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Law and Disorder in Lagos : Sun, 10 Oct 2010, 21:00 BBC2

On the streets of Lagos, it is not the police who wield power but gangs of fight-hardened young men known as Area Boys. Louis spends time with several outfits, joining them as they patrol their turf, clash with local rivals and keep the peace in a brutal and haphazard fashion. The main income for the Area Boys is an arbitrary and unofficial form of taxation, extracted from local businesses and commercial drivers. Louis gets to know the rich and glamorous Area Boy leader MC, a former street youth himself, who has now become a friend of the most powerful men in the city. Taken under MC's wing, Louis experiences the top levels of the Area Boys' world from the inside, complete with a tour of MC's grand residence and extensive shoe collection, and ending in a chaotic mini-riot with gunshots, blood and mayhem..

On the side of the law, Louis rides with KAI, the government's Kick Against Indiscipline paramilitary task force, as they storm different city districts. With bulldozers and arrest warrants, KAI use their own strong-arm tactics, and are in their way as feared as the Area Boys.

In Law and Disorder in Lagos, Louis wrestles with life in a world in which the forces of law and the forces of disorder are not always readily distinguishable and nothing is quite whhat it seems.

Luois Theroux has done many Law & Disorder series for Johannesburg,Philadelphia .He is a well known TV critic in the UK and can be very biased in his assessments from my personal opinion.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Theroux's_BBC_2_Specials
Louis Sebastian Theroux (pronounced /θəˈruː/;[1] born 20 May 1970) is a British broadcaster best known for his Gonzo style journalism[2] on the television series Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends and When Louis Met...


Theroux was born in Singapore, the younger son of the American travel writer and novelist Paul Theroux[3] and his British first wife, Anne Castle. His elder brother is the writer and television presenter Marcel Theroux. He is the cousin of American actor Justin Theroux. He moved to the UK when he was 4, and was brought up in London. Theroux was educated for a couple of years at Allfarthing school then moved to Westminster School (where he was a friend and contemporary of the comedians Adam Buxton and Joe Cornish). Another of his contemporaries was Liberal Democrat politician Nick Clegg with whom he travelled to America.[4] He then went to Magdalen College, Oxford where he gained a first class degree in modern history and was noted for his film reviews for the Grapevine magazine.
His first journalism job was at Metro Silicon Valley, an alternative free weekly newspaper in San Jose, California. In 1992 he was hired as a writer for Spy magazine. He was also working as a correspondent on Michael Moore's TV Nation series, for which he provided segments on off-beat cultural subjects, including Avon ladies in the Amazon, the Jerusalem syndrome, and the attempts by the Ku Klux Klan to rebrand itself as a civil rights group for white people. When TV Nation ended he was signed to a development deal by the BBC, out of which came Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends. He has guest-written for a number of publications including Hip-Hop Connection and he continues to write for The Idler.
source wikipedia

Question What is the beef the British have with us ? Britain is not Paradise !
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i wonder if they were tears of Joy or Sadness !
Tears as Babatope, Igbinedion, others escape air crash

A former Transport Minister, Chief Ebenezer Babatope and Chief Gabriel Igbinedion, owner of the defunct Okada Airlines, were among passengers who narrowly escaped death, yesterday, as their Aerocontractors’ flight flew into a very bad weather on approach to land at the Murtala Muhammed Airport in Lagos.

Also on board the flight was Professor Olu Aina, who was said to be travelling to Ghana for an educational conference.

Vanguard gathered the plane, a Boeing 737, took off at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Airport, Abuja, for Lagos at 7:30 a.m, and was expected to land at 8:30am, but could not.

The pilot of the aircraft was said to have made seven attempts to bring down the aircraft but was impeded by the bad weather.

A source told Vanguard that some passengers wept profusely as the pilot battled storming wind to land the aircraft.

The pilot was said to have called for emergency landing, prompting the activation of fire tenders at the airport to prepare for the worst.

According to the source, the pilot, after hovering for close to an hour in the skies, eventually made forced landing at 9:30 a.m.

Director-General of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, Dr. Harold Demuren, could neither confirm nor deny the incident.

