Tag: U.S.

  • NiDCOM urges Nigerians in Ukraine to remain calm

    NiDCOM urges Nigerians in Ukraine to remain calm

    The Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM) on Sunday called on Nigerian citizens living in Ukraine to remain calm, amid growing fears that Russia could invade Ukraine.

    The call is contained in a statement by Mr Gabriel Odu, a Media, Public Relations, and Protocol Officer at NiDCOM.

    The statement made it clear that Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, the Chairman/CEO of NiDCOM had earlier urged Nigerians in Ukraine to be calm and security conscious in view of the strained relations between Ukraine and Russia.

    “Dabiri-Erewa has assured that the Nigerian Embassy in Kiev, Ukraine is doing all it can to ensure the safety and security of all Nigerians in that country.

    “The NiDCOM boss also urged Nigerian citizens in Ukraine to visit the embassy’s website and duly follow the registration processes.

    “Meanwhile a statement from the Nigerian Embassy in Kiev has further provided information and necessary action with regards to emergencies and concerns,” the stayement quoted Dabiri-Erewa as saying.

    Meanwhile, U.S. President Joe Biden has announced the increase of U.S. troops in Europe to strengthen North Atlantic Treaty Organisation’s (NATO’s) eastern flank as a response to the build-up of Russian troops near the Ukrainian border.

    A total of 1,700 troops will be redeployed from the U.S. to Poland, while a further 300 troops are to be sent to Germany.

    In turn, some 1,000 U.S. troops currently stationed in Germany will be redeployed to Romania, which shares a border with Ukraine.

  • U.S. threatens to shutdown gas pipeline project if Russia invades Ukraine

    U.S. threatens to shutdown gas pipeline project if Russia invades Ukraine

    The U.S. government is once again threatening Russia with the shutdown of the German-Russian Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline in the event of an invasion of Ukraine.

    U.S. President Joe Biden’s National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan issued the threat in an interview with broadcaster NBC on Sunday.

    “If Russia invades Ukraine, one way or another Nord Stream 2 will not move forward and Russia understands that we [have] co-ordinated with our allies,” Sullivan said.

    Asked if German Chancellor Olaf Scholz would publicly pledge such a measure during his inaugural visit to Washington on Monday, Sullivan said: “I’ll let the German chancellor speak for himself.”

    Doubts over the trans-Atlantic alliance have emerged in part due to Berlin’s adherence to the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project with Russia, which the U.S. and Eastern European nations have strongly criticised.

  • Russians, not Ukrainians should brace up for attack – By Owei Lakemfa

    Russians, not Ukrainians should brace up for attack – By Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa

    The United States, US, and its European allies have, for months now, saturated the world and choked the media on a poorly dramatised soap opera about Russia on the verge of ‘invading’ Ukraine.

    In this, they have succeeded in diverting the attention of humanity from pressing issues like tackling the Omicron variant of COVID-19, growing hunger and poverty made worse by the pandemic, the ongoing genocide in Yemen, shortage of safe drinking water, climate change, the spread of terrorism across Africa, including an epidemic of coups in its West African region.

    I knew the “Russians are coming” cry was a false alarm but thought it better to wait for the expected meeting of the United Nations Security Council where, if it existed, irrefutable evidence will be presented to the world. But when all that happened at the January 31, 2022 meeting was a shouting match between the US and Russia, I knew I was right all along.

    I had reached that conclusion based on four premises. First, is that the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, NATO, and its members, especially the US had for months made a claim of having irrefutable evidence of Russia on the verge of invading Ukraine, without providing any shred.

    Secondly, it does not make sense for Russia to amass troops on its borders with Ukraine for months with the intention of carrying out an ‘imminent’ invasion. My take is that it should not take Russia more than a day or two to invade its neighbour.

    When the US in 1983 decided to invade Grenada which is 2,424 miles away, it took only two days, and that was even with a coalition of six Caribbean countries, and the invasion had to be through the sea! If Russia were for months to amass troops for an ‘imminent invasion’, for how long will the invasion take place? Africans say if it takes a man 20 years to prepare for madness, for how long does he intend to be mad? Thirdly, the propaganda gives the impression that war may break out in Ukraine when, in truth, there has been war in that country since 2014 with over 14,000 persons killed.

    In that war, the US and NATO support the government in Kiev, while the Russians support the rebels in the East. Fourthly, it does not make sense that the same NATO that has for eight years now claimed Russian troops are fighting in the Donbas Region of Ukraine, to claim Russian troops want to invade Ukraine.

    In other words, if Russian troops, according to the US, have been fighting in Eastern Ukraine since 2014, why does Russia need to ‘invade’ Ukraine when all it needs to do is push towards Kiev?

