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Brexit: Boris Johnson says a good UK-EU trade deal ‘there to be done

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Mr Johnson had time to take part in PMQs in Westminster before heading to Brussels this evening.
Boris Johnson has said “a good deal is there to be done” with the EU on trade – but says the bloc is currently insisting on terms which no prime minister could accept.

Mr Johnson spoke at Prime Minister’s Questions before travelling to Brussels for final talks with EU President Ursula von der Leyen, just says before the transition period ends on 31 December.

Responding to a question from his Brexiteer colleague Sir Edward Leigh, he tried to assure his colleagues a “good deal is still there to be done” with the EU.

But, outlining the difficulties currently facing the final talks, he added: “Our friends in the EU are currently insisting if they pass a new law in the future which we don’t comply, they have the automatic right to punish us.

Domestic Violence: Addressing The Menace Of Societal Condemnation

We hear it all the time, especially in this part of the world, Africa and Nigeria in particular! “Don’t go oh, he will just marry another wife” or “who will take care of your children?” It sometimes comes in this manner; “your children need a father!”

This must be a joke! How can a man who takes to brutalising his wife at every opportunity be the father figure that women are supposed to cope with for the sake of their kids? What kind of children will you be raising in such an atmosphere? Sociopaths?

According to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), children who grow up in abusive homes tend to continue the cycle of violence as they tend to emulate that mode of behaviour, after all they don’t know better. UNICEF’s findings also show that children who are exposed to violence in the home may suffer a range of severe and lasting effects. Children who grow up in a violent home are more likely to be victims of child abuse. Those who are not direct victims have some of the same behavioural and psychological problems as children who are themselves physically abused.

Before I go further, let me give you this free piece of advice, run! If you are in a marriage where you have become a punching bag, run! In fact, run for your life is the best way to put it. You are praying for him, yes but you have to be alive to pray! What if you don’t survive the next “I hit my head on the door”? Or what if the next black eye makes you blind?

Experts say victims of abuse usually develop what they describe as Stockholm syndrome. This is a psychological response which occurs when hostages or abuse victims bond with their captors or abusers. They make excuses for their abusers and try to protect them. These victims end up believing they are always at fault and they deserve whatever their abusers mete out. And of course, the religious folks believe it’s their mandate to remain in the marriage no matter what happens.

This brings us to the recent drama with the Pius Angbo family. The channels Tv reporter was called out by his wife in a video that went viral on social media. In fact, from the behaviour described by the battered wife, Angbo has some psychopathic tendencies. How can a normal human being sit on the stomach of his pregnant wife, or a woman who is still healing from a C-section, repeatedly trying to choke her?

Well, since the reporter apparently has a relationship with Governor Samuel Ortom of Benue State, there was a public display of reconciliation between the wife and Angbo, the abuser. He reportedly apologised after the governor intervened. This has led many Nigerians to take to social media challenging the act of the governor and calling for the prosecution of Angbo. Some others have renewed the general Nigerian stance of not interfering in marital affairs, since the couple would ultimately settle.

However, as noble as the calls for prosecution of Angbo are, the police generally cannot charge an abuser to court unless there’s a complainant who wants to press charges. The Court cannot also pass judgement on an accused person if such a person is not before it.

The major challenges with prosecuting abuse cases are the factors at play in our society everyday; the parents insist the woman must endure her marriage as her lot in life, friends tell the woman to tolerate, some others insist the woman is the provocateur and so on.

In a chat with Titilola Vivour-Adeniyi, Coordinator of the Lagos State Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Team, she noted that these factors are also seen daily when fathers abuse daughters and the mothers feel compelled to cover up the sick act of their so called husbands. The low rate of reporting and prosecution are as a result of these societal issues.

Emotional abuse is also very common, but since Nigerian women are supposedly wired to endure anything, they take it all in till they eventually explode. For example, Maryam Sanda whose dreams and aspirations have been truncated because she lost it and attacked her husband who she said has been cheating on her to her face. She was sentenced to death and has been appealing her case from one court to the other. Now the question, is remaining in such an abusive marriage worth being on death row, facing more maltreatment and indignity daily?

If she had the boldness to walk away, societal condemnation would have long died down. Social media titans would have long moved on to other trending stories.

Let me say, I am not advocating for break ups in marriages, there are implications on the kids as well. I am stating unequivocally, an abusive marriage is not a healthy union. You can pray and work it out, but leave before you die.

#saynotodomesticviolence

Security Council Ends Mandatory Scrutiny Of Burundi Citing May Elections

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The United Nations Security Council on Monday struck Burundi off its political agenda citing peaceful elections recently conducted in the country.

In a statement presented by South African president Cyril Ramaphosa, the 15-member body said the broadly peaceful elections had marked a new phase for central African country.

