Tag: World

  • NNPCL recovering full cost on imported products, no subsidy – Kyari

    Mele Kyari

    The Group Chief Executive of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), Melee Kyari, said on Monday the Federal Government was no longer paying subsidy on Petroleum Motor Spirit (PMS), popularly known as petrol.

    Kyari disclosed this to State House Correspondents in Abuja.

    He said the federal government was no longer paying subsidy to any person or group for bringing petroleum products to the country contrary to claims on social media.

    The NNPCL chief stressed that the company was recovering its full cost from products imported to the country.

    He said: “No subsidy whatsoever. We are recovering our full cost from the products that we import. We sell to the market.

    “We understand why marketers are unable to import. We hope that they begin to do so very quickly and these are some of the interventions the government is making. There is no subsidy.”

    Kyari pointed out that the pockets of low queues witnessed in some states recently were due to bad roads that had made transporters divert the product to other routes.

    He also claimed that some of the queues were caused by the customers’ preference for filling stations that offered low prices.

    He added: “We have seen in very few states pockets of very low queues. This is not unconnected with the road situation and that’s why we are seeing some blockades on our roads.

    “Moving the products from the southern depots into the northern part of the country takes them much longer time now than it used to be.

    “They have to re-route their trucks around many locations for them to be able to reach their destinations and that created delays and some supply gaps. But, that has been filled and we do not see any such problems again.

    “Secondly, because of the full deregulation that we have in this sector, marketers are now competing amongst themselves.

    “You must have noticed that some fuel stations will reduce their prices by N2 or N3. So customers will naturally run to the places where you have that reduction in prices and probably create panic.

    “This is because those who don’t know why they are doing it will think that there’s something happening or that there’s an ominous sign of scarcity.”

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  • ‘Rust’ movie producers ordered to turn over documents

    A New Mexico judge on Friday ordered “Rust” movie producers to turn over records demanded by a special prosecutor who is seeking accountability in the fatal accidental shooting of the film’s cinematographer by actor Alec Baldwin.

    The movie’s producers have been trying to quash a subpoena requesting documents, including its contracts with Baldwin, who was one of the low-budget film’s producers as well as its star. They also are seeking agreements and memos between the producers and Baldwin’s production company, El Dorado Pictures.

    The special prosecutor wants to learn more about Baldwin’s financial arrangements — and whether he stood to profit if the movie was delivered on time and under budget.

    The special prosecutor, Kari T. Morrissey, is probing why production managers denied a request by weapons handler Hannah Gutierrez Reed for additional days to train Baldwin on the use of his .45 caliber revolver. The gun fired during a rehearsal when Baldwin was practicing a cross-draw maneuver. Firearms experts have said Baldwin likely pulled the trigger, which Baldwin denies doing.

    During Friday’s court hearing in Santa Fe, conducted virtually, Morrissey said the producers’ actions contributed to the deadly October 2021 shooting that claimed the life of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, 42, near Santa Fe.

    Morrissey also alleged that producers have attempted to thwart aspects of the criminal investigation.

    “Rust Productions has either intervened, interfered or obstructed the criminal investigation in this case,” Morrissey told the judge overseeing “Rust” criminal prosecutions. “This entire tragedy occurred because Rust Productions cut corners every chance they could and they hired inexperienced and ill-equipped crew members.”

    The special prosecutor is pursuing felony involuntary manslaughter charges against the armorer Gutierrez Reed, who acknowledges loading the weapon which was given to Baldwin by another crew member that day. The film’s assistant director, David Halls, pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge of negligent use of a deadly weapon earlier this year. Halls has since retired from the film industry.

    Morrissey has not ruled out bringing new counts against Baldwin, who was initially charged with involuntary manslaughter.

    But after Morrissey and her law partner Jason J. Lewis took over the troubled “Rust” prosecution last spring, they dropped the charges against Baldwin, saying new information had come to light that needed to be investigated.

