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The gastric balloon surgery is a weight loss option for people who do not wish to undergo the knife or undergo the weight loss surgery. The best gastric balloon surgery cost in India is quite affordable and this attracts many medical tourists from across the globe to fly down to India for this surgery. India offers world class facilities, amenities, best bariatric surgeons, affordable cost weight loss procedures without any long waiting lists as compared to the western nations. Patients who are either or do not want to undergo any kind of surgery can opt for this weight loss procedure in India.

The intra gastric balloon (IGB), also called as the gastric balloon is a simple non-invasive procedure for treating obesity. This surgery involves placing a balloon inside the stomach to reduce the food intake and hunger which results in weight loss. It is a very simple procedure in which a soft, expandable balloon made of the pliable silicone material is inserted in the smallest, deflated form. The balloon is filled with a sterile saline using a small catheter once it reaches the stomach.

An individual having a body mass index of more than 30 or 40 percent above the ideal weight and do not want to undergo a surgical procedure and looking for a temporary treatment solution to change their eating habits and lifestyle, ready to accept the implant in the stomach and have no heartburn or poorly stabilized diabetes type II are considered to be a good candidate for the gastric ballooning surgery.

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The gastric balloon is a little silicon pouch that is endoscopically introduced through the mouth into the patient’s stomach. This procedure is painless and the balloon is inflated using the saline. After undergoing this procedure, the patient feels fuller due to the presence of the balloon and this decreases the food intake thereby leads to weight loss. The placement time will vary but usually, it takes about 20-30 minutes after which the patient will be monitored by the physician for a short time and can return back home.

The extent of weight loss with gastric balloon surgery is around 15 to 25 kgs and this will depend on the level of adherence to your diet and exercises. On an average, a patient can loose up to 50 percent or more of their excess weight. Recovery post the intra gastric balloon is quicker since you can go back from the hospital the same day or shall stay overnight where you will be kept under observation to see how your body reacts. Most patients tolerate the balloon well and only a small number of them feel nauseous, uneasiness and discomfort for a couple of days. This can be controlled with drugs and you can resume your daily activities within week post the surgery.

The gastric balloon surgery has benefits over the more complex procedures such as:

  • It is a simple small procedure and not a major surgery
  • The balloon is adjustable and has a good life
  • Weight loss is interrelated with a proper diet and exercise and also effective
  • The cost of gastric balloon surgery in India is lower
  • The procedure takes only 10 minutes and has quicker recovery than other major weight loss procedures
  • Relatively less complications when compared to the major procedures

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Cosmetic and Obesity Surgery Hospital India has an association with the best surgeons and top hospitals located across different cities in India. The best gastric balloon surgery cost in Indian Currency is 1,80,000 whereas it may cost about 8,00,000 in the US. Avail the low cost gastric balloon surgery in India with Cosmetic and Obesity Surgery Hospital India, #trusted guide for the gastric balloon surgery.

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Breathtaking for the neutral, hazardous to the health of fans of teams involved in one, the comeback is one of the most emotionally stirring occurrences in football.

Over the years since its inception, the Premier League has 123319_hp.jpg?width=275played host to some fightbacks that you couldn't pay Hollywood's best writers to script.

Newcastle United 4-4 Arsenal - February 5, 2011

...
Fresh in the memory but already being hailed as one of the Premier League's classic games, Arsenal looked to be home and dry after just 26 minutes as Theo Walcott and Johan Djourou scored before Robin van Persie struck twice as the Gunners raced into a four-goal lead.

It could have been more still, but Abou Diaby was sent off early in the second half, and when Joey Barton scored a penalty with just over 20 minutes remaining, the fightback was on.

Leon Best added a second and Barton converted another soft spot kick, before Cheick Tiote hit a thunderous drive three minutes from time to cap a marvellous comeback, proving there could yet be life after Andy Carroll - but sucking the life out of Arsenal's title challenge.

No team had ever been four goals down in a Premier League match and earned a point - until now.

Wigan Athletic 3-2 Arsenal - April 18, 2010


96748_hp.jpg?width=275Arsenal are no strangers to this sort of thing, of course, and this capitulation against Wigan saw the Gunners' Premier League title challenge end last season, after a haphazard final 10 minutes.

As against Newcastle, Arsenal took the lead through Walcott - though they had waited 41 minutes to do so - and looked comfortable as Mikael Silvestre added a second shortly after the half-time break.

But Wigan stirred as Ben Watson side-footed beyond Fabianski with 10 minutes to play, before the Pole spilled a regulation cross for Titus Bramble to nod home from close range.

Fabianski may have been at fault for Wigan's equaliser, but there was little he could do about the winner from Charles N'Zogbia, who curled in from outside the area a minute into stoppage time, leaving Arsene Wenger mystified.

Arsenal have since fallen victim to a similar turnaround as Tottenham secured a famous 3-2 victory at the Emirates earlier this season, while Spurs also notched a 4-4 draw against their north London rivals with a late Aaron Lennon strike at the beginning of Harry Redknapp's spell in charge.

Chelsea 2-3 Arsenal - October 23, 1999


123356_hp.jpg?width=275Things haven't always gone against Arsenal when it comes to dramatic late comebacks though, as this meeting with Chelsea in 1999 proves.

The hosts looked home and dry as the rain poured down at Stamford Bridge, with Tore Andre Flo and Dan Petrescu scoring headers and leaving Chelsea fans feeling confident of a victory with half an hour remaining.

Nwankwo Kanu had other ideas though, first striking in the 75th minute, before pulling the scores level eight minutes later, poking the ball past Dutch goalkeeper Ed De Goey.

Then, with seconds remaining, the Nigerian beat De Goey to a ball outside the Chelsea penalty area, controlled, and fired into the net from a narrow angle as Arsenal finished second in the table, but still some way behind Manchester United.

Tottenham Hotspur 3-5 Manchester United - September 29, 2001

123360_hp.jpg?width=275United have form of their own in this realm, coming from behind to rescue victory from the jaws of defeat on several occasions since the inception of the Premier League, and none have been more astonishing than this remarkable win over Spurs.

The home side had taken an unexpected and commanding lead into the interval after Dean Richards scored on his debut, before stalwart Les Ferdinand and former Germany international Christian Ziege further strengthened Tottenham's advantage.

But - most likely thanks to Sir Alex Ferguson's hairdryer - United were transformed after the break and wasted no time in asserting their dominance as Andy Cole headed a David Beckham cross past Neil Sullivan just a minute in, and further goals from Laurent Blanc, Ruud van Nistelrooy, Juan Sebastian Veron and Beckham himself turned humiliating defeat into a comprehensive rout.

