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Wednesday 7 September 2016

10 Hyped Young Stars Who Have A Lot to Prove

10 Hyped Young Stars Who Have A Lot to Prove
Off the field, Ezekiel Elliott has been involved in offseason controversy. On the field, the hype is still real.
Pundits have dubbed him a pro-ready back who will flourish behind the Dallas Cowboys' talented offensive line and rush his way to the Offensive Rookie of the Year.
Performing well in college and the preseason will do that—set the bar high, that is. And yet, the former Ohio State standout has yet to play a down in a professional game that counts. 
Elliott is not the only young athlete getting a lot of hype right now. Recent college grad Jimmy Vesey had NHL teams clamoring for his services in August, and 22-year-old UFC fighter Paige VanZant has achieved fame beyond her years.
What do these and the other seven athletes on this list have in common? 1. They are the subjects of big-time hype in their sports, and... 2. They haven't had the opportunity or sufficient time to prove themselves yet. Some have yet to play in a professional game, and others are simply young talents without a lot of experience under their belts.
As any sports fan knows, hype is one thing, and execution is another. Will all 10 of these athletes soar to great heights? Will they meet or exceed the surging expectations that have been placed upon them?
glean: bleacher 

Police Request to Postpone Edo State Election " INEC Meets on DSS"

INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu


Olawale Olaleye in Lagos, Senator Iroegbu, Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja and Adibe Emenyonu in Benin City
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) will meet thursday in Benin to deliberate on the request by the Department of State Services (DSS) and Nigerian Police for the postponement of the September 10, 2016 gubernatorial elections in Edo State.
Rotimi Oyekanmi, the Chief Press Secretary to the INEC National Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, confirmed to Thisday last night that the commission whose national commissioners were already in Benin City, the state capital, for the election would meet to consider the security agencies’ request.
Citing security concerns, the DSS and the Police had, after a closed door meeting between the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mr. Ibrahim Idris, and the DSS Director-General, Mr. Lawal Daura, in Abuja yesterday, had advised INEC to consider shifting the election to a future date.
“Credible intelligence availed the agencies indicate plans by insurgent/extremist elements to attack vulnerable communities and soft targets with high population during the forthcoming Sallah celebrations between 12th and 13th September, 2016,” the security agencies said in a statement by the Force Public Relations Officer (FPRO), DCP Don Awunah, and Mr. Garba Abdullahi of the DSS.
But in a swift response, the INEC expressed surprise at the advice and said it was unaware of any security threat to the election, particularly when it had just been assured by the Inter-agency Security Committee on the ground in Benin City, the state capital, that all was well.
“As regards the position of the Police and State Security Agencies, we like to say that we were not informed and therefore not part of that decision in Abuja. Nobody told us, the INEC Chairman is here along with all the national commissioners and we were not informed about it. We just heard the news like every other person else,” Oyekanmi, had told Thisday on phone wednesday.
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the main challenger in the contest, has also opposed the proposition by the security agencies, calling on President Muhammadu Buhari to put them in check.
The security agencies, however, insisted that Edo State was one of the states targeted by extremist elements for attacks around the proposed election date.
They said similar threats were made during the Labour Day and Democracy Day celebrations in May as well as the Ed-el-Fitr holidays in July 2016 but the security agencies were able to disrupt and thwart the insurgents’ plan.
They said while they recognised the importance of the election, the security agencies would not take chances and allow the peace of the country to be disrupted.
“It is in regard of these that we are appealing to INEC which has the legal duty to regulate elections in the country to consider the need for possible postponement of the date of the election in Edo State in order to enable security agencies deal decisively with the envisaged terrorist threats,” the police and the DSS said.
The electoral body has, however, said it was at sea on why the security agencies made the request when their representatives overseeing security for the election in the state had rest assured it that they were ready to secure the poll on Saturday.
Oyekanmi said contrary to the fears over security, the Inter Agency Committee on election security had given an undertaking to secure the exercise.
