We’ve Shed Enough Blood – Orji Uzor Kalu

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Shell shocked former Abia state governor Dr.Orji Uzor Kalu Weekend called for an end to the cocktail of violence following the Kano bomb blasts which claimed over 200 lives including journalist Enenche Akogwu of Channels Television.

Kalu frowned at the wanton destruction of lives and property which can only lead to more bloodshed if not nipped in the bud by well meaning Nigerians.

According to him,”We cannot stand this new culture of bloodletting anymore.This country means more than blood and fire.The world is moving forward while violence relegates us to the dustbin of crisis.Things are happening so fast that we also need a supersonic solution.This is not the Nigeria of our dream.”

The former governor called on well meaning Nigerians to rally round the government in the bid to find a way round the orgy of violence.

“In a time like this, silence can no more be golden.Our elders must talk to our children,they need to secure their future.When we spill all the blood,there may be no tomorrow.Violence does not offer solutions.Enough is enough.Gradually,this crisis will drive investors and the effect on the economy would be devastating,”he said.

Kalu also sent his condolences to Channels Television whose reporter Enenche Akogwu was consumed by the Kano blasts.

“Journalists do not take sides.They are professionals who help pass the message.When they get killed in the course of duty,we all lose.Akogwu died for us all,may God be with Channels TV and his family,”Kalu added.

Remembering Haiti Disaster

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TWO years have passed but for the people of Haiti the nightmare of the destructive earthquake still continues.

Half the rubble remains to be cleared and many bodies still lie underneath says retired Methodist minister, Rev Edward Holmes.

Haiti – the poorest country in the western hemisphere – was torn apart by the largest earthquake to hit the country for 200 years. Teams of rescue workers and volunteers worked around the clock to help victims after it struck on January 12, 2010.

Mr Holmes said that 500,000 people were still living in makeshift accommodation. “Cholera brought in by Nepalese UIN Forces is now endemic in Haiti as it is in Nepal. They have been free of the disease for many generations, now many will continue to die every year from this scourge.

“Construction is going ahead, new settlements being built, hospitals and schools being restored but endemic corruption hinders many worthwhile schemes.

“Churches and charities continue to give much needed support to local communities as they have always done. After the initial response two years ago there have been many other disasters worldwide yet Haiti is not forgotten.

“I continue to receive generous support and my garden party in the summer was the usual success as I expect will be the secondhand sale, coffee morning and lunch I will be holding on Saturday at Central Methodist Church, Brighouse.”

Perjury: Oni Gives AGF 72 Hours Ultimatum To Try Justice Salami

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Former Governor of Ekiti State has requested the Attorney General of
the Federation (AGF), Mr. Mohammed Adoke (SAN) to commence criminal
prosecution of the suspended  President of the Court of Appeal (PCA),
Justice Isa Ayo Salami for the offence of Perjury.

Oni, who was one of the key figures that exposed the alleged underhand
dealings by the suspended Justice Salami on the Ekiti and Osun
Elections Appeal cases gave the AGF 72 hours ultimatum to commence the
trial.

 

Media Aide to the former governor, Mr. Lere Olayinka, who made this
known in a statement issued in Ado-Ekiti today said; in a letter to
the Attorney General dated January 19, 2012, Oni stated that
“following the conclusion of the Justice Umaru Abdullahi Panel, which
found that Justice Salami lied on oath, the AGF should exercise his
constitutional duty to commence prosecution of the suspended PCA
forthwith.”

Section (117) of the Criminal Code Act states that; “Any person who,
in any judicial
proceeding, or for the purpose of instituting any judicial proceeding,
knowingly gives false
testimony touching any matter which is material to any question then
depending in that
proceeding, or intended to be raised in that proceeding, is guilty of
an offence, which is called
perjury. Section (118) prescribes fourteen years imprisonment as punishment for
perjury.

Oni’s letter stated inter alia; ”Hon minister will kindly recall that
the Justice Umaru Abdullahi  panel  investigated the  allegations  by
Justice Ayo Salami  contained   in his affidavit sworn to before the
court to the effect that the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) then
(Justice Aloysius Katsina-Alu) invited him to a meeting and asked him
to interfere in the Tribunal  in respect of the Governorship case of
Sokoto State  then before the Court of Appeal Panel.

