Author: Lara Olaniyi

  • Buhari arrives S/Africa for State Visit, Bi-National Commission meeting

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday arrived Pretoria, South Africa, for a state visit and 9th meeting of the Bi-National Commission.

    Malam Garba Shehu, the President’s spokesman, who confirmed this development in a statement in Abuja on Thursday morning, said the 9th meeting of the commission would for the first time witness participation of the two Heads of State after an elevation.

    The Bi-National Commission meeting was elevated to the level of Presidents’ participation, following the strategic position of the two economies in Africa and the need for stronger relations.

    Shehu disclosed that Buhari and his host, President Cyril Ramophosa, would co-chair the meeting on Thursday.

    The President’s plane arrived in the South African Air force Base, Waterkloof, at 9.10 p. m, and he was received by the Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Dr Naledi Pandor and Minister of Social Development, Ms Lindiwe Zulu.

    Before the meeting which would be held at the Union Building, both Presidents would discuss issues of mutual interests relating to the welfare of citizens, and expanding economic and cultural ties.

    Shehu said the visit would enable more harmonious relations between the two largest economies in Africa, and open up more frontiers of opportunities for prosperity by encouraging more exchange and investments, especially for Nigerians.

    The presidential aide said 32 agreements and Memoranda Of Understanding (MoU) had been signed at the Bi-National Commission, which would be mutually beneficial to both nations.

    He added that the meeting would provide an opportunity to review progress.

    “President Buhari is on a state visit to South Africa. While in South Africa, the two leaders will review a number of issues in our Bi-National Commission, including issues that affect citizens,’’ he said.

    Buhari would also hold an interactive meeting with Nigerians in South Africa before returning to Abuja.

  • Congo: 20 dead in collapsed gold mine

    At least 20 people were killed Thursday when an unlicensed gold mine collapsed in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

    According to local media, the accident occurred in the town of Kampene in Maniema Province.

    Stephane Kamundala, an authority with a non-governmental organization in the region, said the dead included women and children and three people were seriously injured.

    Kamundala said scores of people are trapped under the rubble and search and rescue work is continuing.

    People have been trespassing into abandoned tunnels and working without security measures in gold, copper and cobalt-rich mines in the DRC.

    In June, 36 people were killed in the collapse of a copper mine in the southeastern Kolwezi region.

  • Liverpool Fined Or Fielding Ineligible Player

    Liverpool were fined 200,000 pounds for fielding an ineligible player in their League Cup third-round victory over MK Dons last week.

    The Reds, however, avoided expulsion from the competition, the Football League (EFL) said on Wednesday.

    Spaniard Pedro Chirivella, who was a second-half substitute in the 2-0 win, did not have international clearance, following the expiry of his loan agreement last season with Spanish club Extremadura, the EFL said.

    Half the fine will be suspended until the end of the 2020/21 season and the club will be liable for the suspended amount if they field an ineligible player in the competition again before the end of the next season.

  • Turkish inflation sees steep decline in September

    Turkey’s annualised inflation rate on Thursday fell sharply to 9.26 per cent in September from 15 per cent in August, official data revealed.

    According to the Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat), inflation went down to single digits for the first time in two years.

    TurkStat said that month-on-month inflation stood at just below one per cent in September as food prices weakened.

    Turkish inflation topped 25 per cent in Oct. 2018, due to a steep devaluation of the lira currency.

    According to Seyfettin Gursel, Director, Bahcesehir University Centre for Economic and Social Research (BETAM), the recovery will be short-lived.

    Gursel said that a decline in inflation was already expected for September since the effects of 2018 major spike had faded, estimating a year-end inflation rate at 12.5 per cent.

    The Minister of Finance, Berat Albayrak, also noted that government expected the inflation to reduce to 12 per cent by end of 2019.

    “The government’s aim is to bring inflation down to below 9 per cent in 2020.

    He also set a five per cent economic growth target for 2020.

    “Both goals are too ambitious to come true.