“The funny thing is that we are still in Benin City, we have concluded a final stakeholders forum during which the Deputy Inspector General of Police, Joshak Habila, gave his word that everything is ready; that the police is ready and that they are going to deploy about 25,000 men for the Saturday’s governorship election in Edo State,” he said.
Oyekanmi, who explained that the top echelon of INEC management team was in Benin City where a final meeting of the stakeholders’ forum was held yesterday, expressed surprise that the police raised concerns about security moments after giving guarantees through DIG Habila.
Some of the INEC leadership already on the ground in Edo State include the national chairman Mahmood Yakubu, Amina Zakari, Muhammed Leky, Ambassador Lawrence Nwuruku, Soyebi Adedeji, representatives of the police and DSS and the 19 candidates contesting in the election.
“He gave assurances about adequate security for the election, only for us to hear of news filtering in that security agencies addressed a press conference in Abuja, saying that they cannot guarantee security for the election. As I speak we are planning to meet with the civil society organisations and other stakeholders to determine how we are going to respond to it,” the INEC chair CPS said.
The CPS said that the DIG who represented the IG on the inter agency committee on election security, including the new commissioner of police, Edo State Command, attended the stakeholders’ meeting and gave assurances that security agencies would provide security, warning all trouble makers and potential trouble makers that if they make any trouble they would be promptly arrested and prosecuted.
“It was on that note that we ended the meeting but now we are hearing a different thing, so obviously something may be going on that we were not part of,” Oyekanmi said.
Expectedly, the opposition PDP came out smoking against the security advice, calling on Buhari to rein in the security agencies.
“President Muhammadu Buhari should caution the security agencies to desist from doing anything that will jeopardise this forthcoming gubernatorial election in Edo State and direct them to provide security for the exercise,” Prince Dayo Adeyeye, Publicity Secretary of the party’s National Caretaker Committee, said wednesday.
In a statement yesterday by Adeyeye, the party said there is no way the state, which successfully hosted the president during the APC rally without any hitch could now become so insecure to warrant a postponement of the election.
Puncturing the security concerns excuse by the police and DSS, it said it was hogwash having regards to the fact that INEC recently conducted a ‘hitch free’ senatorial by-election in Borno State, which was a high-point of insurgency in the country without objection from the security agencies.
“It is lamentable to hear from these same security agencies that the election cannot be held in a state where in less than 24 hours, the president and all the APC leaders and members had an uninterrupted rally,” it said.
Incidentally, Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State was also up in arms against the postponement move as he told INEC not to postpone the defeat of the PDP by shifting the date of the election.
According to the governor, who is a member of the All Progressive Congress, “The APC is ready for the election this Saturday and that was why we held our mega rally on Tuesday and after that rally our people across the state became more committed, more dogged and ready for the Saturday election.”
He, however, said security being a critical factor in an election must be taken seriously. “If on their own they are calling on INEC for postponement, I am sure they must have their reasons because they are experts in it. If you recall, we raised the alarm that the PDP had planned to import thugs from neighbouring states to help them unleash mayhem on our people because they are not prepared for the election,” he said.
Ize-Iyamu Predicted a Shift in Date
Incidentally, the PDP governorship candidate in the election, Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu, had predicted a shift in date of the election, saying the ruling APC had planned to hinge the postponement on the Sallah break. He would appear to have now been vindicated.
Ize-Iyamu had said a few weeks ago that there were plans to postpone the election, although he cited the Muslim Sallah as the probable reason, he further alluded to the fact that it was a ploy by the APC to destabilise things and put the PDP at a disadvantage.
The PDP candidate, who hinted this during an interactive session with journalists in Benin, the Edo State capital, said the possibility of a postponement was almost inevitable if the facts before him were correct.
He said the information, which had been deliberately concealed by the ruling party for strategic reasons, was however leaked to him by some members of the other camp (APC), who believed in his ambition and had pretended to be unaware of it too, albeit for strategic reasons.