“This is  contained among others in Para graph4( v) of the  sworn
affidavit which stated ‘the Honourable Chief Justice of Nigeria
actually instructed me to direct the panel of justices hearing the
Sokoto state gubernatorial Appeal Panel to dismiss the Appeal which I
told him I could not do.’

“Based on evidence before the panel by the former CJN and Hon Justice
Dahiru Mustapha, the current Chief Justice of Nigeria, who was present
during the said meeting between  the then CJN and the Suspended  PCA,
the panel found that the allegations of interference  by the CJN was
not true ,contrary to the sworn affidavit deposed to by the President
of the Court of Appeal, Justice Ayo Salami on 31/3/11.
“The Panel stated on page 96 ‘From all the circumstances there is
available evidence that the CJN did not give instructions to the PCA
to direct the panel to dismiss the appeal’’…. ‘’ the Panel finds that
the allegation that the CJN had taken over the running of the Court of
Appeal   in an unprecedented manner as unfounded.’
“It is trite therefore that having lied on oath,   a crime of perjury
has been committed by  Justice  Salami, one of the persons who sits at
the top echelon of the bench, a situation which has  no doubt put the
judiciary in public odium.
“It is the duty of the Attorney General to initiate prosecution of
anyone who has committed a criminal offence in our country or give a
fiat for such prosecution, and  it is a well known legal maxim that
all persons are equal before the law.
“It is in pursuing our patriotic duty to the nation that I  wish to
request the Hon Attorney General to initiate the prosecution of
Justice Salami for the offence of Perjury  within  a reasonable time
not later than 72 hours of the receipt of this petition or course a
fiat to be given to our lawyers for this prosecution.”
It would be recalled that sometimes in October, 2011 a similar letter
was written to the AGF by lawyers of the Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP) in Ekiti and Osun states, but the letter has not been acted
upon.
This notwithstanding, moves are allegedly being made to return Salami
to his position based  on pressures allegedly being mounted on the
Presidency and the CJN, Justice Dahiru Musdapher by some opposition
party chieftains working in concert with   some leading figures in the
Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in what has been termed ”political
solution.”

 

Need For Reforms In The Downstream Sector Of The Petroleum Industry

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By: Charles Ikedikwa Soeze, fhnr, fcida, fcai, cpae, son, emba

 

            It is a truism to say that the petroleum industry world over is a fast changing one including the downstream sector and as a result, needs to be reformed for accountability and service delivery to the people, which in the final analysis will bring progress and development to our nation, the giant of Africa.   Every opportunity occasioned by delays, should be used to re-evaluate and re-examine plans and programmes and their contents.  There should be no embarrassment for making meaningful changes or modifications, especially if they are influenced by new economic or technological realities which will  also lead to economic transformation of the economy for the betterment of all Nigerians whether from oil producing states, communities or not.

 

The responsibility for propelling economic development is clearly that of government.  However, the necessary capital inputs cannot be government alone.  In this regard therefore, only the right economic climate will encourage foreign and indigenous private capital to offer to participate.  On the issue of propelling economic development, the government must clearly articulate and disseminate new directives it is mapping out.  In the petroleum industry sector, people have lived for so long with certain situations that they assume it can not be altered.  There is therefore the need for changes in policies and strategies in the sector which must be widely disseminated using relevant media, print and broadcast inclusive as well as making use of community leaders, opinion leaders and moulders. In order to make meaningful impact, emphasis must change from merely satisfying domestic consumption to using part of such efforts in pursuing export.  One can boldly and proudly say that the government is already doing a lot.  It must do more if the economy is to truly turn around and begin to really grow in the right direction.  It is abundantly clear that the downstream sector of the petroleum industry has the potential to make meaningful impact on that effort.  Furthermore, any meaningful development of any kind usually takes place within an environment which is conducive to it.  This is so in the case of economic development and particularly in high risk sectors requiring intensive capital inputs.  It is for this reason that any talk of meaningful development in the downstream sector of the petroleum industry inNigeriamust first address the issue of the climate in which it has attempted to thrive so that appropriate measures may be taken to enhance or correct it.

