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Facts of life
👉1.
Don't educate
your children
to be rich.
Educate them
to be Happy.
So when
they grow up
they will know
the value of things
not the price
👉2.
Best awarded words
in London ...
"Eat your food
as your medicines.
Otherwise
you have to
eat medicines
as your food"
👉3.
The One
who loves you
will never leave you
because
even if there are
100 reasons
to give up
he will find
one reason
to hold on
👉4.
There is
a lot of difference
between
human being
and being human.
A Few understand it.
👉5.
You are loved
when you are born.
You will be loved
when you die.
In between
You have to manage...!
*****
If u want to Walk Fast,
Walk Alone..!
But
if u want to Walk Far,
Walk Together..!!
Six Best Doctors in the World-
1.Sunlight
2.Rest
3.Exercise
4.Diet
5.Self Confidence
&
6.Friends
Maintain them in all stages of Life and enjoy healthy life
If you see the moon ..... You see the beauty of God ..... If you see the Sun ..... You see the power of God ..... And .... If you see the Mirror ..... You see the best Creation of GOD .... So Believe in YOURSELF..... :) :) :).
We all are tourists & God is our travel agent who
already fixed all our Routes Reservations & Destinations
So!
Trust him & Enjoy the "Trip" called LIFE...
Islamic State
(Isis) in Libya has become a threat to all of Europe and western
military intervention may now be required, but only so long as the
Libyans can first form a coherent national government, Sir Peter
Ricketts, David Cameron’s former national security adviser, has warned.
Ricketts, who has just ended a stint as UK ambassador to France, said
there was a “very remote” chance UK combat forces would be used, and
said airstrikes on their own would be of no use.
Western powers have been considering whether any military
intervention, such as training Libyan security forces, can help prevent
Isis gaining a permanent foothold in the oil-rich country.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4, Ricketts described Libya as an ungoverned
space. “It is a threat to all of us in Europe because Isis is moving in
so there is a case to do everything we can to help them produce
stability in Libya,
but they have got to do it. The likelihood of British combat forces
being deployed seems to me very remote, but supporting the Libyans to do
a more effective job in governing their own space, I can certainly see a
case for that.”
UN-led efforts to form a national unity government in Libya following the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 have foundered. Two rival administrations have formed
and militias have proliferated across the country. The UN has so far
failed in efforts to reconcile differences between the governments,
which are based in Tripoli and Tobruk.
Discussions are continuing in the west as to whether a force could be
assembled to help defeat Isis, but the lack of a unity government is
allowing Isis space and time to expand.
The number of Isis fighters in Libya has reportedly increased
to 5,000. The group currently holds sway in the port of Sirte, and is trying to move into the Libyan oilfields.
Isis is said to be under growing financial pressure in Iraq as it
loses access to oil, so Libya would be a major strategic prize for the
group.
The UK foreign affairs select committee has been examining the merits of the western intervention in 2011 and what the west could have done to prevent the country collapsing into chaos.
Ricketts, who was national security adviser at the time, said the
intervention was right “because it stopped a bloodbath in Benghazi and
it gave the Libyan opposition groups a chance to get together to form a
coherent government with a coherent security structure and basically
reinvent their country. They failed to do that, which is a great
disappointment.”
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He
also ruled out airstrikes. “We can only do anything if there is an
emerging security structure that we can support, because we cannot bring
security to Libya ourselves.”
Martin Kobler, the UN special representative in Libya, has expressed
his frustration at the disputes between the groups, telling Der Spiegel
they “discuss commas in agreements and bring legal arguments into play.
Isis does not discuss commas, it is capturing new territory each day. If
things keep going like this they will soon capture the oil terminal Ras
Lanuf. But the awareness that people need to be coming together to
counter the threat is still lacking. My fear is the political process is
not going to go as fast as the military process.”
The UK ambassador to Tripoli, Peter Millett, has also warned that the
number of gunmen had multiplied since the end of the war because the
Libyan central bank has been forced at gunpoint to fund the militias.