According to him, the main reason the possibility of a shift in date was being kept secret by the ruling party was because they wanted the PDP and its candidate to outspend themselves before the announcement, by which time raising more money ahead of the new date would have been a bit difficult.
He told the journalists: “There is the possibility that INEC may postpone the election from September 10. Although this is not official, we have it on good authority that the date may coincide with this year’s Muslim Salah and if that is true, the postponement might be inevitable. But no one has mentioned or communicated this to us yet.
“But we have it on good authority that the other side already knows about the development and are trying as much as possible to conceal it from us, so that by the time the postponement is announced, we would have outspent ourselves and you know what that means.”
INEC Says 1,925,105 Voters, 18,511 Officials, 25,000 Police Personnel to Participate
The electoral commission, however, said yesterday that 1,925,105 voters would vote during Saturday’s election, adding that 18,511 officials would conduct the election.
The INEC Chairman, Yakubu, while addressing political parties, civil society organisations, non-governmental organisations, interest groups and other stakeholders in a meeting in Benin City, said the officials had been trained on the election and electoral guidelines.
He assured the participants that more card reader machines had been deployed. He said incident forms would also be used for those who had not finalised their accreditation process. He explained that accreditation and voting would commence simultaneously.
The INEC boss said no voter is entitled to security escort to the polling units, adding that high profile personalities were not eligible to come with thugs and security men to polling units to vote.
He said voters should leave the polling area after casting their votes. He said the election would be free and fair, promising that the election would be transparent.
Ize-Iyamu Predicted a Shift in Date
Incidentally, the PDP governorship candidate in the election, Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu, had predicted a shift in date of the election, saying the ruling APC had planned to hinge the postponement on the Sallah break. He would appear to have now been vindicated.
Ize-Iyamu had said a few weeks ago that there were plans to postpone the election, although he cited the Muslim Sallah as the probable reason, he further alluded to the fact that it was a ploy by the APC to destabilise things and put the PDP at a disadvantage.
The PDP candidate, who hinted this during an interactive session with journalists in Benin, the Edo State capital, said the possibility of a postponement was almost inevitable if the facts before him were correct.
He said the information, which had been deliberately concealed by the ruling party for strategic reasons, was however leaked to him by some members of the other camp (APC), who believed in his ambition and had pretended to be unaware of it too, albeit for strategic reasons.
According to him, the main reason the possibility of a shift in date was being kept secret by the ruling party was because they wanted the PDP and its candidate to outspend themselves before the announcement, by which time raising more money ahead of the new date would have been a bit difficult.
He told the journalists: “There is the possibility that INEC may postpone the election from September 10. Although this is not official, we have it on good authority that the date may coincide with this year’s Muslim Salah and if that is true, the postponement might be inevitable. But no one has mentioned or communicated this to us yet.
“But we have it on good authority that the other side already knows about the development and are trying as much as possible to conceal it from us, so that by the time the postponement is announced, we would have outspent ourselves and you know what that means.”
INEC Says 1,925,105 Voters, 18,511 Officials, 25,000 Police Personnel to Participate
The electoral commission, however, said yesterday that 1,925,105 voters would vote during Saturday’s election, adding that 18,511 officials would conduct the election.
The INEC Chairman, Yakubu, while addressing political parties, civil society organisations, non-governmental organisations, interest groups and other stakeholders in a meeting in Benin City, said the officials had been trained on the election and electoral guidelines.
He assured the participants that more card reader machines had been deployed. He said incident forms would also be used for those who had not finalised their accreditation process. He explained that accreditation and voting would commence simultaneously.
The INEC boss said no voter is entitled to security escort to the polling units, adding that high profile personalities were not eligible to come with thugs and security men to polling units to vote.
He said voters should leave the polling area after casting their votes. He said the election would be free and fair, promising that the election would be transparent.
glean: ThisDay


