Thursday 13 April 2017

Janet Jackson Steps Out With Her Son For The First Time [Photos]


Janet Jackson, 50, who recently split from her husband, Wissam Al Mana[/img], stepped out for the first time with her son, [b]Eissa Al Mana. The singer was seen strolling with her 3 months old son in a pram in a London park on Wednesday with a female companion. Her son's face still hasn't been shown to the world yet.
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Nigeria is punished by God - Zamfara state Governor

Governor Abdulaziz Yari of Zamfara State and Chairman, Nigeria Governors Forum
In a series of letters from African journalists, novelist and writer Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani looks at whether a culture of blaming everything on destiny is holding Nigeria back
The recent meningitis outbreak, which has so far claimed more than 450 lives in Nigeria’s north, may have exposed one of the reasons why that region of the country continues to have some of the grimmest statistics in almost every area of development.
Even before the Boko Haram militant Islamist insurgency, there were alarmingly high figures on infant and maternal mortality, poverty, child marriage, children out-of-school, to mention but a few.
The region is also one of the few in the world that is yet to be certified free of polio, the infectious disease that often cripples children.
When it comes to the meningitis outbreak, Zamfara State has suffered the most deaths and hospitalisations out of all those affected.
One official has said that people need to “repent and everything will be all right”.
While addressing journalists recently, state governor Abdulaziz Yari absolved his administration of any responsibility for the disease’s spread in his state. Instead, he said the problem was that people have been sinning against God.
“People have turned away from God… that is just the cause of this outbreak as far as I am concerned,” Mr. Yari said.
“There is no way fornication will be so rampant and God will not send a disease that cannot be cured.”
In accordance with his belief about the health emergency’s origin, Mr. Yari proffered a solution which has nothing to do with any action or inaction on the part of his government.
“It is impossible to cultivate a spirit of innovation and transformation when people believe themselves helpless about their plight.
“The most important thing is for our people to know that their relationship with God is not smooth,” he said.
“All they need to do is repent and everything will be all right.”
These comments have drawn criticism from many Nigerians, notably from Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, the Emir of Kano, who is one of the country’s most important Muslim leaders.
But Mr. Yari merely amplified an attitude that is not uncommon in the country.
In the 2011 post-election violence that broke out in parts of northern Nigeria, nine recent university graduates assigned to work with the electoral commission in Bauchi State were killed.
Isa Yuguda, the state governor at the time, ascribed the young people’s deaths to a higher force.
“They were destined to experience what they experienced,” he said.
“Nobody can run away from their destiny.”
He added that human beings should always accept their destiny, whether or not it was “in our favour or against our interest”.
Thus, Mr. Yuguda implied that there was nothing his administration could have done to protect the young lives from their ghastly fate.
He was not to blame.
In January, I met a 21-year-old woman in Maiduguri, north-east Nigeria, one of the millions of people displaced from their homes by Boko Haram.
While living in a camp for displaced people, she was befriended by a man who works with the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF), a group that was formed to help oust Boko Haram.
One night two years ago, he locked her up in his official vehicle, muffled her screams and raped her.
A few weeks later, she discovered that she was pregnant. Her family, his family and the local CJTF boss intervened.
They decided that the victim would marry her rapist. That was the best way to save her from the shame of being a single mother, they believed.
She told me that she did not imagine any better alternative herself and so willingly went along with their decision.
Thus, she became the third wife to a man who was paid by the government to protect her and other refugees; a man who raped her and fathered her first child in the official vehicle he had been provided to carry out his job of protecting her and other vulnerable people.
I was keen to know what her husband felt about what he had done to her, how he had so brutishly altered the course of the woman’s life forever.
“He told me that is the way Allah wants it,” she replied. “He said that is my destiny.”
This attitude of attributing life circumstances to forces beyond people’s control is antithetical to progress and development.
It is impossible to cultivate a spirit of innovation and transformation when people believe themselves helpless about their plight.
Some northern Nigeria leaders are, thankfully, starting to speak out against such regressive beliefs.
The Emir of Kano described Mr. Yari’s comments as “Islamically incorrect”.
“When we talk about a difficult environment, we realise that 90 per cent of that difficulty, we can address, because it is self-inflicted,” the Emir said
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See what you need to know about the Guardian Thursday news paper-photo


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We never sacked Amapakabo as the Rangers Coach- Enugu state Govt

Imama Amapakabo
In a twist of fate, the Enugu State Government has debunked reports in the media suggesting that Rangers International FC coach, Mr. Imama Amapakabo, has been sacked.
The Commissioner for Youths and Sports in the state, Mr. Charles Ndukwe, made this clarification to journalists at the end of the State Executive Council meeting held at Government House, Enugu wednesday.
He stated that Amapakabo was only suspended by the state government based on the club’s recent run of poor performance which was also evident in their home match, last Sunday, against Zesco United Football Club of Zambia. The match had ended 2 – 2 despite Rangers earlier taking a two-goal lead.
Noting that a sack letter could not have been issued to the coach without the state government’s consent, the commissioner said, “the general manager has no right to sack a coach, and Enugu State government cannot take an abnormal action”.
He informed journalists that Chukwuma Agbo is presently the chief coach of the club, adding that Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi is interested in the welfare of the club and will do everything possible to restore its glory.
Amapakabo, at the end of last season became the beautiful bride of many prominent clubs both within and outside the country, but chose to remain with the Enugu side whom he piloted to break the long standing jinx of Enugu Rangers trophy drought by wining the Nigeria league.
However the club as been a shadow of itself with poor run so far in the league and also dropped from CAF Champions League cadre to the Confederation Cup in which they are in the verge of been eliminated following a 2-2 home draw with visiting Zesco United of Zambia.
Not even the three-match ultimatum handed to him during the poor run could change the fortune of the team following one home draw and two losses making just one point out of nine.
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