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Arsenal appoint ex-midfielder Edu as technical director

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Former Arsenal midfielder Edu returned to the club on Tuesday to take up the role of technical director with the Gunners.

“Edu will coordinate the work of our first-team coaching group, the academy and player scouting and recruitment,” Arsenal said in a statement.

Edu will leave his role as general coordinator for the Brazilian Football Confederation after the team won the Copa America on home soil.

The 41-year-old, a member of Arsenal’s unbeaten Premier League-winning squad in 2003/04, will become the club’s first-ever sporting director as they continue to modernise their recruitment structure following the departure of Arsene Wenger last year.

“His arrival is the final and very important part of the jigsaw in our development of a new football infrastructure to take us forward,” said Arsenal’s head of football Raul Sanllehi.

“He will be working closely with Unai Emery and the first-team coaches, and will play a relevant role leading our football vision.”

Edu played under Arsenal manager Emery at Valencia and believes the future is bright for the club despite failing to qualify for the Champions League for three seasons in a row.

“Arsenal has always had a special place in my heart and I’m thrilled to be returning to this great club in this new role,” he said.

“We have a strong squad and some very talented young players with fantastic people at every level. I’m looking forward to helping make a difference.”

I transmitted election results to INEC server as APO I, witness tells tribunal

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Petitioners’ 17th witness, Uchena Umeh, confirmed before the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal in Abuja, on Tuesday, that as an Assistant Presiding Officer I during the last presidential election in Gwarinpa, Abuja, he transmitted the results of the poll to the server of the Independent National Electoral Commission.

Umeh appeared before the five-man tribunal led by Justice Mohammed Garba at the instance of the Peoples Democratic Party and its presidential candidate in the February 23 election, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, who are challenging the victory of President Muhammadu Buhari and the All Progressives Congress at the poll.

Under cross-examination by Buhari’s lawyer, Abubakar Mahmud (SAN) said as the APO I, Umeh said he was on the day before the election given the code with which he transmitted the results of the poll at his polling unit to INEC server.

He said, “In the course of the training, they told us there was an INEC server.

“A code was given to us and they told us that only APO I should know the code.”

Responding to another question, he said, “It will be wrong to state that election would not be held in a polling unit if the card reader failed to authenticate a permanent voter card.”

Hisbah arrests 48, confiscates 37 cartons of beer in Jigawa

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Hisbah, the Sharia law enforcement agency in Jigawa, says it has arrested 48 suspects and confiscated 37 cartons of beer in Taura Local Government Area of the state.

Hisbah Commander, Ibrahim Dahiru, made this known to journalists in Dutse on Tuesday.

Mr Dahiru said the suspects were arrested after operatives of the agency, in collaboration with the police, carried out a raid at Gugunju village.

He also said that 30 women suspected to be commercial sex workers and 18 men were arrested during the raid.

The suspects, he said, had been handed over to the police for further investigation and prosecution.

Mr Dahiru commended residents of the area, particularly the youth, for supporting the agency to discharge its duty smoothly.

“We are advising people to stop engaging in immoral acts and other vices that can destroy our society.

“We will continue to fight against immoral acts, including consumption of alcohol.

“Again, we are also reminding people that consumption of beer remains prohibited in all parts of the state,” Mr Dahiru said.

Don’t interfere in appointment of my commissioners, Ortom tells PDP

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Governor Samuel Ortom of Benue State has called on his party, the Peoples Democratic Party not to interfere in the composition of his cabinet.

Ortom stated this during the meeting of PDP caucus held at the new Banquet Hall of the Government House, Makurdi.

The governor also sounded notes of warning to potential members of his cabinet. He said that they risked been sacked the next day if they are found wanting in the discharge of their duty.

Ortom said, “Now, I do not have any godfather, so I should be allowed to constitute my Executive Council.  I should be held responsible for any failure.  I can not allow myself to be messed up. Those who will make my cabinet must be ready to work because I will not tolerate any redundancy.

“They should know that it is a call to service of the people and not to enrich themselves. I can sack any commissioner. Even the day after the appointment if you fail to do my bidding.  In the end,  I will be the one to bear the brunt.”

The governor announced that his cabinet will be made up of 15 commissioners drawn from the three zones of the state.

“I will also appoint 23 Special Advisers, one from each Local Government Area, who will be party men and will be under strict supervision by me as well as two Senior Special Assistant and Special Assistant from each Local Government Area”,  Ortom said.

How new African trade agreement Buhari signed will impact Nigeria

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Mr Buhari’s delayed signing of the agreement, according to the government, was borne out of the need to appraise its potential and possible danger to the local economy.

With a porous border system, for instance, there were fears that the agreement would open the country’s seaports, airports and other businesses to unbridled foreign interference and domination.