    “The Turkish Central Bank will come under increased pressure from President Recep Erdogan to cut interest rates further,“ Gursel said

    Since July, the central bank aggressively cut its benchmark interest rate by 7.5 per cent to 16.50 per cent.

    According to Erdogan, lower rates will bring lower inflation as opposed to traditional beliefs in how the market operates.

    “The main test for the government will be if they can rejuvenate investor confidence in 2020, citing low investments, high unemployment, political and security risks, mainly due to lingering civil war in Syria,“ Gursel said.

  • New orders fuel Kenya’s private sector activity in Sept–PMI

    Kenya’s private sector activity grew for the fifth straight month in September, boosted by an increase in new orders for businesses, a survey showed on Thursday.

    The Markit Stanbic Bank Kenya Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for manufacturing and services rose to 54.1 in September from 52.9 in the previous month. Any reading above 50 indicates growth.

    “Private sector activity is showing signs of momentum, although panelists continue to highlight cash flow issues that they face,” Jibran Qureishi, regional economist for East Africa at Stanbic Bank, said.

    “In addition to the current stock of arrears owed to the private sector, the interest-rate-capping law could also hold back firms from flourishing on a multi-month basis.”

    Last week, lawmakers rejected a finance ministry request to scrap commercial lending rate caps that critics say have led to a credit growth squeeze.

    The rate of new business orders was the strongest in 13 months in September, the survey found, although output among firms grew modestly due to the cash flow concerns.

  • Learn more about nation’s history by visiting museums-Curators

    The National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM) in Lagos has called on students to visit the museums across the country to acquire adequate knowledge about her history and culture.

    The Curator of Lagos Museum, Mrs Omotayo Adeboye, gave the advice while speaking with the Flowerbud News on Thursday in Lagos.

    Adeboye said a visit to the museum would enable children to learn about their past and proffer solutions to both the current and the future problems.

    “I call on parents in company with their children to always visit the museums so that they can appreciate their cultural heritage.

    “We usually have art exhibitions that are related to happenings in the society and most of the exhibitions are contained in the children’s school curriculum.

    “Students’ visit to museums will enable them to see, touch and feel  the artifacts, antiquities and monoliths they had read about in schools.

    “Experiences garnered from such visits by the students will stick to their memories.

    “Adults and children learn more and better about their cultural heritage when they visit the museum which is a repository of their historical past,’’ she said.

    She advised that youths and adults were free to visit the museum.

    Adeboye said that the museum was currently running a programme tagged: “See, Touch and Feel”, which allows visitors to feel its artifacts.

    She said that the programme would encourage the visitors the opportunities to appreciate the importance of its collections for the period it would last.

    She said this was because visitors were not usually allowed to touch most of the materials to guide against being damaged and theft.

    She said that the commission had visited some schools with contemporary art works to complement what most of the students had been taught by their teachers.

