Nigeria Boko Haram spiritual leader Sheikh Abubakar Shekau shot, deposed –

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Read Time:6 Minute, 26 Second

BORNO—Sheikh Abubakar Shekau, leader of the violent Islamic sect, Boko Haram, has reportedly been shot and deposed by members of his own sect, Boko Haram.

A new leader, Abu Zamira Mohammed, who is the sect’s leader  negotiating with the federal government has been appointed new leader by the group’s Shura Council.

The group also said that its ceasefire declaration is working, pointing  out that there has not been any suicide bombing since the declaration. It noted its condemnation of the Yobe massacre where 40 students were killed, adding that some politicians now commit murder and ascribe it to Boko Haram

 

On the Kano blasts last Monday, which led to the death of about 45 people, the group blamed it on  federal government’s tardiness in responding to the ceasefire agreement.

A joint report published yesterday, by Dr. Stephen Davis, a conflict resolution expert and an adviser to the last three Nigerian Presidents and  Phillip van Niekerk, President of Calabar Africa, a strategic advisory company focusing on Africa, and former Editor of South Africa’s Mail & Guardian newspaper, in the US based online newspaper, huffingtonpost.com, quoted one Imam Liman Ibrahim, spiritual leader of Boko Haram, as saying that the change in leadership was prelude to peace negotiations with the federal government.

A faction of Boko Haram has entered into a back-channel dialogue with the government in the search for an elusive peace to a conflict that has seen multiple suicide bombings, attacks on government buildings and churches, and has claimed thousands of lives since 2011.

The Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Dialogue and Restoration of Peace in the North-East, Tanimu Turaki, last month announced that his committee had reached an “understanding for ceasefire” with members of the Jama’atu Ahlul Sunnah Lih Da’awa Wal Jihad, JAS, more commonly known as Boko Haram. JAS leadership also nominated five people to enter peace discussions with the Federal Government: Abu Liman Ibrahim, Abu Zamira Mohammed, Abu Adam Maisandari, Kassim Imam Biu and Mallam Modu Damaturu. In its press statement, JAS said the ceasefire would be in effect for 60 days, and that during the period, any attacks in its name or in the name of its leader, Imam Shekau, would be bogus attacks.

Boko Haram has been in preliminary discussions with government emissaries since the organisation declared a ceasefire on June 26. Abu Zamira Mohammed  told the paper that his group was still waiting for the Federal Government’s response to the ceasefire declaration. The contacts are still at an early, fragile stage, and there is no guarantee that the talks will achieve a breakthrough.

The writers said: “It has now come to light that Boko Haram’s leadership sent representatives to the capital Abuja on June 25, 2013 where they revealed to the government that Shekau was no longer their leader.”

Imam Liman Ibrahim, the spiritual leader of Boko Haram, explained that the teaching of Shekau was becoming increasingly harsh and began to depart from the Holy Qu’ran.

“It was harsh, harsh, harsh,” Imam Liman said when explaining the reasons for the change of leadership.

“The beheadings, the killings, the recent death of students … this is not the way of the Holy Qu’ran. We could tolerate it no longer.

“Imam Liman explained that Shekau was given a choice of joining the peace dialogue with the Nigerian government, forming his own sect or being killed. Several senior Boko Haram commanders including Shekau’s Chief of Security and personal bodyguard, Abdullahi Hassan, have claimed that Shekau has since been shot in the lower leg, thigh and shoulder,” the paper went on.

The report said,” Shekau’s exact fate is not known. A video clip recovered from a Boko Haram camp in the Sambisa Forest Reserve in the northeast Nigeria, raided by the military on May 16, shows Shekau limping, providing confirmation of reports he had been shot.

“However, Shekau has been noticeably absent from recent public statements and is not one of the leaders who have engaged with government emissaries. It had been presumed that Shekau chose to voluntarily leave peace discussions in the hands of Boko Haram’s leadership group,” the duo wrote.

The JAS leadership were quoted as citing the Qu’ran as their inspiration for seeking peace. “In the Holy Qu’ran, Sura At Tauba: Wa-injanahuu-Lisalmi Faji Nahlahaa, we are encouraged to seek peace. The Holy Qu’ran also tells us it is good to negotiate. Sura At Nisa Ayih: Wa-sulhu Haira.”

