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Nigerian Police Sets-up Election Offences Task Team

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Nigeria Police
Nigeria Police Logo

Nigerian Police is setting up a Special Team to investigate all electoral offences in the forthcoming general elections in the country.

 

Inspector-General, Suleiman Abba ordered the constitution of the team under the Commissioner of Police, Force Legal Prosecution Department, Nwodibo Ekechukwu.

 
Nigeria goes to polls on February 14 for presidential and National Assembly elections and on February 28 for the governorship and House of Representatives elections.

 

Many Nigerians are already expressing fear that the election may lead to violence. Already, supporters of the two major political parties – the ruling Peoples Democratic Party and opposition All Progressives Congress have been accused of physically attacking each other.

 

Over 800 Nigerians were killed in 2011 after announcing the result of the presidential elections which saw General Buhari losing.

 

The international community has urged all politicians and political stakeholders to call their supporters to order.

NTA Jos on Fire

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Nigeria Television Authority, NTA, Jos, north central Nigeria is on fire.
Eye witness say the cause of the fire is unknown, but has affected the admin block of the station
At the time of filing this report, efforts are on to put off the fire.

Nigeria May Extend Dealine of Voter Card Collection

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Nigeria may extend distribution of voter card beyong the February 8 if the electoral commission fails to distribute significant number of the cards by the closing day.

Amina Zachary, a commissioner for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Amina Zachary gave the indication in an interview Reuters.

“Let’s see how the PVC (permanent voter card) distribution goes by Feb. 8, then maybe,” she said.

She however said no decision had been taken yet.

10 days to the presidential election, only 44 million out of 68.8 million permanent voter cards have been collected by voters and this has compelled the electoral body to shift the closing date of the collection to February 8.

Zachary said one of the major challenge the Commission is facing is that of low distribution of the cards – about 11 states out of the 36 states distributed less than 60 percent of the cards.

“We’ve sometimes just had one person at some distribution stations. Now we put two but the cost is very high, it has eaten up all the money as we have to pay INEC staff extra for staying late,” Zachary said.

Nigerian Health Workers End Strike

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Medica workers attending to patients

Nigeria’s health workers on Monday announce the suspension of 11 weeks old strike after a meeting with President Goodluck Jonathan.

The union commenced strike on November 12, 2014 over non-implementation of earlier agreement entered into with government on improvement of welfare package for health workers.

National Leader of Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU), the striking body, Ayuba Wabba said President Jonathan had pleaded for time to review their demands with a promise to implement them.

“As the last authority, we have no doubt that those commitments will be met and he made a passionate plea that having intervened at that level, he pleaded with JOHESU to suspend the action and allow him the period to consider all the issues and dispense with them…. having shown enough commitment and the demonstration of his goodwill, we then have no option than to suspend the strike action and direct our members to resume work immediately.

The strike by health workers has paralysed health service delivery in Africa’s most populous country and the continent’s largest economy.

It had complicated health care delivery in both the cities and villages; the sick were not attended to, no matter the condition of illness of the person visiting the hospital.

Last week Nigeria’s Minister of Health has threatened to stop salaries of the striking health workers on No Work, No Pay rule, but Wabba said President Jonathan has given a commitment that no member of the union will be victimised in any form.

The union comprises of Pharmacists, radiotherapists, medical record officers and other cadre of health workers in the federal and state government owned hospitals

Egypt Court Sentences 183 To Death

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Picture showing Egypt Political Prisoners

An Egyptian court has issued death sentence to 183 Muslim Brotherhood supporters accused of a role in the killing of police officers in August, 2013, during the upheaval that followed the army’s ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.

This is coming a day after Egypt released Al Jazeera journalist, Peter Greste, accused of false reporting and aiding the Muslim Brotherhood,

183 out of 188 supporters of the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood Movement were convicted over the killing of at least 11 policemen in August 2013.

