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Regional Security:Oyo State Deploys Amotekun Troops after passing-out ceremony

Oyo State Governor on Wednesday said he was ready to deploy Amotekun corp members to all the state’s 351 wards.

He said this while attending the passing-out ceremony of the Amotekun Corps in Oyo Town.

Amotekun is a regional security outfit conceived by South-West states.

The outfit is expected to complement federal policing as the country continues to mull over the mechanics of a policing system under the authority of state governments.

“This afternoon, we held the passing-out ceremony of the Àmòtékún Corps in Oyo Town,” Makinde said. “It’s been a long journey to get to this point from July 2019, when the first meeting was held by all six southwest governors to set up a regional security outfit.

 “The Àmòtékún Corps will collaborate with federal security agencies to secure our state. Members of the corps will be drafted to all the 351 wards in Oyo State. They will be answerable to me and so, I will be responsible for their actions.”

U.S. Divorce Rate Hits 50-Year Low: ‘Great News for Americans’

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The U.S. divorce rate hit a 50-year low in 2019 according to new Census data that is being hailed as “great news” for America’s families and children by a prominent researcher.

The new data shows that 14.9 marriages per 1,000 ended in divorce in 2019, a rate that is the lowest it’s been since 1970, according to an analysis by author Wendy Wang, director of research for the Institute for Family Studies. It’s even slightly less than in 1970 when it was 15.0, Wang wrote in an online analysis.

The data is derived from the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey.

“This is great news for Americans who are married,” Wang wrote. “It means that their marriages will likely be more stable, and their children will be more likely to grow up with two married parents, which provides them the best chance for success later in life.”

The drop in the divorce rate likely will continue, despite the pandemic, Wang asserted. New data from the American Family Survey shows that 58 percent of married Americans say “the pandemic has made them appreciate their spouse more and half agree that their commitment to marriage has deepened,” Wang wrote. 

“Moreover, initial data from some states suggest that divorce filings have indeed declined,” she wrote. “It is likely that divorce may increase a bit after COVID-19 because of the pent-up demands, but the overall decline in divorce appears to be a consistent trend.”

But the Census data also has some bad news for the nation: The marriage rate continued to decline in 2019, hitting an all-time low.

“For every 1,000 unmarried adults in 2019, only 33 got married. This number was 35 a decade ago in 2010 and 86 in 1970,” Wang wrote before pointing to a disparity between income classes. “… College-educated and economically better off Americans are more likely to marry and stay married, but working-class and poor Americans face more family instability and higher levels of singleness.”

Wang calls this gap between income classes a “marriage divide.”

“With the rates of both divorce and marriage dropping in America, we expect to see the marriage divide deepen and poor and working-class Americans increasingly disconnected from the institution of marriage,” Wang wrote. “The impact of this disconnection on our family lives can be destructive, which makes it an issue that policymakers, community leaders, and scholars should continue to pay attention to.”

However the report failed to take into cognisance the role played by faith based organisations and the church which have been at the fore front of protecting the sanctity of marriage and with an enabling environment for the church to thrive b the present administration there is no gainsaying that this has also had a positive impact on the issue.

Nigerian army used live bullets on Lekki protesters – CNN confirms after investigation

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A CNN investigation has alleged that the Nigerian army used live bullets on protesters during its intervention in the #EndSARS protests in Lekki, Lagos state.

The American cable network also unveiled the identity of a protester who reportedly died on the night of the shootings.

He was named as Victor Sunday Ibanga.

CNN said a forensic probe of the bullet casings recovered from the scene of the incident revealed that live bullets were fired at the protesters.

It said current and former Nigerian military sources confirmed that the bullet casings “match those used by the army”.

Two ballistics experts also confirmed that the shape of the bullet casings indicate they used live rounds, CNN said.

The network also said it worked with the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network and “established that several of the bullets from the Lekki toll gate originated from Serbia. Export documents CNN has seen show that Nigeria purchased weaponry from Serbia almost every year between 2005 and 2016”.

The Nigerian army has repeatedly denied using live rounds, insisting that its soldiers used blank bullets and shot only into the air.

Iran Breaching Deal, Pumping Uranium Gas Into Advanced Centrifuges – UN Watchdog

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The UN’s atomic watchdog agency has reportedly found that Iran is pumping uranium gas into advanced centrifuges at an underground part of the Natanz nuclear facility, in the latest breach of the 2015 nuclear deal signed with world powers.
The International Atomic Energy Agency reported in a document distributed to member countries that Iran is feeding uranium hexafluoride (UF₆) gas feedstock into the advanced IR-2m uranium-enriching centrifuges installed at the Natanz plant.


