Tag: U.S.

  • Convoy attack: U.S Embassy confirms safe recovery of 2 staff

    Convoy attack: U.S Embassy confirms safe recovery of 2 staff

    The United States (U.S) Embassy in Abuja says two of its employees involved in the attack on its convoy in Anambra have been rescued alive.

    The Embassy made this known in a statement made available to journalists on Friday in Abuja.

    The U.S Embassy said that the victims were under the protection of the Nigerian authorities in Anambra.

    The statement said that the U.S government was working intensively to bring to book the perpetrators of the crime.

    According to it, two U.S. Mission employees missing since the May 16 attack in Anambra state are alive and safe, and under the protection of Nigerian authorities in Anambra.

    “We have informed their families of their safe recovery.  U.S. Mission personnel are on their way to meet and accompany them home.

    “We continue to work intensively with the Nigerian security and law enforcement on this matter, to identify the victims previously found, and to bring to justice those responsible for this heinous attack.

    “We welcome any information the public may have in this regard.

    “We are deeply grateful for the partnership and solidarity of the Nigerian government and Nigerian security and law enforcement colleagues and mourn with them for those who died in the attack.”

    Recalled that on May 16, a convoy of a U.S vehicle was attacked by gunmen in Atani, Ogbaru Local Government Area of Anambra State while the team was on a mission.

  • Montana becomes first U.S. state to ban TikTok

    Montana becomes first U.S. state to ban TikTok

    Montana has become the first U.S. state to ban the Chinese-developed social media app TikTok, as its Republican governor Greg Gianforte signed a bill into law on Wednesday.

    “To protect Montanans’ personal and private data from the Chinese Communist Party, I have banned Tiktok in Montana,’’ Gianforte tweeted after signing the bill.

    The new rule prohibits app stores from offering the video-sharing app from Jan. 1, 2024 and prevents TikTok from operating as a business in the state.

    For every day the social media platform is still available, app providers would have to pay a 10,000 dollars fine.

    Users do not face a fine and those who already have the app on their own device are not affected.

    TikTok did not initially respond to the legal change.

    Lawsuits challenging the ban based on the right to freedom of expression are expected.

    Owned by Chinese company Byte Dance, TikTok has already been banned on government-issued devices in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Britain and the U.S., amid cyber security concerns.

    The app has more than a billion users worldwide and is widely used in the U.S. and Europe.

    It is fueling fears that Chinese authorities and secret services might use the app to collect information from users or to spread influence.

    The company has rejected such allegations.

  • Atiku fumes at Blinken’s 20-minute conversation with Tinubu

    Atiku fumes at Blinken’s 20-minute conversation with Tinubu

    The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar has fumed at Anthony Blinken’s phone call to President-elect Bola Tinubu.

    Blinken, who is US secretary of state had a 20-minute phone conversation with Tinubu and pledged his country’s commitment to partner with the incoming administration.

    But in a tweet on Wednesday, Abubakar said Blinken’s call to Tinubu contradicted the US position on the general election.

    “I am in disbelief that Anthony Blinken, US secretary, called Tinubu, a contradiction to the publicly stated position of the US on Nigeria’s 2023 presidential election,” Abubakar wrote.

    “This is inconceivable considering that America, as the bastion of democracy, is well briefed on the sham election of February 25.

    “To give legitimacy to the widely acknowledged fraudulent election in Nigeria can be demoralising to citizens who have hedged their bet on democracy and the sanctity of the ballot.”

  • Gov Soludo make vow against attackers of US embassy staff convoy

    Gov Soludo make vow against attackers of US embassy staff convoy

    Gov. Chukwuma Soludo of Anambra has expressed sadness over the attack on United States embassy staff and Policemen in the state.

    Soludo, in a statement signed by Mr Christian Aburime, his Press Secretary, described the attack as heinous and unprovoked.

    Recall that US Embassy convoy were attacked on Atani-Osamala Road, Ogbaru Local Government Area, leaving two Staff and policemen killed by yet-to-be identified assailants on May 16.

    Soludo said his administration had in the last one year worked very hard with gallant security forces to massively degrade criminality and restore law and order and could proudly assert that Anambra was currently one of the safest states in Nigeria.

    He said the US embassy convoy incident in a remote Riverine community in Ogbaru local government was a reminder that patches of these criminal gangs could still unleash senseless and murderous acts.

