Monday, 2 December 2013

Starving Syrian Rebels Butcher LION from Syrian Zoo.



A graphic picture has emerged which appears to show Syrian rebels so desperate for food they have killed and butchered a lion.

Parts of Damascus have been under siege by the Syrian army for more than six months, causing food to become scarce as winter draws near.

The picture, which has not been independently verified, appears to show a visibly emaciated lion.

It is though to have been captured from Al-Qarya al-Shama Zoo, in east Ghouta.

Last month, clerics issued a fatwa, or religious order which allowed staving Syrians to eat cats and dogs if food supplies became desperate.

The picture is being circulated by many as an example of how desperate the starving rebels have become – but some believe the rebels are skinning the animal to use its coat for warmth, rather than to eat its meat.

Ghouta was the target of the chemical attack on August 21st which sparked debate around the world over the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons.

Last month, weapons inspectors confirmed Syria’s chemical weapon production facilities had been destroyed.

The regime’s stockpile of weapons has been removed from Syria and taken to a US Navy ship, where they are in the process of being neutralised.

posted from Bloggeroid

BOKO-HARAM Strikes In Maiduguri.



In early hours of Monday, at about 3 a.m., unidentified terrorists conducted a siege on the Composite Group Air force Base in Maiduguri, the Borno state capital. There were reports of sporadic shooting and sounds of rocket propelled launchers firing, with airstrikes in Maiduguri and Jere metropolis up until 8 in the morning.

There is also information of Boko Haram attacking the Maiduguri International Airport, located at the Airport Road, setting several aircrafts ablaze.

Several people have been declared killed, security operatives and terrorists included.

Over 300 suspected terrorists planted explosives in targeted areas in the state capital.

Also attacked are the newly constructed trailer parks along Damaturu-Maiduguri road, military checkpoints, along with other residential and public buildings.

According to an eyewitnesses’, who is a resident at Gomari airport area, account, five military operational vehicles conveying dead bodies were seen on their way to the hospital at about 6am.

Army spokesman Ibrahim Attahiruon confirmed the attacks, saying the city’s airport has been affected, but could not provide further details.

Following the development, authorities in Borno have imposed a 24-hour curfew on Maiduguri metropolis.

Addressing the press, Alhaji Ahmed Jidda, the Secretary to the State Government, said the curfew was imposed in consultation with the 7 Division of the Nigerian Army in Maiduguri.

“During the period of curfew, government pleads with all citizens to remain calm.

“Only vehicles on emergency calls and essential services are allowed to move while the curfew will be lifted as soon as situation improves.

“The imposition of the curfew is necessitated by attack in Maiduguri by people suspected to be Boko Haram members in the early hours of today.”

Source: Vanguard

posted from Bloggeroid

Actor Paul Walker star of "Fast and Furious" killed in a car crash.


If you are a Fast and Furious Fan, the name Paul Walker, will ring more than a bell to you. He was a fantastic actor.
He passed on 3 days ago. He will surely be missed by many.
The 40-year-old star of Universal Pictures' "Fast and Furious" movie franchise, was killed in a single-car crash in California Saturday, according to a post on his official Facebook page. He was a passenger in a friend's car.

posted from Bloggeroid

Thursday, 14 November 2013

Types of Vegetables You Can Cultivate to Make Money in Nigeria





Every business in Nigeria shouldn't be about buying and selling, finished goods. Vegetable farming is one aspect of farming in Nigeria that is capable of bringing quick cash to the would be farmer this season. There are so many people in the streets of nigeria who have no business being in nigeria. While they waste away in poverty, hoping for a better tomorrow; opportunity to make good money through farming keep passing them by on daily basis.

In Nigeria of those days, the term 'Farmer' is heavily associated with poverty and illiteracy. But that was then, not now anymore when farmers are becoming the richest people (I heard that one of the richest man in China is a farmer) and leaving the best of life possible.

Vegetable farming happens to be one of the easiest agricultural engagement, and any kind of edible vegetable is always in hot demand all year round. One good example is Fluted Pumpkin (Telfairia occidentalis) popularly known as Ugu (It's Igbo name) across .

