Home Blog Page 1986

Gov. Bello Advocates History Subjects In Schools

Gov. Abubakar Sani-Bello of Niger has called for more priority in the teaching of History subject in the educational institution to enlighten the youths on their various cultures.

In a statement by Chief Press Secretary to Sani-Bello, during a visit on Sunday to the Emir of Zaria, Amb. Ahmad Bamali, at the palace in Zaria.

The Governor said that History teaches people about their roots while culture is a way of life of the people.

He added that Nigerians should maintain, preserve and promote their culture so as to enable them trace their backgrounds.

“The emir was kind enough to take me round the palace so that I see part of Zaria culture with regards to royalty.

“I am highly impressed by what I have seen especially the preservation of ancient culture that has been here since 1920s and this will go a long way towards maintaining our history and culture.

“The emir was also kind enough to explain the historical background of the ruling family in Zazzau to me and it was very clear and easy to understand.

“The palace is taking a new shape without having to destroy the entire palace. The feeling of the traditional institution is still there but you can see it has been cleaned and tidied up”.

He, however called on other traditional rulers to emulate the Emir of Zazzau in the maintenance of their rich cultural heritage.

“I hope most of our traditional rulers will see what is being done here and do the same in their various emirates because this place for all I know is like a museum. I learnt so many things today,” he said.

The Emir, who along other palace subjects, conducted the Governor and members of his entourage round the palace for sightseeing.

He said the governor’s visit was a remarkable one, explaining that it will remain evergreen in their hearts as he expressed happiness that they were reconnecting.

The historical sites visited include the first palace of the emir, women wing, clinic, stable, the old city palace and fence built by the 16th Emir.

Others are the chamber of late wives of the late emirs and old personal accommodation occupied by three previous emirs; Malam Yakubu Jafaru the 16th emir, the 17th emir late Muhammadu Aminu and Alhaji Shehu Idris, the 18th emir.

Other sites visited were construction sites of a new clinic, guest house and other structures are ongoing as well as the tomb of the immediate past emir.

Zaria is an ancient city and the capital of the Zazzau Emirate which is one of the largest traditional emirates in Nigeria.

Some structures in the palace of the ancient city are believed to be over 600 years.

The present emir is from the Mallawa dynasty and is also the grandson of the first Fulani emir of Zazzau who was the flag bearer in 1804, Malam Musa Bamali, the founder of Mallawa dynasty

German Train Drivers Demand 3.2% Salary Increase As Strike Begins

0

Many train drivers with Germany’s national railway walked off the job on Monday as their union embarked on its second two-day strike this month in a bitter dispute with the company.

The GDL union called on passenger train drivers to strike from 2 a.m. Monday to 2 a.m. Wednesday. Freight train drivers already started their strike on Saturday afternoon.

Railway operator Deutsche Bahn planned to run about one-quarter of long-distance trains, while about 40% of regional and local services were expected to go ahead.

The union’s demands include a 3.2% salary increase and a one-time “coronavirus bonus” of 600 euros ($700). GDL is at odds with government-owned Deutsche Bahn, among other things, about when increases should take place and over what period a wage agreement should cover.

On Sunday, Deutsche Bahn announced that it was prepared to negotiate a “coronavirus bonus” for this year and called on GDL to return to the table. It didn’t specify what exactly it would offer.

The union rejected the overture as “another smokescreen” and said it would go ahead with the walkouts regardless.

Critics of GDL and its combative leader, Claus Weselsky, contend that union rivalry is a significant factor in the dispute. GDL, which traditionally has concentrated on train drivers, is competing with larger rival union EVG to represent a broader range of railway workers.

Private railway operators, which in Germany operate some regional and a handful of long-distance services, aren’t affected by the strike.

Govt N4.8bn pledge: FG can’t be trusted says NARD

0

The National Association of Resident Doctors, on Sunday, faulted the N4.8bn which the Federal Government promised to release for the residency training fund.

The first Vice-President of NARD, Adejo Arome, said in an interview that the association could no longer trust the Federal Government.

Arome said this as the strike embarked upon by the association, which commenced on August 2, entered its 21st day today (Monday) as patients lament the effects of the industrial action.

The strike was called over the Federal Government’s failure to implement the agreements it signed with the doctors before they suspended an earlier industrial action.

Among others, NARD accused the government of not paying house officers and failing to register many doctors on the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System.

Read Also: Using petrol, kerosene to stop bleeding ineffective- Physician

The Federal Government had a week ago headed for the industrial court after failing to convince the resident doctors to call off the strike.

But on Friday, President Muhammadu Buhari directed both sides to resume negotiations.

The Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, had on Saturday said the Federal Government had agreed to pay the N4.8bn residency training fund to the association, while also stating that there were plans to ensure that other demands of NARD, such as payment of arrears and payment of house officers, among others, were met.

Ngige had also said that the association would be required to sign a Memorandum of Action today (Monday).

But on Sunday, Arome said the association no longer trusted the government to implement the agreements.

He said NARD leaders could not return to their members with promises, adding that none of the agreements earlier signed with the government had yielded positive results.

