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jpeg&STREAMOID=sE3SsWlCHeZL$kvMe9fpFS6SYeqqxXXqBcOgKOfTXxQQVCE$5FSsEN8GRCxdSubBnW_PgxgftuECOcfJwS6Jtlp$r8Fy$6AAZ9zyPuHJ25T7a9GKDSxsGxtpmxP0VAUyHL6IDcZHtmM2t7xO$FHdJG95dFi6y2Uma3vSsvPpVyo-&width=123The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) yesterday rearrested the former chief executive officers of AfriBank, Finbank, Union and Intercontinental banks and eight other directors in Lagos. According to Femi Babafemi, the commission’s spokesperson, the arrests were based on fresh discoveries. While confirming the arrest of Erastus Akingbola, the former managing director of Intercontinental Bank who was out on bail after a series of court appearances, Mr Babafemi said: “These are fresh charges but they are related — not only him, but three other former MDs (managing directors) and eight other directors; about eleven of them are arrested.”

Mr Babafemi, however, did not give details of the names of the eight directors that were arrested and when they might be charged to court.

“I know Akingbola will be charged to court tomorrow,” he said.

Mr Babafemi also confirmed that Sebastian Adigwe of Afribank, Bartholomew Ebong of Union Bank and Okey Nwosu of Finbank who were also rearrested would soon be charged to court.

Lamido Sanusi, governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, had been in office for barely two months when he sacked the CEOs on August 14, 2009 and replaced them with new management. Mr Sanusi said that in building public confidence in the Nigerian banking system, the CBN would exercise zero tolerance on professional and unethical conduct.

“We will not allow any bank to fail,” Mr Sanusi said that Friday morning while announcing the sacking of the bank chiefs and the injection of about N420 billion into the rescued banks. “However, we will also ensure that officers of banks and debtors who contribute to bank failures are brought to book to the full extent of the law and that all proceeds of infraction are confiscated where legally feasible.”

Mr Sanusi also released the banks’ bad debt numbers which totalled over N716 billion. Oceanic Bank was owed N278.204 billion in nonperforming loans; Intercontinental, N210.903 billion; Afribank, N141.856 billion; Union N73.582 billion; and FinBank, N42.445 billion.

Plea bargaining

Sacked managing director of Oceanic Bank, Cecilia Ibru, has already pleaded guilty to the charges and forfeited N191 billion worth of assets and bagged an 18-month suspended jail sentence in the process. Mrs Ibru was released after six months due to poor health. The remaining suspects have been on trial since their sack. They were charged for various offenses including conspiracy to grant unsecured credit facilities, conspiracy to manipulate share prices, reckless consideration of credit facilities without adequate security and failure to present their monthly statements of account to the Central Bank. The anti-graft agency said then that the charges could still be amended as the trial progressed. Mr Nwosu of Finbank was arraigned on an 11-count charge. Mr Akingbola was on the run for over a year before his return last year. Other directors of Intercontinental Bank that have been arraigned include Raymond Obieri, Samuel Adegbite, Christopher Adebayo, Olusegun Ajibola, Sunny Adams, Isiyaku Umar and Bayo Dada who were all remanded in EFCC custody before they were eventually granted bail. They were arraigned on a 27-count charge.

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jpeg&STREAMOID=sE3SsWlCHeZL$kvMe9fpFS6SYeqqxXXqBcOgKOfTXxQQVCE$5FSsEN8GRCxdSubBnW_PgxgftuECOcfJwS6Jtlp$r8Fy$6AAZ9zyPuHJ25T7a9GKDSxsGxtpmxP0VAUyHL6IDcZHtmM2t7xO$FHdJG95dFi6y2Uma3vSsvPpVyo-&width=234EFCC rearrests former bank chiefs, directors    http://bit.ly/kWUHvm

 

 

jpeg&STREAMOID=EgfSWHubJL_aUXm4SSXY5S6SYeqqxXXqBcOgKOfTXxTUcKKHeSFQJARl6DD1k4IrnW_PgxgftuECOcfJwS6Jtlp$r8Fy$6AAZ9zyPuHJ25T7a9GKDSxsGxtpmxP0VAUyHL6IDcZHtmM2t7xO$FHdJG95dFi6y2Uma3vSsvPpVyo-&width=234Woman in court for assaulting househelp 

 

bin-laden-compound-_146645d.jpg?width=234Photos – bin Laden compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan WARNING GRAPHIC PHOTOS 

 

 

 

 

 

osama_bin_laden_dead0001_66.jpg?w=197&h=263&width=123Fake Dead Osama Photos :US debates release of Osama bin Laden pictures to quash doubts over death 

 

Al-Mustapha is alive, says lawyer: former chief security officer to the late Sani Abacha, a dictator who ruled t...   

 

 

 

Ras Kimono Storms Benin in Comeback Reggae fest !

 

IRAN EXECUTES FIRST JUVENILE OFFENDERS IN 2011 

 

The deal about abstaining from sex by Myne Whitman 

 

Bin Laden's neighbors noticed unusual things By NAHAL TOOSI and ZARAR KHAN, Associated Press 

 

Lime Wire's day of reckoning is here by Greg Sandoval

 

previously:

 

Corpers Were Destined to Die ! Bauchi Governor Isa Yuguda aka Jaguda

images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTiJJx1wMlGkBB0BM-xZ3j4LoUYY2n9xESWWxvONP39nOa6JyKUPJp9fgDenunciation and condemnation on Saturday trailed the comments attributed to the

 The Men that Killed Osama Bin Laden Meet The 'Seal Team 6',

12166309294?profile=originalThe Bad-Asses Who Killed Osama Bin Laden

The military team that killed Osama Bin Laden is an elite special forces group unofficially called Seal Team 6.

 

Officially, the team's name is classified and not available to the public, technically there is no…

 

 

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Mark Gorton and Lime Wire pocketed millions by enabling people to obtain songs online without paying for them. Now, Gorton and his company could end up paying damages of over $1 billion.riaa1_270x179.jpg

Some of the 9,715 albums that the RIAA says were downloaded illegally with LimeWire's help.

In a New York federal court this week, the four largest record companies will try to prove that it was Gorton's own greed that drove him to continue operating Lime Wire, the company behind the highly popular file-sharing service LimeWire, though they warned him years ago to stop and fellow peer-to-peer operators advised him to cut a deal. Gorton continued to defy the top labels even after their trade group, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), filed a copyright suit against him in 2006 and after the courts had issued unfavorable rulings against operations like his.

Starting this week, a jury will be asked to decide the amount Gorton and Lime Wire must pay in damages to the four major labels. Jury members can choose any amount between $750 and $150,000 for each infringing work. That's the range for copyright damages set by Congress. In this case, the RIAA seeks damages for 9,715 albums. That means Gorton doesn't walk out of the courtroom for less than $7.2 million. If the jury finds him liable for the maximum, he will owe about $1.4 billion.Gorton could not immediately be reached for comment.

 

The RIAA won its copyright case a year ago, when U.S. District Judge Kimba Wood found that Gorton and Lime Wire were liable for "willful" infringement. In October, she ordered the company to shut down operations. After that the only question left to answer was how much Gorton would be required to pay and whether the RIAA can collect.

 

Based on the way these things typically go, expect the music industry to win a judgment that will likely exceed Gorton's personal net worth. He could then attempt to file for bankruptcy and discharge the judgment that way. The music labels would dispute his bankruptcy claim, noting that he was found liable of willful copyright infringement and then try to prove his actions were malicious. Typically those found liable of willful and malicious copyright infringement aren't allowed to shed judgments because of a bankruptcy claim. If I'm correct, then following all that, the labels will need to find Gorton's assets. Some of them won't require too much searching. Records show that Gorton owns a $4 million home on Manhattan's Upper West Side.

For the music industry though, the case isn't just about dollars and cents. The LimeWire software was downloaded more than 150 million times and was one of the top file-sharing services. More than 90 percent of the service's file-sharing traffic was pirated material and the cost to the music sector was in the billions, the RIAA has alleged.

Lime Wire was the last of its kind. There aren't any more mainstream U.S.-based companies accused of employing music piracy as a business strategy. With Lime Wire's demise, the RIAA can now boast that they've driven file-sharing services underground or overseas. In addition, by taking down the company and possibly hefting huge debt onto Gorton's shoulders, the music industry has turned LimeWire and Gorton into a powerful cautionary tale.

In discussions with several copyright hardliners from the music sector, I've seen that for them Lime Wire's legal undoing is a story about justice and retribution.

To his music industry critics, Gorton, who is 44 and also operates a hedge fund as well as a software business, is little more than a digital-music carpetbagger. He swooped in after Napster exposed the industry's vulnerability to file sharing and before the courts had yet to rule on the legality of operations like his.

GORTON3_270x308.jpgThe building in New York where records show Mark Gorton owns a $4 million home.

 

RIAA lawyers will likely tell the jury that even after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the 2005 landmark case of MGM Studios v. Grokster that peer-to-peer services could be sued for inducing copyright violations Gorton refused to clean up his act.

His competitors--Grokster, Kazaa, BearShare, WinMX, and eDonkey--either went legitimate or closed down. That left Lime Wire in charge of file sharing during the 2000s. The service went from a file-sharing market share of 3 percent in 2004 to nearly 80 percent by 2007, according to research firm NPD Group.

During the same period, Lime Wire's annual revenue grew from $6 million in 2004 to $20 million two years later.

The only changes Gorton appeared to make were moving personal assets into trusts controlled by his family.

According to testimony from Lime Wire's former CEO as well as from Gorton's own deposition with RIAA lawyers, he transferred his money to "protect the assets in the event of a legal judgment against me personally."

 

Gorton suggested in an interview last year with The New York Times that he was "naïve" about the legal issues involved. Some who used to work with Gorton say that isn't true.

Ted Cohen, a long-time music industry exec who now is a consultant for digital-music services, was hired in 2006 by Gorton and Lime Wire to "take them legal" Cohen wrote in a blog post last December. According to Cohen, after he wrote an opinion piece in Billboard magazine that the labels should license Lime Wire in "its then-current state" and after he began to set up meetings with the record companies, the plan was scrapped unexpectedly by Gorton.

 

"LimeWire's owner, called me to express his displeasure with my editorial position," Cohen wrote. "He said he had no intention of paying a dime to artists, labels or publishers and I should not be stating anything to the contrary. When I reminded him that he'd hired me to get LimeWire agreements with the rights holders, he said all he wanted me to do was to get them to leave him alone. I told him that wasn't going to happen...I knew it was not going to be a happy ending."

blog_greg_sandoval_60x60.png

Greg Sandoval covers media and digital entertainment for CNET News. Based in New York, Sandoval is a former reporter for The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times.

 

Article extracted from: http://news.cnet.com/8301-31001_3-20059366-261.html?tag=topImage2

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capt.ad3dc2d14bae4247a7fe250cab513bdf-ad3dc2d14bae4247a7fe250cab513bdf-0.jpg?x=213&y=136&xc=1&yc=1&wc=409&hc=261&q=85&sig=LjOrNYeWF.vNq2KUFNeKxw--ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan – When a woman involved in a polio vaccine drive turned up at Osama bin Laden's hideaway, she remarked to the men behind the high walls about the expensive SUVs parked inside. The men took the vaccine, apparently to administer to the 23 children at the compound, and told her to go away.

