needed to go their separate ways, she loved him no doubt, but her father's opinion was superior to whatever argument she may want to put up.
After weeks of pleading for his understanding, Uche reluctantly severed his relationship with Olachi. She eventually met with Simon who was nothing like her Uche, what with success and affluence written all over him. But she willed herself to love him for her father's sake.
They got married less than three months after and settled down to the business of marriage. Simon was as cold as steel to her even though she tried many times to pull him out of his shell. He was emotionless and hardly ever displayed any romance with her.
She laid complaints to her father on several occasions until finally, he told her never to come to him to complain about her marriage but to make it work. Her mother was helpless and could only advise that she endured with Simon since they were only getting to know each other better.
Unfortunately, five years after enduring an eccentric man for a husband, they were yet to produce off springs. Several trips to the doctors had given her a clean bill of health but not Simon, who refused to go anywhere near a hospital much less a doctor! When she accused him of deliberately refusing to have children, he beat her silly.
This pattern continued each time she tried to complain about his insensitivity on several issues; each beating always left her with a very visible scar. One of such beatings landed her in the hospital and rather than reach out to her parents, it was her brothers she turned to for consolation. So aggrieved were they at what Simon had turned their sister into that they in turn beat him thoroughly.
Simon went to Olachi's father to report and rather than listen to both sides of the story, her father blamed his sons for taking the law into their hands. He asked them to allow the couple sort out their disputes themselves since no third party mediated in his marriage of over thirty years to their mother.
Everything anyone else said made no sense to him. As soon as his daughter got discharged, he told her to keep a rein on her tongue and to quit provoking her husband so she wouldn't ever find herself on the hospital bed again.
It has been ten years of hell rather than a blissful marriage and they still do not have children. Olachi is tempted to leave the marriage, not minding what her father would say in order to save her life and make something meaningful out of it. But she is hampered by her religion which doesn't allow divorce except to faithfully work at making it work. She wondered how long she was going to continue to condone the evil Simon was perpetrating to her, before her sanity snapped.

Why should i get mary: Cheating

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'Akala spent N24bn on road contracts without due process'

The transition committee set up by Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State has said the immediate past Governor, Otunba Adebayo Alao-Akala spent a mouth-watering N24 billion on road contracts in the year 2010 alone without regard for quality and maintenance.
The committee through its Chairman, Dr. Adebisi Busari also alleged that the previous administration awarded contracts with impunity and engaged consultants without due process, citing the controversial award of LAUTECH Teaching Hospital project.
These were contained in a report of the committee which was presented to the governor at the Council Chambers of the Governor's Office on Thursday by Dr. Adebisi.According to the 30-man transition committee, the resultant effect of this disregard for quality and maintenance was "that most of these roads are in various stages of disrepair."
Dr. Adebisi explained that in the course of his committee's activities, it was discovered that appointments and promotions were made within the higher echelon of the civil service, without regard to vacancies or need.
He also noted that there had been total collapse of the healthcare delivery system in the state under the former government, "in spite of the huge resources of the State committed to the sector in the last six months".
Dr. Adebisi restated that in pursuit of the mandate of the then governor-elect for a smooth transition, the previous administration created bottlenecks for the committee.
The former political science teacher said that the committee, however, had to rely on report of activities of various ministries, departments and agencies as at May, 2011, as well as information gathered at the interactive sessions with officials of these ministries, departments and agencies.
The committee also said that the out-gone government went on an "unrestrained appointment and promotion within the higher echelon of the service without regard to vacancies and/or need due to politicization of the public service."
Dr. Adebisi said that the committee hoped that Governor Ajimobi would "galvanize the transformational agenda of the present government through a peep into the financial status of Oyo state" through the various suggestions contained in the committee's report and that it "will provide the necessary compass to navigate the dark crevices of governance."
While receiving the report, Governor Ajimobi thanked the committee which he called "professional and intellectual" for its job, stating that from the presentation of its chairman which he called "erudite", he was sure that the report would be of high quality.
The governor said that the uncooperative attitude of the out-gone government was now understandable to him, based on the rot he had seen since assuming the mantle of office, maintaining that the government would look into the government to see how the government was run in the past.
He commended the quality of the committee stating that already, two out of it had been appointed as Secretary to the State Government and Chief of Staff and wished that some more would be appointed into office by government.

