Monday, 18 January 2016

Taxi driver, 34, dies after electric shock at Portsmouth football pitch

A junction box at the Mountbatten Centre in Portsmouth   Photo: Paul Jacobs/pictureexclusive.com
A taxi driver has died after he was electrocuted on an artificial football pitch.
Paramedics attempted to revive Albert Xhediku, 34, who fell unconscious after he suffered an electric shock at the Mountbatten Leisure Centre in Portsmouth on Sunday night.
He was taken by ambulance to the Queen Alexandra Hospital in Cosham, where he was pronounced dead.
An investigation has been launched by Parkwood Community Leisure, which operates leisure centre where Mr Xhediku died.
Hampshire Constabulary are also invesstigating the incident, and have appealed for witnesses.
The driver, who works for private hire firm City Wide Taxis in Portsmouth, Hants, left his silver Vauxhall Vectra work vehicle in the car park, where it remains.
Passers-by saw paramedics try and give him CPR shortly after they got the call at 6.30pm.
The outdoor all weather artificial pitch is enclosed by a metal cage. It was sealed off by police after the incident.
A spokesman at Portsmouth Coroner's Office said they had been informed of Mr Xhediku's death, and that next of kin had been informed.
A spokesman for Parkwood Community Leisure, which operates the centre on behalf of Portsmouth City Council said: "We have launched a formal investigation into this incident alongside our Health and Safety consultants from the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents.
"We extend our deepest sympathy and condolences to the gentleman's family and friends at this difficult time."
David Williams, Portsmouth City Council's chief executive, added: "We are deeply saddened this has happened and our thoughts are with the family.
"Our centre operator Parkwood Leisure will be assisting the police with their investigations."
The Health and Safety Executive have been informed, but have no involvement at this stage, a spokesman confirmed.
The incident saw a passing police officer flagged down before he then alerted his colleagues.
Local residents paid tribute to Mr Xhediku on social media.
Emma Walker, on Facebook, wrote: "R.I.P thoughts are with family and friends.
"But how the heck did that happen? Did he walk into something? Poor guy, 35 is no age to die."
Natalie Cook added: "RIP. Thoughts are with the family and friends at this sad time, what a sad way to start the year gone too soon."
Pauline Jenkins said: "To the man I just seen having cpr on Mountbatten playing fields, hope they got you to hospital in time."
A spokeswoman for Hampshire Constabulary said: “Investigations into the incident, which happened on the outside pitch at Mountbatten Leisure Centre, are ongoing today as we try to establish the circumstances surrounding the 34-year-old’s death.
"Police were alerted to the incident at 6.40pm yesterday and he was taken to Queen Alexandra Hospital by ambulance, where he was later pronounced dead.
"Part of those investigations will include looking into the possibility that he was electrocuted.
"We are working in conjunction with Portsmouth City Council."
Detective Inspector Paul Southey said: “The area remains cordoned off and will remain so for the rest of today as our investigations continue.
“We are keen to speak to anyone who thinks they have any information which could be relevant to this incident.”
A South Central Ambulance spokeswoman said: “We got a call at 6.36pm to Mountbatten Leisure Centre. A male was reported to have had an electric shock.
“We took him to the Queen Alexandra Hospital in Portsmouth. We sent a rapid response car, an ambulance and team leader.”
The Mountbatten Centre is a large leisure complex in the centre of Portsmouth, managed by Parkwood Community Leisure on behalf of Portsmouth City Council.


With Telegraph News

Climate Change: Buhari wants Greater Global Cooperation

While addressing the opening of the 2016 World Future Energy Summit on Monday in Abu Dhabi, President Buhari reaffirmed Nigeria’s readiness to work with the United Arab Emirates and the rest of the world in a collective effort to mitigate the effects of climate change, according to Channel Television.
“Africa is already suffering from the consequences of climate change, which includes recurrent drought and floods. In Nigeria, the drastic drying up of the Lake Chad to just about 10% of its original size, has negatively impacted on the livelihood of millions of people and contributed in making the region a hot bed of insurgency.
“Desert encroachment in Niger (Republic), our northern neighbour and in far northern Nigeria, at the rate of several hundred meters per annum, has impacted on the existence of man, animal and vegetation, threatening to alter the whole ecological balance of the sub-region.
“In the middle and southern part of Nigeria, land erosion threatens farming, forestry, town and village peripheries and in some areas major highways. Constant and abrupt alteration between floods and droughts prove that climate change is real and therefore a global approach and cooperation to combat its effects are vital, if the human race is not to face disaster in the 21st century,” he told participants at the summit.
Noting that the summit was taking place soon after the United Nations Conference on Climate Change held in Paris late last year, the President praised the United Arab Emirates for consistently supporting international action on climate change.
“We see Abu Dhabi as a dependable partner in the collective effort to manage climate risks, including the attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030. Thank you Abu Dhabi, for consistently continuing to support international action in this sphere.
“We appreciate your immense contributions worth hundreds of millions of dollars in energy aid to developing countries,” he said.
President Buhari is expected back in the country on Tuesday, January 19, 2016.