One of the passengers, Babatope, narrated his ordeal: “ What happened yesterday will shake anybody’s confidence about flying in this country. I have never seen that kind of thing in my life. The plane was parked full and everybody was crying and praying.”

“When we took off in Abuja, the pilot told us the flight would take 50 minutes and that the weather in Lagos was good. But as soon as we were descending to land the Lagos, the weather changed and the pilot made several attempts to land, but he couldn’t. For a 50-minute flight, I discovered we were two hours in the air, that was when the apprehensions of passengers started. Air planes are made to fly in bad weather, but what happened yesterday is better imagined.”

Besides human error, bad weather had been identified as the second most important cause of air crashes across the world.

The latest air crash in Russia which killed Polish President, Lech Kazhinsky, and his wife and scores of other senior government officials, was blamed on inclement weather..

The Tupolev plane reportedly crashed into trees while trying to land amidst bad weather.
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Bankole, Oshiomhole, Fashola, others stranded in Europe • EU to resume limited air traffic today
By NDUBUISI ORJI

Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Speaker of the House of Representative Dimeji Bankole, Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole, and Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola are among Nigerians stranded in Europe as result of rising Iceland volcano ash. Others stranded included some aides of the Acting President Dr Goodluck Jonathan. Also, the governors of Imo and Akwa Ibom States, Ikedi Ohakim and Godswill Akpabio are said to be among those stranded in the UK.

photo:Fashola


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The socio- political implication of this development that government business, which the affected officials were supposed to address have been left unattended.

For instance in Edo State, the launch of the ‘one man, one vote’ campaign earlier schedule for tomorrow has been postponed by one week because of the absence of Governor Oshiomhole..

Meanwhile, European officials carved up the sky yesterday, creating three zones to more quickly break the flight deadlock caused by volcanic ash flowing from Iceland over Europe. Many more flights will be able to take off today, the bloc said.

European countries can resume airline traffic in designated “caution zones” where the threat of ash is considered less dangerous, French officials said after a meeting of the bloc’s 27 transport ministers.

Under the accord, one area defined by the European air traffic control agency Eurocontrol will remain entirely off limits to flights. Another area will be open to all flights and a third area will be a caution zone in which some flights will be allowed.

Jean-Louis Borloo, the No. 2 French Cabinet official, said flights in the caution zone will be “very secure” with many tests to make sure jet engines are not damaged by ash.

EU Transport Commissioner Siim Kallas said after a videoconference with EU transport ministers and industry officials that “the decision increases air space available to air traffic. This is the final outcome.”

The EU said as of Tuesday morning “we should see more planes starting to fly.”

Meanwhile, airline losses from the volcanic ash cloud spiraled over $1 billion yesterday, the industry demanded European Union compensation and criticized European governments for relying too much on scientific theory not fact in their decisions to shut down airspace across the continent.

Shares of some European airlines fell as flight disruptions from the volcanic cloud moved into a fifth day, and the International Air Transport Association complained of “no leadership” from government leaders, one of whom admitted to EU dissension about how to respond.

“It’s embarrassing, and a European mess,” IATA CEO Giovanni Bisignani told The Associated Press. “It took five days to organize a conference call with the ministers of transport and we are losing $200 million per day (and) 750,000 passengers are stranded all over. Does it make sense?” IATA officials said the $200 million estimate was at the low-end of their projections, and that it could run as high as $250 million-$300 million a day.

Even as airline officials were clamoring for relief, both financial and operational, a senior Western diplomat told The Associated Press that several NATO F-16 fighter jets had suffered engine damage after flying through the cloud, suggesting government caution was warranted..

The official declined to provide more details on the military flights, except to say that glasslike deposits were found in the planes’ engines after they patrolled over unspecified European airspace. European civil aviation authorities held a conference call Monday about what steps could be taken toward opening airspace, and transport ministers of all 27 European Union members were conferring by phone and videoconference.

Dominique Bussereau, France’s transport minister, told reporters Monday that he had urged EU president Spain. ever since Saturday. to call the ministerial meeting immediately but Madrid declined. “Naturally, it would have been better if had taken place Sunday or Saturday,” Bussereau said.