10 Feared Killed As Tiv Farmers, Fulani Herdsmen Clash Again

UDEI town, about 25 kilometres north of Makurdi, the Benue State capital, has been completely deserted following intense fighting between Tiv farmers and Fulani herdsmen. Ten persons were feared dead and hundreds displaced.
Despite heavy security presence around the border communities of Benue and Nasarawa States, heavy fighting continued on Thursday night, with fighters on both sides operating in the forests around the area, killing and burning down homes.
Near Udei, armed herdsmen and farmers continued their guerrilla fighting on Thursday evening, making it impossible for the soldiers drafted to the area to track them down. Residents of the area fled to camps in Daudu and to the homes of their relatives in Makurdi to escape the fighting.
The clashes forced the Benue and Nasarawa State governments to set up a high powered joint committee yesterday, to stem the escalating violence in the border areas of the two states.
Inauguration of the committee by Governors Gabriel Suswam of Benue State and Tanko Al-Makura of Nasarawa which took place at Yelwatta in Nasarawa State, was held amid very tight security mounted by close to 150 soldiers, mobile policemen, regular policemen and agents of the State Security Service (SSS).
Governor Suswam regretted the killing of security personnel by the fighters and urged the joint committee to work hard to achieve lasting peace in the area. He said that the root cause of the crisis was the migration of some Fulani herdsmen who had clashed with Tiv farmers in Benue State, only to relocate to Nasarawa State to instigate violence against Tiv people.
On his part, Nasarawa State Governor, Tanko Al-Makura urged all affected communities to eschew violence and give peace a chance. He said members of the joint committee were chosen based on their track records, to restore peace in the affected areas.
Meanwhile, former Minority Whip of the Senate, Senator Daniel Saror has regretted the inability of the government and its agencies to bring the crisis under control, describing the failure of the government as disturbing.
He called on the government to engage traditional institutions to resolve the crisis between the Tiv and Fulani.

EFCC Arraigns Former Jigawa Gov, Turaki Over N40bn Fraud

former Jigawa State governor, Senator Saminu Turaki, on Friday appeared before a Federal High Court sitting in Dutse over 32 count charges levelled against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
The former governor was earlier standing trial before an Abuja High court since 2007 on the same count charge, but the case was re-opened by the EFCC and transferred to Jigawa State for prosecution.
The former governor, who was present in court during the proceedings was asked to stand in the witness box for 85 minutes while the charges were read to him.
The former governor was accused of conspiracy between him, his companies, Arkel Nigeria limited, Wild Cat Construction Company, INC Natural resources and one Ahmed Muhammed Ibrahim now at large. Both were said to have defrauded the state government to the tune of N40 billion.
The charges include illegal transactions involving N8.4 billion, N1 billion on the 3rd May 2006 , another N1billion on the 23rd of May 2006 , N6 billion also on the 23rd of May 2006 and N91, 870, 142. Y60 million on the 25th of August 2006, which it said contravened section 14, 17 sub section 1B of the Money Laundering Prohibition Act 2004.
In his ruling, the presiding judge of the court, Justice Shehu Yahaya allowed the accused person to continue to enjoy the bail based on the conditions granted by the previous judges.
Speaking before the court, counsel to the accused person, Barrister Mahmud Abubakar Magaji prayed the court to grant bail to his client orally.
Barrister Magaji, while explaining his oral application for bail said that, "all evidence and facts are available before the court that Turaki was granted bail by two previous judges who handled the case before its transfer to Dutse but that his client never jumped bail nor made any move that could tamper with the court case"

Why did Kolade kill Titi?

 


The question on the lips of neighbours, friends and other relatives of the couple is why would Kolade kill Titilayo, the mother of his three-year old daughter? What is even more strange is that the incident took place on his 30th birthday.



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A colleague of Titilayo, who used to work at the Marina branch of the bank but was recently transferred, told Sunday Sun that Titilayo was a hardworking and jovial lady with a lovable personality. Her voice laden with emotion, she recalled her relationship with the deceased, saying: “I’ve known Titilayo for more than three years. She joined Marina branch over a year ago. She joined Skye bank about four years ago and I can tell you that she never received a query from the bank.

