Saturday, 14 November 2020

RECKLESS NATION !! Nigeria seeks fresh $750million World Bank loan

 


Nigeria is in the process of taking a fresh $750 million loan, from the World Bank to help states overcome the effect of COVID-19.

Minister of Finance, Budget, and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, announced this in Abuja on Friday.

She said the loan would be used to stimulate the local economy and support vulnerable household consumption.

Ahmed spoke at the inauguration of the Federal Steering Committees of the Nigeria COVID-19 Action Recovery and Economic Stimulus (N-CARES) programme.

She said the federal government has created windows of intervention, as captured in the economic sustainability plan inaugurated by President Muhammadu Buhari, in March 2020.

She stressed that in going to borrow the money the federal government is considering the cause and consequences of civil unrest and COVID-19 in the country.

“The consequences will be too high if we ignore the root cause of rising civil unrest in our country. We must, therefore, fashion out ways of ensuring that post-Covid-19 is not injurious to the Nigerian people and the economy,” she stated.

The minister stated that the government has carefully selected the “members of the Federal Steering and Technical Committees because of the important role MDAs play in the recovery of the Nigerian economy.

She also said the committee will help achieve government goal of lifting 100 million people out of poverty”.

“The inauguration of the committee is expedient given the nature of this emergency intervention.

“Nigeria as the biggest economy in Africa cannot afford to remain in recession.

“The survival of over 200 million population is germane to all we do and we must address the concerns of the majority of our populace”.Zainab Ahmed added.

- PM NEWS

Niran Adedokun: Nigeria too divided to be called a country

 


Niran Adedokun, a public relations practitioner and lawyer, says Nigeria is too divided to be referred to as a country. 

Adedokun spoke on “Book Hour”, a virtual programme organised by Book Sellers, on Saturday.

Speaking on some of the issues raised in “The Danfo Driver in All of Us”, his latest book, the author said Nigerians would be deceiving themselves by claiming they have a country.

He argued that the failure to come to terms with such reality over the years led to the widespread disunity among the various regions that make up Nigeria.

Adedokun cited the opposition of northern governors to the disbandment of the special anti-robbery squad (SARS) in October when youths mostly from the south advocated proscription of the police unit as one of the signs of disunity in the country.

“I truly do not believe we have a country. To be honest, Nigeria is not a country. We are only deceiving ourselves and I think the bulk of our problem is because we don’t accept this reality,” he said.

“You cannot claim that Nigeria is a country in a situation when a region of the country is saying one thing and the other is saying something different. That cannot be a country. A country is defined by people that are united in purpose, know where they are going and what they what they want to achieve.

“Nigeria is not there yet. We don’t have unity, some people want restructuring, others don’t. So, currently, we have confused dreams and aspirations.”

The author said it is unfortunate that past and successive administrations in the country “are not even doing anything to change the trajectory.”

Adedokun added that until concrete measures are taken to address the situation, Nigeria will continue to remain a “mere dream”.

“There is no patriotism or loyalty to the nation. So, we would be lying to ourselves if we claim we have a country. That’s is why I said Nigeria has not attained the status of a country, it is still a dream of some people which does not exist yet,” he added.

The Danfo Driver in All of Us is a compilation of the author’s personal reflections and interventions on a variety of topical national issues between 2013 and 2018.

- THECABLE

Barcelona set to extend Ansu Fati’s contract amidst injury

 


Barcelona are said to be ‘on track’ to reach an agreement with Ansu Fati over a new and improved contract as the 18-year-old leaves the hospital after a surgery on his knee.

Fati picked up the injury during Barcelona’s 5-2 win over Real Betis and is expected to be ruled out for the next four months after going under the knife to repair a tear in his meniscus.

The youngster after an impressive start to the season netted five goals and contributed four assists, giving new head coach Ronald Koeman something to smile about during a tricky start to his tenure.

Despite his injury woes, Marca report that Barcelona have no plan to halt negotiations with Fati’s representatives over a new deal, as they see him not just as an important figure in the first team right now, but also as a star of the future.

Talks between the two parties to extend Fati’s contract, which expires in 2022, are said to have started weeks ago.

The Catalan giants confirmed back in September that his release clause had been raised to a whopping €400m.

Since then, there had been no extension to the length of his deal.

As a result, Barca are working to hand the teenager a deal that is more reflective of his growing importance to the team.

- PM NEWS

€2 million, 600kg of cocaine found in Dutch apartments

 


Officials have found 600 kilograms of cocaine in two apartments in Rotterdam, Netherlands.

The drugs worth approximately 18 million to 24 million euros has been destroyed.

Investigators had noticed men entering the apartments continually, carrying large bags.

The police trailed a suspicious car and found a third apartment.

A man and a woman were caught counting money, supposedly from illegal drug sales.

Authorities have confiscated two million euros, Dutch news agency ANP reports.

The police said four suspects were arrested during operations this week.

- DAILY POST

EPL: Fabregas reveals what Arsenal players think of Arteta

 


Former Arsenal captain, Cesc Fabregas, has spoken about the thoughts of players under Mikel Arteta at the club and claims they are “fascinated” by him.

Arteta replaced Unai Emery at the Emirates in 2019, after two seasons working alongside Pep Guardiola at Manchester City.

The Spaniard has managed to keep most of his squad on his side, with many stars on board with what he is trying to achieve, according to Fabregas.

“They have a new project, I believe what Mikel [Arteta] is doing is nice,” Fabregas told the Daily Mail.

“The players are fascinated by how he came in and changed the training ground, the methodology, how he prepares for games.

“He makes it easier for his teams to understand how to attack, how to defend – I like his ideas, all I’m hearing is positive.”

