Tuesday, 17 February 2015

Putin urges Ukraine troops to give up Debaltseve

Putin urges Ukraine troops to give up Debaltseve

Russian President Vladimir Putin has urged the Ukrainian government to allow its troops to surrender to rebels in the strategic town of Debaltseve.

Mr Putin also said he hoped the rebels would let any captured troops return to their families.

Fierce fighting raged throughout Tuesday in the town despite a ceasefire deal signed last week, with rebels saying they now controlled most areas.

The UN Security Council called for an immediate end to hostilities.

On Tuesday evening a resolution drafted by Russia calling on all sides to respect the deal, signed in the Belarusian capital Minsk last week, was adopted unanimously by the council.

International observers monitoring the truce have been unable to enter Debaltseve.

The town has become a key prize for rebels and government forces, as it sits on a strategic railway line linking rebel-held Donetsk and Luhansk.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko described rebel attempts to take the town as a "cynical attack" on the ceasefire.

"Today the world must stop the aggressor," Mr Poroshenko said in a statement posted on his website following a phone conversation with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

"I call on the permanent members of the UN Security Council to prevent further violation of fundamental principles and rules of the UN and the unleashing of a full-scale war in the very centre of Europe," he said.
'Understandable' fighting
 
President Putin: "There is a considerable decrease in the intensity of fighting"

Speaking on a visit to Hungary, President Putin said he hoped the ceasefire agreements would be observed by both sides.

Mr Putin said there had been a "significant reduction" in the intensity of combat since the truce came into effect over the weekend.

He said the conflict could not be solved by military means.

"I hope that the Ukrainian authorities are not going to prevent the Ukrainian soldiers from laying down their weapons," he said.

"If they aren't capable of taking that decision themselves and giving that order, then [I hope] that they won't prosecute people who want to save their lives and the lives of others."

Mr Putin added that the fighting in Debaltseve was "understandable and predictable".

He said he had warned participants in the Minsk talks that - ceasefire or no ceasefire - encircled government troops would try to break free and the rebels would try to prevent this.

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The wealth of claim and counter-claim around Debaltseve speaks volumes. It's hard to confirm any of today's stories.

Controversy surrounds the fate of dozens of government troops - rebel sources say they surrendered, while the army contends they were captured after running out of ammunition during an ambush.

The rebels say Debaltseve is not covered by the ceasefire agreement reached last week in Minsk and continue to insist that it's an "internal" matter. Between April and July last year, the town was in rebel hands. It sits astride the railway line linking two rebel strongholds, Donetsk and Luhansk.

Ukrainian TV has shown pictures of text messages sent to government soldiers in Debaltseve, allegedly from Russia. "Poroshenko and his generals have betrayed you," the messages read, referring to the Ukrainian president. "There's no need for you to die for them."

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Meanwhile, sources in the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic (DPR) said Debaltseve police station and railway station had been taken, and at least 80% of the city was under rebel control.

According to later reports, the city's military HQ - where many government troops are based - has also been surrounded.

The rebels said that up to 300 Ukrainian troops in Debaltseve had surrendered, and Russian TV showed footage of what it said were 72 captured soldiers.

Ukraine said a group had been taken prisoner after an ambush but denied large-scale surrenders.

The Ukrainian military said there was intense fighting in the streets and confirmed that the rebels were in control of parts of the city.

Pro-Russian rebels warm themselves by a fire near the town of Debaltseve - 17 February The rebels say they control at least 80% of Debaltseve

Ukrainian artillery outside Debaltseve. 17 Feb 2015 Government artillery outside Debaltseve. Neither side has withdrawn its heavy weaponry as yet

Car travels past explosion near Debaltseve. 17 Feb 2015 This car carrying journalists and a wounded driver fled shelling near Debaltseve on Tuesday

Although Debaltseve has suffered weeks of artillery exchanges, correspondents say this is the first fierce fighting inside the town.

Most of its 25,000 population have been evacuated but about 7,000 civilians are still believed trapped by the fighting, according to Amnesty International.

The ceasefire, which came into effect on Sunday, has been broadly observed but separatists insist the agreement does not apply in Debaltseve because they have the town almost surrounded.


Both sides have also failed to pull back heavy weapons from the front line.

The withdrawal was due to start no later than the second day after the truce came into effect and be completed within two weeks, creating buffer zones 50-140km (30-85 miles) wide.

Officials say more than 5,400 people have been killed since the conflict erupted in eastern Ukraine in April, but the UN believes the actual death toll to be much higher.

Ukraine's pro-Western government says Russia is supporting the separatists with troops and weapons, but the Kremlin has consistently denied this.

Bayern Munich's Xabi Alonso was sent off in his 100th Champions League game

Xabi Alonso
The former Liverpool midfielder fouled Taison to collect a second yellow card with around 25 minutes to play.

Earlier, Thomas Muller had pulled a shot wide when clean through for Bayern and he fired over before the break.

But neither side threatened after Alonso's red in a tetchy game. They meet again in Munich on 11 March.

The sides shared 35 fouls and six yellow cards in addition to Alonso's red, with attacks often cut short by tactical fouls when danger looked likely.