The 62 Super-rich People own as much as half the world

About $7.6 trillion is hidden in havens, depriving governments of $190bn in tax revenue every year [Eric Gaillard/Reuters]


The world's richest 62 people now own as much wealth as half of the world's population, according to a report by the charity Oxfam, according to Aljazeera. 
Super-rich individuals saw an increase of 44 percent since 2010, taking their cumulative wealth to $1.76 trillion - equivalent to the total owned by 3.5 billion of the world's poorest people.  
The UK-based charity on Monday also said tax havens were helping corporations and individuals to stash away about $7.6 trillion, depriving governments of $190bn in tax revenue every year.
Oxfam Australia's Chief Executive Helen Szoke said there were no appropriate mechanisms to check if wealth was being shared appropriately.
"We believe there is a need for commitments from global business leaders and political leaders for major tax reform to get rid of the tax havens," Szoke said.
"There's too much leakage of what should be paid in taxation exacerbating this gap [between rich and poor]."
Referring to economic growth in Western countries, such as her native Australia, Szoke said little wealth was reaching the impoverished.
"The startling figure in our domestic context in Australia is that where there has been wealth generation in the past decade, none of that has actually trickled down to some of the Australians who are poor."
Oxfam said wealth was being concentrated in the hands of increasingly fewer people, while the world's poorest continued to get poorer. In 2010, 388 people owned as much as the world's poorest 50 percent. 
Mark Goldring, Oxfam chief executive in the United Kingdom, said the stated concern of world leaders over escalating inequality was not being matched with action.
"It is simply unacceptable that the poorest half of the world population owns no more than a small group of the global super-rich, so few you could fit them all on a single coach. 
"In a world where one-in-nine people go to bed hungry every night, we cannot afford to carry on giving the richest an ever-bigger slice of the cake," Goldring said.
The organisation is calling on world leaders meeting for the World Economic Forum in the Swiss city of Davos later this month to crack down on tax havens, ensure fair wages, and invest in public services.


With Aljazeera

PDP defectors plans exposed by Chief Bisi Akande



Chief Bisi Akande
Former interim Chairman of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Chief Bisi Akande, has charged the All Progressives Congress, APC, to be weary of those defecting from the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, stressing that they are parasites coming to destroy the ruling party if allowed, according to Daily Post..
Akande gave the note of caution while speaking with newsmen at his residence in Ila Orangun, Osun State on his 77 birthday.
He called on the ruling party to be watchful of the new members so that they do not end up killing the APC like they did to the PDP.
Akande said, “We in the APC should be careful, the defection is not a strange thing but I know it is always done by parasites. I have always remained in one line of politics. I have never defected and I will never defect; I will remain in that progressive polity.
“But those who are defecting from one party to the other, by nature, they are political parasites. They have killed the original host, which was the PDP, and they are now coming to the APC, which is the new host. It is for the APC to gird its own loins and prevent the parasites from killing the party, because a parasite has no root of its own but feeds on the little food that the host has.
“So, running away from the PDP to the APC looks good but the APC must be careful in dealing with those parasites.”audget to be more discipline, stating that such a story coming from the Senate was not shocking because its leadership was not a disciplined one.
“Only the budget of the Senate was missing, so that leaves a complication into what is happening. You know, it is borne out of the same indiscipline that led to the hijack of the National Assembly. When the foundation of an assembly is indiscipline- until you remove the cause, you will continue to have this kind of problem in your hands.
“That assembly was not constituted the way my party planned it. It was by hijack and indiscipline which constitutes the way it is. So, you can expect any kind of dissatisfactory stories from such an assembly,” he said.