Spurs have since led by two goals at Old Trafford, only to find themselves on the receiving end of another five at the hands of ruthless United.

Tottenham Hotspur 4-4 Aston Villa - October 1, 2007

23360_hp.jpg?width=275White Hart Lane has never been a stranger to goals, so fitting then that on the club's 125 year anniversary celebration, the ground on Tottenham High Road should play host to an eight-goal thriller.

The festivities got off to a flying start as Dimitar Berbatov headed Spurs in front, but Villa took a 3-1 lead into half time thanks to a Martin Laursen double and a Gabby Agbonlahor strike,

Craig Gardner added another with 30 minutes to play, but Pascal Chimbonda scored, Robbie Keane notched from the penalty spot and, in the closing stages, Younes Kaboul lashed home from inside the box to rescue a point, but it would not be enough to save manager Martin Jol, who was replaced by Juande Ramos shortly after.

Wolverhampton Wanderers 4-3 Leicester City - October 25, 2003


123358_hp.jpg?width=275Perhaps less heralded than coming from a goal down to beat Manchester United on Saturday evening will be, but this was an equally thrilling comeback for Wolves against fellow basement battlers Leicester back in 2003.

Les Ferdinand had scored twice in 15 minutes and set up Ricardo Scimeca for the Foxes' third after 35 minutes as the visitors looked to have secured a vital three points on the road to survival.

It wasn't to be for Micky Adams' side though, as Colin Cameron - now player/assistant manager at Cowdenbeath - netted a brace of his own, Alex Rae levelled, and Senegalese striker Henri Camara sealed the win from close range with just four minutes of normal time to play.

Wolves did not survive though and were relegated at the end of the season, level on points with bottom-placed Leicester and Leeds United.

Manchester City 2-3 Fulham - April 26, 2008

123359_hp.jpg?width=275One team that did survive, thanks in no small part to a comeback, was Fulham, who picked up a hugely important win in their battle against relegation at Eastlands towards the end of the 2007-08 season.

City went ahead after 21 minutes through Stephen Ireland and Benjani doubled the lead that they took into the interval, looking comfortable in the process.

A further 25 minutes of the second half passed before Diomansy Kamara fired through Joe Hart's legs to give Roy Hodgson's side hope.

Danny Murphy then saw a penalty saved but equalised with the rebound, before Kamara added his second and Fulham's third as the Cottagers stayed in the Premier League on goal difference by winning their remaining two games, at the expense of Reading.

Did we miss anything out? Goal.com UK wants to know what YOUR favourite Premier League comebacks are, so please leave us a comment below to let us know.
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Motorola-Xoom-Body.jpgMotorola and Google must have been pleased at hearing the Xoom tablet computer was voted the best tablet at the CES 2011. The computer electronics show is an annual event where the best and the not so good display their models which are due for release next year.

In what is set to be a competitive year in the tablet computing industry, with numbers expected to triple over the coming years, Motorola’s new product has done exceptionally well to win the coveted ‘best in show’ award.

The Xoom runs Google’s Android operating system 3.0 which has been called Honeycomb. This operating system has been optimized for tablet computers.

Motorola and Google launched the marketing campaign for the Xoom last year with subtle and not so subtle strategies. It peaked the interest then and it is nice to see a product deliver on the back of the hype.

It will be interesting to see if it can take on the iPad once it is released...

 

 

Can Android Tablets Compete with the iPad?

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We’ve rounded up what we know about upcoming Google Android tablets to see if any devices will give the Apple iPad a true rival.

With the success of Apple’s iPad, virtually every manufacturer is brainstorming their own version attempting to ride the tablet wave. Sound familiar? The tablet market seems to be following the path of smartphones, but there is a key difference this time: Apple doesn’t have quite the head start they had back when the first iPhone was released. Android has made a big dent in the mobile industry and it’s looking to do the same for tablets. Apple sold 3 million iPads in the first 80 days and they’re expected to sell around 20 million more in 2011. If Android wants to get its foot in the door then the time is now, before they fall behind again and it takes years to catch up. More and more manufactures are unveiling plans for tablets and the vast majority are choosing Android (sans HP with their Web OS tablet). Below we’ve rounded up everything we know at this point about upcoming Android tablets and when they might hit the market. If there is a tablet we have missed, let us know and we will add it to the list! 

archos-7.jpgArchos 7

The Archos 7 features a 7-inch (800×400) display, 8GB of internal storage along with a micro SDHC slot (for additional storage) and an ARM Cortex A8 processor. The Archos 7 has been available since March and it runs for $199.99.


cisco-cuis.jpgCisco Cius

Last month Cisco revealed its plans to join the tablet arms race with the Cius. The Cius will pack a 7-inch screen, a 720p webcam on the front and a 5 megapixel camera on the back. No firm launch date has been set, but Cisco has stated that they’re shooting for early next year.


altec-lancing-cruz-tablet.jpgVelocity Micro Cruz Tablet

Velocity Micro will step away from its luxury gaming throne to dabble in the emerging Android tablet market with the release of their Cruz Tablet this summer. It will feature a 7-inch touch-screen, 4GB of built-in storage, and will accept SD cards for additional storage. The Cruz Tablet will release this summer at a surprisingly low price of $300.


samsung-galaxy-tab.jpgSamsung Galaxy Tab P1000

Samsung unveiled a picture of its upcoming Samsung Galaxy Tab last month and it looks like the iPad’s smaller twin. It will feature a 7-inch AMOLED display, Android 2.2, 16GB of internal storage with a microSD expansion slot, and will be powered by a 1.2GHz A8 processor. The Galaxy Tab is expected to launch sometime this summer and a larger 10-inch tablet from Samsung has been rumored to follow.


dell-streak.jpgDell Streak

Stewart Wolpin thought the Streak was closer to a large cell phone than a tablet in his hands-on impressions, but it’s being promoted as a tablet so we’ll play along. The streak will feature a 5-inch display, 5 megapixel camera, and integrated social media apps such as Twitter and Facebook. No solid release date has been set for the Streak, but its unlocked price is expected to be $500.


notion-ink-adam.jpgNotion Ink Adam

The Adam will be the first tablet on the market to feature the Pixel Qi display. The 10-inch transflective LCD display offers 3 different modes for viewing including a reflective e-paper mode for low power viewing even in bright sunlight. The Adam is expected to be released in Q3 of this year in selected countries.


icd-ultra-android-tablet.jpgICD Ultra

ICD’s follows up its 15-inch Vega tablet with the ICD Ultra, a smaller Android-based device. The ICD Ultra will feature a 7-inch touchscreen display, a NVIDIA Tegra T20 chipset, and integrated 3G, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth. Pricing and a final release date have not been set.