Shakhtar, champions in Ukraine, will be "heroes" if they overcome Bayern according to the manager Mircea Lucescu as his side are still playing home fixtures away from their Donbass Arena because of conflict in the area.

They have also not played a competitive game since December as the Ukraine Premier League - in which they sit second to Dynamo Kiev - is on its winter break.

Playing several hundred miles away from home in the western city of Lviv, they arrived to face a Bayern side who had hammered Hamburg 8-0 on Saturday but ended the night having restricted their visitors to few chances.

Though Muller sprang the offside trap from Arjen Robben's pass in the first half, he could only pull his shot across the goalmouth from 10 yards and he then fired over from a Franck Ribery pull-back late in the first period.

Shakhtar, boasting the tournament's top scorer in Luiz Adriano, played on the break but only got their talisman into the game sparingly and he left the field late on having completed just 44% of his 18 passes.

Alonso tangled with Shakhtar winger Taison when the Brazilian threatened a break away, prompting a second yellow card, but the Ukrainians failed to make their advantage count and both sides settled for a point.

They will reconvene in three weeks' time in Munich, where Bayern have not lost since defeat against Real Madrid in the semi-final of this competition last season.

Chelsea could only manage a draw @ PSG

Branislav Ivanovic celebrates Chelsea's first goal against PSG
Branislav Ivanovic scored his fifth goal of the season to give Chelsea the lead

Chelsea withstood waves of Paris St-Germain attacks to claim a draw in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie.
Branislav Ivanovic headed Jose Mourinho's team in front after Gary Cahill's flick from John Terry's cross.
But PSG dominated the second half and scored a deserved equaliser when Edinson Cavani headed in.
Cavani came close to scoring a winner but prodded his effort wide after swapping passes with Blaise Matuidi.
Chelsea progressed at PSG's expense in last season's quarter-finals when they won on away goals after it finished 3-3 on aggregate.
They lost the first leg 3-1 in Paris last season but withstood long periods of pressure to ensure they return to Stamford Bridge on 11 March with a slight advantage thanks to the away goal.
David Luiz moved from Chelsea to PSG in the summer and performed well against his former club in midfield.
Luiz was occasionally used in that position by Mourinho during his time at Stamford Bridge but had not previously played there for PSG.
With Luiz holding, Matuidi was free to stride forward and Thibaut Courtois, returning in place of Petr Cech, was forced into making saves in quick succession from the French midfielder and Zlatan Ibrahimovic.
PSG striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic
Zlatan Ibrahimovic has scored seven goals in 34 Champions League knockout games
The Belgian keeper was again called into action before half-time when he pushed Cavani's header away at the near post but Chelsea snatched the lead moments later.
Thiago Silva's headed clearance went out to Terry and the Chelsea captain's cross was flicked on by fellow centre-back Cahill for Ivanovic to steer his header beyond Salvatore Sirigu.
It was Ivanovic's fifth goal of the season but first in Europe since his winner against Benfica in the 2013 Europa League final.
PSG started the second half strongly and took advantage of poor marking from the visitors to equalise. Maxwell's pass freed Matuidi in the left channel and his cross was perfect for Cavani, who found space between Terry and Cahill to head the ball down and into the net.
The home fans were buoyant and Laurent Blanc's team pressed for a second.
They came close when Ibrahimovic tricked his way into a shooting position but Courtois again saved well and Ezequiel Lavezzi's follow-up was goal-bound until it hit Cesar Azpilicueta in the six-yard box.
Chelsea continued to look vulnerable on crosses and Luiz came close to scoring against his former employers when Courtois tipped his header over from Lavezzi's free-kick.
Cavani could have ensured Blanc's team travelled to London with a slender lead but prodded his shot wide after swapping passes with Matuidi.
And Chelsea were indebted to Courtois again in stoppage-time when he pushed over Ibrahimovic's powerful downward header.
Chelsea striker Diego Costa
Diego Costa missed Chelsea's previous three matches through suspension
PSG captain Thiago Silva
Defender Thiago Silva joined PSG from AC Milan in 2012
David Beckham and Sir Alex Ferguson
The watching David Beckham (left) was sat close to his former Manchester United boss, Sir Alex Ferguson
PSG striker Edinson Cavani
Edinson Cavani had scored five goals in six matches to help PSG progress through the group stage

Lineup, Bookings (4) & Substitutions (4)

Paris Saint Germain

  • 30 Sirigu
  • 23 Van der Wiel Booked
  • 05 Marquinhos
  • 02 Thiago Silva
  • 17 Maxwell
  • 24 Verratti Booked
  • 32 David Luiz
  • 14 Matuidi
  • 22 Lavezzi (Pastore - 81' )
  • 10 Ibrahimovic
  • 09 Cavani

Substitutes

  • 01 Douchez
  • 06 Camara
  • 15 Bahebeck
  • 21 Digne
  • 25 Rabiot
  • 27 Pastore
  • 34 Kimpembe

Chelsea

  • 13 Courtois
  • 02 Ivanovic Booked
  • 24 Cahill
  • 26 Terry
  • 28 Azpilicueta
  • 07 Ramires
  • 21 Matic
  • 22 Willian (Cuadrado - 79' )
  • 04 Fàbregas Booked (Oscar - 83' )
  • 10 Hazard
  • 19 Diego Costa (Remy - 81' )