According to state-run Al-Ahram newspaper, presiding Judge Nagy Shehata, sentenced a minor to 10 years in prison, acquitted two defendants, and dropped charges against two others as they had passed away,

The sentences came after the verdicts were sent to Egypt’s top cleric, Grand Mufti, for approval — a process that typically follows each mass trial

Their charges include participating in and funding terrorism, forming an illegal group aimed at obstructing state institutions from performing their duties, assaulting citizens and spreading terrorism.

The incident occurred in the town of Kerdasa, near Cairo at the period of intense fight between pro-Muslim Brotherhood and security forces.

In a reaction, Amnesty International has kicked against the trial which it says was held in prison complex, rather than the conventional courtroom, and that some defendants were sentenced in absentia,

It described the process as “Egypt’s disregard for national and international law.”

In a statement, its Middle East and North Africa Program Deputy Director, Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, said “These verdicts and sentences must be quashed and all of those convicted should be given a trial that meets international standards of fairness and excludes the death penalty,”

Al Jazeera Journalist Regains Freedom

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CAIRO, Egypt (1 February 2015) – Aljazeera’s Peter Greste, arrested and imprisoned by Egyptian Government has gained freedom after spending 400 days in jail.

A statement by the Egyptian Interior Ministry said it had been “decided to extradite Australian journalist Peter Greste… to his country today, 1 February (2015)… after the cabinet’s approval, in enforcement of the Presidential Decree no. 140 for the year 2014 regarding the rulings on extraditing defendants and deporting the convicts”

Fourty eight years old Greste was arrested alongside two Aljazeera journalists, Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed in December 2013 on charges which included spreading false news.

Egyptian sources said Fahmy would be deported to his country Canada.

The journalists were also accused of siding the banned Muslim Brotherhood after the military overthrew the government of President Mohammed Morsi in 2013.

The three of them denied the charges against them and said they were only reporting the news.

In a statement, Acting Director-General of Aljazeera Media Network, Mostefa Souag, said “We’re pleased for Peter and his family that they are to be reunited. It has been an incredible and unjustifiable ordeal for them, and they have coped with incredible dignity.”

President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi in November announced he was considering pardon to the two foreign al-Jazeera journalists.

In January, Egypt’s Supreme Court ordered the retrial of the Aljazeera journalists.

Sudan: Rebels Free UN Aid Workers

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KHARTOUM, Sudan (1 February 2015) – Six aid workers kidnapped by Sudan rebels in South Kordofan region of the country have been released by their captors.

Spokesperson of Sudan’s Foreign Ministry, Betina Zhoteva announced on Sunday.

“They are in good health and are in a safe place with a team of the United Nations Food Programme,” She said.

The aid workers, all Bulgarians, were kidnapped by Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) on Jan 26, when their helicopter landed in the region on emergency.

Spokesperson of the rebel group, Mubarak Ardol said the six kidnapped persons were transferred from the rebel-held territories in Sudan to Yida refugee camp in South Sudan, where they were handed over to the United Nations.

Fight between Khartoum government and SPLM-N rebels increased in the region about two months ago when peace talks failed.

South African Apartheid-era Commander Gets Parole

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An apartheid-era commander in South Africa, Eugene De Kock has been granted parole having spent 20 years in prison.

De Kock, 66, was sentenced in 1996 to two life terms in prison and a further 212 years for the crimes he committed.

He was nicknamed “Prime Evil” for his role in the killing and maiming of activists fighting white minority rule in the 1980s and early 1990s.

South Africa’s Minister of Justice Michael Masutha said De Kock announced that De Kock would be set free “in the interests of nation-building”.

The Minister however said the time and place of release would not be made public, stressing that his decision was guided by the country’s constitution.

De Kock, a former colonel was head of the notorious Vlakplaas police unit in the apartheid era.

He appeared before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) which was established a year after South Africa’s first democratic elections in 1994.

De Kock confessed to more than 100 acts of murder, torture and fraud, taking full responsibility for the activities of his undercover unit.

Sandra Mama, widow of Glenack Mama who was killed by De Kock in 1992, sided the minister for granting parole.

She told BBC “I think it will actually close a chapter in our history because we’ve come a long way and I think his release will just once again help with the reconciliation process because there’s still a lot of things that we need to do as a country.”

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