British Airways said airlines have asked the EU for financial compensation for the closure of airspace, starting last Wednesday. With London among the first hubs shut down, the British carrier said it’s losing as much as 20 million pounds ($30 million) per day.

BA Chief Executive Willie Walsh pointed out that compensation had been paid to airlines after the closure of U.S. airspace following the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. “This is an unprecedented situation that is having a huge impact on customers and airlines alike,” Walsh said. “We continue to offer as much support as we can to our customers, however, these are extraordinary circumstances that are beyond all airlines’ control.”

Environment Minister Jean-Louis Borloo, the No. 2 in the French Cabinet said a meeting of French airlines, travel agencies and the government was planned for Tuesday to examine possible state aid to the industry. “This aid will evolve of course based on the severity of the crisis. For that, we need a European pre-accord that we have obtained, an accord in principle so this sector aid can be allocated,” Borloo told France’s i-Tele.

German Transport Minister Peter Ramsauer said government decisions were based on a “sea of data” and defended the continued closure of air space in his country. He brushed off airlines’ complaints about losses, saying they know about their susceptibility to weather conditions.

“It is completely obvious that you have to calculate with such risks,” he told Radio station Deutschlandfunk. “And I defend myself right away against any calls to the government,” to compensate for the corporate losses. The IATA, in a statement, called on governments to place “greater urgency and focus on how and when we can safely reopen Europe’s skies”, such as through more in-depth study of the ash cloud.

“We have to not just use as the Europeans were doing, a theoretical model, let’s try to use figures and facts,” Bisignani said.” It means sending test planes at certain kinds of altitudes to check what was the situation with the ashes.”

While the association says “safety is our top priority,” Bisignani said in the statement that its member airlines have run test flights with no problems and “they report missed opportunities to fly safely.” Bisignani said that Europe, unlike the United States, for example is “not well-equipped” when it comes to planes that can test the air quality in the skies. He estimated that once flights in Europe do resume, it would take three to six days for traffic to return to normal.

France’s Borloo said disparate analyses needed to be brought together based on “real tests on real planes with real pilots,” so some air “corridors” could be reopened. “The issue today is not to reopen all European commercial airspace, the issue today is to increase the ability to reopen corridors to allow the general de-congestion of European traffic,” he told reporters.

Pierre-Henri Gourgeon, the No. 2 executive at Air France-KLM, said his company is losing euro35 million a day and called for more test flights to see if routes are safe to fly. He said the French-Dutch carrier conducted five test flights on its own Sunday and planned another seven Monday.

Speaking to reporters Monday at Air France headquarters near Paris’ main airport, Gourgeon said aviation authorities had relied on “insufficient” information when they imposed a near-blanket flight ban in some countries.

The prospect of continued losses and flight cancelations pushed down shares of many airlines. In early afternoon trade Europe, German carrier Deutsche Lufthansa AG was down 3.9 percent to euro12.24 in Frankfurt; Air France-KLM SA dropped 4.5 percent to euro11.87, and British Airways was down 4.4 percent to 224.6 British pence.

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Passengers on Dana Air's 9am Abuja bound flight from Lagos on Monday escaped a crash after one of the engines of their aircraft witnessed bird strikes some minutes after takeoff..

The aircraft which took off from the Murtala Mohammed Airport 2 (MMA2), Lagos with 97 passengers onboard, had to effect an emergency landing at the international wing of the airport when sparks resulting into smoke emanated from its affected engine.

"Some minutes after we took off from the airport, the captain announced that there was a bird strike and it has affected one of the engines," said Adeleke Babatunde, a passenger onboard the flight.

The situation, which made some residents of Mafoluku, a community close to the airport, run out of their houses in order to avoid casualties, was meticulously controlled by the aircraft pilot who landed the flight 9J 995 plane some minutes after the incident.

"We saw the plane shaking as large smoke came out of its engines and we had to run out for safety," said a resident who gave her name as Uchechi.

Commenting on the incident, Jacky Hathiramani, chief operating officer for Dana Air in a statement admitted that the aircraft suffered bird strike, adding that the captain had to make an emergency landing in line with the airline's safety and service policy.