    Baldwin later traveled to Montana to complete filming of the western movie.

    Sources told the Los Angeles Times that prosecutors were told that the gun had been modified before arriving on set, potentially making it easier for it to discharge. However, the weapons provider, Seth Kenney, has stated during questioning that the gun wasn’t altered. Kenney said he had just received the weapon — a Pietta-manufactured replica of a vintage 1880s Colt .45 — from his supplier, before turning it over to film’s prop master.

    Baldwin and other producers have said they are not to blame for the actions of others in the crew.

    “Rust” producers have received scrutiny for their management of the conditions on the set of the western.

    New Mexico’s Occupational Safety and Health Bureau originally filed a complaint, saying “Rust” managers “demonstrated plain indifference” to employee safety and levied a $136,793 fine for safety violations that led to the death of Hutchins.

    Camera crew members walked off the set hours before the fatal shooting, protesting what they called safety concerns.

    After an appeal by the producers, the safety violations fine was reduced to $100,000. New Mexico regulators also agreed to downgrade its citation of the violations from “willful-serious” to “serious.”

    On Friday, the lawyer for Rust Movie Productions suggested the state’s efforts to obtain documents was a back-door way to glean information to potentially bring new criminal charges against the high-profile actor.

    “The state has made it very clear in its statements that it’s still considering bringing charges against Alec Baldwin,” attorney Abigail R. Wolberg said during Friday’s hearing. “I see these subpoenas as nothing more than continuing down that path.”

    Instead, Wolberg laid responsibility for the tragedy on Gutierrez Reed, who Wolberg said was an independent contractor — not an employee of Rust Movie Productions. Wolberg said documents the prosecutor sought were irrelevant to the state’s case against Gutierrez Reed.

    “The real question for the state, for the court, for the jury will be about her conduct and what she agreed to,” Wolberg said.

    “How Alec Baldwin was paid, how much money was spent on set, how much money went into (the film) … doesn’t assist in investigating the defendant’s allegations that she, as a contractor, was requested to do certain things,” Wolberg said.

    Morrissey, the special prosecutor, struck back, alleging the movie producers have tried before to influence the criminal case.

    “Beginning on Oct. 21, 2021, Rust Productions had a lawyer on the scene within 30 to 60 minutes after this fatal shooting, who was running around and talking to witnesses before the police could speak to those witnesses,” Morrissey said.

    “Since then, we have issued numerous subpoenas to Rust Productions and they have either … not responded or responded very, very slowly,” Morrissey said.

    Morrissey told the judge that one of Gutierrez Reed’s defenses was that she recognized Baldwin needed more gun training, but production managers denied her request for additional training days.

    Gutierrez Reed was struggling to fill two jobs on the production — armorer and props assistant. Emails have shown that Gutierrez Reed was scolded for not paying enough attention to her role helping with non-gun-related props.

    Morrissey said producers had a financial incentive to reduce the amount of time that Gutierrez Reed spent on her armorer duties because she was paid a higher rate for that time. She was paid a lower hourly rate for the time spent dealing with other props.

    “We have a situation where Rust Production is doing everything it can to keep costs low so that it can keep profits high,” Morrissey said, adding that because he was one of the films producers, “Mr. Baldwin himself benefits financially from keeping production costs low.”

    Attorneys for Baldwin were not immediately available for comment.

    New Mexico First Judicial District Court Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer ruled the “Rust” producers must turn over the documents that Morrissey requested by Oct. 20 — the eve of the second anniversary of the tragedy.

    Prosecutors have stepped up their case against Gutierrez Reed, who has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter and evidence tampering charges. Morrissey has said Gutierrez Reed was “the most culpable defendant in a case that resulted in the senseless death of another person.”

    In June, special prosecutors accused Gutierrez Reed of drinking and smoking marijuana during off-hours while the western was in production. They have alleged that she probably was hung over on the fatal day when Baldwin’s gun fired during the rehearsal in an old wooden church at Bonanza Creek Ranch. Her attorneys have challenged the allegations, saying there was no proof of drug use.