The terror chief and his family kept well hidden behind thick walls in this northwestern hill town they shared with thousands of Pakistani soldiers. But glimpses of their life are emerging — along with deep skepticism that authorities didn't know they were there.

Although the house is large, it was unclear how three dozen people could have lived there with any degree of comfort.

Neighbors said they knew little about those inside in the compound but bin Laden apparently depended on two men who would routinely emerge to run errands or to a neighborhood gathering, such as a funeral. There were conflicting details about the men's identities. Several people said they were known as Tariq and Arshad Khan and had identified themselves as cousins from elsewhere in northwestern Pakistan. Others gave different names and believed they were brothers.

Arshad was the oldest, and both spoke multiple languages, including Pashto and Urdu, which are common here, residents said.

As Navy SEALs swept through the compound early Monday, they handcuffed those they encountered with plastic zip ties and pressed on in pursuit of bin Laden. After killing the terror leader, his son and two others, they doubled back to move nine women and 23 children away from the compound, according to U.S. officials.

Those survivors of the raid are now "in safe hands and being looked after in accordance to the law," the Pakistani government said in a statement. "As per policy, they will be handed over to their countries of origin." It did not elaborate.

Also unclear was why bin Laden chose Abbottabad, though at least two other top al-Qaida leaders have sheltered in this town. The bustling streets are dotted with buildings left over from British colonial days. These days it attracts some tourists, but is known mostly as a garrison town wealthier than many others in Pakistan.

Bin Laden found it safe enough to stay for up to six years, according to U.S. officials, a stunning length of time to remain in one place right under the noses of a U.S.-funded army that had ostensibly been trying to track him down. Most intelligence assessments believed him to be along the Afghan-Pakistan border, perhaps in a cave.

Construction of the three-story house began about seven years ago, locals said. People initially were curious about the heavily fortified compound — which had walls as high as 18 feet topped with barbed wire — but over time they just grew to believe the family inside was deeply religious and conservative.

The Pakistani government also pushed back at suggestions that security forces were sheltering bin Laden or failed to spot suspicious signs.

"It needs to be appreciated that many houses (in the northwest) have high boundary walls, in line with their culture of privacy and security," the government said. "Houses with such layout and structural details are not a rarity."

The house has been described as a mansion, even a luxury one, but from the outside it is nothing special. Bin Laden may have well have been able to take in a view of the hills from secluded spots in the garden, though.

The walls are stained with mold, trees are in the garden and the windows are hidden. U.S. officials said the house had no Internet or phone connection to reduce the risk of electronic surveillance. They also said residents burned their trash to avoid collection.

Those who live nearby said the people in bin Laden's compound rarely strayed outside. Most were unaware that foreigners — bin Laden and his family are Arabs — were living there.

Khurshid Bibi, in her 70s, said one man living in the compound had given her a lift to the market in the rain. She said her grandchildren played with the kids in the house and that the adults there gave them rabbits as a gift.

But the occupants also attracted criticism.

"People were skeptical in this neighborhood about this place and these guys. They used to gossip, say they were smugglers or drug dealers. People would complain that even with such a big house they didn't invite the poor or distribute charity," said Mashood Khan, a 45-year-old farmer.

Questions persisted about how authorities could not have known who was living in the compound, especially since it was close to a prestigious military academy.

As in other Pakistani towns, hotels in Abbottabad are supposed to report the presence of foreigners to the police, as are estate agents. Abbottabad police chief Mohammed Naeem said the police followed the procedures but "human error cannot be avoided."

Reporters were allowed to get as far as the walls of the compound for the first time, but the doors were sealed shut and police were in no mood to open them.

Neighbors showed off small parts of what appeared to be a U.S. helicopter that malfunctioned and was disabled by the American strike team as it retreated. A small servant's room outside the perimeter showed signs of violent entry and a brisk search. Clothes and bedding had been tossed aside. A wall clock was on the floor, the time stuck at 2:20.

Abbottabad has so far been spared the terrorist bombings that have scarred much of Pakistan over the last four years.

Like many Pakistani towns where the army has a strong presence, Abbottabad is well-manicured, and has solid infrastructure. Street signs tell residents to "Love Pakistan." The city also is known for its good schools, including some that were originally established by Christian missionaries.

Little girls wear veils while carrying Hannah Montana backpacks to school. Many houses in the outlying areas have modern amenities, but lie along streets covered with trash. Shepherds herd their flock of sheep along dusty roads just a few hundred yards from modern banks.

Al-Qaida's No. 3, Abu Faraj al-Libi, lived in the town before his arrest in 2005 elsewhere in northwest Pakistan, according to U.S. and Pakistani officials. Earlier this year, Indonesian terror suspect Umar Patek was nabbed at a house in the town following the arrest of an al-Qaida courier who worked at the post office. It is not clear whether Patek had any links with bin Laden.

Western officials have long regarded Pakistani security forces with suspicion, chiefly over their links to militants fighting in Afghanistan. Last year, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton caused anger in Pakistan when she said she found it "hard to believe" that no one in Islamabad knows where the al-Qaida leaders are hiding and couldn't get them "if they really wanted to."

But al-Qaida has been responsible for scores of bloody attacks inside Pakistan, including on its army and civilian leaders. Critics of Pakistan have speculated that a possible motivation for Pakistan to have kept bin Laden on the run — rather than arresting or killing him — would be to ensure a constant flow of U.S. aid and weapons into the country.

Suspicions were also aired in Pakistani media and on the street Tuesday.

"That house was obviously a suspicious one," said Jahangir Khan, who was buying a newspaper in Abbottabad. "Either it was a complete failure of our intelligence agencies or they were involved in this affair."

___

Associated Press Writer Chris Brummitt in Islamabad contribute to this report.

 

Article extracted from 

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Here are more photos of the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan where Navy Seals killed Osama bin Laden. More to come soon, stay tuned on Twitter @pimpmy9jabook  http://twitter.com/pimpmy9jabook

compound_binladen_050211.jpg?width=397AP

This undated artist rendering handout provided by the CIA shows the Abbottabad compound in Pakistan where American forces in Pakistan killed Osama bin Laden, the mastermind behind the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. (CIA)

This undated artist rendering handout provided by the CIA shows the Abbottabad compound in Pakistan where American forces in Pakistan killed Osama bin Laden, the mastermind behind the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. (CIA)

bin-laden-compound-_146645d.jpg

bin_laden_compound_01.jpg

Does not look like $1 million dollars in my book. Maybe in California.

binladencompound2.jpg?w=300

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2011-05-02T065727Z_01_BTRE7410JC200_RTROPTP_3_NEWS-US-BINLADEN-COMPOUND.JPG

600_bin_laden_compound_3_110502.jpg

800_osama_compound_in_pakistan_3_110502.jpg

The area of a compound where it is believed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden lived seen in Abbottabad, Pakistan on Monday, May 2, 2011. (AP / Anjum Naveed)

800_ap_pakistani_guards_110.jpg

Pakistani authorities beefed up security around a compound of the U. S. consulate after killing of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, in Karachi, Pakistan on Monday, May 2, 2011. (AP Photo/Shakil Adil)

Osama Bin Laden

Osama bin Laden used his youngest wife as a human shield in the minutes before he was shot dead

satimage.jpg?w=300

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Obama administration's insistence that DNA tests prove body is 'virtually 100% match' fails to silence calls for graphic evidence   

John-Brennan-007.jpg?width=460
'We are looking at releasing additional information, details about the raid as well as any other types of material,' said White House counter-terrorism adviser John Brennan. Photograph: Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images

The official US version of Osama bin Laden's killing is being questioned around the world, with doubters asking why they have not yet seen stills or video footage of the raid, his corpse or his burial at sea.

The White House said it was considering whether to release photos of Bin Laden after he was killed, but admitted the photos were "gruesome". Press spokesman Jay Carney said officials were concerned about the "sensitivity" of releasing any photos, but "there is not some roiling debate here about this."

Asked if President Obama is involved in the photo discussion, Carney said the president is involved in every aspect of the issue.

The Obama administration earlier insisted it used advanced DNA techniques to find a "virtually 100% match" of the body with DNA taken from relatives of Bin Laden. Face-mapping software was also used.

But doubts persist – especially online. "Is Bin Laden Really Dead Or Is This Some Conspiracy Bullsh*t The Government Is Feeding Us??? Something To Think About," asked Hiphopwired.com.

"Talk about perfect timing! Right when the president's approval rating is at an all-time low, and just as he prepares his re-election campaign, look who he discovers hiding under a rock? What a way to kick some life into his career?"

Participants in jihadi website forums also expressed doubts about the killing. "How sound is the news of the martyrdom of Sheikh Osama bin Laden?" asked a member of the Ansar forum. Another said: "God willing, [this] news is not true. Catastrophic if it is authentic."

On Islamic Awakening one sympathiser wrote: "I will wait for the mujahideen to confirm this, and will not believe until I see a picture of his dead body."

Zabiullah Mujaid, a Taliban spokesman in Afghanistan, said in a statement to journalists: "This news is only coming from one side, from Obama's office, and America has not shown any evidence or proof to support this claim.".

American right-wingers were sceptical and scornful. On the Free Republic forum, a poster called salamander wrote: "The commie muzzie usurper in chief had better release photos and videos toot sweet. WTF with this burial at sea before the body is cold? … Something about this smells."

In July 2003, the US faced criticism but succeeding in silencing most conspiracy theorists by releasing graphic photos of the corpses of Saddam Hussein's sons Uday and Qusay to prove that US forces had killed them. The bodies were embalmed for 11 days before being buried.

 

"We are looking at releasing additional information, details about the raid as well as any other types of material, possibly including photos," White House counter-terrorism adviser John Brennan said on ABC News's Good Morning America show. "We want to understand exactly what the possible reaction might be to the release of this information."

The DNA evidence that confirmed Bin Laden was dead came through in the morning after the assault at Abbottabad.

By that time, US intelligence officials were 95% certain they had their man. He was identified by those who took part in the raid and by a woman in the building said to be one of the fugitive's wives.

Further identification came from photographs of the body that were beamed back to CIA specialists who compared them with confirmed images of the al-Qaida leader.

The DNA test left little room for doubt, with one intelligence official telling reporters they had "a virtually 100% match" of the body against DNA taken from "several Bin Laden family members."

As a prioritised task, the DNA analysis could be completed within six hours, said Mark Jobling, a geneticist at Leicester University where DNA fingerprinting was invented.

The first step was to extract DNA from a swab of blood or saliva, a procedure that can be done with a commercial kit in minutes. The next stage was to create a DNA profile to check against those compiled long ago from Bin Laden's relatives.

A genetic profile is based on regions of DNA called short tandem repeats (STRs). These are parts of the genetic code where a sequence of "letters", such as GATA, repeats several times over. The number of times an STR repeats varies from person to person, but is crucially inherited from parents, passed on to children and shared with siblings. A typical genetic fingerprint shows how many times 10 or more STRs repeat in an individual.

The match was obtained when the genetic profile of the dead man was compared with profiles already worked up for Bin Laden's close relatives, such as his sister, who is reported to have died in a Boston hospital. A sibling of Bin Laden's would share half his DNA, but a much stronger match was possible with profiles from more relatives.