    He vowed that the Anambra government would actively work with security agencies to smoke out the criminals and bring them to justice.

    “Only two weeks ago, the dreaded and notorious criminal gang leader, operating mostly in a neighboring state, was gunned down with four of his team members when they made incursions into Anambra and recovered huge deadly weapons.

    “The criminals are largely on the run or feeling the heat of our zero tolerance to criminality.

    “We call on anyone with information on the identity or whereabouts of the criminals to offer the same on our secured security phone numbers or to any of the security agencies and such informants will be handsomely rewarded.

    “We assure our residents and visitors of our continued commitment to law and order. This incident has emboldened our drive,” it said.

    Soludo said it was evident the visiting team made their own security arrangements and totally bypassed the existing security architecture in the state and the state government was not aware of the “humanitarian mission” of the visiting team.

    According to him, in a place like parts of Ogbaru where security forces have been fighting the criminals and oil bunkerers, the sight of few policemen can indeed attract vengeance from the criminal gangs.

    “The Government of Anambra once again, expressed its deepest condolences to the families and loved ones of the victims and reassure the United States Embassy in Nigeria of our unwavering commitment to the safety and security of its officials in the state,” it said.

  • U.S. govt makes revelation on working with president-elect, Tinubu

    U.S. govt makes revelation on working with president-elect, Tinubu

    The U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has assured Nigerian President-elect Bola Tinubu of the U.S. commitment to further strengthening the U.S.-Nigeria relationship with the incoming administration.

    Blinken, in a statement by U.S. State Department Spokesperson Matthew Miller, said he called the President-elect on Tuesday to discuss issues of interest.

    The secretary noted that the U.S.-Nigeria partnership was built on shared interests and strong people-to-people ties and that those links should continue to strengthen under President-elect Tinubu’s tenure.

    He also discussed the importance of inclusive leadership that represents all Nigerians, continued comprehensive security cooperation, and reforms to support economic growth with the president-elect.

    President-elect Bola Tinubu will be sworn-in on May 29, 2023.

  • How gunmen killed, burned bodies of US embassy officials in Anambra

    How gunmen killed, burned bodies of US embassy officials in Anambra

    The Police Command in Anambra State has disclosed how gunmen on Tuesday killed two mobile policemen and two staff members of the U.S Consulate and set their bodies and vehicles on fire.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Command Spokesman, DSP Tochukwu Ikenga, in a statement in Onitsha, said that no U.S citizen was involved in the convoy attacked by gunmen in Ogbaru local government area of the State.

    DSP Ikenga said the command was concerned that such officials will visit the State without recourse to the police in the area or any security agency.

    According to him, a Joint Security Force has, however, embarked on a rescue and recovery operation to track and apprehend the gunmen.

    “Following an attack on a convoy of staff of U.S Consulate around 3:30 p. m. along Atani, Osamale road.

    “The hoodlums murdered two of the PMF operatives, and two staff of the Consulate, and set their bodies ablaze and their vehicles.

    “Also, the arsonist/murderers on sighting the responding joint security forces abducted two Police operatives, the driver of the second vehicle and took to their heels.

    “No U.S citizen was in the convoy”, he said.

    He assured that the battle against insurgents in the state will be sustained until stability is fully restored.

  • U.S. clarifies visa restrictions, refuses to name those affected

    U.S. clarifies visa restrictions, refuses to name those affected

    The United States of America (USA) has further clarified the visa restrictions imposed on certain Nigerian politicians for undermining the democratic process in the 2023 elections.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Vedant Patel, the Principal Deputy Spokesperson for the U.S. Department of State, provided the clarification during a press briefing, where he disclosed “visa records are confidential” and therefore, will not “get into a specific litany of lists”.

    Fielding questions during the press briefing after US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken on Monday first disclosed visa restrictions are being imposed on a number of Nigerians, Patel noted that the restrictions are specific to certain individuals.

    “As you know…, visa records are confidential, so I’m just certainly not going to get into a specific litany of lists, but what I will note is that today’s steps are specific to certain individuals and they are not directed at the Nigerian people nor the Government of Nigeria as a whole,” he said.

    Patel recalled that in February Blinken spoke to this via a statement in which he congratulated Nigerians people and the winners in the 2023 general election.

