Sunday, 31 January 2016

Nigerians attack Economist for calling Jonathan ‘ineffectual buffoon’

Nigerians have expressed outrage at the Economist for labeling the country’s past president, Goodluck Jonathan, as an ‘ineffectual buffoon.’
In an article titled “Crude Tactics: Cheap oil is causing a currency crisis in Nigeria. Banning imports is no solution”, published in The Economist last Thursday, the magazine, while analysing the economic policies of President Muhammadu Buhari, had written that “In the eight months since Mr. Buhari arrived at Aso Rock, the presidential digs, the homicidal jihadists of Boko Haram have been pushed back into the bush along Nigeria’s borders.
“The government has cracked down on corruption, which had flourished under the previous president, Goodluck Jonathan, an ineffectual buffoon who let politicians and their cronies fill their pockets with impunity.”
In angry reactions on social media, majority of Nigerians expressed their displeasure with the tag on a former president of Africa’s most populous nation.
One Ismail Aniemu on his Facebook page  wrote "every Nigerian should be worried about any derogatory description of our leaders by the western media".
“Describing Jonathan as an ‘Ineffectual Buffoon’ is not a good testimonial for us coming from an influential publication, The Economist. Nigerians should jointly seek ways of avoiding embarrassments of this sort in future. How did we get a GEJ to lead us in the first place?” he wrote.
Another Nigerian, Adedayo Adesoji, also expressed his reservations on his Facebook page.
He wrote, “Despite the fact that I have never for once fancied the kind of President Jonathan’s style of leadership, I take exception to the Economist’s position referring to the Nigerian immediate past President as an ineffectual buffoon! It is the height of disrespect to the personality of our former President! If truly the Economist condescended so low to spew out this insult, then the above globally respected news platform has lowered its professional standard and brought international journalism to a state of disrepute! I am awfully disappointed in the Economist if truly it authored such a publication!”

With The Punch

Breaking News: At least 30 people killed in double blast near Shia shrine of Sayyida Zeinab, south of Damascus

Twin blasts have killed 30 people and wounded at least 40 in Syria's capital Damascus, officials said. 
The blasts, one of which was caused by a car bomb, happened near the Shia Muslim shrine of Sayyida Zeinab on Friday, the interior ministry said. 
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) claimed responsibility for the attack. 
The shrine has been targeted before, including in February 2015 when two suicide attacks killed four people and wounded 13 at a checkpoint nearby.
In the same month, a blast ripped through a bus carrying Lebanese Shia Muslim pilgrims headed to Sayyida Zeinab, killing at least nine people in an attack claimed by the al-Nusra Front armed group.

'Diversit reigns' as Idris Elba and Viola Davis win SAG awards


The journalism drama Spotlight took home the main prize at the Screen Actors Guild awards, but the success of minority actors drew most attention.
The film, about the Boston Globe's investigation of paedophile Catholic priests, won for best film cast.
But many of the main awards in Los Angeles were won by actors of diverse backgrounds, with industry magazine Variety noting that "diversity reigns".
It comes amid controversy over a lack of diversity among Oscar nominees.
British actor Idris Elba won for his roles in the detective drama Luther, and for his supporting role as an African warlord in Beasts of No Nation.
"Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to diverse TV," he said as he presented an award.
The female prison series Orange is the New Black won the ensemble award for a comedy series, and its star Uzo Aduba for best comedy actress in a television series.
The series has earned praise for its diverse cast and willingness to address race issues. Accepting the cast award, actress Laura Prepon referred to her cast mates, saying: "This is what we talk about when we talk about diversity."
The three main acting awards were given to films with mainly white casts, Spotlight, The Revenant and Room, all of which are among the Oscar favourites.
The absence of any non-whites in the four Oscar acting categories for the second year running has prompted discussion on diversity in Hollywood.
Since then, the organisation behind the awards has promised to double the number of female and minority members, a move welcomed by leading actors.
However, director Spike Lee, actress Jada Pinkett Smith and her husband Will Smith announced they would not be attending next month's awards.


With BBC

Is Nigeria fighting recession before 2016 budget implementation?