 

 

NOTE: These photos are NOT the real photos of bin Ladens death.

The real photos have not yet been released. These photos are circulating now, but Defense Dept. says they are old edited photos  that have been around for a while. the photos of the homes are REAL though .compound_binladen_050211.jpg

osama_bin_laden_dead0001_66.jpg?w=197&h=263&width=197
usama osama bin laden dead photo

Rick Shell: Reporting Live – Osama or Usama bin Laden has been killed. US sources including the president, have confirmed the death of the top al-Qaeda leader, saying he has been killed in firefight following a US Navy Seals raid in Abbottabad.600_bin_laden_compound_CIA3_ap_110502_430241.jpg?2

The operation to kill bin Laden was launched earlier Sunday in Pakistan’s Abbottabad, a two-hour drive north of the capital Islamabad.

Bin Laden was killed in a firefight. No Americans were harmed.

US Navy Seals attacked the 3 story home where Bin Laden was in hiding. The Seals rappelled from Chinook and Blackhawk helicopters. A large firefight ensued.

The home was 8 x larger than others in area, built in 2005 in a largely unpopulated area that had since grown around the home.

600_bin_laden_compound_2_110502.jpgThe home was surrounded by 2 security fences and barbed wire.

2 brothers who worked for bin Laden reportedly lived in the home and were also killed.

Latest reports indicate that Bin Laden’s son was also killed. Other dead include the two brothers and one woman that may have been used as a bullet shield. . Apparently there were many people at the residence. U.S. forces took custody of bin Laden’s body and it was later buried at seain keeping with Islamic tradition which calls for a body to be buried within 24 hours in most cases.

There are also reports that two of bin Laden’s wives and four of his children were also captured during the operation. No confirmation yet on these reports.

US authorities received  intelligence last September and were able to track bin Laden down through his couriers. They followed them to the compound and after weeks of surveillance, Navy Seals attacked.bin-laden-compound-_146645d.jpg

DNA testing was conducted as well as facial recognition techniques to help formally identify him.

Oil and Silver have taken a dive and the US dollar has soared. It will be interesting to see the reaction of Wall Street in the next few hours.

In addition to 9/11 ( September 11, 2001)  bin Laden has also been linked  to a string of attacks including the 1998 bombings of American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and the 2000 bombing of the warship USS Cole in Yemen. More Indepth Updates forthcoming.

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jpeg&STREAMOID=xwifqrXKW2zJKGVKTt3mBS6SYeqqxXXqBcOgKOfTXxQ2pjRfVLh$h7fPJjt1Ngo1nW_PgxgftuECOcfJwS6Jtlp$r8Fy$6AAZ9zyPuHJ25T7a9GKDSxsGxtpmxP0VAUyHL6IDcZHtmM2t7xO$FHdJG95dFi6y2Uma3vSsvPpVyo-&width=234former chief security officer to the late Sani Abacha, a dictator who ruled the country between 1993 and 1998 - Hamza Al-Mustapha - is alive and well, says his lawyer. Olalekan Ojo, Mr Al-Mustapha's lawyer, said on telephone yesterday that he spoke with someone "who was with him early today (Monday) while he was playing tennis at the prison."

The fragile peace of Kano city was nearly shattered yesterday when news of the alleged murder of Mr Al-Mustapha at the Kirikiri Maximum Security Prisons broke. A press statement by his younger brother, Hadi, nearly stoked the embers of the fire more when it demanded that the federal government avail the family of the true position on Mr Al-Mustapha's current state.

"For days running, we have been inundated with several calls from well wishers and friends as well as other well-meaning Nigerians that want to ascertain the veracity of the truth of the rumour.

"We have made several unsuccessful attempts to get to the root of the matter. Most worrisome about this matter is that it has thrown the entire family, who are aware of the fact that there is no smoke without fire, into a state of frustration and apprehension," the statement read.

The statement added that the last time they saw Al-Mustapha was when he appeared in the court recently and that since then they had not heard from him.

"The last time we saw Major Hamza Al-Mustapha was in April when he put up one of his several appearances before a Lagos High court. We were already looking forward to his release after his case was closed for lack of witnesses to prove the charges preferred against him.

"Even the Lagos-based Court of Appeal corroborated this when the presiding judge ruled that the witnesses that would have proven the charges against him are all unreliable. This revelation that appears to have absolved Major Al-Mustapha, who has spent 13 years awaiting trial, came to us as a cheering development. We are very worried with the turn of events as we have been forced to call for the intervention of human rights organisations in and outside Nigerians first time."

Not entirely correct

But it appears the family did not give the total picture in its statement as Mr Ojo, the lawyer further claimed that he was with Al-Mustapha last week "and I'm also in touch with his younger brother who was with him last week." When contacted on phone at 5.45pm, Mr Ojo denied that his client had died saying, "It can never be true, because God forbid, if it had been true, I should have known about it in a matter of 30 minutes. I can authoritatively tell you that with what I know and also knowing the last time we were in touch; it is not true and can never be true."

Kano city recently erupted in spasmodic violence after supporters of Muhammadu Buhari, the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) presidential candidate went on a rampage over their candidate's loss in the presidential elections of April 16. The Emir of Kano's palace in Dorayi was burnt just as the house of a former House of Representatives speaker, Umar Ghali Na'abba was set on fire. The house of the Galadima of Kano, who allegedly distributed money and fabric on behalf of President Goodluck Jonathan, was also burnt down.

History

Mr Al-Mustapha was arrested on October 22, 1998 and has since been in and out of the courts. He was arrested and arraigned in court for allegedly killing Kudirat Abiola, wife of the late Moshood Abiola, the acclaimed winner of the June 12, 1993 presidential elections, and attempted murder of former internal affairs minister, Alex Ibru.

He was recently acquitted of the charges in Mr Ibru's case.

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jpeg&STREAMOID=EgfSWHubJL_aUXm4SSXY5S6SYeqqxXXqBcOgKOfTXxTUcKKHeSFQJARl6DD1k4IrnW_PgxgftuECOcfJwS6Jtlp$r8Fy$6AAZ9zyPuHJ25T7a9GKDSxsGxtpmxP0VAUyHL6IDcZHtmM2t7xO$FHdJG95dFi6y2Uma3vSsvPpVyo-The Lagos state police command said parents and guardians who assault their children and wards will be made to face the full wrath of the law.

This follows the arrest and prosecution of a housewife, Chigozie Godrick, for allegedly brutalising her ward, Ifunnaya Nwamba, 12.

Mrs Godrick was arrested last month following a petition to the police by the school authority at the Adeniyi Jones Primary School located at 1 Kudeti Street, Adekunle Village in Adeniyi Jones, where Miss Nwamba is a pupil, on repeated cases of brutality by her guardian Mrs Godrick.

Looking wrong

Miss Nwamba's classroom teacher, Mr Jimoh, noticed on April 8 that she had come to school that day with a swollen face and bruises all over her body.

Mr Jimoh took Miss Nwamba's case to the school authority and the girl, who was weak and groaning in pain, was taken to the hospital for treatment.

"After her treatment, Ifunnaya narrated her ordeal to the school authority. She stated that she was punished for her inability to wash Mrs Godrick's Nissan Sienna wagon properly. Ifunnaya is a little above four feet while the height of the car is above five feet so she was unable to wash the top parts of the car. So when her madam saw that the top of the car was not washed, she became angry and used the water hose to beat the poor girl," Mr Jimoh said.

Taking action

Following this brutality, the school authority, in a petition dated April 8 and addressed to the commissioner of police in the state, read in part:

"The management of Adeniyi Jones Primary School hereby petition the police command on the assault on one of our pupils Miss Ifunnaya Nwamba, a 12-year-old girl who was brutalised by her guardian (Mrs Chigozie Godrick). The girl claimed to have been battered as a result of her failure to wash her (Mrs Chigozie Godrick's) car to her satisfaction. This has been a re-occurring issue for the past two years. About a year ago, her back was bruised and when the management asked her, she said it was caused by hot oil poured on her by this same guardian. She claimed to have always beaten her with turning pestle, hose, pipes and wood with nails," read the petition.

The school also petitioned the executive chairman of the state's Universal Basic Education Board at Maryland, the Social Welfare, and the Guidance and Counselling Unit School services, through the education secretary of the local government education authority, who gave the school license to proceed with the case.

The police spokesperson Samuel Jinadu said the police will not hesitate to arrest and prosecute any parent or guardian who assaults their children and wards.

"The case was transferred to the Human Rights Department and the woman (Chigozie Godrick) was charged to court on April 14, 2011. Mrs Godrick was charged to the Ikeja Magistrate court," Mr Jinadu said.

NEXT gathered that Mrs Godrick was charged on a two-count charge of alleged assault and causing grievous bodily harm.

Miss Godrick, however, pleaded not guilty to the charges and was granted bail in the sum of N100,000. The case has been adjourned until May 23, 2011

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12166310869?profile=originalAmnesty International has condemned a sharp rise in the rate of executions in public in Iran – which have included the first executions of juvenile offenders in the world this year.   

Since the start of 2011, up to 13 men have been hanged in public, compared to 14 such executions recorded by Amnesty International from official Iranian sources in the whole of 2010.  Eight of those executions have taken place since 16 April 2011. 

On 20 April 2011, two juvenile offenders – identified only as “A.N” and “H.B” - were among three individuals hanged in public in Bandar Abbas, southern Iran, after being convicted over a rape and murder committed when they were only 17. A fourth man was hanged at the same time for rape. 

“Yet again, Iran has distinguished itself by being the only country this year to execute juvenile offenders.  No more juvenile offenders must die at the hands of the state,” said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Deputy Director of Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa Programme 

“Not only were these young men executed for crimes committed when aged under 18, but their executions were carried out in public.  Public executions are not only a violation of the right to life, but are a gross affront to human dignity which cannot be tolerated.” 

On 16 April 2011, three men were also hanged in public in Shiraz for murder, armed robbery and kidnapping.  A fourth man was hanged on the same day near Kazeroun in Fars Province after being convicted of four counts of murder. 

Public executions in Iran are usually carried out by cranes which lift the condemned person by a noose around the neck.  They are advertised in advance. 

Iran is one of the only countries that still imposes the death penalty on juvenile offenders - those convicted of an alleged crime committed before they were 18 - and was the only country known to have executed a juvenile offender in 2010.  Executions of juvenile offenders are strictly prohibited under international law. 

UN human rights experts have made it clear that executions in public serve no legitimate interest and only increase the cruel, inhuman and degrading nature of this punishment. 

“It is deeply disturbing that despite a moratorium on public executions ordered in 2008, the Iranian authorities are once again seeking to intimidate people by such spectacles which not only dehumanize the victim, but brutalize those who witness it,” said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui. 

There was a sharp rise in the rate of executions in Iran in December 2010 and January 2011, with at least 86 people executed in January alone.   

The rate fell significantly in February 2011, after international condemnation of the rise, but has risen again since the end of the Iranian New Year holiday in early April.   

According to official sources, at least 135 people – ten in public - have been executed so far this year. Credible reports suggest over 40 others - three of which were said to have taken place in public in Salmas, north-west Iran, in February – have also taken place, which have not been acknowledged by the authorities. 