    ___

    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Iran Responds As Netanyahu Says Israel’s Retaliation For Hamas Attack Will Be Remembered For Decades

    The president of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu vowed Monday that the Israel Defense Force military operation against Hamas group will be remembered for decades to come by them and Israel’s “enemies”.

    Netanyahu reteriated that Israel was at war after Hamas perpetrated Southern Israel, saying the group “slaughtering families in their homes, massacring hundreds of young people at an outdoor festival, kidnapping scores of women, children and elderly, even Holocaust survivors.”

    Netanyahu continued that though the war was forced upon Israel in the most brutal and savage way, Israel will finish the war.

    “Hamas will understand that by attacking us, they have made a mistake of historic proportions. We will exact a price that will be remembered by them and Israel’s other enemies for decades to come.

    “In fighting Hamas, Israel is not only fighting for its own people.
    It is fighting for every country that stands against barbarism.

    “Israel will win this war, and when Israel wins, the entire civilized world wins,” Netanyahu said in a video posted on his X page on Monday.

    Meanwhile, the government of Iran, a long-time critic of Israel, has called all “Muslim countries” to stand with Palestine against Israel.

    Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian on Monday described Israel government as the Zionist regime that has martyred 260 Palestinians, including 40 children and 11 women while detaining 5,000 Palestinians in the West Bank.

    In a tweet by the Iran Foreign Ministry, the minister said “the people of #Gaza and the West Bank need the support of Muslim countries more than ever before.”

    “Amirabdollahian added that at the same time, attacks and military aggression as well as the desecration of al-Aqsa Mosque are continuously on the agenda of the Zionist regime, and the result of these actions by Tel Aviv was the response by the resistance,” the ministry tweeted.

    The war between Israel Military and Hamas of Palestine is intense and is ongoing with death toll crossing 800.

    Hamas claimed responsibility for infiltrating Southern Israel and killing Jews, saying it is response the “desecration of al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem.”

    Source

  • Three killed as school bus mounts sidewalk and drives into pedestrians along pavement (photos/videos)

    Three killed as school bus mounts sidewalk and drives into pedestrians along pavement (photos/videos)

    Three people have been killed and two more are seriously injured after a coach carrying nursing students crashed into a taxi rank.

     

    The crash happened in Cadiz, Spain, at around 3.45pm this afternoon, Oct. 9, close to the city’s El Corte Ingles department store.

     

    The coach was reportedly carrying nursing students to a nearby work placement before the driver crashed into a taxi rank.

     

    It’s believed the driver lost control after crossing a bridge, and the coach ended up on the pavement by the taxi rank on the wrong side of the road.

     

    Three killed as school bus mounts sidewalk and drives into pedestrians along pavement (photos/videos)

     

    Local police have begun an investigation, with reports suggesting the brakes on the vehicle could have failed. 

     

    It is understood the coach driver tested negative for drugs and alcohol.

     

    Around seven or eight pedestrians were reportedly hit by the coach.

     

    A spokesman for a regional government-run emergency response coordination centre said: “Three people have died and another has been injured after a coach mowed down several people in Cadiz.

     

    Three killed as school bus mounts sidewalk and drives into pedestrians along pavement (photos/videos)

     

    “The accident occurred in a road called Avenida de Las Cortes.

     

    “Emergency responders began to receive the first calls around 3.45pm in which people said a coach had run several people over.

     

    “The callers said there were people who had died as well as others who were seriously injured.

     

    “Police and paramedics were sent to the scene along with other emergency responders.

     

    “Health sources have said the number of dead currently stands at three and another person was injured who has been evacuated to the Puerta del Mar Hospital.”

     

    Watch videos below.