The agreement was heavily criticised by prominent interest groups like the Nigeria Labour Congress and Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, with suggestions that aspects of the agreement would hurt Nigeria’s interest.

Following Mr Buhari’s refusal to sign the agreement, the government called for adequate consultation and inputs from interest groups, particularly with the NLC, which called the treaty a “renewed, extremely dangerous and radioactive neo-liberal policy initiative.”

In June, Mr Buhari received the report on the impact of the agreement on Nigeria’s economy.

“As Africa’s largest economy and most populous country, we cannot afford to rush into such agreements without full and proper consultation with all stakeholders,” the president said at the occasion. For AfCFTA to succeed, African nations must develop policies that promote African production, among other benefits, he added.

The signing of the agreement on Sunday brought to an end several months of wait by many in the various sectors of the economy.

With a GDP of $405 billion, Nigeria is considered the largest economy in Africa. It is followed by Egypt ($332 billion) and South Africa ($295 billion). With a population of about 180 million, the nation is also Africa’s largest market.

Analysts are however divided on the impact of the agreement on the economy and what Nigeria’s delayed signing would translate to.

A few analysts have argued that the treaty would impact on government revenue and social welfare. According to them, elimination of all tariffs among African countries would erode the trading states’ treasury by up to $4.1billion annually and deepen poverty, with millions of Africans potentially exposed to starvation and death.

Last Saturday, Ghana was selected as the host of the AfCFTA secretariat. A review committee said the West African nation was awarded the right based on regional balance formula.

The country edged out six other countries that had submitted their bids to host the secretariat, including Egypt, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar and Senegal.

The secretariat’s primary mandate will be the implementation the agreement, which has been ratified by 25 countries, according to the African Union.

Jide Ojo, public policy analyst and development expert, said the signing of the agreement was the right way to go. “If properly implemented and guided, Nigeria stands to gain a lot from that because as we do know, Nigeria is a huge market.”

Mr Ojo explained that with free movement of goods and services, the African market can help boost the nation’s economy because Nigeria has a comparative advantage if things are done right. To achieve maximum value, the nation must fix its infrastructure and develop local capacity, he added.

Tope Fasua, economist and public affairs commentator, said the arrangement would have been Nigeria’s ‘baby’, had the government and other stakeholders been proactive. According to the former presidential candidate, with her huge potential and vast resources, Nigeria ought to have been the country driving the process, rather than being the nation trying to hold every other nation back on the continent.

“We have lost the battle, at least psychologically, but could still win the war,” he wrote. “Ghana positioned herself and today hosts the secretariat. If nothing, that is a lot of tourism money that will be drawn to Ghana, especially from Nigeria where many people in government service are getting ready, smacking their lips for the deluge of trips for meetings and conferences – which is what we know how to do best.”

But for Cheta Nwanze, lead partner at SBM Intelligence, a research and geopolitical intelligence platform, Nigeria’s delayed signing of the agreement would not have much impact on what the nation stands to benefit in the long run.

“We signed (the agreement) before the thing had really gone into full drive (there isn’t even a secretariat yet), so we will benefit from it completely,” he told said Tuesday morning.

However, Mr Ojo said that he was worried about Nigeria’s level of preparation. He noted that the agreement is like the West African free trade agreement which Nigeria has failed to maximise.

“How well-positioned are Nigeria’s businesses to take advantage of the agreement?” he asked. “Where is the infrastructure? How have we positioned the products that we seek to export?

“If we must take advantage of AfCFTA, we must incentive the private sector for value addition. We cannot continue to export raw materials and get peanuts in return.”

Mr Ojo also expressed fear over the possibility of having locally produced products dumped into the country and mislabelled by other countries across the continent.

To check dumping, Nigeria needs to have some safeguards, he said, adding that the nation must develop infrastructure, protect her borders, set up monitoring teams and develop the capacity of local manufacturers.

If the government and relevant stakeholders fail to put these measures in place, he warned, the nation may not gain from the agreement.

“We may just be signing on to something that may be like paper tiger; something good on paper alone. Unless we develop capacity for value addition, we may not profit maximally from AfCFTA.”

Aircraft Assembled, and Flown, By SA Teenagers Lands Safely in Egyp

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The first aircraft assembled, and flown, by South African teenagers arrived safely in Cairo, Egypt, on Monday, after it jetted off from Cape Town last month.

The aircraft was assembled by a group of 20 students from vastly different backgrounds.

According to the BBC, the four-seater Sling 4 plane landed in Namibia, Malawi, Ethiopia, Zanzibar, Tanzania and Uganda during the 12 000km trip to Egypt.

Pilot Megan Werner, 17, founder of the U-Dream Global project, told the BBC that she was thrilled with the accomplishment.

“I’m so honoured to have made a difference around the continent at the places we’ve stopped. The purpose of the initiative is to show Africa that anything is possible if you set your mind to it,” she added.