Substitutes

  • 01 Cech
  • 03 Filipe Luis
  • 05 Zouma
  • 08 Oscar
  • 11 Drogba
  • 18 Remy
  • 23 Cuadrado
Ref: Cüneyt Çakir

Boko Haram fighters blamed for Cameroon military base attack

A screengrab from a video released by Nigerian Islamists Boko Haram shows the leader of the extremist group, Abubakar Shekau. (AFP)

Yaounde — The Cameroonian military says one of its bases on the border with Nigeria has been attacked by suspected Boko Haram extremists, leaving at least five soldiers dead.
Col. Joseph Nouma said on Tuesday that eight other wounded soldiers had been brought to the capital for medical treatment following the attack Monday on the base in Waza.

The renewed violence comes as heads of states from Central African countries were ending a meeting in the Cameroonian capital about a joint military response to the growing regional threat posed by the Nigeria-based Islamic jihadist group.
Nouma said that two machine guns and an armored vehicle had been seized from the insurgents but hundreds of the militants escaped to Nigeria after burning homes and looting.

- AP

Taliban ambush, kill six police in southern Afghanistan

Taliban militants in Pakistan. (A Majeed, AFP)

Kabul - Taliban insurgents have killed six policemen in southern Afghanistan after luring them to an abandoned building by setting off a bomb, officials said Tuesday.
The attack took place Monday night in the Maiwand district of Kandahar province, 28 miles (45 kilometres) from Kandahar city.
"They were fired on as they arrived at the house. Unfortunately six police were martyred," provincial police spokesman Zia Durrani told AFP.
Samim Khpalwak, the provincial governor's spokesman, confirmed the details of the incident.
The attack highlights Afghanistan's fragile security situation. Local forces are tackling a persistent Taliban-led insurgency on their own after US-led NATO forces ended their combat mission in late December.
On Monday the Afghan military and police jointly launched a major operation in neighbouring Helmand province ahead of an anticipated increase in violence in the spring season.
Also read: Taliban now smuggle drugs and gems like mafia
On Sunday night a female member of the provincial council in the eastern province of Nangarhar died in hospital following a bomb attack on her vehicle last week.
Angiza Shinwari was critically injured after a sticky bomb attached to her vehicle detonated in the provincial capital city Jalalabad last Tuesday. The explosion killed her driver on the spot and wounded three other people.
Experts and Afghan military officials anticipate a surge in Taliban violence with the start of the traditional spring and summer "fighting season" in April or May.
The US and its allies have reduced their military presence in Afghanistan to a contingent of about 12,500 who are mainly focused on training and support for the 350,000 Afghan troops and police.

- AFP

Millionaire rams guard with car, charged with murder


New Delhi – Police say an Indian millionaire has been charged with murder in southern India after he allegedly rammed his SUV into his security guard he accused of being too slow.
Mohammed Nisham slammed his Hummer into the guard and hit him with an iron rod after pinning him against a wall as the gates were slow to open when the businessman returned home late one night two weeks ago, police official Biju Kumar said on Tuesday.
The guard died on Monday after being in hospital on life support.
Nisham has had several police cases filed against him, including one for allowing his 9-year-old son to drive a Ferrari on a public road in 2013.
India's economic boom has created a class of super-rich, whose excesses are frequently in the news.

- AP

PDP loses six more lawmakers in House


Abuja - The ranks of the Peoples Democratic Party in the House of Representatives further depleted on Tuesday as six more members dumped the party for other parties, reports Punch.

Three of the defectors joined the rival All Progressives Congress.
Two of the defectors moved to Labour Party while one joined Accord Party.
Read more at Punch.

PDP leaders want Jonathan replaced as presidential candidate

Goodluck Jonathan
Abuja - Some leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party are pushing for the replacement of President Goodluck Jonathan as the party’s presidential candidate in the event that the presidential election does not hold on March 28 as scheduled.
The leaders are currently discussing how to ease President Jonathan out of the race and replace him with another candidate from the Niger Delta zone, reports Sahara Reporters.
The move to replace Jonathan follows intelligence report that the PDP might lose the election if he is fielded as the party’s candidate in the election.

The leaders will, however, have to convince the South-South that they meant well with their plan to replace Jonathan.
Read more at Sahara Reporters.

INEC set for public enlightenment on smart card readers


Lagos - The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Tuesday said that it would next week begin public enlightenment on the use of smart card readers.
An INEC National Commissioner, Prof. Akinola Salau, gave the assurance in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos.
Salua, who is in charge of Osun, Ondo and Lagos states, spoke to NAN during a visit to Lagos State Office of INEC, in preparation for the general elections.
The commissioner said that INEC was making efforts to see that voters were properly educated on the use and value of the smart card readers.
"Hopefully, by next week, the resident electoral commissioner will make every effort to see that mass education is held on what the card reader is, its use and the value,’’ he told NAN.