That is to show you how committed she was to her job.
“But what has been strange about her is that on some occasions, she had come to work with injuries but no one suspected that she was being abused. There was a day she came to work in bandage but when I asked her how she sustained the injuries, she said she fell from okada.

Two weeks ago, another colleague saw marks on her hands but when asked how she got the bruises, she said she slipped on the stairs in the house. It is now that I’m beginning to connect the dots. Titilayo was small in stature and her husband is big. I can only imagine the sort of beating he would have been giving her. I regret not noticing on time. Probably, we would have been able to avert this disaster,” the lady lamented.

Sunday Sun learnt that Titilayo was an introvert and this probably explains why many people around her never knew about her troubled marriage. Our source said “Titi was so much in love with Akolade. On many occasions, she would distribute copies of Akolade’s curriculum vitae to colleagues in the office because she was eager to see him get a job. Akolade however, never appreciated her. Sometimes, he would seize her cheque book, ATM cards and her car keys as punishment whenever they fought even though she was the one sustaining the family financially.”
Sunday Sun checks revealed that on the day Titilayo was murdered, she had just started her leave from work so as to spend more time with her husband and daughter because she hardly had time for them due to the demanding nature of her job.

“Titilayo was very happy last Thursday because her leave was to start on Friday, which happened to be her husband’s 30th birthday. She said the leave period would be for just herself and her husband. Because she had no housemaid, she used to leave her daughter in the care of her father and her stepmother on Mondays and then pick her up on Friday,” the source said.

Anothersource added that on the day she was killed, the couple had a quarrel as usual. And neigbhours heard their loud voices as they argued in their flat but they didn’t bother to investigate as the couple frequently fought.
However, they began to suspect foul play when after a while they spotted Kolade hurriedly leaving the house, wearing a blood stained shirt. He got into the car and sped off.
It took two days later before they found out that Titilayo had been stabbed to death. Sunday Sun learnt that they had to break into the house. Another relative of Titilayo who pleaded anonymity said that they became worried after making several calls to the couple’s numbers to congratulate them on Kolade’s birthday but the numbers did not go through after two days.

Disturbed by this, they visited their house to find out what was amiss. And that was when they discovered her corpse after forcing the door open.
A friend of Kolade contacted by Sunday Sun, who doesn’t want his name in print, described Kolade as “a very easy-going young man who can hardly harm a fly.” He wondered what could have led into the alleged act.
All efforts to reach Kolade’s parents have proved abortive. Meanwhile, he has been in custody of State Criminal Investigation Department, Panti, Yaba, Lagos.





 


Man dies during sex romp with lover

  A man whose age was put between 55 and 60 years died in an hotel room at Aremo area in Ibadan, Oyo State where he had gone to have sex with his lover.
He was said to have booked a room and ordered for fish pepper soup and drinks, after which he and his lover got into bed and engaged in foreplay.
Baba Opa had reportedly interrupted the love session by taking an excuse to ease himself in an adjoining toilet.
It was while in the toilet that the woman was said to have heard a sound, which made her rush to the toilet to see what happened.
On sighting the figure of her lover on the toilet floor where he slumped, Sumbo had raised an alarm which attracted the staff of the hotel.
All efforts to revive the unconscious man proved abortive, which prompted the hotel staff to report the case at Agugu Police station.
When Sunday Tribune visited the scene, detectives from the police station were met at the scene, from where they eventually removed the man's remains for deposit at the Adeoyo State Hospital mortuary.
Information gathered revealed that the woman was married with four children and was the second wife of her husband, whom she was still married to.
The two lovers, according to the woman, had been going out for the past two years but were visiting an hotel for the first time.
She is currently being detained by the police to help in the investigations into unraveling the mystery surrounding the death of her lover.
The man whose name was simply given as Baba Opa and said to be a commercial motorcycle operator, had reportedly taken his 40-year-old lover known as Sumbo, to one Atiko Hotel around 2.30p.m. on the fateful day.