In June, the Boko Haram leadership demanded that women held by the military under the state of the emergency in the north be released. President Jonathan authorised the release, which opened the door to the ceasefire and the peace dialogue.

The report also said “the Boko Haram leadership has appointed Abubakar Babasani Ibn Yusuf as spokesman to replace Zamirah. Babasani says the leadership has been consulting all senior commanders to assure compliance with the ceasefire. He said commanders as far afield as Niger, Chad, Sudan and Cameroon have agreed to the ceasefire and discussions with the Nigerian government on the subject of a peace deal.”

The June 26 ceasefire announcement has been accompanied by an absence of suicide bombings, giving credibility to the new leadership and their intention of signing a peace accord. However, the administration’s tardiness in responding to the group’s ceasefire announcement is believed to have precipitated three car bomb attacks in the northern city of Kano this week that left at least 15 people dead.

Other attacks have persisted including the recent horrific killings of students in Yobe where about 40 students were incinerated in their school building. The latest Boko Haram statement is highly critical of the Yobe deaths and denies responsibility for the attacks.

The leadership blames such atrocities on politicians in the northeast whom they accuse of arming gangs and committing crimes in the name of Boko Haram.

Shekau was deputy leader under Boko Haram founder Imam Mohammed Yusuf who was captured in July 2009 in fighting in the northeast of Nigeria and executed by Nigeria’s Police force in what appears to have been an extrajudicial killing. The interrogation and Yusuf’s bullet-riddled body were filmed on video.

Yusuf’s death radicalized the Boko Haram leaders and led them to move underground and identify more closely with Al Qaeda. Following the founder’s killing, Shekau emerged as the new leader of a revitalised Boko Haram in 2010 and he and other commanders refocused the group towards global jihad.

Shekau launched a series of well-planned assassinations and suicide bombings that targeted Nigerian police headquarters and the UN offices in Abuja among many other locations. Through a series of video appearances on television stations, notably Al Jazeera, Shekau emerged as the face of Boko Haram. Earlier this year, the U.S. placed a $7-million bounty on his head.

The military’s Joint Task Force has recently arrested Alhaji Mala Othman, Chairman of the opposition All Nigeria People’s Party in Borno state, the epicentre of the insurrection, on terrorism charges.

“Jonathan declared a state of emergency on May 14 and launched a military offensive that has seen some successes. But reprisal attacks by Boko Haram, including the freeing of 105 of their members from prison, indicate that without a peace deal, Boko Haram has the resources to continue the fight,” the duo wrote.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Nigerian Catholic Church & CAN condemn Kano attack

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Read Time:4 Minute, 15 Second

LAGOS — PRESIDENT of the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor and the Catholic Archbishop of Lagos, Archbishop Adewale Martins are saddened by the twin explosions by Boko Haram in Kano metropolis where no fewer than 53 people were killed and scores injured.

The Catholic cleric through the Archdiocesan Director of Social Communications, Monsignor Gabriel Osu, condemned the blasts in Kano, saying that it was particularly painful that the attack occured during the holy month of Ramadan.

He said: “We are sincerely saddened by the latest development especially coming at a time when the committee set up by the Federal Government to ensure peace in the North has assured the nation that it is on top of the situation. We are tired of speaking on the state of insecurity in the nation.”

Pastor Oritsejafor was particularly traumatized by the news from Biu, Borno State that 16 Christians were handcuffed and burnt to death by members of the Boko Haram sect within the precinct of a church in the ancient city on Sunday, a day before one of the explosions in Kano went off at the Christ Salvation Pentecostal Church at the peak of evening worship.

On behalf of CAN, the President commiserated with the victims of the bomb attack, the families and friends of those who lost their lives in the Kano and Biu tragedies, insisting that these happenings were a further confirmation that the primary targets of the Boko Haram sect are Christians and their churches. He prayed that God should grant unto the families of the departed the grace of comfort at this trying moment.

Pastor Oritsejafor said with the bombing of the Pentecostal Church, the killing of Christian non-indigenes in Kano and the 16 Christians burnt to death in Biu, the Federal Government should consider the handshake to the Islamic militant group as having extended beyond the elbow.