Different_Types_of)Vegetables

Types of Vegetables


Ugu vegetable is by far, the most consumed vegetable of any kind in Nigeria. An acre size Ugu farm is capable of turning in above N500,000 and it will take you less than N60,000 to cultivate one acre farm of pumpkin vegetable.

If you are in Lagos, the entire Power Line of hundreds of Acres, that stretched from Egbin power station in Ijede, Ikorodu, down to almost Ikorodu garage are extremely good for Ugu farming and you can get them almost free to cultivate your pumpkin and other vegetables.

Some popular Vegetables in Nigeria that you can Cultivate

Fluted Pumpkin - Like I've said before, Pumpkin vegetable is the most consumed vegetable by Nigerians of all class. It is used to prepare varieties of dishes and it's very nutritious too. When you talk about soup in Nigeria, you are directly talking about ugu because, almost all Nigerian soups are cooked with this vegetable.

Apart from cooking, pumpkin vegetable has been known to increase the volume of the red blood cell when consumed fresh, without being cooked. It's blood enhancing nutrients gives it the ability to expand the volume of your blood at a very short time after consumption!

It is of course natural for a vegetable of these benefits and usage to be in high demand, anyone who can cultivate Ugu, is absolutely going to make good money selling it and can be cultivated in every part of Nigeria due to the plant's tolerant of drought and poor soil.

Green Okra - Okra, which is popularly known as the lady's finger and gumbo, in many English speaking countries is a very nutritious edible green pod vegetable. When sliced, the okra's edible green seed pods produces slippery sticky substance that make the soup tick, smooth, and delicious. My personal experience with okra shows that eating fresh vegetable soup prepared with plenty of okra can relive constipation and increase digestion.

If you are a Nigerian, you don't need to be told about okra soup. It's one of the most popular soup in Nigeria restaurants, usually prepared with Ugu vegetable and smoked fish - very delicious and taste good.

Okra contains good amount of Vitamin-A and is known to be anti-oxidant due to it's good content of beta-carotene. It is also rich in Vitamin-C, Vitamin-K, and some form of Vitamin-B Complexes. Like Fluted Pumpkin, it tolerate all kinds of soil.

Cabbage - Cabbage is another popular vegetable in Nigeria and is popularly used to prepare salads. The only part of the plant that is normally eaten is the rounded leafy head (the spherical cluster of immature leaves) excluding the partially unfolded outer leaves.

Because of it's spicy flavor, Cabbage is used in a variety of dishes, and is widely consumed raw as well. It is in high demand in Nigeria and sells for reasonably good price.

Cabbage really does not like the sun, it grows better in a cold environment but must get at least 6 hours of sunlight everyday. It grows well on a well fertile, well drained manured soil.

Cucumber - As I always says: Great skin starts with Cucumber; If you really want your skin to be happy, your number one answer is cucumber. This is because, cucumber and skin is known to share the same level of hydrogen content, which makes it easier for cucumber to deal with the skin problems by engulfing them. It works well in soothing, softening, and relaxing your skin very quickly.

Cucumber can be eaten and is used for preparation of many kinds of food in Nigeria. Cultivating this vegetable will surely put money into your pockets.

Cucumbers like every other vegetables like soil that is well drained and rich in organic matter, but don’t stress about the soil conditions. Cucumbers are hearty plants and easy to grow. Just make sure they have full sunlight and soil that is rich in organic matter.

Cucumber sells quick to in markets across Nigeria and is widely consumed. It is another vegetable farming that makes a lot of money.

When you engage in farming, you will have plenty of food to eat, you sell to make good cash, and it gets you closer to nature. These will increase your overall well being as a human-being. So, give it a trial today and see for yourself.

posted from Bloggeroid

Friday, 25 October 2013


naijamayor:
What’s This Much Talked About Agreement Between The Federal Government and ASUU.