    “So you might recall that in February the Secretary spoke to this via a statement in which – congratulating the Nigerian people and the winners of that election and calling that election credible, and our viewpoint is that both things can be true.

    “The election can be credible and we congratulated it when it happened, but also, individuals could have attempted to undermine it.  And that’s what today’s designation is about, is the Secretary announcing steps to impose visa restrictions on individuals who we believe were responsible for or complicit in undermining the democratic processes during Nigeria’s 2023 elections,” he emphasized.

    US Secretary of State Blinken in a statement disclosed there were visa restrictions being imposed on a number of Nigerians over undermining the democratic process in the elections this year.

    A number of opposition candidates have challenged the actual validity of the election results and the litigations are presently ongoing at election petitions tribunals set up across the country.

  • Two brothers, friend face extradition, to appear in U.S. court

    Two brothers, friend face extradition, to appear in U.S. court

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) says it has commenced extradition proceedings against three suspects, Samson Ogoshi, his brother, Samuel, and Ezekiel Ejemeh Robert over the exploitation of minors and the production of child pornography.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Ogoshis along with Ezekiel were indicted in a United States Federal Court on December 1, 2022 on charges of exploitation of minors and production of child pornography resulting in death, conspiracy to distribute child pornography and conspiracy to commit stalking through the internet.

    According to investigations, the suspects conspired to conduct sex-based extortion of minors and adults in the United States of America (USA).

    The trio, investigations also revealed, hacked some social media accounts, posing to be young attractive women to entice unsuspecting victims to send their sexually explicit photographs.

    These pictures were then used in blackmailing the victims, thereby forcing them into making huge financial payments.

    Consequently, Samuel Ogoshi is charged with sexual exploitation and attempted sexual exploitation of minors that resulted in the death of one Jordan DeMay, an offence that carries a maximum penalty of life in prison and a statutory mandatory minimum of 30 years in prison.

    The trio are charged with conspiracy to sexually exploit minors by causing them to produce child pornographic images that they used to blackmail them.

    They are further charged with conspiracy to distribute child pornography, which borders on sending images to minors, their families and friends, as well as conspiracy to commit stalking through the Internet. Both offences carry a minimum of five years and maximum 20 years imprisonment.

    While the Ogoshis were arrested sometime in February, 2023 around the Ojo axis of Lagos, Ezekiel was picked up in Nasarawa by operatives of the EFCC.

  • U.S. talk show host Jerry Springer dies at 79

    U.S. talk show host Jerry Springer dies at 79

    Jerry Springer has died at the age of 79, his agent confirmed on Thursday to the PA news agency.

    The U.S. talk show host was best known for The Jerry Springer Show, which ran from 1991 until 2018 in the U.S.

    His series inspired the UK’s The Jeremy Kyle Show, which ran on ITV between 2005 and 2019.

    Springer was a British-born American broadcaster, journalist, actor, producer, lawyer and politician, who served as the 56th Mayor of Cincinnati from 1977 to 1978.

    He was also a political campaign adviser to Robert F Kennedy

  • When the American fox complains about the Mexican dog – By Owei Lakemfa

    When the American fox complains about the Mexican dog – By Owei Lakemfa

    MEXICO has drug cartels which can also be violent. One of the most infamous drug lords, Joaquin Archivaldo ‘El-Chapo’ Guzman, former leader of the Sinaloa Cartel is serving a life sentence in the United States, US. The drug cartels are a problem to Mexico which has other related challenges. First is the seeming insatiable appetite of Americans for drugs which provides a ready market.

    The second is the ceaseless flow of arms from the US to Mexico; some half a million annually, which arms the cartels, and make them difficult to bring down. However, the solution of some American leaders is not to tackle these challenges, but to militarily invade neigbouring Mexico allegedly to take out the drug cartels and cut down insecurity.

    On March 15, 2023, Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene from Georgia tweeted: “Our US military needs to take action against the Mexican cartels.” She was reacting to a claimed explosive device wrapped in duct tape thrown from Mexico, which turned out to be sand. That she was wrong on the alleged explosive did not deter her from the campaign to invade a sovereign country. Two months earlier, 39-year-old Representative Daniel Reed Crenshaw of Texas Second Congressional District and a former Navy SEAL, had introduced a bill to “authorise the use of United States Armed Forces against those responsible for trafficking fentanyl or a fentanyl-related substance into the United States or carrying out other related activities that cause regional destabilisation in the Western Hemisphere.”

