Showing posts with label government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label government. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2013

24-HOUR CURFEW IMPOSED IN SOUTHERN KADUNA AS SCORES KILLED IN ETHNIC CLASHES


The Kaduna State Government has declared a 24-hour curfew in Kafanchan, following bloody fighting between ethnic indigene groups in Southern Kaduna and settler elements of Hausa-Fulani dwelling in the area.

A security source of SaharaReporters told by telephone that at least five persons were killed in the fighting.

The bloody clash was also confirmed by an elderly Yoruba resident of Kafanchan, an otherwise quiescent town that used to be known as a railway hub. The man said the assaults flared up again on September 19, 2013, Thursday, after armed soldiers had earlier quelled a skirmish last Sunday.

The security operative disclosed that indigenes of Southern Kaduna and Hausa-Fulani youths engaged in a free-for-all fight using machetes, spears and a few guns. Apart from the dead, many people also sustained varying degrees of injury.

The source said, "I can confirm to you that attacks started yesterday between the indigenes and settlers. And several people were killed before [the] government declared 24 hours curfew today. As we speak, we are in the streets patrolling and all residents are now indoors."

The security agent said yesterday's attack appeared to be reprisals for the death of a young man who was killed last Sunday.

It was not possible to receive the confirmation from Mr. Olufemi Adenaike, the Police Commissioner of Kaduna State. However, a police officer in Kaduna said the commissioner and military authorities in Kaduna had deployed troops to the trouble areas to beef up security and contain any threats that might escalate attacks.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

WHICH SIDE MINISTER MAKU SUPPORTS IN NASARAWA CRISIS?


The recently registered All Progressives' Congress party (APC) demands to relieve the Information Minister Labaran Maku of his duties as the supervising Minister of Defence. The opposition suspect him of being an interested party in the ongoing Nasarawa State crisis.

In order to end the Nasarawa violence, which claimed several lives and wiped out hundreds of houses, troops were deployed to the state by the Federal Government. It is believed that the crisis was triggered by the infamous Ombatse cult, otherwise known as Ombatse militia group.

Voicing the party's statement on Thursday, its National Publicity Secretary, Lai Mohammed, said that Maku is of the Eggon ethnic group, and the Ombatse cult is of similar origins. This fact, according to APC, makes Maku's new appointment as the Supervising Minister of Defence, untenable.

Whatever steps Maku would take in his new capacity towards solving the Nasarawa crisis, they would be judged and most probably misinterpreted, Mohammed alleged.

It was suggested in the statement that Jonathan should immediately relieve Maku from his new duties, as such practice is widely spread worldwide.

Jonathan directed Maku to take the reins of government of the Defence Ministry, as the Minister of State for Defence, Olusola Obada, was sacked last week. Until Mrs. Obada was sacked alongside eight other ministers, the ministry had no senior minister.

The APC also noted that the minister did little to help the matters with his recent interview with BBC. Maku has been "economical with the truth," the statement read, and tried to downplay the role of the Nasarawa State Government in solving the conflict and curbing the activities of the Ombatse cult.

"At the instance of the State Government, several meetings have also been held with Eggon leaders and the Eggon Cultural and Development Association (ECDA), to no avail. It is therefore blatantly wrong for the minister, or anyone for that matter, to say the State Government has not initiated dialogue as a means of resolving the crisis.

"Also, the State Governor has been briefing the President, on a regular basis, over the crisis. He has requested for the deployment to the state of a Mobile Police Squadron as well as troops. While the requests were granted, the deployments are just about being carried out, yet Minister Maku gave an erroneous impression concerning the role of the State Government in curtailing the crisis.

"Thirdly, the State Government has compiled and sent to the Federal Government the names and addresses of the suspected leaders and major players in Ombatse, the perpetrator of the violence. The State Government has also instituted a Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the violence, while assisting the victims of the violence state-wide.

In conclusion, the APC stressed that Maku (as well as any prominent Eggon citizen) has not expressed his disapproval over the Ombatse attacks on ordinary citizens and security operatives. This, the party says, serves as an excellent evidence to show where their sympathy lies.