pandigital-novel.jpgPandigital Novel

The Pandigital Novel can be classified as an eReader but since it features a web browser and media player we think it crosses into tablet territory as well. The Novel will features a 7-inch color 800×600 touchscreen, an SD card slot for adding storage, and will integrate with the Barnes & Noble eBookstore. It will be priced at $199 and is slated to go on sale this month.


nec-lifetouch.jpgNEC Life Touch

The Life touch will feature a 7-inch TFT LCD screen, ARM Cortex A8 processor and 256MB of RAM. The Android 2.1 device is expected to be available in Japan in October with no official price as of this article.


google-tablet.jpgGoogle Tablet

Details are still scarce on the rumored Google Android Tablet. There have been reports that Verizon and Google are working together on a tablet, but at this point we don’t even know if Google’s Tablet will run on Chrome OS or Android.


acer-tablet.jpgAcer Tablet

The Acer tablet looks very similar to its LumiRead e-book reader that was announced at the same event back in may. Not many details have been released but we do know that it will feature a 7-inch color display, will run Android, and has a likely Q4 release date.


lg-tablet.jpgLG Tablet

LG announced on July 6th that they will be jumping into the Android tablet market. They didn’t however provide any details on the device, only stating that it plans to release it in the fourth quarter of this year.

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Weekend Trivia:KAITA(Noun/Verb): A man who single handedly hinder the hope of his country for reason best known to him. "Kaita" can be use in place of words like Jeopardy, Hinder, Sabotage, Disrupt, Antagonist, fool etc.
Example

Noun: IBB is a kaita, so is Ota boy. Verb: Don't kaita what we have been building for 11 yrs in one day." I like that girl, please don't be a Kaita" Or In a Foolish Person's Thought: We are winning 1 - 0, let me kaita this game, so that I can get a red card and my opponent can win.



BODO, Nigeria — Big oil spills are no longer news in this vast, tropical land. The Niger Delta, where the wealth underground is out of all proportion with the poverty on the surface, has endured the equivalent of the Exxon Valdez spill every year for 50 years by some estimates. The oil pours out nearly every week, and some swamps are long since lifeless.


Perhaps no place on earth has been as battered by oil, experts say, leaving residents here astonished at the nonstop attention paid to the gusher half a world away in the Gulf of Mexico. It was only a few weeks ago, they say, that a burst pipe belonging to Royal Dutch Shell in the mangroves was finally shut after flowing for two months: now nothing living moves in a black-and-brown world once teeming with shrimp and crab.

Not far away, there is still black crude on Gio Creek from an April spill, and just across the state line in Akwa Ibom the fishermen curse their oil-blackened nets, doubly useless in a barren sea buffeted by a spill from an offshore Exxon Mobil pipe in May that lasted for weeks.

The oil spews from rusted and aging pipes, unchecked by what analysts say is ineffectual or collusive regulation, and abetted by deficient maintenance and sabotage. In the face of this black tide is an infrequent protest — soldiers guarding an Exxon Mobil site beat women who were demonstrating last month, according to witnesses — but mostly resentful resignation.

Small children swim in the polluted estuary here, fishermen take their skiffs out ever farther — “There’s nothing we can catch here,” said Pius Doron, perched anxiously over his boat — and market women trudge through oily streams. “There is Shell oil on my body,” said Hannah Baage, emerging from Gio Creek with a machete to cut the cassava stalks balanced on her head.

That the Gulf of Mexico disaster has transfixed a country and president they so admire is a matter of wonder for people here, living among the palm-fringed estuaries in conditions as abject as any in Nigeria, according to the United Nations. Though their region contributes nearly 80 percent of the government’s revenue, they have hardly benefited from it; life expectancy is the lowest in Nigeria.

“President Obama is worried about that one,” Claytus Kanyie, a local official, said of the gulf spill, standing among dead mangroves in the soft oily muck outside Bodo. “Nobody is worried about this one. The aquatic life of our people is dying off. There used be shrimp. There are no longer any shrimp.”

In the distance, smoke rose from what Mr. Kanyie and environmental activists said was an illegal refining business run by local oil thieves and protected, they said, by Nigerian security forces. The swamp was deserted and quiet, without even bird song; before the spills, Mr. Kanyie said, women from Bodo earned a living gathering mollusks and shellfish among the mangroves.

With new estimates that as many as 2.5 million gallons of oil could be spilling into the Gulf of Mexico each day, the Niger Delta has suddenly become a cautionary tale for the United States.

As many as 546 million gallons of oil spilled into the Niger Delta over the last five decades, or nearly 11 million gallons a year, a team of experts for the Nigerian government and international and local environmental groups concluded in a 2006 report. By comparison, the Exxon Valdez spill in 1989 dumped an estimated 10.8 million gallons of oil into the waters off Alaska.

So the people here cast a jaundiced, if sympathetic, eye at the spill in the gulf. “We’re sorry for them, but it’s what’s been happening to us for 50 years,” said Emman Mbong, an official in Eket.

The spills here are all the more devastating because this ecologically sensitive wetlands region, the source of 10 percent of American oil imports, has most of Africa’s mangroves and, like the Louisiana coast, has fed the interior for generations with its abundance of fish, shellfish, wildlife and crops.

Local environmentalists have been denouncing the spoliation for years, with little effect. “It’s a dead environment,” said Patrick Naagbanton of the Center for Environment, Human Rights and Development in Port Harcourt, the leading city of the oil region.

Though much here has been destroyed, much remains, with large expanses of vibrant green. Environmentalists say that with intensive restoration, the Niger Delta could again be what it once was.

Nigeria produced more than two million barrels of oil a day last year, and in over 50 years thousands of miles of pipes have been laid through the swamps. Shell, the major player, has operations on thousands of square miles of territory, according to Amnesty International. Aging columns of oil-well valves, known as Christmas trees, pop up improbably in clearings among the palm trees. Oil sometimes shoots out of them, even if the wells are defunct.

“The oil was just shooting up in the air, and it goes up in the sky,” said Amstel M. Gbarakpor, youth president in Kegbara Dere, recalling the spill in April at Gio Creek. “It took them three weeks to secure this well.”

How much of the spillage is due to oil thieves or to sabotage linked to the militant movement active in the Niger Delta, and how much stems from poorly maintained and aging pipes, is a matter of fierce dispute among communities, environmentalists and the oil companies.

Caroline Wittgen, a spokeswoman for Shell in Lagos, said, “We don’t discuss individual spills,” but argued that the “vast majority” were caused by sabotage or theft, with only 2 percent due to equipment failure or human error.