UNICEF - Nigeria risks raising adults with low intelligence

Image result for unicef image
The Nutrition Specialist, United Nations Children’s Fund, Mrs. Ada Ezeogu, has said that more Nigerian children may grow up to become adults with low mental capacity because of malnutrition.
Ezeogu stated this on the sidelines of a media dialogue on how to stop child malnutrition in the country.
Quoting a National Health Demographic Survey, Ezeogu also said that the number of stunted children occasioned by inadequate diet and micronutrients deficiency was high even in some states in the South-West.
Such children, she said, might grow up to become adults with low mental capacity if nothing was done to arrest the situation.
According to her, unpaid salaries and hike in prices of foodstuff are also contributing to the malnutrition problem facing Nigerian children.
She said this was the reason UNICEF was promoting exclusive breast-feeding for six months.
Exclusively breastfed babies, she added, had lower chances of developing chronic health conditions such as diabetes, asthma and childhood leukaemia in the future.
She said, “Breastfed infants do better in intelligence and behaviour test than formula fed babies. There are many Nigerian children with stunted growth and this affects their mental capacity even when they become adults.
“Every child should be exclusively breastfed for the first six months.  Breast feeding lowers the risk of chronic conditions, such as obesity, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, diabetes, child-hood asthma and leukaemia.”
Ezeogu explained that breast feeding babies for the first six months would boost their mental capacity as well as make them to become adults with great intellect.
She also warned mothers against mixing breast feeding with infant formula, saying this was dangerous to babies.
Ezeogu, who said that 50 per cent of infant deaths in the country were caused by malnutrition, added that this could be reduced drastically with adequate nutrition.
glean:  PUNCH.

FG Rejects Importing GM Rice


The Federal Government has denied that it had imported and flooded the nation’s markets with Genetically Modified rice.
The Director-General of the National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA), Dr Rufus Ebegba made the position of government known at a news conference on Wednesday in Abuja.
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that an online news platform had alleged that the Federal Government through a firm had flooded the nation’s market with poisonous GM rice.
Ebegba said that there was no iota of truth in the report, noting that no GM rice had either been imported or released officially into the country.
According to him, `no GMO rice has been commercially released anywhere in the world.
He said that the Federal Government had banned the importation of rice and there was no indication that the ban had been lifted.
Ebegba described the online report as a falsehood and imagination of the writer, who “probably used a fake name.’’
He added that the report was intended to cause unnecessary panic and called on Nigerians to disregard it.
The director-general also urged them to join hands with the government to ensure safety in the practice of modern biotechnology in the country in line with global best practices.
He said NBMA was capable of regulating all GMO products in Nigeria, promising that the agency would not compromise on its mandate. (NAN)
Glean: Leadership

Dismissed Mobil workers demand N11.4bn compensation

Akwa Ibom State Governor, Udom Emmanuel

Former workers of Mobil Producing Nigeria have asked the management of the company to pay them N11.4bn compensation as their terminal benefits.
It was learnt that the over 1,444 affected workers were engaged as service contract staff by the company and later laid off in 2012 without commensurate entitlements as contained in the Collective Bargaining Agreement alleged to have been reached between Mobil and the affected workers.
The spokesman of the group, Mr. Godwin Idim, on Wednesday in Eket blamed the MPN for breaching the contractual agreement with its ex-workers regardless of all entreaties to get the company to honour the deal.
He lamented that some of their members had died in the course of the struggle to get MPNU to the negotiation table with a view to remitting the outstanding financial claims.
The CBA, dated July 1, 2010 and signed by former Field Manager, Human Resources of MPNU, Mr. Seun Oluwole; Assistant Secretary of NUPENG, Mr. G. A. Tasker; Chairman, Labour Contract, Mr. Ikohesa Ikohesa; Chairman, Service Contract, Mr. Aniedi Douglas, and witnessed by Mr. Victor Bassey, Mr. Godwin Udokop, as well as Jephter Jonathan, was made available to newsmen.
Containing in Clause 52 (c), it said, “Gratuity, 1.5 month’s gross salary per year served multiplies by the number of years of service. In addition, the employee shall earn all his or her accrued vacation benefits and any other allowance that may accrue to him or her.
“Notice pay-one month gross salary in lieu of notice. Ex-gratia-two month’s gross salary, pension and redundancy benefits in addition to end of service benefits shall apply.”
Idim, however, warned of the consequences that failure to pay former workers would bring to the company. He called on Akwa Ibom State governor, Mr. Udom Emmanuel, to wade into the matter.
Counsel to the disengaged workers, Mr. Jacob Udobang & Associates, in a letter had reminded MPN of the need to settle with the workers since the existing labour law (CBA) it signed with NUPENG and service contract staff on end of service in July 1, 2010 subsists.
glean: Punch

