Tag: World

  • Father of three arrested for raping his 13-year-old house help in Rivers State

    Father of three arrested for raping his 13-year-old house help in Rivers State

    Rivers State Police Command has arrested a 42-year-old man simply identified as Kolawale for allegedly defiling his 13-year-old female house help in Ejekwu Street, Eneka in Obio/Akpor Local Government Area of the state.

     

    The suspect, a father of three, was arrested by the human rights desk of the state police on Monday, October 16, 2023, following a complaint by concerned neighbours whom the teenage girl ran to after the former allegedly defiled her. 

     

    A source who pleaded anonymity said that Kolawale is a rig worker and has been sleeping with the girl whenever he was in town unknown to his wife.

     

    The man is married with three children and the girl has been staying with them. He is a rig worker and not usually around. He comes on break and goes back to work where he spends weeks,” the source told the punch. 

     

    “Whenever he is in town and when his wife is not around, he usually has his way with his house help who is 13 years old. The girl has been staying with them for some months

     

    “I think the girl has been tired of the whole thing but didn’t know how to escape or avoid him. So, this time around, when he returned from work, he wanted to sleep with her, but the girl refused

     

    “She resisted him, ran out of the compound and informed some residents of what she has been going through. So the women amongst them took her in for check and confirmed that there had been penetration in her private part.”

     

    The source said the women were shocked at the level of damage following regular penetration of the minor and peeved by the discovery, they took the girl to the state Ministry of Justice where they lodged a formal complaint.

     

    “So, it was actually the Ministry of Justice that now reported to the human rights desk at the police headquarters at Moscow Road. After receiving the report, the police have been monitoring the man since he was not steady

     

    “On receiving information that he came back on Sunday, they (police) moved in and arrested him on Monday morning,” the source disclosed.

     

    It was also gathered that the result of a medical examination conducted on the teenage girl showed that her private part was penetrated.

     

    Spokesperson for the state police command, SP Grace Iringe-Koko, who confirmed the arrest of the suspect said investigation was ongoing.

     

    “Yes, I can confirm the incident. The suspect has been arrested and in our custody. Investigation is ongoing.” the PPRO stated. 

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  • NSCDC arrests suspected kidnapper, fake doctor in Bauchi

    The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) has arrested a suspected kidnapper, Muhammad Sani Rinji in Bauchi State.

    The NSCDC Commandant in the state, Ilelaboye W. Oyejide, who briefed journalists at the command headquarters in Bauchi on Wednesday, said the operatives also arrested a fake medical doctor simply identified as Usman Sadique Yelwa.

    He said: “The corps intensified efforts in its patrol and surveillance and luck run out of one the suspected kidnappers by name Muhammad Sani Rinji on 15/10/2023.”

    “The suspect was arrested by our officers working with Nasarawa State Command in Lafia based on credible intelligence information.

    “During interrogation, the suspect agreed to all the allegations that they were responsible for the series of Kidnapping and armed robbery activities in Toro LGA and beyond. He gave a vivid account of his involvement in the kidnapping business.

    “Also, a fake medical doctor by name Usman Sadique Yelwa working with the State Government General Hospital, Misau, was arrested based on credible intelligence and he is helping the corps in its investigation.

    “The two suspects have been charged to court for the established offences for prosecution accordingly.”

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  • Gov. Zulum approves construction of 1,000 houses for displaced communities in Banki

    Gov. Babagana Zulum of Borno has approved the construction of 1,000 houses for displaced communities at Darajamal and Mayanti communities in the Bama Local Government Area of the state.

    Mr Zulum, who gave the approval on Wednesday during an assessment visit to Bani, said infrastructure should be completed within four months.

    “We are here to implement a policy statement I made about one year ago to resettle some of our IDPs, particularly in Bama and Banki.

    “These are two locations in Borno that have a large number of IDPs. For this, we want to construct 500 houses each here in Darajamal and Mayanti, this should be the first phase of the construction exercise,” Zulum said.

