Wednesday, 13 January 2016

Khloe Kardashian's flight makes emergency landing in Las Vegas

                                  Khloe Kardashian

Khloe Kardashian planned to take New York by storm — until her her flight was forced to make an emergency landing in Las Vegas.

The youngest Kardashian sister, who was traveling with make-up artist Joyce Bonelli, alerted fans about the plane drama Tuesday on Twitter.

"Supposed 2b in NYC but somehow I'm in Vegas NYC I'm trying to get there. Emergency landing but Joyce and I are safe," she tweeted.

Shortly after the reality star’s American Airlines flight departed from Los Angeles, the plane was diverted to Las Vegas after the “pilots reported an electrical smell in the cockpit,” TMZ reports.

Kardashian and her pal chose to do deal with their unexpected stop in Sin City by livestreaming from the airport while awaiting word on a new flight, according to E! News.

After learning that their flight to New York was canceled and they couldn’t depart Vegas until the next morning, Kardashian asked for a flight back to Los Angeles, which is when the livestream ended.

The 31-year-old star had been en route to the Big Apple to promote her new DIY talk show “Kocktails with Khloe,” with appearances scheduled Wednesday on “Good Morning America” and “The Tonight Show.”

Earlier in the day, Kardashian made headlines after sharing a cryptic tweet in which she wrote, “Be careful when trying to fix a broken person.”

The social media post led to speculation that she was referring to her estranged husband Lamar Odom, who was recently moved to a private rehab facility after a lengthy hospitalization.