On 14 November 2020, the Agency verified that Iran began feeding UF₆ into the recently installed cascade of 174 IR-2m centrifuges at the Fuel Enrichment Plant (FEP) in Natanz,” the IAEA report was quoted as saying.
The nuclear deal Iran signed in 2015 with the United States, Germany, France, Britain, China and Russia, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, only allows Iran to use first-generation IR-1 machines, and states that those are the only ones it was allowed operate at Natanz’s underground plant.


The report comes a week after the UN atomic watchdog said that Iran continues to increase its stockpile of low-enriched uranium far beyond the limits set in the nuclear deal and to enrich it to a greater purity than permitted.
Iran continues to increase its stockpile of low-enriched uranium far beyond the limits set in a landmark nuclear deal with world powers and to enrich it to a greater purity than permitted, the UN’s atomic watchdog agency said Wednesday.
The International Atomic Energy Agency reported in a confidential document distributed to member countries and seen by The Associated Press that Iran as of November 2 had a stockpile of 2,442.9 kilograms (5385.7 pounds) of low-enriched uranium, up from 2,105.4 kilograms (4,641.6 pounds) reported on August 25.


The IAEA reported that Iran has also been continuing to enrich uranium to a purity of up to 4.5%, higher than the 3.67% allowed under the deal.
Wednesday’s report confirmed that, in line with previous statements by Iranian officials, centrifuges had been installed at an underground part of the Natanz nuclear facility after another part of the site was damaged in an explosion in July which Iran blamed on “sabotage.”

Largest City in Africa Gets Its First Jewish Rabbi

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Rabbi Mendy and Mazal Sternbach to Establish a Chabad Center in Lagos, population 17.5 million

When Mendy Sternbach first traveled to Nigeria from Brooklyn, N.Y., in 2014 as a 21-year-old rabbinical student to help out for the High Holidays, he didn’t expect that someday he would be putting down roots in Africa. But year after year, something drew him back—and now he and his wife, Mazal, are about to embark on establishing what will be Chabad’s eleventh permanent presence in sub-Saharan Africa, in the continent’s most populous city.

While simultaneously studying in New York and Israel to earn his rabbinic ordination and rabbinical judicial degrees over the past six years, Sternbach returned to Nigeria for almost every Jewish holiday. He occasionally remained for extended periods of time to assist Rabbi Israel and Haya Uzan, who established a Chabad center in the Nigerian capital of Abuja in 2012 and have since provided the necessities for Jewish life to the 1,000 or so Jews living in the country. 

Despite the challenges of a new continent and culture, Sternbach told Chabad.org that “the overwhelming support from the local Jews and the never-ending work,” gave him the impetus to return each year. “The community was always asking: ‘When will you be back?’ ” said the young rabbi.

Sternbach, who is 27, and his wife, who is 22, will now be opening their own Chabad House to serve about 450 Jewish residents in the coastal city of Lagos, Nigeria—Africa’s most populous city of 17.5 million and the continent’s fourth-largest economy. 

“As the High Holidays were approaching, many  people told us they were concerned about the coronavirus  and didn’t plan on joining, said Sternbach. “So we spent a lot of time thinking of ways to create open spaces and safe-distance seating for services.  Just a day before Rosh Hashana, we had so many people wanting to join that we needed to change locations to safely accommodate the over 70 people who wanted to join.  At the end it was so successful, that for Sukkot we needed to redesign our sukkah to safely house everyone,” said the rabbi.  

Despite the current challenges, the Sternbachs are upbeat about the future. 

“Nigeria has tremendous economic potential and with its growth, the Jewish community is expected to grow as well,” said Sternbach. “We will be here with the infrastructure in place, ready to serve their needs and achieve the directive of the Rebbe [Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory] to bring Torah study, the permanence of mitzvahs, and the love of God and Jewish tradition to every place in the world where Jewish people can be found,” he declared.

Following her graduation from Beth Rivkah high school in Yerres, France, and seminary in Montreal, Mazal Sternbach served as a teaching assistant in Wisconsin. “While in Milwaukee, I received a call from Rabbi Uzan asking me to come to Nigeria to help him with educational programs,” she said. “It was an amazing experience. The community in Abuja was so welcoming. I was involved in directing the preschool, an online school, running children’s programs, CTeen, Shabbat and holiday programs. Nigeria is such a unique place, and I feel so lucky to be a part of this beautiful project.”

The Sternbachs were married in Paris in 2019 and are about to embark on establishing the latest Chabad center under the auspices of Rabbi Shlomo Bentolila, Chabad-Lubavitch emissary to Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and director of Chabad’s operations in ten nations in Central Africa.  

