Sunday, August 30, 2020

BUHARI IS ONLY NIGERIAN MILITARY OFFICER TO OVERTHROW A DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT-- Sowere

Photo Credit: Buhari, Omoyele Sowere

Hours after the Council of State meeting ratifying the appointment, Shehu sent a brief message to journalists announcing Kwara, a Muslim from Nasarawa State, as Chairman.


rights activist and SaharaReporters Publisher, Omoyele Sowore, has knocked Senior Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, over comments that he (Sowore) was trying to overthrow a democratically-elected government.

According to the activist, the only Nigerian military officer, who overthrew a democratically-elected government in history was President Buhari.

Shehu had on Friday while reacting to SaharaReporters’ publication accusing him of reversing the Council of State decision nominating Silas Agara as Chairman of National Population Commission and announcing one Nasiru Kwara, a Muslim, described Sowore as a coup plotter.

But responding swiftly to Shehu’s post, Sowore said, “Garba Shehu, let me remind you that the only Nigerian military officer whoever overthrew a democratically-elected government in 1983 was and remains Major

General Muhammadu Buhari, your current boss. He is yet to face trial for that criminal act of treason! #Revolutionnow." 

SaharaRepoters earlier raised the alarm on the plot by some powerful persons to replace Agara, who is a Christian, with a Muslim despite his selection for the position by President Buhari.

Hours after the Council of State meeting ratifying the appointment, Shehu sent a brief message to journalists announcing Kwara, a Muslim from Nasarawa State, as Chairman.

According to findings, Shehu disrupted the entire arrangement with his message to journalists, who reported the narrative he sold to them.

A government source confirmed to SaharaReporters that Governor Abdullahi Sule of Nasarawa State was among top Northern Muslims, who worked against Agara being appointed to head the commission.

“Governor of Nassarawa and Chief of Staff told Buhari not to handover NPC to a Christian,” the source said.



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Source: Saharareporters


 

Saturday, August 29, 2020

GERMANY CORONAVIRUS: 'ANTI-CORONA' PROTESTS IN BERLIN DRAWS THOUSANDS

 


Thousands of people have protested in the German capital, Berlin, angry at coronavirus restrictions.


Some 38,000 people took part in a march that split into two main groups.

Police ordered one group near the Unter den Linden to disperse for flouting safety rules, then arrested 200 after rocks and bottles were thrown.

A second group of about 30,000 met peacefully west of the Brandenburg gate to hear speeches from, among others, the nephew of President John F Kennedy.

Although Germany has so far not seen the wave of cases affecting some parts of Europe, its infection rate has been growing. New case numbers are reaching highs last seen in April.

What has been happening?
Police issued an order for a protest around the Unter den Linden, near the Brandenburg Gate, to disperse at about midday after participants refused to keep a safe distance from each other, the authorities said.

"Unfortunately, we have no other option," Berlin police said on Twitter. "All the measures taken so far have not led to compliance with the conditions."

Protesters were closely packed in places, and sat together on the ground at one point.
Attila Hildmann spoke to protesters outside the Russian Embassy on Unter den Linden

Some demonstrators remained gathered there in the early evening, with bottles and rocks thrown at police.

Among the 200 people arrested was cookery author and conspiracy theorist Attila Hildmann, who had addressed crowds through a loudspeaker.

The other main group of around 30,000 people to the west of the Brandenburg Gate was respecting the rules, Interior Minister Andreas Geisel said.

A ban had originally been imposed on Saturday's protest but a court overturned it. Mr Geisel said he regretted the way the violence had developed but that the situation was "predictable".

Berlin police tweeted at about 22.40 local time (20:40 GMT) that their operations were ending, saying there had been peaceful protests by tens of thousands but that officers had also suffered verbal abuse.

Who is involved in the Berlin protests?

Mr Geisel said the people protesting outside the Russian Embassy on Unter den Linden were "right-wing extremists" and that seven police officers had been injured.

Some protesters then broke through a cordon at the Reichstag building and were dispersed by police using pepper spray.
Some protesters broke through to the Reichstag before being dispersed

German news site Deutsche Welle reported that flags and T-shirts supporting the far-right could be seen among the crowd.

The demonstration to the west of the Gate at the Victory Column was organised by the Stuttgart-based movement Querdenken 711 (or Lateral Thinking 711). The group has more than 16,000 followers on Facebook and communicates largely through encrypted messaging service Telegram.

It believes that coronavirus regulations infringe on basic rights and freedoms enshrined in Germany's constitution and wants them to be lifted.

The group previously organised a protest in Berlin on 1 August dubbed the "day of freedom". Thousands joined, including some from the far-right and some conspiracy theorists who do not believe Covid-19 exists.
Protesters near the Victory Column hold a banner reading "first wave, second wave, permanent wave?"


The protests have also gained support from Robert F Kennedy Jr. The anti-vaccination campaigner, also the son of assassinated US Democratic presidential hopeful Robert F Kennedy and nephew of assassinated US President John F Kennedy, is at the demonstrations in Berlin.

Mr Kennedy told the crowd at the Victory Column that his uncle had famously addressed Berlin in 1963 to counter totalitarianism and that "today Berlin is again the front against totalitarianism", warning of a surveillance state and the power of 5G phone networks.