Corruption: Osinbajo queries BPE chief on N1.5b ‘curious’ contracts

Oluyemi Oluleke Osinbajo 

Disturbed by the alleged N1.45billion legal and consultancy fees scandal in the Bureau of Public Enterprises(BPE), Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has queried the Director-General of the agency, Benjamin Dikki, on the award of such contracts, according to The Nation.
The controversial contracts include a curious N950million job for the liquidation of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria(PHCN) when the company had seized to exist and N500million as consultancy fees to a government department.
The report shown that, the DG is also expected to clarify the alleged payment of N27,188,232,208:20 billion as premium for group life and group personal accident insurance for former staff of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria(PHCN).
Another issue is the alleged diversion of N455,266,618;23 meant for the payment of retirement benefits to entertainment allowance for the staff.
The query followed a petition to the Office of the Vice President by a former director of the BPE, Ibrahim Muhammad Kashim.
Kashim said the N950million contract for the winding up of PHCN was unnecessary because PHCN was already a “shell” company.
Before the action of the Vice President, the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) had asked the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to probe the contracts.
The contracts were awarded contrary to the advice of the immediate past Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) and the BPP, it was learnt.
The BPP requested the EFCC to investigate the payment scandal in a June 27, 2015 letter to the anti-graft agency.
But a fresh petition by the ex-BPE director to the Office of the Vice President sparked the Presidency’s interest.
A letter by the Office of the Vice President to the ex-director reads in part: “I am directed to acknowledge with thanks, the receipt of your letter dated 3rd November 2015 on the above stated subject.
“His Excellency, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, GCON, Vice President, Federal Republic of Nigeria has further directed that the said document be forwarded to Director-General, Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) for his due consideration and response.
“Please accept the assurances of His Excellency, the Vice President’s warm regards.”
Earlier in his petition, Kashim said there was rot in the BPE which should be investigated by the Vice President, who is the Chairman of the National Council on Privatisation(NCP).
He said: “Your Excellency, the former DG Miss Bolanle Onagoruwa, was removed partly because she refused to accept the appointment of a prominent PDP lawyer to wind up PHCN for an amount exceeding N1.5bn. ( When the proposal was sent to her, I was one of the Directors she confided in.)
“ As lawyers, we reckoned that it was unthinkable, more so as all the assets of PHCN had been transferred through a presidential order to the Discos and Gencos while all the liabilities were to be handled by Nigeria Electricity Liability Management Company ( NEMLCO). PHCN is therefore a shell company.
“Immediately after her removal, the current DG established a committee that awarded the assignment to the preferred law firm. I publicly expressed my disagreement. The DG sent for me and solicited for my support as it was from our bosses. I maintained my position, as a result of which the matter was never tabled at, or brought to the management committee for deliberation and approval before going to NCP.
“ I still maintain that PHCN was a shell company that had no assets and or liabilities. Winding up a shell company surely cannot be done for close to a billion naira. It was fraudulent.
Regarding the payment of over N27billion for insurance premium, the ex-director said at the time, PHCN had no more staff.
He added: “The DG one day invited me to his office. He informed me of a memo that would be sent to Management Committee for its consideration and approval. He suggested that we should pass it, since I was the one that usually chaired such meetings. It was to approve for transmission to the chairman of NCP the payment of N27,188,232,208:20 billionas premium to Great Nigeria Insurance Plc for group life and group personal accident insurance for PHCN staff. I told him it cannot pass, for even a law 101 student knows the cliche ‘No premium No cover’.
“And in any case at that time PHCN had no staff. However, I learnt later that the same paper came to BPE with all the necessary approvals, and I believe the money was paid.”
On retirement benefits, Kashim alleged that the amount approved for BPE staff was converted to Entertainment Allowance.
He said: “ One of the items approved by the NCP was Terminal Benefits for exiting staff. It was to take effect from 2015. For that purpose NCP approved for inclusion into 2015 national budget the sum of N455,266,618:23. The staff due to retire in 2015 are:(1)Ibrahim Muhammad Kashim(Director), (2)Hajiya Fati Abubakar (Director);and (3) Afolabi Mathew(Deputy Director).
“ The amount approved by the NCP as terminal benefit was meant only for three of us retiring in 2015. It meant that BPE should in 2015 seek NCP’s approval for staff retiring in 2016. (As a matter of fact there will be only one retiring staff in 2016).
“The DG by these acts has wrongly converted our terminal benefits to pay management staff entertainment allowances. This he did to calm the restiveness of the management staff as he had completely spent the internally generated revenue on his weekly trips to Zuru in Kebbi State to campaign for a political party (in deed he  even bought a pilot vehicle fitted with a siren to facilitate the trips).