According to him, the Boko Haram sect is becoming more untrustworthy as this latest killings of non-indigenes and Christians in their places of worship have further stirred the sensibilities of the people.

Orisejafor said: With the persistent and continuing attacks on innocent Nigerians who are largely non-indigenes and churches in the northern part of the country for four years on by the Islamic militant group, Boko Haram, the need for an all-round strategy to rein in the Islamic insurgents has become more persuasive now more than ever before.

“We in CAN commend officers and men of the special forces for taking extra-ordinary steps to protect the lives and property of innocent Nigerians. The Police and the Department of State Service, DSS, should do the same and in addition sharpen their investigative skills.

“As it is, we would not be wrong to think that those who buy the extreme ideologies of the Boko Haram sect have infiltrated the ranks of all the security arms of the nation as intelligence sharing and management seem thwarted by agents of the sect within the system.

“If personalities who do not have the mandate of the people speak as though representing them, those mushrooming as champions of the North would also add to inspire the terrorist into action against those who are from other regions and religions.

“In the meantime, we plead with Islamic scholars to begin to restructure the unsymmetrical unity among them which has manifested in the evolution of five denominational ideologies, namely Suni, Shia, Tijania, Izala and Ahmadiya. The real Islam that CAN knows should make true leaders of the faith to rectify the contradictions of arbitrary knowledge of the Qur’an to remind those pushed out of the line to seek the good of all.

Olive branch

“Having waived the olive branch, constituted a committee to dialogue with the result that more Nigerians, especially Christians are being killed during the month of Ramadan, CAN believes that her members are targeted for annihilation. This is a war of ethnic and religious cleansing by the Islamic fundamentalists. There is, currently, a particularly tiny tribe of contaminous and irascible Islamic clerics who take delight in inflaming passions. We urge them to keep passion aside and rally behind the Special Forces in order to defeat the current enemy. We urge them to tone down their rhetorics and take more and far reaching actions that would see an end to this undeserved violence on innocent Nigerians.

‘Civilian JTF’

“By doing this, they will be joining the league of the “civilian JTF in Borno State” who have since been fired by nationalistic fervor to fight against terrorists. They should not throw barbs when the north-east part of the northern region is a hotbed of the terrorists. As true believers in the fact that fundamentalism and terrorism is not that of Islam, fearlessness, courage and determination should be their major weapons. Once again, we appeal to well meaning Nigerians, friendly nations in Africa and indeed the international community to come to the aid of Nigeria in her bid to stem this evil tide of violence

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Xenophobic hostility in Nigeria

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Read Time:4 Minute, 25 Second

A few days ago, four Northern Governors visited their embattled Rivers State counterpart, Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi, to discuss the problems he has been having with various opponents. The visitors were met at Port Harcourt Airport by a baying anti-Amaechi mob, which slung rocks at their convoy.

I know some of the senior Rivers people who have been fighting our Governor; and when I cornered one of them to complain about this shameful incident, which gave the world the impression that our state is populated by savages who think that it is OK to launch attacks on un-belligerent guests, I was told that:

“Those Northern Governors are known Amaechi sympathisers; and they deserved to be stoned because they are outsiders who should stay in their own zones and stop interfering in a Rivers State crisis that is not their business.”

Xenophobic hostility

This xenophobic hostility towards “outsiders” reared its ugly head again when it was announced that concerned citizens, including Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, and Femi Falana (SAN), the distinguished human rights lawyer, were planning to participate in a demonstration in Port Harcourt, to protest about the undemocratic conduct of some of Amaechi’s enemies.

 

A local militant outfit, Ijaw Freedom Fighters, IFF and an NGO, the Ijaw Peoples’ Development Initiative, IPDI, reacted to this news by issuing veiled threats and warning Soyinka et al that the safety of any non-Niger Deltans who showed up at the protest march could not be guaranteed.

According to IPDI spokesman, Austin Ozobo: “The crisis in Rivers State is a minor issue that does not need external solution as warring leaders could resolve their differences if they mean well for Rivers.”

Ozobo is right about one thing: The opposing camps have the power to end the crisis and should make peace if they have the state’s best interests at heart.

However, I’m amazed that Ozobo regards the conflict as “minor”, given the wide-ranging damage it has caused and the fact that it has hugged domestic newspaper headlines for several weeks and attracted international attention!