Photos shared online also showed flags and slogans linked to the conspiracy theory QAnon. The wide-ranging, unfounded conspiracy theory says that US President Donald Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media, among other claims.



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Credit: BBC


HOW FELA KUTI LIVES ON IN POP STARS LIKE WIZKID, BURNA BOY, TIWA SAVAGE AND WYCLEF

 



Fela Kuti was Famous for pairing his music with politics and human rights activism, Fela, who died in 1997, stood up against Nigeria's military dictators, often at great personal cost to his family and band members. His art has become fuel for a new generation of creators who are tapping into his music, and the spirit behind it, to make new records. While Wyclef Jean and Wizkid and many others have infused Fela's work in their new creations, they interpret his legacy in very different ways, which fans can judge for themselves



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JUST IN: IRAN MUSICIAN FACES JAIL FOR WORKING WITH WOMEN DANCERS, SINGERS

 

Rajabian has been jailed twice earlier for his music in 2013 and 2015 [Rajabian/CC BY-SA/Wikipedia]

Mehdi Rajabian held after reports said his project featured female singers and video showed a woman dancing to his song.


Iranian musician Mehdi Rajabian has said he is under house arrest as he awaits trial for working with female dancers and singers, in the country's latest move to stop female artists from performing.

Rajabian, 30, said he was arrested on August 10 following media reports that his latest project will include women singing and the publication of a video of a woman dancing to his music - both of which can be deemed immoral under Iranian law.

Iran's Justice Ministry and the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance did not respond to Reuters news agency's requests for comment.

"Even if I go to prison hundreds of times, I need female singing in my project, I need female dance," said Rajabian, who has been jailed twice before over his music.

"Whenever I feel the need to produce this music, I will definitely produce it. I do not censor myself," he told Reuters via text message from the northern city of Sari where is currently out on bail.

Iran has long censored art and music and arrested hundreds of performers under vaguely defined morality laws that target women and sexual minorities, according to Human Rights Watch.

There are no laws banning women in music but religious decisions issued under Iran's Islamic rulers, who came to power in the 1979 revolution, have been used arbitrarily, said Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of the Center for Human Rights in Iran.

"The government would like to propagate ... a traditional attitude towards women's presence in public in general," he said. "It doesn't have to be about performance."

Laws limiting women's freedom
The Iranian government faced nationwide protests last year, sparked by fuel price hikes, which were met with a violent crackdown.

Many young Iranians are disillusioned with laws that limit women's freedom, with fines and jail terms for having their hair uncovered or for wearing clothes deemed immodest. Many have protested by removing their hijabs in public in online videos.

The video which led to Rajabian's latest arrest features Iranian dancer Helia Bandeh, who lives outside Iran, performing to a track from his 2019 peace album Middle Eastern by Sony Music, which features about 100 artists.

Rajabian spent three months in solitary confinement in 2013 for propaganda against the state. In 2015, he served two years behind bars until he was released after a 40-day hunger strike.

Freemuse, a non-profit that supports freedom of artistic expression, said at least 11 artists were prosecuted or sentenced to jail in 2019, with women targeted for performing for mixed - rather than all-female - audiences.

Negar Moazzam was investigated for singing solo in traditional costume and her Instagram account was taken down after a video of the performance went viral on social media, Freemuse said.

It also said male musicians Ali Ghamsari and Hamid Askari were banned from performing in Iran after they allowed women to sing during their concerts, with authorities turning off the sound to stop the women being heard during both shows.

"This has been happening ... because of one-sided interpretations of religious doctrine supported by political power," said Srirak Plipat, executive director of Freemuse.

Meanwhile, Rajabian is undeterred by the latest prison threat as he has been living in isolation for a long time.

"I have been completely alone at home for years," he said. "It was as if I had been transferred from a smaller prison to a larger one."


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17 DEAD, MANY INJURED AS RESTAURANT COLLAPSES IN CHINA

 


45 people have been brought out, of which 17 were dead, seven seriously injured and 21 slightly injured


At least 17 people were killed in China after a two-storey restaurant collapsed during a gathering on Saturday morning, state media said.

The restaurant was in Shanxi province's Xiangfen county, about 630 kilometres (400 miles) South-West of Beijing.

Xinhua news agency reported that “45 people have been brought out, of which 17 were dead, seven seriously injured and 21 slightly injured”.

Rescuers in orange overalls and hard hats combed the crumbled ruin of the building, images on the CGTN website showed, with a decorative painting seen on one of the few walls still intact.

Seven hundred people were involved in the rescue operation, CGTN said.

While the cause of the disaster was not immediately clear, China is no stranger to building collapses and deadly construction accidents.


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Credit: Saharareporters


ARSENAL WINS COMMUNITY SHIELD TOURNAMENT ON PENALTIES

 


Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scored a superb goal and netted the winning penalty in a shootout as Arsenal beat Premier League champions, Liverpool, in the Community Shield at an empty Wembley Stadium.


Liverpool striker Rhian Brewster, brought on in stoppage time, hit the crossbar with his penalty - the only one not converted in the shootout.

Aubameyang's curling strike gave FA Cup winners Arsenal the lead in the first half before Liverpool substitute Takumi Minamino equalised after the break.

