Tag: U.S.

  • U.S. VP Harris accuses Beijing of coercion in disputed sea

    U.S. VP Harris accuses Beijing of coercion in disputed sea

    U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday accused China of coercion and intimidation in the disputed South China Sea.

    “Beijing’s actions continue to undermine the rules-based order,’’ she said while speaking in Singapore.

    China’s sweeping claim to most of the resource-rich sea overlaps with those of several other nations, including Vietnam and the Philippines, a U.S. ally.

    Harris had opened her remarks by saying the U.S. was “laser focused’’ on evacuations from Kabul’s international airport after the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban a week ago.

    “I am fully aware that the eyes of the world are on Afghanistan,’’ she said.

    She described the U.S. withdrawal from the country as a courageous and right decision.

    “We had achieved what we went there to do,’’ she said, doubling down on U.S. President Joe Biden’s justification for the withdrawal.

    In spite of the retreat from Afghanistan, Harris said the U.S. aimed at pursuing a free and open Indo Pacific, based on what she said were her country’s enduring interests in the region.

    Harris arrived in Singapore on Sunday on the first leg of a South-East Asia visit that would also take her to Vietnam on Tuesday.

    Her Asia itinerary was arranged before the Taliban group gained control of Afghanistan just over a week ago and follows Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin’s recent visits to Singapore, Philippines and Vietnam.

    During the visits, Austin had also criticised China’s claim to the South China Sea.

  • Nigeria, US to sign agreement on cultural property trafficking

    Nigeria, US to sign agreement on cultural property trafficking

    The Federal Government and the United States of America have agreed to sign a bilateral agreement stopping illicit trafficking in cultural property and artefacts.

    The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed disclosed this in Washington DC after a closed door meeting with the U.S. Acting Assistant Secretary of State on Education and Culture, Mr Mathew Lussenhop.

    After the meeting, the minister said the agreement which would be signed in Nigeria soon, would expand cooperation between the two countries in the area of cultural property.

    Specifically, the minister said the agreement would prevent stolen artefacts in Nigeria from getting into the U.S. to prevent the harrowing experiences passed through in retrieving looted Benin bronzes from Germany.

    He said the agreement included capacity building for Nigerians and the country was the second in Africa to enter into it with the U.S. after Mali.

    “We agree on the final draft of the MoU which will be ready after vetting by our Ministry of Justice, and anytime soon, there will be a signing ceremony in Nigeria.

    “The agreement is to prevent artefacts and cultural property that people want to illicitly ship to the U.S.

    “In addition to artefact, the agreement also extends to illicit drug trafficking and the FBI is involved,’’ he said.

    Mohammed said that there were few stolen artefacts that Nigeria was expecting mostly from private museums in the U.S.

    “They have invited us and the National Commission for Museum and Monument is working hard on this.

    “In particular, there are about two or three private collectors who had voluntarily surrendered the artefacts which they believed were either illegally trafficked or stolen from Nigeria,’’ he said.

    The minister recalled that he was in Germany in July on the trail of thousands of artefacts looted from Benin Kingdom during the 1897 British expedition.

  • US alerts citizens in Afghanistan of ‘security threats’, tells them to avoid Kabul Airport

    US alerts citizens in Afghanistan of ‘security threats’, tells them to avoid Kabul Airport

    The United States on Saturday urged its citizens in Afghanistan to avoid traveling to the Kabul airport for now, citing “potential security threats” near its gates.

    The warning, posted on the website of the US Embassy in Afghanistan and tweeted by the State Department in Washington, provided no detail on the nature of the threat.

    But conditions outside Hamid Karzai International Airport have been chaotic amid the crush of people hoping to flee the Taliban takeover of the country.

    As thousands of Americans and Afghans wait in the airport for flights or gather outside its gates, there have been “sporadic” reports, confirmed by the Pentagon, of Taliban fighters beating and harassing people trying to flee.

    “Because of potential security threats outside the gates at the Kabul airport, we are advising US citizens to avoid traveling to the airport and to avoid airport gates at this time unless you receive individual instructions from a US government representative to do so,” the US embassy alert said.