Why I Quits Football To Join WWE

As a goalkeeper, Stuart Tomlinson's size made him a regular target of abuse from opposition fans.
Stick 'Stuart Tomlinson fat chant' into a search engine and you'll find AFC Wimbledon supporters mercilessly taunting him with an "Any pie will do" sing-a-long during his time at Burton Albion.
Lord knows what they'd chant at him now as he dances his way to a wrestling ring wearing only a pair of boots and some pink polka dot trunks.
It turns out the former Crewe, Barrow, Port Vale and Burton keeper wasn't fat at all. Nicknamed 'The Tank', he had a torso chiselled out of granite, honed by hours in the gym. Another online video shows him bench-pressing 180kg. In flip-flops.
Tomlinson was so toned he did some modelling on the side and even adorned the cover of Men's Health magazine. It proved the launch-pad for a transformation that saw him swap the penalty box for a wrestling ring, and move from professional sportsman to sports entertainer inside a year.
The magazine cover was seen by a talent scout from World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE),the world's largest professional wrestling promotion which has been home to the likes of Hulk Hogan, the Undertaker and the Rock.
"Most of the lads who I played with knew I was a wrestling fan, particularly at Port Vale," said Tomlinson. "When we were travelling, I was always talking about what I'd watched.
"Going into wrestling when I finished football was definitely something I thought about, but I never knew how to get involved. Luckily enough I was there when opportunities were being given, in the right place at the right time."
Tomlinson was still at Burton when he got invited to a WWE try-out, something he kept quiet because "in a changing room full of 20 or 30 lads you don't go running your mouth off".
He pitched up to his trial at the O2 Arena with no experience of what the WWE likes to call 'sports entertainment' - sport because the athleticism and risks involved are very real, entertainment because the characters are outlandish, the storylines soap-like and the results of matches predetermined.
Still, his football background gave Tomlinson the edge over thousands of others who applied for a shot at wrestling stardom - men twice his size, men who can perform a back-flip quicker than a hiccup, or have been wrestling independently at carnivals and in town halls.
"The try-out was tough, but luckily I'd been doing pre-season so my fitness level was high," he said. "Agility-wise, I was quite good, going against people who were bigger and heavier.
"Port Vale goalkeeping coach Mark Grew and Burton's Kevin Poole probably don't know how much they helped me - they'd had me doing fast feet, ladder drills and plyometrics every day for the previous couple of years."
Tomlinson went back to Burton, but had done enough to impress the WWE and stayed in touch for the next year.
In July 2013 he decided he no longer wanted to battle a knee injury and retired from football at the age of 28. Five months later, he signed a three-year deal with the WWE and moved to Orlando to join their developmental arm.
The Florida lifestyle was already a world away from diving around at Burton's Pirelli Stadium - "the sun is shining every day, I'm not on a pitch where it's raining and you've got fans calling me fat" - but his new training regime provided Tomlinson with another culture shock.
"A basic day at football would be train for an hour, maybe play a bit of five-a-side, have a laugh and a joke, then go home," said Tomlinson. "In a day, I would probably do two hours' work - an hour's training, an hour in the gym, then the rest would be free time.
"Now, a normal day would be wrestling for two or three hours - learning techniques, new moves, getting comfortable with what you're doing.
"You'd have a break for dinner, then do some weightlifting or power work for an hour or two, then we'd usually have a promo class for an hour."
For those unfamiliar with the theatre of pro wrestling, the promo is where the performer tells the crowd just how good he is. Think the braggadocio of a less controversial Tyson Fury, but solo in the middle of the ring, trying to tell a story to thousands of restless fans.
"Getting interviewed after a match stood me in good stead, especially when you're getting asked dodgy questions about losing 5-0 and it's all your fault," he said.
"You have to engage with the audience. If you are confident in your delivery, people will believe it."
His previous career not only helped Tomlinson with his oration, but gave him the confidence to put on a staged fight in front of packed arenas. After all, this is a man who played at Wembley, winning the FA Trophy with Barrow in 2010.
"I've not been fazed, maybe because I've played football in front of big crowds," said Tomlinson. "I've seen people try out in front of just their peers and they would struggle.
"I've always been fairly confident in my own ability to do something, ever since I was young. If you walk into something and you're not confident you will achieve, then you probably won't."
Confidence is what brings Tomlinson to his character, his alter-ego. He performs under the name Hugo Knox - a name chosen from a list of five he was given - in those polka dot trunks.
"Hugo Knox is a lively, high-energy and bubbly guy," he said. "On my way to the ring I'll be dancing my socks off, but when the bell goes then it's time to get down to it.
"Hugo Knox and I are the same person; he is a little bit more amplified. I'm myself, I'm not trying to be anybody else - it's just a little bit more turned up.
"The gear you wear in the ring is totally up to you. I went with the polka dots. Someone suggested toning it down, but there's no point training every day if you're going to cover it up. I want the smallest polka dot pants possible!"
Tomlinson speaks with the enthusiasm of a man who loves his new career, and appreciates the opportunity that a life outside football can offer.
"It's naive if someone thinks they are going to play football for the rest of their lives," he said. "Sometimes people get brainwashed in that whole football scene and a lot struggle to find work after they have been playing.
"People who make a career out of football are very lucky, but it was drummed into me from a young age by my mum and dad that it wasn't the be-all and end-all and I should always have other opportunities, to look outside the box."
The message got through. What began as a love for lifting weights in the gym led to the modelling, which in turn led to wrestling and ultimately, a new identity.
"I was a semi-decent footballer, respectable," he concluded. "I probably didn't achieve what I wanted to achieve, but I had good fun doing it.
"Within a year of training to be a wrestler, I have performed in front of thousands of people. I watched this year's Wrestlemania, where the crowd was 80,000, and I want to perform on those big stages.
"I would like to be remembered as one of the better wrestlers to come out of England. They might also say I was a footballer too."