 

For the benefits of the mass audience including talakawas, deregulation simply put is the liberalization of logistics and pricing of goods and services.  It has to do with the removal of the monopolistic control which should lead to the creation of a regime of level playing ground giving rise to competition which ultimately should lead to better, efficient and effective services to customers at most beneficial rates.  It is crystal clear that any mention of deregulation in the petroleum industry often attracts so much apprehension and emotions.  This is so, as it becomes the tradition to associate deregulation with upward movements of the prices of petroleum products without corresponding improvement in the services to the consumers.  Deregulation will lead to massive investment and expansion of product reception and storage facilities.

A cursory look at the refineries will reveal at a glance that the first oil refinery built in the country is located outsidePort   Harcourtin the southern part of the country known today as the south-south region, and it started operations in 1965 with a capacity of 38,000 barrels per day (bpd).  In addition, three other refineries were built to take care of the expanding domestic needs for the last thirty years.  In the 1990’s based on population explosion, there were more demand for gas outweighing supply.  In view of massive corruption, smuggling, mismanagement, wrong appointments and postings, the refineries operated at less than optimal levels.  Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) was executed on the refineries by non technocrats or professionals, based on the unjust lay-off of professionals within the refineries in an attempt to talk of the federal character principle that is, equal representation of states without taking into consideration ones level of training and professionalism.  As a result, we have what should be termed ‘killed the refineries and go into shady deal in the importation of petroleum products’.  What a dangerous dichotomy indeed!  This has made the desired result not to be achieved.  Consequently, the NNPC had to import heavily from abroad in this connection cutting actual revenue derived from oil exports.

 

Whatever the case may be, the deregulation of the downstream sector will encourage the following among others, maintaining self-sufficiency in refining, ensuring regular and uninterrupted domestic supply of petroleum products at reasonable prices, establishing facilities and infrastructure for the production of refined product at the export market and support the domestic petrochemicals, creating value added from these activities and finally gainful employment and enabling Nigerians to acquire technical know-how in refining and distribution business.

 

It is flabbergasting that despite all the TAM on the refineries, it yielded no meaningful result.  In the Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company (WRPC), the full rehabilitation of the Fluid Catalytic Cracking (FCC) unit as well as the overhaul of Gas Turbine Generator and procurement of TAM materials never made it to perform optimally.  In the Kaduna Refinery and Petrochemical Company (KRPC), the projects include rehabilitation works on demin plant raw water intake, electric bubstation, air compressors, fuels plant and instrumentation.

 

Price liberalization is central to the various reforms to be carried out in the nation’s downstream sector.  Generally speaking, price liberalization would afford the system sectoral efficiency and effectiveness and institute a regime of sustainable development.  In other words, price liberalization will among other things include, induce competition and efficiency that will drive prices downwards; permit entry of new participants thus providing access to state of the art technique in business practice, management, technical know-how and modernization.  It is appropriate to state that separation of functions based on Business Units will ensure that economic cost of service is established and there is transparency regarding profit/loss.

 

A liberalized downstream has the merits of price liberalization.  If this is fully implemented inNigeria(the giant ofAfrica) a number of benefits will accrue toNigerialike guaranteeing products availability as fuel could also be brought in through importation, just as it is capable of ensuring rapid disruption in supply chain.  A liberalized downstream would makeNigeriathe hub in the west coast ofAfrica. Nigeriahas export capability with a refining capacity of 445, 000 bpd and a lesser apparent demand.  That is to say with a liberalized downstream,Nigeriawould also ensure relevant pricing of natural gas, thus buoying the buddingNigerianatural gas sector.

 

For sometime now, the NNPC has been importing fuel.  The importation, I think and believe, is because of the sub-optimal performance of refineries.  The truth of the matter is that with the importation, the corporation is unable to recover cost of imported products.  For example in 2001 and 2002, the shortfall in cost to NNPC and the nation was N91,583 million and N68.81 million respectively.  What about the years ahead?  This, therefore, shows at a glance that the scenario leaves us to the fact that price is absolutely necessary to create competition in the sector.