Thursday, August 29, 2013

BIZZARE: Female Journalist Takes Off Her Clothes While Interviewing Local Government Leader



Lori Welbourne, a columnist and blogger was chatting with mayor of Kelowna , Walter Gray on the topic of female toplessness when she decided removing her top mid-interview.

Lori Welbourne, who hosts the radio show On The Rocks and writes a column for the Province newspaper, was talking to Walter Gray, mayor of Kelowna in British Columbia, about whether it was legal in the town for women to bare their breasts in public.

'What if I went walking down the street topless?' she asked in the recorded interview.

The ABC newspaper columnist and radio host told him to hold the microphone, took off her halter top and asked about his views on women baring their breasts in public would be arrested, in anticipation of Sunday’s Go Topless Day.


Welbourne then undid the strap on her dress, exposing her breasts.

'What are you doing,' he asked, to which she replied, 'it's really hot in here.'

After regaining his composure, Gray explained that while someone may be tempted to call the police there is little authorities could do because it is in fact entirely legal for a woman to be topless anywhere a man can be.

Public toplessness is not illegal anywhere in Canada unless it's deemed to be indecent. It is also legal for women in a range of American states though plenty still outlaw.

'So I can go topless here in Kelowna?' Welbourne went on.

'Well, evidently,' Gray said. 'I'm not suggesting you should do that but I don't think you’d be committing any crime or breaking any bylaw.'


Wednesday, August 28, 2013

BIZZARE: Indian Snake Festival Or How To Get Blessings From Snakes


"For us snakes are gods. We worship snakes, we would never want them to suffer."

Hundreds of people queued in a remote village in eastern India over the weekend to receive blessings from metres-long and potentially deadly snakes, thought to bring them good luck.



An Indian snake charmer displays a variety of "gokhras" - cobras - at a Purba Bishnupur snake fair.

Snake charmers clapped and beat colourful drums to lure their "prized catches" out of wicker baskets and clay pots, as part of an annual festival in the village of Purba Bishnupur in West Bengal state.

"It is an art to make the snakes come out of their boxes and baskets,'' Hyder Mal, a 46-year-old snake charmer taking part in the festival said.

The snakes, considered by the locals as incarnations of the Hindu snake goddess Manasa, swayed to the rhythm and motion of their handlers as the villagers drew closer.

Every year, people from the area gather in the green village some 85 kilometres from the state capital Kolkata, to honour and pray to Manasa.

Indian snake festival Snake charmers say bringing cobras out of their baskets is an "art".

The goddess is believed to bring good luck ahead of the harvest season and also ward off troubles in this mainly agricultural belt.

Mal, a father of six, appears at ease as he handles a long golden-brown cobra while urging the crowd gathered around to donate freely.

"Business has gone down for us. People want to take blessings from the snakes but are stingy when it comes to paying up,'' he complained.

Mal, who owns six large serpents, reminisces of the time when business was roaring, mainly because of the demand for venom used to treat snake bites.

"Now we are living a life of penury. Synthetic venom is what is used now. The government does not care about us,'' said Mal.

"I wouldn't want any of my children to carry on with our family tradition,'' he added.



Indian snake festival Snake charmers claim they 'worship' cobras like gods, but animal activists say the reptiles are being abused.

Charmers have long been a favourite with tourists in India. But their numbers dwindled after the government strengthened laws in 2002 proscribing the commercial use of wild animals, including performances with live snakes.

The legislation emptied most cities of charmers, although they can still be found in rural areas, and also around major tourist sites, risking arrest as they try to cajole visitors into taking a photo for a small fee.

Animal rights activists accuse snake charmers of cruelly capturing the serpents in suffocating bags and yanking their teeth out or sewing their mouths shut so that they don't bite.

Mal and other snake charmers were quick to refute the charges. "For us snakes are gods. We worship snakes, we would never want them to suffer,'' said a 60-year-old charmer, who did not want to be identified