    He explained that in addition to the construction of the houses, the government would provide social infrastructure, including primary school, health centre and water facilities, among other basic needs of the community.

    Mr Zulum also announced that resettlement packages, including food and non-food items and cash, would be distributed to the returnees to support their means of livelihood.

    The governor assured that the government would work towards resettling displaced persons currently taking refuge in Bama.

    He noted that the return of people at Banki junction would go a long way in reviving commercial activities and providing job opportunities to thousands of residents.

    According to him, the government will work with the military to secure communities and enhance civic authority so that the people can pick up the pieces of their lives.

    The agrarian communities were displaced by Boko Haram insurgents in 2014, forcing most of the residents to take refuge in Bama and Banki towns.

    (NAN)

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  • NYC to house migrant families with kids in ‘semi-congregate’ settings despite right-to-shelter rules

    Mayor Eric Adams announced Monday that his administration will soon start housing migrant families with children in a “semi-congregate” facility in Brooklyn — a move that appears at odds with city and state shelter rules.

    Under the city’s decades-old right-to-shelter mandate, children should not be housed in congregate, barrack-style settings. The prohibition is based on state rules stipulating that homeless kids should only be housed in family-style shelters with separate rooms that allow for privacy, a restriction advocates say protects minors from sexual abuse and other dangers.

    Despite those regulations, Adams’ office said in a statement Monday afternoon that his administration will start placing migrant families with kids in a “semi-congregate” shelter it’s building at Floyd Bennett Field, a defunct U.S. military airstrip near Jamaica Bay in southern Brooklyn. The site, once up and running in a few weeks, is expected to have capacity for about 500 asylum-seeking families with kids, according to City Hall’s statement. The statement also said that “privacy dividers with locks will be installed” to separate households from each other.

    Adams also announced that his administration will start limiting city shelter stays for migrant families with kids to 60 consecutive days, confirming an exclusive Daily News report from Friday revealing that a new rule was imminent. According to Adams’ office, families with kids will be provided with “intensified casework services” during those 60 days with an aim of helping them move out of the city’s care and find their own housing.

    The 60-day restriction, which took effect Monday, builds on a similar policy that limits consecutive shelter stays for single adult migrants to 30 days.

    If a single adult migrant can’t secure their own housing in that time, they can return to the city’s Roosevelt Hotel asylum seeker arrival center to reapply for shelter. An Adams spokesman said the same reapplication process will be available to families with kids.

    The new restrictions related to kids come as the Adams administration continues to house more than 64,100 migrants in city shelters and emergency housing facilities, according to City Hall data. They also come as lawyers for the mayor continue to argue in court that the administration should get permission to suspend right to shelter, which requires the city to provide shelter to anyone who requests it.

    The Legal Aid Society and the Coalition for the Homeless, which are fighting the administration’s push to roll back right to shelter in court, said the Floyd Bennett Field plan “raises serious legal questions” and hinted they may take legal action to block it.

    “Private rooms, not open cubicles, are needed to ensure the safety of families with children and to reduce the transmission of infectious disease, among other obvious reasons,” the groups said in a joint statement. “We are still waiting for specifics, but, should this plan contradict the Boston consent decree (which guarantees the legal right to shelter for homeless families with minor children) or relevant laws, we will have no choice but to seek an immediate injunction from the court.”

    Of the new 60-day rule for migrant families with kids, Legal Aid and the Coalition slammed it as being “devoid of any humanity.”

    “This new policy … will disrupt access to education, which has provided much needed stability for our newest neighbors, and also cause chaos for school administrators,” their statement said. “We are also concerned about access to medical care and other vital services.”

    Adams spokesman Charles Lutvak said the right-to-shelter concerns are addressed by the “privacy dividers” the administration is setting up at the Floyd Bennett Field site.

    The Adams administration has placed migrant children in congregate settings before.