Metuh tore statement at EFCC

    PDP National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh
The National Publicity Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party, Chief Olisa Metuh, has torn a confessional statement he made to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, a top operative of the commission has said.
The top officer of the commission, who confided in one of our correspondents on Tuesday, alleged that Metuh tore the statement when it was brought to him for his signature.
The source alleged that the PDP spokesman tore the statement he had earlier made to shreds and attempted to put the pieces in his mouth when operatives stopped him.
Metuh was arrested by the EFCC last week for allegedly receiving N1.4bn meant for the purchase of arms from a former National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki (retd.).
The source said the interrogators believed that the PDP spokesman destroyed the statement after realising the gravity of the evidence against him.
The top operative added that the commission was considering filing additional charges against Metuh for allegedly destroying a major evidence in the case against him.
He added that the action of the PDP spokesman amounted to a wilful damage of government property.
“The tearing of statement is tantamount to wilful destruction of government property and it is a serious offence. Also, the fact that he obstructed operatives from performing their job is a criminal offence.
“We will explore the possibility of filing a separate charge against him at the Federal Capital Territory High Court,” the source said.
Efforts to get Metuh’s aide, Mr. Richard Ihediwa, to react to this latest development did not succeed as calls to his mobile telephone indicated that it was switched off.
There was a report last week that the EFCC was investigating the account of Destra Investment Limited, owned by Metuh.
According to the report, the EFCC investigators discovered that Destra Investment Limited was used to fund the PDP’s activities, including its 2015 campaigns.
The EFCC alleged that the company, which had N6, 676,576.06 as of November 24, 2014, recorded a balance of N1.4bn by last December.
Some of the deposits in the account are N400m from the Office of National Security Adviser on November 24, 2014; N253m on December 2 and 4, 2014 from Ibrahim Kabiru, whose identity had yet to be confirmed; N91m on December 2, 2014 from Capital Field Investment; and N92m on December 3, 2014.
Meanwhile, Metuh has said he will no longer speak to investigators about the N400m he collected from former President Goodluck Jonathan.
He said rather, he would only speak in an open court.
Metuh had admitted before the EFCC operatives that he received N400m from Jonathan, but refused to disclose what the money was meant for or for what job.
In a statement by his Special Assistant, Ihediwa, in Abuja on Tuesday, Metuh claimed that he executed a project for the former President but refused to explain the job he executed for the ex-President that fetched him the huge sum.
Metuh, who is said to be on hunger strike, said he would only disclose the job he did for the defeated former President in an open court.
Ihediwa said, “In exercise of his rights, he has since given his statement to the EFCC wherein he submitted that he received the sum of N400m from the former President for an assignment, which he executed to the satisfaction of the former President.
“In further exercise of his rights, Metuh has also indicated his readiness to make public the nature of this assignment, but only in an open court in line with the laws of the land, and where his statement would not be distorted by anybody.”
Meanwhile, the caucus of the PDP in the House of Representatives has demanded the release of the PDP spokesperson from the custody of the EFCC within 48 hours.
The Minority Leader of the House, Mr. Leo Ogor, a member of the PDP from Delta State, who spoke on behalf of the caucus, clarified that the demand did not mean that the lawmakers were against the anti-corruption war of the Federal Government.
Ogor added, “We are not in support of corruption or any corrupt person, but due process must be followed. Metuh has been arrested and kept in detention for nine, almost 10 days, without trial.
“We insist that he should be taken to a court of competent jurisdiction or granted an administrative bail as has been done in cases involving other persons.”
The caucus recalled that like Metuh, former Kaduna State military governor, Brig.-Gen. Jafaru Isa, a “known associate” of President Muhammadu Buhari, was also detained by the EFCC for receiving N170m from former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki.
However, the PDP observed that in the case of Jafaru, he was granted bail soon after his arrest by the anti-graft agency.
“Isa Jafaru was granted bail after the EFCC chairman (Ibrahim Magu) visited Aso Rock. What does that tell us?” Ogor asked.
The EFCC had said Isa was granted bail after he refunded N100m from the N170m he collected from Dasuki.
Ogor added, “If you make a reference to the refund of money, then we have missed the point. The point is ‘why keep a man in detention endlessly without trial’? It is not the duty of the EFCC to direct anybody to refund money. That is the responsibility of the courts.’’
PDP’s National Legal Adviser, Mr. Victor Kwon, told one of our correspondents that he was not at the place where the incident allegedly happened.
Kwon said, “I wasn’t there and I won’t want to react to hearsay.
“Only those who were there can confirm or deny whether the incident took place or not.”
Efforts to get the EFCC’s spokesman, Wilson Uwujaren, to confirm Metuh’s action, had not succeeded as of the time of sending this report as calls to his mobile telephone did not connect.