“We do not believe that we behave irresponsibly, but we do operate in a unique environment where security and lawlessness are major problems,” Ms. Wittgen said.

Oil companies also contend that they clean up much of what is lost. A spokesman for Exxon Mobil in Lagos, Nigel A. Cookey-Gam, said that the company’s recent offshore spill leaked only about 8,400 gallons and that “this was effectively cleaned up.”

But many experts and local officials say the companies attribute too much to sabotage, to lessen their culpability. Richard Steiner, a consultant on oil spills, concluded in a 2008 report that historically “the pipeline failure rate in Nigeria is many times that found elsewhere in the world,” and he noted that even Shell acknowledged “almost every year” a spill due to a corroded pipeline.

On the beach at Ibeno, the few fishermen were glum. Far out to sea oil had spilled for weeks from the Exxon Mobil pipe. “We can’t see where to fish; oil is in the sea,” Patrick Okoni said.

“We don’t have an international media to cover us, so nobody cares about it,” said Mr. Mbong, in nearby Eket. “Whatever cry we cry is not heard outside of here.”
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"Mai broda, I laugh tire yesterday my ribs nearly cracked open." "But I know you. Even when there is nothing to laugh about, you are permanently titillated. God must have deposited some amount of laughing gas in your blood stream and so life for you is one long comedy. Where others see sorrow, you see an opportunity to bare your teeth. I understand. We can't all be the same."

But you should hear me out first..."

"Okay what is it? But remember that today is Good Friday. Not a day to go about laughing anyhow as if you are mocking God. It is the day in honour of our Lord Jesus Christ, the day he covered all of us in His Blood, with His original sacrifice, so that bloody sinners like you may share in the grace of Salvation"

"I am talking about yesterday."

"What happened yesterday?"

"It was April Fools' Day".

"Oh yes, the day specially set aside for the recognition of some people that I know."

"I laughed and laughed."

"Naturally"

"You know no matter how life turns out, Nigerians have a great capacity for laughter."

"I have one of the laughing Nigerians in front of me, so I should know."

"I got some text messages that I think should win prizes for the best April fool jokes."

"Oh, if that is what is given you rib pains, I got a few of those too. There was this one that said the appointment of Ministers had been put on hold because President Umaru Yar'Adua was going to address the nation at 12 noon. I believed it. I was fooled. I even sent it to some friends who also got fooled. Before I knew what was happening, people were calling me to ask if indeed it was true. Some people immediately rushed to their television sets. But by 12 noon, there was no Yar'Adua, and then it dawned on me that it was an April Fool joke."

"Looks like the Yar'Adua family has been finally turned into a national joke. I won't be surprised if one of these days, we have a film coming out of Nollywood titled the Missing President"

"I suggest the Living Ghost"

"That is a bad title for a movie"

"Who is saying so? What better title to convey the current situation in the Presidency?"

"The man is not a ghost."

"I say a living ghost. What is a ghost? -an unseen object that can be occasionally visible to the living."

"Nigerians are callous towards their leaders. You know there was this other April Fool joke about Turai. It said Turai's name had been forwarded to the Senate for consideration as a Minister of the Federal Republic."

"I believed that one too. I even suspected that it may have been the handiwork of some of her image management people. Do you think if Jonathan offers the woman a portfolio, she won't jump at it?"

"Kai. That will be the ultimate betrayal."

"She will take it! In fact, even the Yar'Adua April Fool joke may have been a kite that someone was flying. You think if Turai is offered the Petroleum Ministry or the Federal Capital Territory, she won't jump at it? She will jump at it the way a monkey jumps at a piece of banana."

"Let's be fair."

"Your problem is that you always optimistic. Did you not see how the young Yar'Adua was so enthusiastic at his Ministerial screening?"

"Meaning what?"

"The young man made it a point of duty to tell the Senate and by extension all Nigerians that he intends to do things in a new way and that he promises all Nigerians youthful energy. I don't consider that an innocent promise. That fellow was trying to tell us that he is a healthy Yar'Adua, young, virile, ready to make his own mark, lest anyone thinks that it is the entire family that is incapacitated. If he was asked to produce his medical records, he would have done so immediately. I won't be surprised if he had a medical report in his pocket!"

"He couldn't have been as callous as you are putting it."

"I am repeating what the fellow said. In this country, when it comes to the game of power, there are no innocent remarks. When a Yar'Adua from another wing of the family says he is young and new, you should dissect and dimension the statement. That was a campaign speech."

"Look, let's leave the Yar'Aduas alone. As far as I am concerned, what the Senate called Ministerial screening was a joke. The entire exercise lacked depth and sense."

"What did you expect? I never expected any serious screening in the first place."

"It is perhaps this kind of thing that makes people like Gaddafi say that Nigeria should be split into several ethnic states."

"Gaddafi should shut up. Let him go and split his own country into the Arab North and the Black South. In fact, Nigeria should shut down its embassy in Tripoli completely. When Gaddafi first made that statement about Nigeria being split into Muslim North and Christian South, and everyone started calling him a madman, I thought Nigerians were over-reacting. But now, I am convinced that something is wrong with that man. "

"He has breached the cardinal rule of diplomacy. It is wrong for the representative of a sovereign state to call for the dismemberment of another sovereign state."

"And the man repeats the affront by modifiying his initial assault on sovereign Nigeria. It is an act of war. War doesn't have to be physical, it can be verbal or psychological. President Jonathan must regard this as war against Nigeria."

"Ol' boy, be careful. I don't think Nigeria can go to war against Libya oh, with this Nigerian military that can't even take charge of the Niger Delta. But if you are calling for a verbal war. Yes. I support that. We have people who can talk; that's why the telecom companies are making a kill. We can report Gaddafi to the African Union and put ECOWAS on notice."

"The security of Nigeria is threatened. Have you not noticed that some Nigerians are already saying Gaddafi is right? His statement has suddenly become a source of inspiration for many of our stupid compatriots."

"Nigerians will latch on to any statement. But don't use the word stupid. Gaddafi has not said anything, after all the Americans also said Nigeria will soon break down and break up, but it does not lie in his mouth, Gaddafi to say so."

"You mean you don't mind when the Americans say it. But you take offence when Gaddafi puts his mouth into the matter. Look, talking seriously, I think the long and short of it is that we should try and put our house in order."

"The man even said Nigeria should break up like Yugoslavia. And you know Gaddafi, once he starts a campaign he doesn't give up. My fear is that he may have been listening to some aggrieved Nigerian ethnic nationalists."