 

Furthermore, it will lead Nigerians to the fact that price liberalization is necessary to lift barriers and create competition in the sector.  It is appropriate to acquaint Nigerians with some of the important features of an efficient and effective price mechanism under a liberalized downstream environment.  It will result in fair petroleum product prices to end users consistent with economic and social policies.  It responds promptly to changing circumstances without political intervention.  It includes fair margins to all participants as a basis for on-going investments and operating to international safety and environment standards.  It is transparent and easy to administer.  It is also accompanied by a related regulatory framework to replicate, to the extent possible, the workings of a free market.  In the words of Engineer Funsho Kupolokun, one-time Special Assistant to President Olusegun Obasanjo on petroleum matters, “Liberalization, after all is capable of generating additional fiscal revenue, which will be properly allocated and can be more effective in addressing special needs than price subsidy”.  Refer to the Sunday Times ofJune 22, 2003 p.7.

 

Writing on the downstream reforms, Anayo Korie made it categorically clear that with a total of 6,000 items that could be got from crude oil coupled with establishment of private refineries in Nigeria; the deregulation of the oil sector would enhance creation of 60 million jobs in the next ten years.  He specifically made reference to the data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA), the official energy information statistics of the United   States.  He went further to say that deregulation will lead to industrial revolution and economic boom of countries in areas of power, steel, and petrochemicals.  Refer to The Moment newspaper ofJanuary 18, 2012 p.25.  Finally, defective regulation of the sector has made it impossible for the nation to maximally tap from the benefits inherent in its joint venture operations with multinational oil companies.

 

 

Charles Ikedikwa Soeze, fhnr, fcida, fcai, cpae, son, emba is a

Communications Researcher/Public Affairs Analyst and Head,

Academic and Physical Planning (A&PP) of the Petroleum

Training Institute (PTI), Effurun, Delta State (08036724193)

charlessoeze@yahoo.ca

Chad shuts refinery in dispute with Chinese partner

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N’DJAMENA, Jan 20 (Reuters) – Chad’s government said it has shut down the country’s only oil refinery and will expel the plant’s director after joint-venture partner China National Petroleum Corp. refused to produce fuel at the government-set price.

The closure of the 20,000 barrel-per-day plant could exacerbate fuel shortages in the central African state’s capital N’Djamena, where petrol stations owners said they had not received new supplies in several days.

“We sent a joint team from the ministries of oil, trade, defence and security to notify of the closure of the refinery, because it has not produced any fuel since Dec. 23, 2011 and has thus not fulfilled its commitments,” Chad Commerce Minister Mahamat Allahou Taher told Reuters by telephone on Friday.

“We will also declare the director of the refinery, a Chinese national, persona non grata (in Chad) because he is the cause of all the difficulties we are facing at the moment.”

The 20,000 barrel per day plant, 60 percent owned by CNPC, has been idled intermittently since it was inaugurated in June as its leadership sought an increase in fuel prices to help it cover costs for crude oil feedstock.

“The pricing of petroleum products is deemed unreasonable, the refinery has suffered heavy losses and it is not able to continue normal operations,” CNPC said in a statement published in local newspapers on Friday.

The 588-million-euro ($758.07 million) refinery, which is 40 percent owned by state firm SHT, has lost $4.77 million since it opened, CNPC said. ($1 = 0.7757 euros) (Reporting by Madjiasra Nako; Writing by Bate Felix; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Anthony Barker)

Iran’s Economic Troubles Mount As New Sanctions Are Made Ready

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Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

A golden future beckons for Iranian merchants like Mohammed Fathi – and they   are very worried.

Faced with piles of riyal bank notes that grow bigger but more worthless every   day amid the panic over the country’s mounting nuclear crisis, they are   turning to the one currency that has weathered every twist in Iran’s   turbulent history – the sekkeh, or gold sovereigns first minted in   ancient Persia in 500 BC.

“The riyal is falling so fast that it’s impossible to do business in it,”   Mr Fathi, 35, a stationery merchant, told The Sunday Telegraph last   week.

“We can’t agree any proper deals with other firms because within an hour   or two, the prices of everything may have changed. The government has   limited the amount of other currencies we can use, so everyone is using gold   instead.”

The switch to gold is partly due to the crude vote-buying policies of   President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has fuelled rampant inflation by handing   out cash to millions of households to offset recent subsidy cuts on fuel.

But the underlying reason is his regime’s obsession with another, less stable   metal – the uranium 235 that the West believes it is secretly enriching for   a nuclear bomb.

On Monday the price Tehran pays for continuing that programme will spike   sharply too, when European Union foreign ministers meet in Brussels to   approve a ban on importing Iranian crude oil – a stiff blow to a regime   whose vast energy wealth has long kept it afloat.