With The Punch Newspaper

NNPC plans first oil assets IPO for 2018

                                       Mr. Emmanuel Kachikwu
It has now emerged that before the next general elections in 2019, the Muhammadu Buhari administration plans to sell key oil assets to the public, Emmanuel Kachikwu, Petroleum Resources Minister of State and managing director, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), revealed yesterday in far away Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirate (UAE).

“It’s inevitable,” Kachikwu, who also heads the NNPC, said on Tuesday in an interview in Abu Dhabi.

“Part of the cleaning up process that we’re doing is to prepare for that,” Bloomberg quoted him as stating.
The plan is to sell NNPC’s shares in its refining and distribution business and “select” exploration and production assets to the public, he said.

NNPC manages Nigeria’s stakes in joint ventures with international oil companies that pump the country’s crude. It also operates refineries and a distribution network of depots and pipelines across the country of about 180 million people.

Kachikwu also said yesterday that some members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) had requested an emergency meeting, adding that current market conditions support the need to hold such a gathering before the June 2 scheduled meeting of the cartel.

The United Arab Emirates (UAE), however, moved to quash talks of a potential emergency meeting as the country’s Energy Minister Suhail bin Mohammed al-Mazroui said that the current OPEC strategy was working, adding that a period of between one and one-and-a-half years was needed to allow oil prices to rebound.

Reuters quoted Kachikwu as telling reporters at an energy conference in Abu Dhabi that there was a lot of push from various blocs within OPEC for the meeting.

“A couple of countries, I don't want to mention names,” he said when asked if any had requested holding an emergency meeting.
According to him, any meeting that would take place would be to review OPEC’s position to see if there was any need to change its strategy, adding that the meeting could take place in February or March.

OPEC heavyweight, Saudi Arabia, which has resisted calls for a cut in production to help boost prices, was also said to be against an emergency meeting.

But Kachikwu insisted that “Saudi Arabia has never held the position that it does not want to talk”.
“In fact, it was very supportive of a meeting before June, at the time when we held the December meeting, if (there was a) consensus call for it,” Kachikwu added.

However, the UAE has moved to quash talk of a potential emergency meeting of OPEC.
UAE Energy Minister later told the same conference that the current OPEC strategy was working, adding that time was needed to allow this to happen — perhaps between one and 1-1/2 years.

“I’m not convinced OPEC alone can change or can solely unilaterally change this strategy just because we have seen a low in the market,” Mazroui said.

Mazroui added that while the first half of 2016 would be “tough” for the oil market, there would be a gradual recovery later in the year, aided by an expected drop in non-OPEC production.

But two OPEC delegates from outside the Gulf were sceptical an emergency conference would take place.
“There won’t be any meeting,” Reuters quoted one of the OPEC delegates from an African OPEC country as saying.

OPEC’s strategy of maintaining production levels, instead of reducing supply to allow prices to recover, has been aimed at defending market share at the expense of higher-cost producers such as those in the U.S. shale sector.

The supply glut is likely to be exacerbated in 2016 by the return of Iranian supply to the market, once Western sanctions have been lifted.
“I think all the members including Iran have the right to increase their production. I don’t think we are going to restrict anyone,” Mazroui said.

Such prospects have led oil analysts to downgrade their forecasts in recent days, with Standard Chartered saying prices could drop to $10 a barrel, while the International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicted $20 per barrel.

Despite UAE’s reluctance for the emergency meeting, Nigeria and other non-Gulf OPEC members might get their way, as oil dropped below $30 a barrel in New York for the first time in 12 years on concerns that turmoil in China’s markets will curb fuel demand.