     

     

     

     

     



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  • BREAKING: Court Sentences Nigerian Police Officer To Death By Hanging For Killing Lawyer, Bolanle Raheem

    A Lagos High Court on Monday convicted and sentenced a Nigerian police officer, Darambi Vandi to death by hanging for killing a Lagos-based lawyer, Mrs Omobolanle Raheem, on December 25, 2022. 

     

    SaharaReporters had reported how ASP Vandi attached to Ajiwe Police Station, last Christmas Day shot the female legal practitioner while she was returning home from a Christmas service at Ajah Under-bridge.

    It was gathered that after killing Raheem, the trigger-happy policeman fled the scene with his colleagues before another set of policemen later took her remains to a mortuary in the Yaba area of the state.

    Raheem’s death generated a nationwide outrage with Nigerians from all walks of life calling for the prosecution of the killer police officer and justice for the deceased.

    Vandi was first arraigned in January 2023 on one count of murder but he pleaded not guilty.

    Justice Ibironke Harrison of a Lagos High Court sentenced him to death by hanging on Monday.

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  • What the latest funding data says about the humanitarian system

    As humanitarian leaders meet in Geneva for talks aimed at improving emergency aid, a new analysis warns that the system itself is “overwhelmed” and pushed to its limits.

     

    The Global Humanitarian Assistance report, released this week by the UK-based analysts Development Initiatives, is an annual examination of international emergency aid funding. This year’s analysis paints a stark portrait of a system in crisis.

     

    Donor funds rise each year, but they don’t keep pace with costs. The few tools the aid system has to make the money go further or to shrink risks – reforms to make aid more efficient and more locally led, or a focus on prevention, for example – haven’t evolved quickly enough to account for skyrocketing humanitarian needs.

     

    The warnings come as humanitarian leaders converge in Geneva for a week of high-level meetings meant to thrash out policies to improve aid and help countries transition out of crisis.

     

    The annual “humanitarian affairs segment” – staged by the UN’s Economic and Social Affairs Council – brings together aid leaders and political policymakers. Food and famine, the climate crisis, and impacts on women and girls are among the core themes this year.

     

    “The humanitarian system remains under huge amounts of strain,” Ramesh Rajasingham, director for coordination at the UN’s humanitarian aid coordination arm, OCHA, told the council on Wednesday. 

     

    Here are a few takeaways from the latest analysis of humanitarian financing trends:

     

    The funding gulf is wider than ever

    Humanitarian funding continues to rise year on year, at least on the surface. But it’s not enough to keep up with emergency needs supercharged by climate change, conflicts, and economic turbulence.

     

    Humanitarian funding from public and private sources reached a record $47 billion last year, according to the report. But humanitarian needs also spiralled, leaving a $20 billion shortfall for UN-backed humanitarian appeals – also a record.

     

    Needs have grown on such a scale that the gap between what aid costs and what’s available is five times more than it was a decade ago, the report’s authors said.

     

    Longer crises are the norm

    Crises are lasting longer and becoming harder to solve.

     

    Some 83% of people in need live in countries that have had UN-backed emergency response appeals for at least five straight years – and the figure is rising.

     

    The causes of crises are also overlapping. A growing proportion of people who need aid – now up to about three quarters – live in countries facing at least two of the key causes of crises: conflict, climate, or economic fragility.

     

    “Complex, protracted crises are increasingly the norm,” the report’s authors said.

     

    The same few donors fund the vast majority of international aid 

    The international aid sector has not managed to diversify its funding base, leaving aid groups reliant on a shallow pool of donors.

     

    Just three donors – the United States, Germany, and the EU – accounted for nearly two thirds of all international humanitarian assistance from public sources in 2022, the report notes. The US alone represents half of all funding for food emergencies over the last five years.

     

    These big three upped their funding in 2022, as did most of the world’s top 20 donors.

     

    There are long-standing calls to find new sources of funding – demands for governments of growing economies, multilateral banks, or the private sector to step up, for example. But analysts say there are no quick fixes for a sector in need of transformation, not tweaks.