On the Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs), he said that efforts were being made to ensure that all registered voters would receive their PVCs in time.
The commissioner appealed to eligible voters to avail themselves of the opportunity of the extension of PVCs distribution period to collect theirs.
"I plead that they should go and collect their PVCs; INEC will produce the cards; we cannot force you or come to your home to say you should go and collect them.
"I plead that everybody should make an effort to collect his or her PVC so that he or she can duly vote on the election days,’’ he said.
NAN reports that INEC had on Feb. 9 extended the deadline for PVCs collection to March 8, following the postponement of the general elections.
The elections earlier scheduled for Feb. 14 and Feb. 28 were rescheduled for March 28 and April 11.


- NAN

Legislators tasked to stick to hand-over date


Abuja - The All Progressives Congress Presidential Campaign Organisation (APCPCO) has cautioned members of the National Assembly to comply by the date to hand over power to a new administration by May 29.
The opposition-aligned organisation thus warned the legislators against taking any action that might affect the foundation of democracy in the country.
A statement signed by the Director of Media and Publicity of the APCPCO, Malam Garba Shehu, noted that the legislators were returning to plenary at a time when the country was passing through a phase of some surreptitious attempt to tamper with the sanctity of the election date and the hand-over date.
The statement observed the commentaries coming from leading members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) about a plot to compromise on the sanctity of the May 29 hand-over date portends a great danger to the integrity of Nigeria's democracy.

"We wish to welcome back to plenary distinguished members of the National Assembly. We also wish to call their attention to the fact that their resumption is coming at a time when some senior members of the ruling party are mouthing overtures over a surreptitious attempt to compromise on the sanctity of the election day and the hand-over date," APC stated.

"To the extent that the Parliament is the heart of any democracy, our National Assembly members have a duty to ensure that they protect our democracy from the archeries of its enemies," the statement read
"It is on this note that the we in the APCPCO call on every member of the National Assembly to add their voices to that of millions of other Nigerians and stand resolute that the general elections hold between March 28 and April 8 as scheduled and also that the May 29 hand-over date remains sacrosanct.
The APCPCO said it stands at the side of millions of other Nigerians to say that any form of government beyond the May 29 terminal date of this incumbent  administration, whose authority is not legitimised by the ballot box is unacceptable, unconstitutional and, in effect, null and void.
"We call on the National Assembly to similarly lend its voice to that of the overwhelming number of Nigerians by proclaiming that any illegal government before or after May 29 is unacceptable."


- CAJ News

Minister advises Obasanjo to apologise to PDP, President Jonathan

Olusegun Obasanjo
Abuja - Dr Stephen Oru, the Minister, Niger Delta Affairs, on Tuedsay advised former President Olusegun Obasanjo to apologise to President Goodluck Jonathan and the PDP over alleged unguarded statements credited to him.
Oru made the call in Abuja at a news conference organised by the ministry.
He said that the former President was the most privileged Nigerian who had the opportunity of ruling the country twice both as military Head of State and as a democratically-elected president.
Oru expressed dismay over alleged comments credited to Obasanjo, who had served as President for two tenures on the platform of the PDP.
He said that the alleged statements were not in the interest of the unity of the country, considering his position as an elder statesman.

According to him, as an elder statesman, Obasanjo’s opinion is highly respected nationally and internationally.
Oru advised Obasanjo to emulate other respected former presidents who have humbled themselves and utilised available channels to advice government on ways to move the nation forward.
According to him, Obasanjo has not treated the PDP, the person and office of the President and Nigerians fairly.
"He still has the time to make amends and retrace his footsteps and tender an apology to the party and the nation.''
The minister observed that Jonathan had an usual gift of patience, tolerance and humility.
Obasanjo was quoted on Monday as saying that Jonathan was behind the rescheduling of the general elections because of his desperation to win the election.
He had declared publicly his resignation from the party at a meeting of his supporters in Abeokuta, where he also ordered that his PDP membership card be torn, following which his party expelled him.

- NAN

Police officer killed, reporter stabbed at APC rally


Port Harcourt - One police officer has been killed, four others have been injured and a reporter covering the event was stabbed at the APC election rally.
The violence erupted at the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) meeting of governorship candidate Dakuku Peterside in Okrika, the hometown of President Goodluck Jonathan's wife Patience.
"Five police officers were shot. One of them is dead and four are lying in critical condition at this hospital," Peterside said.
Peterside and a source at the private Channels television network said its reporter at the scene, Charles Erukaa, had been stabbed and was being taken to a hospital.
Political tensions have raged in Rivers state since outgoing governor Rotimi Amaechi defected to the APC from the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in 2013.
The war of words has been particularly fierce between Amaechi's camp and supporters of the first lady.
Critics have alleged that she sees Rivers as her personal political domain and was committed to removing the governor at any cost.
Peterside, who is Amaechi's hand-picked successor, had tried twice previously to hold a rally in Okrika but was forced to cancel on security grounds.

