Sunday 8 October 2017

Nigeria/Zambia Match: 5 killed, others injured at stadium


No fewer than five people were killed, scores unconscious, while others sustained serious injuries in a stampede at the entrance of Godswill Akpabio International Stadium, Uyo, Akwa Ibom State on Saturday.

Thousands of football fans, who had thronged the stadium to watch the match between the Super Eagles of Nigeria in action against the Chipolopo of Zambia on Saturday, suddenly found themselves all at one gate.A surge followed with the fans pushing and falling over one another.The blood stain of those who died, and those who sustained serious injuries as well as those who were in coma, were seen everywhere around the gate of the stadium.

A journalist with The Punch newspaper was among the victims who were injured by the soldiers who were controlling the crowd.Police and the Federal Road Safety Corps personnel were seen standing beside some unconscious fans.Shoes of those who had fallen victims to security manhandling were seen in every section of the stadium.Some of the fans who spoke with our correspondent said they escaped death narrowly.One of them, Aniema Ekong, said that apart from the five people that were taken away in ambulance dead, she did not see any possibility for some fans who were in coma to survive.

“I thank God that I’m alive. This is not the first time this incident has occurred. It’s been happening. In fact, in every major tournament, there is always a tale to tell of security agents injuring or killing people.“To me, it seems as if this stadium is a blood-sucking demon. My experience today is different. Today’s experience is a near dead one. Let them be with their stadium. To me, watching matches here again, will be impossible”, she said.

Another fan said his girlfriend had been severely injured by security personnel manning the gate.According to him the security pushed the lady to the gate, where she hit her left shoulder and arms against the gate and fell flat on the ground.He said the lady had been taken to a nearby hospital.

He said, “I don’t know why there is always trouble in this stadium (Godswill Akpabio International Stadium). Each time there is a match; there is always one problem or the other.Many people were seen leaving the stadium thanking God for their lives.
The state Police Public Relations Officer, Mr. Elkana Bala, could not be reached for confirmation as his phone lines were switched off.
Source: The Next Edition

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Saturday 7 October 2017

Monkeypox: Suspected cases in Rivers

Prof Chike Princewill, who disclosed this while briefing newsmen in Port Harcourt yesterday, said three suspected cases have been identified.
The deadly Monkey Pox virus, which has affected some people in Bayelsa State, has found its way into Rivers State.
The state Commissioner for Health, Prof Chike Princewill, who disclosed this while briefing newsmen in Port Harcourt yesterday, said three suspected cases have been identified.
Chike said the disease has been identified in three communities- Rumuolumeni, Eneka and Rumomoi, all in Obio/Akpor Council, adding that the ministry has deployed measures to prevent its spread.
He said those affected with the virus have been quarantined, pending the outcome of research on it and advised medical personnel in the state to put on their Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) while handling patients who have rashes and fever.
The commissioner appealed to the public to intensify efforts to improve on their personal and environmental hygiene methods and also endeavour to avoid contact with body fluid.
He noted that the Rapid Response Department of the ministry has been revamped, while the ministry has made arrangements with the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH), the state primary health centres and other relevant authorities for any emergency.
He urged the public to contact the following numbers- 08056109538, 09062277699, and 08033124314– in case of any suspected case.
Chikere said the virus could be transmitted by rodents and monkeys, stating that the signs and symptoms include fever, sore throat, body weakness and rashes, among others.
The virus was first noticed in Bayelsa state early this week.
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Nobel Prize sends a nuclear message to Trump