     

    There’s a growing dependence on emergency aid

    Is the triple nexus working? The topline figures, at least, suggest the aid sector’s push to bridge its humanitarian, development, and peacebuilding efforts hasn’t made a dent in the world’s worst crises.

     

    Emergency or humanitarian aid is meant to be short-term by definition, while longer-term assistance is geared towards helping communities withstand crises on their own. But the numbers show that countries in long-term crisis have a growing dependence on humanitarian aid.

     

    They’re also receiving less in development aid that might help them transition out of emergency mode: Development assistance to countries in long-term crisis fell from 50% to 48% over five years as of 2021, while the proportion of humanitarian assistance rose to 41% from an average of 37%.

     

    “The aid system beyond humanitarian assistance is not effectively addressing the wider development needs that could mitigate disaster, increase resilience, and help people lift themselves out of poverty,” the report’s authors said.

     

    Countries in crisis see smaller shares of climate and disaster risk reduction money

    Similarly, climate and preparedness funding that could help communities recover from and withstand shocks is only trickling down to countries that need it most.

     

    People in climate-vulnerable countries also facing a protracted crisis received $1 per person from multilateral climate funds – about a fifth of what went to vulnerable countries with no long-term humanitarian response.

     

    The largest chunks of disaster risk reduction (DRR) funding, meanwhile, aren’t always going to countries facing the highest level of risk.

     

    Six of the 10 countries at the top of the disaster risk scale actually saw reductions in the amount of aid earmarked for DRR.

     

    “The overall picture is of small volumes of climate finance and DRR to countries experiencing crisis,” the report’s authors said.

     

    Edited by Andrew Gully.

    Source

  • ‘Our laws cannot be a replica of yours,’ Wike faults EU’s report on 2023 elections

    The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, on Monday disagreed with the European Union (EU) on its report about the last general election in the country.

    The 27-member bloc Election Observation Mission (EU EOM) in a report released in June said the country’s general election held between February 25 and March 18 lacked transparency.

    It also recommended legal and operational reforms in the electoral process in order to enhance transparency, inclusiveness, and accountability in the system.

    Wike, who spoke when the EU Ambassador to Nigeria, Samuela Isopi, visited him in his Abuja office, however, said the report did not give the true position of the elections.

    The former Rivers State governor urged the EU and other international organisations to respect the country’s laws.

    He said: “I sincerely do not agree with the European Union on their stance about the past election in Nigeria. I do solemnly take exceptions to their stance.

    “You see, we thought there was no need for you to interfere in Nigeria but rather to observe and make recommendations. And your interference came when there were electoral tribunals going on. It is not acceptable.

    “In fact, I was surprised like in Rivers State. I ask, ‘How many of you were in Rivers State to visit the 6, 886 or thereabouts number of polling units?’ Sometimes, you send one or two persons.

    “So, if you have seen some infractions in 20 polling units, is that enough to make a general conclusion? And you said, there in Rivers State that they did not allow the opposition to campaign which is totally not correct.

    “Our laws cannot be a replica of yours.”

    In his remark, the EU envoy said the report was produced by independent observers picked by the bloc.

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  • Stolen mail and physical assaults: Postal workers in Compton decry violence on the job

    Bee Lee did not recognize the man who followed him as he delivered mail in Compton earlier this year.

    Lee, a longtime letter carrier for the U.S. Postal Service, was wary but “had a job to do” and kept walking his route.

    When Lee stopped to get a drink from his truck, the man punched him in the jaw — so hard that he blacked out — and ran away.

    Lee, 62, of Torrance, has struggled with his memory since the March assault, saying his brain feels “like it’s shut down.” He retired — earlier than he wanted to — after three decades of carrying mail for the Postal Service.

    Violent attacks, such as the one that cut Lee’s career short, have become more common in Southern California and beyond since the start of the pandemic, according to the National Association of Letter Carriers, the union representing Postal Service carriers.

    Dozens of postal workers this week rallied outside a Compton post office on Santa Fe Avenue, decrying the robberies, assaults and intimidation they face on the job.