Minamino's flicked pass to Mohamed Salah bounced back kindly for him to slot home from close range.

There was a quick VAR check for handball by Salah but the replay showed no clear contact.

It is the second year in a row Liverpool have lost on penalties after Manchester City's victory in 2019.

Aubameyang has been convinced to stay at Arsenal - Arteta
Aubameyang leads Arsenal to move silverware
Aubameyang's importance to Arsenal was once again shown in another impressive performance.

The Gabon international, who scored twice in the FA Cup final at the same stadium this month, cut inside from the left and whipped the ball into the far corner in emphatic style to open the scoring.

He continued to terrorise Liverpool's defence, exposing young right-back Neco Williams.

And when Aubameyang stepped up to take the final penalty, with the score 4-4 in the shootout, there was no way he was going to miss.

He has netted 71 goals in 110 Arsenal appearances and no Gunners player has scored more than his five goals at the venue.

Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta said on Friday he was "pretty confident" the skipper will sign a new contract after a long, painful wait for supporters.

After lifting their second piece of silverware in a month, it would cap off a very pleasing summer for Arsenal if Aubameyang does eventually put pen to paper.

Stuttering Liverpool fall short again
Liverpool were without regular starters Trent Alexander-Arnold and Jordan Henderson but they fielded a side many would feel were capable of beating Arsenal.

They started off on the front foot, with Sadio Mane getting in behind on numerous occasions on the left and linking up with full-back Andy Robertson.

But sloppiness crept into their game as the first half wore on - Virgil van Dijk berated Georginio Wijnaldum and Fabinho on separate occasions for giving the ball away too easily in midfield.

Arsenal's Ainsley Maitland-Niles was impressive and caused problems, while Bukayo Saka was busy in and around the Liverpool box.

However, Liverpool had plenty of chances to score. An unmarked James Milner headed over the bar, Van Dijk almost got on the end of a Mane flick-on and Roberto Firmino had the ball in the net, only for it to be ruled out for offside.

Liverpool grew more dominant in the second half - Minamino deservedly drew them level with more than 15 minutes to play - but they could not find a winner.

Arsenal's Joe Willock had a brilliant chance to make it 2-1 with five minutes to go when he miscued his header following Cedric Soares' cross from the right.

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp brought off Wijnaldum, who had his penalty saved in last year's shootout by City, and replaced him with 20-year-old Brewster, but the England youth international crashed his spot-kick off the bar.

There is certainly no need to panic but the air of invincibility Liverpool had throughout most of the 2019-20 league campaign has worn off in recent months following a patch of two defeats and a draw in seven games at the end of the season.


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BREAKING NEWS: NEWLY PROMOTED ASSISTANT INSPECTOR-GENERAL OF POLICE, YUSUF, IS DEAD

 


Yusuf died on Saturday after a brief illness at an Abuja hospital


A serving Assistant Inspector-General of Police in charge of the newly created Zone 14 comprising of Katsina and Kaduna State, Rabiu Yusuf, is dead.

Yusuf died on Saturday after a brief illness at an Abuja hospital, according to katsinapost.com.ng.

He served as Commissioner of Police in Kano State before he was promoted to Assistant Inspector-General of Police in 2020.

“Assistant Inspector-General of Police, Rabi'u Yusuf, in charge of newly established Zone 14 headquarters in Katsina is dead. 

"May Jannatul Firdausi be his final resting place. Amin,” a police source told SaharaReporters.


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BREAKING NEWS: CRASHED HELICOPTER WAS DECLARE NON-AIRWORTHY THREE YEARS AGO, OWNERS TRICKED NCAA TO OBTAIN OPERATIONAL LICENSE

 



The aircraft was also used in the past by different Nigerian airline operators to dupe NCAA into issuing them Air Operators’ Certificates.


Abell 206-B3 helicopter with registration number 5N-BQW, which crashed on Salvation Road, Opebi, Lagos State, on Friday, was declared non-airworthy three years ago, SaharaReporters can report.

The helicopter crashed with three persons on board.

While two crew members died on the spot, the third person earlier rescued and taken to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, later died.

Documents seen by SaharaReporters showed that the crashed helicopter was declared non-airworthy in 2017 by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority. 

The aircraft was also used in the past by different Nigerian airline operators to dupe NCAA into issuing them Air Operators’ Certificates.

The AOC, which authorises an operator to carry out specific commercial air transport operations, is issued once the NCAA was satisfied that the operator had the required personnel, assets, and systems to ensure the safety of its employees and the general public.

An operator applying for AOC is required to have an air transport license from the NCAA, which permits it to operate scheduled passenger or cargo air services in the country.

A source told SaharaReporters that some of the operators use same helicopters previously presented by others to obtain AOCs from the NCAA including the ill-fated Bell 206-3 aircraft with registration number 5N-BQW.

The crashed aircraft, the source disclosed, were used at different times by Omni-Blue Aviation Services and Quorum Aviation to obtain AOCs from the NCAA.

“The ill-fated copter was declared non-airworthy in 2017 when it was discovered that most of the equipment onboard have expired. 

"Then, Quorum Aviation had approached the NCAA for AOC license and it was discovered that the helicopter was faulty. NCAA also accused the management of refusing to maintain the engine of the aircraft.

