Wednesday, 5 June 2019

Nigeria’s Oil Thieves Back With A Bang

Just as Nigeria gets to grips with militants who brought the nation’s oil industry to its knees a few years ago, another group of longstanding foes are slowly making a comeback: thieves.
Saboteurs including thieves caused an 80% increase in the number of spills in 2018, Royal Dutch Shell Plc, the largest international producer in the West African country, said in a report last month. By contrast, there have been no militant-related halts to operations since 2016.
The disruptions underscore how hard it will be for Nigeria to fully rid itself of security challenges that have plagued the nation for decades. Overseas crude shipments represented by far the nation’s largest source of export income, with about $43.6 billion of sales last year, according to ITC Trade Map, a venture between the WTO and the UN.
“Oil theft is a severe drain on Nigeria’s revenue,” said Cheta Nwanze, the head of research at SBM Intelligence, a Lagos-based consultant. “The losses to theft could easily fund Nigeria’s budget deficit.”
On one level, theft is probably a more palatable option for Nigeria and the companies operating there than attacks by militants. About 100,000 barrels a day are being taken out of pipelines, whereas militancy halted at least eight times that amount at one stage three years ago.
The increase reflects a belief among local communities that multinationals don’t really own the barrels in the first place, according to Ledum Mitee, a lawyer and minority rights activist.
“They believe the oil is theirs and the government is the thief,” he said. “People now realize that instead of just cutting pipelines to spite the government, they can make money out of it.”
It’s also akin to an industry. Theft employs at least 500,000 people in the country, according to Mitee, former head of the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative.
Much of the stolen crude is processed in tiny, makeshift refineries comprising hundreds of cauldrons, each of which can hold as much as 150 barrels of oil, according to Nwanze. The world’s biggest refineries handle more than 1.2 million barrels each day.
Unlike politically-driven militancy, where fighters say they represent impoverished people in the Niger Delta region, stealing crude is considered a less risky option for those involved.
Multiple incidents of force majeure, a legal measure that allows companies to forgo their contractual supply obligations, have happened this year in Nigeria — even if the precise causes often remain unclear.
Aiteo Group, operator of the Nembe Creek Trunk Line to Shell’s Bonny export terminal, has been one of the hardest hit this year, halting flows through the link at least three times since January.
And the challenges doesn’t appear to be getting easier. Shell lost an average of 11,000 barrels a day to theft in 2018, it said. That’s up from losses of 9,000 barrels of crude a day in 2017.
Chevron Corp. has also reported problems with third-party interference on its production facilities.
The rogue refineries, essentially scaled up versions of widespread gin distilleries in the region, typically employ about 100 people working in shifts. Yields from a single cauldron will include 7,500 liters of diesel, 2,000 liters of gasoline and 500 liters of kerosene a day. It costs about 4 million naira ($11,100) to construct a boiling pot.
Oil producers often take their own security measures, deploying daily helicopter surveillance with infrared cameras while simultaneously pushing state authorities to do more. But large-scale theft persists.
Addressing the challenge requires a “holistic approach,” Nigeria’s Oil Minister Emmanuel Kachikwu said after attending a cabinet meeting in Abuja last month.
“Oil theft is rife because there is an economic gain to be made from it,” Kachikwu said. “So we want to shut those illegal gains by creating positive and legal economic opportunities.”
Source:https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-06-05/nigeria-s-oil-thieves-roar-back-even-as-militants-kept-in-check

Alleged fraud: AfDB bans Nigerian construction company for three years

Alleged fraud: AfDB bans Nigerian construction company for three years
The African Development Bank (AfDB) says it has barred Qualitrends Global Solutions Nigeria Limited, a Nigerian construction company, for 36 months.
The bank made this known in a statement released by its communication and external relations department.
It explained that an investigation conducted by the bank’s Office of Integrity and Anti-Corruption established that the construction company allegedly engaged in numerous acts of fraud in bidding for a construction contract.
The office is responsible for preventing, deterring and investigating allegations of corruption, fraud and other sanctionable practices in bank’s financed operations.
It disclosed that the contract was under the Agricultural Transformation Agenda Support Programme Phase One in Nigeria (ATASP-1).
According to the statement, while participating in a tender for the conduct of construction of social infrastructure in Niger state, the company misrepresented its experience in conducting such construction contracts and submitted false bid security.
“The debarment, therefore, renders the company ineligible to participate in bank-financed projects during the debarment period,” the statement released on Monday read.
“The debarment qualifies for cross-debarment by other multilateral development banks under the Agreement for Mutual Recognition of Debarment Decisions, including the Asian Development Bank.
“Others are the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Inter-American Development Bank and the World Bank Group.
“ATASP-1 is financed under the African Development Fund, an entity of the AfDB’s Group.”
- THECABLE