  • U.S thrash Serbia to reach Tokyo Olympics women’s basketball final

    U.S thrash Serbia to reach Tokyo Olympics women’s basketball final

    A relieved U.S had no difficulty in thrashing Serbia 79-59 on Friday to reach the final of women’s basketball event at the Tokyo Games.

    The victory helped them to maintain their long unbeaten streak at the Olympics.

    The U.S have won eight of nine Olympic gold medals available since 1984 and are unbeaten at the Games since the last of their three losses came in 1992.

    They will target a seventh straight gold medal, which would equal the men’s best Olympic streak, in Saturday’s final against Japan after the hosts beat France 87-71.

    Serbia never looked like causing an upset and were effectively beaten by the end of a first quarter they trailed by 13 points.

    From then the U.S controlled matters and coasted through.

    Brittney Griner led them in scoring with 15 points, a tally matched by U.S-born Yvonne Anderson playing for Serbia.

    But with no teammate also reaching double figures, Anderson did not have the support offered by U.S players Chelsea Gray and Breanna Stewart as her lonely resistance fell short.

    A victory in the final for the U.S would give Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi their fifth gold medals —— the most ever in Olympic basketball.

    “I think everybody here wants to win gold for them, for us, for everybody that’s started this streak that got us here,” Griner said.

    Japan prevailed over the French with Himawari Akaho top-scoring with 17 points.

    France led 22-14 after the first quarter but the hosts stormed back in the next two.

    It meant they were able to ease off a little and save some energy in the final quarter with the Americans waiting.

    The French will take on Serbia for bronze also on Saturday in Saitama.

    The Serbians also finished third in Rio.

  • Biden calls on New York Governor to resign

    Biden calls on New York Governor to resign

    US President Joe Biden has called on New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo to resign after an investigation found that he had sexually harassed 11 women.

    Biden, at a White House press conference on Tuesday, said he believed the prominent democrat should resign.

    When asked if the governor should be impeached, Biden said, “Let’s take one thing at a time here.“

    “I think he should resign. I understand that the state legislature may decide to impeach, I don’t know that for a fact. I haven’t read all that data,” the president said.

    Biden added that he had not read the report or spoken to Cuomo.

    New York Attorney-General Letitia James released the report on Tuesday, saying at a press conference that Cuomo had “sexually harassed current and former state employees in violation of both federal and state laws.

    The independent investigation found that Cuomo harassed multiple women, many of whom were young women, by engaging in unwanted groping, kisses, hugging and by making inappropriate comments.

    In a video statement following James’s report, Cuomo said that he had not sexually harassed anyone and his actions with the 11 female accusers were portrayed incorrectly due to cultural and generational differences.

    He painted himself as a champion of sexual assault victims, apologising to Charlotte Bennett, one of his accusers, whom the governor said he was trying to help.

    He said he would institute new sexual harassment policies for the state.

    Cuomo also released a report on Tuesday that contains dozens of photos showing him touching and kissing numerous people, including Biden.

    He also included a photo of former President Barack Obama hugging a Hurricane Sandy victim.

    When asked about the use of the photo, Biden said, “I’m sure there were some embraces that were totally innocent, but apparently the attorney-general decided there were things that weren’t.”

  • NAFDAC accuses U.S., EU of ‘persistently rejecting Made in Nigeria food’

    NAFDAC accuses U.S., EU of ‘persistently rejecting Made in Nigeria food’