Disgraceful acts of violence have been inflicted on indigenes and visitors. There have been alarming hospitalisations. There has been a thuggish invasion of the State House of Assembly premises and a crude attempt to impeach its Speaker.

The Governors’ Forum has been split into two factions. And the Governors’ Forum Chairman has been suspended from the PDP. And one of his most prominent supporters has been arrested for allegedly trying to kill a legislator colleague. And the Senate has called for the removal of the Commissioner of Police.

Meanwhile, a whole President of the Federal Republic and his First Lady have been openly accused of instigating this unholy mess.

How serious, scandalous, scary, toxic and high-profile does a political drama have to become before Mr Ozobo will face reality and describe it as “major”?!

As for all this anti-“outsider” talk, Nigeria is supposed to be a modern nation, not a backward collection of tribal or regional cabals that view each other with intense suspicion and only come together when they absolutely have to.

Most human beings, this columnist included, are prone to prejudice. But we should all grow up and become more high-minded and more patriotic and stop discriminating against each other on ethnic and geographical grounds!

I feel entitled to be part of (and to express views about) anything that is happening in any part of this country. I don’t feel that I should only dare to comment on – or throw myself into – debates and events that take place within my ancestral terrain.

I therefore think that if a Yoruba, Northerner or Igbo is worried about developments in Rivers State or any other segment of the Niger Delta, he or she should not be insulted for getting involved alongside Niger Deltans.

After all, not every quarrel can be resolved internally and privately. People who are at loggerheads are usually too wrapped up in their own selfishness or hurt feelings to see the wood for the trees…which is why the United Nations was established and why couples who are having problems often seek external advice from pastors, priests and professional marriage guidance counsellors.

All I am saying is that no Nigerian should be regarded as “outsider” when any issue that involves fellow Nigerians – from Anywhere – is at stake.

Also please note that while “outsiders” can sometimes play useful neutral mediation roles, they are also allowed, in my opinion, to take sides, disagree with whoever they want to disagree with and be “vexatious” (as Mr Ozobo put it!).

When I said, on this page, that Northern girls should be protected from grown men who seek to marry minors, a couple of Northern Vanguard readers contacted me to tell me that their customs were none of my business.

But I’m not going to meekly accept this ridiculous attempt to gag me because I am a Southern “outsider”. I will continue to speak for female victims of paedophilia because any human rights violation in my country is my business

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Nigeria: JTF, Niger Republic troops foil planned terrorists regrouping

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Read Time:1 Minute, 14 Second

ABUJA— Following the military onslaught by special forces of the JTF in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states which resulted in scores of Boko Haram terrorists escaping across border communities to neighbouring countries, plans by the sect to regroup have been thwarted by combined Nigerian-Nigerien troops.

Making the disclosure yesterday, the Defence headquarters noted that a leader of the group who fled the North East in the wake of the aerial and land bombardment of the terrorists camps in Borno, was behind the plans to regroup, with a view to launching fresh attacks.

A statement signed by the Director of Defence Information, Brigadier General Chris Olukolade, said: “The plan by a band of terrorists who relocated to Niger Republic to remobilize and rearm insurgents with the aim of carrying out fresh terrorists attacks on some Nigerian communities has been foiled.

The leader of the group who had fled Nigeria when the terrorist camps were sacked was reportedly recruiting fresh hands and training them for renewed terrorist activities in Nigeria.

The intention of the group is to focus its attacks on some towns around the Nigeria-Niger Republic border.

Intelligence operatives of the Multi-National Joint Task Force, MNJTF, had been on the trail of the leader until he was eventually arrested in Karanga, Niger Republic on Saturday with the cooperation of Nigerien forces.

His other accomplices were later picked up in other villages in Nigeria. They are currently being interrogated.”