N13 billion debt: Court freezes SPDC accounts



Justice Okechukwu Okeke of the Federal High Court sitting in Lagos has restrained Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) from paying, transferring, crediting and or making any further payment as contribution and deductions from members of the SPDC West Multipurpose Co-operative Society Limited (otherwise known as Shell Staff Co-op Thrift and Credit Society (SSCTCS)) to any other bank except United Bank for Africa (UBA) PLC.The court also ordered nine commercial banks to disclose all the assets of Shell Staff Co-op Thrift and Credit Society with them. The banks include Access Bank PLC, Bank PHB PLC, Diamond Bank PLC, Equatorial Trust Bank Ltd, First Bank of Nigeria PLC, Zenith Bank PLC, Spring Bank PLC, Guaranty Trust Bank PLC and First City Monument Bank PLC.The court’s action is sequel to a motion ex-parte dated May 11, 2011 and filed on May 26 by UBA in its bid to recover a debt of N13.093 billion from SSCTCS in a suit pending before the court.The suit is between UBA PLC and SSCTCS but UBA, the plaintiff in the suit also joined Director Co-operative societies, Delta State as co-defendants.Justice Okeke also restrained SSCRCS and its directors, officers and their agents from demanding and accepting money from the nine banks mentioned, including UBA.  Besides, the court also barred the company and its agents from receiving any payment of sales or dividends on the shares it owned in the sister companies including Cordros Capital Limited, MBC Securities Limited, CashcraftAssts Management Limited, Law Union and Rock PLC, Maven Asset Management Ltd., BGL securities Ltd, Eurocomm Securities Ltd and UBA Stockbrokers Ltd.In an application sworn to by the principal remedial officer of UBA, Mr Yomi Dada, and filed before the court by Barrister Oluwakemi Balogun, in which the court granted the orders, the deponent averred that UBA granted upon request a N10 billion mortgage facility to SSCTCS to finance acquisition of homes by members of staff in January 2007.The said loan was secured by irrevocable domiciliation of all the company’s members’ monthly contribution and deductions to be paid to the bank as well as legal mortgage on the property to be acquired by all members of staff of the company.SSCTCS was to forward to UBA originals of the title documents as well as all other duty-executed documents required within four weeks of payment. UBA also directed the company to ensure that its main account was adequately funded in order to absorb the monthly loan deductions.Contrary to the agreement between the two parties, the company was alleged to have diverted the funds meant for the acquisition of properties into other use, to wit: purchase of shares in some of the companies listed above and depositing huge sums of money with some commercial banks.In order to make the defendant abide by the rules and regulations guiding the contract, UBA wrote several letters to the company on the need to fund its account.But instead of paying the loan, the company admitted an indebtedness of N2,729,687,380.00 and requested the bank to write off the sum of N5,640,000,000.UBA carried out forensic investigations and it was revealed that the company, acting through its authorized officials, deliberately perfected the alleged monument fraud on the bank, forcing it to write a petition to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) over the alleged fraud perpetuated by the company and its officials who were unjustifiably holding on to third-party deposition funds advanced by UBA PLC in the ordinary course of business.
These revelations came to light when some of the company’s officials were arrested by the EFCC. The outstanding indebtedness of the company in favour of the bank now stands at N13, 093, 13638, 18 as at 15 April, 2011. UBA therefore prayed the court, in the interest of justice, for a freezing of the company’s account, a request which the court granted.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Fox News Twitter feed says Obama dead in apparent hack

Fox News Twitter feed says Obama dead in apparent hack

Why should i get mary: Not tonight dear, we're married: Trying the knot ...

Why should i get mary: Not tonight dear, we're married: Trying the knot ...: "Sexual tension: A third polled no longer fancy their partner as much as they did in the early days, with 43 per cent claiming their loved ..."

LIFE: The Young Married Life of Bad Health

LIFE: The Young Married Life of Bad Health: "My friend his recently married, he weighed at the time 290 Lbs and now 8 months later he weighed 308. His wife was 250 9 months ago and now..."

Why should i get mary: Marriage can mean career slavery

Why should i get mary: Marriage can mean career slavery

Children and Divorce: Children and Divorce: Men need to stop and ask themselves

Children and Divorce: Children and Divorce: Men need to stop and ask themselves

blogger: Ten Tips for writing a blog post

blogger: Ten Tips for writing a blog post: "Here are ten tips that help me with my blog writing . Make your opinion known Link like crazy Write less 250 Words is enough Make Head..."

