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This should be in the  Guiness Book of Records  

The number of ‘tenants’ allegedly defrauded by an estate agent in Lagos, has risen to 64, even as policemen at the Special Fraud Unit (SFU), Milverton Road, Ikoyi, Lagos, are still collating names of victims. The Police have also confirmed that Omotayo Balogun, who other victims claimed was not one of them, was actually defrauded by the estate agent, Olatunde Najeem.

 
According to the Public Relations Officer (PRO) of the SFU, Ngozi Isintume, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), Balogun paid the sum of N500,000, to Najeem for a mini flat.
She explained that after the payment, Najeem failed to give the flat to him. According to her, it was based on that, that he (Balogun) wrote a petition to the SFU on December 2, 2010, which led to the arrest of the suspect.
She disclosed that it was when other victims heard that Najeem had been arrested that they came to report that they were also defrauded by the suspect.
The PRO, however, wondered why some of the victims resorted to being hostile to the policemen, who according to her, were working to ensure that they get justice..
“It is not true that Balogun was not defrauded by the same estate agent. It’s not possible for all the victims to know themselves. The police are in a better position to know the victims because, they come to complain to us and not to their fellow victims.
“Omotayo was the first person who wrote a petition to the police. Those who are alleging that Balogun was not one of the victims, did not even report the matter to the police. It was when they heard that he had written a petition to the SFU, leading to the arrest of the suspect, that they started showing up,” she said.
Meanwhile, Isintume has advised people to always carry out thorough investigation before paying for accommodation. She also urged other victims in the rent scam to visit SFU for further information.
Daily Sun had in its Thursday, February, 17, 2011, edition published report of the estate agent, who defrauded 51 ‘tenants’ the sum of N16.9million.
 

 
 

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From Laolu Akande, New York

WHILE the consumption of petroleum-based products in the United States (U.S.) is flat, Nigeria's ranking on the international oil supply chart to the U.S. has grown.

A monthly data on the origins of crude oil imports into the U.S., based on February 2010 figures, which is the most recent estimate available to the U.S. government, shows that Nigeria is the fourth top oil supplier of the U.S., now ahead of Saudi Arabia, by the end of February this year.

According to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), Nigeria is among the top five oil suppliers to the U.S. and "the top five exporting countries accounted for 64 per cent of United States crude oil imports in February while the top 10 sources accounted for approximately 85 per cent of all U.S. crude oil imports."

The EIA listed the top five sources of U.S. crude oil imports for February as Canada with 1.897 million barrels per day (mbpd) to the U.S.; Mexico (0.996 mbpd), Venezuela (0.913 mbpd), Nigeria (0.896 mbpd), and Saudi Arabia (0.881 mbpd)..

EIA added that "the rest of the top 10 sources, in order, were Iraq (0.540 mbpd), Colombia (0.371) mbpd), Angola (0.312 mbpd), Algeria (0.282 mbpd), and United Kingdom (0.260 mbpd).

Altogether, the total crude oil imports to the U.S. averaged 8.680 mbpd in February, which is an increase of 0.226 mbpd from January 2010.

According to the EIA, Canada remained the largest exporter of total petroleum in February, exporting 2.490 mbpd to the U.S., which is a decrease from last month's (2.593 mbpd). The second largest exporter of total petroleum was Mexico with 1.134 mbpd.

But in the EIA Annual Energy Outlook, the EIA disclosed that "although U.S. consumption of liquid fuels continues to grow over the next 25 years...reliance on petroleum imports decreases."

The Outlook added that with U.S. government policies and rising oil prices providing incentives for the continued development and use of alternatives to fossil fuels, "bio fuels account for all the growth in liquid fuel consumption in the United States over the next 25 years, while consumption of petroleum-based liquids is essentially flat."

EIA outlook stated further that the role played by petroleum-based liquids could be further challenged "if electric or natural-gas-fueled vehicles begin to enter the market in significant numbers."

Now in the U.S., the Outlook said that rising oil prices, together with growing concerns about climate change and energy security, were leading to increased interest in alternative-fuel vehicles (AFVs), but both electric and natural gas vehicles face significant challenges with the potential for petroleum displacement.
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