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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DELTA’S FREE MATERNAL PROGRAMME GULPS N1.8BILLION

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Read Time:1 Minute, 45 Second

To bring health care delivery to the people, the Delta State Government has so far spent the sum of N1.8 billion on free maternal health programme since it was launched by Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan’s administration on November 20, 2007.
            The State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Joseph Otumara disclosed this in Asaba while briefing journalists on the activities of his Ministry at the on-going mid-term reports by members of the State Executive Council.
            Dr. Otumara explained that it was in keeping with the administration’s goal to substantially reduce mortality and morbidity rate in the state through the provision of quality, accessible and affordable health care services to the generality of Deltans and others living within the State.
            He said that the Free Maternal Health Care Services which initially included ante-natal care, deliveries, including caesarean sections as well as essential laboratory tests have been expanded to include management of ectopic pregnancies and complications of abortions as well as blood transfusion services. The aim was to reduce maternal mortality by more than 50 percent in the state, adding that several health personnel have been recruited to strengthen the workforce.
            Dr. Otumara revealed that out of 278, 484 ante-natal care bookings during the period under review, there were 127,849 deliveries.
The Health Commissioner also said that the State Government spent N570, 000 on Rural Health programme, adding that all the Local Government Areas in the state have benefitted from the scheme which has brought succour to many rural dwellers.
            He further disclosed that a total of 669, 549 patients have so far benefitted from the Free Under Five Medical care programme that started May 27, 2010 for which government have spent about N1.2 billion during the same period.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Delta reduces cost of dialysis treatment for indigents, seals off 43 private hospitals

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Read Time:2 Minute, 19 Second

To ease the financial stress on patients suffering from renal failure, the Delta State Government has pegged the cost of dialysis per session treatment in its hospitals to N5, 000 for Delta State indigenes.
Also, the State Government in another move to sanitize the health institutions, ensure professionalism and wholesome medical practice in the State has sealed off 43 private hospitals and clinics over quackery.
The Commissioner for Health, Dr. Joseph Otumara who made this known while taking his turn at the ongoing Mid-Term Report Press Briefing by Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) in the state, commended Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan for this gesture, pointing out that the lives of many Deltans who were faced with the challenge of huge treatment bills have been saved by the reduction and pegging of the dialysis treatment cost.  He stressed that the cost reduction which is about 80 percent reduction is only for indigenes of Delta State.
On the sealing off of the 43 private hospitals and clinics by the State Government, Dr. Otumara who said the measure became necessary to ensure standard practice in all health Institutions across the state, disclosed that any sub-standard and unethical medical practice by health Institutions will be sanctioned in accordance with relevant provisions.
The Health Commissioner revealed that in the on-going monitoring of private health institutions in the state, a total of 129 facilities have so far been visited, saying that 36 of these were warned and 43 were out rightly sealed up for obvious sub-standard and unethical medical practice.
He stated that since the inception of the monitoring of health institutions in the state, a level of discipline had been recorded, even as he said that the discipline was not only in the private health constitutions but also in that of the public.
Dr. Otumara also announced that a total of 390 health projects has been awarded to various contractors within and outside the state, adding that these projects cut across the primary, secondary and tertiary health institutions, even as he said that 284 of these projects have been completed while others are at various stages of completion.
Besides, the Commissioner disclosed that 264 primary Health Centres built at the cost of N789 million are now functional, even as he stated that six Health Institutions, Government Hospital Uzere, Ubulu-Uku, Onicha-Olona, Ogriegbene and Government Hospital Abigborodo were completed and now functional in the state.
He further disclosed that in order to position the newly rehabilitated and re-equipped Eku Baptist Hospital for specialized and quality health care to the people, the State Government has taken over the Hospital, since 2009 saying that the hospital has been upgraded with almost all the facilities, redesigned and reconstructed with the hospital buildings wearing modern aesthetics.
 

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Zimbabwe elections: Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party claims landslide victory

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Read Time:6 Minute, 12 Second
Robert Mugabe shows off his stained finger after casting his vote in Harare. Mugabe has been in power for 33 years. Photograph: Xinhua /Landov / Barcroft Media

President Robert Mugabe's party has claimed victory in Zimbabwe's elections by a landslide, while his main rival dismissed it as a "huge farce" and warned that an illegitimate result would plunge the country into a serious crisis.

Final results are not yet published but Zanu-PF said on Thursday it was confident of a resounding victory and state television reported wide gains for the party. By contrast, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which had previously expressed confidence, appeared despondent and attacked the electoral process.

Saviour Kasukuwere, Zanu-PF's youth and indigenisation minister, predicted: "It's a landslide, a total annihilation of the MDC. Their project has completely failed. President Mugabe has won. The villagers in the countryside know the result.