INSPIRATIONS STORY: TRUE LOVE STORY

INSPIRATIONS STORY: TRUE LOVE STORY: "One day, a young guy and a young girl fell in love. But the guy came from a poor family. The girl’s parents weren’t too happy. So the youn..."

INSPIRATIONS STORY: TRUE LOVE STORY

INSPIRATIONS STORY: TRUE LOVE STORY: "One day, a young guy and a young girl fell in love. But the guy came from a poor family. The girl’s parents weren’t too happy. So the youn..."

news/politics: African Union: Members will not cooperate with Gad...

news/politics: African Union: Members will not cooperate with Gad...: "The African Union says its members will not cooperate with the International Criminal Court's arrest warrant for Libyan leader Moammar Gadha..."

Sunday, July 3, 2011

African Union: Members will not cooperate with Gadhafi warrant

The African Union says its members will not cooperate with the International Criminal Court's arrest warrant for Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, arguing that the measure jeopardizes efforts to negotiate a peace deal in the war-torn nation.
The arrest warrant "seriously complicates the efforts aimed at finding a negotiated political solution to the crisis in Libya," said a statement summarizing the countries' decision at a summit in Equatorial Guinea that ended Friday.
A three-judge panel at court in the Hague in the Netherlands issued arrest warrants June 27 for Gadhafi, his son Saif al-Islam Gadhafi and his brother-in-law Abdullah al-Sanussi.
The warrants are "for crimes against humanity," including murder and persecution, "allegedly committed across Libya" from February 15 through "at least" February 28, the court said in a statement.
The court's judges said the arrests were necessary "to ensure their appearances before the court," ensure that the three "do not continue to obstruct and endanger the court's investigations" and "prevent them from using their powers to continue the commission of crimes."
Libya is not a signatory to the Rome Statute that established the international court's authority, and the court does not have the power to enter Libya and arrest the leaders.
Gadhafi has made clear he would not recognize the court's authority.
Some analysts said last week that the court's move could damage efforts to get Gadhafi to end his 42-year reign, stopping him from leaving the country for fear of being prosecuted.
"In effect, the ICC arrest warrant tells Gadhafi to fight to the death," said Michael Rubin, an analyst with the conservative American Enterprise Institute.
Speaking to reporters after the court issued the warrants last week, chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo batted away questions from reporters about whether an ICC arrest warrant would discourage Gadhafi from stepping down.
He said the decision to investigate Gadhafi came from a unanimous U.N. Security Council resolution, not the court.
The U.N. Security Council referred the matter to the ICC through a resolution February 26, following widespread complaints about Gadhafi's efforts to crush a rebellion.
In a statement Sunday, a spokesman for the British Foreign Office called on Gadhafi to end violence and leave office, noting that the NATO coalition's aim was to protect civilians, not arrange a safe exit for the Libyan leader.
"We have been clear that those responsible should be held to account. The ultimate political objective is to facilitate a transition to a stable, democratic Libya," the spokesman said in a statement. "To achieve this, Gadhafi must step down, and leave Libya to the Libyan people."
On Sunday South African President Jacob Zuma was scheduled to head to Russia for a meeting of the International Contact Group on Libya.
The situation in Libya is slated to be a top agenda item at a Russia-NATO Council meeting Monday, Russia's state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported, citing the Kremlin.
NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen will meet with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev as part of the meeting in Russia's Black Sea resort town of Sochi, the news agency reported.
"The sole possibility of stabilizing the situation in Libya is an immediate cease-fire and the start of talks between the internal Libyan participants in the conflict with the support of, but not interference from, outside," the Kremlin said, according to RIA Novosti. 

news/politics: COULD AMERICA GO THE WAY OF GREECE

news/politics: COULD AMERICA GO THE WAY OF GREECE: "Watching the return of the Greek crisis, many people in America are wondering, are we next? Will America face the same financial disaster t..."

