Tuesday, 26 January 2016

Ramires set for £25m move to China

Ramires

Chelsea's Ramires to join Jiangsu Suning in £25m move.

The 28-year-old Brazil midfielder, signed from Benfica for about £17m in 2010, agreed a new four-year deal in October but has only started seven Premier League games this season, according to BBC sport.
Jiangsu finished ninth in China's top tier in 2015 and are managed by former Blues defender Dan Petrescu.
Ramires has helped the Blues win the Premier League, FA Cup, League Cup, Champions League and Europa League.

DasukiGate: Dasuki property confiscated by EFCC

Property believed to belong to former National Security Adviser (NSA) Sambo Dasuki was at the weekend confiscated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in Kaduna, according to The Nation.
Dasuki, NSA to former President Goodluck Jonathan, is at the centre of a massive investigation into the alleged misapplication of about $2.1 billion meant for the procurement of arms.
A panel, which investigated the way the money was spent, indicted Dasuki and others. The EFCC moved in. Dasuki has been arraigned in court.
It was learnt that the property of others linked with the scandal were also confiscated by the anti-graft agency in Kaduna.
Among them is a former Theatre Commander of the Operation Lafia Dole in Maiduguri, Major General Yishau Mahmood Abubakar.
It was learnt that occupants of some of the buildings were expelled by EFCC operatives who took over the property, which they marked with red ink.
Dasuki’s confiscated property are said to be a hotel complex on Rabah Road, Malali GRA in the heart of Kaduna metropolis and a mansion under construction on Sani Sami Road, also in Malali GRA.
Except for some workers moving out their tools, the site was empty yesterday.
Maj.-Gen. Abubakar’s residential duplex located at No. 5C, Sultan Close was sealed off Sunday evening.
It was also gathered that when the EFCC operatives arrived at the house, there was a birthday party going on. Everybody was asked to vacate the premises immediately and they obeyed.
A shopping mall allegedly belonging to Gen. Abubakar’s wife was also confiscated by the anti-graft agency. The inscription “Keep off, under EFCC investigation”  was put on it.
Sources said the property belongs to the General’s brother and not his wife –  as alleged.
Another shopping mall on Sultan Road, which is believed to belong to Gen. Abubakar’s friend who is an Ambassador was also confiscated.

Louis van Gaal: Man Utd boss did not offer to resign after defeat

Manchester United boss Louis van Gaal did not offer to resign at the weekend, despite reports to the contrary.
    Van Gaal, 64, was said to have told executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward he would be prepared to quit following Saturday's 1-0 defeat by Southampton.
A source said no such conversation took place.
Van Gaal returned to United's training ground on Tuesday as they begin preparations for Friday's FA Cup fourth-round tie against Derby County.
Woodward, meanwhile, has club commitments in London rather than north-west England.
United are maintaining their long-established position of refusing to publicly discuss Van Gaal's future.