UN human rights bodies have also stressed the need for states which carry out executions to be transparent about their use of the death penalty.  The UN General Assembly has passed three resolutions calling for a worldwide moratorium on executions.

 

Article extracted from: http://www.amnesty.org

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Remember the under pressure man Well yes he storms Realto Hotels Benin This month in a fun filled Jam packed Reggae Comeback ! More Details soon ! 

 

 

Recent Interview:

In a bid to revamp his musical career and once again capture the hearts of Nigerians with classic tunes, Reggae sensation Ras Kimono released two singles late last year. 
In a chat with Daily Sun, Kimono revealed that young artistes are no longer interested in making good music but are rather keen on making money at the expense of creating an enduring legacy through music. The dreadlock-wearing singer also stated that nothing will make him go into politics. Excerpts:

What are your plans for the year?
My plan for the year is to drop my new album. Late last year, I came out with two singles Veteran and Wicked politicians. They are enjoying massive airplay. For now, I have only promo copies and radio stations in Nigeria are doing justice to it. 

You are trying to revamp your career no doubt but how do you intend to take over the scene since young Nigerians are not given totally to reggae music?

Before I came into the limelight in the late 80s and early 90s, it was like that, still, I achieved success in the industry then through hard work and intense promotion and that is what I intend to do now to make sure reggae music reigns once again. it is like I am starting afresh, I am going on tour around the country and not waiting for my company to do it for me. They tend to go to the cities alone and not penetrate the rural areas.

I am focusing on rural dwellers to revamp reggae music so that they will hear me. You know Nigerians, when reggae picks up again, a lot of youths will now go into it. They just want somebody to lead them and I am back to lead again because I have always been a flag bearer.
Nigerians still have a soft spot for Reggae music. They react positively anytime I sing since I came back to the country. They love the truth that Reggae music reveals. It is just a matter of time before it finally gains ground fully because a lot of youths will also go into Reggae music. Some of them have not come out openly to do so because they may have not have the platform, but I am ready to be the platform for them. 

How would you describe your career at this moment?

It’s been good. Since I came back to the country in 2009, I have enjoyed a lot of commendations. I didn’t know it would be like this. The ovation has been louder more than it was over 15 years ago. I give thanks to Jah every morning for that. I see that as an advantage I have to utilize to bring back Reggae music. I am looking for a proper channel and a good marketer that will work closely with me to achieve this. I need good promotion because no matter how good or bad an album is, if you don’t push it well, it will flop in the market. If I don’t do a good job on my album, I am ready for doom. 

What qualities do you look out for in a marketer that you think will help push your album the way you want it?

Marketers are not the same as recording companies so you can’t handle them the same way. It could be anybody but the bottom line is that we will spend money to make money. We have to channel money into promotions and make sure Nigerians crave for reggae music once more. Given the expansion of FM stations, there is enough room for promotions on air. I just need someone that will help me expose these songs so that it can reach everyone. 

What inspired this come-back album?

Music. All the while I left this country, I have been doing music. I wasn’t working, but playing where my services were needed. With that, I was bidding my time pending when I would return to Nigeria. I decided to go into the studio and make songs of international standards, songs that are better than what I have done before and focusing on leadership failures. My songs are to call them back to order. I think we should be tired of all the lies, deceit and deprivings. I talk about the truth of the time with my lyrics. 

I am inspired with what is going on in our society. Nigerians copy the ugly side of western civilisation and it stands to be corrected. We have to emulate good things too and not vices alone. America has the good, the bad and the ugly, but over there, they celebrate the good so that it overshadows the ugly side of their existence. Nigeria was colonized by Britain but our leaders are not following British rules. Our leaders travel abroad and see developments in these nations but when they are elected to perform, they loot instead of working with the funds allocated to them. I want to keep saying it and also wish to have followers that will stand with me in fighting corrupt government through music. We have to deal with the issue of bad governance so that we can see change. I will do my best and leave the rest for Jah.

How do you intend to drive home your point through music because you are not the first musician to do this?
I am not the first person to tackle bad leadership through music. Many people have been doing it even through other means and some of them have died while the ones that are alive are still shouting. I will do my best because I know that someday, I will be no more and some other people will keep talking until Nigeria gets to the promised land. We have to make sure we retain our status as the giant of Africa. Without Nigeria, some of these western countries will collapse. Nigeria is very crucial to world development. I will only relax when our country becomes a better place for us and our children.

Do you think Nigerian artistes are right in supporting the present crop of politicians we have now by doing songs and jingles for them?
I don’t campaign for politicians. My style is different from other musicians’ styles. I don’t have faith in our politicians. They have disappointed us for a long time and I don’t think they have anything good to offer us as a nation. Even the younger politicians whom I had a little respect for are now getting worse than the older ones. I refuse to be part of the campaign for today’s politicians. 

So if you are called to campaign for them, what will you do?
They have called me, but I won’t be a party to it. I don’t want to regret anything. If I have to support any of them, I must have a legitimate reason to do so and not because other musicians are doing so to get money. I have not seen any one among them who really cares about the masses and has the interest of Nigerians at heart. Even the minimum wage is appalling. What is N18,000 in Nigeria? They are just there for themselves and are not genuine. 

How do you think Nigerian artistes should relate with politicians?
Artistes are individual people. I can’t speak for anybody. I am a lone ranger in my fight against corrupt governments. I do not join forces with anyone. It is left for the artistes to do whatever they want to do. Some of these artistes are richer than me but every member of their families is still facing the repercussion of electing bad leaders. Those ones supporting these politicians are selfish and are only looking for how to enrich their pockets. If we come together to say we won’t support them, before you turn your back, someone has betrayed you all. They should act as watchdogs and not support evil. 

How would rate music generally in Nigeria?
Music has come of age in Nigeria. Most youths that have gone into music are making it big. They drive choice cars and build good houses. They are living large and it is good for the industry. 

But would you say these lyrics make an impact? What is responsible for our lyrics filled with vulgar languages?
The corporate bodies are responsible for it. I have been back for two years and deal with reality of the time. I speak about societal ills. They promote these guys with empty lyrics, support them and pay them millions to perform.

ras-kimon.gif?width=228
•Ras Kimono

The Nigeria Broadcasting Corporation also is to blame for the influx of vulgar lyrics in Nigeria. They have refused to check what is going out on air. When I released my song We no want the system in 1988, because of a word in the lyrics, it was banned. It was not played on radio.

If they refused to play that song then, it means there is a regulatory body that makes sure whatever song is aired is checked and scrutinized. I don’t think that organisation still exists because if it does, all these trashy and vulgar songs should have been banned. The languages that corrupt children are not supposed to be aired at all. If they are not encouraged, they will go back and churn out good tunes. Some of them get drunk and smoke on stage and yet, no one cares to call them to order. 

In your view, what should young artistes do to release good tunes to Nigerians?

Young artistes are making money and are not concerned about releasing soul-lifting music. It is just a matter of time, and the result of releasing trashy songs will show. Good name is better than money, but they don’t want to listen. When they look back and nobody recognizes them, then, they will know they have not have done well. They have to go back to the drawing board and put in more effort to release quality lyrics. 

How would you describe these young musicians?

Most of them are just flashes in a pan. They just release a song and you never hear of them again. They are after the money and not to leave a legacy through their lyrics.

You have been away for a long time, what have you learnt over the years that has helped you become a better person?

I have learnt to be business-minded. Even though I sing, I have learnt to manage the business aspect of it as well and not only minding the lyrics alone. I have learnt to be punctual in my career. I have learnt to relate with different kinds of people well no matter their weaknesses. I can accept people for who they are and not for what I want them to be. I have learnt not to be judgmental. I can now see life from a different perspective.

Did you have any unpleasant experience while you were abroad?

I was playing in clubs. That was not what I wanted for myself at that time. When I was in Nigeria, I never played in clubs. Over there, you play in a club of about 20 people and you will be lucky if they are up to 20. 

People are insinuating that you ran to America to make money and when the money didn’t come, you came home. How true is this?

It is not true. I went there to take a break and to gain knowledge as a musician. I took a break with my stay overseas so that I can come back with something fresh and better. How can I go to America to make money? There is more money to make here in Nigeria than in America. 

Are you back for good or you still have plans to go back to the States?

I am back for good but that doesn’t mean I won’t travel if the opportunity arises. I am a musician and can be called to perform anywhere in the world. 

How about your family?

My family is still abroad. You know when women get to such places, they are comfortable and do not want to move. My wife and children are still in America. 

As a husband and a father, what advice would you give to husbands and fathers?

Marriage is like two dogs playing. Sometimes, one brings the other down and he gets beaten. It works with understanding. If a couple decides to fight like kings of the jungle, then the marriage won’t stand the test of time. If you react based on how angry you are, you will make mistakes. Couples should be each other’s fool to make it work. No one is better than the other, it takes two of you to build a lasting marital relationship. 

As a father, you must always listen to your kids. You must be around to watch your children grow. There are questions they want you to answer as their father and you must be willing to play that role well. You also have to be involved in their education and extra-curricular activities. This is the way you can express your love and support for them. 

If you make all the money in world and don’t have time to nurture your kids, they will turn out bad and all your struggles will be in vain. They must feel secured with your presence. It doesn’t have to be their mother all the time. Create time to play with your children, it makes them feel wanted and loved. You must make your children your closest friends. They must trust you enough to tell you all their fears. If you don’t listen to them, they will go astray. 

What else do you hope to achieve in life?

Greatness. As far as I am concerned, heaven is my starting point. I am hoping that before death takes me away, I will achieve my aims and objectives. One of such objectives is to see Nigeria safe and great and black people united again. I will be glad if West Africa have a common passport, it will be good. We should stop segregation in Africa, we need the peace and unity. 

Do you have any plans to go into politics?

Never. The rules of the game are dirty and if you don’t take time, you will join them in the name of bringing change to the masses. It is not peculiar to Nigeria alone. All over the world, politics is a dirty game. Politicians are politicians everywhere. 

What advice would you give to upcoming musicians as a veteran in the industry?

They should leave drugs alone because most of them do drugs. Drugs will not make them. I don’t do drugs and I don’t smoke weed and I have achieved a great height as a musician. Learn to play an instrument so that it will give you an edge over your colleagues.

 

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images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTiJJx1wMlGkBB0BM-xZ3j4LoUYY2n9xESWWxvONP39nOa6JyKUPJp9fgDenunciation and condemnation on Saturday trailed the comments attributed to the governor of Bauchi State, Alhaji Isah Yuguda, that the National Youth Service Corps members who were murdered in the state were destined to die the way they did.