According to Bloomberg, West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude tumbled to the lowest since December 2003. Concerns that China’s economic growth may slow have soured investors on the prospects for a quick recovery, turning hedge funds the least bullish in five years.

A rapid appreciation of the US dollar may send Brent oil to as low as $20 a barrel, Morgan Stanley also said yesterday.
Oil extended a 70 per cent drop since June 2014 as volatility in Chinese markets fuelled a rout in global equities and US stockpiles remained more than 120 million barrels above the five-year average.

Saudi Arabian Oil Co., the world’s biggest crude exporter, confirmed on last week that it was studying options for a share sale, including listing “a bundle” of refining subsidiaries.

“Psychology has completely taken over,” said Stephen Schork, president of the Schork Group Inc. in Villanova, Pennsylvania. “Market sentiment has shifted so far that it’s self-fulfilling. There’s been a big cutback in CFTC positions, which shows that everyone is heading for the exit.”

WTI for February delivery fell $1.28, or 4.1 percent, to $30.13 a barrel at 2.07 pm on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract touched $29.93, the lowest intraday price since December 2003. Prices lost 30 per cent last year.

Brent for February settlement decreased $1.05, or 3.3 per cent, to $30.50 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. It touched $30.34, the least since April 2004. The European benchmark crude traded at a 37 cent premium to WTI.

Withb Thisdays News

Obama Delivers Final State Of Union Speech

                                                     SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Hearkening back to the themes of change that helped sweep him into office eight years ago, President Obama used his seventh and final State of the Union address to illustrate how different the nation looks as he prepares to leave but largely avoided most of the flashpoint topics that created the most controversy during his presidency.

Going through a laundry list of accomplishments, Obama focused on the progress the nation has made under his watch: The growing economy and the focus on shrinking income inequality, the fight on terrorism and keeping America safe and the need to maintain focus on American technological innovation.

But the President used the word “gun” just one time over the course of the speech, despite an enormous effort in recent weeks to focus on gun control — including the announcement just days earlier of a slew of controversial executive actions on the matter.

Instead, he maintained an optimistic and unifying message, and, in a subtle nod to the upcoming 2016 election, encouraged Americans to embrace change and reject fear.

“We live in a time of extraordinary change — change that’s reshaping the way we live, the way we work, our planet and our place in the world,” Obama said. “And whether we like it or not, the pace of this change will only accelerate,” he said, before acknowledging that many find such change scary.

“America has been through big changes before,” he said. “Each time, there have been those who told us to fear the future; who claimed we could slam the brakes on change, promising to restore past glory if we just got some group or idea that was threatening America under control,” he said.

“And each time, we overcame those fears,” he said. “We made change work for us, always extending America’s promise outward, to the next frontier, to more and more people. And because we did — because we saw opportunity where others saw only peril — we emerged stronger and better than before.”

But “such progress is not inevitable,” Obama warned.

“It is the result of choices we make together,” he said, in a thinly veiled nod to the upcoming election. “Will we respond to the changes of our time with fear, turning inward as a nation, and turning against each other as a people? Or will we face the future with confidence in who we are, what we stand for, and the incredible things we can do together?”

Obama appeared to reject much of the claims made by Republican presidential candidates, such as GOP front-runner Donald Trump, of American decline at home and abroad.

“All the talk of America’s economic decline is political hot air,” Obama said to grand applause from Democrats in attendance. “So is all the rhetoric you hear about our enemies getting stronger and America getting weaker. The United States of America is the most powerful nation on Earth. Period. It’s not even close.”

“What I’m asking for is hard. It’s easier to be cynical; to accept that change isn’t possible, and politics is hopeless, and to believe that our voices and actions don’t matter,” he said. “But if we give up now, then we forsake a better future.”