(From L) World Council of Churches (WCC) spokeswoman Marianne Ejdersten, Nuclear disarmament group International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) executive director Beatrice Fihn, ICAN coordinator Daniel Hogstan and ICAN member of the steering committee Grethe Ostern attend a press conference after ICAN won the Nobel Peace Prize for its decade-long campaign to rid the world of the atomic bomb as nuclear-fuelled crises swirl over North Korea and Iran, on October 6, 2017 in Geneva. With the nuclear threat at its most acute in decades, the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, which on October 6 won the Nobel Peace Prize, is urgently pressing to consign the bomb to history. Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP
The Nobel committee spurned an opportunity to celebrate the Iran nuclear deal, but still found a way to send a message to US President Donald Trump.
Trump is a stern critic of the 2015 accord, and US officials say that he intends to tell the US Congress next week that Tehran is not honoring its side of the bargain.
He is also engaged in a perilous game of brinksmanship with nuclear-armed North Korea, threatening “fire and fury” and exchanging insults with young dictator Kim Jong-Un.
Some supporters of the deal had hoped the jury would honor the architects of the Iran deal and in doing so send a message to Trump about the power of diplomacy.
In the end the committee chose not to provoke Trump by handing prizes to Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif or former US secretary of state John Kerry.
But in celebrating the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) they sent a strong message about the world’s concerns about nuclear escalation.
“The message that has been communicated is a more subtle indirect messaging,” said Melissa Dalton, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
“It’s potentially a message and an encouragement to uphold the JCPOA as a commitment that the US has made with allies to non-proliferation,” she said, referring to the Iran deal.
ICAN is a global civil society movement pushing for a global treaty to ban nuclear arms, one that was signed by 122 countries — although none with such weapons — in July.
Speaking in Geneva, ICAN head Beatrice Fihn made an explicit link between the award and concerns about Trump’s attitude to the Iran deal and non-proliferation efforts.
Next week, Trump is expected to announce he is “decertifying” Iran’s compliance with the 2015 agreement it signed to limit its nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief.
Officials insist that this will not sink the deal itself but open the way for Congress to possibly develop new measures to punish other aspects of Iran’s behavior.
Global opinion 
Trump has called the deal an “embarrassment to the United States” but rather than scrap it he is exploring a risky middle path to turn up the pressure on Iran.
Ever scornful of the record of his Nobel laureate predecessor Barack Obama, the US leader is unlikely at this stage to be influenced by a Norwegian committee.
But the timing of the award underlines the extent to which his hostility to the pact is out of step with global opinion, including with US allies in Europe.
And even if, as is now expected, the accord survives Trump’s Washington maneuvers, his position may have weakened his ability to negotiate with another foe: North Korea.
The US strategy to deal with Kim’s nuclear bravado is to use sanctions and diplomacy — backed by a credible military posture — to bring him to the negotiating table.
But doubts hanging over the Iran deal make success less likely, say observers, including Jung Pak of the Center for East Asia Policy Studies at the Brookings Institution.
“Even if North Korea and the US came to an agreement, Kim has no reason to think that an agreement would stick from one US administration to the next,” he warned.
“Given Trump’s sharp criticism and talk of reneging on the Iran nuclear deal, the message is loud and clear, the US cannot be trusted.”
Washington’s European allies are also nervous that Trump’s criticism of the deal will encourage US hardliners to undermine the entire agreement.
“We told the administration: certification or not, that’s not our problem, this is an American domestic issue,” one Western diplomat told reporters.
“But beware of a demarche that would endanger the agreement. Our concern now is what the Congress will do if Trump doesn’t certify,” he said.
There are some hawks in Washington who will seize on any opportunity to toughen the US stance — despite the international solidarity symbolized by the Nobel award.
Influential conservative Senator Tom Cotton is known to have Trump’s ear and he advises pushing ahead with both decertification and new sanctions.
“If anything, certifying the disastrous deal with Iran will show the North Koreans that we lack the will to confront them,” he said, arguing that Kim would respect a strong stance.
“Isn’t it curious that North Korea’s nuclear and missile tests have accelerated so rapidly since we agreed to the Iran deal?”
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At least 16 killed as train hits bus in Russia


A handout picture released by Vladimir region branch of the Russian Interior Ministry shows the site of a collision, after a train slammed into a passenger bus that had broken down on a level crossing, near the city of Vladimir, some 110 kilometres (70 miles) east of the Russian capital, on October 6, 2017. / AFP PHOTO / Russian Interior Ministry / HO 
At least 16 people were killed on Friday when a train slammed into a bus that had broken down on a level crossing east of Moscow, authorities said.
The collision occurred before dawn on Friday near the town of Pokrov, some 110 kilometres (70 miles) from the Russian capital.
“According to preliminary information, 16 people, including a child, have been killed,” Russia’s Investigative Committee said.
“Other passengers, including minors, have been taken to hospital with various injuries. The number of dead and injured is being ascertained,” the committee said, confirming it had opened an investigation.
The regional interior ministry said the bus broke down on the level crossing.
Uzbekistan’s foreign ministry said in a statement that 19 Uzbek nationals had died in the crash, despite the Investigative Committee reporting a lower figure.
The train, travelling at 90 kilometres per hour from the second city of Saint Petersburg to Nizhny Novgorod, east of Moscow, slammed into the bus at 3:29 am (0029 GMT) on Friday.
The train was 400 metres (yards) away from the crossing when the driver slammed on emergency brakes and sounded a warning alarm, but it was not able to stop before it hit the vehicle, Russian Railways said.
All victims on the bus
All of those killed were on the bus, which was carrying 58 people, 56 of them Uzbek nationals.
The remaining two were drivers from Kazakhstan.
“There are no victims among the train passengers,” the interior ministry said.
Images from the scene showed the white Mercedes bus had been almost completely torn apart with most of its roof ripped off and debris scattered across the tracks.
The Uzbek ambassador to Russia was on his way to the scene along with other staff from the embassy, it said.
the interior ministry was sending a team of experts to the region to offer assistance.
Millions of migrants from poverty-stricken ex-Soviet countries such as Uzbekistan come to work in Russia. None of the official statements specified what the Uzbek nationals who were killed in the crash were doing in the country.
The foreign ministry of neighbouring Kazakhstan confirmed the two bus drivers, one of whom was killed, were Kazakh nationals.
The train continued on its route at around 11:00 am local time.
The train-bus collision appears to be Russia’s most deadly accident involving a train since 2006 when 22 people were killed when a train struck a bus at an unprotected crossing in the southern Krasnodar region.
In 1996, a train hit a school bus in the area of the southern city of Rostov-on-Don, killing 21 children and injuring 19 others. The driver was unable to see the bus early enough to brake because of a heavy fog.
Another road accident
In a separate accident later Friday, at least six people died and about 15 were injured when a bus overturned in a ditch in the Moscow region, a regional interior ministry spokesman told AFP.
Russia’s road accident mortality rate is extremely high, although it has been declining over the past few years. Some 20,000 people died in car crashes in the country in 2016.
Seventeen people were killed in August when a bus carrying construction workers veered off a pier and plunged into the Black Sea.
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