The new sanctions come just three weeks after the US President, Barack Obama,   signed a law that effectively allows Washington to ban any country that buys   Iranian oil from access to the US financial system.

The parallel US and EU measures, the toughest to date, follow the failure of   almost a decade of negotiations, which most diplomats believe has Tehran has   simply used to buy extra time. Now, with the regime thought to be within a   year of nuclear weapons capability, and mounting fears that Israel will   attack before then, the West is gambling that economic pressure may   ultimately succeed where political pressure has failed.

“This is a serious move to tighten the pressure on Iranand bring them back to the negotiating table,” said one European   diplomat. “It is designed to hit them where it hurts, significantly   reducing their oil revenue.”

On the streets of Tehran, the smog-filled, mountain-ringed Iranian capital,   the sense of impending crisis is already clear from the queues in the gold   and money changing shops in the sprawling bazaars.

Since October, as new sanctions came to seem ever more likely, the riyal has   slid from around 10,500 to the dollar to nearly 18,000 last week, sometimes   by as much as 500 riyals per day. The result has been a run on both dollars   and gold.

The government has responded in typically authoritarian fashion, restricting   how many dollars an individual can buy, and sending plain-clothes police to   arrest anyone dealing on what is now a booming black currency market – but   to little avail. At the few authorised foreign exchange shops still selling   dollars, demand is so great that other currency dealers have started hiring   people to queue in line for them, according to residents of the Iranian   capital talking through intermediaries to The Sunday Telegraph.

“I was paid 150,000 riyals (£5) to stand in line for a currency dealer,”   said one day labourer. “There were 20 to 30 others like me in this line.”

The gold market has been the same: sovereigns, which used be bought mainly as   wedding gifts, are fetching around 7,750,000 riyals (£274) for a   quarter-ounce, twice what they cost in 2010. In three days alone last week,   said Mr Fathi, their price rose 15 per cent.

Combined with inflation rates of at least 20 per cent, mass bankruptcies have   ensued. Half the firms on Tehran’s biggest industrial estate have gone bust,   according to the Iranian Labour News Agency.

“My business has almost been totally ruined because transferring money   from Iran to foreign sellers has become very hard,” said Naser   Alikhani, 42, who runs a print machinery firm. “I’m moving what remains   it abroad and laying off all 15 staff in my Tehran office.”

Iranian import firms also find it impossible to get outside lines of credit,   and the costs of illegally-imported luxuries, such as Apple I-phones, have   risen by a third in recent weeks. Some shops are now finding it more   profitable to stockpile goods rather than sell them, exacerbating the   shortages, and Iranians are watching with alarm as their savings peter away.

“I have lost 40 per cent of my savings in the past three months and 40   per cent of the value of my home due to the falling riyal,” said Marjan   Babaei, 48, an arts dealer. “The government blames this on sanctions   but I think most people feel its mainly to do with mismanagement and   corruption.”

The economic picture will darken even more with the new sanctions on oil   sales, which, thanks to high global prices, have earned Mr Ahmadinejad’s   government some £350 billion in revenues over the last five years. Although   the EU boycott will take up to a year to bite because of grace periods given   to debt-laden Greece, Spain and Italy – Iran’s biggest EU oil customers – to   find new supplies, it could eventually rob Tehran of a fifth of its oil   sales and perhaps a higher share of its oil income.

Analysts point out that through the use of complex front companies, and simply   lowering their prices, the Iranian regime will probably always find buyers   for its oil, just as Saddam Hussein’s Iraq did. But by forcing them to sell   at ever lower rates, Mr Ahmadinejad’s income will be significantly dented.

Whether it will help bring about a change of Iran’s political direction is   another matter.

Parliamentary elections are due in March, but supporters of the reformist   Green movement, who were jailed in their thousands after 2009’s disputed   elections, are either banned from standing or unwilling to do so on   principle, fearing a fraudulent contest again.

And despite the “Arab Spring” felling regimes elsewhere in the   Middle East, Iranian faith in the power of street politics is at an ebb. “The   way the regime cracked down on the opposition leaves no hope of any change   in the near future,” said Ali Rezai, 28, an engineer. “Although if   it is ever revived I will join in again.”