Arome stated, “The government has not met anything. Saying they have set aside any amount of money is just their usual saying.

“We cannot go back to our members with promises. We won’t sign anything again. In fact, there is nothing to sign.

“We have signed all forms of memorandum. None of the ones we have signed has brought any positive results.

“We have signed Memorandum of Understanding and Memorandum of Action, you name it.”

He added, “Let them go and do their work and let the people responsible for the issues be held responsible.

“We don’t trust them. We appeal to the President to take over the negotiations himself because right now, he is the only one we can trust.”

I didn’t negotiate with NARD – Labour Minister

However, Ngige ruled out further negotiations with the resident doctors, saying he would not negotiate with NARD.

He said it was the Nigerian Medical Association that spoke with the leadership of the striking resident doctors.

One of our correspondents had asked the minister to react to the position of NARD that its members no longer trusted the Federal Government since previous agreements were not honoured.

But Ngige said he stopped talking to the association because it had gone to court.

The minister stated, “Call the NMA president and ask him. He was there throughout the two-day negotiations. He led them.

“I wasn’t negotiating with them (NARD). I was negotiating with the NMA. So, call the NMA for their reaction.

“I didn’t negotiate with them (NARD) because their matter has been transmitted to the court. The NARD is in court. So, it is the NMA that we held a meeting with and discussed with.

“I am not negotiating with them. The Ministry of Health is their employer, I am only a conciliator.

“Other unions and bodies like the NMA, the elders’ council, the Office of the Head of Service and the Budget Office, among others, were there and they agreed.”

Israel Fire And Rescue Services Attempt Fire Control Along Gaza Border

Several fires broke out in different locations within Kissufim and Be’eri forests, along the Gaza border due to incendiary balloons, Israeli media reported on Monday.

Three main fires, as well as 10 smaller fires, broke out in the Eshkol Regional Council and Sdot Negev Regional Council forests.

Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael-Jewish National Fund (KKL-JNF) and Israel Fire and Rescue Services firefighting crews are attempting to control the fires.

According to Israel Fire and Rescue Services, nine of the fires in Eshkol Regional Council reported were caused by incendiary balloons. The cause of one fire in Sdot Negev Regional Council is still undetermined.

Israel Fire and Rescue Services added the fires are all relatively small and under control.

Firefighters try to distinguish a fire in the Simhoni forest caused by incendiary ballons sent by Palestinian terrorists into southern Israel. June 15, 2021. Photo by FLASH90 *** Local Caption *** שריפה ביער שמחוני מבלוני תבערה עוטף עזה טרור בלונים

Eshkol Regional Council head Gadi Yarkoni responded to the incendiary balloons attack, stating the Palestinian’s terrorist groups’ “audacity to reignite the balloon terror attacks and light up our forests must be stopped.”

“If not stopped today, we will find ourselves extinguishing fires for another summer,” Yarkoni said. “What starts with acceptance of incendiary balloons, ends with rocket attacks and firing towards IDF soldiers,” he added.

Yarkoni concluded by saying he “expects the government to send an immediate message to these terror groups.”

On Sunday night, explosive balloons were reportedly launched from the Gaza Strip towards southern Israel. A number of fires were reported on Monday morning there, although it is as of yet unclear if the fires were caused by incendiary balloons.

Despite Egypt closing the Rafah Crossing in both directions, reportedly in response to the violent riots in which Shmueli was injured, the crossings with Israel remained open on Monday and no indication was made that plans to transfer Qatari funds to Gaza would be disrupted.

Trucks loaded with construction iron, diesel, gasoline and gas entered the Gaza Strip through the Kerem Shalom Crossing on Monday, according to Palestinian reports.

The right-wing Im Tirtzu organization announced on Monday that it was organizing a protest in front of the Kerem Shalom Crossing, located in the southern Gaza Strip, at 5 a.m. on Wednesday to protest the continued transfer of goods into the Gaza Strip.

UK Recovery Slows As Staff Shortages Plague Firms

0

Staff and supply shortages have taken their toll on the UK’s economic recovery this month, according to a closely watched survey.

The IHS Markit/CIPS Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for August hit a six-month low of 55.3, falling from 59.2 in July.

Any reading above 50 indicates growth, but the bounce-back from the pandemic is losing momentum, said researchers.

CIPS group director Duncan Brock said the figures were “a stark warning”.

He said the “abnormally large slowdown in overall activity” suggested that the accelerated levels of growth seen earlier in the summer were “not sustainable”.

“The worst shortages of staff and materials on record are mostly to blame,” he added.