 Bauchi State governor, Isa Yuguda
 
Some corps members were killed in the state as well as in some other northern states shortly after the Independent National Electoral Commission declared the incumbent President and Peoples Democratic Party standard-bearer, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, winner of the April 16 presidential poll.
Specifically, nine corps members were reportedly killed in Bauchi State.
Property worth millions of Naira were also destroyed in the post-election violence in which the irate youths were protesting the defeat of the Congress for Progressive Change standard-bearer, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.) by Jonathan.
Jonathan polled over 21million votes to beat other contenders comprising Buhari, the All Nigeria Peoples Party standard-bearer, Ibrahim Shekarau, and his Action Congress of Nigeria counterpart, Nuhu Ribadu.
However, speaking to our correspondents on Saturday, some eminent Nigerians among them the former Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Chief Richard Akinjide; Chairman, Arewa Consultative Forum, Gen, Ibrahim Haruna; former governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji Balarabe Musa; former governor of old Anambra State; Chief Chukwuemeka Ezeife; and spokesperson to the Congress for Progressive Change Presidential candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, Mr. Yinka Odumakin, said Yaguda's comments were condemnable.
Haruna who spoke to one of our correspondents on Friday described the reports attributed to the governor as disappointing.
Haruna said there was no justification for the slaughter of young Nigerians because of politics.
He said it was inconceivable for anybody with human feelings to make such a comment on the gruesome killing of young innocent Nigerian graduates in the service of their fatherland.
To him, what was expected of Yuguda was for him to join other Nigerians to eulogise them as heroes and to name structures after them to alleviate the pangs of their loss.
He called on the Federal Government to exploit the instrumentality of the law to ensure effective maintenance of peace and security.
He said that it was grim for such young men to be killed because of politics because the country was not in a state of war. He added, "I am saddened by what he said. Is there any justification for any young, hopeful Nigerian to be killed because of politics?
Akinjide, who described the governor's comment as unwarranted, opined that a leader must be discreet at all times in handling issues that affected lives. He said, "It is sad that the governor of a state should treat human life with levity.
"Was it not in Bauchi that a teacher was murdered because one of the students was alleged to cover up something? That lady came from the South. She was not the person who used the Quran to wrap something.
"A governor, as the chief security officer of the state, is expected to be a role model and should uphold the rule of law and promote peace and harmony in his state. Human life is too sacred to be toiled with."
The former Attorney General explained that even the Commissioner of Police in the state was responsible to the governor and as such should be taking orders from him. He said that explained why in every state the governor is the chairman of the Security Council while the CP is only a member together with the Attorney-General.
Similarly, a former Commissioner of Police in Lagos State, Abubakar Tsav, said the statement attributed to Yuguda was most unfortunate and unbecoming of somebody in his position as a governor of a state where such killings took place.
He said that Yuguda should have at least shown sympathy to the corps members, their families and indeed the country.
Tsav said, "It is most unfortunate, this is unexpected of somebody in the position of a governor. He should have shown sympathy with the corps members, their families and Nigeria."
Musa simply summarised his opinion by saying, "I think it is being insensitive and quite undiplomatic."
Odumakin, who strongly condemned the governor's assertion, said, "What Governor Yuguda said further confirmed that Nigeria is a nation founded on iniquity, sustained by hypocrisy and is on a balance of uneven scale. That is why today we talk about peace and nobody is talking about justice. Even if he was truly attacked in Ibadan in 1979 as he claimed, is that enough to justify the killing of corps members in his state? General Muhammadu Buhari did not make such inciting comment but went on air to discourage the people from causing violence. That is the prize of leadership."
However, Ezeife contended that the governor's statement depended on how each individual viewed it. He said that some people believe in destiny and stretch the belief to the limit because of the doctrine of their religion. "You have to be careful not to expect so much from such people," he said adding that the governor's statement was not provocative.
Yuguda had said while speaking with journalists in Bauchi on Thursday that the corps members who got killed in the state were not the only victims of the unfortunate violence that followed the presidential election.
He recalled to the shock of journalists that his son was almost lynched while his house was torched.
"They (corps members) were destined to experience what they experienced. Nobody can run away from destiny. When they were serving me, they were the happiest in Nigeria.
"Immediately I handed them over to INEC, it was the responsibility of INEC to protect them. They were not the only ones affected. My own house was burnt; they almost lynched my first son. It is part of their destiny. I was also attacked as a corps member in Ibadan in 1979.
"They were attacked on the services of INEC," he was quoted as having said.
Also, a former Security Advisor to Rivers State Government, Chief Anabs Sara-Igbe, condemned the statement.
He stated that Yuguda had failed the nation by issuing inciting statements.
Meanwhile, in a statement titled 'PUNCH goofed as Yuguda was misquoted' made available to SUNDAY PUNCH on Saturday, Bauchi State government said the governor was not quoted correctly.
The statement signed by the Senior Special Adviser to the Governor on Media/Public Affairs, Sanusi Muhammad, quoted the governor as saying during the media briefing that "The death of the corp members was purely an act of destiny. As human beings we should always accept our destiny either in our favour or against our interest. The unfortunate death of the corp members was destined to happen in the course of their service to Nigeria. Every new day is a new experience to all living souls which we must contend.
"After the unfortunate attack on the corp members that led to the untimely death of some in some remote areas of the state on receiving the report, I swiftly acted and made sure that those evacuated are camped at the Senior Staff Development Centre of Directorate of State Security Service in Bauchi metropolis were comfortable and well protected. I paid several visits to the camp to boost their morale and comfort them. Each of them was given a token amount to take care of their immediate needs while in the camp. I have vowed to bring the perpetrators of the crime to book as several arrests have already been made.
"At a time when all efforts are being made to ensure return to normalcy and the need to rebuild frontiers of harmonious relationship and friendship, we urge the media not to play with the destiny of the country through sensationalism and outright mischief."
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12166309294?profile=originalThe Bad-Asses Who Killed Osama Bin Laden

The military team that killed Osama Bin Laden is an elite special forces group unofficially called Seal Team 6.

 

Officially, the team's name is classified and not available to the public, technically there is no team 6. A Tier-One counter-terrorism force similar to the Army's elusive Delta group, Team 6's mission rarely make it to paper much less the newspaper.

It shows how important the publicity about Bin Laden's killing is to the U.S. that this morning, Team 6 is front-page news.

The members of Team 6 are all "black" operatives. They exist outside military protocol, engage in operations that are at the highest level of classification and often outside the boundaries of international law. To maintain plausible deniability in case they are caught, records of black operations are rarely, if ever, kept.

The development of SEAL Team 6 was in direct response to the 1980 attempt to rescue the American hostages held in Iran. The mission was a terrific failure that fell apart at many points and illustrated the need for a dedicated counter-terrorist team capable of operating with the utmost secrecy.

The Team was labeled 6 at the time to confuse Soviet intelligence about the number of SEAL teams in operation at the time. There were only two others.

Team 6 poached the top operatives from other SEAL units and trained them even more intensely from there. Even among proven SEAL's the attrition rate for Team 6 is reported to be nearly half.

There are no names available for current Team 6 members, but the CIA does recruit heavily from their numbers for their Special Operations Group, so it makes sense that they were chosen to work with the CIA on this mission.

Team 6 is normally devoted to missions with maritime authority: ship rescues, oil rigs, naval bases or land bases accessible by water. There are no waterways near Bin Laden's compound.

When a former Navy SEAL was called for a comment about this article all he could say was: "You know I'd love to help you man, but I can't say a word about Team 6. There is no Team 6."



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Today is World Press freedom Day

12166310659?profile=originalThanks to the First Amendment, I'm free to write these words -- and you're free to read them.

But for about 84 percent of the about 6.9 billion people with whom we share this planet, that's not the case. They live in nations where the press is only "partly" free from government control or criminal intimidation, or not free at all.

Those global press freedom figures are from a 2010 report by Freedom House, an independent human rights organization, which has compiled such data annually since 1980. The group's 2011 report was issued Monday.

The figures are worth noting as the United States hosts this year's World Press Freedom Day today with the theme "21st Century Media: New Frontiers, New Barriers." It's an appropriate focus given the dramatic presence of new media methods and technology in political and social turmoil in the Middle East and elsewhere.

The Freedom House report notes that "in response to the growing popularity of Internet-based applications like Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter, many governments have started targeting the new platforms as part of their censorship strategies." In 12 of 37 countries examined, the group said, officials imposed temporary or total bans on such new technology.

But these kinds of ratings and reports tell only part of the story of the worldwide struggle to gather and report the news freely and report it without fear:

• Eight journalists were attacked in recent days in Uganda while trying to report on the second day of a walk-to-work campaign protesting fuel prices and government's inefficiency.

• The editor of a Ukrainian English-language newspaper was fired on the spot on April 15 reportedly for insisting on publishing an interview with a government minister regarding possible international trade violations. From Bahrain to Sri Lanka, journalists have been arrested for simply doing their job.

• And, in a ceremony set for May 16, the Journalists Memorial at the Newseum in Washington, D.C., will add the names of 59 journalists who died in 2010 in the course of reporting the news. Eighteen names of newly identified journalists who died in previous years also will be added, bringing the overall total to 2,084.

Information freely gathered and freely reported is the enemy of despots, dictators and criminal cartels. For democracies, it would seem just as obvious that a free and unfettered flow of information is the lifeblood of systems that depend on an informed citizenry to make the ultimate governing decisions.

Newly created global news outlets on the Web, widely used social media and so-called "data dumps" by groups like WikiLeaks do raise legitimate issues ranging from personal privacy to credibility to national security.

Serious critics of the press, here and abroad, are right to point to errors of fact and judgment by journalists.

But on at least one day, we all ought to pause to appreciate the value -- and for far too few, the unique national asset -- that is a free press.




Wikipedia:

The United Nations General Assembly declared 3 May to be World Press Freedom Day[1][2] to raise awareness of the importance of freedom of the press and remind governments of their duty to respect and uphold the right to freedom of expression enshrined under Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and marking the anniversary of the Declaration of Windhoek, a statement of free press principles put together by African newspaper journalists in 1991.
UNESCO marks World Press Freedom Day by conferring the UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize on a deserving individual, organization or institution that has made an outstanding contribution to the defence and/or promotion of press freedom anywhere in the world, especially when this has been achieved in the face of danger. Created in 1997, the prize is awarded on the recommendation of an independent jury of 14 news professionals. Names are submitted by regional and international non-governmental organizations working for press freedom, and by UNESCO member states.
The Prize is named in honour of Guillermo Cano Isaza, a Colombian journalist who was assassinated in front of the offices of his newspaper, El Espectador, in Bogotá, on 17 December 1986. Cano's writings had offended Colombia's powerful drug barons.
UNESCO also marks World Press Freedom Day each year by bringing together media professionals, press freedom organisations and UN agencies to assess the state of press freedom worldwide and discuss solutions for addressing challenges. Each conference is centred around a theme related to press freedom, including good governance, media coverage of terrorism, impunity and the role of media in post-conflict countries.
The 2011 World Press Freedom Day celebration is being held in Washington, D.C., USA on May 1-3. This will be the first time the United States has hosted the World Press Freedom Day celebration. The theme of this year's event is 21st Century Media: New Frontiers, New Barriers. The event will affirm fundamental principles of media freedom in the digital age—the ability of citizens to voice their opinions and access diverse, independent information sources—20 years after the original declaration was made in Windhoek, Namibia. The World Press Freedom Day 2011 program and agenda are available here.
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images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTiJJx1wMlGkBB0BM-xZ3j4LoUYY2n9xESWWxvONP39nOa6JyKUPJp9fgDenunciation and condemnation on Saturday trailed the comments attributed to the governor of Bauchi State,
The Men that Killed Osama Bin Laden Meet The 'Seal Team 6',

12166309294?profile=originalThe Bad-Asses Who Killed Osama Bin Laden

The military team that killed Osama Bin Laden is an elite special forces group unofficially called Seal Team 6


weboga Today is World Press freedom Day

12166310659?profile=originalThanks to the First Amendment, I'm free to write these words -- and you're free to read them.

