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Showing posts with label 2017 at 10:12AM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2017 at 10:12AM. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 March 2017

Teenager wins 2017 Delta Icon Talent Search

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Miss Favour Njikonye, 17, has emerged winner of the “2017 Delta Icon Talent Search Show’’, sponsored by Blue House Entertainment industry.

The programme was held on Sunday at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Junior Staff Club in Warri.

Njikonye, a graduate of Challenge International School, Kolokolo in Delta, defeated nine other contestants in the grand finale of the keenly contested competition.

According to the organiser, Mr Mine Dafiaghor, the winner will smile home with N300, 000 prize and a contract with a music producer in Lagos.

Dafiaghor, who resides in the U.S., said the contract period would enable the sponsors to prepare a visa for the winner to travel to Chicago to take part in a global career event.

“I want to come home and start making a difference and I want to effect the change through entertainment, starting from my home state, Delta.

“The whole idea started two years ago and this has given me the opportunity to actualise the idea at a time when there is high demand for Nigeria’s culture in America.

“We have a show that is all about African Festivals for the winner and sponsors; after completing the project, they will come back to Nigeria,” he said.

The 21-year-old Dafiaghor, who is also a university undergraduate in Chicago, said Nigeria was blessed with both natural and human resources.

“We have the best people in Nigeria and I am happy to be here because it gives me a sense of identity,” he said.

Dafiaghor appealed to wealthy Nigerians to help the less privileged in the country to fast track national development

 

The post Teenager wins 2017 Delta Icon Talent Search appeared first on Vanguard News.

Vía Vanguard News http://ift.tt/2mfD0w2


Forex at CBN’s disposal likely to go up – Expert

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Mr Ayo Teriba, Chief Executive Officer, Economic Associates, says he is optimistic that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will be able to sustain its intervention on the foreign exchange (Forex) market.

Teriba told newsmen on Sunday in Abuja that increase in oil production and high oil prices had increased the foreign reserve base of the country.

“We are back to a situation where the Forex at the disposal of the CBN is likely to go up.

“The CBN could not intervene in the Forex market in 2016 because of low oil production, prices and because foreign reserves were also low.

“Today, oil price is up, reserves have also gone up, the outlook of the oil prices is stable and production in Nigeria is going back to capacity; so it has the capacity to intervene.

“In a couple of months, the apex bank should be able to meet all of the demands and all the multiple exchange rates will converge.”

The CBN recently injected 100million dollars into the interbank foreign exchange market as a measure to ease Forex accessibility, thereby crashing demand in the black market.

The measure was also to fund commercial banks with enough Forex to cater for the demand by customers and to meet basic travelling allowance, medicals and tuition fees.

 

The post Forex at CBN’s disposal likely to go up – Expert appeared first on Vanguard News.

Vía Vanguard News http://ift.tt/2mg1AxB


Friday, 24 February 2017

German secret service spied on global media

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel is in the focus of cameramen and photographers as she waits on February 16, 2017 in Berlin to face a closed-door hearing by a parliamentary enquiry looking into revelations of the sweeping surveillance activities of the US intelligence service NSA and into the extent of its cooperation with German's BND foreign intelligence service.<br />John MACDOUGALL / AFP

Germany’s foreign intelligence service BND long spied on journalists of the BBC, The New York Times, Reuters and other media, news weekly Der Spiegel reported Friday.

Media rights group Reporters Without Borders labelled the alleged surveillance “a monstrous attack on press freedom”, voiced fears the eavesdropping was continuing and said it was planning legal action, according to Der Spiegel.

The magazine, which has worked extensively with US fugitive intelligence contractor Edward Snowden and has reported on US and German espionage scandals, cited only documents it had seen.

It reported that the BND had listed at least 50 telephone and fax numbers and email addresses of journalists or newsrooms on its list of “selector” keywords for surveillance since 1999.

A Spiegel journalist told AFP that the list was thought to have covered only part of the BND’s international media targets at the time, and that it was unknown whether surveillance had ceased or was ongoing.

On the list seen by Der Spiegel were several dozen numbers of the British Broadcasting Corporation at its London headquarters and in Afghanistan, as well as of the BBC World Service, it said.

A number used by The New York Times in Afghanistan was also on the list, as were mobile and satellite phone numbers of news agency Reuters in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Nigeria.