    This past May, The News reported that the administration was housing several migrant families with kids in an old NYPD training facility in apparent violation of the rules against sheltering kids in congregate settings.

    At the time, Department of Social Services Commissioner Molly Wasow Park said the gym wasn’t supposed to be a long-term accommodation for anyone, but rather a place where migrants could stay while the city found space in shelters or hotels.

    In a statement released Monday along with the press release on the Floyd Bennett Field plan, Adams said roughly 600 new migrants continue to come to the city every day on average and reiterated that his administration needs immediate help from the federal government to slow the pace of arrivals.

    “With the current surge we’re seeing, a comprehensive, coordinated effort from the federal government to decompress the pressure New York City is under is needed now,” the mayor said.

    ___

    © 2023 New York Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Guinea Insurance, Jaiz Bank Shares Gain As NGX Investors Made N15.2bn

    Trading on the Nigerian Stock closed bullish on Wednesday with market capitalisation closing at N37trn from N36.98trn.

    The upward increase in the shares of Guinea Insurance, Eterna Plc, Unity Bank and Jaiz Bank pushed the All-Share Index 0.43 per cent to 67,353.23 points from the 67,326.12 points recorded on Tuesday.

    Data analysed from the Nigerian Exchange Ltd shows that N15.2bn was added to the market capitalisation.

    The shares of Guinea Insurance rose 9.09 per cent from N0.22 to N0.24 after projecting that it’s gross premium is expected to grow to N2.65bn while its profit will hit N520.37m by the end of the year.

    Eterna Plc shares rose 6.86 per cent from N13.85 per share to N14.8 reflecting a trend it has maintained in the last three days.

    Unity Bank 5.49 per cent from N0.91 to N0.96 per share which led to an uptick of its market capitalisation to N11.2bn.

    Similarly, Jaiz Bank shares rose 5.26 per cent from N1.52 to N1.6 per share, leading to its market capitalisation rising to N55.2bn.

    On the flip side, CWG Plc emerged as the biggest loser closing 10 per cent. Another company RT BRISCOE Plc’s shares also fell 8.77 per cent, Africa Prudential Plc closed 7.14 per cent while FTN Cocoa shares fell 6.29 per cent.

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  • Stefanik’s Distorted U.S. Energy Production Claim

    In her speech nominating Rep. Jim Jordan as House speaker, Rep. Elise Stefanik distorted the facts about U.S. energy production and the reasons for higher gasoline prices and utility bills.

    Stefanik, who is the House Republican Conference chair, made her case for Jordan on Oct. 17, during the first roll call vote for speaker, which ended with Jordan falling well short of the necessary votes to become speaker.

    The New York Republican claimed that Jordan is the right person “”for such a time as this” — a quote from the Book of Esther in the Hebrew Bible. She claimed, among other things, that “American energy production has been crushed by Joe Biden’s radical, failed far left policies, causing seniors, farmers and families to pay more at the pump and struggle with skyrocketing utility bills.”

    In fact, U.S. oil production has increased since Biden took office. Gasoline and utility prices have gone up, too, but experts have told us the reasons have little to do with Biden.

    In 2020, before Biden took office, domestic crude oil production averaged 11.3 million barrels per day in the U.S., according to the Energy Information Administration. In the last 12 months, crude oil production averaged about 12.5 million barrels per day, EIA data through July shows. That’s an increase in oil production of roughly 10.7%.

    And the EIA projects that production will average 12.92 million barrels a day in 2023 and 13.12 million barrels a day in 2024. Both averages would exceed the record set in 2019.

    As for gasoline prices, the national average price of regular gasoline was $2.379 the week of Jan. 18, 2021, and $3.576, as of the week of Oct. 16. That’s an increase of a whopping 50% during Biden’s presidency.

    Likewise, average electricity prices increased from 10.66 cents per kilowatt-hour, or kwh, in 2020 to 13.21 cents per kwh in the third quarter of 2023, according to EIA historical data. That’s an increase of nearly 24%.