South Africa holds the Council’s presidency for December. The development means Burundi is close to ending nearly six years of international isolation.

In a statement aired on the state broadcaster government spokesman Prosper Ntahorwamiye said, Burundi has received, with joy, the noble decision taken by the UN Security Council of withdrawing Burundi from its political agenda.

The government of Burundi had stated on many occasions that the country no longer posed a threat to regional peace and security, and demanded that the Security Council end its mandatory reporting on Bujumbura.

In May, Burundi held a presidential election which was won by Evariste Ndayishimiye, candidate of the ruling National Council for the Defense of Democracy – Forces for the Defense of Democracy (CNDD-FDD) party.

The Council encouraged donor countries which had suspended aid to Burundi to continue dialogue towards resumption of development assistance.

A report by a UN watchdog in September said human rights violations were still being committed in Burundi, including sexual violence and murder.

Senegal Court Jails Three Fathers For Pushing Sons To Migrate To Europe

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A Senegalese court on Tuesday handed down jail terms to three fathers accused of pushing their sons to migrate to Europe by sea, sending them on a trip that left one of them dead.

Defence lawyer Assane Dioma Ndiaye said the trio were given two-year jail terms, 23 months of which were suspended, on a charge of “placing the lives of others in danger.

Ndiaye added they were acquitted of the charge of abetting migrant trafficking in a high-profile case.

The sons were with other migrants who boarded a canoe to make the crossing from Senegal to Spain’s Canary Islands, the first step in a plan to reach continental Europe.

But one of them, a teenager nicknamed Doudou, fell ill and died during the trip. His father had paid 250,000 CFA francs ($460) to a smuggler, who was to take the boy to Spain. His destination after that was Italy, where he hoped to sign up for a football training academy.

The fathers of the three, all of them fishermen in the coastal town of Mbour, were arrested a couple of weeks later.

Over 500 people have died this year, mostly in October and November, according to the UN’s International Office for Migration (IOM), compared to 210 fatalities for the whole of last year.

The pressure to migrate is especially strong among fishing communities. Coastal villages in Senegal have been badly hit by dwindling catches, and by the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

AFCON 2021: Gambia Fined For Letting Gabonese Team Sleep On Airport Floor

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Gambia has been fined $100,000 for the unsporting reception accorded to the visiting Gabonese national team in November.

In its ruling published on Tuesday, the Confederation of African Football (CAF) berated the hosts for non-compliance “with the loyalty, Integrity and sportsmanship values and rules of Fair Play”.

A fine of $100,000 USD (One Hundred Thousand US Dollars) was imposed on the Gambian federation out of which $50,000 (Fifty Thousand US Dollars) is suspended on the condition that the federation is not found guilty of a similar offense within a period of twenty-four months.

The Gabon delegation were reportedly told they were not allowed to leave the airport because of an administrative problem and were forced to sleep on the floor before being allowed to leave in the morning after government intervention.

The incident garnered global attention after Arsenal captain and Gabon international Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang tweeted about it.

CAF also fined the Gabonese football federation $10,000 for ‘offensive and degrading material that undermines the honor and image of the Confederation of African Football’ published by Aubameyang.

Gambia and Gabon are in drawn in Group D along with Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

ASUU promised to call off strike today, December 9

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The Federal Government has claimed the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) had promised to call off their nine-month-old strike before Wednesday, December 9.

This was contained in a statement from the media office of the Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, on Tuesday.

Ngige insisted the government has delivered on offers made to ASUU.

The Minister was reacting to claims made by ASUU President, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, that the government has failed to deliver on offers it made to them.

Ogunyemi had made it clear the lecturers would not return to classes until their salary arrears were paid. 

Ngige has, however, claimed ASUU agreed at their last meeting on November 27 to call off the strike.

“The truth of the matter is that a ‘gentleman agreement’ was reached at the last meeting in which ASUU agreed to call off the strike before December 9, 2020.

“And the minister, in turn, agreed that once the strike is called off, he would get a presidential waiver for ASUU to be paid the remainder of their salaries on or before December 9,” Ngige said

He added that, “the N40b Earned Academic Allowances have also been processed just as the N30bn revitalisation funds, bringing it to N70bn. Likewise, the visitation panels for the universities have been approved by the President but the panel cannot perform its responsibilities until the shut universities are re-opened.”

Ngige also revealed that lecturers were paid for February and March, before an extension was made to the months of April, May and June when they were already on strike, “on compassionate ground”.

Nigeria’s COVID-19 cases rise to 550, highest in 15 weeks

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Nigeria hit a major record on Tuesday with over 550 new positive samples of COVID-19 cases confirmed, the highest daily count in the past 15 weeks.