    The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has called for synergy amongst government agencies to end the rejection of made in Nigeria food products by the U.S and European Union.
    The call was made in a statement signed by the agency’s resident media consultant, Mr Olusayo Akintola, and issued to newsmen in Abuja, on Sunday.
    The statement quoted NAFDAC’s Director General, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, as decrying the persistent rejection of food and agricultural commodities from Nigeria by the two entities on account of poor quality.
    She urged all the regulatory agencies at the port to find a lasting solution, by ensuring Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF) of border rejection by the EU of products originating from Nigeria.
    Adeyeye was speaking on quality and safety of export food trade at a virtual technical roundtable with government agencies like Ministry of Agriculture, Foreign Portfolio Investments (FPIS) and the Standard Organization of Nigeria (SON), among others.
    She lamented the resulting bad image the repeated rejection of commodities from Nigeria by the EU had caused the country, noting that the stakeholders meeting was, therefore, apt.
    The NAFDAC chief executive said that the meeting was apt in view of the volume of food and agricultural commodities from Nigeria that were currently facing challenges at entry points in some European countries and the U.S.
    ‘’ NAFDAC has a statutory responsibility to safeguard public health, through the execution of its mandate, we are charged with the responsibility to regulate and control the manufacture, importation, exportation, distribution and advertisement.
    “We are also charged with the responsibility of monitoring sale, use of food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, bottled and packaged water, chemicals, that were generally referred to as NAFDAC regulated products.’’
    “NAFDAC is designated as World Trade Organization/sanitary and phytosanitary enquiry point in Nigeria on food safety to facilitate international trade, and respond to enquiries on safety standards, regulations, and guidelines on food trade in Nigeria,” she said.
    Nigeria’s products meant for the export market are faced with the presence of contaminants, such as pesticide residues, notoriously dichlorvos and other impurities, exceeding the maximum permitted level, she also stated.
    Some of the products, she noted, also faced the challenges of inadequate packaging and labeling which had caused a lot of product rejections in the global market.
    Adeyeye explained that the international market was competitive in nature and only accepted products of high quality with relevant certifications and quality packaging that was environmentally friendly, to trade globally.
    She stressed the need to address the issue of rejection because the problem of quality, standard, certification, and appropriate packaging for made-in-Nigeria products destined for export had been a recurring issue in the international market.
    NAFDAC had over the years intervened to assist Nigerian exporters meet with international regulations, thereby creating employment and earning foreign exchange for Nigeria, she said.
    Through this intervention by NAFDAC, Adeyeye added, it was agreed that the products be subjected to 100 per cent pre-export testing and issuance of health certificate to products with satisfactory limits before further EU verification at their border control points.
    She also disclosed that NAFDAC had analysed the RASFF alert from the EU and observed that most rejected products by the EU were smuggled out and we’re not certified by the agency nor the Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Services at the ports.
    Adeyeye stated that the issue really called for proper collaboration and synergy amongst all agencies of government, to curb the inappropriate behaviors of some exporters and ensure that only quality and certified products were exported.
    ‘’We need to close the gaps and work together to prevent regulatory gaps being exploited by the unscrupulous traders and their collaborators. There must be a convergence for all regulatory activities.
    “We have to do this, especially at the Ports of Exit, before we begin cleaning up and capacitating the honest operators and traders in the country’’.
    “Based on the RASFF alert received from the EU, she said, NAFDAC had sensitized food processors, handlers and exporters through training programmes, workshops and seminars on the current food safety management requirements.
    “Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP), Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP), Good Hygiene Practices (GHP) and Risk Analysis are crucial to ensure that products are safe and of good quality.
    “To gain consumers’ confidence and acceptability from Nigeria, effective assessments of export products are very key, basic information that may be needed to be considered in the accompanying shipping documents include Certificate of Radiation,” Adeyeye said.
    She called on the participants at the roundtable, especially the MDAs, to be awake to their responsibilities as the nation’s gatekeepers by ensuring the availability of quality-assured, safe, wholesome and efficacious products, stressing that they must always strive hard to meet up with quality, to stop further rejection.
    The NAFDAC director general said that they must converse together, understand one another, agree to work together, and come up with a workplan for whatever we agreed to do and must turn a new leaf for the sake of the country.
    She said that there was need for coordination, cognition, and collaboration between regulatory agencies of the government in order to effectively address the problem faced in the international market.
  • Twitter shuts two largest U.S. offices indefinitely

    Twitter shuts two largest U.S. offices indefinitely

    Twitter has closed its offices in New York and San Francisco following an outbreak of the Delta variant in the US, which has led to a surge in coronavirus cases.

    Its decision to shut the doors of its two largest offices came just two weeks after they reopened, and alongside a pause in reopenings of other Twitter office locations.

    “Twitter has made the decision to close our opened offices in New York and San Francisco as well as pause future office reopenings, effective immediately. We’re continuing to closely monitor local conditions and make necessary changes that prioritise the health and safety of our Tweeps,” a company spokesperson said.

    Fellow tech companies Google and Apple have also delayed a return to office work, with employees largely remaining working from home until October this year.