"All 97 passengers and crew disembarked the aircraft safely, and the aircraft was taken to the hanger," he said. "Most of the passengers were booked on alternative Dana Air flights to Abuja while a few who preferred a refund were given." Mr. Hathiramani, however, thanked passengers onboard the aircraft for their cooperation, as well the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) and all airport authorities for their responsiveness and support.

Bird strikes or Bird Aircraft Strike Hazards (BASH) are collisions between airborne animals and man-made vehicles or aircraft.

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AMIDST the controversies trailing the dramatic return of ailing President Umaru Yar'Adua from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia came reports that the government of the Islamic kingdom was responsible for his untimely return.






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Nigerian Tribune was informed by a very competent security source that the government of the United States (US) and the European Union (EU) embarked on a subtle 'blackmail diplomacy' against Saudi Arabia, a development which, according to the source, almost put the Islamic Kingdom in the 'dock'.


The source also gave an insight into how the air ambulance, which brought in the ailing president, was acquired. A frontline construction giant and a former governor from one of the South-South states were said to have brokered the deal that provided the air ambulance.


The multimillion dollar air ambulance was provided by a medical firm in Los Angeles, California, in the United States, after the said construction giant contacted some highly-placed officials of its home government to intervene on its behalf.


According to him, the intelligence community in the country was in the know of the planned return of the sick president, but that the information was not fully shared with the acting president, Goodkuck Jonathan, until very late.


"People still do not understand the undercurrents of this dramatic return. Left for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, it would not have allowed the president to leave its soil without fully recovering from his ailment, but then, here is a situation that has put it as a collaborator in the whole saga.


"It got to an extent that the US government and the European Union had to engage in a subtle blackmail diplomacy with the kingdom of Saudi Arabia that it had not done too well as regards the secrecy surrounding the health of the Nigerian president since he arrived in the Kingdom for treatment.


"Of course, we know that if the government of Saudi wanted to be off the dock, it had a duty to correctly advise those very close to the president to quickly take him home rather than attracting unnecessary international attention to the respected kingdom known for its close ties with the United States.


"It was a very simple thing they did: allow the president stop subject to see him or take him to your country and maintain the secrecy of his sickness because the situation was already drawing Saudi Arabia to the international arena as part of Nigeria's political impasse until Jonathan was made the acting president two weeks ago.


The source said this was not the first time the Saudi authorities had tried to make close allies of the president see the need to allow people to see him.


"The first time they attempted to bring the ailing president into Nigeria, the man collapsed and they had to go back to the drawing board; but this time round, the construction giant and the former governor played key roles in approaching a Los Angeles-based medical firm for the air ambulance," the source said.


It will be recalled that Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana, had, last week, threatened to drag the government of Saudi Arabia before international adjucation bodies for its alleged role in the Yar'Adua health saga..