The last time the daily count was over 550 was on August 22, when 601 infections were confirmed.

The Tuesday figure is a significant increase over the past 24 hours, as 390 cases were recorded on Monday.

With the new cases, the country’s total count of coronavirus infections has now surpassed 70,000.

According to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), 550 new cases were confirmed in 16 states and the federal capital territory (FCT) on Tuesday.

Lagos, which recorded less than 100 cases on Monday, was top of the list with 219 new infections, followed by FCT with 168, and Kaduna with 52.

Meanwhile, the country’s recovery count has now exceeded 65,000 with 163 patients discharged on Tuesday.

One person was, however, confirmed to have died of COVID-19 complications, increasing the toll to 1,182.

Out of 70,195 cases recorded across the 36 states and the FCT, 65,110 people have recovered, while the number of active infections has now increased from 3,517 to 3,903 within 24 hours.

FCT takes the lead with 1,170 active cases, followed by Lagos with 707, while Kaduna now has the third-highest figure with 355 infections.

Supreme Court Gives Dec. 9 Deadline In Congressman’s Bid To Upend Pennsylvania election Results

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The U.S. Supreme Court moved up a key deadline Sunday for Pennsylvania officials to respond to a last-minute bid by one of President Donald Trump’s top boosters in Congress to decertify the state’s elections results.

Previously, Associate Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., who oversees emergency matters arising out of Pennsylvania for the court, had given state election administrators until Wednesday to file their response to the appeal from U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly (R., Butler), who has argued that Pennsylvania’s vote-by-mail law is unconstitutional and that every mail ballot cast in the state should be thrown out.

But on Sunday, Alito moved up the schedule in Kelly’s case by a day, ordering state officials to respond by 9 a.m. Tuesday, instead.

The difference of just a day is significant, given that the previous deadline of Wednesday fell one day after what is known as the “safe harbor date,” the federal cutoff date for states to resolve any remaining election disputes and lock in their slate of electors for the Dec. 14 Electoral College vote.

UN Resolution Urges Russia To Withdraw From Crimea

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The UN General Assembly on Tuesday adopted a resolution calling on Russia to end its occupation of Crimea and to withdraw from Ukraine.

“It urges the Russian Federation, as the occupying Power, to immediately, completely and unconditionally withdraw its military forces from Crimea and end its temporary occupation of the territory of Ukraine without delay,” the UN said in a statement on the nonbinding resolution.

The representative of Ukraine who introduced the related text said that by occupying Crimea, Russia is violating international law, and threatening “peace and security well beyond the Black Sea region.”

In the meantime, the Russian side called the text “politicized” and added that Crimean people had decided their future via a referendum.

Russia and Ukraine have been at loggerheads since 2014 when Russia annexed Crimea after a controversial referendum.

Turkey as well as the UN General Assembly viewed the annexation as illegal.

Ukraine has also blamed Russia for separatist violence in eastern Ukraine near the border with Russia.

The resolution on the militarization of the peninsula of Crimea, the port of Sevastopol and parts of the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov was adopted by 63 countries, with 17 voting against and 62 abstaining.

The resolution is non-binding but has political significance. It was put forward by 40 countries, including Britain, France, Germany and the Baltic states, as well the United States, Australia, Canada and Turkey.

NIDCOM Hails Apex Bank Over Diaspora-Friendly Forex Policy

The Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM) on Tuesday commended the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for its new policy to grant unfettered access to Foreign Exchange (Forex) on Diaspora Remittances.

Chairman/Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of NiDCOM, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, gave the commendation while hosting the first Honorary Consul of Columbia to Nigeria, Mrs Maricel Cantillo, who visited the Commission in Abuja.

A statement by NiDCOM’s Head of Media and Public Relations, Abdur-Rahman Balogun, quoted her as saying that Nigerians in the Diaspora were excited with the policy which would ultimately impact positively on the Diaspora remittances and Investments in Nigeria.

Dabiri-Erewa added that the commission had already set up a process for the Nigerian Diaspora Investment Trust Fund.

She also said that beneficiaries of remittances by Nigerians in the Diaspora would get their money in the currency of transmission rather than in Naira.

She advised them to patronise registered Bureau de Change in operation and urged the CBN to reduce the levies charged by International Money Transfer Operators (IMTOs) on remittances, with that of Nigeria being the highest in the world.

Dabiri-Erewa said she was happy to receive Columbia’s first honorary consul to Nigeria, noting that it was an opportunity to engage Nigerians in Columbia and Colombians in Nigeria to deepen cultural and trade relations.

Responding, Cantillo, who expressed excitement at being the first Honorary Colombia Consul to Nigeria, said she believed that would strengthen the ties between both countries.