"He probably has been listening to the Nigerian asylum seekers and immigrants who have become very notorious in Libya."

"I don't think he should be ignored. Nigeria should find a way of putting him where he belongs."

"But we sef, we get too many problems for dis country. Yes, some of us don't want Nigeria to break up, but does it not say something to you, that in Plateau state, the House of Assembly had to pass a special resolution condemning the attempt by the National Youth Service Corps Headquarters to withdraw young Nigerians on national service in that state. The state Governor had to offer a sum of N5 million to the youth corps members who reject redeployment from the state. When young Nigerians have to be bribed to stay in any part of their country, that is a veritable sign of crisis."

"I am interested in that N5 million. Who collected it? How will it be shared? Who is entitled to it? Is it N5 million per corps member or for all corps members, since automatically anyone that is still in Jos is entitled to it."

"How does that concern you? You are not a beneficiary."

"I am a concerned observer. Don't let us wait until you and I start discussing the why, how and wherefore of the N5 million after it may have led to another outbreak of violence."

"The issue in Jos is not about money, it is about indigeneship, who is a settler and who is not, and power and privileges and position."

"You are talking about money. Who gets it, who controls it? And it is not only in Jos. It is everywhere. Look at the protest in Lagos state about the nomination of Segun Aganga as the Minister from Lagos in the Jonathan cabinet. Some Lagos indigenes have put out adverts saying Aganga is not from Lagos state, they say he is from Sabongida Ora in Edo state and that an Edo man cannot come and take a Lagos slot."

"Let's face it, who is from Lagos? I have been saying it. Lagos state is no longer Lagos Island. It belongs to all of us from Isale Eko to the Ijebus in Somolu, the Ibos in Amuwo Odofin, the Mallams in Agege, the Egbas in Abule Egba, the Oro people in Surulere, not to talk of all the people from Brazil, Sierra Leone, Portugal and Liberia who have made Lagos home. We live here. We pay tax here."

"The indigenes disagree."

"So, they justify Gaddafi"

"But really, I think those protesters are interested in their pockets. They want a man from the clan and the party who will make returns. Don't you know that a Ministerial appointment is an invitation to come and chop?"

"Sad. Even in Ogun state, the Yewa/Awori people took to the streets; they insist that only a man from their area should be Minister from Ogun. I think we should be more interested in ability not where a man comes from."

"Sadly in Nigeria, we can't run away from issues of balance."

"Too many stupid things happen in this country. I will give you one example. The Sharia Court in Kaduna has issued an order banning people from discussing the amputation of Mallam Jangebe on Facebook and Twitter. Why? The commentators are criticising the Sharia."

"Don't waste your sweat on that. If a court gives an order that it cannot enforce, why do you bother yourself?"

"The ruling is an assault on the freedom of speech"

"Just as amputation is an assault on human rights."

"You know, we should be optimistic, it won't be long before we have peace in this country."

"How?"

"You know President Obama has now said that more offshore oil drilling licenses should be given out in the United States. With the US producing more oil, this could affect the global price of oil and the demand for Nigerian crude oil, with a corresponding reduction in revenue"

"Nigerian crude is special. It is low sulphur crude. Very sweet crude."

"Still we should be thinking of other options. Like agriculture."

"Agriculture? Are you aware that Nigeria has sent some consultants to the Middle East asking investors to come and buy Nigerian land for cultivation with a guarantee that all the produce can be exported 100%."

"In a country where a taxi can have a head on collision with an aircraft, indeed anything is possible.".
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Turai’s secret agony: Yar’Adua’s wife now prisoner in Aso Rock • Dad ill, flown to Egypt • Abandoned by friends and associates
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First Lady, Mrs. Turai Yar’Adua, is currently in agony, which is known by only a few people. Although she cuts the image of a toughie and a superwoman, who, through her iron will, has held on doggedly to the reins of power on behalf of her ailing husband, President Umar Musa Yar’Adua, Saturday Sun can exclusively reveal that she is in much more pains than is known to the public.

Mrs. Turai Yar’Adua


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Sources revealed that the First Lady has many woes, which has left her devastated.

Her father, Alhaji Alkali, suffers a serious illness. Also, her once-upon-a-time close friends and associates have not only shunned her but now hobnob with Acting President Goodluck Jonathan.

Saturday Sun also gathered that Mrs. Yar’Adua has been quarantined in Aso Rock villa, where she’s stuck with a husband in dire need of midwifery and cannot venture out to even see her daughter, who recently gave birth to a baby girl. To compound her problems, it was gathered, many Nigerians are calling her names, describing her as a ‘greedy, power-hungry woman’ who won’t let go despite strident calls for Yar’Adua to step down due to his health constraints.

Impeccable sources at the presidential villa revealed that this catalogue of woes has traumatised the First Lady, to the extent that she has become a shadow of herself and in most cases stays indoors to avoid the scorn of former members of the federal cabinet, especially, before they were sacked by Jonathan on Wednesday.

Saturday Sun learnt that the grandeur and perks of office, which, before the illness of President Yar’Adua, were at their peak, have reduced. At present, it was gathered, governors’ wives, who used to visit her as well as other dignitaries, who do her one favour or another, while in Abuja to see Yar’Adua, no longer do so.

The expansive living room, that used to burst at the seams, prior to last November, is now desolate. The army of sycophants, including those older than her, who called her ‘mama,’ has found other allies in the family of the acting president.

The fragile health of President Yar’Adua has weakened the First Lady as we reliably found. This was made worse, it was gathered, when the National Assembly approved Jonathan as acting president. She complains to the few remaining close associates that the transfer of power to Jonathan has banned her from reckoning. She is said to be greatly pained that Mrs. Patience Jonathan, wife of the acting president, who she earlier had brushes with, is now the person holding court at the presidential villa and getting all the attention at the villa.

The source said of the agony of the First Lady: “She still can’t believe that people like Prof. Dora Akunyili will turn against the president and his family. Of all the ministers, Dora was the closest. She had access to everywhere in her house, including the kitchen. Every Friday, Madam Turai used to prepare masaran (Hausa delicacy) and send to her. She used to fall over her. But today, she’s calling them names.”

It was gathered that Akunyili is not the only person in the recently dissolved cabinet who has deserted Turai and her ailing husband.

“There are some governors and ministers who made Aso Rock their second home. You will think that these governors live in Abuja, but now you can’t find them. The ministers have turned their back against the president and his family. Madam is shocked at this cruel and insensitive side of human nature,” the source said.