    Perhaps NATO has been silent about the Civil War in Ukraine partly because it is more a case of its ally rejecting Western democracy and relying on violence and non-constitutional means to attain power or change government. The Ukrainian crises began in 2004 when Viktor Yanukovych from the East won the presidential election. But some pro-West Ukrainians refused to accept his victory as he was seen as pro-Russian. Mass protests erupted, especially in Kiev.

    It was christened the Orange Revolution. The election was upturned and in the new election, the rival candidate, Viktor Yushchenko, was declared winner. In the 2010 presidential election, again Yanukovych won.

    This time, his electoral victory was accepted. But four years later, when his government decided to sign a trade agreement with Russia rather than the European Union, Ukrainians mostly in the Kiev region protested, killing over 100 persons. President Yanukovych was overthrown in a coup. The angry Eastern populace which was witnessing the second unconstitutional move against a leader from their region, declared themselves independent and took up arms. Half the Ukrainian troops in that region, joined the rebel army. This led to the on-going Ukrainian Civil War.

    The current cries by NATO stems from Russia’s position that Ukraine should not join NATO as it would endanger its security. Some can argue, and quite logically too, that Russia has no right to challenge the sovereign decision of Ukraine to join NATO. But, just as Ukraine can claim to have a right to join NATO, does Russia also have a right to protect its own sovereign interests and security?

    There is a decided case on such matters involving the US and Russia, the successor country to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, USSR. After Cuban youths on January 1, 1959 overthrew General Fulgencio Batista, the US decided to overthrow the new order. Its forces, including Cuban exiles and its Central Intelligence Agency, CIA, invaded Cuba from April 17-20, 1960 in what became known as the Bay of Pigs Invasion. The Cubans won, and a humiliated President John F. Kennedy decided on a more comprehensive attack: ‘Operation Mongoose’.

    The Cubans appealed to the USSR for support and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in July 1962 agreed to supply Cuba missiles to deter further American invasions. However, President Kennedy would not have any of this as Cuba is just 95 miles away. He threatened to invade Cuba unless the missiles were removed saying: “If Cuba should ever…become an offensive military base of significant capacity for the Soviet Union, then this country will do whatever must be done to protect its own …”.

    Given this threat of a Third World War, Khrushchev told Kennedy: “I think you will understand me correctly if you are really concerned about the welfare of the world. Everyone needs peace: both capitalists, if they have not lost their reason, and, still more, Communists, people who know how to value not only their own lives but, more than anything, the lives of the peoples…if indeed war should break out, then it would not be in our power to stop it, for such is the logic of war. I have participated in two wars and know that war ends when it has rolled through cities and villages, everywhere sowing death and destruction.”

    As compromise, the missiles were removed from Cuba while the US pledged never to invade Cuba and also agreed to remove its own missiles in Turkey which shared borders with USSR. Yes, Cuba, like Ukraine, has sovereignty, but it had to give up the missiles. I am convinced that the US would not accept neighbouring Mexico enter into a military coalition with Russia which would enable it have Russian troops and weapons in its territory.

    America is sending more troops to the Russian zone, including 1,000 moved from Germany to Rumania and 2,000 troops from North Carolina to Poland which shares boundaries with Russia. So, it is Russia, not Ukraine that should brace up for attack.

  • 2023: U.S. based Nigerian female activist gets endorsement to run for president

    2023: U.S. based Nigerian female activist gets endorsement to run for president

    An activist and former Commissioner for Women Affairs in Washington DC in the U.S., Dr Carol Nwosu has been given endorsement by some women groups to run for the presidency of Nigeria.

    Nwosu received the endorsement at a ceremony held at Ado in the Karu Local Government Area of Nasarawa State on Saturday, where she received the traditional title of “Udemba – The People’s Ambassador’’.

    The title was given to her by the Eze Igbo of Ado Kingdom, Igwe Ochendo Chukwudi, who described Nwosu as a consummate politician, grassroots activist and nationalist, whose services would be needed in Nigeria at a time like now.

    He called on women in the country to rise to the challenge of leadership in the country by participating in politics and supporting each other to make the difference and give Nigeria a sense of direction.

    Chukwudi said that Nwosu had shown consistency in her political career, urging Nigerians to look beyond the APC and PDP in choosing the next president to pilot the affairs of the country in the next political dispensation.

    In her remarks after receiving the honour, Nwosu pledged that she would use her experience and international connections to mobilise men and women in Nigeria to work for a united and indivisible nation.

    She said she was ready and able to serve Nigeria at the highest level of leadership, noting that she was no stranger to international politics and the politics of Nigeria, where she said she had made her mark over the years.