Prologue
“Listening to the  that was signed by the Federal Government and Comrade Uche Chukwumerije read out, I was really wondering whether this was signed or it was just a proposal. But when he concluded, he said it was signed. It only shows the level of people the executive sent to go and negotiate on their behalf because ab initio, people must be told the truth, what can be accomplished and what cannot be accomplished. If a leader says I am going to accomplish this, he is morally duty bound to honour it. But even if you decided immediately after that you cannot accomplish it, I think it is only proper for you to go back and start renegotiating. But if you prolong it on the basis that you are still going to honour it and you don’t honour it, then it doesn’t portray us in good light.”

- David Mark, Senate President
By Uzor Maxim Uzoatu
A new ground-breaking study of the
complex politics of kidnapping of oil
workers in the Niger Delta area of Nigeria
is due for its first public presentation on
Saturday, October 26, 2013, at Telus
Centre, Room 150, University of Alberta
Campus, Edmonton, Canada. Entitled
Criminal Resistance? The Politics of
Kidnapping Oil Workers the award-
winning work by 2011 Governor General
of Canada Academic Gold Medal
recipient, Tope Oriola, will be formally
reviewed by Biko Agozino, Professor and
Director, Africana Studies, Virginia Tech,
USA. The event is being sponsored by
the Global Education Program,
Department of Sociology & Faculty of
Arts, University of Alberta, Edmonton.
Recently released by the notable
academic publishers Ashgate, the book is
based on a multi-actor qualitative
research in the oil-rich Niger Delta region
of Nigeria. Crude oil extraction in the
Niger Delta region generates 96% of all
foreign earnings and 85% of state
revenues. However, several generations
of state neglect and mismanagement
have ensured that the Delta region is one
of the most socio-economically and
politically deprived in the country. By the
late 1990s there was a frightening
proliferation of armed gangs and
insurgent groups. Illegal oil bunkering,
pipeline vandalism, disruption of oil
production activities, riots, and
demonstrations intensified and in 2003,
insurgents began kidnapping oil workers
at a frenetic pace. An uber-insurgent
movement 'organization' was formed in
Nigeria in late 2005. Christened the
Movement for the Emancipation of the
Niger Delta (MEND), it operates as an
amorphous, multifaceted amalgam of
insurgent groups with an unprecedented
clinical precision in execution of intents.
Offering more insight into the book in his
Foreword, Patrick Bond, Professor of
Political Economy at the University of
KwaZul-Natal in South Africa avers that
the “book is a healthy corrective to the
romanticized non-violence fetish of much
social movement scholarship as well as
that of solidarity movements which arose
to support Ken Saro-Wiwa’s heroic fight
against pollution and underdevelopment
of the Ogoni people a quarter of a
century ago.” Bond further notes that: “In
part because of his tasteful stylistic
approach, as well as the extremely rich
information and synthetic capacity, Oriola
has produced amongst the finest works
in the tradition of socio-political framing
narratives. This book is, therefore, a vital
addition to the academic understandings
of the Delta conflict, but much more, it
offers lessons to anyone interested in
Nigeria, Delta solidarity, the oil and
security sectors, social movement
mobilisation, and environmental justice
strategies and tactics”
The book launch event promises to
provide an enlightening narrative about
the production of the book--the
experience garnered in the course of the
research, including interviews and focus
group discussions with insurgents. The
event will bring together (public)
intellectuals, students, human rights
activists, as well as the Edmonton
community and beyond. Guests will be
engaged in a robust conversation on
kidnapping of oil workers in Nigeria’s
Delta region as well as the significance
of the global phenomenon.
Currently an assistant professor in
criminology & socio-legal studies,
Department of Sociology, University of
Alberta, Oriola has authored or co-
authored several refereed journal articles.
His works have been published in leading
journals, such as Sociology, the British
Journal of Criminology, Critical Studies
on Terrorism, and Canadian Journal of
Family and Youth, among others. His
research focuses on kidnapping, police
and use of force, state crimes and the
political economy of crime. Oriola’s on-
going SSHRC-funded book project
investigates the use of “less-lethal” force
options by Canadian police (under
contract at University of British Columbia
Press with Nicole Neverson & Charles
Adeyanju).
CoinBeez is a global company, and it aims to be the most powerful supercomputer in the world by combining the computing power of networked computers via the Internet (by performing parallel processing). CoinBeez pays for all the power you share, so that the more processing power you and your team hold and the longer you keep it, the more you earn. And best of all, it's a system that works on autopilot, since all you have to do is download a software (which will be available on the 1st of November 2013) and install on your PC. Leave your computer on with the software running every day or as long possible to earn more money. Do not waste time and get started building your referral network! Link for registration:GET STARTED