    However, the price at the pump depends on the cost of crude oil, which is set on the global market and based largely on worldwide supply and demand, as the EIA explains on its website. Experts have told us that the global supply has struggled to keep pace with the demand after the pandemic-induced economic shutdowns and during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

    Utility prices, too, are determined by the price of “feeder fuels,” which is set on the global marketplace, Mark Wolfe, executive director of the National Energy Assistance Directors Association, told us.

    “President Biden has no more control over retail electric, natural gas, heating oil or gasoline prices than did President Trump,” Wolfe said in an email. “‘Feeder fuels’ such as natural gas and coal to produce electricity and petroleum to produce gasoline are set in [the] marketplace rather than by ‘fiat’ by the White House.”

    The House was scheduled to resume voting on a speaker Oct. 18.

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  • Keep on hating. We ain’t going anywhere

    Keep on hating. We ain?t going anywhere - Kiddwaya tells Nigerians who just love to hate rich people

    Reality TV star, Kiddwaya has asked Nigerians who just love to hate rich people to keep doing so as they are not going anywhere. 

     

    The son of billionaire businessman, Terry Waya, incurred the wrath of some Nigerians today after he shared a video of himself and his dad flying on a private jet.

     

    Responding to the trolls, Kiddwaya wrote;

    ‘’You guys just love to hate rich people. Keep on hating. We ain’t going anywhere. Im going to be in your faces till

    @elonmusk decides to delete this app. Then we move to IG. Then snapchat. LinkedIn sef. You go see my posts for your dreams.”

    Keep on hating. We ain?t going anywhere - Kiddwaya tells Nigerians who just love to hate rich people

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  • FCT Minister Wike debunks reports he’s promoting anti-Islamic policies

    The FCT Minister Nyesom Wike stated on Wednesday that he is not opposed to Islam.

    Wike made this statement on during a courtesy visit with members of the Abuja National Mosque Management Committee, led by its chairman, the Etsu of Nupe, His Royal Highness, Alhaji Yahaya Abubakar.

    The minister also refuted rumours that his administration in Abuja was pushing for legislation that went against Islamic religious principles.

    “Those trying to whip religious sentiment are doing so in order to score some cheap political points.

    “I have no reason to instigate hate speech against any religious groups but to support any that has a genuine cause,” Wike noted.

    Read Also: Wike throws light on why he accepted to work with Tinubu

    He assured that FCT would not hesitate to support the maintenance of the National Mosque, or the National Ecumenical Centre, having been declared as a national monument.

    The minister also called on religious leaders to preach National unity and peaceful coexistence.

    Wike said, “No government will hesitate to support the maintenance of a National Monument, be it for Christians or Muslims.”

    In his remarks, the Etsu Nupe urged the Minister to support the maintenance project of the National Mosque, which he disclosed had been stalled for some time now.

    The cleric pleaded with the Minister to grant the Committee more time to develop plots of land allocated to it by FCTA.

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  • Lagos CP removes DPO for extorting N200,000 from phone dealer

    The Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Idowu Owohunwa, has ordered the immediate removal of the divisional police officer in Meiran for allegedly extorting N200,000 from a phone dealer.

    The state’s police spokesperson, Benjamin Hundeyin, disclosed this on his X account on Wednesday, saying the officers culpable have been identified and are currently on trial.

    “CP Idowu Owohunwa has ordered the immediate removal of DPO Meiran for leadership dereliction and supervisory ineptitude,” said Mr Hundeyin.

    “Meanwhile, all the officers involved have been identified and are currently at the Command headquarters where their orderly room trial has commenced,” he added.

    Mr Hundeyin had vowed that the police would take necessary action after an engineer, Ibrahim Saliu, accused some officers attached to the Meiran Police Station of extorting him of N200,000 on Saturday.

    Mr Saliu said the officers detained him and his brother, Olaiya Murtala, for not providing an identity card or the receipts for the iPhones found with his brother.