    The activist said that she was passionate about building a united, peaceful and progressive Nigeria, where women would have a voice and where everyone would benefit from the ethos of equity, justice and fair play.

    She said the title bestowed on her would encourage her to fight for the recognition of women and to give them their pride of place in the politics of the country.

    “This title has made me not only a member of the palace but a warrior in and bearer of peace to all Nigerians.

    “I will ensure that I contribute immensely to unifying different ethnic nationalities and I will always push for peaceful co-existence among the different ethnic groups and religions in Nigeria.

    “I will do my best to advance the cause of women in Nigeria. I did exactly that when I was a Commissioner of Women Affairs in the U.S. I will replicate here in my country,’’ she said.

    Nwosu has held several positions in the U.S. bureaucracy, where she also made her mark in international engagements and negotiations.

    She was the founder of Nigerians in Diaspora Integrated Agency, which later translated into the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission.

    In 2002, Nwosu successfully organised the first Nigeria and U.S. Economic and Democratic Summit in Washington DC.

    In 2014, she negotiated with King Goodwill Zwelithni of Zululand in South Africa on the xenophobic attacks on Nigerians and other Africans in South Africa, to bring the attacks to an end.

    In the year 2000, Nwosu single handedly facilitated the release of over 1,000 Africans, 420 of whom were Nigerians, who were stranded in Ghana after being deported from various countries.

    She also through diplomatic engagements, saved the lives of some Nigerians facing death penalty in Indonesia for drug-related offences.

  • 75-year-old man returning from U.S. dies on arrival at Lagos Airport

    75-year-old man returning from U.S. dies on arrival at Lagos Airport

    A 75-year-old man (name withheld) has died at the Lagos Airport in Nigeria’s commercial capital.

    The man arrived in the country on Monday via the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos aboard a flight operated by Delta Air from the United States of America.

    According to reports, the man died shortly after the aircraft touched down and taxied to the finger for passengers to disembark and move into the airport terminal.

    Airport sources said the deceased passenger was suspected to have suffered a prolonged underlining ailment before embarking on the flight.

    The sources said the reactions of his family members who came to receive the corpse showed they suspected that he would be brought to the country dead.

    His remains were said to have been deposited in a hospital morgue.

    No further detail has been obtained from the airline regarding the development.

  • Two-year old son shoots dad to death

    Two-year old son shoots dad to death

    A Georgian man was shot dead by his two-year old son after the child found the loaded handgun inside their home, police said.

    Dustin Walters, 25, was found by police after they responded to reports of a shooting at his Savannah home at about 5:30 p.m. on Dec. 5.

    Walters was rushed to a hospital suffering from a gunshot wound, but he later died of his injuries. A preliminary investigation has since found that Walters’ son fired the fatal gunshot, police revealed this week.

    Cops said the child was under 2 years old.

    Walters is survived by his partner, Tori Pippin, and their only son, Mars, according to his obituary.
    Police have not released any information on how the child was able to access the gun, or whether it was in a secure location.

    “As a parent, I cannot imagine what this family is going through or will continue to go through in the coming years,” Savannah Police Chief Roy Minter said in a statement.

  • Russia orders U.S. diplomats living in Moscow over 3years to leave

    Russia orders U.S. diplomats living in Moscow over 3years to leave

    The staff of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow living in Russia for over three years must leave the country by January 31, 2022.
    Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, said on Wednesday following the U.S. move to order Russian diplomats out of the country.

    Russian Ambassador to the United States, Anatoly Antonov, said on Sunday that 27 Russian diplomats would leave the country on Jan. 30.

    The Department of State said that the order for diplomats to leave is not an expulsion.

    It said that Moscow can assign other diplomatic members instead of those departing ones.

    “We regard the American demand precisely as expulsion and intend to react accordingly.

    “By Jan. 31, 2022, U.S. embassy officials who have been in Moscow for over three years must leave Russia if the U.S. does not compromise on

    Russian diplomats, another group of their diplomats will leave Russia by July 1,’’ Zakharova said during a press conference.

  • U.S. tightens COVID-19 travel rules as countries race to quell Omicron threat

    U.S. tightens COVID-19 travel rules as countries race to quell Omicron threat

    Air travellers to the United States (U.S.) will face tougher Coronavirus (COVID-19) testing rules as several countries moved to seal-off their borders amid growing uncertainty around the virulence of the Omicron variant.

    The Omicron variant has the ability to dodge existing vaccines.

    In Asia-Pacific, Hong Kong and Japan said they would expand travel curbs, while Australia was bracing for more Omicron cases after at least two people visited several locations in its biggest city while likely infectious.

    In an attempt to stave off hasty global border restrictions, the World Health Organisation called on countries to apply “an evidence-informed and risk-based approach” to travel measures.