The BND declined to comment, Der Spiegel said in an excerpt of an article to be published in full in its weekly edition which hits news stands Saturday.

A BBC spokeswoman said: “We are disappointed to hear these claims.

“The BBC’s mission is to bring accurate news and information to people around the world and our journalists should be able to operate freely and safely, with full protection for their sources.

“We call upon all governments to respect the operation of a free press.”

Reuters and The New York Times did not immediately reply to requests for comment from AFP.

Germany had reacted with outrage when information leaked by former NSA contractor Snowden revealed in 2013 that US agents were carrying out widespread tapping worldwide, including of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s mobile phone.

Merkel, who grew up in communist East Germany where state spying on citizens was rampant, declared repeatedly that “spying among friends is not on” while acknowledging Germany’s reliance on the US in security matters.

But to the great embarrassment of Germany, it later emerged that the BND helped the NSA spy on European targets.

Berlin last June approved new measures, including greater oversight, to rein in the BND following the scandal.

Vía The Guardian Nigeria http://ift.tt/2likh3d


Wednesday, 25 January 2017

Finalists named to lead under-fire WHO

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WHO

WHO

The World Health Organization on Wednesday picked three finalists for the role of its next director-general, a high-stakes choice for the powerful agency described as facing an “existential crisis”.

After a day of interviews, WHO’s executive board chose UN veteran David Nabarro of Britain, ex-Pakistani health minister Sania Nishtar and senior Ethiopian politician Tedros Adhanom.

France’s former foreign minister Philippe Douste-Blazy and Italy’s Flavia Bustreo, a current WHO deputy chief, were eliminated.

The three finalists will campaign for votes among WHO’s 194 member-countries before a final poll in May.

“This is an enormously important election,” the director of Harvard University’s Global Health Institute, Ashish Jha, told AFP.

“It really is an existential crisis for WHO,” added Jha, co-author of a 2015 report calling for sweeping agency reform.

WHO may be the United Nations’ most influential body, coordinating responses to pandemics like Ebola and Zika, but also setting standards for national healthcare systems including in advanced Western countries.

Since 2006, it has been led by Hong Kong-born Margaret Chan, whose tenure has suffered from accusations of inadequate transparency and accountability.

Those complaints boiled over with the 2014 Ebola epidemic in west Africa, when WHO was found to have missed glaring warning signs about the severity of the crisis that ultimately killed more than 11,000 people.

“When you look at the debacle of the Ebola response, no one in Geneva lost their job over that,” further fuelling concerns over accountability, said Jha.

WHO officials often lament their funding constraints, but the Harvard professor said financing problems are caused by the fact that “donors don’t fundamentally trust WHO to do a great job”.

Among the criticisms of the Ebola response was that WHO deferred to governments in the region, notably Guinea, as they initially sought to downplay the dangers of the outbreak.

The editor of The Lancet medical journal, Richard Horton, told AFP the election was “make-or-break time” for the Geneva-based WHO, especially after the failures linked to Ebola.

“We need a director-general who has got courage, who is independent and who puts people before governments”, he said.

– The finalists –

Nabarro, 67, is an Oxford-educated doctor who has held a series of high-level WHO posts. With the Ebola crisis raging in August 2014, Nabarro was tapped to take over the botched UN response and won praise for helping contain the outbreak.

Among the top priorities listed on his campaign website is aligning WHO to respond outbreaks and emergencies.

Nishtar, the only woman in the group, has high-level experience within the UN but also founded and has led Heartfile, a respected non-profit focused on healthcare in Pakistan, possibly giving her the outsider credential that some say the agency needs.

The senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations, Yanzhong Huang, told AFP the 53-year-old Nishtar has impressed by voicing a clear commitment to shaking up WHO’s internal governance.

Tedros, a former foreign and health minister, is also a renowned malaria researcher, applauded for expanding access to healthcare in Ethiopia.

He is being strongly backed by the African Union and, if elected, would be the first African to lead the global health body.

While experts urged WHO members to pick the most qualified candidate, they conceded that the lobbying ahead of the May poll will inevitably be highly politicised.

“Voting… will likely be driven more by foreign policy concerns than by health goals,” said Huang, warning over the prospect of “vote buying and deal striking” among member states.

Vía The Guardian NigeriaThe Guardian Nigeria http://ift.tt/2jfv78z