  • C-G National Park calls for reversal of ugly trend of climate change

    Abuja, Oct.3, 2019 Alhaji Ibrahim Goni, the Conservator General, National Park Service (NPK) has called for the reversal of the ugly trend of climate change and climate action to save the nation from impending danger.
    Goni made the call on Wednesday at the Park headquarters while receiving a donation of 112 seedlings from two youth corps members serving with the Department of Agric and Rural Development Secretariat of the FCTA.
    The donors are Abdullahi Suleiman Gbale and Izere Iyamide Martha.
    According to Goni, `the Service appreciates the gesture and the timing of the donation, it is clearly in line with the vision of the present Government on climate change mitigation.
    “Nigeria’s seven National Parks cover about three per cent of the country’s total land area and this to me, is grossly inadequate for a country of over 200 million people.
    “I want to therefore, urge all of us to support the vision of the President to keep and protect the environment for the sustainability of the present and yet unborn generations’’.
    The C-G said that awareness creation of the ugly trend of climate change cannot be overemphasized and that therefore, Nigerians must join the world in the race of mitigating the effects of climate change.
    “The negative impacts of climate change can be seen in the recent flooding across the various States of the Federation. “Even in the upsurge of diseases in plants and animals, degradation of land in and around the Parks, desertification in the north, siltation of Lake Chad, etc.
    “It is my belief that this effort of donation of these seedlings is an attempt in the right direction to reverse the ugly trend of climate change and climate action’’.
    He commended the corpers who have keyed into the vision of biodiversity preservation as part of their contribution towards community development in the service of their fatherland.
    He also assured them that the seedlings will be shared to both primary and secondary schools in Abuja environs as part of the service’s conservation education programme.
    Miss Martha Iyamide Izere, the leader of the team, in her remarks stated that their passion for a healthy environment began during their Industrial Training Attachment in Old Oyo National Park, Oyo in 2017.
    She said that having met her colleague again during their service year, they decided to push their passion a step further by making the environment a better place for all to live in.
    While recounting some of the debilitating effects of climate change, Izere noted that this donation is a service to humanity in an attempt to support the mitigation of effects of climate change and enhance development in our contemporary society.
    She also used the occasion to solicit assistance from the National Park Service to support them in this very noble course.
    The seedlings donated by the corps members include:
    Neem: Azadirachta indica (27)
    Gmelina: Gmelina arborea (27)
    Guava: Psidium guajava (27)
    Teak: Tectona grandis (27)
    Orange: Citrus aurantium (2)
    Mango: Mangifera indica (2)
  • Prince William, Kate Middleton to visit Pakistan

    The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have said they are excited to visit Pakistan to meet its people and to witness and experience its beautiful culture, although the Duke of Cambridge is wary of spicy food, the Duchess likes spicy food.

    Prince William and Kate Middleton were speaking to around 70 selected Pakistanis at the Aga Khan Centre at an exclusive reception hosted for them by His Highness The Aga Khan in association with Pakistan High Commission. The royal couple visited the centre for two hours ahead of their Royal Highnesses’ official visit to Pakistan, which will take place between Monday 14th and Friday 18th October.

    Pakistan’s High Commissioner to the UK Nafees Zakaria and the Aga Khan welcomed the royal couple when they arrived for the visit of the centre. While the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, both 37, mingled with the guests, a Pakistani musician played tabla in the background. The couple were seen going round to the guests and asked them questions about Pakistan and the work they did.

    The Aga Khan, 82, told the guests he was hosting the Royal Couple at the centre to showcase them the contribution Pakistanis are making to the cultural diversity of Britain. Speaking briefly to this correspondent, Prince William said he looked forward to visiting Pakistan as he has heard so many wonderful things about Pakistan.

    The food for the guests was cooked by Saliha Mahmood Ahmed, the MasterCheff 2017 winner. She told Geo News that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge asked her about Pakistani food and sought tips on what to eat.

    Saliha said, “They asked me about Pakistani culture, they wanted to know about Pakistani food. They are much excited to visit Pakistan. I recommended that they should eat traditional food of Pakistan. I suggested them not to worry about putting on fats, you can exercise later on and burn the fats!”.

    Saliha said the Duchess likes spicy food and the Duke is wary of it but both looked forward to enjoying the local cuisine. Writer and broadcaster Sarfraz Manzoor quoted the Duke as saying that he likes medium spice but “I don’t think it exists in Pakistan”.

    Producer and composer of Naughty Boy (Shahed Khan) said the royal couple asked him how bansri and tabla are played and that they looked forward to enjoying Pakistani music during their visit.

    Lord Zameer Choudrey said he welcomed the Royal couple. Banker Arif M Ali said the couple asked him how he helped Pakistan. “They were eager to know more about my work for Pakistan and wanted to know in what way I helped Pakistan’s economy.”

    Mahmood H Ahmed of Agha Khan Foundation said that the event was organised to showcase modern Pakistani culture and the royal couple were able to meet a range of people from Pakistan, including community leaders, those involved in British and Pakistani business, and key figures within the diaspora community, including musicians, chefs and artists.

    He said the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) has been working in Pakistan for over a century to improve the quality of life, promote pluralism, and enhance civil society.

