Sunday, 13 March 2016

FG plans to make rice affordable by April

The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, made this disclosure while declaring open the 2016 National wheat farmers field day in Alkamawa village in Bunkure Local Government of Kano state.
Ogbeh said that the stability of price of rice would be very viable due to its demand and affordability to the people from April.
He said the boosting of wheat production and other cereals had become necessary to reduce over dependence on importation.
The minister added that over 300, 000 hectares of land in wheat producing states would be dedicated to boost wheat production.
“The government will continue to support farmers to encourage agricultural activity, enhance food security and employment generation in the country,’’ he said.
According to him, the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari will diversify the economy with greater emphasis on agriculture.
Ogbeh urged Nigerians to embrace agriculture to enhance their welfare and enable them become self reliant.
In a remark, Chairman of Senate Committee on Agriculture, Senator Abdullahi Adamu, said the senate would make legislation to remove obstacles being faced by wheat farmers in the country.
On his part, Governor Atiku Bagudu of Kebbi state said Kebbi would dedicate 70 per cent of the proposed 300, 000 for wheat production to boost its production.

shooting at Ivory Coast beach resort left at least 12 dead

At least 12 people were killed Sunday after gunmen opened fire at a beach resort in Ivory Coast and took terrified tourists and staff members hostage in a hotel.

The gunfire erupted near the Hotel Etoile du Sud in Grand-Bassam, a popular tourist attraction, according to The Guardian.

Witnesses told AFP that two to four gunmen, heavily armed and wearing balaclavas, yelled "Allahu Akbar" as they opened fire on sunbathers. Several social media users tweeted footage of bloody bodies on the beach and tourists running through the resort for safety.

The attack is believed to be ongoing, with the gunmen reportedly taking people hostage inside the hotel.

Security forces rushed to the scene and evacuated the beach.

It's unclear who is behind the attack. 

France had warned Ivory Coast at the beginning of 2016 that Islamic militants were planning an attack there, likely at a beach, according to Bloomberg. The warning came after extremists killed dozens in hotel attacks in two other West African countries — Mali, in November, and Burkina Faso, in January.

The U.S. Embassy in Abidjan said there is no evidence that American citizens were harmed or targeted in the Sunday slaughter.

The attack happened in Grand-Bassam, a popular Ivory Coast tourist attraction.

Embattled Madonna embarked on another bizarre, boozy tirade at her Melbourne

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Madonna took a spill while riding a tricycle during her Melbourne show, but she didn’t spill her tequila.

The embattled pop star Madonna embarked on another bizarre, boozy tirade at her Melbourne, Australia concert over the weekend, this time knocking back swigs of tequila as she beckoned to the crowd to take care of her.

The "Like A Virgin" singer struggled to compose herself at the sold-out show and at one point even tried to ride around the stage on a tricycle with a liquor bottle in-hand before she collapsed to the ground.

"Somebody take care of me please," she told the Rod Laver Arena crowd, according to reports. "Who is going to take care of me?"

The 57-year-old singer, who is currently waged in a drawn-out, contentious custody feud with ex-husband Guy Ritchie, also reportedly took sips out of a concertgoer's flask in between songs.

And in another rambling, profanity-laced rant, the Material Girl surveyed the audience and pleaded "someone please f--- me."

Likewise, Madonna admitted to the intrigued audience that she'd "messed up" a couple songs before joking she figured they'd be embedded in her DNA, according to British tabloid The Sun.

Earlier in the week, Madonna dressed as a clown for her first Melbourne performance, where she emotionally opened up about her drawn-out legal battle with Ritchie and dedicated a song to her estranged son Rocco.

Many surmised that Madge was drunk at the show, as she slurred her words and downed a Cosmo on stage as she addressed the audience. But her flacktold TMZ the mid-show vodka cocktail was the only thing Madonna drank that night.

Madonna has regularly spoken about her ongoing custody war at shows since the 15-year-old Rocco ditched her "Rebel Heart" tour in December to move in with his father in London.

A Manhattan Supreme Court justice ruled in December that Rocco had to return to his mother's Manhattan home, but the wayward teen and his director father ignored the court order. The judge has since said Rocco, who prefers to live with his father, can remain in England until his parents come to a custody agreement.

Guy and Rocco Ritchie each attended a High Court hearing on Thursday, but Madonna was unable to attend due to her shows in the Land Down Under.

The highly complicated saga appears to have taken a major toll on the Queen of Pop, and People magazine reported last week that Ritchie is "treading on eggshells" to avoid upsetting her in hopes of finally reaching a settlement.

Saturday, 12 March 2016

Gist-Link: Federal Government on Friday apologised to Nigeria...

Gist-Link: Federal Government on Friday apologised to Nigeria...: The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said this in a statement issued in Abuja by his Special Adviser on Media, Mr...