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Even as the Presidency appeared to have distanced itself from the ongoing air bombardment of some Ijaw communities in Delta State which has claimed hundreds of lives with thousands of surviving victims displaced, emerging facts indicated that the military aerial assault had indeed been planned more than one year ago, awaiting presidential nod.Hints from top security sources in Abuja revealed that President Umaru Yar’Adua had given approval to the military high command to implement the recommendations in a security and operational report on the Niger Delta, in which a former commander of the Joint Military Task Force [JTF] code-named ‘Operation Restore Hope’, Major General L.P.Ngubane, had emphatically requested the use of air raid.Then a Brigadier-General, Ngubane, who is currently the General Officer Commanding the 2 Division of the Nigerian Army, had in the security report dated July 2007, and addressed to the Chief of Defence Staff [CDS], stated that the aim of his brief was to avail the authorities with strategies for the stemming of militant activities in the troubled Niger Delta region.Citing terrain difficulties which he described as a ‘defenders haven’ as the main reason for recommending the use of military air operations, Ngubane had posited that the severity of hindrance the terrain offered to the Nigerian Army troops was directly proportional to the advantage it conferred on the militants. “The terrain of most parts of the Niger Delta is no doubt severely restricted to both infantry and armour. The situation is worse in the riverine communities which are interspersed with creeks,” he noted.“The advantage the terrain confers to the militants can be neutralized by combat air operations, using helicopter gun ships. Employment of fast patrol crafts can also assist troops to beach land safely and gradually wade through the creeks to seize objectives. However, the operation will be intensive in manpower and will also demand close air support, casualty evacuation and supply by air,” Ngubane recommended in the report tagged: ‘Strategies to stem out militant activities within the Joint Task Force Operation Restore Hope Area of Responsibility’.In assessing the equipment, arms and ammunition of the various militant groups, General Ngubane stated that every major militant camp possessed almost enough of weapons such as AK-47 rifles, GPMG, BMG, RPG 7, speedboats, gunboats, and anti-aircraft [only in Camp 5] just like an infantry unit of a regular army with sufficient personnel to counter any attack from the Nigerian military through land or sea.The army chief had also in his report, linked the heavy financial muscle and weaponry of the various militant groups to their alleged involvement in illegal oil bunkering activities, through which he claimed that a large part of the crude was given in exchange for arms and ammunition. Consequently, he recommended that the only way to curb the activities of the militants was for the Navy and the Nigerian Air Force to be given full approval to sink the ships used by the bunkering masters on the high sea.“The militants rake in so much money from this illegal activity which they also use in purchasing of arms, ammunition, speedboats and also sustain the militant activities. This constitutes serious threat to peace and security. Chasing the militants in the creeks to stop this unwholesome act is not only difficult, but hazardous. The illegal activity takes place in the hours of darkness in the depth of the creeks. In these hours of darkness, it is almost impossible for security agents to do anything meaningful,” Ngubane noted.In the security report, the erstwhile JTF boss further stated that: “In the Niger Delta, militant activities thrive most in the communities that buy into their illegal activities. For instance, in Okerenkoko, Oporoza and Kurukuruama, all in Gbaramatu kingdom, the traditional rulers and the communities are part and parcel of MEND and are very hostile to security agencies.”Incidentally, when the presidential seal was given for implementation of his recommendations more than one year after the report, Okerenkoko, Oporoza and Kurukuruama, were indeed, the first three communities bombed last Friday by no fewer than seven military fighter jets, allegedly killing scores of the inhabitants.Going by General Ngubane’s recommendations to the federal authorities, there are strong indications that besides about six communities where structures have already been reduced to rubble by massive air bombardment, more villages and towns are likely to suffer the same fate in the days ahead against the backdrop of fears by the military that the various militant groups enjoy brotherhood in the face of a common foe.Part of the report reads: “Militants enjoy camaraderie in the face of a common adversary. Also, their common goal and ethnic affinity ensure that they would easily be assimilated into other communities of the same ethnicity. Consequently, militants when attacked could easily relocate to other parts of the Niger Delta. It is therefore important that any offensive operation against militants should be conducted in the entire Niger Delta. The concurrent involvement of troops other than those of the JTF OP HR and JTF Op Flush-out 111, would be necessary. This may require that 4 and 13 Bdes as well as the ENC and WNC, would at least be at alert to ward off migration of the militants to other parts of the Niger Delta.“Offensive operations adopting either Option 1 or 2 would require the immediate deployment of one additional battalion to the operational area. This is important as troops already deployed are holding vital and key locations within the JTF Op HR AOR, and would be needed to continue to maintain their deployments. Additionally, the troops would be required for blockade operations while the additional troops would then be engaged in the striking operations.“In the advent of widespread destruction of oil industry’s facilities and other acts of sabotage and bombings, it would be necessary to induct 2 additional battalions into the operations area at 7 days notice. These 2 additional units would be able to carry out pursuit operations and the strengthening and tightening of security within the entire AOR until the insurgency is curtailed.”Apparently in line with the operational recommendations, Daily Sun reliably gathered that as at weekend, over 90 military gunboats had been placed in strategic positions around the waterways in Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State where the bombings are ongoing for effective blockade of all entry and exit routes.Unconfirmed reports said besides about 20,000 persons who successfully fled to take refuge in some other safe villages and towns before the commencement of air raids on Friday, over 30,000 others are presently trapped in the mangrove forests as a result of the heavy military blockades. Reports also indicated that apart from the JTF troops, three battalions, including the 81 Battalion had been placed on standby to moved into the conquered communities.
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