‘In his next world, he’ll not make advances to married women’ – Angry husband tells Police after killing neighbour


A 30-year-old man, Abubakar Muhammadu, has been killed by a 21-year-old man, Audu Umar for allegedly making advances to his wife
Audu, who is currently in the custody of the Niger State Police Command, said that he did not regret killing Muhammadu because he was fond of making advances to married women in the village.
According to The Nation, the suspect declared that he was satisfied with executing judgment upon the victim, insisting he was ready to face the consequence of his action.
“I do not regret killing him because Mohammadu decided to die like a chicken. In his next world, he will not make advances to married women in this village.
“I am ready to bear the consequences, so let the law take its cause. I am fulfilled Mohammadu will never see my wife again, Allah will judge him.”
Audu and Muhammadu hail from Wawa village in New- Bussa in Borgu Local Government Area of Niger state
The suspect’s wife, Hassana Audu, had reported to her husband that the deceased had been disturbing her for relationship which she refused.
The suspect claimed he had warned the deceased several times to desist from making advances to his wife which he refused but went further to provoke him beyond reason, so he attacked him with a machete, inflicted deep cuts on his head which resulted to his death.
The Command Public Relations Officer, Mohammad Abubakar, said that the matter would be charged to court after investigation.
- DAILY POST

Suicide rate: Psychologist reveals why depression is rising in Nigeria


A Clinical Pyschologist and Emotions Therapist, Mr Enitan Oyenuga, Wednesday attributed the high rate of depression and suicide amongst youths in Nigeria to emotional attachment and the falsehood of social media.
Oyenuga said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.
According to Oyenuga, social media is a good technological innovation but has been used by many people to exaggerate their strengths and achievements rather than a combination of strengths and weaknesses.
“It’s been observed that people on social media post areas that show their sophistication compared to their labor, they post areas that promote their significance as oppose their labor.
“The way the brain chemistry works is that for every time you go on social media, you see other people progress as a negative for yourself.
“Those yet to attain those achievements, begin to see themselves as less and not hard working enough.
“This less worth feeling could lead to depression and if not properly managed could lead to suicidal thoughts and non-acceptance by the society,” he said.
The Therapist said that for every time a person chose to like or dislike a post on social media, the functions of the human brain got altered.

He explained that the chemistry behind such alteration was that once the person whose picture was liked saw the ‘Like’, it altered the person’s brain for good, making the person feel elated but brought dysphoria to the person who liked the post.
“So as the dysphoria increases it alters the brain chemistry then the person starts to have suicidal adulation.
“The person’s mood starts to alter, as the mood alters the person goes through anhedonia thereby losing interest in what he or she ordinarily love to do,” Oyenuga explained.
Dysphoria is an emotional state that can follow a variety of mental illnesses or physical conditions. A person with dysphoria often experiences profound uneasiness and dissatisfaction with life, followed by depression, anxiety and agitation.
Meanwhile, Anhedonia is the persistent feeling of sadness or loss of interest that characterises major depression that can lead to a range of behavioural and physical symptoms.
These may include changes in sleep, appetite, energy level, concentration, daily behaviour or self-esteem.
He advised Nigerians to be conscious of one another’s attitude in order to notice psychological changes and call for assistance when needed and on time.
The Psychologist encouraged parents to communicate and spend quality time with their children in order to identify depression signs at an early stage and call for psychological intervention when due to avoid suicide.
- DAILY POST

Nigerian architects predict more building collapse in Anambra


The Nigerian Institute of Architect (NIA) has blamed the Anambra State government for the numerous cases of building collapse in the state, saying that more incidents may happen until the state government implements recommendations made by the group in a white paper.

State chairman of the group, Arc Osita Okafor, who addressed a press conference in Awka after an emergency meeting of the institute, expressed displeasure that despite a white paper produced by a state panel of enquiry on collapsed buildings in the state in 2014, the state government was yet to begin implementations.
The group frowned at the recent inauguration of a 10-man panel of enquiry into the recent cases of building collapse in Onitsha, in which some six persons had lost their lives.
Okafor said, “We are taken aback by the news of the inauguration of the panel without implementation of the recommendations of a former panel set up by the same government on 9th June 2014.
“The building industry is regulated, and we know that there are defined roles for various professions. It is therefore unconventional and unacceptable that non-architects now assume the role of architects.
“We, therefore, use this opportunity to draw government’s attention to the implementation of an already published white paper report on building collapse in October 13, 2014. That white paper stressed the need to establish a one-stop approval process. By these process, all relevant professionals in the building industry vet drawings, /documents submitted for approval.
“Finally, the NIA frowns at a panel to investigate and deal with a serious matter as grievous as building collapse, and the architects, who are the prime consultants in the building projects all over the world are excluded from the panel.”
The group said that with such constitution of a panel, and non implementation of the previous panel’s report, the issue of collapsed buildings may not abate soon in the state.
It charged the Anambra State governor, Chief Willie Obiano to take a dispassionate look at the posers raised by the group with a view to correcting them to ensure that building collapse was checked once and for all in the state.
- DAILY POST