As supporters were gathering for Tuesday's rally at the National Secondary School, several explosions went off, Peterside told journalists.
Organisers then decided to press on with the event but gunshots from unknown assailants caused a second wave of chaos, live pictures on Channels showed.
Erukaa was forced to take cover, lying with his stomach on the ground as armed security personnel moved in the background. He was later stabbed in the leg by unidentified attackers.
Police were not immediately available to comment on the identities of the gunmen. Peterside claimed the gunmen were PDP loyalists but that claim could not be independently confirmed.
- Swing state -
The National Human Rights Commission last week said 58 people had been killed in political violence in the run up to Nigeria's polls, which were initially scheduled for February 14 but have been moved to March 28 over security fears.
The commission pointed to oil-producing Rivers in the Niger Delta as a flashpoint area for potential unrest, in part because of the bitter rivalry between the APC and the first family in the state.
In the national campaign, Jonathan is facing a tough test against the APC's Muhammadu Buhari, a former military ruler, and Rivers has been identified as a key swing state.
Jonathan comes from neighbouring Bayelsa and had previously banked on massive support across the Niger Delta but Amaechi's defection to the APC has changed the political dynamics.
Losing Rivers could ruin Jonathan's re-election hopes and would likely be seen as a personal embarrassment to the first lady, who is an often criticised figure in Nigeria.
Patience Jonathan had initially suggested that the kidnapping of more than 200 schoolgirls in Chibok by Boko Haram in April last year was staged to embarrass her husband.
Later, while meeting with relatives of the hostages, she appeared to fall into a religiously inspired trance, repeatedly shouting "there is God-o!", a video of which went viral in Nigeria.

Pastor arrested for drugs smuggling

(File)
Lagos - The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) said on Monday that it had apprehended a pastor (name withheld) in Lagos attempting to export 174 kg of narcotics to South Africa.

In a statement by the Head, Public Affairs Unit, Ofoyeju Mitchell, the NDLEA said the suspect was arrested following the interception of the drug at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport (MMIA) during pre-shipment examination.

It said that preliminary investigation indicated that the 60-year-old accused was suspected to be a member of a drug syndicate operating in Nigeria, Ghana and South Africa.

It also stated that the pastor was a member of the Eternal Sacred Order of the Cherubim and Seraphim Church at Agodo-Egbe, Ikotun, Lagos.

"He had international passports bearing his photographs with the names Michael Raji and Kadigun Fatah Ola respectively.

"It was equally discovered that the church premises where he was ministering, also served as a warehouse for narcotics.

"The seized drugs, concealed inside large bags of foodstuff, were found to contain 91kg of Methamphetamine and 83kg of Ephedrine with an estimated street value of N609 million.’’

The statement also quoted Hamza Umar, the Commander, NDLEA, Lagos Airport, as saying that a Mercedes Benz Jeep was also impounded during the operation.

- NAN

Customs denies withdrawing operatives from border stations

(F Nasri, AFP)

Abuja - The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) has dismissed an allegation that it had withdrawn its operatives deployed at border stations in Kebbi and Sokoto states.
This is contained in a statement issued by the service’s Public Relations Officer, Wale Adeniyi, on Monday in Abuja.
The statement said there was no directive whatsoever, verbal or written to officers of NCS posted to Kebbi/Sokoto and Kaduna/Katsina commands to withdraw from the borders or their patrol bases.
According to the statement, the attention of the Service has been drawn to reports alleging that customs operatives deployed at border stations in Kebbi and Sokoto states have been withdrawn.

"According to the reports, the directive withdrawing the officers was said to have been given verbally by an un-named official of the Federal Government, raising fears about security of our borders.
"In view of the security implication of this development and its sensitivity, it is necessary for the service to clarify the situation,” it said.
The statement added that there was no directive withdrawing customs operatives from duty posts in the affected areas or other border stations across the country.
It said the service’s Comptroller-General, Dikko Abdullahi, had last week directed a reinforcement of patrol teams across the country in view of the security situation in the country.


The statement, however, urged the state with border posts to regard the withdrawal allegation as baseless and mere speculations.

- NAN

Protests after regional force claims Boko Haram successes

A screengrab from a video released by Nigerian Islamists Boko Haram shows the leader of the extremist group, Abubakar Shekau. (AFP)

Niamey - Thousands of people marched in Niger's capital Niamey on Tuesday to protest against Boko Haram after regional forces claimed successes against the Islamists in the country's south and in northern Cameroon.
But attacks continued in Nigeria, with the Islamists storming the town of Askira Uba in Borno state on Monday evening, razing homes and public buildings, forcing hundreds of residents to flee.


In Niger, Prime Minister Brigi Rafini led demonstrators under a heavy police presence, with snipers posted on roofs along the route, including parliament, and shops shut.
"Niger will be the death of Boko Haram," President Mahamadou Issoufou told a cheering crowd at the end of the rally.
"Nobody attacks Niger with impunity and Boko Haram learned that to its cost on February 6."
Niger's army has said that more than 200 Boko Haram fighters were killed that day when they launched their first raids into the south of the country, while seven soldiers died. But sources on the ground did not mention numbers and talked instead only of heavy militant casualties.
Tuesday's protest came a day after police said they had detained over 160 people suspected of being allied to the group in the border region of Diffa, which is currently under a state of emergency.
Central African leaders also met in Cameroon's capital Yaounde to discuss a joint strategy against Boko Haram, reflecting increased fears about regional security.
Cameroon's army separately announced that it had killed 86 militants and detained more than 1,000 people suspected of having links to the Islamists in the country's far north.
Local resistance?