“Let the DG BPE Mr. Benjamin Ezra Dikki tell Nigerians by publicising the minutes of meetings where in those matters were presented to the management committee of the BPE and that it deliberated and recommended to the NCP for approval in line with the extant law. The BPE is the secretariat of the NCP. Matters going to NCP have to be discussed and approved by the management committee. Why none of the payments in question came before the committee was because I objected to it, so the DG went elsewhere and got the memos approved after which he disbursed the money. And it was my stance that made the DG in an attempt to pay me back, to circumvent NCPs approval that amended the BPE Staff Condition of Service, just to ensure that I don’t get my terminal benefits.
“Not only that, he equally converted the approved sum for retiring staff in 2015 to be converted into recurrent management staff entertainment allowance.”
In its defence, the BPE said its ex-director lied and misled the public in his petition to the Vice President.
The BPE, in a statement by its Head, Public Communications, Alex E. Okoh, said: “Kashim lied when he stated,  “….. The former DG Ms Bolanle Onagoruwa was removed partly because she has refused to accept the appointment of a prominent PDP lawyer to wind up PHCN for an amount  exceeding N1.5billion… immediately after her removal the current DG established a committee that awarded the assignment to the preferred law firm.”
“The fact is that the National Council on Privatisation at its 3rd Meeting of 2013 held on Thursday May 9, 2013 had approved the engagement of Messrs J K Gadzama as the consultant for winding up of PHCN.  Benjamin Ezra Dikki was appointed acting DG on 27th November, 2013, over six months later.”
On insurance premium, the BPE added: “The provision of Group Life Insurance Policy for employees is mandatory and compulsory under Section 4(1) (5&6) of the Pension Reform Act 2004. The maxim of no premium no cover does not apply here where the law explicitly provides, ‘Every employer shall maintain Group Life Insurance Policy in favour of each employee for a minimum of three times the total annual emoluments of the employee and premium shall be paid not later than the date of commencement of the cover’.
“Thus, PHCN Successor Companies as employers of labour before privatisation were mandated by law to provide these classes of insurance to its employee in compliance with the Pension Act.
“It was established that there was an Insurance Policy between GNIP and PHCN.  Premiums were outstanding  for year 2011/2012 amounting to N13,607,151,141.10 and renewable for the year 2012/2013 at the sums of N13,581,080,774.10, totalling  N27,188,232,208.20 for which payment was outstanding.  PHCN had already filed claims with GNIP for 267 staff that died in active service for compensation to the relations/widows of the deceased.
“GNIP did not pay the claim because PHCN did not pay premiums due for 2011/2012 and 2012/2013. PHCN submitted these claims to the Implementation Committee set up by the National Council on Privatisation for the processing of entitlements to PHCN Staff  that  then made representations to the then Minister of Power.
“The Minister of Power presented the matter to the Vice President in a memo dated 23/12/2013.   It was subsequently presented to and approved by the National Council on Privatisation at its 3rd meeting held on August 4th, 2014, for payment.  BPE transferred the sum to the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation for further action.
“As mentioned earlier, at a special meeting held, on January 12, 2013 the NCP set up an Implementation Committee, chaired by the Minister of State for Power to handle the processing and payment of entitlements of PHCN Staff based on the approvals given at the same meeting.
“This Implementation Committee chaired by a Minister comprised of representatives of various Ministries and Agencies, was superior to BPE management.  Thus no single one of the forty tranches of payments to PHCN Staff ever came to the BPE management for consideration.
“It is in compliance to the same process that the Insurance premium payment did not have to come to BPE management as insinuated by Ibrahim Kashim.
“Once the implementation Committee processed and verified PHCN Staff entitlements, it advised BPE and BPE remitted the relevant sums to the office of Accountant General of the Federation that effected payments as appropriate.”
The BPE denied allegation of diversion of retirement benefits of BPE staff including the entitlements of Kashim.
It said: “The Bureau in its desire to ameliorate the plight of its former staff who retired and the financial dislocation they went through before they could access payments from their RSA, decided to explore the provision of Section 4(4) (a) on the Pension Act which gives employers the discretion to make additional payments of benefits to its retiring employees.
“It was intended to provide a cushion of funding for retiring staff pending when they were able to process and access their RSA’s.  Consequently, the National Council on Privatisation approval was sought to create terminal benefits for the Bureau’s staff who are retiring.
“This was, however, subject to the approval of the Salaries and Wages Commission, the body that has the statutory powers to approve Salaries and Allowance of Public Servants.  The Salaries and Wages Commission declined approval of the Terminal Benefits on the grounds that the Bureau cannot be singled out of the entire Public Service for such special treatment.  Once the Salaries and Wages Commission does not approve the benefits, such cannot be included in the budget template and be funded.
“By the provisions of the Pension Act and the determination of the Salaries and Wages Commission, there is no terminal benefit payable to Mallam Ibrahim M Kashim or any staff.
“We wish to emphasise that all retirement benefits are paid by PENCOM in line with the Pension Act and all the ex-director’s records have been forwarded to PENCOM for payment. He has been advised to follow up with PENCOM for payment.”

With The Nation