“There is a real problem with the proliferation of militias,” he said.
“The fact is that all main militias are still paid for by the central
bank. Bored young men can join a militia, then they have a salary and
something to do.”
Asked why the central bank was continuing to fund the different
militias – including factions who are at each other’s throats – Millett
said: “I am told that in 2012, a gun was held to the minister of
finance’s head and he was told ‘sign that cheque’. They were told that
the easiest thing was simply to buy off the militias.”
Estimates of the number of militia men in Libya have gone from around
30,000 at the time of the anti-Gaddafi revolution to as high as 140,000
now.
Millett said “If you do not have a government, what can you do about
Isis? I do not think we have an answer. If the whole thing collapses we
will be into a very difficult situation. It will be difficult to deal
with Isis without a formal request from the Libyan government.”
Jeremy Corbyn has written to Cameron seeking assurances that no
British troops will be deployed in Libya without the agreement of the
Commons. It is possible the UK government could argue that the troops
were not being sent in a combat role and the relatively recent tradition
of seeking Commons prior approval does not apply. Thanks for reading
Between 2012 and 2014, the Federal Government spent N248bn on foreign
travels embarked upon by officials in Ministries, Departments and
Agencies of government.
The N248bn spent within the three year period, according to a
statement by the Federal Ministry of Finance, represents 18 per cent of
the total overhead expenditure for the period.
The statement signed by the Special Adviser to the Finance Minister,
Mr. Festus Akanbi, said in a bid to reduce the amount spent on travels, a
meeting had been held with local and foreign airline officials to
secure discounts for travel expenses.
It said that given the large amount spent on travel, and consequently
the significant potential for savings, it was imperative that the
Efficiency Unit prioritises travel as a key focus area for cost cutting
and generation of savings.
For instance, the statement said with an average of N83bn spent
annually on travels, a five per cent discount could generate over N4bn
savings on annual travel costs.
It reads in part, “The Federal Ministry of Finance has disclosed that
discussions with local and international airlines to secure discounts
for travel by government officials are yielding positive results.
“A review of Government overhead expenditure for the period 2012 to
2014 showed that travel was the largest single expenditure item.
“A cumulative total of N248bn, equivalent to about 18 per cent of
total overhead expenditure, was spent on travel during the period. This
translates to N83bn per annum.
“At a conservative discount of five per cent on ticket prices, the estimated savings per annum is approximately N4bn.”
As part of measures to reduce travel costs, it said the Efficiency
Unit has engaged in negotiation with local and international airlines
for discounts commensurate with the large number of ticket purchases
made by Government annually.
The savings generated, it added, would increase funding available to the government for capital investment.
“In addition to reducing government spend on travel, the Efficiency
Unit has made proposals to the appropriate government authorities for
the introduction of guidelines that will reduce the need for travel by
localising the activities that necessitate travel, where feasible, and
encouraging the use of Information and Communications Technology.
“Other overhead expenditure items including insurance, advertising
and fuel, where the government’s bargaining power can be leveraged are
also being reviewed,” it added.
In the same vein,the statement said administrative controls are being
strengthened through the issuance of circulars detailing appropriate
guidelines and the implementation of measures to enforce compliance. Thanks for reading.
The government has said it has no plans to deploy British troops to
provide security for Libya’s newly-appointed national unity government.
The denial came in response to a letter to the foreign secretary from
Crispin Blunt MP, the chairman of the Commons foreign affairs select
committee, seeking a statement to parliament in advance of any military
action.
Blunt had argued that the first formal move of a new Libyan
government was likely to be to ask Britain and its allies to conduct
airstrikes against Islamic State targets in the country, according to Blunt.
Isis, with strongholds in Syria and Iraq, has expanded its presence in Libya, taking over the town of Sirte and other areas, taking advantage of the absence of a government and of increasing unrest.
Blunt said that the reported deployment of UK troops as part of an
Italian-led force to Libya would be a matter for the Commons and Hammond
should make a statement before defence secretary Michael Fallon agreed
to such a deployment.