The attack in Askira Uba came after Nigeria's military claimed to have regained control of the garrison town of Monguno, near the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, which was seized on January 25.
Askira Uba lies 25 kilometres (16 miles) south of Chibok, where Boko Haram kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls in April last year, sparking global outrage and drawing attention to the conflict.
The Islamists took over Chibok in September but troops backed by vigilantes reclaimed it days later.
Since then, a large contingent of soldiers have been based in the now infamous town but residents claimed that soldiers "refused to deploy" to Askira Uba.
Independent corroboration of any of the claims in the remote regions in Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon are difficult, with access limited and communications almost non-existent.
But the high numbers detained recall Nigerian military tactics early in the counter-insurgency of holding large groups of civilians in areas of rebel activity.
Ryan Cummings, chief Africa analyst at Red24 risk consultants who tracks the conflict, suggested the numbers "may not be indicative of actual Boko Haram support".
Instead, local communities, particularly in Cameroon's Far North region which has been increasingly hit by attacks, may have armed themselves against the insurgents.
"This may be creating the perception that they are antagonistic towards government forces and therefore aligned to Boko Haram," he told AFP in an email exchange.
"This would explain why casualties numbers of supposed Boko Haram militants are so high in comparison to relatively low figures among military forces."
'Enemy of Islam'

Niger's ruling coalition called for a national day of protest against Boko Haram last week following a surge in violence by the militants in the country's southern border region.
In Niamey, protesters held aloft banners proclaiming Boko Haram as the "enemy of Islam" and pledging "unswerving support" for the country's campaign.
Parliament voted on February 9 to send troops to Nigeria to fight the rebels, whose insurgency has claimed more than 13,000 lives and left more than one million people homeless since 2009.
The current regional force comprising troops from Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon has claimed early successes against Boko Haram, recapturing towns seized by the militants since mid-2014.
The group's escalation of attacks in northern Cameroon, its push into border areas of Chad and Niger and continued strikes within Nigeria suggests it is undeterred and well-equipped.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau said in a recent video: "Your alliance will not achieve anything. Amass all your weapons and face us. We welcome you."
Nigeria's government, long criticised for its inability to end the insurgency, has claimed that sympathisers in Niger, Chad and Cameroon have fuelled the conflict.
"We can't rule out the possibility that the sect does enjoy significant local support in these countries," said Cummings.
"Gross socio-economic and political marginalisation by the respective Niger and Cameroonian governments" may have created sympathy to the cause, he added.

- AFP

Two dead in suicide blast at restaurant in Potiskum


Kano - Two people were killed in a suicide blast at a restaurant in the northeast Nigerian city of Potiskum on Tuesday, a police officer, rescuer and a hospital nurse told AFP.
A bomber blew himself up inside Al-Amir restaurant, a popular chain in northern Nigeria, at about 4:40 pm (1540 GMT), killing the manager and a steward. Thirteen staff and customers were seriously injured.

"We evacuated three dead bodies which included the bomber and two victims to the hospital," said a police officer involved in the rescue operation. Another rescue worker and a nurse at the Potiskum General Hospital confirmed the toll.


- AFP

Sokoto Police begins 24-hour patrol of schools

 (Sunday Alamba, AP)

Sokoto - The Sokoto State Police Command said it had commenced a 24-hour patrol of all schools across the state to protect lives and property.
The Spokesman of the command, Al-Mustapha Sani, disclosed this on Tuesday in Sokoto.
'' This is part of sustainable and proactive measures by the command to ensure that all schools across the state are more secure.
''It is also to provide a conducive environment for effective teaching and learning in the schools,'' Sani said.
He said the command had recently organised a seminar for school principals, headmasters and proprietors of private schools on the need for them to be security-conscious.
Also read: Sokoto police head insists police neutral amid violence
He said the seminar was also to sensitise them on the need to complement the efforts of the security agencies on how to ensure the security of members of their schools' communities.
''They can also go a step further by engaging the personnel of reputable private security guards in this direction,'' the police spokesman said.
He urged managements of the schools to promptly report movement of any suspicious persons or groups in and out of their schools' premises to the security agencies for immediate action.

- NAN
(AP)

Kano - Two suicide attacks in northeast Nigeria killed at least 38 people Tuesday, after Boko Haram razed a town and as violence raged across the embattled region less than six weeks from elections.
The Islamist insurgency has already forced a delay in the vote, initially scheduled for February 14, and officials voiced hope that a regional military offensive could contain the bloodshed before the new polling day, March 28.