“How Quorum Aviation was cleared to fly the aircraft after that was what I can’t really say.

“Imagine in 2016, Omni-Blue Aviation Services borrowed this crashed Bell 206-3 helicopter to obtain AOC from NCAA. A year after, Quorum Aviation applied for AOC with the same helicopter,” he said.

The investigation into the cause of Friday's crash is currently ongoing.

Part of the building the helicopter crashed into was destroyed while some vehicles around the place were also damaged as a result of the incident.


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ERICSSON WANTS TO ACCELERATE 5G ADOPTION IN AFRICA

 

Todd Ashton, Ericsson vice-president and head of South and East Africa within the Middle East and Africa.

Todd Ashton’s immediate task as newly-appointed Ericsson vice-president and head of South and East Africa within the Middle East and Africa is to drive the adoption of 5G on the African continent.


Ashton took the new role on 1 August and prior to assuming the position, he served as head of Malaysia, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

In an interview with ITWeb, Ashton says Ericsson is continuously working with partners to identify and create 5G use cases relevant to the African market.

“One of our first major steps towards rolling out 5G in Africa was the announcement in November 2019 that Ericsson had been selected by MTN South Africa as a 5G network modernisation vendor.”

Vendors that are positioning themselves to take advantage of the 5G growth in SA include Huawei, Ericsson, Nokia and ZTE.

So far, Vodacom, MTN and data-only network Rain have announced commercial 5G launches in SA.

A key challenge of spectrum allocation in SA is that spectrum is currently used for analogue broadcasting due to delays in digital migration.

“Africa is a very diverse market when it comes to technology maturity and, for that reason, we are driving 5G technology towards the advanced markets, and for the less advanced markets, we are working very closely with our partners to prepare them to catch up with the big technology race, starting with 4G and paving the way towards 5G as a next step.”

According to Ashton, Africa has a relatively low level of 4G penetration today, and he believes that by working together with customers and other stakeholders, Ericsson will accelerate the rollout of 4G and eventually 5G across the continent.

“This will, in turn, unleash the potential and creativity that exists in Africa. Many of us consider that achieving broadband for all is a basic human right and we know that for every 1 000 new broadband connections, 80 new jobs are created.”

Ashton adds a 10% increase in mobile broadband adoption secures 0.6-2.8% GDP growth and a doubling of average achieved broadband speed generates an additional 0.3% GDP growth.

“We are on a mission to accelerate the rollout of 4G, paving the way for 5G to empower Africa’s technology-enabled economies. I’ve seen the impact this can have in places like Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, and I’m convinced we can do even bigger things for Africa.

“We work closely with our partners, the mobile operators, in the region to bring these technologies to the people. South and East Africa is a diverse region in terms of technology maturity, but we are proud to co-operate across the different markets, bringing our technology expertise from 2G/3G in some areas and all the way to 5G in others.”



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Thursday, August 27, 2020

DROGBA'S FIF PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDACY BID REJECTED



This rejection was based on criticisms of the former striker for several eligibility requirement breaches and highlights the challenges the star faced in trying to establish himself within the Ivorian football industry in spite of his international status, athletic track record and personal wealth — and beyond just being a player on the field.

Eligibility Requirements
Drogba, who was partly trained in France and once played for European clubs, Chelsea and Marseille, only managed to obtain sponsorship of two first division clubs — one short of the three required.

Although he does, in fact, have three club sponsors on file, the third technically did not count as it came by way of the vice-president and not the president himself who gave his support to the president of the League, Sory Diabaté (who boasts the support of six Division 1 clubs).

Interest groups also must follow the same rules as each candidate is required to obtain sponsorship of at least one of five in particular. Drogba was unable to garner support from neither the Alumni Association nor the Ivorian Players Association.

Likewise, on file, he did have the support of the association of referees (AMAF). However, it was a similar situation of falling short by a technicality as "the sponsorship" was from a person "who does not have the capacity to legally commit the AMAF," according to the electoral commission.

Public and Peer Opinion
One of the most famous and celebrated public Ivorian personalities, Didier Drogba, has been a treasure to the country's national football team and has received from many of his former teammates and peers such as Eugène Diomande, the Yaya and Kolo Touré brothers, Aruna Dindane and many others.


On the other hand, some of his other industry colleagues have shown support for Idriss Diallo, the former 3rd vice-president of the Fif (supported in particular by the current vice-president of the Fif), such as Cyril Domoraud, Bonaventure Kalou or Ahmed Ouattara.
Still more colleagues such as Didier Zokora, Youssouf Fofana and Abdoulaye Traore (known as Ben Badi) supported the president of the League, Sory Diabaté.

The Ivorian football icon has five days to make an appeal to the governing commission.



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POLICE PARADED KILLERS OF UNIBEN UNDERGRADUATE RAPED, MURDERED WHILE READING INSIDE CHURCH

 


Nelson Ogbebor, Akato Valentine, Mrs Tina Samuel, Mrs Mary Ade, Nosa Osabohien and Collins Ulegbe were paraded at Edo State Police headquarters by Kokumo.


The Edo State Commissioner of Police, Mr Johnson Kokumo, on Wednesday, said police in the state had arrested six suspects, who allegedly raped and killed a 100-Level Microbiology student of the University of Benin, Uwaila Vera Omozuwa, in a church in Ihovbe Quarters in Benin.