Fallon on Tuesday held a telephone conference with the defence
ministers of Italy, France, Spain and Germany about the combined force.
The 5,000-strong force – though Blunt puts it at 6,000 – would be sent to train and advise
the new Libyan army. Although all five countries insist the role would
not be a combat one, there is always a risk of mission creep. The Libyan
government might need to be bolstered in the event of an attack or the
international force might be targeted by Isis.
The Italian government is trying to build as wide a coalition as
possible so if more countries were to send troops the UK contribution
could end up as fewer than 1,000.
But a government spokesperson issued an unusually strong denial:
“What members of the foreign affairs committee heard on their recent
visit is wrong on a number of counts. There are no plans to extend
airstrikes to Libya nor are there plans to send British troops to
provide security on the ground in Libya. It is therefore also wrong to
suggest the defence secretary will agree any UK contribution this week.”
Blunt, who last week visited Tunisia and Egypt with the rest of the
committee, said the formation of a new Libyan government – the
government of national accord – was announced on Saturday and “we heard
that the GNA’s likely first formal action will be to request that the UK
and its allies conduct airstrikes against Isil [Isis] targets in
Libya”.
The Ministry of Defence says it has no such plans for airstrikes,
though it insists it has the capability in spite of already being in
action in Iraq and Syria.
The US is already conducting sporadic airstrikes against Isis in Libya.
In his letter, Blunt said the international force of which the UK
would be part will be deployed in the near future and the committee had
heard it will have two objectives: to train the Libyan army and provide
security for the new government in Tripoli.
“The pre-emptive deployment of UK military forces is now a
matter for the House of Commons. I, therefore, request that you make a
statement to the House on the state of the plan of for any deployment of
UK military forces in Libya before the defence secretary agrees the UK
component of any international force and explain how this deployment is
consistent with our policy objectives,” Blunt wrote.
The Italian-led force requires first a formal invitation from the new
government. Ministers from the Libyan unity government are expected to
establish an office in Tripoli in the coming days, but their arrival is
likely to be contested and could trigger fresh violence in the capital.
Western capitals predict the new government will give a green light
to a future military training programme for a new Libyan army and back
the US-led airstrikes against Isis militants already under way.
The list of proposed ministers has yet to receive a vote of approval
from the House of Representatives (HoR), a UN-backed assembly in Tobruk,
as had been envisaged in a political settlement agreed in Morocco in
December. But western diplomats say the volatile and often violent
nature of Libyan politics meant that many HoR members were not able to
cast their votes. Instead, the presidency council chose to interpret the
endorsement of about 100 HoR members as a “green light” to proclaim the
new government.
It is widely accepted that the government will have no real
legitimacy without moving to Tripoli, the seat of most state
institutions, but that will not be easy. It is opposed by the leadership
of the Islamist-dominated general national congress (GNC) and at least
one hardline militia, the Samood Front. Even members of the negotiating group that produced the December agreement have voiced doubts on its legitimacy without a formal HoR vote.
However, negotiations are under way this week with other Tripoli
militias prepared to accept the new government, if only because its
arrival would resume the flow of foreign funds into the Libyan capital.
Those talks are hoped to clear the way for the quiet arrival of at least
some of the new ministers, including the prime minister designate and
the head of the presidency council, Fayez al-Sarraj. That would
establish at least a symbolic presence that the UN, US and Europe hope
will bring the support of other power-brokers in Libya’s chaotic
political and military landscape.
However, it is expected that the Samood Front, Isis and other
hardline Islamists in Tripoli would seek to target the ministers,
triggering a flareup of violence in the capital. The ministers would
have to stay for the immediate future in a single heavily guarded
location.
A yellow fever epidemic in Angola has killed at least 250 people
since the end of December and continues to spread, stretching limited
resources, doctors and officials said Tuesday.
The head of the Luanda pediatrics hospital, Mateus Campos, said 27
children died there on Monday alone, with 900 suspected cases turning up
each day.