- DAILY POST

Lekki shooting: We are not happy Sanwo-Olu denied inviting us, says army

 


Ahmed Taiwo, a brigadier general of the Nigerian Army, says the military is not happy that Babajide Sanwo-Olu, governor of Lagos, denied inviting soldiers to restore peace and order in the state.

He stated this while appearing before the Lagos judicial panel on Saturday.

According to Taiwo, Sanwo-Olu called on the military for support on October 20, after the #EndSARS crisis degenerated into chaos.

“I spoke with the governor and said the army was unhappy that he said he did not ask the army to intervene. But I’m sure, after we’ve watched everything, we saw he had more than reasonable grounds to ask he army to intervene,” he said.

“Perhaps, it was the way everything went that made him say so.”

Following the outrage that trailed the Lekki tollgate incident, Sanwo-Olu blamed it on “forces beyond his direct control”.

“This is the toughest night of our lives as forces beyond our direct control have moved to make dark notes in our history, but we will face it and come out stronger,” the governor had said in a statement.

When he featured on CNN one week after the shooting, the governor said the army was responsible for the incident.

The army had denied being responsible while the federal government said it would investigate the tragic incident.

But Sanwo-Olu told CNN: “From the footage we could see, because there were some cameras at that facility, it seems to me that they would be men in military uniform—it should be Nigerian Army or something.”

Asked if he meant the military opened fire on protesters, he said: “Yes. That’s what the footage showed.”

The army later said the governor invited them to restore order after the protest went out of control.

- THECABLE


Why Trump is afraid to leave the White House

 


Donald Trump is the luckiest man alive. Unlike almost, well, everyone, he’s been protected from the consequences of his own mistakes his entire life.

Born into a wealthy family, he was insulated from lukewarm academic prospects and serial business crack-ups by his father’s money. (“I often say that I’m a member of the lucky sperm club,” is how he put it in one of his books.) Emerging as a reality-TV star in the early 2000s, Trump discovered that fame allowed him to be as predatory as he pleased without repercussions. (“When you’re a star, they let you do it.”) And his 2016 ascent to the White House opened his eyes to the presidency’s legal armour — which he interpreted broadly and often inaccurately. (“I have an Article II, where I have the right to do whatever I want as president.”)

Although Trump has over the years juggled, among other difficulties, ho-hum grades, the threat of personal bankruptcy, sexual assault accusations, an intensive federal investigation and an impeachment, he has plowed ahead relatively unwounded and unencumbered by regret. Wealth, celebrity and the presidency have kept him buoyant. All that insulation has also meant that he hasn’t learned from his mistakes. Every personal and public reckoning has been postponed or shunted aside.

Now, however, Trump is staring at two threats that loom after he leaves the White House in January. One is financial, the other legal. Neither is entirely under his control. And both may help explain, along with his perennial inability to accept losing, why Trump won’t acknowledge that President-elect Joe Biden is going to succeed him and why he has enlisted the Republican Party to help him gaslight Americans about the outcome of the presidential election.

Trump and the patchwork of businesses he houses inside the Trump Organization are saddled with more than $1 billion in debt, which Dan Alexander of Forbes has helpfully tallied. A portion of that total has been divulged over the past few years in the president’s personal financial disclosures, on file with the Office of Government Ethics. The New York Times recently revealed that Trump has personally guaranteed at least $421 million of the debt, with more than $300 million coming due within four years.

In other words, Trump is on the hook for a lot of money that he may have to scramble to repay in a Covid-19-battered economy in which his industries — hotels, leisure, urban real estate — have been particularly pummelled. Forbes estimates his assets are worth $3.7 billion; Bloomberg News pegs them at about $3.2 billion. He’s not going broke. But if the economy continues to struggle in coming months, those valuations will be tested. And much of what Trump holds isn’t liquid, meaning he may be hard-pressed to sell assets quickly if he needs to raise funds. Among Trump’s most valuable holdings, for example, are minority stakes in two properties controlled by Vornado Realty Trust. Rumours of fire sales might further depress the value of his portfolio.

Another thing that would weaken Trump’s ability to negotiate sweetheart financial deals or forgiveness: leaving the presidency.

On the legal side of the ledger, Trump, his children and their company face aggressive investigations into their finances, accounting practices and tax payments.

The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office is investigating Trump for possible tax fraud and falsification of business records, according to appellate court filings. In this probe, which is also examining the president’s payment of hush money to two women who allegedly had sexual encounters with him, the DA’s office is seeking eight years of Trump’s tax returns. It is also taking a look at whether Trump inflated the value of his properties and other assets in order to secure funds from lenders and investors.

New York Attorney General Letitia James has launched another investigation, also focused on whether the Trump Organization and the Trump family manipulated valuations to secure funding or engineer tax benefits. James’s probe is a civil case, which could bring hefty financial penalties against Trump but no prison time (unless she finds reasons to recast it as criminal case). Vance’s investigation is a criminal matter, however, and if the Trump crew is found guilty of felonies, prison time is on the table.

Trump’s team has fought back hard against the Vance investigation, including arguing before the U.S. Supreme Court that a sitting president is immune from state criminal prosecutions. While the court rejected that notion in a landmark ruling over the summer, it would become a moot argument in any venue once Trump is no longer president.

A Trump pushed outside the legal moat that surrounds the White House becomes, for the most part, a Trump who can be sued and penalized just as any other American can. That could also give fresh traction to the sexual assault cases against him.

It’s unclear how aggressive law enforcement officials in the Biden administration will be toward Trump. They could resurrect some of the obstruction charges that have gone fallow since former Special Counsel Robert Mueller ended his probe. On the other hand, the political firestorm that could ignite might persuade Biden to hold back.

*First published in Bloomberg on 11 November