SaharaReporters had in May reported how 22-year-old Omozuwa was brutally raped and killed inside a Redeemed Christian Church of God branch in the city while reading. 

Nelson Ogbebor, Akato Valentine, Mrs Tina Samuel, Mrs Mary Ade, Nosa Osabohien and Collins Ulegbe were paraded at Edo State Police headquarters by Kokumo. 

Speaking with pressmen, Kokumo said the autopsy revealed that Uwaila was raped. 

The CP said, “The matter is of great concern to the Inspector-General of Police, Muhammed Adamu, who sent homicide experts to work with our policemen in Benin.

“What we are seeing today is a result of the efforts of the police to get at the root of the crime, and today, I announce to you that the perpetrators have been arrested.”


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BREAKING: NIGERIAN GOVERNMENT POSTPONES RESUMPTION DATE FOR INTERNATIONAL FLIGHTS

 



The announcement was made on Thursday evening by the Ministry of Aviation during the Presidential briefing on COVID-19.


The Nigerian Government has postponed the date for the resumption of international flights. 

The announcement was made on Thursday evening by the Ministry of Aviation during the Presidential briefing on COVID-19. 

Announcing the news on Twitter, the ministry wrote, “Regret to announce that the international flights' resumption earlier scheduled for 29th August has been shifted to 5th September 2020.”




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Credit: Saharareporters






Tuesday, August 4, 2020

FELA KUTI FOUND FAME IN AFRICA IN THE '70S - BYT AT THE TIME IT ELUDED HIM ELSEWHERE. AS NEW AUDIENCES DISCOVER HIS MUSIC, PETER CULSHAW LOOKS BACK AT THE COMPLEX CHARACTER


Late Fela Kuti

When I met Fela Kuti, the self-styled “Black President”, he was in a London hotel wearing only a pair of red underpants, smoking a massive joint, surrounded by three of his wives (he notoriously married 26 in one day) and his personal magician, a Ghanaian who called himself Professor Hindu. This was in 1984, and was the first interview I ever had published. At the time, Fela was a cult figure in the UK and I was working on one of the few articles about him. Back in Nigeria and the rest of West Africa, though, he had been a major figure for well over a decade; when he died Lagos came to a standstill after a million people turned up to his funeral.

Fela died of an Aids-related illness in 1997, and it seems that every year since then his profile outside Africa has been steadily increasing. Barely a month goes by without new re-releases of his music. Next month sees yet another box set,  this time selected by Brian Eno, a musical pioneer himself – as well the producer of U2, Coldplay and Talking Heads – who says he has played his music more than any other artist. He has also said: “I thought it was the music of the future in 1972 and I still do.”

Fela’s music – or the Afrobeat genre that he founded – can be heard in lofts in fashionable Dalston in London or Williamsburg in New York, and current popular indie artists like Vampire Weekend, Franz Ferdinand and Damon Albarn have acknowledged a musical debt to him. Albarn has worked with Tony Allen, the original drummer in Fela’s Africa 70, who continues to release albums.

Fela’s crossover to a mainstream Western audience was boosted by the musical Fela! which ran in London and Broadway in 2010. And now there’s a feature film – Finding Fela – directed by Academy Award-winner Alex Gibney, which is showing in a few cinemas in the US and rolls out in Europe and beyond in September.  As a musician and social activist, he is increasingly being compared with Bob Marley.

Band on the run?

Since the early 1970s, Fela and his bands Africa 70 and, later, Egypt 80 built up an audience in Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa. People were drawn to the revolutionary politics of his music, with songs like ITT (International Thief Thief), which attacked multinational corporations and Zombie, which parodied the mindless military types who unquestioningly followed orders. In the course of his life, he was arrested more than 100 times, imprisoned and beaten. Like Bob Marley, he was a man of the people, with a strong political agenda.

But it was as a musical revolutionary that he became a talismanic figure for fellow artists. In Gibney’s film, Paul McCartney recounts how he saw Fela’s band when recording Band on the Run at the EMI’s Lagos studio in 1972. “They were the best band I’ve ever seen live,” he said. “When Kuti and his band eventually really began to play, after a long, crazy build-up, I couldn’t stop weeping with joy.”


One of Fela’s main musical inspirations was the funk of James Brown – who was in turn influenced by Kuti after his group visited The Shrine, Fela’s nightclub in Lagos. As Brown’s bassist Bootsy Collins recalls: “We were telling them they’re the funkiest cats we ever heard in our life. I mean, this is the James Brown band, but we were totally wiped out!”

Other revered musicians in the ‘70s – from Stevie Wonder to Gilberto Gil – came to Nigeria’s largest city to see for themselves what the fuss was about. Great jazz musicians like Miles Davis also acknowledged him as a “life-transforming artist”.  With some of the top musicians in the world backing him, why didn’t he become a global star 40 years ago?

One reason Kuti wasn’t better known in his lifetime was his personality – he was a difficult, complex man with a self-destructive streak. When Paul McCartney offered to have Kuti and his band as guests on Band on the Run, Fela got up the next night at The Shrine, and said “the white man has come to steal our music.” McCartney said at the time: “Do us a favour, Fela, we do OK. We sell a couple of records here and there.” Band on the Run, incidentally, was the best-selling album of 1973 and being on the record would have put Fela on the world map.