    High Commissioner Nafees Zakari said, “The Royal couple is much excited to visit Pakistan. I told them that the whole Pakistan awaits them with excitement. I think this will be a great visit.

    This visit will boost relations between the two countries and will project the real soft image of Pakistan before the world. The visit will draw attention of many people towards Pakistan.”

    Zakaria said the people of Pakistan still cherish and fondly recall” the visits by the Queen and described the upcoming trip as a “reflection of the importance the United Kingdom attaches to its relations with Pakistan. The two countries enjoy historical links which both sides wish to strengthen further”.

    The prominent Pakistanis who attended the reception included artist Mehtab Hussain, Shahed Karim, Shaista Gohar, Arif Rangoonwala, Adil Ray, Shazia Mirza, Sarfraz Manzoor and many others.

  • President Buhari’s remarks at State Banquet in Pretoria

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday in Pretoria, South Africa, said authorities should be more pro-active in detecting early signals of violence between competitors, while migrants and companies should adhere to the local laws of host countries.

    Malam Garba Shehu, the President’s spokesman in a statement in Abuja on Thursday, said the Nigerian leader stated this when he responded to questions during a news conference at the Union Building, alongside his host, President Cyril Ramaphosa.

    He called for more tolerance, vigilance and heightened security to ensure safety of citizens, noting ”competition heralded by globalisation, especially with ease in migration, will only get more intense for businesses”.

    “Police must be on alert not to allow violence to escalate,’’ he said.

    President Buhari said the business world had turned out more dynamic over the years, with foreigners competing with locals in businesses that were initially considered low.

    He said the panacea would only be for security agencies to show more interest in market operations, players and likely areas of tensions.

    The President likened the situation of Nigerians in South Africa to Ghana where competition at low levels of the economy breeds intense competition, noting that it would keep growing with population explosion.

    He told Nigerians living in various parts of the world, especially in South Africa, to adhere to the laws of the country they reside, and ensure compliance with market laws.

    “Like it is said, ‘when you are in Rome behave like the Romans’. Always be law abiding,’’ he said.

    Earlier in his remark, the President condemned attacks on Nigerians and the burning of their properties in South Africa, describing it as “unacceptable’’.

    He also assured the South African government that their citizens and businesses in Nigeria would always be protected from harm.

    He also condemned the reprisal attacks in Nigeria.

    “In my discussions with President Ramaphosa and the Bi-National Commission meeting, we reviewed wide range of issues at national, regional, continental and global levels,’’ he added.

    He said some of the issues were on trade, investment, mining, security, police affairs and environment.

    “Our two countries have also agreed to unequivocally address the challenges in our relations including the recent people to people challenges that saw attacks against foreign nationals, including Nigerians, and their properties, which we strongly condemned,” he disclosed.

    In his remarks, President Ramaphosa said the attacks on foreigners in South Africa, including Nigerians, were regrettable, assuring that his government would work hard to see an end to such attacks.

    He equally condemned reprisal attacks in Nigeria.

    According to him, President Buhari is the first president to embark on a state visit in South Africa since they came into power.

    “We will work together to promote cohesion and best values. What happened did not reflect our values.

    “We both condemn the attacks and the reprisal in strongest terms. We will set up mechanisms for early signals,’’ he said.

    Ramaphosa said his country would also create a more enabling environment for Nigerian businesses to thrive in South Africa, acknowledging that more South African companies operate in Nigeria.

    He, however, observed that Nigerians were mostly in Small and Medium Scale sectors in his country.

    “We have large corporations operating in Nigeria while you have small and medium enterprises from Nigeria here in South Africa,” he said.

    He promised to deepen the reforms in his country to open the space for more Nigerian business to “address the imbalance”.

    “The rule of law must be obeyed by all citizens. Nigerians in South Africa must obey the rule of law, while South Africans in Nigeria must obey the rule of law,’’ he added.

    Nigerian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama and South African Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Dr Naledi Pandor, signed agreements on the minutes of the 9th session of Bi-National Commission.