    The signs they carried read: “Enough is Enough — Protect Our Letter Carriers.”

    Brian Renfroe, president of the postal workers’ union, said the violence is perplexing because letter carriers have been able to walk down “the meanest streets of the country without a problem” for the nearly 250 years since the Postal Service formed.

    “Nobody messed with us,” Renfroe said. “Unfortunately, that is no longer the case.”

    Since 2020, there have been more than 2,000 violent attacks on letter carriers represented by the NALC, which has more than 30,000 members in California, union leaders said this week.

    In the first eight months of 2023, there were 20 robberies involving letter carriers in Lakewood alone, said Eli Torres, an NALC branch vice president.

    Natashi Garvins, a USPS spokeswoman, said the Postal Service and its law enforcement arm, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, recognize the increasingly challenging environment and have partnered with local and federal authorities to protect the carriers and the mail they are delivering.

    “We will continue to adapt to evolving security threats and implement expanded measures to safeguard our employees and preserve the security of the mail that our customers expect and deserve,” Garvins said.

    “We have been — and will continue to — implement an engaged, robust nationwide initiative to harden blue collection boxes, enhance collection box key and lock technology and institute dual authentication for change of address protocols.”

    Union leaders say recent attacks in Compton have been among the most violent in California.

    Last year, a Compton letter carrier was pistol-whipped in the head while making a delivery.

    And in September, another Compton carrier — a colleague of Lee’s — had a gun pulled on him while delivering mail.

    That carrier, who wished to remain anonymous out of fear for his safety on his route, had just dropped off some mail at a residence when a man started yelling at him and cussing him out.

    The resident was furious that the mail banged during a delivery, the letter carrier said.

    The carrier said he did not report the verbal assault to his bosses because he worried residents would know it was him who snitched. He returned to the street two days later — and the resident who had yelled aimed a gun at his face.

    “I’m thinking, ‘Dude, this is it for me,’” he told the Los Angeles Times.

    The carrier still walks his route, but he avoids the man’s street, he said.

    “This problem is growing,” Renfroe, the union president, said in a speech to workers at the Compton rally this week. Targeted armed robberies, assaults and shootings, he said, have become “part of our job.”

    Renfroe called for the federal government to help. An estimated 14% of crimes against letter carriers have been federally prosecuted and resulted in an arrest, he said.

    “You know what that tells me?” he asked. “That 86% of the people that do this get away with it. That has to change.”

    Keisha Lewis, a union representative who oversees carriers in Nevada, California, Hawaii and Guam, said she receives two to three emails every week about a letter carrier being robbed or attacked — something that was, until recently, unthinkable.

    The most effective deterrent, she said, will always be customers speaking up and telling authorities when they see something.

    Sharon Whitaker rolled up to the rally late — in her USPS truck, laying on the horn.

    Whitaker, a 63-year-old letter carrier and union steward who grew up in Compton, said the job feels a lot more dangerous these days. She prays every day before taking off on her route.

    “I ask God to bring me back home safe,” Whitaker said. “But every time a car comes down the street I’m ducking. Because you never know what will happen.”

    Ever since a shooting last September near South Park in Compton that left two men dead and a woman injured, Whitaker won’t park her mail truck in the area while she walks her route.

    Customers called the day after the shooting, warning her not to come out.

    Whitaker said she has had her safety threatened numerous times during her nearly four decades working for the Postal Service.

    While delivering mail in Compton early one morning in 1991, a gunfight broke out. Her shirt and shoes were grazed as she ran for safety to a nearby home, banging on the door until someone let her in.

    “I was so afraid,” Whitaker told The Times. “So afraid.”

    Once, a man put a gun to her head during a delivery at an automotive store near Rosecrans Avenue, she said. One of her customers rushed out to scare the man away.

    Whitaker reported the incident, and her bosses told her she could head back to the post office if she did not want to finish the route that day.