The teens built the aircraft in two weeks under the guidance of The Airplane Factory, U-Dream mentors and five team leaders from Denel Aviation.

Werner, who is from Krugersdorp, told the BBC that the team encountered some issues along the way, such as struggling to get fuel in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa and having to fly alone for two hours during the last leg of the trip from Addis Ababa to Cairo via Aswan.

“Driaan van den Heever and I flew alone for 10 hours, without the support aircraft, so it was two teenagers, all by ourselves with no support,” Werner said.

Atiku’s witness can’t remember date of presidential election

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The 13th petitioners’ witness, Audu Sani, told the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal, on Tuesday that he could not remember the date of the last presidential election.

Sani, who was the Peoples Democratic Party’s collation agent in Lapai Local Government Area of Niger State for the presidential election, had alleged that there were incessant incidents of thuggery and sporadic shootings in many parts of the area, preventing and disrupting voting.

The witness appeared before the five-man panel led by Justice Garba Usman, to testify at the instance of the PDP, and its presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, who are challenging the victory of President Muhammadu Buhari at the February 23 poll.

He said, under cross-examination, that he submitted the results he collated in his local government to the state collation agent of his party.

Asked by the All Progressives Congress’ lawyer, Lateef Fagbemi (SAN), when he submitted the results, he said he did on “the 26th”.

Asked which month, he said “April 26”.

Asked when did the election hold he said “23rd”.

When asked to mention the month, he said, “I cannot remember.”

Breaking: 2 officers shot as shi’ites invade National Assembly, set cars ablaze (Graphic photos)

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Members of the outlawed Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN) otherwise known as Shi’ites on Tuesday  broke into the National Assembly premises destroying properties worth billions.

Television Nigerian gathered that the sect broke down the first gate and proceeded to the second, which serves as the main entrance to the complex.

A police officer and a personnel of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps NSCDC have received gunshot wounds and are in critical condition.

However, security operatives on ground repelled the protest with gunshots fired into the air to disperse the protesters.

They are protesting the continued detention of Ibrahim Elzakzaky, their leader.

The Shiites are currently burning some vehicles parked close to the gate while more security operatives are being deployed to the scene.

Graphic: 2 streetlight technicians electrocuted in Kaduna

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Two streetlight technicians have been electrocuted and burnt to death while conducting maintenance of some streetlights along NNPC/KRPC way in Kaduna.

Television Nigerian gathered that the cause of the electrocution may be as a result of safety negligence as the victims were using metal scaffolds as against a towertruck.

 

 

UNDP partners Nigerian Army for Stabilization Programme in North East

The United Nations Development Programme UNDP has sought the partnership of the Nigerian Army to commence its stabilization and development programme for Nigeria’s North East Communities ravaged by the Boko Haram insurgency.

 

The Resident Representative Designate for Nigeria office of UNDP, Mr. Mohammed Yahya disclosed this during a courtesy call to the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Tukur Yusuf Buratai at the Army headquarters in Abuja.

Yahya stated that the partnership can only be achieved if the Nigerian Army provides support and creates the enabling environment for proper entrenchment of the programme.

“We are about to embark on the programme with regards to the stabilization of the North East. I feel I have to come see the Army Chief to inform him because the Army has done a lot in tackling the insurgency and unless the Army gives us the support to do our work, it will be very difficult”, he said.

He further emphasized that the support of the Nigerian Army was crucial for the stabilization programme to succeed while noting that the programme entailed re-establishment of livelihood in deserted communities, provision of critical infrastructure and ensuring enablement of the rule of law.

Emphasizing on the need for other critical stake holders in the stabilization efforts to key into the speed and pace of work to be embarked upon by UNDP, Yahya said, “The programme would also involved reconstruction of towns and communities. UNDP really needs the Nigerian Army’s support for its personnel to access difficult communities”.

In his response, the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Tukur Yusuf Buratai assured the UNDP representative that the Nigerian Army will give the UN all the support it requires for the stabilization programme to succeed.

Buratai said the Nigerian Army was ready to support NGOs and the UNDP in the area of provision of peace and security to enable them carry out their programmes.

He also used the occasion to inform the UNDP representative that the Nigerian Army had already commenced its own stabilization and reconstruction programmes in certain areas and was working seamlessly with several NGOs in this regard adding that such experience will come to play in the assistance to the UNDP efforts.

Senior officers present at the visit were the Chief of Policy and Plans, Major General Ali Nani, Chief of Training and Operations, Major General Lamidi Adeosun, Chief of Logistics, Major General Enobong Udoh, Chief of Military Intelligence, Major General SA Adebayo, Chief of Administration, Major General Ishiaku, Chief of Civil-Military Affair, Major General Shehu Mohammed and the Director of Policy, Department of Policy/Plans, Brigadier General Sawyer.