    As if on cue, former American Attorney General, William P. Barr in a piece titled: “The U.S. must defeat Mexico’s drug cartels” in the March 2, 2023 issue of the Wall Street Journal thundered: “America can no longer tolerate narco-terrorist cartels. Operating from havens in Mexico, their production of deadly drugs on an industrial scale is flooding our country with this poison. The time is long past to deal with this outrage decisively. Reps. Dan Crenshaw (R., Texas) and Michael Waltz (R., Fla.) have proposed a joint resolution giving the president authority to use the U.S. military against these cartels in Mexico. This is a necessary step and puts the focus where it must be.”

    The next day, Senators Lindsey Graham, South Carolina, and John Kennedy, Louisiana, demanded the US invades Mexico. Graham said: “Drug cartels in Mexico have been terrorising Americans for decades. We are going to unleash the fury and might of the U.S. against these cartels. We are going to destroy their business model and their lifestyle because our national security and the security of the United States as a whole depends on us taking this decisive action (we will) give the military the authority to go after these organisations wherever they exist. Not to invade Mexico. Not to shoot Mexican airplanes down. But to destroy drug labs that are poisoning Americans.”

    Interesting. American politicians want to teach the world how to militarily attack alleged drug laboratories spread across neigbourhoods in a sovereign country without invading the country. It is the classic case of wanting to make omelette without cracking an egg. So what would the Mexicans be doing, watching civilians killed in their homes and in crossfire without coming to the defence of their innocent citizens? Conversely, will the US allow or watch the Mexican military attack alleged drug cartels in America?

    The irony is that the most insecure country in the region, and one of the most insecure in the world is the US. Apart from other violent crimes, in the last 14 weeks, it has witnessed more than 160 mass shootings with each of those taking at least four lives. Just this Saturday, April 15, Alexis Dowdell was holding her Sweet Sixteen Birthday in Alabama. There were rumours that somebody at the party had a gun. The rumours filtered into her home, and her 18-year-old brother Phil, came to get her. LaTonya Allen, her mother also arrived, turned on the lights, went to the DJ booth and announced that whoever had a firearm should leave the party. Since nobody spoke, she turned off the lights to allow the party go on.

    Then, gunfire erupted. Alexis whose brother pushed her down when the guns began to boom said: “All of a sudden you hear gunshots and you just see everybody running towards the door and people falling and screaming.” After the shooting died down, four persons, including her brother, lay dead with 32 injured. Another set of sacrificial lambs for the American gun culture in which for profit, lives and limbs are ceaselessly sacrificed to the gods of the gun industry. To clarify, the overwhelming majority of Americans are against the free flow of arms. In fact, 67 per cent of Americans support a ban on military and assault-style weapons. But they face an overfed war industry that makes huge profits from virtually unrestrained arms trade. So, the populace is forced to go into periodic mourning of children and teenagers, young and old, men and women cut down in the insanity called gun violence.

    The US gun culture is a suicidal one from the country that needs to be saved from itself; America has a population of 331.9 million but with 393 million guns in private hands or 120.5 firearms for every 100 American residents. This is about 46 per cent of the total firearms in civilian hands worldwide. The US military itself, holds 4.5 million firearms. In contrast, China with a 1.412 billion population or four and half times the American population, has 49.7 million guns in private hands. While there are all sorts of gun markets in US, Mexico has only one gun store from which people can buy firearms legally.

    The American campaign to take out drug laboratories in Mexico is a mere camouflage to invade a neighbour it cannot control and whose President Andre Manuel Lopez Obrador is quite popular. It is also an attempt by American companies to seize Mexico’s resources and turn that country into their own market. The Americans have not forgotten that large swaths of their country like Texas and California were taken by force from Mexico. Some of their politicians might be seeking new ways to place their hands on more Mexican territories.

    The fact is that a new world economic and political order is evolving and the American empire might soon lose its dollar, economic, financial and military dominance. Nobody should expect it to go down peacefully and quietly; its establishment would put up a struggle, including overthrowing non-compliant governments and invading other countries. The current campaign to invade Mexico on the excuse that it has violent drug gangs may just be the first step in its attempts to stem the tide of history.