COULD AMERICA GO THE WAY OF GREECE

Watching the return of the Greek crisis, many people in America are wondering, are we next?
Will America face the same financial disaster that the Greek government faces, with a soaring deficit and debt, markets that have lost faith in it and a downward spiral of budget cuts that then further depress the economy?
It might, but let us understand something really important: America stands in a fundamentally different place than does Greece.
Greece has two problems. First, it has a big budget deficit and markets have lost faith that it can ever repay its loans.
Second, it is an unproductive economy and cannot generate enough economic growth over the next few decades. In economics-speak, Greece has a liquidity problem but also a solvency problem.
The United States, by contrast, does not have a solvency problem. The American economy remains one of the world's most competitive, with many of the fastest-growing companies in most of the advanced industries. It houses the best capital markets in the world, the greatest universities and the most dynamic society.
America is demographically vibrant, thanks to immigration. It will be the only rich country that will see its population grow over the next 25 years.
America could face a liquidity problem - that is, it could have difficulty financing its debts and deficits if markets lose faith in it. But, again, let's be clear: This has not happened yet. In fact, right now the world is lending to America more cheaply than ever before.
The most important difference between Greece and America is this: America has many paths to solve its deficit problem. Were it to implement the Simpson-Bowles Deficit Reduction Plan, for example, it would instantly give America among the strongest public finances of any rich country.
Would Congress simply allow the Bush tax cuts to expire - returning rates to where they were under Bill Clinton's presidency when America created almost 25 million jobs - that one action would provide the federal government with $3.9 trillion in revenues over the next decade and basically solve the deficit problem. We would still face the long-term problem of entitlements, especially health care costs, like every other rich country, but the short and medium-term crisis would be over.
Greece, Portugal and Ireland have no such economic answer to their problems. Europe is choosing between only terrible and dangerous options in resolving the Greek dilemma - massive, unending bailouts or a default that could turn into a Lehman Brother collapse type of event.
Now, America's economic problems might have a simple solution, but our political system seems utterly unable to get us to this solution. One party refuses to even think about tax increases, the other will not take seriously the problem of entitlement reform. The result is paralysis.
If we do end up losing the trust of markets, and it can happen, it will not be because they lost faith in America, in our economy and our society, but because they despaired at the country's selfish and self-defeating politicians.
On July Fourth weekend, that's a pretty depressing thought.

Get Out of Debt with the Debt Snowball Plan

Myth: I should pay off the debt with the highest interest rate first to get out of debt quickly.
Truth: You should pay off the smallest debt first to create the greatest momentum in your debt snowball.
The math seems to lean more toward paying the highest interest debts first, but what I have learned is that personal finance is 20% head knowledge and 80% behavior.You need some quick wins in order to stay pumped enough to get out of debt completely. When you start knocking off the easier debts, you will start to see results and you will start to win in debt reduction.

Debt Snowball Plan

The principle is to stop everything except minimum payments and focus on one thing at a time. Otherwise, nothing gets accomplished because all your effort is diluted. First accumulate $1,000 cash as an emergency fund. Then begin intensely getting rid of all debt (except the house) using my debt snowball plan. List your debts in order with the smallest payoff or balance first. Do not be concerned with interest rates or terms unless two debts have similar payoffs, then list the higher interest rate debt first. Paying the little debts off first gives you quick feedback, and you are more likely to stay with the plan.

Build Momentum

Redo this each time you pay off a debt, so you can see how close you are getting to freedom. Keep the old papers to wallpaper the bathroom in your new debt-free house. The New Payment is found by adding all the payments on the debts listed above that item to the payment you are working on, so you have compounding payments which will get you out of debt very quickly. Payments Remaining is the number of payments remaining when you get down the snowball to that item. Cumulative Payments is the total payments needed, including the snowball, to pay off that item. In other words, this is your running total for Payments Remaining.

Debt Free!

You attack the smallest debt first, still maintaining minimum payments on everything else. Do what is necessary to focus your attention. Keep stepping up to the next larger bill. After the credit debt is taken care of, you are ready for the next Baby Step in your Total Money Makeover.
I have been broke. I know how scared I felt, and I know how fast I wanted to get out of debt. I know how you feel, and I have learned that what really works is unbelievably fierce, focused intensity.
Build and work your debt snowball with our FREE debt snowball tool