But for about 84 percent of the…

weboga Ten Tactics of Online Oppressors

The world’s worst online oppressors are using an array of tactics, some reflecting astonishing levels of sophistication, others reminiscent of old-school techniques. From China’s high-level malware attacks to Syria’s brute-force imprisonments, this may be only the dawn of online oppression. A CPJ special report by Danny O’Brien

NollywoodMohits 9ja rapper breaks world freestyle record

jpeg&STREAMOID=o8kaXdB6dHvklnmE3SDnYC6SYeqqxXXqBcOgKOfTXxSfDyHabqBtnyMs9cP$IOConW_PgxgftuECOcfJwS6Jtlp$r8Fy$6AAZ9zyPuHJ25T7a9GKDSxsGxtpmxP0VAUyHL6IDcZHtmM2t7xO$FHdJG95dFi6y2Uma3vSsvPpVyo-&width=234Rapper Chidera ‘Chiddy' Anamega from the Hip-Hop duo, Chiddy Bang is the current holder of the ‘World's Longest… Continue

 


weboga Kidnappers Now Demand For Recharge Cards also

Members of a gang of kidnappers who abducted a medical doctor in Edo State have called on members of the family

webmadam Osama was executed: U.S. forces were under orders to kill Bin Laden

jpeg&STREAMOID=5gn8vMi1zp6AEpyTaxFgNS6SYeqqxXXqBcOgKOfTXxQn3JUzE6qnqra6aWy_4I0AnW_PgxgftuECOcfJwS6Jtlp$r8Fy$6AAZ9zyPuHJ25T7a9GKDSxsGxtpmxP0VAUyHL6IDcZHtmM2t7xO$FHdJG95dFi6y2Uma3vSsvPpVyo-&width=234Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed in a U.S. helicopter raid on a mansion near the Pakistani capital…

weboga The Prisoner's dilemma

why two "errant" people might not cooperate even if it is in both their best interests to do

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Ten Tactics of Online Oppressors

The world’s worst online oppressors are using an array of tactics, some reflecting astonishing levels of sophistication, others reminiscent of old-school techniques. From China’s high-level malware attacks to Syria’s brute-force imprisonments, this may be only the dawn of online oppression. A CPJ special report by Danny O’Brien

SAN FRANCISCO In reporting news from the world’s most troubled nations, journalists have made a seismic shift this year in their reliance on the Internet and other digital tools. Blogging, video sharing, text messaging, and live-streaming from cellphones brought images of popular unrest from the central square of Cairo and the main boulevard of Tunis to the rest of the world.

In Other Languages
Yet the technology used to report the news has been matched in many ways by the increasing sophistication, from the state-supported email in China designed to take over journalists’ personal computers, to the carefully timed cyber-attacks on news websites in Belarus. Still other tools in the oppressor’s kit are as old as the press itself, including imprisonment of online writers in Syria, and the use of violence against bloggers in Russia.

To mark World Press Freedom Day, May 3, the Committee to Protect Journalists is examining the 10 prevailing tactics of online oppression worldwide and the
 
Offenders and Tactics
(/reports/2011/05/audio-report- the-10-tools-of-online-
oppressors.php)
 
• Download the pdf (/reports /CPJ.Tools.of.Oppression.pdf) More on This Issue • CPJ Internet Channel: Danny O'Brien's blog (/internet/)
countries that have taken the lead in their use. What is most surprising about these Online Oppressors is not who they are—they are all nations with long records of repression—but how swiftly they adapted old strategies to the online world.

In two nations we cite, Egypt and Tunisia, the regimes have changed, but their successors have not categorically broken with past repressive practices. The tactics of other nations—such as Iran, which employs sophisticated tools to destroy anti-censorship technology, and Ethiopia, which exerts monopolistic control over the Internet—are being watched, and emulated, by repressive regimes worldwide.

Here are the 10 prevalent tools for online oppression.

WEB BLOCKING Key country: Iran

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's government has set the bar for Internet oppression. (Reuters)

Many countries censor online news sources, using domestic Internet service providers and international Internet gateways to enforce website blacklists and to block citizens from using certain keywords. Since the disputed 2009 presidential election, however, Iran (/mideast/iran/) has dramatically increased the sophistication of its Web blocking, as well as its efforts to destroy tools that allow journalists to access or host online content. In January 2011, the designers of Tor, a privacy and censorship circumvention tool, detected that the country’s censors were using new, highly advanced techniques to identify and disable anti-censorship software. In October, blogger Hossein Ronaghi Maleki was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment for allegedly developing such anti-filtering software and hosting other Iranian bloggers. The government’s treatment of reporters has been among the worst in the world; Iran and China topped CPJ’s 2010 list of worst jailers of the press, with 34 imprisoned apiece. But by investing in new technology to block the Net and actively
 

The 10 Tools of Online Oppressors - Reports - Committee to Pr...    http://cpj.org/reports/2011/05/the-10-tools-of-online-oppressors.php
persecuting those who circumvent such restrictions, Iran has raised the bar worldwide.

Tactics in practice:
An array of repressive tactics (/2011/02/attacks-on-the-press-2010-iran.php) > World’s worst jailer (/reports/2010/12/cpj-journalist-prison-census-iran-china-highest-14-years.php)

PRECISION CENSORSHIP Key country: Belarus
Belarusian police crush an election protest as critical domestic websites were suddenly blocked. (AP/Sergei Grits)
Permanent filtering of popular websites often encourages users to find ways around the censor. As a result, many repressive regimes attack websites only at strategically vital moments. In Belarus (/europe/belarus/) , the online opposition outlet Charter 97 (http://charter97.org/en/news/) predicted that its site would be disabled during the December presidential election. Indeed it was: On Election Day, the site was taken down by a denial-of-service, or DOS, attack. A DOS attack prevents a website from functioning normally by overloading its host server with external communications requests. According to local reports, users of the Belarusian national ISP attempting to visit Charter 97 were separately redirected to a fake site created by an unknown party. The election, conducted without the scrutiny of critical outlets like Charter 97, was marred by secretive vote-counting practices, international observers said. Technological measures were not the only attacks on Charter 97: The site’s offices were raided on the eve of the election, and editors were beaten, arrested, and threatened. In September 2010, the site’s founder, Aleh Byabenin, was found hanged under suspicious circumstances. Tactics in practice: > Blocking sites for an election (/internet/2010/12/widespread-net-disruption-surrounds-belarus-electi.php) > Web journalists targeted (/2011/02/attacks-on-the-press-2010-belarus.php)
 
The 10 Tools of Online Oppressors - Reports - Committee to Pr...    http://cpj.org/reports/2011/05/the-10-tools-of-online-oppressors.php

DENIAL OF ACCESS Key country: Cuba
Bloggers such as Yoani Sánchez face significant technical and political hurdles. (Reuters/Desmon Boylan)

High-tech attacks against Internet journalists aren’t needed if access barely exists. In Cuba (/americas/cuba/) , government policies have left domestic Internet infrastructure severely restricted. Only a small fraction of the population is permitted to use the Internet at home, with the vast majority required to use state-controlled access points with identity checks, heavy surveillance, and restrictions on access to non-Cuban sites. To post or read independent news, online journalists go to cybercafes and use official Internet accounts that are traded on the black market. Those who do get around the many obstacles face other problems. Prominent bloggers such as Yoani Sánchez (http://www.desdecuba.com/generationy/) have been smeared in a medium accessible by all Cubans: state-run television. Cuba and Venezuela recently announced the start of a new fiber-optic cable connection between the two countries that promises to increase Cuba’s international connectivity. But it’s unclear whether the general public will benefit from connectivity improvements any time soon.
Tactics in practice

Bloggers face huge obstacles (/reports/2009/09/cuban-bloggers-offer-fresh-hope.php) > Sánchez called a “cybermercenary” (/blog/2011/03/for-cuban-blogger-sanchez-a-government- distinction.php)

INFRASTRUCTURE CONTROL Key country: Ethiopia
 
The 10 Tools of Online Oppressors - Reports - Committee to Pr...    http://cpj.org/reports/2011/05/the-10-tools-of-online-oppressors.php
Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi tightly controls online news media. (AP)

Telecommunications systems in many countries are closely tied to the government, providing a powerful way to control new media. In Ethiopia (/africa/ethiopia/) , a state-owned telecommunications company has monopoly control over Internet access and fixed and mobile phone lines. Despite a management and rebranding deal with France Telecom in 2010, the government still owns and directs Ethio Telecom, allowing it to censor when and where it sees fit. OpenNet Initiative (http://opennet.net/) , a global academic project that monitors filtering and surveillance, says Ethiopia conducts “substantial” filtering of political news. This matches Ethiopia’s continuing crackdown on offline journalists, four of whom are imprisoned for their work, according to CPJ records. Ethiopian government control does not simply extend to phone lines and Internet access. The country has also invested in extensive satellite-jamming technology to prevent citizens from receiving news from foreign sources such as the Amharic-language services of the U.S. government-funded Voice of America and the German public broadcaster Deutsche Welle.


Tactics in practice:

Suppressing news of Middle East unrest (/blog/2011/02/sub-saharan-africa-counters-censorship- on-mideast.php) > Controls over all media (/2011/02/attacks-on-the-press-2010-ethiopia.php)
ATTACKS ON EXILE-RUN SITES Key country: Burma
 

The 10 Tools of Online Oppressors - Reports - Committee to Pr...    http://cpj.org/reports/2011/05/the-10-tools-of-online-oppressors.php
Editors at Democratic Voice of Burma face repeated cyber-attacks. (AP/Morten Holm)

For journalists who have been run out of their own country, the Internet is a lifeline that enables them to continue reporting news and commentary about their homeland. But exile-run news sites still face censorship and obstruction, much of it perpetrated by home governments or their surrogates. Exile-run sites that cover news in Burma (/asia/burma/) face regular denial-of-service attacks. The Thailand-based news outlet Irrawaddy (http://www.irrawaddy.org/) , the India-based Mizzima (http://www.mizzima.com/) news agency, and Norway’s Democratic Voice of Burma (http://www.dvb.no/) have all experienced attacks that disabled or slowed their websites. The attacks are often timed around sensitive political milestones such as the anniversary of the Saffron Revolution, a 2007 monk-led, anti-government protest that was violently suppressed. Burmese authorities have coupled these technical attacks with brute-force repression. Exile-run news sites depend on undercover, in-country journalists, who surreptitiously file their reports. This undercover work comes with extreme risk: At least five journalists for Democratic Voice of Burma were serving lengthy prison terms for their work when CPJ conducted its annual worldwide survey in December 2010. Tactics in practice: > Cyber-attacks hit exile sites (/2010/09/burmas-exile-media-hit-by-cyber-attacks.php) > Repression precedes election (/2011/02/attacks-on-the-press-2010-burma.php)

MALWARE ATTACKS Key country: China
International journalists are targeted in many ways in China. Here, a foreign journalist is pushed to the ground while trying to cover a potential protest in Beijing. (Reuters)
 
The 10 Tools of Online Oppressors - Reports - Committee to Pr...    http://cpj.org/reports/2011/05/the-10-tools-of-online-oppressors.php
Harmful software can be concealed in apparently legitimate emails and sent to a journalist’s private account with a convincing but fake cover message.

