Wednesday, 13 January 2016

DasukiGate: All Is Set For EFCC To Arrest Ex-PDP Chair On $2.1Bn Arms Cash

                                           Adamu Muazu

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is currently on the trail of two Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) bigwigs whom may flee the country for alleged involvement in the ongoing $2.1 billion arms probe, according to an online news.

The Nation reports that the former chairman of the PDP, Adamu Muazu and a former principal private secretary to former president Goodluck Jonathan,  Hassan Tukur, have been placed on the “watch-list” of the anti-graft agency.
A source within the EFCC disclosed that the two party chieftains have been under investigation in the last few months on the arms cash allegedly disbursed to them for campaign purposes and counter-insurgency initiative with Boko Haram.
“We need to interact with these two leaders, who are on watch-list. Since Muazu went for his daughter’s graduation and medical treatment, we have not been able to locate him.
“We learnt Muazu is around Singapore, Hong Kong and Malaysia axis. We are on his trail because some suspects have admitted drawing campaign funds from the ex-PDP national chairman. Over N600 million has so far been traced to him.
“Tukur is believed to have been seen in the country by security agencies about three or four days ago. He might be invited over the botched deal with Boko Haram, which allegedly involved the payment of a ransom. He is also implicated in the disbursement of some funds for use in the Presidency for campaign and 2015 poll,” the source said.

NNPC tanker with fuel bursts into flames while discharging in Abuja

A petrol tanker belonging to Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) with 45,000 litres of petrol caught fire, on Tuesday, while discharging the product at a filling station along Abdulsalami Abukakar Way, Apo, Abuja, according to Nigerian Tribute.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reported that there was no loss of life but the tanker was completely razed, while the filling station was partly affected.
Mr Jeremiah Abimaje, Branch Manager, NNPC Mega Station, said that the cause of the fire was unknown.

"No one can really say what actually caused the fire. The tanker came with the product and was off-loading its product when it suddenly caught fire," he said.

He said that prompt arrival of men of the Fire Service prevented the fire from engulfing the filling station and other properties in the neighborhood.

An eye witness, Mr Monday Osadolor, said that men of the fire service were able to contain the fire because the station was not selling fuel when the incident occurred.

"If it was a normal day when there are many cars around this road, many people would have lost their lives,” he said.

Mr Jaji Abdulganiyu, Operations Commander, Federal Fire Service, who led his men to the scene, said the service was committed to putting fire outbreaks under control in the FCT

Nigeria lasa fever contained

                                     Prof. Isaac Adewole
Lassa fever has claimed 41 lives from 93 reported cases in 10 of the 36 states, the Federal government said yesterday.
Last Friday, the government put the death toll at 40 out of 86 reported cases but the number of the suspected cases also rose to 93.
Minister of Health Prof. Isaac Adewole gave the update on the ravaging disease and the plans to curb it, at a joint ministerial news conference in Abuja, according to The Nation.
He listed the affected states as Bauchi, Nasarawa, Niger, Taraba, Kano, Rivers, Edo, Plateau, Gombe and Oyo.
He however said there were no new confirmed cases or death in the last 48 hours.
He did not disclose the state from which the additional life was lost.
Adewole assured Nigerians that there was no need to panic as the government has the capacity to deal with the outbreak.
He noted that the disease is different from Ebola and so it will be treated differently; explaining that unlike Ebola which had a single entry point into the country, Lassa Fever has multiple outbreak and has been restricted to rural areas.
Adewole blamed the states for the heavy casualty for failing to notify his office on time.
“In the last 48 hours the government raised a four-man expert committee, chaired by Prof. Michael Asuzu, to visit Kano, Niger and Bauchi, the three most endemic states.
“The committee will embark on a fact-finding mission, assess the current situation, document response experiences, identify gaps and proffer recommendations on how to prevent future occurrences,’’ he said.
The minister assured the public that the task of the committee was not to apportion blame but rather to document lessons learnt for better planning of an affective responsive.
According to Adewole, part of the long term response is to establish an inter-ministerial committee to deliver a final blow on Lassa fever and other related diseases.
The committee is made up of ministers of Education, Agriculture and Natural Resources, Environment, Information and Culture as well as Health.
Adewole advised communities to improve on their hygiene, including food hygiene and food protection practices.
He also urged the public to avoid contact with rodents and rats as well as food contaminated with rat’s secretions and excretions.
“Avoid drying food in the open and along roadsides, it is also important to cover all foods to prevent rodents contamination,’’ he said.
The minister said affected states have been advised to intensify awareness creation on the signs and symptoms of the disease.
“The public is hereby assured that government and other stakeholders are working tirelessly to address the outbreak and bring it to timely end,’’ said the minister.
He said the ministry had ordered for the immediate release of adequate quantities of “ribavirin’’, the specific antiviral drug for Lassa fever, to the affected states for prompt treatment of cases.
Adewole said Nigeria has the capability to diagnose Lassa fever, adding that “all the cases reported so far were confirmed by our laboratories’’.
“The reassuring aspect of the current outbreak is that we have not recorded any new case of outbreak in the last 72 hours. We have also not recorded any death in the last 48 hours.
“This gives one hope that we are beginning to see the end of the outbreak.”
He cited the case of Niger State where “the outbreak started in August and we were not informed until November. And we consider this to be very unfortunate.
“Not only that about 80 per cent of the outbreak was concentrated in three states; Kano Bauchi and Niger. Niger recorded 35 outbreaks with 16 deaths; Kano recorded 14 outbreaks and nine deaths; Bauchi recorded 14 outbreaks and three deaths.”
He announced that no health worker has been effected so far as against what happened in 2012.”
In respect of Oyo State, he said: “It is a sort of disconnect. We had a confirmed case at the University College Hospital (UCH) Ibadan. I have the laboratory result that was signed by UCH Ibadan. After treatment, this same individual had test repeated in Lagos and Lagos now said it was negative.
“We are standing on the original report from UCH which confirmed him positive and we are in touch with Oyo state on the true situation.
“May I also say that it is only the Federal Ministry of Health that can make pronouncement on the status of Lassa Fever in Nigeria. And to us, we have a case from Oyo state and that case was treated and he is alive, which is a good story.”
The minister also announced that the two suspected cases in Rivers state have turned out to be negative, likewise the other two from Lagos.
For now he said the ministry is very comfortable with happening, though he said “We expect to have more report of suspected cases but what we want to assured you is that confirmed cases should not increase. We can assure you that we have not receivedý any confirmed case in the last 72 hours.”
He also declared that there is cure for Lassa fever but for the cure to occur, the patients must be seen very early. Early presentation to health facilities, he said is important and drugs have been distributed.
“We hope working together we can finally declare the final end of Lassa fever ýin this country,” he said.

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."