    The engineer said he said he had sent his brother to his shop with six iPhones, but during a stop-and-search, the police officers intercepted him and took him to the police station.

    “When I got there, the DPO asked me to produce my ID and the receipts for the phones. I told him I didn’t have them. I told him I sell phones, but he didn’t believe me. I then told him that though I didn’t have all the receipts, I could take them to my shop, which was close by, but they still refused.

    “The DPO took the iPhones, removed the warranty stickers on them, and declared that my brother and I are thieves and armed robbers.

    “The next thing I heard was the DPO giving them an order to detain us and that we would be locked up for stealing and armed robbery. We were surprised that we started begging,” he stated.

    He explained that the DPO later asked them to pay N500,000 to secure their freedom, adding that they begged him until they settled for N200,000, which the police officers insisted must be paid in cash.

    He also revealed that one of the police officers led him to a nearby PoS operator, where he withdrew N182,000 in addition to the N20,000 he had on him and gave the officers before they were released.

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  • 68% of US troops are obese or overweight, study finds

    A new report shows that almost 70% of U.S. military troops are overweight or obese, prompting long-term concerns about national security and military readiness.

    According to a new study conducted by the American Security Project, a nonprofit organization based in Washington, 68% of active duty troops in the U.S. military are considered overweight or obese based on the body mass index method of classification determined by a person’s weight and height.

    Based on the findings of the study, the American Security Project warned that obesity threatens to cause challenges in “recruitment, readiness, and retention” for the U.S. military.

    “Rapid and sustained recurrence of obesity across all services, ranks, and positions now poses a dire threat, especially for at-risk populations and those in critical combat roles,” the report stated. “Designing an effective strategy to monitor and tackle obesity within the U.S. military begins by treating it like any other chronic disease.”

    The American Security Project explained that the Department of Defense will need to “significantly improve” research and reporting of service members’ weight in order to “effectively tackle” the current “obesity crisis.” The nonprofit organization suggested that the military can begin by implementing health policies based on evidence rather than “military appearance regulations.”

    READ MORE: 25% of U.S. soldiers became obese during Covid, study finds

    The American Security Project noted that obesity is one of the main causes of disqualification for military applicants, leads to injuries for active service members, and can result in medical discharges. The study showed that the number of “obese” troops has increased from 10.4% to 21.6% over the past decade.

    According to Stars and Stripes, the Pentagon recently indicated that less than 25% of Americans between the ages of 17 and 24 are academically and physically qualified for service in the military, resulting in a recruiting shortage.

    The American Security Project explained, “Obesity poses a complex challenge to recruitment, readiness, and retention within the U.S. armed forces.”

    Recommendations by the American Security Project to address the issue of obesity include reviewing regulations pertaining to body composition, removing Defense Department policies that give military commanders the ability to exempt obese troops from medical interventions, conducting additional obesity reports, and referring obese service members to physicians for proper treatment.

    “By adequately screening for obesity, military services can develop proactive measures to address obesity,” the report stated. “Early screenings for obesity and related health conditions, such as prediabetes and high cholesterol, are associated with sustained weight loss, better health outcomes and a lower cost burden on healthcare systems.”

    The American Security Project’s recent report also noted that the “social stigma” often associated with people struggling with obesity and other weight issues needs to be addressed.

    “Obesity is a chronic disease, not a lapse in personal discipline,” the report said. “Despite this reality, the enduring stigma against overweight soldiers continues to result in punitive measures in lieu of medical treatment.”

    Moving forward, The American Security Project emphasized the importance of the military “decisively and cohesively” addressing the issue of obesity by consistently upholding “strong body composition standards” and by updating health policies with “evidence-based recommendations.”

    The American Security Project added, “Identifying, diagnosing, and treating obesity within soldiers at the front lines of our national defense may ultimately determine the long-term survival of the force. It may not be easy, but it is long overdue.”



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