If opened by the reporter, the software will install itself on a personal computer and be used remotely to spy on the reporter’s other communications, steal his or her confidential documents, and even commandeer the computer for online attacks on other targets. Journalists reporting in and about China (/asia/china/) have been victims of these attacks, known as “spear-phishing,” in a pattern that strongly indicates the targets were chosen for their work. Attacks coincided with the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize award to imprisoned writer and human rights defender Liu Xiaobo, and official suppression of news reports describing unrest in the Middle East. Computer security experts such as those at Metalab Asia

(http://twitter.com/#!/metalabasia) and SecDev (http://secdev.ca/index.php) have found such software is aimed specifically at reporters, dissidents, and non-governmental organizations.

Tactics in practice:
  A Nobel invitation that wasn’t (/internet/2010/11/that-nobel-invite-mr-malware-sent-it.php) > Taking over an email account (/2011/02/attacks-on-the-press-2010-internet-analysis-danny-obrien.php)

STATE CYBERCRIME Key country: Tunisia under Ben Ali

Amid protests in Tunisia, the government tries to sabotage journalists' Facebook and other social media accounts. (Reuters/Zohra Bensemra)
Censorship of email and social networking sites was pervasive in Tunisia (/mideast/tunisia/) under Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, as it has been in many repressive states. But in 2010, the Tunisian Internet Agency took the effort one step further, redirecting Tunisian users to fake, government-created log-in pages for Google, Yahoo, and Facebook. From these pages, authorities stole usernames and passwords. When Tunisian online journalists began filing reports on the uprising, the state used their login data to delete the material. A common tactic of criminal hackers, the use of fake Web pages to steal passwords is being adopted by agents and supporters of repressive regimes. While cybercrime tactics appear to have been abandoned with the

The 10 Tools of Online Oppressors - Reports - Committee to Pr...    http://cpj.org/reports/2011/05/the-10-tools-of-online-oppressors.php
collapse of Ben Ali’s government in January, the new government has not relinquished control of the Internet entirely. Within weeks, the administration announced it would continue to block websites that are "against decency, contain violent elements, or incite to hate." Tactics in practice:
 
Invading Facebook (/internet/2011/01/tunisia-invades-censors-facebook-other-accounts.php) > Will the revolution endure? (/internet/2011/01/will-tunisias-internet-revolution-endure.php)

INTERNET KILL SWITCHES Key country: Egypt under Mubarak
The Mubarak regime turned off the Internet to hide images and news of protests. (Reuters/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany)

Desperately clinging to power, President Hosni Mubarak shut down the Internet in Egypt (/mideast/egypt/) in January 2011, preventing online journalists from reporting to the world, and Egyptian viewers from accessing online news sources. Egypt was not the first to sever its link to the Internet to restrict news coverage: Internet access in Burma was shut down during a revolt in 2007, and the Xinjiang region of China had either limited or no access during ethnic unrest in 2010. Mubarak’s crumbling government could not sustain its ban for long; online access returned about a week later. But the tactic of slowing or disrupting Net access has been emulated since that time by governments in Libya and Bahrain, which have also faced popular revolt. Despite the fall of the Mubarak regime, the transitional military government has shown its own repressive tendencies. In April, a political blogger was sentenced to three years in prison for insulting authorities.

Tactics in practice:
> Egypt vanishes from the Net (/internet/2011/01/watching-egypt-disappear-from-the-internet.php) > Online, an enormous loss (/internet/2011/02/what-the-world-loses-from-egypts-internet-disappea.php)
 
The 10 Tools of Online Oppressors - Reports - Committee to Pr...    http://cpj.org/reports/2011/05/the-10-tools-of-online-oppressors.php
DETENTION OF BLOGGERS Key country: Syria

President Bashar al-Assad's government has made a practice of jailing bloggers. (Reuters)

Despite the spread of high-tech attacks on online journalism, arbitrary detention remains the easiest way to disrupt new media. Bloggers and online reporters made up nearly half of CPJ’s 2010 tally of imprisoned journalists. Syria (/mideast/syria/) remains one of the world's most dangerous places to blog due to repeated cases of short- and long-term detention. Ruling behind closed doors in February, a Syrian court sentenced blogger Tal al-Mallohi to five years of imprisonment. She was 19 when first arrested in 2009. Al-Mallohi’s blog discussed Palestinian rights, the frustrations of Arab citizens with their governments, and what she perceived to be the stagnation of the Arab world. In March, online journalist Khaled Elekhetyar was detained for a week, while veteran blogger Ahmad Abu al-Khair was detained for the second time in two months.
Tactics in practice:
 
A blogger becomes a “spy” (/2011/02/syrian-blogger-sentenced-to-five-years-in-prison.php) > Detention among many tools (/2011/03/syria-cracks-down-on-press-attacks-in-libya-elsewh.php)
VIOLENCE AGAINST ONLINE JOURNALISTS Key country: Russia
 
The 10 Tools of Online Oppressors - Reports - Committee to Pr...    http://cpj.org/reports/2011/05/the-10-tools-of-online-oppressors.php
The brutal assault on blogger Oleg Kashin drew worldwide outcry. Here, a protest at the Russian embassy in Kyiv. (Reuters/Gleb Garanich)
In countries with high rates of anti-press violence, online journalists have become the latest targets. In Russia (/europe/russia/) , a brutal November 2010 attack left the prominent business reporter and blogger Oleg Kashin so badly injured he was placed in an induced coma for a time. No arrests have been made in the Moscow attack, which is reflective of Russia’s poor overall record in solving anti-press assaults. The attack on Kashin was the most recent in a string of assaults against Web journalists that include a 2009 attack on Mikhail Afanasyev, editor of an online magazine in Siberia, and a 2008 murder of website publisher Magomed Yevloyev in Ingushetia.

Tactics in practice:
 
Danny O’Brien, CPJ's San Francisco-based CPJ Internet advocacy coordinator, has worked globally as a journalist and activist covering technology and digital rights. He blogs at cpj.org/internet/ (/internet/) . Follow him on Twitter @danny_at_cpj (http://twitter.com/danny_at_cpj) .
Read more…
jpeg&STREAMOID=o8kaXdB6dHvklnmE3SDnYC6SYeqqxXXqBcOgKOfTXxSfDyHabqBtnyMs9cP$IOConW_PgxgftuECOcfJwS6Jtlp$r8Fy$6AAZ9zyPuHJ25T7a9GKDSxsGxtpmxP0VAUyHL6IDcZHtmM2t7xO$FHdJG95dFi6y2Uma3vSsvPpVyo-&width=234Rapper Chidera ‘Chiddy' Anamega from the Hip-Hop duo, Chiddy Bang is the current holder of the ‘World's Longest Freestyle Rap' title. The American-based rapper with Nigerian root last weekend had a rap freestyle running for 9 hours, 16 minutes, and 22 seconds at the MTV organised ‘O Music Awards' to beat the previous record of 9 hours, 15 minutes and 15 seconds held by the rapper named M-Eighty.
Revealing preparations towards achieving this feat, the rapper popularly known as Chiddy told MTV.com he practices freestyles daily.
"That's better than a lot of people, if you really think about it; I freestyle once a day for like 30 minutes straight. I never put myself to this maximum test, but it's very exciting for me, and once this all done, it'll be like, ‘Wow I didn't know I could go that long.'"
"It's a marathon, not a race," Chiddy continued.
"It's all about pacing yourself. I tend to be very, very hype when I rap. This time, I realise I'm gonna rap for like nine hours, so I'm not gonna come out of the gate hyped. I'm just gonna pace myself and ride that thing out, ride it till the wheels fall off."
The group Chiddy Bang gained recognition after its 2009 released Extended Play set, ‘The Opposite of Adults' received critical commendations. Chidera acknowledges his Nigerian roots on the opening of the track ‘Sooner Or Later' which receives sampled elements from the legendary Afrobeat singer, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti.
-------------------------------------------------------------
***Ehikhamenor presents new collections 
Visual artist, Victor Ehikhamenor will commence the exhibition of his famous ‘Entrance & Exit' series on Saturday May 7 2011. The latest from the series, ‘Entrance & Exit: In Search of Not Forgetting' will be paraded at the Centre for Contemporary Arts, Yaba and the exhibition will be open till Saturday May 28,
2011.
According to the Masters Degree holder in Fine Art from the University of Maryland, USA, the exhibition which is an instalment of the ‘Entrances and Exits: A Quest for Memory', will display new art works from the ‘Entrance & Exit' collection.
"The exhibition will present several new bodies of paintings, photographs, drawing and installation. These works will explore from an ethnographic perspective, the artist's consummated experience between his ancestral heritage and home, and the subsequent valour with which the colours, patterns and designs engraved or drawn on these ancestral walls, doors and other surfaces fuelled his evolutionary style in figurative and abstract paintings and drawings. It also explores the aesthetic imagery that connects his visual repertoire with the beaming arts on the numerous shrine walls, including the mud walls of his many grandmothers, the rooms of his uncles, and other villagers' walls,' a message from the official invitation reads.
A graduate of English and Literary Studies from Bendel State University, Ekpoma (now Ambrose Alli University, Edo State), Ehikhamenor is currently the creative director at Timbuktu Media, publishers of NEXT newspaper.
Previous successful exhibitions include ‘The Labyrinth of Memories series', ‘The Mirrors and Mirages series' and ‘Roforofo Fight: Paintings to Fela's Music' amongst others.
---------------------------------------------------------
***"Fast Five", "Thor" top box office attractions 
"Fast Five," the fifth entry in the "Fast and the Furious" street-racing franchise, raced to the biggest opening of the year at the North American box office, while "Thor" was the top choice overseas.
According to studio estimates issued on Sunday, "Fast Five" earned about $83.6 million during its first three days of release across the United States and Canada, proving the appeal of car chases in exotic locales for young male moviegoers.
Industry prognosticators had expected the film to edge past the $71 million start for the previous film, "Fast and Furious" in 2009. The opening also boosted the flagging fortunes of both its distributor, Universal Pictures, and the overall industry.
"Thor" pulled in $83 million from 56 foreign markets, a week before the Marvel comic book adaptation opens in North America.
Top-ranked openings included Britain ($9 million), France ($8.1 million) and South Korea ($5.7 million). Its foreign total stands at $93 million after the Paramount Pictures release got an early start in Australia last weekend.
"Fast Five" earned $45.3 million internationally after expanding to 14 markets from four last weekend. It opened at No. 1 in each of the 10 new markets, including Russia ($11.5 million), Germany ($10.2 million) and Spain ($6.3 million). Its foreign total stands at $81.4 million.
The strong performances of the two action films suggest a strong summer for the Hollywood studios, which have suffered a dismal year so far. Ticket sales in North America are off 17 per cent and attendance is down 18 per cent from 2010. Universal, newly controlled by Comcast Corp, had the smallest market share of the six major studios last year. It has enjoyed a decent 2011 because it distributed the hit cartoon "Hop."
-------------------------------------------------------------
***Kelly Price releases first R&B album in eight years 
When Kelly Price was nominated for a Grammy last December, the R&B nod caught many people off guard.
Up until that point, Price hadn't released an R&B album since 2003's "Priceless." In fact, when she delivered the contemporary gospel album "This Is Who I Am" three years after that, most people assumed the soulful singer had chosen a new career path.
"It's never been a secret that I'm a preacher's kid," says Price from her Los Angeles home. "Gospel will forever be a part of my life; that's why I sing the way I sing. But I never said I was leaving R&B." Now, the artist known for belting out such hits as "Friend of Mine," "As We Lay" and "Heartbreak Hotel" is adding an exclamation point to that declaration with the May 3 release of her sixth album "Kelly." Its anthemic opening track "Tired" caught Grammy voters' attention. (Alas, she lost to Fantasia).
Not only does the project plant Price squarely back into the R&B scene, it's helped the singer achieve her first top 40 hit on Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart in 11 years: second single "Not My Daddy," featuring Mint Condition frontman Stokley Williams.
Price and her manager, husband Jeffery Rolle, began dressing the stage for her return three years ago when they relocated from Atlanta to Los Angeles. After the 2006 release of "This Is Who I Am," Price continued performing, averaging between 200 and 250 dates per year.
Read more…
Members of a gang of kidnappers who abducted a medical doctor in Edo State have called on members of the family of their captive to send them enough airtime to recharge their mobile phones to facilitate transactions on his release between both parties. Cases of kidnapping, which seemed to have abated during the election, suddenly rose again as a retired permanent secretary in the state ministry of health, Momoh Daudu, was kidnapped over the weekend. For this reason, the Edo State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) over the weekend called for a total overhauling of all security agencies in the state, saying it is apparent that they have failed in checking the rising spate of kidnapping and armed robbery in the state. Family sources said that the abductors of the medical doctor are demanding for an undisclosed amount of money as ransom and also airtime with which to communicate with members of his family. The Edo State chapter of the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) has condemned the abduction of Mr Daudu. A statement signed by the state chairman of the NMA, Philip Ugbodaga, made available to NEXT, described his abduction as "one too many," adding that the incident has again brought to the fore "the worsening state of insecurity in Edo." The statement went on to call on the abductors of Mr Daudu "to immediately free him unconditionally," saying that neither "the NMA nor the family of Dr Daudu is prepared to negotiate any payment of ransom for his release." Overhaul the system The medical practitioners therefore called for "a total overhauling of the entire security network in Edo state and for improved funding and equipping of the relevant security agencies in the state for optimal performance," in order to stem the rising spate of crime in the state. As at the time of filling this report, it was not known if the family members of the abducted doctor have reached an agreement with the kidnappers on an amount as ransom money or sent recharge cards to them as demanded. The spokesman of the Edo State police command, Peter Ogboi, could not be reached on his mobile phone for comment as it was said to be unavailable.
Read more…