Instead, the main threat to Mr Ahmadinejad comes from factions within his own   hard-line camp, in particular that of Ayatollah Ali Khameini, the unelected “Supreme   Leader”. Mr Ahmadinejad has accused Mr Khameini’s aides of deliberately   escalating confrontation with the West, hoping that new sanctions will ruin   the economy and discredit him.

The power struggle is less about ideology and more about the growing threat   the clerical class sees from Mr Ahmadinejad and his neo-conservative camp.

Rather like the Protestant zealots of 17th century Europe, the   neo-conservatives regard the clerical class as corrupt and over-privileged,   and query its untrammelled power.

Yet neither side are much interested in compromise with the West on the   nuclear issue. Indeed, for many, another spell of the kind of battle and   sacrifice experienced during the brutal 1980-88 war with Iraq is just what   is needed again to keep the Islamic revolution pure and free of Western   temptation. By that yardstick, even a disintegrating currency and a   bankrupt-ridden economy is unlikely to change their minds – in turn, making   it all the more likely that the Israeli prime minister, Benhamin Netanyahu,   might back a pre-emptive Israeli strike.

“At the end of the day, Netanyahu doesn’t want to be remembered as the   man who let Israel face the existential threat,” said Mark Fitzpatrick,   Iran expert at London’s International Institute for Strategic Studies.

He said it was far from certain, though, whether Israeli or even the much   heavier “bunker buster” bombs being developed by the US could   penetrate the most secure Iranian nuclear sites such as the new facility at   Fordo, which is buried 80 metres beneath a mountain. A failed attempt would   bring the worst of all scenarios: massive Iranian retaliation across the   Middle East, and extra justification for Tehran to continue the program as a   defence against future aggression.

Right now, however, most ordinary are concentrating on their more immediate   battle for survival.

“I was only a child when the war with Iraq finally ended, but I remember   those days very well, and it’s horrifying to think about another war coming,”   said Mr Rezai. “But with the economy as it is, nobody can even plan for   tomorrow, never mind the future.”

Iranians quoted in this article asked for pseudonyms to be used.

Like Obama? Cast a ballot for Gingrich.

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Registered Democrats and independent voters in 16 states can take it easy during the primary season. Democrats already know President Obama will be their nominee in 2012, and independents can’t vote in states with closed primaries or caucuses that only permit those enrolled in a party to vote.

In most states, however, unaffiliated voters can vote in either party’s primary, and partisans, in some cases, can cross party lines to vote in the other party’s primary. In these states, which include Texas, Ohio, and Illinois, Obama supporters should show up and vote in the Republican primary – and, for strategic reasons – they should vote for Newt Gingrich.

Many people are unaware that there is considerable variation in primary election systems – across both states and parties. The Supreme Court has ruled that states cannot dictate primary election participation rules to parties, and parties in many states do not restrict participation to partisans. So Democrats in these non-closed primary states can show up and vote in the Republican contests. Given the shear number of Democrats in these states, their influence in Republican contests can be considerable.

Once voters get to the polls to vote in primary elections, they generally have two voting options: They may vote sincerely – that is, for their top choice – or strategically. For Obama supporters, a sincere vote for the president in the Democratic primary would essentially be wasted.

That leaves Obama supporters with a strategic vote. Strategic voters cast votes that help their first choice indirectly. This happens by influencing, for example, who their preferred candidate’s opponent will be in the general election.

This practice was so common in the past that many New Jersey Democrats in the 1930s, for example, became known as “one-day Republicans” and were openly wooed by Republican candidates during the primaries.

Mr. Gingrich is the best choice for Obama supporters voting strategically in primaries. The former US House Speaker generally fares worse than his Republican contenders against Obama in head-to-head poll match-ups looking ahead to the general election.

Maybe it’s the baggage – his track record of volatility, concerns about his character or his personal life, or perceptions that he is too extreme in his ideological views for many Americans. Whatever the reasons, such a weak Republican nominee (even with a Rick Perry endorsement) would be the ideal opponent for Obama – in the eyes of those who would like to see the president re-elected.

There is surely no love lost between Newt Gingrich and Obama supporters. But the latter have every incentive to do their part to assure Gingrich will eventually emerge as the nominee, and, for his part, the speaker may wish to woo them.

Costas Panagopoulos is associate professor of political science and director of the Center for Electoral Politics and Democracy at Fordham University.