"I'm excited. I was young at independence in 1980. Today I feel very independent. Our country is now firmly in our hands. It's a second coming."

Asked if Mugabe, who at 89 is Africa's oldest leader, would serve a full term in office, Kasukuwere replied: "We have elected President Mugabe to serve a full term."

Until Wednesday, the MDC had insisted that, despite the claims of vote rigging and intimidation, its supporters' weight in numbers would be enough to end Mugabe's 33-year rule. But the mood changed as the arithmetic began to sink in.

"This election has been a huge farce," said presidential candidate Morgan Tsvangirai, sombre in flat cap and jacket as he read a statement at MDC headquarters. "In our view, that election is null and void … It is a sham election that does not reflect the will of the people."

Tsvangirai said thousands of people had been disenfranchised because they were not registered on the voters' roll, which listed some people twice. Among his numerous other complaints were that traditional chiefs and headmen had been used to intimidate people and that voters had been taken by bus into constituencies that were not their own.

"For the above reasons, the election has been heavily manipulated," the prime minister said. "In our view, the outcome of this election is illegitimate. But more importantly, the shoddy manner in which it has been conducted and the consequent illegitimacy of the result will plunge this country into a serious crisis."

Tsvangirai's concerns were echoed by a foreign diplomat who said: "It is a very sad day for Zimbabwe. What we've seen is huge evidence of voters' roll irregularities, extra polling booths set up and voters bussed in, and that had a big impact. We have very grave concerns about the credibility of this election. It looks like a big steal."

The head of the independent Zimbabwe election support network, Solomon Zwana, said its observers found a wide range of problems and up to a million voters had been disenfranchised. It claimed that registration was higher and the turning away of voters lower in areas known to be Zanu-PF strongholds.

But a southern African electoral commissions team, which brought 25 observers, said there had been no reports of violence or intimidation and praised organisers for their transparency. "We believe these elections have been conducted in a credible and fair manner," it said. The African Union is yet to deliver its verdict.

Kasukuwere rejected Tsvangirai's claims as "absolute nonsense", demanding: "How can he talk of vote rigging when there are some MDC candidates who have won and some key members of ours who have lost. Would we rig against ourselves? He knows his party is divided. What's so special about losing an election?"

On Thursday afternoon, the MDC headquarters was shuttered and the party website was still advertising a pre-election rally and a "countdown to July 31".

Defeat would be a devastating blow to the 14-year-old party and raise questions over the future of Tsvangirai, who was making his third attempt to unseat Mugabe. Previous elections were marred by allegations of vote rigging, killings and torture; in 2008 Tsvangirai withdrew, citing violence against his supporters which left more than 200 people dead. Tsvangirai declined to take questions on how the MDC would react to the official result.

On Wednesday, Tendai Biti, the MDC secretary general, brushed off a query as to whether the MDC would protest in the courts or the streets, insisting that it was heading for victory. The MDC's final election rally in Harare drew an estimated record 100,000 people.

McDonald Lewanika, co-ordinator of the civil society group Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, called for people to challenge the result by any means necessary. He said: "This is no longer a legal issue; the MDC has gone to court on several occasions. The MDC must take this politically by rejecting the election and taking action to show Zanu-PF they have the people.

"They have to leave their laptops, leave their Range Rovers, leave their comfort zones and show they have got the people power. If people were to walk to State House or stop the announcement of the vote, let it be. They've got no choice because otherwise this is the end of it all. My vote has been stolen."

State-controlled ZBC television reported that Zanu-PF won 13 of 15 wards in local elections in Chinhoyi, where earlier this week the Guardian reported claims of violence and intimidation against men wearing MDC T-shirts.

David Coltart, the education, sport, arts and culture minister, described it as a catastrophic day for the MDC, admitting: "There's no point putting a gloss on it. Zanu-PF will win a majority of seats in parliament and Robert Mugabe will get more than 50%."

Coltart, a member of the breakaway MDC faction led by Welshman Ncube, said he appeared to have lost his parliamentary seat, by just 19 votes to Thabitha Khumalo from Tsvangirai's MDC. Zanu-PF also did much better than expected.