jpeg&STREAMOID=5gn8vMi1zp6AEpyTaxFgNS6SYeqqxXXqBcOgKOfTXxQn3JUzE6qnqra6aWy_4I0AnW_PgxgftuECOcfJwS6Jtlp$r8Fy$6AAZ9zyPuHJ25T7a9GKDSxsGxtpmxP0VAUyHL6IDcZHtmM2t7xO$FHdJG95dFi6y2Uma3vSsvPpVyo-&width=234Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed in a U.S. helicopter raid on a mansion near the Pakistani capital Islamabad early on Monday, ending a long worldwide hunt for the mastermind of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

Members of an elite Navy Seals team dropped by helicopter to the compound were under orders to kill not capture bin Laden, who had eluded U.S. forces for 13 years, a senior U.S. security official told Reuters.

"This was a kill operation," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Many analysts see bin Laden's death as largely symbolic since he was no longer believed to have been issuing operational orders to the many autonomous al Qaeda affiliates around the world.

Fearful of revenge attacks, the United States swiftly issued security warnings to Americans worldwide. A top Republican lawmaker briefed by the White House on bin Laden's death said U.S. security agencies were working to prevent any attacks on the United States or its installations overseas.

"This is a key moment because al Qaeda has to avenge. This is a terrible defeat for them and they have to move as quickly as they can, and it's up to us to stop them," said congressman Peter King.

Bin Laden's death is unlikely to have any impact on the nearly decade-long war in Afghanistan spawned by the September 11 attacks on Washington and New York. U.S. forces there are facing record violence by a resurgent Taliban, which has vowed to avenge his death.

President Barack Obama, whose popularity has been hit hard by rising gasoline prices, will likely see a short-term bounce in his approval ratings. But he may also come under more pressure from Americans to speed up a planned withdrawal of U.S. forces from the unpopular war in Afghanistan.

U.S. officials said bin Laden was found in a million-dollar compound in the military garrison town of Abbottabad, 35 miles north of Islamabad. After 40 minutes of fighting, bin Laden was among several people in the mansion killed.

A source familiar with the operation said bin Laden was shot in the head. A senior U.S. official in Washington said the al Qaeda leader was killed in a firefight after he resisted the assault force.

Two officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said bin Laden was buried at sea. A third official said this was done to prevent a gravesite on land becoming a shrine for followers.

"Justice has been done," Obama declared in a dramatic late-night White House speech announcing the death of the elusive head of the militant Islamic group behind a series of deadly bombings across the world.

Pakistan told after raid

Leaders worldwide praised the killing as a dramatic success in the war against al Qaeda, a mood reflected in financial markets. The dollar and stocks rose, while oil and gold fell, on the view bin Laden's death reduced global security risks.

Thousands of jubilant, flag-waving Americans thronged outside the White House and in the streets of New York after Obama's announcement.

It was the biggest national security victory for the president since he took office in early 2009 and will make it difficult for Republicans to portray Democrats as weak on security as he seeks re-election in 2012.

In sharp contrast, on the streets of Saudi Arabia, bin Laden's native land which stripped him of his citizenship after September 11, there was a mood of disbelief and sorrow among many.

The Palestinian Islamist group Hamas mourned bin Laden as an "Arab holy warrior."

But many in the Arab world felt his death was long overdue. For many Arabs, inspired by the popular upheavals in Egypt, Libya and elsewhere over the past few months, the news of bin Laden's death had less significance than it once might have.

The operation could complicate relations with Pakistan, a key U.S. ally in the battle against militancy and the war in Afghanistan. Those ties have already been frayed over U.S. drone strikes in the west of the country and the six-week imprisonment of a CIA contractor earlier this year.

A U.S. official said Pakistani authorities were told the details of the raid after it had taken place.

The revelation bin Laden was living in style will hugely embarrass Pakistani officials, who will be under pressure to explain how he could have been right under their noses. Residents in Abbottabad said a Pakistani military training academy is near the compound.

"For some time there will be a lot of tension between Washington and Islamabad because bin Laden seems to have been living here close to Islamabad," said Imtiaz Gul, a Pakistani security analyst.

REUTERS

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capt.9ffca9b8866040eebdda6fc9015dacba-9ffca9b8866040eebdda6fc9015dacba-0.jpg?x=213&y=142&xc=1&yc=1&wc=410&hc=273&q=85&sig=bxyYYvYcu1T4ZbmVX8Jm1w--NEW YORK – A trove of papers and photographs documenting the lives of Holocaust victims and survivors includes notable names like Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel and former Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. But Benzion Baumrind's name might have stayed forgotten to his descendants without the records kept by a humanitarian aid agency.

A genealogist discovered Baumrind, one of 6 million Jews killed during the Holocaust, was in her family with one stray document buried in a database of historic papers and photos kept by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee.

With over 500,000 names, and more than 1,000 photographs, the searchable collection documents the relief organization's vast efforts during World War II and the postwar era in 24 countries, from China and Japan to the Dominican Republic and Bolivia. The records, being made available online for the first time on Monday, open a singular view into the lives of survivors that the JDC aided during that cataclysmic period.

"We can get broader pictures of the actual everyday social life in the aftermath of war," Kenneth Waltzer, director of the Jewish Studies Department at Michigan State University, said of the collection.

Until now, the organization's archive has been largely inaccessible to the public, kept at a private storage warehouse located a short subway ride out of Manhattan.

Volunteers entered names in a database for over a year; rare, fragile documents were scanned into the computer system. Users of the site can submit names to identify people they recognize in the photographs, which may be later added to captions.

"A website like this is where history meets technology," said Gideon Taylor, an executive with the New York-based committee. "It's taking history out of the dusty files... And bringing it out into the community."

The committee plans to put even more documents from its archive online later this summer.

The project is one of a growing number around the world aimed at making available on the Internet primary records about the Holocaust.

"It is a world phenomenon that's launched by the technology," said David M. Kleiman, president of Heritage Muse Inc., a New York-based genealogy technology firm.

The collection offers glimpses of the lives of children who survived the Holocaust to become moral and spiritual leaders, politicians and artists.

There was the 16-year-old teenager who would become an author and one of the world's most esteemed humanitarians — Wiesel — listed on a document naming 426 orphaned boys from the Buchenwald concentration camp who were taken to Paris by the committee in 1945. Also on the list: a future Chief Rabbi of Israel and one of the youngest surviving prisoners of Buchenwald, Israel Meir Lau, who was 7 years old when he was liberated.

Begin, the future Israeli prime minister, is named on a list of 9,000 Polish Jewish refugees receiving the agency's aid in Vilna, Lithuania, in 1940.

Another person named in the files is Peter Max, the famed New York artist whose cosmic-colored works became a signature style of the hippie 1960s.

"Looking back, it's amazing that people had the will to organize, to create organizations to help people who fled other countries and were in dire need," said Max, who was 6 months old when his family, the Finkelsteins, fled Berlin, and found safe haven in Shanghai, where the JDC also had a relief operation.

For Linda Cantor, the past president of the Jewish Genealogical Society of New York and a volunteer who helped put the names online, the collection helped her find a relative she never knew about.

A researcher with 30 years of experience in genealogy, even she was surprised when she came across a document that connected her to Baumrind, who lived in the Polish town where her family was from.

That document, a list of Polish Jews expelled by the Nazi German government and living in the border town of Zbaszyn, Poland, between 1938 and 1939, showed that her great-aunt was named as Baumrind's contact in the United States. It was a tantalizing clue that would help her document him as a cousin.

"My discovery allowed him to have a place in somebody's memory," she said.

The committee, commonly known as the Joint, was founded in 1914 to help Jews in need in war-ravaged Europe and Palestine. During World War II, it provided assistance to refugees from Lithuania to Japan and helped Jews escape Europe, including by booking them on ships headed for the Americas.

Claus Hirsch, 76, of New York, fled Berlin with his parents and brother and found asylum in Shanghai and had to rely on the Joint for hot meals. As a volunteer, going over lists of names and keying them into the database, it has been an emotional experience.

"It's nice to see a name on a list," he said, before he began to weep. "I saw names of people I had known years ago. And I hadn't thought about them in 30 or 40 years."

 

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The Prisoner's dilemma

why two "errant" people might not cooperate even if it is in both their best interests to do so.

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