Dossier out on 35-man Nigerian cybercriminal gang ‘Scattered Canary’

A Nigerian-based scammer gang dubbed “Scattered Canary” has evolved from a one-man, start-up operation to a multi-faceted, scalable, “corporation” with 35 “employees” targeting individuals, businesses, and government agencies.
The criminal gang was exposed in a new Threat Actor Dossier published Wednesday by Agari, the next-generation Secure Email Cloud that restores trust to the inbox.
Scattered Canary, for which Agari has traced fraudulent activity originating from 2008, has grown exponentially from a lone-wolf cybercriminal named “Alpha,” operating entry-level Craigslist scams to an entire organisation with at least 35 criminal actors working for it.
Each actor has his own area of expertise, ranging from recruiting money mules to providing infrastructure for the organisation. At any one-time, Alpha is orchestrating Scattered Canary’s operatives to simultaneously carry out business email compromise (BEC) scams and other fraudulent schemes, including romance scams, tax fraud, social security fraud, credit card fraud, and payroll diversion.
Similar to legitimate budding entrepreneurial companies, the Scattered Canary gang has sought to increase business operations by developing and validating scalable business models across a diverse set of revenue streams.
Initially detected after impersonating a Senior Executive at Agari to target its Chief Financial Officer, Scattered Canary’s victims include individuals, organisations and, in 2017, was expanded to include federal and state government agencies.
Utilizing a feature within Gmail accounts, which does not recognise periods in email addresses, the group created numerous ‘dot variant’ accounts that allowed the group to make their scams more efficient by removing the need to create and monitor different email accounts for every account they create on a targeted website.
As a result of this tactic, Scattered Canary was able to file 13 fraudulent tax returns with the IRS, submit applications for FEMA disaster assistance under three identities, submit 11 fraudulent Social Security benefit applications and gain approval for at least $65,000 in credit with four US-based financial institutions via 48 credit-card applications.
“BEC can no longer be viewed in isolation,” said Crane Hassold, senior director of threat research, Agari. “If we are to take Scattered Canary as a microcosm for the organisations behind today’s most malicious scams, it demonstrates that a more holistic approach, one based on threat actor identity rather than type of fraudulent activity, is needed to detect email fraud and protect businesses. While Scattered Canary’s primary attack vector is BEC, at any given time, it is also involved in a dozen other types of disparate scams.”
The Agari Cyber Intelligence Division (ACID) is the only counterintelligence research team dedicated to worldwide business email compromise (BEC) and spear-phishing investigation. ACID uncovers identity deception tactics, criminal group dynamics, and trends in advanced email attacks, and helps mitigate cybercrime activity by working with law enforcement and other trusted partners.
In the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) annual Internet Crime Report, it was revealed that losses from BEC scams nearly doubled to $1.3 billion in 2018.
*Download the dossier on Scattered Canary gang

*Press Statement by PRNewswire

1,618 die from road accidents in 3 months – FRSC


The Federal Road Safety Corps says that at least 1,618 people have lost their lives through road accidents between December 2018 and February 2019.
The information is contained in the Report of Road Traffic Crash for December, 2018, January and December, 2019, released by the FRSC.
According to the report, over 21,577 people were involved in road crashes involving cars, minibuses, motorcycles, trucks, tankers and trailers.
Further analysis shows that the top five causes of road accidents were speed violation, wrongful overtaking, dangerous driving, tyre burst and brake failure.
The FRSC report identified Kaduna-Abuja road as the most prevalent route in cases of accident fatality within the period under review.
Similarly, the Lagos-Ibadan, Abuja-Lokoja and Kaduna-Zaria were also identified as routes with high record of road crashes.
The report called for the intensification of patrol and rescue operations along routes with high crash records to further reduce casualties.
“There is need to conduct workshop on vehicles safety education as well as safe usage due to high involvement of cars, minibuses and motorcycles in crashes.
“As a matter of fact, the Corps needs to step up enforcement on overspeeding or initiate a high powered technology to detect and stem the tide of overspeeding as part of operational activities,’’ the report added.
- PM NEWS

PL NEWS : I will sack Pogba If I become Manchester United coach – Maradona


Diego Maradona says he is focusing his attention on coaching English Premiership side Manchester United if the club has run out of patience with the present handler Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.
The outspoken Argentine is currently managing Dorados in Mexico’s second division but nonetheless, he is adamant he can deliver trophies if he was put in the Old Trafford hot seat.
Maradona, who was speaking to FourFourTwo, hinted that he would shake up the current squad by ditching midfielder Paul Pogba as he feels he ‘doesn’t work hard enough’ to remain in the side.
“If Manchester [United] need a coach, I’m the man to do it,’ he said. ‘I know they sell lots of shirts around the world, but they need to win trophies, too. I can do that for them.”
Pogba’s future remains unclear this summer after enough tricky season back with United.