Saturday Sun learnt that even more agonising for the First Lady is her dad’s ill-health, which came about the same time her husband was in critical condition in Saudi. According to sources, Alhaji Alkali (her father) had to be flown to Egypt for urgent medical care, which was supervised by Turai’s personal doctor, Rasheed.

“She has been deeply troubled. Imagine a woman saddled with taking care of an ill husband and father at the same time. Imagine a woman who, because of these two critical events, couldn’t go and take care of her new grand daughter in Kebbi State. That woman is in pains and she is being abused daily and portrayed as a bad woman,” the presidential villa source said.

It was gathered that the dissolution of the federal cabinet devastated the first lady, as it means she has completely lost power. Sources said that until the sack of the Federal Executive Council, she was still getting information on the plans in government from the few ministers, who remained loyal to Yar’Adua. But with the dissolution of the cabinet and the planned constitution of a new one, she fears that she and her husband would not make any input.

The First Lady’s close confidant told Saturday Sun: “Wednesday’s dissolution of the federal cabinet would be the most fatal blow the First Lady got in recent times. She never thought it would happen. She had reckoned that with the presence of her husband in the villa, Jonathan would be cautious in taking some actions. Now with the ministers sacked, she is greatly in agony.”

When Saturday Sun sought answers to why Yar’Adua can’t simply quit over these travails, our sources said: “Madam would want her husband to leave power. She doesn’t believe it’s a do-or-die matter. She is only after protecting the family name and ensuring that they are not humiliated out of office. She doesn’t think it is right to continue to abuse a sick man and heap all kinds of blame on him.”

As the clock ticks in the nation’s volatile political terrain, with all kinds of permutations and gladiators posturing for the plum job, it remains to be seen if Turai’s wish for her ailing husband (not to be humiliated out of power) will be met or not. For now, the waiting game continues as the big woman conrinues in her agony.
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When David Beckham arrived in Italy for what, at the time, seemed a novelty excursion some 14 months ago, he received a text message from an old friend. It consisted of just seven words: “David Beckham. Manchester United. Real Madrid. Milan.” The point was being made that, long after he stopped being a footballer, he would have a unique legacy: he has belonged to the three most glamorous clubs from what, in the span of his playing career, have been the three most celebrated leagues.images?q=tbn:NtJfBvwu1KhAUM:%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=http://www.bostonherald.com/blogs/sports/rap_sheet/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/david_beckham1_300_400.jpg">

So storied is the life of David Beckham that there is plenty to insert in between the Manchester chapter, the Madrid episode and the coda in Milan; there are debates to rehearse about the ratio of skill to hard-sell that motivated those who have employed him; arguments to hold about the greatness of the actual sides he played in at each of those clubs. But the sequence United-Real-AC gives Beckham a great deal of pride, not just because it reflects professional peaks set across so sustained a time, but because it also shows a sportsman with the dedication to see out and deliver a grand plan.

What he had never quite planned for, he admits, was the moment when the distinguished line of fabled club names had a kink in it, a meeting of the threads, as it does on Tuesday, when Milan face his “ex” — his most loved ex. “You know, I’ve never had to do this before, play against one of my old teams,” says Beckham, struck by the curiosity of that fact. In Madrid, he used to look forward to Uefa draw ceremonies at least twice a season, and the strong possibility that the names Real and Manchester United would be paired and he would be obliged to stand in a line and shake hands before kick-off with Gary Neville, Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs and perhaps Roy Keane as they filed past him wearing red while he wore white.

As Beckham spent a third and then a fourth season as a Madrid footballer, always in the Champions League, the chance of playing against United became more probability than possibility. It never happened. Once he joined Milan for the second half of the 2008-9 campaign, his adventures abroad were restricted to the Uefa Cup. When Milan did meet Madrid in the senior competition last autumn, Beckham was at the other end of his transatlantic commute, seeing out his obligations to Los Angeles Galaxy in America.

And so, 15 years and two months after Beckham made his Champions League debut for United, it is United he faces on his Champions League debut for Milan. The occasion will have an extra drumroll and crash of cymbals because it is Milan’s 100th match in the European Cup to be played at their San Siro site.

As Beckham spoke on Friday evening, it was clear that if he was preparing to put on the professional blinkers to safeguard against a confusion of emotions, those around him were readying themselves for an occasion of gravitas. His children, who have continued their schooling in the US while dad does his five-month stint in Italy, have come over. His head coach at Milan, Leonardo, spoke of “a very special moment in David’s life. For any player to play in the Champions League against an old club is special, but for David it is particularly.”

Leonardo was stressing that this was not just a case of an itinerant professional playing against a former club. Beckham is not a peripatetic Nicolas Anelka or Christian Vieri, he is a Manchester United fan, several of whose contemporaries never left Old Trafford. Beckham still sometimes suggests that he would have been equally happy, in the summer of 2003, had he stayed there rather than joining Madrid.

Will there be a knot in his stomach, a lump in his throat on Tuesday? “Obviously there will be emotions,” he says, “but I don’t think it will be a problem. I’ve played in many big games. There has been so much talk about me going back to Manchester United in the second leg, because it will be my first time playing for a club there in seven years. But this tie is not just about me playing against United, it’s about AC Milan. It’s about two great clubs coming together, and that’s what makes it such a big game, for the teams, for the fans.”

There are plenty of grounds for trepidation besides his own butterflies. “United are just on fire at the moment, which means it’s going to very tough for us.” It goes without saying that Beckham — “I love to watch every United game where possible” — has as precise a gauge of United’s form as anybody at Milan, and the same understanding of where the principal menace comes from: Wayne Rooney.

Beckham, a close witness to Ronaldinho’s recent revival in form, has no hesitation in likening Rooney to the Brazilian in his best form. He sees a Rooney liberated this season, operating at the sharpest point of the attack. “I have always thought,” says Beckham of his England colleague, “that Wayne is one of the best goalscorers in football anywhere. He’s proving that. He’s at a great club and doing what he does best, which is scoring goals. United are playing so well for him, too.” Not least Ryan Giggs, whose absence with injury seems a genuine source of personal regret for his former colleague. “It’s a big shame Giggsy’s out. To have played on the same field as Giggsy, but against him for once, would have been really nice for me. Hopefully he’ll be fixed up soon and maybe he’ll make the second leg.”images?q=tbn:ib67OKW5GLWOiM:%3Ca%20rel%3Dnofollow%20href=http://www.sportsagentblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/david_beckham_victoria_beckham_boob.jpg">

As for his own fitness, Beckham, 34, is happy with progress since reaching Italy and with his capacity for taking his season all the way into July, as part of the England World Cup squad. Fabio Capello is expected at San Siro as an observer on Tuesday and the understanding between the England manager and Beckham is that the player needs to show sufficient stamina and competitiveness with Milan to earn his ticket to South Africa. Major League Soccer was not a convincing platform for Capello. Milan is.