    A Twitter spokesman told the San Francisco Chronicle that employees who had returned to the office previously were requires to have a vaccinated, while they were also given the option to remain working remotely if they did not want to come in.

    However, the emergence of the Delta variant, which is now the dominant strain in the US, and a change in guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about mask-wearing indoors, prompted the company to announce it was postponing its office reopening.

    Last year, Twitter’s HR chief Jennifer Christie suggested the company would not go back to pre-pandemic working conditions.

    “People who were reticent to work remotely will find that they really thrive that way,,” the Daily Mail reported her saying. “Managers who didn’t think they could manage teams that were remote will have a different perspective. I do think we won’t go back.”

     

  • France hand US first Olympic basketball defeat in 17 years

    France hand US first Olympic basketball defeat in 17 years

    The U.S lost an Olympic men’s basketball match for the first time in 17 years on Sunday when they started the Tokyo Games with a 76-83 loss to France.

    The American team led by eight points at half-time, but the French roared back in the third quarter where Kevin Durant ran into foul trouble.

    The French won the quarter 25-11 and then ended the match with a 16-2 run for an impressive victory after the Americans had briefly regained their composure.

    Evan Fournier led France with 28 points while Jrue Holiday (18) and Bam Adebayo (12) were the best scorers in the U.S team.

    “I mean it’s great, but until we have what we want to have around our neck, it doesn’t really matter,” French player Rudy Gobert from NBA side Utah Jazz said.

    “Every single guy that came in the game brought us something —— with scoring, without scoring on defence, on rebounds. It’s really the team that we want to be and it’s exciting for the rest of the tournament.”

    The last U.S Olympic loss was in the Athens 2004 semi-finals against Argentina.

    The US have won 15 of the 19 gold medals since the sport’s debut at the 1936 Games.

    The American class of 2021 appears not as strong as past U.S sides since professionals joined in 1992, and had lost tune-up games against Nigeria and Australia.

    The other teams in Group A are Iran and the Czech Republic, with the Czechs winning that game 84-78.

    Group B also got going with Germany opening their first Olympic campaign in 13 years with an 82-92 loss to Italy.

    Alba Berlin’s Maodo Lo scored 24 points but Germany, who led for a long spell in the game, eventually fell decisively behind at the arena in Saitama, north of Tokyo.

    “Today is a setback, but we can definitely take motivation for the next game,” said Germany’s Johannes Thiemann.

    Germany, without NBA star Dennis Schroeder for insurance reasons, next face Nigeria who lost 67-84 to Australia.

    Action in Group C and the women’s tournament begin on Monday.

  • BREAKING: Six Super Tucano aircraft arrive Nigeria from U.S.

    BREAKING: Six Super Tucano aircraft arrive Nigeria from U.S.

    The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) on Thursday took delivery of the first batch of six A-29 Super Tucano aircraft from the U.S.
    The Director of Public Relations and Information, NAF Headquarters, Air Commodore Edward Gabkwet, announced this in a statement in Abuja.
    According to Gabkwet, the aircraft arrived Kano, at about 12.34 p.m.
    He added that the officials that received the aircraft included the Minister of Defence, Major.-Gen. Bashir Magashi (Rtd); Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt.- Gen. Faruk Yahaya; and Chief of Air Staf (CAS), Air Marshal Oladayo Amao.
  • U.S. first lady Jill Biden to attend Olympics opening ceremony

    U.S. first lady Jill Biden to attend Olympics opening ceremony

    U.S first lady Jill Biden will attend the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Tokyo on July 23, the White House said on Tuesday.

    Further details will be announced at a later date.

    Her husband, President Joe Biden, is not expected to be at the Games, according to the Washington Post.

    White House spokeswoman, Jen Psaki said last week that Biden supports the Olympics in Tokyo and the protective measures taken there to fight the coronavirus pandemic.

    The announcement of the first lady’s trip to Tokyo comes a few days after local organizers confirmed that spectators won’t be allowed at the Olympic events, due to the rising coronavirus infections and the spread of the highly contagious delta variant.

    Tokyo and neighbouring regions are under a fourth state of emergency that will run provisionally until Aug. 22.