Sudanese Presidential Adviser Secretly Met With Syria’s Bashar: Sources

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Sudanese presidential adviser Mustafa Osman Ismail (L) and Syrian president Bashar al-Assad

January 19, 2012 (KHARTOUM) – The Sudanese presidential adviser Mustafa Osman Ismail secretly met with Syrian president Bashar al-Assad in Damascus yesterday, Sudan Tribune has learned.

Well placed sources told Sudan Tribune the unannounced meeting discussed the situation in Syria amid continued unrest and violent crackdown in that country since early 2011. They also reviewed the work of the Arab league monitors team dispatched last December.

The observer mission is headed by the Sudanese general Mohammed al-Dabi whose appointment drew strong criticism by Syrian opposition and human right groups due to his past as leading several security organs in Sudan accused of ill-treatment of dissidents.

The head of the monitoring team was still working on his report and would not arrive at the League’s Cairo headquarters until Saturday, the day before Arab foreign ministers are due to weigh their next move on Syria, according to Reuters.

Ismail tackled the recent Arab positions and how to move past the current tensions between Syria and other countries, particularly Qatar, according to the sources.

But the Syrian president in the talks rejected suggestions made by the Qatari Emir Hamad Bin Khalifa al-Thani that Arab countries should consider sending troops to the Arab country in order to “stop the killing”.

The United Nations estimates that the unrest in Syria between the security forces and pro-democracy activists has left more than 5,400 people dead since it first erupted in March, with 400 killed since the observers deployed.

Sudan has changed hearts with regards to Syria and agreed to Arab League decision imposing sanctions on Damascus. Prior to that Sudanese president Omer Hassan al-Bashir called events in Syria an international conspiracy.

This month Bashir called on Damascus to embrace “reforms” suggested by Khartoum that are enshrined in Sudan’s constitution and its political parties’ laws.

The sources refused to say whether Syria remained upset at Sudan’s position after Ismail’s visit.

Al-Assad and other Syrian officials slammed Sudan suggesting that it turned its back on Damascus despite support it lent to Khartoum in the past particularly in connection with the International Criminal Court (ICC) warrant against Bashir.

On Wednesday the Sudanese presidential adviser also met in Cairo with Hamas politburo Chief Khalid Meshaal and Fatah official Azzam al-Ahmed. The details of the meeting were not divulged.

Delta Oil Rich Community, Uzere Dethrones Exiled Monarch

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Uzere indigenes protesting against SPDC

By Our Reporter, Delta state

The traditional ruler of Uzere kingdom, Isoko south local government Area of Delta state, Isaac Udogri 1, has been deposed by the people of the kingdom in a well attended emergency conference held weekend at the community’s town hall.

Moving the motion of deposition which was unanimous adopted, Prince Israel Akiri hinged it on alleged high handedness, pride, greed autocracy, falsehood and frivolous petition which subsequently led to the arrest of some of kingdom’s leaders who spent the last Christmas in police custody.

In addition the people also alleged that since the embattled monarch has abandoned the throne for more than twenty-one days, he is no longer fit to be king as the community laws and customs has been breached beyond bounds.

Uzere protseters advancing the SPDC facility in Uzere

 