‘Chabad Brings Jews Together’

The Jewish population in Nigeria mainly consists of businesspeople working for international corporations and aid organizations, primarily in the cities of Abuja, Lagos and Ibadan. Dozens of Israeli companies in the spheres of construction, infrastructure, high-tech, communications and information technology, agriculture and water management operate in the country. Solel Boneh (RCC), one of Israel’s largest construction and civil-engineering companies, has been carrying out major infrastructure projects in Nigeria and other African countries for decades.

“Back in the 80s, there were nearly 4,000 Jews in Nigeria,” said Sternbach. “They even had an Israeli school with Israel’s Ministry of Education overlooking and inspecting the curriculum. In Ibadan itself there were nearly 2,500 Jews.”

But, the rabbi noted, the community without a formal Jewish presence. “They didn’t have anyone to care for their spiritual life,” said Sternbach. “Those few who got together made kiddush or managed to get a few pages of a machzor for Yom Kippur but most didn’t have that. Our mission is to reach each and every Jew and light up their neshama.” 

The Chabad center in Abuja includes a synagogue, a Jewish day school and a mikvah (Jewish ritual bath). Rabbi Uzan imports kosher food and recently opened a supermarket stocked with imported kosher products from Israel and the United States, with kosher poultry obtained locally.

Anti-Semitism does not exist In Nigeria” –  Attests Sternbach

 Nigeria’s population is roughly divided among Christians and Muslims located mainly in  the country’s north. The average Nigerian is religious and has very favorable views regarding Jews. “Anti-Semitism does not exist,” attests Sternbach. “The locals love Jews and often approach me in the street to ask for a blessing. They tell me that we Jews are ‘a light unto the nations.’ Local businesses are also eager to assist with Jewish programs and activities.”

“There are so many Jewish souls to light up. We have come to realize that this is our life’s work, and we are proud of it,” Sternbach concluded. “Chabad is the focal point of Jewish life in Nigeria. It brings Jews together. During our events, we often witness otherwise fierce business rivals sitting and talking together in friendship. That’s something that feels great to be a part of.”

Bahrain Foreign Minister In Israel For First-Ever Ministerial Visit From Gulf Nation

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Bahrain’s foreign minister landed in Tel Aviv Wednesday morning for a whirlwind visit, during which he will meet with senior Israeli officials and participate in a trilateral meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Abdullatif bin Rashid Al-Zayani is the first minister from the tiny island nation to visit the Jewish state. His Gulf Air flight touched down at Ben-Gurion Airport at 10:30 a.m., marking the first-ever nonstop commercial flight from Bahrain to Israel. He is joined by a senior US delegation, headed by the outgoing administration’s top peace negotiator, Avi Berkowitz.

Al-Zayani’s delegation — which includes various senior officials, including a deputy foreign minister, the head of Bahrain’s civil aviation and some journalists — was greeted at the airport by Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi.

In a private conversation in front of al-Zayani’s car, Ashkenazi told his Bahraini counterpart that he was very excited to welcome him to Israel. “It’s historic visit,” he said.

“For us, this is a dramatic event,” an Israeli diplomat who deals with relations with Gulf states said Tuesday. “There is great enthusiasm on their part to advance their cooperation with us — in nearly all areas,” he added, noting that during Al-Zayani’s visit, the Arab Gulf monarchy and Israel will sign a number of bilateral agreements, including in the fields of aviation and technological cooperation.

Bahrain’s state-owned BNA news agency said Monday that the visit would “affirm Bahrain’s strong and permanent position in favor of supporting the peace process” and be focused on “the economic opportunities and bilateral accords with Israel.”

To some extent, al-Zayani has been the public face of Bahrain’s normalization process with Israel. He signed the Abraham Accords and a “Declaration of Peace” with Israel at the September 15 signing ceremony at the White House.

On October 25, he signed eight bilateral agreements, including a “Joint Communiqué on the establishment of diplomatic, peaceful, and friendly relations” with Israel during a ceremony in Manama.

Board Refuses To Certify Wayne County, Michigan (Detroit) Election Results

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The Wayne County, Michigan Board of Canvassers deadlocked on a 2-2 party line vote on whether to certify the results of the November 3 elections, with the two Republican members refusing to approve the vote because of poll books that did not match vote tallies. Wayne County includes the city of Detroit where most of the problems occurred. According to the current count, Joe Biden leads President Trump by just under 150,000 votes statewide.   

The next step will be for the state board of elections to review the Wayne County results and decide on whether to certify the votes. The state board is likewise made up of two Republican and two Democrats. If that board deadlocks, then it would go to the Republican state legislature.

 Michigan GOP Chairman Laura Cox issued a statement on Wayne County:

“The people of Michigan deserve to know what happened in Wayne County on Election Day and the days following. I am proud that, due to the efforts of the Michigan Republican Party, the Republican National Committee and the Trump Campaign, enough evidence of irregularities and potential voter fraud was uncovered resulting in the Wayne County Board of Canvassers refusing to certify their election results. This action will allow more time for us to get to the bottom of these deeply troubling irregularities. The people of Michigan deserve fair, open and transparent elections, and we will continue to fight for just that.”