He said there were "glaring anomalies" in his constituency, Bulawayo East. "The number of people voting for Mugabe and Zanu-PF bears no relation to historical trends and there are incredibly unusual voting patterns around military barracks," he said. "They created seven polling stations in a 2km radius of military barracks and I lost the election in those seven stations. In other stations, several hundred people were turned away, which also cost me. I seriously question the veracity of the result."

The discrepancies were mirrored across the country, he claimed, adding: "Zimbabwe has been subjected to electoral fraud on a massive scale."

Asked how the MDC factions should respond, Coltart said: "The problem of demonstrating in the streets is that you play into Zanu-PF's hands. They are a violent party. The supreme court is unreliable so we have extremely limited options. I tend to think it will be a combination of economic and international pressure: the great tragedy for this country is the economic crisis will be exacerbated by Zanu-PF."

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Nigeria: One dies as explosion rocks Dangote cement plant

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Read Time:1 Minute, 48 Second

…As workers, community protest incident
MAKURDI — Emotion ran high, Wednesday, evening, at the Gboko plant of the Dangote Cement, when an explosion allegedly claimed the live of a father of two and labourer at the factory, one Mr. Solomon Ashir.

Vanguard gathered from an eyewitness, that the deceased was hit by  limestone from the quarry site of the plant which led to his instant death before medical attention could get to him.

According to the eyewitness, the incident  sparked angry reaction from his colleagues and youths of the host community who barricaded the factory and Makurdi-Gboko road with bonfire in protest against alleged poor safety measures in the plant.

“The deceased who was an indigene of the host community and staff of the parking plant of the company was hit by  limestone at the quarry after an explosion that occurred when workers at the site were prospecting for raw materials.

“His death sparked angry reaction from fellow workers and youths of the community who in protest took the corpse of the young man to the palace of the traditional ruler of the community, Tyoor Ukpekpe, Chief Ishi Yonguigba.

“At the palace, the paramount ruler pleaded with the protesters to remain calm and also have restraint in their action.

“Not satisfied, the mob made bonfires on the highway and matched with the corpse into the factory where they insisted on seeing the Assistant General Manager, AGM, in charge of mines, who had fled the scene for fear of being molested.

“They, however, forced their way into the AGM’s office where they dumped the remains of the deceased.”

Vanguard, however, gathered that Ashir’s  remains was taken away and deposited at the Gboko General Hospital by the management of the factory.

Efforts to get a reaction from the company’s manager in charge of community relations, Mr. Bem Meladu, proved abortive as his cellphone was switched off.

Meantime, the Benue State Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, Deputy Superintendent, DSP, Daniel Ezeala who confirmed the incident said the command had commenced investigations into the matter.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Afghanistan, U.S. near agreement on post-2014 force

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Read Time:3 Minute, 39 Second
WASHINGTON – The United States and Afghanistan have resolved most issues and are nearing completion of an agreement that paves the way for an American military presence after 2014 that will include a limited U.S. counterterrorism force and military advisers.
 
"We're at the point now where we concluded the text," said a senior State Department official familiar with the negotiations. "We're in a period of endgame." The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the deal is not official.
 
Without the so-called bilateral security agreement, the United States would be unable to remain beyond 2014, jeopardizing Afghanistan's government and its armed forces.
 
The Afghans have agreed to continue to allow the United States to maintain legal jurisdiction over its troops in Afghanistan, a requirement the Pentagon said was not negotiable.
 
Disagreement over a similar provision ended up scuttling plans for a residual force in Iraq after the end of the combat mission there in 2011. Without such a provision, U.S. forces could be tried by local courts.
 
The agreement needs final approval from Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who has frequently frustrated the United States in negotiations.
 
"Just waiting on Karzai could be a long wait," said Michael O'Hanlon, an analyst at the Brookings Institution, a Washington-based think-tank. Karzai may delay the signing if he believes it will provide him leverage over the United States.
 
In negotiations over the bilateral security agreement, Afghans pushed for security guarantees from the United States, said Said Jawad, a former Afghanistan ambassador to the United States. Afghanistan has frequently voiced concerns about interference from neighboring Pakistan.
 
The Afghan military was designed for fighting an internal counterinsurgency and isn't equipped with the fighter aircraft and other military equipment required to defend its borders, Jawad said.
 
The Afghans also wanted assurances of financial support included in the agreement.
 
