Tag: Sack

  • EPL: Chelsea make Maresca sack decision

    EPL: Chelsea make Maresca sack decision

    Premier League club Chelsea will continue to back incumbent manager Enzo Maresca despite their 1-0 defeat to rivals Arsenal on Sunday and growing frustrations among the fans regarding his style of play.

    According to BBC Sport, the 45-year-old still has a ‘platform to succeed’ at the West London club regardless of their ongoing poor run of form.

    Mikel Merino’s 20th-minute strike was more than enough to ear Mikel Arteta’s side a fairly comfortable 1-0 win at the Emirates, taking them nine points clear of Chelsea in fourth.

    It is emphasised that, unlike last season under Mauricio Pochettino, there is no sense of division behind the scenes or rising concerns about the club’s direction. Those in charge of key decisions remain fully convinced that Maresca is the right person for the job.

    Chelsea were considered early title challengers, rising as high as second before struggling throughout the festive period and the new year, winning just four of their last 13 Premier League games.

    Maresca’s side remain in Champions League contention come the end of the season, although newly crowned Carabao Cup champions Newcastle United sit two points behind them with a game in hand.

    The Italian defended his players after the defeat to Arsenal, suggesting that they ‘controlled the game’, a sentiment that fans didn’t appear to agree with.

    One fan wrote on X, formally known as Twitter,: “We controlled the game”??!! Honestly it’s worrying how deluded he is. Controlling the bits of the pitch with sideways passing doesn’t mean you control the game. We didn’t look threatening at all. Arsenal forced us wide & shut the central areas out comfortably.”

    Chelsea will host Ange Postecoglu’s struggling Tottenham side after the international break as they seek to do a Premier League double over their rivals.

  • USAID contractors sack staff amid Trump Aid cuts chaos

    USAID contractors sack staff amid Trump Aid cuts chaos

    President Donald Trump’s overhaul of U.S. foreign assistance has led to chaos in aid and development, leaving hundreds of contractors in a severe financial crunch.

    Some aid agencies have already  to lay off staff and others are facing millions of dollars in unpaid invoices.

    Upon resumption of office on Jan. 20, Trump ordered a sweeping review of almost all U.S. foreign aid and tasked billionaire Elon Musk, who has falsely accused USAID of being a “criminal” organisation, with scaling down the agency.

    Since then, dozens of USAID staff have been put on leave, hundreds of internal contractors have been laid off, while Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency employees have gutted the agency that is Washington’s primary humanitarian arm, providing billions of dollars worth of aid worldwide.

    Blanket stop-work orders that were issued by the State Department have thrown the aid industry into panic, both at home and abroad as the contractors usually front the costs and then bill the U.S. government.

    For Steve Schmida, co-founder of Vermont-based Resonance, a USAID contractor for many years working in areas such as innovation, fisheries conservation and trade and investment, the issue has become an existential one after the stop-work orders.

    “We had millions of dollars in invoices due to be paid that had been approved by our clients in the U.S. government..We quickly understood that this was a serious threat to our business,” Schmida said.

    He began laying off and furloughing dozens of his staff as he calculated that about 90 per cent of his revenue was about to disappear.

    He said that once he is done, all but about a dozen of his nearly 100 U.S.-based employees will have been impacted.

    “The last 10 days have been the worst 10 days of my professional life,” said Schmida. The funding for some of his projects was granted during the first Trump administration.

    An official at a USAID implementing partner, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to fear of retribution, said the company had to furlough hundreds of U.S.-based staff and were owed over 50 million dollars by the U.S. government in invoices from November and December that are past due.

    Both the official and Schmida said they might have to go to court over the outstanding balances.

    Many of the USAID staff and contractors have expressed shock at how quickly the administration moved to fire people only a few days before their benefits and health insurance expired.

    Rose Zulliger, who worked for the President’s Malaria Initiative as a senior malaria technical advisor while a contractor for USAID, was one of them.

    Zulliger work was terminated last week immediately and her benefits ended a few days later, leaving her scrambling to find insurance before her daughter’s scheduled tonsillectomy in three weeks.

    “It’s not just the personal stress of I’ve lost my job… It’s also the reality that global health as we know it, and the work that we do, saving lives and also protecting Americans.

    “Our work has been put on pause, and the trust and relationships that we have worked so hard (for), that are so integral to the U.S. influence in the global sphere, have all been ruptured,” Zulliger said.

    In fiscal year 2023, the United States disbursed 72 billion dollars of aid worldwide on everything from women’s health in conflict zones to access to clean water, HIV/AIDS treatments, energy security and anti-corruption work. It provided 42 per cent of all humanitarian aid tracked by the United Nations in 2024.

    The funding, less than 1 per cent of its total budget, is instrumental in Washington’s effort to build alliances around the world, reinforce its diplomacy and counter the influence of adversaries such as China and Russia in the developing world.

    Esther Zeledon said she and her husband lost 95 per cent of their income as a result of Trump’s executive orders targeting foreign assistance and diversity measures.

    Zeledon worked part-time as an institutional support contractor for USAID and also had other contracts, while her husband, Paul Rivera, was a full-time institutional support contractor for the agency.