Daily newspaper headlines warn of “Hard times ahead”, while many billboards in the commercial hub of Lagos stand stark white, just blank signs, an indication that companies are trimming costs.
Even high fliers are taking a hit. Importers of French wine complain that demand has dried up. Luxury car dealers and real estate agents say business has dwindled.
Africa’s leading economy is projected to have grown by 3.0 percent in 2015, its slowest pace in over a decade, according to an International Monetary Fund report in January.
Unlike Norway, which invested hundreds of billions of dollars of its oil money into stocks, bonds and real estate, Nigeria spent its riches when times were good.
Now that crude prices have slumped more than two-thirds since $100 per barrel in mid-2014, Nigeria is exposed.
Dollar reserves currently stand at a low of $28 billion — $20 billion less than in April 2013. There is only enough for five months of imports for a country heavily dependent on foreign goods.
Onele Vincent and his colleagues are fed up with the rising cost of living. So they decided to do something about it and led a noisy protest at a top Lagos hotel where they work. 
“Things are more expensive, rent is high, food is high,” Vincent told AFP last week in the lobby of the Southern Sun hotel, a favourite of the monied elite, politicians and expatriates.
"Everything has increased and yet the staff salary has remained the same.”
Vincent and the other hotel workers are far from lone voices in Nigeria, where many are feeling the pain as Africa’s biggest oil producer struggles to adapt to the record lows of global oil prices and its naira currency is under devaluation pressure.
While the huge drop in oil prices is a major headache for Nigeria, analysts say it is the government’s response that is the biggest cause for concern.
The central bank governor, Godwin Emefiele, on Tuesday dismissed calls to devalue the naira in his monetary policy committee statement.
Instead he chose to continue propping up the currency at 197-199 naira to the dollar and maintain foreign-exchange restrictions.
As a result, the naira on the black market is hovering around a record low of 305, fuelling complaints from domestic and foreign businesses who can’t access dollars needed for imports.
With little domestic manufacturing and years of under-investment, mismanagement and corruption in the oil sector, Nigeria depends on imports for almost everything, from milk and machinery to petroleum products.
Jittery investors, fearing the inevitable devaluation of the naira, have held off doing business in the country until there is a clearer monetary policy.
The situation right now is causing a lot of anxiety and uncertainty because no one knows how to plan for it,” said Anna Rosenburg, emerging markets analyst at Frontier Strategy Group.
Everyone is complaining about the lack of direction from the government.”
Attempts to shore up the naira are designed to protect the nation’s dollar reserves.
But the tight forex controls have led to accusations growth is being strangled in Africa’s most populous country.
“At this stage, a weaker naira is less important for fostering the resumption of needed international investment flows than the lifting of the foreign exchange restriction,” JF Ruhashyankiko, a Goldman Sachs economist, said in an investor note.
Now Nigeria is in limbo, badly needing foreign investment but unable to get any.
“If you’re not attracting those inflows and you’re not generating a surplus from the export of oil, then it’s going to be more difficult to sustain foreign exchange reserves where they are,” added Razia Khan, an economist at Standard Chartered Bank.
That could impact on its perceived credit worthiness, which isn’t a good thing when Nigeria is thinking of borrowing externally to fund some of its more ambitious infrastructure programmes.”
President Muhammadu Buhari last month announced a record six trillion naira ($30 billion) budget to avoid a recession, planning to pour money into massive road and railway projects.
But the budget is based on an oil price of $38 per barrel, above the current market price of around $33, and relies heavily on borrowed money.
After Buhari remarked in December that he would consider devaluing the naira, some investors took it as a sign the currency situation would be resolved early in the new year.
Yet on Thursday Buhari put those hopes on the back burner, saying on a visit to Kenya he will not have the naira “killed” and is “optimistic” his policies will soon stabilise the economy.

Amazing Afghan Lionel Messi filmed playing football

Internet search is over as five-year-old Murtaza Ahmadi, who lives in a Taliban controlled area of Afghanistan, identified as boy playing in shirt made from plastic bag.


The young fan in a photograph that spread on social media has been identified as Murtaza Ahmadi, a five-year-old boy who lives in a Taliban-controlled area of Afghanistan.

The shirt was made by his brother, from a plastic bag Photo: AFP
Murtaza had no idea he had become an internet sensation after his elder brother, Homayoun, 15, posted the photographs on Facebook two weeks ago.
Thousands of amateur sleuths trawled through picture archives trying to find the boy, as offers flooded in of real football shirts.
Murtaza, whose father admitted he could not afford to buy him a replica jersey, said he had only a punctured ball to play with in his village in Afghanistan’s Ghazni province.
“I love Messi, he plays well, the shirt was made by my brother and I liked it very much,” he said after being tracked down by the AFP news agency.
“We do not have a football playground near our house, and the only ball I have is punctured.
“I want to be like Messi, when I grow up.”
The shirt was made by his brother, from a plastic bag with Messi's name and number written on with marker pen.
Internet detectives initially believed the boy in the pictures was an Iraqi Kurd before Murtaza’s uncle Azim Ahamdi, who lives in Australia, posted pictures of his nephew and said he was the unwitting star of the story.
The family, who live in a remote rural area, only learnt about Murtaza’s newfound fame from relatives when Murtaza’s father’s visited the Afghan capital Kabul.
He told AFP he had high hopes for his son.
“He asked me to buy him a Messi jersey but I am a farmer and could not afford it,” Mohammad Arif Ahamdi, a father of six, said.
“Murtaza wants to meet Lionel Messi in person one day.
“I want my son to become a good football player in the future and become the Messi of Afghanistan.”
Football is hugely popular in Afghanistan although the national stadium in Kabul was used as a venue for executions during the years of Taliban rule until 2001.