The people condemned the role played by the Ovie and his cohorts in inviting soldiers which led to the killing of some of some youths as well as burning of about 50 motorcycles belonging to youths. The Ovie was also blamed for his hasty actions in arresting innocent persons when the Delta state government had promised to set up a panel of inquiry into the matter.
Consequently upon the resolution to depose, Isaac Udogri, the conference directed the Idiagbo family to seek for an immediate replacement; failing which the next ruling house (Oke) will be asked to nominate the next king.
However neither the Delta state government nor the State ministry of local government and chieftaincy affairs are yet to react to the development. But very reliable source close to government revealed that the state government is being careful in handling the matter because the deposed Ovie and one of his special advisers (a controversial politician from the community) had earlier on defied the state Security Council directive that dialogue be allowed to prevail on the matter.
Community leaders who attended the emergency conference where the deposition was adopted include all members of Uzere executive committee, quarter Iletu, chiefs, youths and women leaders as well as representatives of Uzere branches.
It could be recalled that a peaceful demonstration against SPDC’s marginalization and failure to sign an MOU with Uzere last November had turned away with property worth millions of naira destroyed while the Ovie fled into exile in Warri. Historically, Uzere is the second place in Nigeria after Oloibiri where oil and gas were discovered. It has 39 oil wells. Two (2) oil fields and an average daily output of about 56,000 barrels of crude per day.
The conference which was well attended by a cross section of Uzere indigenes both from home and Diaspora, x-rayed the happenings in the community since November 29, 2011, when a peaceful protest against SPDC turned violent leading to killings and burning of property including the monarch’s palace.
In an interview, President General of the kingdom, Chief Emeakpo Owhe, who presided over the meeting, stated that he had no option on the matter since the people have spoken their minds on the issue at hand adding that the wish of the people is always supreme and that the Uzere tradition must be respected as there are laid down rules and guidelines regulating the kingship.
In a press statement signed by the kingdom’s secretary general, Mr. Genesis Ominabor and made available to newsmen stated that other sacrilege alleged committed by the deposed monarch include telling lies against the community leaders in press interviews to other traditional rulers and government/security agents as well as what they termed allegedly enriching himself from SPDC at the detriment of his subject and community, saying the people have completely lost confidence in the exiled monarch as such can no longer accept his rulership in the oil rich kingdom.

When contacted the embattled monarch, Isaac Udogri who maintained that he still remains the king of the kingdom, berated the extend his subjects are going about the issue without regard for the committee of enquiry set up by the state government.

Boko Haram: Uduaghan Appeals To Christians Against Reprisal Attacks

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From right, Delta State Governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, Bishop of Asaba Diocese, Anglican Communion, Most Reverend Justus Mokegwu and Bishop of Oleh Diocese, Most Reverend Jonathan Edewor, during the Governor's meeting with religious leaders in the state at Government House, Asaba, yesterday.

GovernorEmmanuel Uduaghan yesterday passionately appealed to Christian leaders in thestate not be provoked into instigating their followers to carry out retaliatoryattacks on Muslims in the state.

Dr.Uduaghan at a meeting with the state chapter of the Christian Association ofNigeria (CAN) in Asaba, urged the Christian leaders to propagate the message ofpeaceful co-existence to their respective congregations.

 

From left, Delta State Governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, Chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria, Bishop God-Do-Well Awvomakpa and Secretary to the State Government, Comrade Ovuozorie Macauley, during the Governor's meeting with religious leaders in the state at Government House, Asaba, yesterday

 

The meeting, according to the governor, was to intimate the Christian clerics withrecent challenges in the state especially in the area of security and the state’seconomy.

He lamented that the state hadrecently witnessed an upsurge in criminal activities including kidnapping andarmed robbery, adding that “beyond that, we had the threat of bombing whichcaused a lot of tension here. There was fear of reprisal attacks due to theactivities of Boko Haram and we actually had two of such incidents in Sapelewhich, according to investigations, were more of an intra-religious issue.”

The governor thanked the leaders for their various ways in dousing inter-religious tensions in the state andurged them to plead with their followers not to be provoked into taking thelaws into their hands.

“We should appeal to ourcongregations not to take laws into their hands by reacting negatively to whatever happens in the north. Let us appeal to them not to condescend to thatlevel. Also the Federal Government is doing everything possible to tackle thisnew security challenge posed by Boko Haram but beyond that we should alsoencourage our followers to protect themselves against armed robbery, Boko Haramand kidnapping because we have noticed that most people are kidnapped whilegoing or coming from the church,” he stated.

Heinformed the religious leaders that the state government was strategizing to make improved security infrastructures and empower the security apparatuses toput them in position to fight crime.

The governor noted that communitypolicing would be re-invigorated with the registration of communityassociations through the local government councils while vigilante groups wouldbe strengthened to complement the efforts of other security outfits.

He however warned that vigilantegroups are not empowered by law to carry weapon but their functions amongothers it to help the police in fishing criminal elements from the community.

Uduaghan announced that a bill was in the works and when passed, “would empower hotel operators to get fulldetails of lodgers and give same to security agents because we have observedthat a lot of criminal plottings are done in hotel rooms especially those whocome from outside the state.”

Responding,the state chairman of CAN, Bishop God-Do-Well Avwomakpa thanked the governorfor recognising the church as a group of people and pledge that the church willcontinue to support the administration.