    They are unsure if they will have to move in with Zeledon’s mother and father in a couple of months and have been discussing measures such as taking money from their 401(k) retirement plan to meet payments on continuing expenses.

    “It’s horrible because we had planned our entire year with our finances… there’s so much uncertainty,’’ Zeledon said.

    Earlier on Monday, dozens of USAID staff, contractors and Democratic lawmakers protested outside the agency’s offices in Washington after the staffers were told that the headquarters building would be shut for the day.

    Among the crowd was Amanda Satterwhite, whose job is on hold without pay after she received an order last week to cease her job as an independent contractor, where she identified local groups abroad to which USAID could steer assistance rather than U.S.-based organisations to spend more efficiently.

    Satterwhite said she isn’t certain how she and her husband will make their mortgage payments and she has already begun looking for a new job, because “no one is sure in what state the aid industry is going to return.’’

  • Court shifts judgment in suit seeking Ganduje’s sack as APC chair

    Court shifts judgment in suit seeking Ganduje’s sack as APC chair

    A Federal High Court, Abuja, on Wednesday, shifted the judgment in a suit seeking the removal of Dr Abdullahi Ganduje as National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) to Sept. 23.

    NAN reports that the matter, which was earlier fixed for today, was not on the cause list.

    It was gathered that the parties in the suit had  earlier been reached by the court registrar for a new date because the judgement was not ready.

    “We have already called the parties on phone to inform them of the development. A new date is next week, September 23,” a reliable source said.

    Justice Inyang Ekwo had, on July 5, fixed today (Sept. 18) for the judgment.

    Justice Ekwo fixed the date after counsel to the plaintiff, Benjamin Davou; and lawyers to the defence adopted their processes and made their submission for and against the case.

    The plaintiff; the North Central APC Forum, led by Saleh Zazzaga, had filed the suit to queried the propriety of Ganduje’s appointment as the Chairman of the APC when he is not from the North Central geo-political zone.

    In the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/599/2024, the plaintiff listed Ganduje, the APC and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) as 1st to 3rd defendants respectively.

    The plaintiff wants the court to, among others, restrain Ganduje from further parading himself as the chairman of the APC.

    It also prays the court to issue an order directing INEC not to accord recognition to all actions taken by the APC, including congresses, primaries and nominations, since Ganduje became APC Chairman on August 3, 2023.

    The plaintiff is contending among others, that Ganduje is occupying the office of the APC chairman illegally, not being from a state in the North Central geo-political zone.

    It argued that the National Executive Committee (NEC) of the APC breached the party’s constitution when it appointed Ganduje, from Kano State in the North West geo- political zone to replace Sen. Abdullahi Adamu from Nasarawa State in the North Central geo-political zone.

    It also argued that Ganduje’s appointment to replace Abdullahi was contrary to Article 31.5(1) f of the APC constitution and ultra vires the powers of the NEC of the party, among other reliefs.

  • Mourinho lived like an emperor in Rome – Scarnecchia defends Roma sack

    Mourinho lived like an emperor in Rome – Scarnecchia defends Roma sack

    Former Roma star Roberto Scarnecchia feels it was the right time to dismiss Jose Mourinho.

    Mourinho was axed and replaced by Daniele de Rossi last week.

    Scarnecchia told TMW Radio: “Mourinho arrived with many good intentions, then at a certain point he began to be a manager and no longer a coach and he lost sight of the pitch and the players.

    “He began to make declarations beyond all limits, he pulled the string too much and the string breaks even if your name is Mourinho. The club, after too many negative results, was waiting for him to lose consensus with the fans and after the derby and the match against Milan the fans began to divide and the club decided to sack him.

    “I think there was only Saudi Arabia, I don’t think Mou had offers in Europe. This is the reason for the coach’s many appeals to the club. Probably after Roma he understood that perhaps in Arabia he would not live as an emperor like in Rome, where he could do everything.”

    Tribalfootball

  • NRC sacks, demotes staff for ticket racketeering

    NRC sacks, demotes staff for ticket racketeering

    The Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC), says it has sacked and demoted a number of staff found to have been involved in tickets racketeering.

    Mr Fidet Okhiria, the NRC Managing Director, said this at the interactive session of the House of Representatives Committee on Finance on the 2024–2026 Medium-Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper (MTEF/FSP) in Abuja on Wednesday.

    He said the corporation was working with the security agencies to address the menace.

    Rep. James Faleke, the chairman of the committee, expressed worry over the meager N345 million revenue remitted by the corporation in 2023.

    “Our concern is that if we expect so much revenue from NRC and we aren’t getting it, then there is a problem.

    “I think we should take the decision that the railway should be self-funded to take care of its operations and remit to the government the surplus,” he said.

  • How 5 Chelsea players convinced Abramovich to sack managers – Mikel

    How 5 Chelsea players convinced Abramovich to sack managers – Mikel

    Former Super Eagles John Obi Mikel has opened up on players’ influence on Roman Abramovich to sack managers during his time at Chelsea.