Real Madrid are keen to bolster their midfield while Juventus are also rumoured to be monitoring the Frenchman’s situation at Old Trafford.
For Maradona, Pogba’s work-rate would see him axed should he ever find himself in the hot-seat and managing the player.
Maradona, who managed the Argentina national team between 2008-10, is a cult hero throughout the game but may face a tough task of winning over United supporters given his links to rivals Manchester City.
City striker Sergio Aguero used to be Maradona’s son-in-law and the 58-year-old paid close attention to the success garnered by those in the blue half of Manchester.
Aguero was married to Gianna Maradona and the pair have a son together, Benjamin, leading his ex-wife’s father to form a bond with Aguero’s side.
“Manchester United used to be my favourite English team for so long. So many great players and a great team under Alex Ferguson,” he added.
“But now I have to say Man City. I know you shouldn’t change like that but it’s because of Kun [Aguero]. We speak a lot and he plays in a very good team,” Maradona had said when the going was good.
- PM NEWS

Jersey, Nigeria, US to share $267m Abacha loot


The more than $267m (£210m) belonging to former Nigerian dictator General Sani Abach is to be shared between Nigeria, Jersey and the United States.
The money was seized from a Jersey bank account belonging to Abacha.
The money was “derived through corruption” during the presidency of Sani Abacha in the 1990s, according to Jersey’s Civil Asset Recovery Fund .
A shell company called Doraville held the funds, which were frozen in 2014.
BBC reports that after a five-year legal wrangle, the money has now been recovered and will be split between Jersey, the United States and Nigeria.

Jersey’s attorney general, Robert McRae QC, said the seizure “demonstrated [Jersey’s] commitment to tackling international financial crime and money laundering”.
Abacha was in power from 1993 until his death in 1998.
It is not yet clear how much money will be kept by each government.
Jersey’s Law Officers Department declined to comment on the final distribution of the funds because it could “prejudice ongoing discussions”.
Jersey’s government said it had approached the US in 2007 to request legal proceedings begin in US courts over the laundered funds.
The US Department of Justice itself has forfeited millions of dollars of money back to Nigeria, ruling that Abacha and associates laundered funds through the US banking industry.
Following an “extensive” collection of evidence in a variety of international jurisdictions, the funds were frozen by the Royal Court in 2014 and finally paid into the Civil Asset Recovery Fund on 31 May.
The money is just a fraction of the billions of dollars that were allegedly stolen and laundered during the presidency of Gen Abacha.
Swiss authorities last year returned $300m (£228m) to the Nigerian government, after it was found to have been stolen from public funds.
That money is being paid back to 300,000 Nigerian households over the next six years.
A spokesman for Jersey’s Law Officers Department said it had faced “challenges and appeals” all the way to Jersey’s highest court, as well as “separate proceedings” by a third party in US court.
PM NEWS

Former UEFA President Lennart Johansson dies

Lennart Johansson, a Swede who presided over European soccer for 17 years as its Champions League turned into a global commercial juggernaut, has died after a short illness.
Sweden Football Association announced Johansson’s death on Wednesday.
Johansson, president of European football association UEFA from 1990 to 2007, was a driving force behind the formation of the Champions League, giving the continent’s championship a new identity and a huge revenue stream for big clubs.
“Swedish football is in mourning,” the Swedish FA said in a statement.
UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin said Johansson would be remembered as the architect of the Champions League.

“World football will be always be grateful to him for all he has achieved for the beautiful game,” Ceferin said in a statement.
Johansson ran against Swiss Sepp Blatter to head football’s world governing body FIFA in an acrimonious vote in 1998 but lost. Blatter, who led FIFA for 17 years, is serving a six-year ban from football for unethical conduct.
The men remained rivals. The Swedish FA quoted Johannson as saying: “It is my 20-year fight with Blatter that people like.”
Johansson took over the top job in European football at a turbulent time when money from television coverage was flooding into the sport and players gained complete freedom to move between countries and clubs in Europe.
“It was not a given that UEFA would be successful in meeting all these dramatic changes,” the Swedish FA said.
“The Champions League became an enormous success, but Lennart Johansson’s other major achievement was finding a fragile balance between the big clubs’ demands and the needs of the broader football family.”
Johansson was a lifelong supporter and honorary president of Stockholm club AIK.
- PM NEWS