When Motown wanted to set up an African label called Taboo in the early ’80s, it offered Kuti a deal. Rikki Stein, Kuti’s manager and friend, says that Kuti’s response was to contact the spirits via Professor Hindu. The spirits refused to let him sign for another two years. Kuti also refused Motown his back catalogue and wanted $1m in cash. “Even then, Motown went along with it,” Stein says. “But after two years, in April 1985, the very month that Kuti was about to sign, the Motown guy got the sack and the deal was off.”

Kuti received various other offers from American record labels in the ‘80s, but at the time the problem was he was producing 60-minute-long pieces. “Can’t you do a three-minute song for the radio?” Stein recalls asking. “Fela just said: 'I wouldn’t know how to.’”

Fela avoided the Western companies who he saw as imperialist – and mixed with his lack of radio-friendly material –made him a difficult sell.  But one way of understanding his music is as he saw it himself.

‘Sacred monster’

Kuti studied classical music at Trinity College in London in the early ‘60s, where he also had a jazz and highlife band called Koola Lobitos. When I asked him, cub reporter style, who his favourite musician was, he said: “Handel. Western music is Bach, Handel and Schubert. It’s good music, cleverly done. As a musician, I can see that. Classical music gives musicians a kick. But African music gives everyone a kick.”

In the ‘80s, he started calling his music “African classical music” – and is quoted in the new film saying that you wouldn’t expect composers like Mozart or Beethoven to write three-minute numbers, so why should he?

While many of his political insights on religious fundamentalism, corporate greed and political corruption are still prescient, both the musical and Gibney’s film have been accused of underplaying much of Kuti’s controversial opinions about women and homosexuals, which sit uncomfortably with modern liberal mores. He could happily sing anti-feminist songs such as Lady or Mattress and was unapologetic about his views. As he put it: “To call me a sexist… for me, it’s still not a negative name. If I’m a sexist, it’s a gift.”

Nor do the film or musical go into any detail on his death from an illness arising from Aids. He was in denial about the disease, and described the use of condoms as “un-African” – the last song he released was a tirade against them. Fela apologists say though that his death actually brought Aids out in the open and many lives were saved as a result. His opinions were to some extent provocation. As Bill T Jones, the director and devisor of the extraordinary choreography in Fela! and a talking head in Gibney’s film sees the problem: “He would say things like, if you aren’t a real man in this life, you will come back as a homosexual. Although he called himself a priest, for example, quite a few Yoruba practitioners have called him a poseur. He was first and foremost a showman. I think of him as a sacred monster.”
The Fela! musical was seen by a million people and endorsed by stars from around the music world (REX/Alastair Muir)

Rikki Stein doesn’t think Fela could ever reach Bob Marley levels of global awareness. “He wasn’t a poster,” he says, but interest in and knowledge of his innovative and dynamic music is still increasing rapidly. As it happens, a new pop star from Nigeria, D’Banj, who has described himself as a “cross between Fela Kuti and Michael Jackson” and had a global hit in 2012 with Oliver Twist, has an album out later in the year and may well achieve the pop success that Fela never did.

Still, a million people saw the Fela! musical, and with luminaries such as Jay Z endorsing him, a lot of young people have now been made aware of him – and the new film will only increase his fame. But perhaps the way to think of Fela Kuti is less like the African Bob Marley, but more as he saw it, the African Handel or Shostakovich.



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Sunday, August 2, 2020

WORLD'S RAREST GORILLAS SPOTTED WITH BABIES IN NIGERIAN FOREST



The most endangered gorilla subspecies in the world has been sighted in southern Nigeria.
In a rare sighting, conservationists have captured new images of the world's rarest gorillas with several babies in southern Nigeria.

The Cross River gorillas were spotted in the dense Mbe Mountains in Cross River state by a camera set up by the Wildlife Conservation Society.
The subspecies is critically endangered and at one point only about 300 were known to be alive within the mountainous area in Nigeria and Cameroon, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.


Cross River gorillas are rarely seen or photographed.  Extremely shy of humans, they live in most rugged & inaccessible parts of their range. In total, there are only about 300 individuals found in an isolated region along the Nigeria/Cameroon border.

The gorillas tend to avoid humans and their few populations have been the target of hunters in the past. Images of the gorillas were also captured in 2012 in Cameroon's Kagwene Gorilla Sanctuary.
The latest sighting is proof that Cross River gorillas are "well protected and reproducing," after decades of being targeted by hunters, Inaoyom Imong, director of Cross River Landscape for Wildlife Conservation Society Nigeria said in a statement.

The society said it has been working with several communities to ensure the gorillas' protection and since 2012, no deaths of the subspecies have been recorded or reported in Nigeria.
Gabriel Ocha, head chief of Kanyang, one of the villages near the Mbe Mountains, said the images are proof that his community's conservation efforts with the WCS are yielding results.
"I am very happy to see these wonderful pictures of the Cross River gorillas with many babies in our forest," Ocha said in a statement.