But the latest wave of attacks blamed on the rebels underscored the challenge facing Nigeria and its neighbours Cameroon, Chad and Niger despite claims of major successes in the joint operation launched this month.
Niger's President Mahamadou Issoufou vowed that his country's involvement in the four-nation coalition would herald the end for the rebels, whose six-year insurgency has killed more than 13,000 people.
"Niger will be the death of Boko Haram," he told a cheering crowd after a protest against the insurgents in the capital Niamey.
But Boko Haram has proved resilient throughout its deadly uprising an experts question whether the group can be overpowered in the short-term.
Checkpoint, restaurant attacked


In Nigeria's Borno state, three assailants in a motorised rickshaw detonated explosives at a checkpoint at Yamarkumi village, four kilometres (2.5 miles) from the town of Biu, at about 1:00 pm (1200 GMT).
The suicide attack killed 36 people and injured 20, a source at the Biu General Hospital told AFP, requesting anonymity.
"Most of the victims were child vendors and beggars that usually crowd the checkpoint to sell wares and beg for alms," the source added.
Boko Haram has repeatedly tried to seize the Biu, 180 kilometres (110 miles) from the state capital Maiduguri, but has been repelled by troops and local vigilantes.
Some four hours later, in Potiskum, the economic capital of neighbouring Yobe state, a bomber blew himself up inside Al-Amir restaurant, a popular chain in northern Nigeria.
The restaurant manager and a steward were killed, while 13 staff and customers were seriously injured, a police officer and nurse the Potiskum General Hospital said.
The bombings followed a raid late Monday in the Borno town of Askira Uba, some 25 kilometres south of Chibok, from where rebel gunmen kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls last April.
Residents said homes and public buildings were razed, including the palace of the local chief, and hundreds of people were forced to flee.
Aliyu Abdullahia, who fled to the nearby town of Mubi, claimed that soldiers "refused to deploy" from Chibok, where they have been stationed since a Boko Haram attack in September last year.
Neighbours claim major gains
Nigeria had long complained that lack of action from its neighbours had hampered efforts against Boko Haram and has said the new cooperation could prove decisive.
Niamey said that more than 200 rebels were killed in its first cross-border raid on the southeast of the country and on Tuesday claimed to have averted a suicide attack in the Diffa region.
On Monday, police in Diffa, which is currently under a state of emergency, claimed they had detained more than 160 people suspected of being allied to the outlawed group.
Cameroon's army separately announced that it had killed 86 militants and detained more than 1,000 people suspected of having links to Boko Haram in the country's far north.
But with access difficult to the remote regions increasingly at the centre of the conflict and communications often non-existent, there was no independent corroboration of the claims.
Analyst Ryan Cummings of risk consultants Red24 said the regional forces may be repeating Nigerian tactics in the early counter-insurgency.
Cummings said the numbers "may not be indicative of actual Boko Haram support" but rather point to local communities, particularly in Cameroon's Far North region, arming themselves against the insurgents.
"This may be creating the perception that they are antagonistic towards government forces and therefore aligned to Boko Haram," Cummings, said in an email exchange.
"This would explain why casualties numbers of supposed Boko Haram militants are so high in comparison to relatively low figures among military forces."
Campaign violence
In violence unrelated to the Boko Haram uprising, explosions and gunfire at an opposition election rally in southern Nigeria's Rivers state killed a police officer and injured four others, while a reporter covering the event was stabbed.
The unrest happened in the hometown of President Goodluck Jonathan's wife Patience.
A political motive was likely, with tensions running high between Jonathan's ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC).

- AFP
 

'Domestic gas demand to hit 10bln cfpd by 2020'

(Shutterstock)

Abuja - Dr. Joseph Dawha, the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), said domestic demand for gas was expected to rise to over 10 billion cubic feet per day (bcfpd) by 2020.
He described the level of demand for gas as overwhelming.
This is contained in the 2014 last quarter bulletin of NNPC on Monday.
The NNPC boss, while putting the domestic gas utilisation in Nigeria in perspective, said gas utilisation was less than 500 million cubic feet per day (mcfpd) about seven years ago.
According to him, the demand in Nigeria alone is over two bcfpd, growing to five bcfpd by 2017 and over seven bcfpd by 2020.
"At seven bcfpd, we will be almost 150 per cent the size of South Korean consumption. Post 2020, demand is expected to soar rapidly to well over 10 bcfpd.
"At the global level, the demand is less than an aggregate of four bcfpd a few years ago to potentially over 15 bcfpd in the next five to 10 years.
"This creates an overwhelming challenge for supply and by inference on the industry,” he said.

He said that Federal Government was pursuing its aspiration of transforming the nation into gas driven economy vigorously.
The GMD said that gas was now a fuel of choice with far reaching impact on domestic, regional and global economy.
According to him, nowhere is the pulse of gas economy more felt than here at home and within the region.
On steps being taken to meet the astronomical increase in gas demand, Dawha said the Federal Government and the NNPC had embarked on a very aggressive implementation of the Gas Master Plan.
He stressed that it had also stepped up actions on the development of gas infrastructure at an unprecedented pace in the history of the country.



- NAN

Ministry Of Power Blames Vandals For Fall In Power Supply

The Federal Ministry of power has blamed the fall in electricity supply in the country on vandals.
Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Dr Godknows Igali according to Punch, stated this at a budget defense before the Senate Committee on Power.

He said:  “Once we go above 4,000 mega watts, people bring us down to 2000; there is no country where its own citizens will go and blow up gas pipelines.
“If these vandals can allow this gas to flow, we will get to over 6000 megawatts”.
Dr Igali expressed optimism that electricity generation in Nigeria would hit 6,000 mega watts in 2015 if vandalism is effectively addressed by relevant security agencies.
He said, “Going into 2015, Nigerians will have more electricity; all the new owners of the plants are pumping in more money and generating more power.
He noted that the power sector had been attracting the highest amount of investor confidence while there was massive training of young people.