With BBC Sport

Bi-Courtney Highway Services: FG wants out-of-court settlement

There are strong indications that the Federal Government may set up a dispute resolution board on the crisis currently stalling the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway reconstruction project.
It was gathered on Monday that the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunnde Fashola, had been holding meeting with stakeholders involved in the project, including Bi-Courtney Highway Services Limited.
It was learnt that one of the options being explored was setting up of a dispute resolution board involving all sides.
The Infrastructure Bank (TIB), in a public notice on Monday, said it had approached the Court of Appeal to seek the nullification of a recent court ruling that set aside a concession agreement that the Federal Government granted Motorway Assets Limited to finance the reconstruction of the road and later manage it.
A Federal High Court in Lagos, which granted the order of mandatory injunction sought by Bi-Courtney Highway Services Limited on December 11, 2015, held that the concession agreement purportedly signed between the Federal Government and MAL on January 16, 2015 was a flagrant disregard of the established principles of law.
Bi-Courtney Highway Services, owned by Dr. Wale Babalakin, had sued the government challenging the termination of its earlier agreement with the latter to rebuild and manage the road. It named the Attorney-General of the Federation and TIB among the defendants.
Although the Federal Government has not formally responded to a letter written by Bi-Courtney on January 25, 2013 seeking a resolution of the dispute arising from the termination of its contract on the road, findings on Monday showed that it had commenced talks with the company.
A source in the ministry, said that the President Muhammadu Buhari administration was looking into all the contentious issues as far as the road was concerned.
He said those who had taken the issue to court might be persuaded to withdraw it so as to pave the way for the setting up of a dispute resolution board.
“The new government is aware of Bi-Courtney’s letter and it is looking into it and other issues concerning the road so that we can move forward. We may set up a board or panel to resolve the issue out of court,” he said.
The source also said that Fashola met with Bi-Courtney recently on the matter, adding that the minister was handling the issue.
When contacted, the Director of Information in the ministry, Mr. ‘Bisi Agbonhin, said that Bi-Courtney had taken its case to court.
“The case is in court and it will not be nice to start responding to issues that are before a court of law. I think is better to allow the court to handle issues that are before it,” he said.
Fashola had confirmed that the litigation as well as the termination of the agreement with Bi-Courtney by the government was responsible for the suspension of the reconstruction work on the highway.
In a statement from the ministry on Monday, the minister called for attitudinal change by the government and the people concerning their reactions to national issues as this would affect investors’ perception of Nigeria.
The minister, who spoke in Abuja at a retreat for the pension industry, used the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway as a case study, explaining that the Federal Government had granted concession agreement on the road to a private company and later cancelled the contract.
He said the government again entered into a construction and financing agreement with another company, adding that the first firm went to court and got an order to cancel the financing agreement made with the second company.
“As a result of this, work has stopped on the road, thereby leading to the laying off of about 2,000 construction workers, carnage on the road and loss of commuter travel time,” Fashola said.
The Infrastructure Bank said in its publication, “Appeals have been lodged in the Court of Appeal by the defendants in the matter, including the Attorney-General of the Federation and The Infrastructure Bank Plc in respect of the ruling, which at an interlocutory stage, set aside an agreement, which is the basis upon which the current funding of the rehabilitation, reconstruction and expansion of the Lagos-Ibadan road is being implemented.”
Although the bank admitted that the court action instituted by Bi-Courtney had stalled the project in the last eight months, it expressed optimism about completing the work within the stipulated four-year period.
“Commitments have been secured to accelerate the pace of work and ensure the completion of the project within the contracted four-year period,” it stated.
The bank said the project, which was progressing steadily before the litigation, had attained 30 per cent completion within two years of its commencement.
The TIB attributed the progress to its commitment to mobilising over N50bn for the project and the support of other stakeholders.

With The Punch

CBN’s Monetary Policy Committee Begins 2-Day Meeting

Monetary Policy
The Monetary Policy Committee of the Central Bank began its 2-day meeting on Monday at the nation’s Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.
Focus centered on how to make decisions that will drive the economy with particular discussions on the foreign exchange market.
The meeting, which is the first for 2016, comes against the backdrop of slowing global growth and a weakening domestic economic environment, due to the fall in oil prices, according to Channel Television.
Analysts at FBN Quest believe the depletion of official reserves, the slide in the oil price and other economic issues could make a good case for Naira devaluation.
The apex bank will make its pronouncements at the end of the meeting on Tuesday January 26.   
In the meantime, central banks around the world will hold series of meeting this week to chart a way for monetary policies in their various countries.
The U.S. Federal reserve is expected to leave interest rates unchanged at its 2-day meeting which will end on Wednesday even before the recent rout in global stocks.
Equity prices from Japan to Brazil have tumbled into a bear market, China’s economy slowed and oil prices are lower, prompting European Central Bank President, Mario Draghi to warn on Thursday that downside risks have increased.
Analysts expect a rate hike this week from the Reserve Bank of South Africa with most predicting the MPC will go 50 basis points rather than 25, as it did in July and November.

The South Africa Rand tanked and bond yields soared after President Jacob Zuma fired Nhlanhla Nene as Finance Minister in December.