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NIGERIAN MUSIC STAR, MR. EAZI IS RAISING $20 MILLION TO INVEST IN AFRICAN MUSIC CREATIVES


Credit: Mr. Eazi

Music artist, Mr. Eazi has created the Africa Music Fund to support existing and emerging African musicians on the continent.

Award-winning music artist, Mr. Eazi is launching a fund that will invest in Africa's stars of the future.

Mr. Eazi, (real name Oluwatosin Ajibade) told CNN that the Africa Music Fund (AMF), is worth $20 million dollars. The lead investor is 88mph, a company that provides capital for African businesses.
Through the AMF, the 29-year-old artist from Nigeria says he wants to create a new funding model for the music business on the continent.
Mr. Eazi says one of his primary motivations for funding music is to provide financial support for artists to expand their catalog.
Many investors and financial institutions don't understand the business of music and as a result, are unable to properly fund musicians, he says.
"Artists cannot go to banks to get money for their music because financial institutions don't understand how to secure intellectual property. They get it for physical properties but not for music. So, because not a lot of people understand the music business, there is no finance product for musicians," he explained.

Investing in music acts
Selected artists will be given funding depending on their revenue and projected incomes, using metrics such as streaming revenue, Mr. Eazi told CNN.
"For artists who already have footprints in the industry, we will just do our research. We can check how much they are earning or likely to earn from their streaming revenue, for example," he explained.
Artists will be given funds upfront based on their revenue to expand their music content. The initial advance invested in an artist's music will be paid back in installments as the artist's earnings start to rise, he added.
Mr. Eazi, who has more than five million monthly listeners on Spotify says the AMF will also create access to a larger audience for music acts by helping them find and book shows as well as distribute their music.

"Let's say we have a two-year contract with someone. In those two years, we will be their representative, helping them manage their music, and as they grow we will be deducting the initial investment from their earnings," he explained.

Data backed decisions
Mr. Eazi says his parent company emPawa Africa in partnership with music technology company Vydia will be launching Cinch Distro, a music distribution platform for new artists.
Through Cinch Distro, artists can upload one song to major music stores for 500 naira (about $1.19), or 4000 naira (about $10) for unlimited song uploads.
"The way it works is that they register on the platform and make their music. It has an AI-based tech that will filter their possible revenue based on the number of streams they get on the platform alongside a couple of other metrics," he said.
"The artists basically use the platform to distribute their music and we monitor their progress. That way we can make data-backed decisions about who to invest in," he added.
The AMF is not Mr. Eazi's first venture into investing in music and musicians on the continent.
In 2018, he launched emPawa Africa, an incubator program that provided artists with funding and resources to market their music, access radio and TV airplay, and train them to become independent music entrepreneurs.
Through emPawa, some of the continent's biggest artists like Nigeria's Joeboy and Ghana's J. Derobie were discovered.

Data and transparency
Music analyst, Toye Sokunbi says the AMF fund will benefit Africa's creative sector as it will open more doors for music talents on the continent.
Sokunbi, who is also the founder of Artish, a pop-culture publication in Nigeria, says there may be concerns about how the data on each artist is compiled and used and warns artists to be vigilant.
"Many artists don't have the same accessibility to important data that music distributors have about their music. They don't necessarily tell you the exact way they are marketing your music or give artists access to data they can use to maximize revenue for their content. This information imbalance means artists are largely oblivious of much of the audience data farmed from their content," he told CNN.
According to him, it is important for artists to have access to their own data from the backend so that they can build their own music communities and become less dependent on distribution companies.
However, Mr. Eazi says all artists he funds will have access to information about their content and earning in real-time. "With our tech platform you can see how much you earn in real-time, you can also see how much you owe and how that is being deducted," he said.

Additionally, Mr. Eazi says he wants to contribute to creating a music industry where Africans are the owners of their own content and intellectual property.
The biggest players in the African music industry are not from Africa, he said. As a result, he wants to create a space for music stars on the continent to become a significant part of the industry.
"I want to look back and be fulfilled knowing that I contributed to getting African equity participation in the music infrastructure that has been built on the continent."


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Saturday, August 1, 2020

U.K. PRIME MINISTER BORIS JOHNSON SELLS LONDON HOME



The house in Islington has been on the market for less than six months

After less than six months on the market, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has found a buyer for his former North London home, according to listing records.
The Islington townhouse, which was on the market for £3.75 million (US$4.8 million), sold in September, according to listing records. But the transaction has yet to hit public property records, therefore the identity of the buyer and final sale price is not yet available.

Mr Johnson bought the home in 2009 with his then-wife, Marina, for £2.3 million, records show. The pair announced their separation last year.


The Grade II-listed property hit the market in May, just a day before Mr Johnson announced his intention to run for the top government job when his predecessor Theresa May stepped down.

Set behind cast-iron railings at the end of a terrace row, the five-story home dates to 1841. It spans 3,000 square feet and combines the “elegance of a Georgian house with the convenience of the modern finishes,” according to the listing with estate agency Chestertons, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
It has four bedrooms, sash windows, a private terrace, views of the nearby Regent’s Canal, two studies and a garden, the listing said.