Today In History – August 23 – First Televised Boxing Match

0

79 Mount Vesuvius begins stirring, on feast day of Vulcan, Roman god of fire (goes on to destroy Pompeii)

1305 Scottish patriot William Wallace is executed for high treason by Edward I of England at Smithfield, London

1542 Rabbi Joseph Caro completes his commentary of Tur Code

1850 1st US National Women’s Rights Convention convenes in Worcester, Massachusetts

1942 Battle of Stalingrad: 600 Luftwaffe planes bomb Stalingrad (40,000 die)

1996 Osama bin Laden issues message entitled “A declaration of war against the Americans occupying the land of the two holy places”

2005 Hurricane Katrina forms over the Bahamas, later becoming a category 5 hurricane

Today in Film & TV

1933 First televised boxing match — 6-round exhibition at Broadcasting House in London between middleweights Archie Sexton and Lauri Raiteri; aired by BBC-TV

1946 “The Big Sleep” directed by Howard Hawks and starring Humphrey Bogart (Philip Marlowe) and Lauren Bacall, premieres

Today in Music

1994 Jeff Buckley releases his album “Grace”, featuring his cover of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah”

Today in Sport

1933 First televised boxing match — 6-round exhibition at Broadcasting House in London between middleweights Archie Sexton and Lauri Raiteri; aired by BBC-TV

Do you know this fact about today? Did You Know?

World War II: last cavalry charge in history takes place at Isbushenskij, Russia; the Italian Savoia Cavalleria charges Soviet infantry

Nigeria’s External Reserves Lose Momentum After July Rally

0

Nigeria’s external reserves could be heading toward the mid-july trough as it failed to sustain the momentum it started four weeks ago.

The figures have been on a downtrend since August 11 after what appeared like a rally turned out to be a breather from the bearish trend of the past year.

The reserves had risen from an over one-year low when the gross component touched $33.09 billion and the liquid portion estimated at $32.85 billion. Thereafter, a gradual but consistent accretion started, hitting an average of $33.45 billion on august 10 in a fleeting rally.

The figure could only regain 1.5 per cent of its losses when it started a retracement on August 11. The modest rally, which lasted for a month, had raised hope on the outlook of the country’s external reserves.

Last week, the gross reserves closed at $33.52 billion while the liquid (or available) form was $33.24 billion, bringing the average figure to $33.38 billion.

Doctor’s Strike: NARD Reject FG’s MoU

0

Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has distanced itself from the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) drafted by the Federal Government and vehemently refused to sign the document as a commitment to ending its ongoing industrial action.

The association described the MoU as a veiled punishment for doctors, who are to bear the brunt of government’s failures.

NMA’s intervention was to end the resumed strike of the residents doctors which enters its twenty third day on Monday.

Recall that resident doctors on August 1 commenced a strike over alleged failure of the Federal Government to implement an agreement bordering on salaries and allowances.

NARD President, Uyilawa Okhuaihesuyi, who declined his assent owing to an undisclosed clause insisted the leadership has to get the nod of members before he could sign the document.

The Minister of Labour and Employment said at the end of the six-hour meeting that all other unions in the negotiation including the NMA and the Medical and Dental Consultants of Nigeria signed the new agreement.

Chris Ngige disclosed that the meeting did not discuss the issue of ‘No Work No Pay’ but that all parties at the meeting agreed to an out of court settlement.

Rainfall Detected Over Greenland Ice Sheet, First Time On Record

0

The National Snow and Ice Data Centre (NSIDC) in Boulder, Colorado on Friday, August 20, 2021 said rain was detected at the highest point of the Greenland ice sheet for the first time since records began.

The ice sheet’s summit is at an altitude of 3,216 metres above sea level and precipitation normally falls as snow.

However, on Aug. 14, temperatures hovered above freezing for about nine hours, leading to a massive melting of ice and snow.

According to the NSIDC report, a low-pressure system meeting a high-pressure system resulted in warm air and moisture being pushed over the ice sheet, leading to the temperature anomaly.

Large melting events are becoming increasingly frequent as the effects of climate change begin to be felt.

According to records, similar events took place in 1995, 2012 and 2019, and before that, drill core analyses suggest at some time in the late 19th century.

Netherlands Embassy Provides Solar Energy Mini-Grid To Bayelsa Community

The Netherlands Embassy in Nigeria has provided solar min-grid for an uninterrupted power supply to Kalaba Community in Bayelsa State.

In a press release issued on the subject, the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) said it implemented the project with technical support from Community Research and Development Centre (CREDC) in the establishment of the project.

The 8.5 kw power project was completed and commissioned recently by a representative of Dr. Godwin Uyi Ojo, Executive Director of ERA/FoEN, Barrister Nosa Tokunbor.

The solar mini-grid station has been channeled to supply electricity to houses in the community, the resuscitated borehole that was hitherto dysfunctional, provision of pumping machine powered by solar, and extension of solar light to the Community Health Centre.

Over 30 households and a population of about 3,000 people are benefitting from the Photovoltaic systems as well as the community health centre, water supply and solar lights receiving power supply from the solar mini-grid.

Barr. Tokunbor, charged the beneficiaries to jealously protect and properly manage the solar-mini grid system so as to enjoy the maximum benefits especially by children who need the light source to read their books at nighttime and also enhancing women’s cooking during the nightfall.

Dr Ojo commended the Netherlands Embassy and the Kalaba community and stated that the project was in line with the Paris Agreement of 2015 to reduce carbon emissions released into the atmosphere and the urgency for energy transition from fossil fuels to renewable sources.