The State Department official said the United States could not spell out such guarantees in the document, which is limited to establishing a framework for the U.S. military presence there, but U.S. officials have tried to allay those concerns in discussions with Afghans.
 
"It's a big deal because these are the key issues," Jawad said.
 
Karzai has followed the negotiations closely and has raised issues occasionally. "We know he's been consulted each step of the way," the State Department official said. "He's read the text."
 
The White House has not announced the size of the residual force in Afghanistan. The Pentagon has said an American presence is critical to support Afghanistan's government and armed forces.
 
After 2014, the Afghan security forces "will still require substantial training, advising and assistance — including financial support — to address ongoing shortcomings," according to a Pentagon report released this week.
 
The agreement spells out two missions for the U.S. military after 2014: assisting Afghan security forces and establishing a U.S. counterterrorism force that will be limited to pursuing al-Qaeda and its affiliates.
 
"We're not suggesting under any of the conceivable scenarios that we will have a (counterterrorism) force in the country large enough to go after the Taliban," the State Department official said.
 
"We're no longer seeking out the Taliban," he said. "That's the responsibility of the Afghan national security forces."
 
The Afghan security forces have increasingly been taking a lead role in fighting the Taliban.
 
It's not clear what the counterterrorism force could do to respond to a large Taliban resurgence after 2014. "This does raise a lot of issues," said Seth Jones, an analyst at Rand. "What happens if the Taliban make a move on a city?"
 
The official and analysts say the language may allow for U.S. forces to pursue some Taliban leaders and other insurgent groups if there is an established link to al-Qaeda, the international terrorist organization behind the Sept. 11 attacks.
 
"I think there is a bit of wiggle room," Jones said. "How you define affiliate is subject to some debate."

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Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Fertility forecast: Baby bust is over; births will rise

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Read Time:2 Minute, 48 Second
America's fertility rate is taking baby steps upward, a new report suggests.
 
The total fertility rate in the USA is predicted to rise from a 25-year low of 1.89 children per woman in 2012 to 1.90 in 2013, according to the U.S. Fertility Forecast report released today by Demographic Intelligence. Preliminary official fertility estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may be released in 2014; final official estimates are expected in 2015, the company says.
 
"The United States has seen marked declines in childbearing in the wake of the Great Recession, b ut we think that this fertility decline is now over," says Sam Sturgeon, president of Demographic Intelligence, a demographic forecasting firm in based in Charlottesville, Va. "As the economy rebounds and women have the children they postponed immediately after the Great Recession, we are seeing an uptick in U.S. fertility."
 
The fertility rate "says something about people's optimism for the future — their optimism about their economic circumstances," says demographer Mark Mather of the not-for-profit Population Reference Bureau in Washington, D.C.
 
"Historically, we've seen fertility trends move up and down with economic indicators," Mather says. "During the Great Depression, we saw fertility rates drop. We saw it again during the Great Recession.
 
"It is quite possible that we'll see a bump in the fertility rate since the economy is improving and people are feeling better about jobs," Mather says. "The bigger question is, 'Will that be sustained in the long run?'"
 
The total fertility rate is a hypothetical rate – not an actual measurement. It reflects the number of births a woman is expected to have in her lifetime if she were to experience the current age-specific fertility rate. To calculate it, Demographic Intelligence looked at statistics published by the CDC. The company's models incorporated birth data as well as past and current economic and other indicators.
 
The report also notes that attendance at religious services is associated with higher levels of fertility in the National Survey of Family Growth, conducted by the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics.
 
"Much of the downturn in births is related to economic factors, but economic factors do not affect the fertility decisions of all parents or future parents," Sturgeon says. "We started to wonder about various groups that might make fertility decisions based on other factors, and religious persons seemed to be a natural group, so we explored this with the data," he adds.
 
Among women aged 15-44, those who attend religious services weekly or more have 1.42 children, compared with the 1.11 children of women who rarely or never attend.
 
Women who attend religious services weekly intend to have 2.62 children, and those who rarely or never go want to have 2.10 children.
 
"Partly because religious communities provide a family-friendly context to the women who attend them, religious women are more likely to have children and to bear a comparatively high share of the nation's children, compared to their less religious or secular peers," Sturgeon says.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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