Thursday, 24 October 2013

instagist:

Two American sailors have been abducted by pirates, off the coast of Brass in Bayelsa State.

The victims were allegedly seized when the pirates attacked their vessel, C.RETRIEVER and abducted its captain and the chief engineer.

The identities of the sailors as of press time had yet to be known....

saharareporters:

Commercial Motorcyclist Stage Public Protest In Akure

By SaharaReporters, New York

Business and commercial activities were paralyzed yesterday in Akure, the Ondo State capital, over a protest by some aggrieved commercial motorcyclists, otherwise known as ‘okada operators’.

They were reacting to an increase in their ticket fares as well as government highhandedness about their work, describing it as further attempt to impoverish the downtrodden.

READ MORE…

Wednesday, 23 October 2013

Boko Haram: Protect civilians, US tells FG

Boko Haram: Protect civilians, US tells FG
The United States government has urged the Federal Government to protect civilian population as it attempts to flush out insurgents in the north eastern part of the country.
It said such steps were imperative as winning the war against terrorism demanded a holistic approach which must take into account the impact of military operations on the people of the region.
US Assistant Secretary of State, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, spoke during a joint video chat with The US AFRICOM Commander, Gen. David Rodriguez, on American foreign policy and security cooperation in Sub-Saharan Africa, which was monitored by our correspondent in Lagos on Wednesday.
Thomas-Greenfiled said it had made Washington’s position known the Federal Government on how best to address the issues of respecting human rights in the fight against terrorism.
She added that the American government would continue to engage with civil societies in Nigeria as they approach the issues of human rights of the local population.
She said, “We are very concerned with the impact of Boko Haram in Nigeria and on the borders Nigeria shares with other countries. There are broad development issues in Northern Nigeria including the way the security forces respond to the threats posed Boko Haram.
“Finding a solution to Boko Haram is not all about security operations as the problem involves broad perspectives. The Nigerian government should take into account the impact of its operations on civilian population as security forces go after Boko Haram elements.”
naijamayor:
PHCN Workers Shut Down Installations, Cause Blackout In Four Northern States
The four northern states of Kaduna, Sokoto, Kebbi and Zamfara were yesterday thrown into total…
View Post

saharareporters:

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala: The Story Of A Vindictive Minister By Abdullahi Yunusa

Call her Nigeria’s de facto Vice President or Prime Minister and you won’t be faulted at all. For her sake, a peculiar ministerial nomenclature was created just to differentiate her personality and ministerial portfolio from others. She is no other person but the smooth-talking Finance Minister, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, an additional assignment that has no constitutional backing.

Most Nigerians know her more as “Madam Statistics”, who in responding to the cry of starving poor masses in a country literarily flowing with milk and honey would reel out statistics of Nigeria’s ‘bourgeoning’ economy.

READ MORE…

saharareporters:

By Wilson Uwujaren

The Economic and Financial Crime Commission, EFCC, on Wednesday, October 23, 2013, told a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja that three more witnesses will be presented in the trial of top executives of Transnational Corporation, TRANSCORP, Plc.

The officials who...

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

saharareporters:

President Jonathan To Undertake Pilgrimage To Israel

President Goodluck Jonathan will leave Abuja on Wednesday on a pilgrimage to Israel, spokesman Reuben Abati has said.

Mixing religion with politics and business, he will also meet with President Shimon Peres, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and members of the Knesset, the Israeli Parliament, and with the President of the Palestinian National Authority, Mr. Mahmoud Abbas, Abati said in a statement.

READ MORE…