LIFE: CHILD PROSTITUTION IN AFRICA - LOME, TOGO, WEST AFRICA

LIFE: CHILD PROSTITUTION IN AFRICA - LOME, TOGO, WEST AFRICA

LIFE: CHILD PROSTITUTION IN AFRICA - LOME, TOGO, WEST AFRICA

LIFE: CHILD PROSTITUTION IN AFRICA - LOME, TOGO, WEST AFRICA

LIFE: Sarah Baartman: Sad Story of Exploited African Woman

LIFE: Sarah Baartman: Sad Story of Exploited African Woman

After two Cain staffers resign, two more leave his Iowa campaign

TRENDING: After two Cain staffers resign, two more leave his Iowa campaign 

 Mere days after two top staffers resigned from Herman Cain's presidential campaign, two others have also called it quits.
Tina Goff, the Iowa organizational director, confirms  that she left the campaign on Friday. Goff also said that another Iowa staffer - Straw Poll coordinator Kevin Hart - resigned that day. The Cain campaign confirmed both developments.

The Cain campaign downplayed the significance of Goff's title. "She was a junior-level staffer," claimed Communications Director Ellen Carmichael. She said the campaign had not yet hired a director for the state, but that it soon will.
Goff told  that the conservative businessman "wasn't willing to make the commitment to Iowa necessary to win the [Ames] straw poll." That contest is seen as an early test of success in Iowa.
Goff added that she was concerned by the amount of money and time the Cain campaign was committing to that straw poll. However, she declined to discuss specifics.
"I didn't want it to go this way," Goff said. "I'm very sad about it."
But Carmichael emphatically denies the notion that Cain was not putting in enough resources to win in Iowa.
Citing upcoming events in Iowa on Sunday, Carmichael said, "Mister Cain will have been to Iowa 22 times. Any insinuation that he is not committed to Iowa is highly false."
The fresh defections follow those of two other Cain staffers who recently resigned. Matt Murphy left as the New Hampshire state director and Jim Zeiler resigned as Cain's regional director.
In comments that echo those of Goff in Iowa, Murphy reportedly said that Cain refused to mount a serious effort in New Hampshire. The Cain campaign denied that assertion.
"As our first report showed last night we've done quite well. We are continuing to come up with our new staff across the country, including Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina," Carmichael said.
"These are just two people who are not a good fit for our organization."
On Friday, the Cain campaign reports it raised $2.46 million in the second quarter between April and June. Over 27,000 individuals contributed from all 50 states, the campaign said in a statement..

Bachmann: I'll help Obama find a job after I win

Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann is getting more creative, and apparently more aggressive, in her political attacks against President Barack Obama.
On Saturday, the Minnesota congresswoman took fresh jabs at the president. In one instance, Bachmann said she hoped to oust him from his current employment, become president herself - and then help Obama find a job. Bachmann also blasted "Obamacare," saying it would cost American jobs and questioning if Obama "was in his right mind" for championing it.

The comments came as Bachmann headlined an enthusiastic yet sparsely populated Tea Party rally at the state capitol in Des Moines, Iowa. Earlier Saturday, in Iowa City, the candidate launched a bus tour through the first-in-the-nation caucus state.
As she served up red meat to the assembled conservatives, Bachmann took aim at Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner - and the president - over the economy.
"I want you to know, as president of the United States, I look forward to creating real jobs for both the Treasury secretary and the president of the United States," Bachmann said.
Later, she continued a common Republican refrain - that the nation's health care law should be repealed. But Bachmann put a spin on that argument, citing figures that claim the law would bleed jobs on top of those already lost in the troubled economy.
Saying the president "has cost this economy millions of jobs," Bachmann questioned "who, with all due respect, in their right mind would propose a massive government takeover [of health care]" that would cost thousands of jobs.
It's unclear if such talk is part of an amped-up strategy by Bachmann or simply new variations on well-worn attack lines. Whatever the case, it is not without risk. Polls generally show that while conservative voters like the tough talk, such language could turn off critical blocs of independent voters.
Saturday's swipes follow others recently launched by Bachmann.
Last week, she told a crowd in South Carolina, "And we think that there is a certain Hawaiian president who should go back to Hawaii!"
And at a recent conference of Internet-savvy conservatives in Minneapolis, Bachmann used an unusual line of attack.
"The president promised the African-American community, he promised the Hispanic community that he would make their lives better. And that is what we want for every American," Bachmann said. "This president isn't working. He's failing the Hispanic community. He is failing the African-American community. He's failing all of us."