See 3 Africans On The List 11 Outstanding Black Women Named In Forbes’ Most Powerful.

11 outstanding black women made the list of Forbes’ 100 Most Powerful, these women of class, power, money and intelligence deserve our commendation. The interesting part is, Nigerian women made the list!
Forbes’ recently released its ranking of the 100 most powerful women in the world, a list filled with heads of state, CEOs and entrepreneurs, philanthropists, and influential entertainers all ranked by dollars, media influence, and overall impact. Eleven black women made the rank of the 2015 list.

Eleven outstanding black women of class made it to the list of Forbes’ 100 Most Powerful Women 2015. These women have performed giant strides to accord them this kind of honour. They are heads of state, CEOs, philantropists, academicians, entertainers and business women, and they deserve our praise for affecting the world positively in their great way. Here are the outstanding women who made the list starting with the top performer:

10. Michelle Obama


Michelle Obama, wife of President Barak Obama, makes the list due to her influence in policy making both nation and worldwide. At the beginning of this year she travelled to Southeast Asia to support an initiative to improve the education of girls and the financial stability of young women. She’s also been integral in the Obama administration’s effort to end homelessness among veterans in the U.S. and fought measures that would allow some schools to opt out of the federal dietary standards for school lunches.

12. Oprah Winfrey


Oprah is no stranger to the most powerful ranking. Her cable network, OWN has proven successful despite the naysayers and she still makes millions each year from the spin-off stars she helped launch to fame including Dr. Phil and Dr. Oz. Winfrey’s movie imprint, Harpo Films co-produced the well received Martin Luther King, Jr. biopic Selma and she also played a small role as civil rights activist Annie Lee Cooper. She is still the sole African-American woman on the Forbes’ 400 Richest Americans list, and she puts her money to good use by donating hundreds of millions of dollars to educational causes.

21. Beyoncé Knowles


Beyoncé makes the cut as the highest ranked entertainer on the Powerful Women list. Her tour with husband Jay Z last summer grossed approximately $100 million for 19 shows throughout North America, and she herself has pulled in more than $500 million in earnings as a solo artist

29. Ursula Burns


Burns helped Xerox, where she began her career in 1980 as a summer intern, generate $21.4 billion in revenue this past year as CEO, and has helped keep the company viable and profitable in an increasingly paperless world. She has told shareholders that she plans to continue to increase the company’s technology-driven and service-led portfolio.

34. Loretta Lynch


Lynch is the first African American woman in U.S. history to be sworn in as Attorney General. She has expanded President Obama’s proposed plan for police body cameras with a $20 million dollar program proposal of her own and has sworn to “vigorously prosecute all those who tilt the economic system in their favor,” including recently fining five major banks for rate rigging.

47. Ertharin Cousin


Cousin serves as the head of the UN World Food Programme, the world’s largest program for battling food insecurity and hunger. Cousin herself was raised in a low income neighborhood in Chicago and has stated that her goal is to eliminate hunger in her lifetime. The World Food Programme aids in this battle not just through handing out food during crises, but also by helping with food production and child malnourishment.

48. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala


Okonjo-Iweala was the minister of finance for Nigeria and has helped the country’s economy grow an average of 6% annually over three years. She’s also helped develop reform programs to improve governmental transparency.She is the first woman to serve as the country’s finance minister and spent 21 years as a economist at the World Bank.

65. Rosalind Brewer


Rosalind Brewer became the first woman and first African-American to lead a Walmart division when she took over as Sam’s Club CEO in 2012. She has introduced new measures to compete with other big-box stores such as a private health insurance exchange and access to payroll systems and legal services through Sam’s Club membership. She serves on the board of Lockheed Martin and is chair on the board of trustees for her alma mater Spelman College.


87. Folorunsho Alakija


Alakija is the richest self-made woman in Africa and one of only two female billionaires on the continent. Her first company was an upscale fashion label catering to Nigerian elites. This helped her develop a connection with the former military president, Ibrahim Babangida, who later gave her company a prospecting license for one of Nigeria’s most lucrative oil fields.

92. Risa Lavizzo-Mourey


Lavizzo-Mourey oversees the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the largest charitable foundation in the U.S. exclusively dedicated to health. Lavizzo-Mourey, who has an MD from Harvard and an MBA from Wharton, has a focus on improving access to quality healthcare and addressing socio-economic factors affecting health.

96. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf


Johnson-Sirleaf, president of Liberia for nine years now, was in charge for the devastating Ebola outbreak that ravaged West Africa. Though she has overseen economic growth for the county, Liberia is still one of the world’s most impoverished nations and the need for modernization to infrastructure, education, and healthcare systems all impacted the growing crisis in the country. Her decision to use troops to quarantine heavily infected neighborhoods was widely criticized, but Liberia managed to quell the outbreak and achieve zero cases to become the first nation to wipe out the disease a year after recording its first case.