“My fitness is good, really good,” insists Beckham. “Obviously being back at Milan and working hard with the medical regime they have here has been great. To be part of an England squad, you have to be playing at the top level. You have to be playing with top players and be at the top of your fitness.” And his form? “Good,” he replies. Up and down, say the Italian media, ranging from a beaming 7.5 out of 10 from Tuttosport for his showing on his first game back, to a grumpy 4.5 from Corriere dello Sport for the Milan derby three weeks ago.

Leonardo, appointed head coach last summer, appears pleased to have Beckham back at Milan. “He arrived in December, he already knew everything he needed to, knew the atmosphere, most of the team, and how we play,” says Leonardo. “All of that’s not been a problem for him.”

Of the new teammates, the strikers were especially welcoming. Marco Boriello, who spent most of last season injured, has already profited from Beckham’s crossing. The Dutch international Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, signed last August but more out of the first XI than in it so far, hopes the combination of his alertness in the penalty box and the Englishman’s passing might prove fruitful. “He’s got a real eye for the assist,” Huntelaar thought immediately. “He’s always looking for the strikers and to swing the ball in, in front of you. It’s nice to play as a striker with him there and with Ronaldinho on the other side.”

“I got a great welcome from everybody, fans and players,” says Beckham. But there was one significant change from the last Milan dressing room he had been a member of. “Obviously Paolo Maldini’s retired and a couple of other characters have gone who were here last time. But the team is similar. There’s a great spirit within the club and that’s definitely not changed. We’re just as strong. When we play well, we’re a very good team.” The “when” is heavily weighed. He acknowledges that Milan have had a horribly inconsistent month.

January started superbly as Beckham seemed to have brought his Golden Balls knack with him into the new year: Milan had finished 2009 with just three points from their past three games. Beckham went straight into the starting line-up and they won the next three matches, racking up 12 goals, including a 3-0 win away at Juventus.

Then came the derby with Inter, a 2-0 defeat, and two subsequent draws, the second of which, against Bologna, Beckham watched entirely from the bench. Is he frustrated at being left out of the XI? “No,” he replies, “because I’ve always said when I came to the club, I never expect to start any games here.”

His return to action in Friday’s 3-2 win over Udinese, albeit as a substitute, suggests he will have a senior role on Tuesday. “We needed that win after the past couple of games,” he says, “and we needed also to get players fit again, like Alex Pato, with the United matches coming up. Both are going to be tough, but I’m looking forward to it.”

FIFTH TIME LUCKY FOR UNITED?

Manchester United have a score to settle with Milan. The teams have met in four previous two-legged European ties — three of them at the semi-final stage — and Milan triumphed each time, twice going on to win the trophy — in 1969 and 2007.

May 1958 European Cup semi-final: Man Utd 2 Milan 1, Milan 4 Man Utd 0.

April/May 1969 European Cup semi-final: Milan 2 Man Utd 0, Man Utd 1 Milan 0.

Feb/Mar 2005 Champions League, 2nd rd: Man Utd 0 Milan 1, Milan 1 Man Utd 0.

Apr/May 2007 Champions League semi-final: Man Utd 3 Milan 2, Milan 3 Man Utd 0.

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Our boys blew it! but they tried their best