Buhari assemble meeting of Council of State

L-R: Former Interim head of state Chief Ernest Shonenkan, former head of state General Abdulsalami Abubakar, rormer President Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, former Chief Justices of the Supreme Court Justice Mohammed Uwai,s Justice Alfa Belgore and Justice Kutigi, at the National Council of State meeting at the State House, Abuja on Wednesday. PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA
L-R: Former Interim head of state Chief Ernest Shonekan, former head of state General Abdulsalami Abubakar, former President Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, former Chief Justices of the Supreme Court Justice Mohammed Uwai,s Justice Alfa Belgore and Justice Kutigi, at the National Council of State meeting at the State House, Abuja on Wednesday. PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA

President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday summoned the meeting of the Council of State with former President Goodluck Jonathan, interim President Ernest Shonekan and former military Head of State Abduulsalami Abubakar in attendance.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that others at the meeting included state governors, the Chief Justice of the Federation, Mohammed Muhmud and former Chief Justices including Lawal Uwais, Dahiru Musdafa, Alfa Belgore and Alooma Muktar.
NAN reliably gathered that the meeting might discuss the confirmation of the acting Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris and appointment of new National Commissioners for the National Population Commission.
Senate President Bukola Saraki and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, who are members of the Council, were not at the meeting when it started at about 11.08 a.m.
The first meeting of the council, under the current political dispensation, was held on October 21, 2015
glean: Guardian 

Nigeria’s oil resource curse & economic recession

Nigeria had high expectations from crude oil resources as revenue base for the nation when it was first discovered in 1956 at Oloibiri in the Niger Delta.
This optimism that crude oil will be able to assist the country’s developmental agenda, however, was the reason for assessed negligence over other sources of revenue generating opportunities, like agriculture and manufacturing.