    Ex-Chelsea owner Abramovich hired 12 managers in the 20 years he was the club’s supremo.

    Asked what happens when the players want to get a manager sacked, Mikel told Rio Ferdinand’s Vibe with Five show: “The chat happens between the big guys: JT, Frank, Didier and Petr Cech and a little bit of Ashley [Cole].

    “It’s not like a chat where they go ‘we’re going to go at you’, but the one person we really didn’t like was Rafa [Benitez], because he wasn’t a Chelsea kind of manager, and AVB [Andre Villas Boas].

    “AVB was younger than most of the players, younger than Frank, younger than JT, and for some reason, he stopped playing Frank and Frank didn’t take that well so there was a little bit of a rift.

    “When that happens and you get bad results, players who have been playing but are no longer start talking and the atmosphere was a little bit down, it cycles around and before you know it there is a little bit of talk.

    “They stop talking to the manager, not saying ‘good morning’ and just walk past. That’s how they get their message across. Then Roman comes in, as Roman only speaks to those guys, and once their story has been told to Roman, then Roman makes the decisions which favors the players.”

  • What Man Utd must pay to sack Ten Hag

    What Man Utd must pay to sack Ten Hag

    Manchester United would have to pay a significant sum to sack Erik ten Hag this season.

    The Dutch head coach is struggling to keep his job at the Old Trafford club after a terrible start to the campaign.

    Ten Hag’s United have lost eight of fifteen games in all competitions, as they sit in midtable in the Premier League.

    Per The Athletic, Ten Hag earns around £9 million-a-year, which means they would have to pay off roughly £15 million.

    Ten Hag has around 20 months remaining on his contract with the English giants.

    United are also in the middle of an ownership struggle, with Sir Jim Ratcliffe eager to invest to procure a 25 percent stake in the club.

    Tribalfootball

  • BREAKING: Kogi gov, Yahaya Bello sacks aide, gives no reason

    BREAKING: Kogi gov, Yahaya Bello sacks aide, gives no reason

    Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello on Monday announced the sacking of his Special Adviser (SA) on Stakeholders Relations, Mr Anthony Ogah.

    The sack is contained in a statement issued in Lokoja by Mrs Folashade Arike-Ayoade, Secretary to the Government of Kogi.

    The government said that the sack takes effect from Sunday.

    ”Gov. Bello has issued a directive for the immediate dismissal of Ogah, who served as the Special Adviser to the Governor on Stakeholders Relations.

    “The termination of  Ogah as the special adviser to the governor is effective from Sept. 24.

    *Gov Bello extends his best wishes to Ogah in his future endeavors, ” the state government said.

    No reason was given for Ogah’s dismissal.

    He was instructed to “promptly hand over his identity card and any other government property or documents in his possession to the Permanent Secretary, Administration, in the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the state.”

  • Kano gov sacks Commissioner, Adviser who threatened to kill tribunal judges

    Kano gov sacks Commissioner, Adviser who threatened to kill tribunal judges

    Gov. Abba Yusuf of Kano State on Friday sacked his Commissioner of Lands and Physical Planning, Adamu Kibiya and the Special Adviser on Youths Development, Aliyu Yusuf-Imma.

    The two officials had in a viral video disparage Vice President Kashim Shettima and threatened to kill judges of the state governorship election petition tribunal if they upturn the election of Gov. Yusuf.

    The governor has distanced himself from the “unguarded utterances “, according to the Commissioner for Information and Internal Affairs, Baba Halilu-Dantiye.

    The commissioner said at a press conference at Government House Kano, that the governor had sacked the two officials with immediate effect.

    “Kano State Government has respect for Vice President Kashim Shettima and the judiciary, henceforth no government official should talk on any issue outside his ministry or agency,” Halilu-Dantiye said.

    He urged people of the state to be law abiding and respect rule of law.

    The sacked officials made the threats on Thursday after a special prayer by supporters of the governor for the tribunal judgement to be in their favour.

    The viral video had attracted condemnation across the country with some calling for the arrest and prosecution of the two.

  • Wike a force beyond PDP, sack him at your own peril – Fayose warns

    Wike a force beyond PDP, sack him at your own peril – Fayose warns

    Former Governor of Ekiti State, Ayodele Fayose, has warned the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, against sacking the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Nyesom Wike, from the party.

    Fayose issued the warning while appearing on Channels Television’s Hard Copy.

    He stated that Wike is a force beyond the party.

    According to Fayose: “The moment I am not in the PDP, I would never join another political party. And I would never be a member of the APC – not whether they are good or bad.

    “Some people say fight Wike, expel Wike, sack Wike. I think they do that at their own peril. You see, the first thing in your family, even when you have extreme situations or indifferences, is not to drive away your wife or husband.

    “Wike is a force in the PDP and beyond PDP, a force you cannot ignore, ignore Wike, sack Wike, or fight Wike at your own peril. He is a man of capacity.”

    There have been calls for the PDP to expel Wike from the party following his decision to support President Bola Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress, APC, during the last presidential election.

    Recently, the new Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, had declared that nobody can expel him from the former ruling party.