By Ifeanyi Ibeh The Golden Eaglets on Sunday failed in their quest to become the first team in the history of the FIFA U-17 World Cup to defend the trophy after losing by a lone goal to Switzerland at the National Stadium in Abuja. The Eaglets also failed in their bid to become the first host nation in the history of the cadet tournament to win the trophy.
And it was all due to the team’s inability to convert the numerous chances that came their way in the encounter, watched by a capacity crowd at the 60,000-seater stadium. The turning point of the encounter arrived in the 63rd minute when Haris Seferovic nodded the Swiss into the lead from a corner kick for his fifth goal of the tournament. Five minutes earlier, the towering striker of local Swiss side, Grasshoppers, had found himself face-to-face with Golden Eaglets goalkeeper Dami Paul but he failed to bring a save out of the Nigerian keeper who unlike his opposite number in the Swiss goal, Benjamin Siegrist, was mostly on holidays. Swiss hero Siegrist was undoubtedly the hero of the Swiss team as he pulled off save after save to deny the Golden Eaglets a fourth world title, especially in the first half. The opening 45 minutes was played at a frenetic pace and the Golden Eaglets could have shot into the lead as early as the 4th minute through Abdul Ajagun but his shot from the edge of the area was cleared off the goal line by a Swiss defender with Siegrist well beaten. A minute later, Siegrist was on hand to make three saves in quick succession, the first two from the boots of Stanley Okoro, and the third from a speculative long range effort by Aigbe Oliha. The Golden Eaglets continued to make incursions and appeared the more likely side to open scoring, especially through Sani Emmanuel, who was handed a rare start by John Obuh, and the hardworking Ajagun who continued to prove more than a handful for the Swiss defence who had the Aston Villa goalkeeper to thank for keeping the score line barren at the half way point of the game. Emmanuel should actually have put the Eaglets in front a minute into the added time, but a minute after seeing his tame effort easily saved by Siegrist, the youngster failed to curl his shot past the goalkeeper after making his way into the Swiss vital area. More heroics The second half saw Siegrist continuing with his heroics, first, in the 58th minute from Stanley Okoro, and then in the 69th minute from Emmanuel, six minutes after his side had shot into the lead. In the 78th minute, the 17-year-old pulled off, perhaps, the most important save of the day when seconds after seeing his crossbar rattled by a Nigerian header, he used everything at his disposal, from his hands to his legs, to keep out the ball from going into the net in the midst of a sea of Nigerian legs. And by the time the Uruguayan referee, Martin Vazquez, blew for the end of proceedings, Nigerian fans at the venue had started filing out of the stadium and weren’t around to witness the presentation ceremony that saw Golden Eaglets midfielder, Ramon Azeez, claim the Bronze Ball with his industrious team mate, Emmanuel, carting home the Golden Ball as the tournament’s Most Valuable Player, alongside the Bronze Boot after finishing as the tourney’s third leading scorer with five goals. But considering all the controversies that trailed the Nigerian side, particularly on the actual ages of the players all through the duration of the championship, does anyone feel that justice has been served?
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SPECIAL BLOGS FEATURED BLOGS..NOLLYWOOD BLOGS..NETCHURCH BLOGS..GHANA BLOGS..LAGOS BLOGS WHO is India's best known Nigerian right now? The answer may surprise most readers of IndiaPage. With due apologies to other claimants to such distinction, there is virtually no need to hold any opinion poll! I am pretty certain who India's best known Nigerian is: Its Odafa Onyeka Okolie. Odafa Who? How Come? - Hang on! He is a 25-year-old Nigerian footballer - current captain of Goa-based Churchill Brothers Sports Club. He has been known among Indian football aficionados for past six years. Nevertheless, his hat-trick during 10 minutes of extra time of 122nd Durand Cup final in New Delhi on September 22 has transformed him into a legend. Odafa single handedly sank chances of famed Mohun Bagan Club of Kolkata of winning the Durand, India's most coveted, world's third oldest football cup. Churchill Brothers' 3-1 Durand victory followed similar victory over same Mohun Bagan in IFA Shield final a few weeks ago which, too, was largely engineered by Odafa. Odafa has been playing with various football clubs in India since 2003. He renewed his annual contract with Churchill Brothers earlier this year reportedly for a fee of around N30 million- making him highest paid footballer in India. That kind of money puts Odafa into a different Indian league: that of Bollywood stars, who earn even more. But, that's another story! Odafa has outclassed other forwards in the penetrating zone for the last three years. After the 21st round, Odafa led the scorers' tally with 24 goals. Felix Chimaokwu (Churchill Brothers) and Ranty Martins (Dempo SC) came next with 11 goals. Starting his Indian sojourn in 2004, Odafa never had to look back though he had some anxious years with Mohammedan Sporting of Kolkata and Bangladeshi side Muktijoddha. However, he won't be the first footballer to touch the Rs1 crore base in India. Mahindra United defender Mahesh Gawli was signed for close to Rs1.25 crore for a three-year term.
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A MUM of six has ditched her kids and run off with her son’s 18-YEAR-OLD best pal. Debbie Mallinson, 36, fled her council semi after telling her shocked children: “I can’t help who I fall in love with.” She then moved in with baby-faced toyboy Adam Caban in Falmouth, Cornwall. Mallinson’s eldest sons, aged 15 and ten, are now living with relatives. Her other kids — a girl of eight, a boy of six, a boy of five and a girl aged three — are in foster care. And an ex-partner of the runaway mum branded her a “disgrace” last night — and sneered: “She falls in love more often than she gives birth.” The man, who fathered three of the brunette’s six children, hit out after she deserted her young family. Mallinson fled her council home after climbing out of a window and sprinting down the front path into a waiting cab. advertisement here ask9ja.com free classifieds ! Her 15-year-old eldest son had earlier caught her on the phone telling Adam, his best friend, that she loved him. Before she left, Mallinson told her children: “I can’t help who I fall in love with.” But her disgusted ex said: “It breaks my heart — she doesn’t give a stuff about anyone but her.” Mallinson, whose children were fathered by FOUR dads, is living with baby-faced Adam at his sister’s home in Falmouth, Cornwall. Before walking out two weeks ago, she phoned social services saying she couldn’t cope and was going off to live with her lover. Her furious former partner said last night: “This woman is an absolute disgrace as a mother. “First she has an affair with her son’s best friend, then she dumps her kids to move in with him. “She’s now living with him while her youngest children and my kids are staying with strangers. It breaks my heart and makes my blood boil in equal measure. “She’s told social services she wants the kids back eventually and wants to bring them up with her new boyfriend. “But they are living with his sister and don’t have any money. “Anyway, she can’t just turn up and be a mum when she likes. It is just not fair on the children.” Mallinson — whose youngsters cannot be identified — stormed out of her three-bed semi after a blazing row with her teenage son. He and his eldest brother, who is ten, are now living with their grandparents and father respectively. But the lads’ four siblings — a girl aged eight, a boy of six, a boy aged five, and a three-year-old girl — have been put in to foster care. advertisement here ask9ja.com free classifieds ! Mallinson’s former partner added: “The first I knew about it was when my mum called me. “At first I thought it was a wind-up — but I wouldn’t put anything past her. “Her eldest son found out something was going on when he overheard his mum on the phone telling his best mate she loved him. “He is now living with his grandparents in another part of the country — but he has lost his best friend and his mum. “Through no fault of his own, his life has been completely turned upside down. “I’ve known this woman for a long time and she falls in love more often than she gives birth. The sad thing is that it will never last — but it could scar the kids for life.” Mallinson was unavailable for comment. And her 18-year-old lover cowered behind his mum when The Sun visited his family’s address. The dumbstruck teenager stood in the hallway as his mum said: “He’s 18 and can do what he likes. They’re just friends anyway.” Another family member said: “They are moving from house to house at the moment, so we’re just trying to help out by giving them somewhere to stay.advertisement here ask9ja.com free classifieds !
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Despite beating France, the 1998 World Cup winners in a friendly game on Tuesday night in Saint Etienne, Nigeria’s Super Eagles retained their 30th position on the global scale of the FIFA ranking released yesterday. Nigeria however remains Africa’s second best behind Cameroon. Ghana’s Black Stars are third while Cote D’Ivoire is fourth with Egypt fifth. In the sixth place is Gabon while Burkina Faso moved up to the seventh. Nigeria’s rival in the World Cup Group 2 Tunisia is eighth with Guinea and Mali completing the African top ten placement. A jump-up of six places in the latest FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking will help the morale of the team, who are chasing a first-ever place at the FIFA World Cup™ finals which next year is being hosted in neighbouring South Africa. After holding Nigeria to a draw in their opening tie of the final group phase in March, Mozambique's Mambas are brimming with confidence as they prepare for two matches on the road in June - first away against Tunisia on 6 June and then onto Kenya for a meeting in Nairobi on 20 June. Mozambique are now in 80th place in the world standings, edging ever closer to their best-ever position of 66th, set some 12 years ago. The team are now well ahead of their average position of 104 and showing steady progress with each passing month. Indeed, Mozambique won the award in 2007 as the Best Mover in the FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking, ahead of Norway and New Caledonia. June will be a watershed month as the two away trips present a real examination of the extent of their potential. Mozambique have been flirting with African football's superpowers in recent years but the jury is still out on whether they have the credentials to join the elite ranks. European champions Spain continue to lead the way in the June edition of the FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking, and they still hold a comfortable lead at the top. Within the top ten, there is movement directly behind the Iberians, however, as the Netherlands have overtaken Germany and reclaimed second place in the Ranking for the first time since October 2005. Other teams to have traded places are Italy (4th, up 1) and Brazil (5th, down 1), as well as England (6th, up 1) and Argentina (7th, down 1). The next FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking will be published on 1 July 2009.
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