Nigeria joined the ranks of oil producers in 1958 when its first oil field came on stream, producing 5,100 bpd. After 1960, exploration rights in onshore and offshore areas adjoining the Niger Delta were extended to other foreign companies.
More than 50 years after the first oil was produced in the Niger Delta, the country, which depended on crude oil to help finance over 80 per cent of national budget, is now facing economic recession.
Nigeria and other oil producing countries, which depended so much on crude oil resources, are facing the worst time in managing their economies, as crude oil prices remained stagnant at around $50 per barrel since 2014.
Saudi Arabia, which is not so much affected by the low oil prices, perhaps learnt its lessons when its then minister of petroleum, Ahmed Zaki Yamani, declared the natural resource as a curse than a blessing, saying: ‘All in all, I wish we had discovered water’.
At the height of the 1973 oil embargo, which saw the Arab world virtually re-defining the nature of international economic relations, Yamani cautioned at the peak of the euphoria that if the oil resource and the oil weapon were not used properly, it would be like the foolish soldier, who fires a bullet in the air, only for the same bullet to be inflicted on the source.
In broad terms, the immediate foregoing constitutes the tragedy of the Nigerian condition or non-condition, according to Prof. Kayode Shoremekun, Vice Chancellor, Federal University Oye Ekiti.
Shoremekun, in his paper titled: “Nigeria, Oil and the Yamani Syndrome”, made available to The Guardian on , believed that crude oil power status had seen the country going around with bloated ambition and aspirations, and misguided priorities. “Indeed, a number of oil rich countries have become victims to the “resource curse”, a term reserved for those countries, which have a wealth in minerals, fuels and resources but “tend to have less economic growth and worse development outcomes than countries with fewer natural resources,” he said.
Shoremekun stated that owing to the prophetic insights of Zaki Yamani, oil has turned into a feature, which has helped to orchestrate the worst aspects of the existence of Nigeria.
According to him, the indices of such existence included a magniloquent profile that was in a sharp and sad contrast to the country’s productive base.
He said:  “As if to completely fulfill the apocalyptic prophesies of Yamani, oil which if properly handled should have been the basis of our prosperity, has become one of the main sources of our instability.  Unfortunately, this instability has potentially mortal consequences for the nation.  Indeed, the grim reflection in some scholarly circles is that, a book is waiting to be written and this book will probably be title: Oil and the Mortality of Nigerian State.”
Shoremekun said that Nigeria cannot be regarded as oil producing nation. “Nigeria’s authentic status is really that of the recipient of relatively vast and providential oil revenues. The operative words here are “relatively” and “providential”. And this may well explain why Nigeria continues to be caught in the throes of underdevelopment. In simple terms, providential revenues cannot be the basis of development. Development is a conscious choice and process. The illusion of an oil producing status is also accompanied by other illusions, which form an integral part of our national life,” he added.
Former Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Prof. Charles Soludo, said the country’s current economic recession was self-inflicted due to over dependency on oil.
According to Soludo, “for too long, we have lived with borrowed robes, and I think for the next generation, for the 400 million Nigerians expected in this country by the year 2050, oil cannot be the way forward for the future.
“To revive the economy, former governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Muhammad Sanusi II, said Nigeria also needs to take measures to protect its infant industries.

Glean: Guardian 

Four escaped Chibok Schoolgirls included in the Newly Matriculated Students at AUN

Image result for images of american university of nigeria

Four of the 24 Chibok girls that escaped from Boko Haram in 2014 and came to the American University of Nigeria (AUN) for their education, were among the new students formally accepted into the university during the convocation and pledge ceremony on August 29. The matriculation ceremony witnessed a large turnout of parents and students.
Since their lucky escape, all the 24 have been on the university’s scholarship studying under a special preparatory programme. Also among the new students were those accepted from various applications for the maiden class of AUN’s new School of Law that kicked off this semester. The AUN law programme uniquely offers concentrations in Humanitarian, Gender and Environmental Laws.
Others who participated in the ceremony were university graduates pursuing various postgraduate programmes, among who were 18 winners of the 67 competitive AUN scholarships on offer, while several intakes were transferring from other universities in Ghana, Lebanon, Egypt, the United States and some European countries.
Apart from the novelty of admitting its first class of law students, the university admitted the largest number of undergraduates in a semester in the past three years, signaling a return to pre-insurgency admission figures, even as commercial and other activities peak in Yola and other parts of Adamawa State.
Addressing the convocation which held at the Commencement Hall, the AUN President, Margee Ensign announced that the type of education the new students will receive at the university will ensure that students become leaders in their chosen fields. “This kind of education will train you to look at problems from varying perspectives.”
She reminded them that they are being trained to be leaders of the continent who, upon graduation, will be ready to solve the challenges that confront them, their community, their country, and their continent.
“All universities identify new problems, come up with new ideas. They discover new truths and some change society. At AUN, Africa’s first development university, this is what we are trying to accomplish.”
Ensign added that whether those problems are poverty, literacy, inequality, injustice, or violence, by engaging students in the real world, AUN students deal with such problems during their time at the university, asking questions about them and finding solutions that improve the lives of their fellow human beings.
“We not only provide you with a different sort of education, we provide you with the intellectual tools to become the future leaders of Africa.” As part of the ceremony, the president took the entire audience through the AUN pledge of absolute integrity.
glean: Thisday