“As frustration grows, there will be voices urging us to fall back into tribes, to scapegoat fellow citizens who don’t look like us, or pray like us, or vote like we do, or share the same background,” he said.

“But democracy does require basic bonds of trust between its citizens. It doesn’t work if we think the people who disagree with us are all motivated by malice, or that our political opponents are unpatriotic,” Obama said. “Democracy grinds to a halt without a willingness to compromise; or when even basic facts are contested, and we listen only to those who agree with us.”

“Our public life withers when only the most extreme voices get attention,” he said before offering a prescription — and an uplifting trope that resembled a calling card for his desired legacy.

“The future we want … is within our reach. But it will only happen if we work together. It will only happen if we can have rational, constructive debates,” Obama said.

“It will only happen if we fix our politics,” he said.

“A better politics doesn’t mean we have to agree on everything,” Obama added, according to his prepared remarks. “This is a big country, with different regions and attitudes and interests.”

“Whatever you may believe, whether you prefer one party or nonparty, our collective future depends on your willingness to uphold your obligations as a citizen,” “Obama said. “To vote. To speak out. To stand up for others, especially the weak, especially the vulnerable, knowing that each of us is only here because somebody, somewhere, stood up for us. To stay active in our public life so it reflects the goodness and decency and optimism that I see in the American people every single day.”

But he notably avoided many of the most controversial achievements and most divisive unfulfilled policy proposals.

Facing an audience filled with Republican lawmakers who have thwarted much of his agenda, Mr Obama also issued a clarion call to "fix our politics".
"It's one of the few regrets of my presidency - that the rancour and suspicion between the parties has gotten worse instead of better," said the president, who swept to the White House on a unifying promise of hope and change.
He also totally skipped over the biggest news item of the day out of the Middle East — that Iran had detained 10 U.S. sailors after a pair of Navy patrol boats drifted into its waters.
By contrast, he referred to the economy at least 15 times and used “ISIL” — the acronym for the terrorist group also known as ISIS — nine times and referred to “terrorists” or “terrorism” another seven times.
Despite Obama having ignored the refugee issue and of gay marriage, both topics were represented in the form of the President’s personal guests.
Among them were Refaai Hamo, a Syrian scientist who received refugee status and moved to Troy, Mich., after his wife and daughter were killed in a missile strike; and Jim Obergefell, the plaintiff in the historic Obergefell v. Hodges Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage in the U.S.
Also in attendance was Kim Davis, the Kentucky county clerk who was jailed for refusing to issue gay marriage licenses. She was a personal guest of Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio).
Just as noteworthy were those who were not in attendance.
Obama somberly honored the countless victims of gun violence in the U.S. during his address by leaving a seat empty in the House chamber.
The empty seat, in First Lady Michelle Obama's box, was meant to "illustrate the victims of gun violence who no longer have a voice," the White House said earlier this week.
The NRA seized on the gesture by preemptively announcing a formal rebuttal to Obama’s speech, before it even occurred, that will air Wednesday morning.
Republicans, for their part, didn’t wait as long.
The official Republican response to his address was delivered by South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley.
Ms Haley, the daughter of Indian immigrants, called on the nation to resist "the siren call of the angriest voices" in anxious times, according to excerpts.
Her remarks in defence of immigrants were also interpreted as a veiled swipe on Mr Trump and other hardline conservative White House hopefuls.
Nobody who works hard and follows the laws “should ever feel unwelcome in this country,” she added.
In his speech, Mr Obama unveiled no specific policy proposals, but instead sought to generate support for items high on his to-do list, including closure of Guantanamo Bay and tighter gun laws.
As the two-term Democratic president seeks to define his legacy after seven years in the White House, he focused on accomplishments such as his signature healthcare law.
Mr Obama also touted more recent achievements including a nuclear deal with Iran, a diplomatic thaw with Cuba and a huge budget deal with Congress.
However, his remarks on Tehran came amid the Iranian seizure of two US Navy vessels and their 10 crew in the Gulf.

With News Wire Services