Since becoming prime minister in July, Mr Johnson has called 10 Downing Street home.
The official residence of the prime minister, known simply as Number 10 and instantly recognizable for its black facade and front door, is in Westminster, close to both Buckingham Palace and the Palace of Westminster, where parliament meets.
Mr Johnson, 55, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment, was mayor of London from 2008 to 2016 and served as secretary of state for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs from 2016 to 2018. A general election in December will determine if he will remain prime minister.
The Daily Mail first reported the sale.




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BREAKING: BANDITS ATTACKED NASARAWA COMMUNITY, KILL TRADITIONAL RULER



SaharaReporters gathered that the bandits stormed the village in large numbers on motorcycles, armed with weapons and operated for hours.

Bandits on Friday murdered the village head of Odu, Amos Ewa Obere, in Nasarawa Local Government Area of Nasarawa State.

SaharaReporters gathered that the bandits stormed the village in large numbers on motorcycles, armed with weapons and operated for hours.

Some residents of the village were also said to have been injured during the attack.


It was also learnt that the bandits rustled animals.

A source lamented that security operatives were yet to arrive at the village as at 7:30am on Saturday.

Bandits attacks and kidnappings have been on the rise in Northern Nigeria in recent times, leaving many deaths and displacement behind.



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BREAKING: FAMILY OF MAN ARRESTED BY SARS CRIES OUT AFTER POLICE FAIL TO PRODUCE HIM SEVEN MONTHS AFTER



In an interview with SaharaReporters, Kingsley's brother, Ezekiel, said he feared that his brother was murdered shortly after his arrest.

The family of Tariyuwa Kingsley, a 33-year-old man, arrested by the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) unit of the Nigeria Police Force in Port Harcourt, on January 5 2020, has lamented his disappearance seven months after his arrest.

The family vowed to sue the police if it is true that he is dead.

SaharaReporters gathered that Tariuwa, a truck driver with the Nigeria Ports Authority Port Harcourt, was arrested around 8 pm on January 5.

SARS operatives arrested Kingsley at a night club in Port Harcourt, known as Boss Lounge, along with two other persons.

The SARS officers were allegedly cleared by a mobile police officer identified as Elisha Hassan who was in charge of security at the lounge on the day the missing driver was arrested.

In an interview with SaharaReporters, Kingsley's brother, Ezekiel, said he feared that his brother was murdered shortly after his arrest.

"If that is the last thing I can do in this life, then I think my reason for coming to earth has been fulfilled," Ezekiel said, vowing to sue anyone culpable if his brother's death is true.

Francis Nwankwo, the SARS officer who arrested Kingsley, reportedly had a conversation in Pidgin-English with Elisha Hassan, the mobile police officer on duty at the nightclub. The conversation makes Ezekiel think his brother may have been killed.

"Forget them!!! Dem Kingsley's siblings don come to our station today. Commander tells them to say no be we arrest the boys. In fact, we don travel those boys, shae u understand, we don clear them, nowhere e reach, nothing go happen," Nwankwo said during a phone call with Hassan.

Ezekiel said Nwankwo's slang, 'travel those boys,' probably meant the three victims had been murdered.

Hassan had reportedly made the call to Nwankwo, when Kingsley's relatives came to the lounge to receive an account of what happened, after several fruitless searches for their son in police stations across Port Harcourt.

"In their terms, when they say they ‘travel’ someone, it means ‘killed’. Sometimes, they say these things. Maybe they've not done it, or they intend to," Ezekiel said.

The family reported the case to the Police Complaint Response Unit in Abuja. Ezekiel said investigators from the complaint bureau were not told that Kingsley had not been allowed to meet with his family.

When the CRU officials heard this, Ezekiel said Jovinus Iwuh, SARS commander in Rivers State, was instructed to explain why Kingsley had not been given the opportunity to meet his family. 

"They –CRU– put a call through to the SARS commander in Port Harcourt. He told them our brother was in their custody, and claimed that they had never denied us the opportunity of seeing him.

"This is the same person that was telling us there is nobody like that (Tariuwa Kingsley) in their custody," he added.

Ezekiel also complained of laxity on the part of the CRU officials over the investigation. 

He said the search for their brother had affected the family. 

"Kingsley's son was five months old when his father was arrested. He would be one year old on July 31," Ezekiel says.

"I am the one feeding the boy and his mother. I am taking care of my parents, too; they are aged," he lamented.

SaharaReporters reached out to Jovinus Iwuh, the SARS commander in Rivers State.

"Talk to the Police PRO," he barked, "I don't speak to journalists."

SaharaReporters reached out to Nnamdi Omoni, police spokesperson in Rivers State. Omoni said he had no idea of the case and had never been briefed on the matter by Mr Iwuh. 

When SaharaReporters called Mr Iwuh again to confront him with the information, he said, "My friend! I don't know you." "Go to the PRO's office, maybe he's not willing to talk to you on the phone."

When SaharaReporters reached out to one of the CRU agents handling Mr Kingsley's disappearance case, he directed our reporter to use official complaint lines.

"Are you the complainant? If you are not, then let the complainant ask," a female told our reporter when he called the number.


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Credit: Saharareporters

GREECE CONFIRMS MIGRANT RESCUE ON STORMY MEDITERRANEAN SEA

O fficials in Greece have confirmed an ongoing search and rescue operation in the Mediterranean Sea east of Crete, following reports of a mi...