“We don’t have the human resources to cope,” Campos added.
Health ministry spokeswoman Adelaide de Carvalho told AFP that the ministry registered 76 suspect cases and 10 deaths in three days alone this month, but gave no overall toll.
A week ago the World Health Organisation put the death toll at 250 but some doctors believe the situation may be far worse.
There is no specific treatment for yellow fever, a viral hemorrhagic
disease transmitted by infected mosquitoes and found in tropical regions
of Africa and Latin America’s Amazon region.
Authorities launched a mass vaccination campaign in February and the
government urged residents to sterilise stagnant water before drinking
it.
Luanda remains the worst-hit area, with nine of every 10 deaths registered in the city over the last days.
Critics such as surgeon Maurilio Luyela have blasted authorities for
failing to upgrade public health facilities or pay doctors good wages.
“Doctors who graduate from university don’t join the public health
sector because there isn’t enough money to pay them,” he told
journalists.
Yellow fever vaccinations are routinely recommended for travellers to
Angola, though the country had not previously seen a significant
outbreak since 1986.
World Health Organization figures show there are an estimated 130,000
cases of yellow fever reported yearly, causing 44,000 deaths worldwide
each year, with 90 percent occurring in Africa. Thanks for reading
One gunman was killed by police in a Brussels apartment on Monday
evening after an anti-terrorist raid by Belgian and French officers
investigating November’s Paris attacks was met with heavy-weapon gunfire that left four police officers wounded.
An official said the man’s body was found when police stormed an
apartment at the centre of the raid where suspects had opened fire on
police.
A joint French and Belgian anti-terrorism squad investigating the Paris attacks
that killed 130 people had arrived to search an apartment building in
the quiet neighbourhood of Forest in the south-west of Brussels at about
2.30pm.
The police came under gunfire from “heavy weapons”, according to the
French interior minister Bernard Cazeneuve. Three Belgian police
officers were wounded in the initial shootout, with one in a serious
condition after being hit in the ear and head according to Belgian media
outlets. Another burst of gunfire reportedly took place around two
hours later. Further gunfire was heard after 6pm. In total, four
officers were wounded in the various shootouts.
During the afternoon, armed French and Belgian police had launched a
manhunt in the quiet neighbourhood of Forest as they sought two
suspected gunmen who were believed to have gone on the run after opening
fire and wounding the officers.
“Police were fired at,” Eric Van Der Sypt, a spokesman for the
Belgian federal prosecutor, told AFP, adding that the search was “linked
to the Paris attacks investigation”.
“Two individuals apparently barricaded themselves inside a home,” Forest mayor Marc-Jean Ghyssels told local media.
In the mid-afternoon, a police spokeswoman told French television that gunmen were at large.
Dozens of armed police in balaclavas armed with submachine guns
cordoned off the scene. Security services blocked roads and told
residents to stay indoors. Two primary schools and creches close to the
scene of the shooting were in lockdown until the children could be
safely collected by parents. Journalists were asked not to publish
videos or photos that identified police officers.
Police cordoned off a wide area and local trams were suspended. The
incident took place across the street from an Audi auto factory and the
train lines leading to the Gare du Midi railway station where Eurostar
trains to London and Thalys trains to Paris run from.
In the early evening, on one approach to the scene, four police and
one van blocked off the street, while two helicopters buzzed overhead.
The police cordons raised memories among commentators of the
five-days of lock-down imposed on Brussels two weeks after the Paris
attacks, when authorities warned of an imminent threat of violence in
Brussels during the ongoing manhunt for suspects.
But beyond the wide security cordon, the broader area of Forest
attempted to get on with their lives. In early evening, around 50 people
had gathered but life carried on as normal. In nearby streets a couple
sat in the laundrette and a woman walked her dog.