Meanwhile, Michigan’s Democrat Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson claims no votes were improperly cast or tabulated, “Michigan’s Bureau of Elections stands ready to fulfill its duty to complete the canvas for Wayne County, address any clerical errors and improve the quality of the canvass overall. Importantly, this is not an indication that any votes were improperly cast or tabulated.”

Air Travel Targets 35% Traffic As European Carriers Resume In Nigeria

International air traffic has been projected to increase to about 35 per cent with additional revenue earnings as Federal Government yesterday readmitted European and Middle East carriers.

With reports of a second wave of COVID-19 in Europe notwithstanding, the likes of Lufthansa, Air France-KLM, and Qatar Airways were given approval to resume international flights in and out of Lagos and Abuja.

Similarly, all the nation’s international airports may resume international flight operations before the end of the year, as global aviation body urged nations to open borders, explore testing over quarantine control measures. On Tuesday, Dana Air reopened the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu.

Nigeria’s Minister of Aviation, Hadi Sirika, said his ministry was working with the Federal Ministry of Health, the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 and other relevant bodies to ensure that the airports meet all safety and health requirements and protocols.

FG had, prior to the September 5 resumption, restricted some airlines from coming into the country. According to Sirika, some of the international airlines denied flight approval, include Air France-KLM, Etihad, Rwandair, Lufthansa, TAAG Angola Airlines and others. They were denied approval because international flights were yet to resume in their countries.

Nigeria’s Oil Production Costs Spike With N785bn Yearly Overhead

NNPC’s Group Managing Director, Mele Kyari, disclosed that the highest personnel cost in the oil and gas sector remained in Nigeria, a development, which he said, was unacceptable.

With Nigeria’s oil industry incurring about 7.4 per cent of the national budget in personnel and overhead costs, alongside others like logistics, direct handling and lifting of crude, operators may have to do more to achieve the $10 per barrel (bbl) production benchmark set by the Federal Government.

 Indeed, many operators in the country spend about 50 per cent of their cash flow on personnel costs, which is why some still produce at a high rate of $93/bbl, even in a low oil price regime.

“There is nowhere any company will spend 50 per cent of its cash flow on human resources and survive. It is not possible,” Kyari had noted.

Beyond taxes, he noted that high expenditure driven mainly by high personnel, logistics and handling costs, push the unit operating price of oil to $20/bbl.

Was it right for Pope Francis to congratulate Biden who isn’t Pro-life?

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Pope Francis, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, offered his congratulations to President-elect Joe Biden during a morning call recently.

According to a statement from the Biden-Harris transition team, the pair discussed some policy areas in which Biden is likely to break from President Trump.

It raises the question being asked by those from faith based organizations and pro-life activists alike that should the Pope be congratulating the Biden camp knowing what it stands for when it comes to issues of religious liberty and abortion?

Considering the fact that the church or faith based organisations and pro-life movements have enjoyed more support from the Trump administration which has defunded pro-abortion movements and maintained that Government has no business in Gods business, one would have thought that the Pope would be the last to celebrate a Biden victory.

Recent reports on Pope Francis support for gay unions outside the church (whatever that means) have seem to have given more affirmation to the suggestion by watchers that the Pope has become more liberal to accommodate liberal interests as opposed to what scripture upholds.

The Pope’s past and present utterances rather that diffuse the controversies have become a source of heated debate about the Vatican gradually moving from a spiritual leadership to a political one or are we the ones late to come to that reality and have Catholics been living in denial that they are a mixed multitude?

The president-elect in his correspondence to the Pontiff expressed his desire to work together on the basis of a shared belief in the dignity and equality of all humankind.

Francis has been outspoken on these issues and has repeatedly called on global leaders to take more action to confront them. I’m wondering where in scripture climate change take precedence over the spread of the gospel? This is a good that gives the commission in the book of Genesis to man to multiply and subdue the earth.

Biden will be the second Catholic president in U.S. history, following John F. Kennedy yet we wonder how Biden will be favorable to the faith. In a recent video put together by Fox exposing Biden’s many gaffs instead of God he says America is one nation under a thing. 

Regardless deep media and fake news making the rounds call Senator Biden deeply devout person of faith, I you believ that you’ll believe anything!

In the final week of the presidential campaign, for example, Biden quoted an anti-populism passage from the pope’s most recent encyclical, that should be a giant leap for religion.

Holy Scripture posits that a man cannot serve two masters, either he serves one and despises the other. Can the Pope be a political and spiritual leader at the same time? I guess it depends on whose agenda you are pushing.