    Blanket travel bans will not prevent the spread, and they “place a heavy burden on lives and livelihoods”, the WHO said.

    More than 50 countries were reportedly implementing travel measures aimed at potentially delaying import of Omicron as of Nov. 28, the WHO added.

    Investors remained on edge on Wednesday, even as financial markets came off lows plumbed a day earlier following remarks by the CEO of Moderna that raised questions about the efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines against Omicron.

    Global health officials have since sought to offer reassurances and reiterated calls for people to get vaccinated.

    “Even if the new variant becomes more widespread, the vaccines we have will continue to provide protection,” European Medicines Agency Executive Director Emer Cooke said.

    Echoing remarks by vaccine maker BioNTech and scientists, Cooke said laboratory analyses should indicate over the next two weeks whether the blood of vaccinated people has sufficient antibodies to neutralise the new variant.

    BioNTech’s CEO said the vaccine it makes in a partnership with Pfizer would likely offer strong protection against severe disease from Omicron.

    The World Health Organisation classified Omicron as a “variant of concern,” due to the number of mutations that might help it spread or evade antibodies from prior infection or vaccination.

    First reported in southern Africa a week ago, Omicron has triggered global alarm, led to travel bans, and highlighted the disparity between massive vaccination pushes in rich nations and sparse inoculation in the developing world.

  • US court sentences Nigerian to 7 years Imprisonment over scam targeted at women

    US court sentences Nigerian to 7 years Imprisonment over scam targeted at women

    …to forfeit over $440k

    A federal judge in Pennsylvania has sentenced a Nigerian man, Jabin Godspower Okpako, to more than seven years in prison for conspiring to launder approximately $1.89 million in mail and wire fraud proceeds in a scheme that targeted women.

    The United States Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Pennsylvania announced that Okpako, 36, was sentenced on November 23, 2021, by U.S. District Court Chief Judge Matthew W. Brann.

    According to United States Attorney John C. Gurganus, Jabin Okpako and his wife, codefendant Christine Bradley Okpako, age 54, of Sayre, Pennsylvania, received approximately $1,898,046 million in proceeds from a mail and wire fraud scheme, laundered the funds through numerous bank and wire transactions in multiple states, and transferred the funds out of the United States to three separate bank accounts in Nigeria.

    The mail and wire fraud scheme sought to defraud multiple female victims throughout the United States, ranging in age from 55 to 85.

    The victims had visited online game, relationship and dating web sites, including Instagram, Facebook, Words with Friends, and What’s App.

    The conspirators, located in the United States and West Africa, befriended the victims through interaction and exchanges of photos on the web sites via text and instant messaging.

    After cultivating online relationships with the victims, the conspirators fraudulently induced the victims to send and transmit funds for various fictitious reasons and purposes, including to assist a worker in Alaska who fell from a tower, to purchase an apartment in Washington, D.C., to assist the United Nations, to repair machinery and equipment on an oil drilling rig, to pay for medicine, to recover a $6 million inheritance, and to make an investment in gold.

    After fraudulently inducing the victims to provide funds for these fictitious reasons, the unindicted conspirators instructed the victims to transmit checks and cash to Okpako and Bradley at their residence in Sayre, Pennsylvania.

    In sentencing Okpako, Chief Judge Brann stated that Okpako and his wife continued to transfer fraud proceeds to Nigeria even after numerous banks closed their accounts based on the suspicious and irregular nature of the transactions.

    Chief Judge Brann also noted that Okpako and his wife continued to conduct money laundering transfers despite receiving a warning letter from the FBI concerning their activities.

    Chief Judge Brann ordered Okpako to make restitution in the amount of $440,950 to victims and forfeit proceeds of the criminal activity.

  • Biden taps into U.S. strategic petroleum reserve to lower cost of gas

    Biden taps into U.S. strategic petroleum reserve to lower cost of gas

    President Joe Biden has authorized release from the strategic petroleum reserve of the United States of America (USA) in order to lower the cost of gas in his country.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Biden authorized the Department of Energy to make available releases of 50 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to lower gas and oil prices for Americans.

    “Today I’m announcing action to lower the cost of gas and oil for American families. The Department of Energy will make available releases of 50 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to lower gas and oil prices for Americans.

    “I have been working with countries across the world to address the lack of supply. As a result of our diplomatic efforts, this step will be taken in parallel with other major energy consuming nations including China, India, Japan, Republic of Korea and the United Kingdom,” Biden said.

    Facing rising consumer discontent ahead of Americans hitting the road for the Thanksgiving holiday, Biden called it the “largest-ever release” when announcing the action in remarks on Tuesday.