It would be recalled that last week several Abuja communities marked  one year of uninterrupted power supply due to the launch of the Operation Light-up Rural Nigeria (OLRN).
Professor Chinedu Nebo, the Minister of Power, said the project ensures effective power supply to the rural communities located far from the grid adding that it embodied the success of President Goodluck Jonathan’s Transformation Agenda.
READ MORE: http://www.naij.com/387045-ministry-of-power-blames-vandals-for-fall-in-power-supply.html

President Jonathan Sacks Social Media Strategist For Twitter Blunder

President Goodluck Jonathan has sacked his social media strategist, Reno Omokri, due to Twitter Blunders that showed that the president’s chances of winning the 2015 election are slim.
The president has now appointed  Obi Asika as the new senior special assistant on social media in a bid to re-energize his media image.

According to Sahara Reporters, the president’s former social media strategist had organized two online polls that showed that President Jonathan would lose the 2015 elections to the opposition APC presidential candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, by a wide margin.
Several sources at the Presidency said Mr. Omokri’s removal became imminent after he engineered a poll on Twitter where informal posts showed that Mr. Jonathan’s electoral prospects had become wretched. “That ill-advised Twitter poll backfired and caused embarrassment to Mr. President,” said a source close to the Jonathan campaign.
Mr Omokri was also said to have been involved in a series of scandals which may have also lead to his sack.
Sahara Reporters has it that that the presidential aide had stolen the identity of the son of Deborah Campbell, a California-based woman who was once married to a relative of Mr. Omokri, to engage in the circulation of fraudulent news that smeared Mr. Sanusi, who is now the Emir of Kano.
The media platform also reports that Mr. Omokri was last week accused of having a hand in the in the disappearance of  N25 million cash meant for President Jonathan’s re-election campaign.
Presidential spokesman, Reuben Abati has confirmed Mr. Asika’s appointment to take charge of the president’s social media coverage.
Mr. Omokri who was once the lead media strategist is now in a subordinate position to Mr. Asika in the hierarchy of aides working on the president’s social media image.


In a seperate incident, members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Senate have accused the ruling Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) of plotting to postpone the 2015 general elections again.
The APC senators who raised the alarm today, February 17, alleged that the Presidency and the PDP were plotting how to make INEC shift the elections again using the card reader as an excuse.

Look at What Empress did on Val's Day:Empress Njamah Is Full Of Love

Popular Nollywood actress Empress Njamah is full of love!
Empress Njamah
Empress Njamah
The actress, just as she has done since 2010 through her foundation, has given out in a huge way this year’s valentine! The actress through her ‘House of Empress Foundation’ celebrated her Valentine’s Day with Garki hospital patients in Abuja. Here are photos from the beautiful event:

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Just recently the actress, who affirmed in a recent interview that she is an extremist, 
READ MORE: http://www.naij.com/386487-empress-njamah-is-full-of-love.html

Crude Oil Prices Continue To Rise (OPEC)

At the weekend crude oil prices continued to rise for the third week in a row.
 Hadn’t settled above $60 since December 24, Light Brent crude rising by $2.24 or 3.8 per cent to settle at $61.52 a barrel, marking the highest price at which it has been sold this year. US crude oil  futures also rose $1.57 or 3.1 per cent, to settle at $52.78 a barrel, up about 2.1 per cent for the week.
OPEC   OPEC Basket Price
The oil prices rise caused by spending cuts by oil companies and further declines in the number of active US oil rigs, which fell by 98 to 1,358 on Friday, representing 406 rigs less than the figure recorded the same time last year, according to weekly data from Baker Hughes Inc.
Dr. Diran Fawibe, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of International Energy Services Limited says that the current rise in the price of crude oil was as a result of the strategy of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) not to cut output so as not to lose market share to non-OPEC members.
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He notes that the OPEC strategy was aimed at forcing high cost producers of shale gas in North America to curb output so that the market would stabilise.
OPEC, particularly Saudi Arabia and the Gulf producers that produce oil at a lower cost, used the strategy to force the high cost producers to reduce their output as oil prices sank below their cost of production, Diran Fawibe states.
According to Fawibe: “It is a strategy that was largely being promoted by Saudi Arabia and some gulf countries like the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and it was an attempt to force the US to stop dumping oil into the market.But whether it is the best strategy in the current situation is another matter. To my own mind, I feel that it can only work in the short run. Of course, we are beginning to see some evidence of that working squarely against North American shale oil producers, who are now reducing their activities in the market”. 
Speaking further he explains:“You see, in the past, one of the drivers of oil price in the world market was not just the economic situation in the consuming countries. You may have some major developments in some oil producing countries that will disrupt supply and lead to speculation.”
He also adds that the speculation in turn, will lead to the rising oil prices. For example, if certain things happen in a major oil producing country that disrupts the flow of oil to the market, it can lead to price escalation.
“As a matter of fact, one only hopes that it does not remain at $50 to $60 and continues to rise. But the best we can achieve this year is about $70 a barrel,” he said.