    “But I did (finish) because I knew customers were waiting on me,” she said. “I had their paychecks. I had all they needed to survive.”

    Despite the scary incidents, Whitaker described her job as “the best in the world” — one that makes her long days well worth it.

    Whitaker wakes up at 4 a.m. each day, caring for her 84-year-old mother and for her 30-year-old son, who has congestive heart failure and needs assistance. By 8 a.m., she’s out the door, headed first to McDonald’s for a caramel frappe and then to the post office.

    She usually starts her route by noon.

    Some customers have become like family — offering her iced drinks when it’s hot outside and homemade sweet potato pie around Thanksgiving.

    Whitaker was inspired to become a postal worker by her older sister, Robin Baker, one of the first Black women to work at the post office in Lakewood.

    Whitaker started in 1985, walking Route 6 on central Compton Boulevard. There was no automation back then, so Whitaker sometimes came to work around 5 or 6 a.m. to manually sort the mail.

    Carrying cash from grandparents, paychecks, love letters, mail carriers used to be greeted like celebrities when walking down the street. Now, what they carry makes them a target for robbery — which saddens Whitaker.

    “The world is getting worse,” she said.

    Most of the people along her residential route are seniors, so she understands if they can’t physically step in if someone tries to harm her. But keeping an eye on the streets and on letter carriers goes a long way toward making the job safer, she said.

    One customer who is “always looking out” for Whitaker is 93-year-old Veola Baker.

    Baker, who has the same name as Whitaker’s grandmother, makes the letter carrier feel less scared and not so alone while she’s out there delivering mail.

    As she was discussing the uptick in violence before the rally, Whitaker’s phone rang.

    It was Baker calling to check on her.

    ___

    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • We Are Not Issuing Power of Attorney To Owners Of Buildings Marked For Demolition -Abia Govt

    Alex-Otti-Abia-LP-Candidate

    The Abia State Government has denied issuing Power of Attorney Form to residents whose structures were marked for compensation and consequent demolition in the first phase of the Ossa- Okpara Square Road Project.

    In a statement made available to THE WHISTLER, the Commissioner for Information and Culture, Prince Okey Kanu said the state government has nothing to do with the issuance of such Power of Attorney.

    He described as totally misleading and a huge scam for the name of the Commissioner of Works to be associated with the issuance of such a phony Power of Attorney.

    Kanu maintained that the state government has paid compensation to all those affected who submitted their accounts before the demolition exercise commenced.

    According to him, the Abia state Government views with suspicion, the misleading act by Messers Nnaji & Co that is capable of defrauding those concerned of their hard earned compensation and called on residents especially those living along the Ossa- Okpara Square and Abia Tower- Onuimo axis to beware of the firm and its fraudulent antics .

    He added that security agencies have been briefed to investigate and get to the root of the matter.

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  • ‘I’m still around and well,’ Gowon dismisses rumour of his death

    The former Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon, has dismissed rumours of his death.

    A rumour on the elder statesman’s death emerged on Monday evening.

    The former Nigerian leader dismissed the rumour in a terse statement issued on Monday night by his personal aide, Adeleye Ajayi.

    The statement read: He is still around and well.

    “General Gowon is not in a hurry to go anywhere.”

    The Social Democratic Party (SDP) governorship candidate in Delta State, Kenneth Gbagi, also dismissed the rumour of Gowon’s death.

    In a statement issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Orusi Kenneth, the former minister of state for education, described the rumour as the handiwork of mischief makers.

    He added that Gowon is alive and currently in London.

    “I, Gbagi, just spoke with him. I hereby refute the rumour of the death of my friend, Gen. Gowon.

    “He has communicated to Nigerians that he is still much around, hale and hearty. Gowon is alive,” the SDP candidate stated.

    The Plateau State-born former military officer ruled Nigeria from July 29, 1966, to July 29, 1975, when his government was overthrown by the late Gen. Murtala Mohammed-led gang.

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