Locals were shocked to kind the sleepy neighborhood at the centre of a
major police operation. “It’s always quiet here, it is peaceful, “ said
Nathanael Dantas, a 21-year-old student, who said he was unable to
return home. “I’ve never seen so many police here, against the blare of
sirens. But police allowed one family with three small children to pass
through the cordon and go home.
“It is a very calm peaceful area,” said one 17-year-old, standing in
her parents’ shop. “This is a shock for everyone.” Outside television
cameras crowded around the police cordon.
“Forest is a calm, peaceful place. I’ve never heard of gunfire in
this neighborhood, said Maria, 29, pushing a buggy, as she waited
outside the police cordon, unable to visit her mother who lives inside.
“Now I am afraid, I am afraid for my little girl.”
The November attacks in Paris are believed to have been in part prepared and coordinated in Brussels.
But
police confirmed that the raid was not connected to Salah Abdeslam, the
26-year-old French national who grew up in Brussels and is one of the
prime suspects in the Paris attacks.
Abdeslam, believed to have played a key role in organising the Paris
attacks, has been on the run since November. He left Paris in the hours
after the attacks, shortly after his brother had blown himself up as
part of the terrorist assault. Abdeslam fled across the border to
Belgium, helped by friends. He is believed to have stayed for a time in Belgium but has not yet been found.
“The operation was not targeting Salah Abdeslam. It was aimed at
people connected to one or several of the 11 Belgians who have been
charged,” a police source confirmed to AFP. Eight of the 11 people
charged are still in detention.
Abdeslam’s associate Mohamed Abrini, who like him grew up in the Molenbeek area of Brussels, is also still at large.
Abdeslam was reportedly holed up in an apartment in the Schaerbeek
district in north Brussels for three weeks after the Paris attacks. In
January, Belgian authorities said they had found two apartments and a
house used by Abdeslam and other suspects in the run up to the attacks.
A fingerprint belonging to Abdeslam was found in the apartment along
with traces of explosives, possible suicide belts and a drawing of a
person wearing a large belt.
Authorities also found DNA traces from Bilal Hadfi, another of the
attackers who blew himself up with a bomb vest near the French national
stadium during the November attacks.
The other premises identified were a flat in Charleroi – a town south
of Brussels where a major airport is located – as well as a house in
the rural village of Auvelais near the French border.
Barely one week after an auto crash claimed the lives of fifteen
persons on Ibusa Road, near Asaba in Delta State, another accident has
claimed the lives of a pregnant mother and her four children.
The accident, which occurred along Ozoro Road in Oleh, Isoko South
Local Government Area of the state, also claimed the life of a
motorcycle rider identified as Chukube.
An eyewitness, Joyce Ejiro, said that the pregnant woman was waiting
by the roadside with her four children to board a car after closing for
the day when a driver, who was fleeing from his relatives, hit them.
It was gathered that the driver was trying to escape after snatching
N200,000 deposited as part payment for the sale of land belonging to the
deceased woman’s family.
Investigation revealed that members of the family had offered a piece
of land to a buyer for N400,000 and the buyer, who accepted the offer,
made a part payment of N200,000.
There was, however, a dispute among the family members over how the
money would be shared. While some members insisted that the money would
only be shared after the buyer completes payment.
In the course of the heated argument, the driver, who is a member of
the family and distant relative to the woman, snatched the money and
took off in a Hilux Van.
Upon realising that he was being chased by three other family members
in a Camry, he suddenly swerved in a bid to overtake another car, but
control and ran into the motorcyclist, who was riding towards the same
direction, also hitting the woman and her children.
It was gathered that the vehicle dragged them and the motorcycle for
some distance before coming to a halt after which the driver absconded.
It was gathered that the Camry somersaulted several times but the
occupants made it out and attempted to escape before being apprehended
by sympathisers at the scene of the accident.
The Police Public Relations Officer in the state, Mrs. Celestina Kalu, said investigation was ongoing.
Meanwhile, the bodies of the deceased, which were identified by their
families, have been taken to the morgue at the Central Hospital, Oleh
with the driver of the Hilux Van at large.
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