Tag: US

  • [Video]IRT Commander Tunji bags silver medal in US Judo Championship

    [Video]IRT Commander Tunji bags silver medal in US Judo Championship

    The Nigerian Police Force Intelligence Response Team Commander, Tunji Disu, has won a silver medal at the US Open Judo Championships held in the United States.

    He won the medal in the Veteran Judo Fighter category on Sunday, July 31, during the 33rd US Open Judo Championships held in the United States.

    He competed among other Judokas, most especially world number One, Woods Glen of the United States to achieve the feat.

    The Super-Cop who heads the renowned crime-bursting department, Intelligence Response Team (IRT) has been active in Judo over the years, despite his tight engagement.

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  • Robert Lewandowski joins Barca teammates in US

    Robert Lewandowski joins Barca teammates in US

    Robert Lewandowski is in the US today to join his new Barcelona teammates.

    Bayern Munich accepted Barca’s offer for the Pole on Saturday.

    “I am here to help Barça get back to the top and win as many titles as possible,” said Lewandowski today upon touching down in the US.

    “I’m finally here. I am very happy to be at Barça. The last days have been long, but in the end the agreement has become a reality. I am ready to face this new challenge in my career. I am a guy who likes to win matches and titles. I hope that the season starts and ends well in this sense.

    “I have always wanted to play for a great club in LaLiga and this is a great opportunity for me. It is also a challenge for my private life.

    “It was easy to make the decision. I want to play and win titles and I know that with Xavi this will be very possible. He knows perfectly how to lead Barça. He was an amazing player and now he is a great coach. He has a great future and I want to be part of it.

    “I am a footballer who always wants to win. We have great players, with a lot of quality, in the squad. I am excited about what we can all achieve together.”

  • Late Alaafin of Oyo’s wife dies in US

    Late Alaafin of Oyo’s wife dies in US

    One of the wife to late Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi, Olori Kafayat is dead.

    She died barely two months after the death of the Alaafin.

    Olori Kafayat, who was the fourth Olori of the late traditional ruler, reportedly gave up the ghost on Friday night in the United States of America.

    She was the mother of Prince Adebayo Adeyemi, who is the chairman of the Oyo State Local Government Pensions Board.

    Details of her death, however, remain sketchy as of the time of filing this report.

    Oba Adeyemi died on April 22, 2022, at Afe Babalola University Teaching Hospital, Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital.

    He joined his ancestors at the age of 83.

    Another Alaafin is yet to ascend the throne after the demise of Oba Adeyemi.

  • US eulogize INEC over conduct of Ekiti Governorship poll

    The United States Mission in Nigeria has praised the Independent National Electoral Commission(INEC) for its effort in conducting a very peaceful and rancour free governorship election in Ekiti state.

    The U.S Mission in Lagos made this known in a statement made available to Newsmen in the state on Thursday evening.

    Recall that INEC declared the All Progressives Congress (APC) Candidate, Mr Biodun Oyebanji, winner of the election.

    According to the mission, INEC’s efforts helped to facilitate a secure election with a credible outcome.

    “We note the election’s technical improvements including that the newly adopted Bi-modal Verification Accreditation System (BVAS) functioned properly in the vast majority of polling stations,” it stated.

    The mission also encouraged all citizens of Nigeria to register to vote as the country moved towards national elections in 2023.

  • How JP Morgan argued to win $1.7 billion case against Nigeria

    JP Morgan Chase has won a $1.7 billion London High Court battle against Nigeria over its role in a disputed 2011 oilfield deals involving energy majors Shell and Eni.

    Nigeria had filed a lawsuit against U.S. bank JP Morgan Chase at a London high court in February, claiming more than $1.7 billion as damages.

    The trial opened with Nigeria’s lawyer Roger Masefield alleging that JP Morgan was “grossly negligent” in its decision to transfer funds paid by the energy majors into an escrow account to a company controlled by the country’s former oil minister Dan Etete instead of into government coffers.

    According to Masefield, the transactions put JP Morgan in breach of its Quincecare duty, which obliges banks to disregard a customer’s instructions if following those instructions might actually facilitate a fraud against that customer.

    “Under its Quincecare duty, the bank was entitled to refuse to pay for as long as it had reasonable grounds for believing its customer was being defrauded,” Masefield said.

    The damages sought include cash sent to Etete’s company Malabu Oil and Gas, around $875 million paid in three instalments in 2011 and 2013, plus interest, taking the total to over $1.7 billion.

    But a London High Court judge said no such breach took place in a ruling published on Tuesday.

    JP Morgan’s counsel Paul Erekoro, argued that the allegations against it were “baseless and false” and denied any complicity in the case.

    The bank said that it did not breach the Quincecare duty, neither did it act with gross negligence as claimed by the Nigerian government.

    Erekoro said that release of Malabu’s claims over OPL 245 was a vital part of the transaction, because without this Shell and Eni would not have been prepared to take on the block, and it would therefore have continued to languish in an unproductive state.

    “The Resolution Agreements were subject to detailed scrutiny by a large number of senior ministers and officials within the FGN, most of whom are not accused of any wrongdoing

    “The agreements were personally approved by President Jonathan, and represented the policy of his administration.

    “JPMC agreed to provide the Depository Account for this purpose, and charged a fee of $25,000 for its services. Its role was thus intended to be discrete and limited,” the bank said.

    A spokesman for the bank said in a statement on Tuesday, that the judgment “reflects our commitment to acting with high professional standards in every country we operate in, and how we are prepared to robustly defend our actions and reputation when they are called into question”.

    Brief Background

    The London case dates back to 1998 when Nigerian military ruler Sani Abacha awarded the offshore oilfield licence, OPL 245, to a company Etete owned.

    The $20 million price tag – of which Etete paid about $2 million, according to court documents – was widely viewed by industry experts as too low given the block was expected to yield billions of dollars of crude, although it remains undeveloped.

    Subsequent Nigerian administrations contested Etete’s rights to the field, triggering years of legal wrangling until a deal designed to end the battles was struck in 2011.

    Etete’s company Malabu Oil and Gas handed the undeveloped OPL 245 back to Nigeria as part of a resolution agreement involving Shell and Eni.

    To complete the deal, Shell and Eni also paid a signature bonus of about $200 million directly to the Nigerian government and then deposited $1.1 billion in the Nigerian government’s escrow account with JP Morgan, court documents showed.

    A report by the anti-corruption group, Global Witness, released in November 2018, said that Shell and Eni’s deal for Nigeria’s OPL 245 oil block reduced Nigeria’s expected revenue by nearly $6 billion.

    The report urged Nigeria to revoke the OPL 245 licence rather than allow the oil companies to make enormous profits from the deal.

  • US journalist killed In Ukraine

    US journalist killed In Ukraine

    As the hostilities between Ukraine and Russia rages on, Brent Renaud, a United States journalist, was gunned down in Irpin, a frontline northwest suburb of Kyiv, capital of Ukraine, on Sunday.

    Renuad was shot dead in the ongoing war between Ukraine and Russia.

    The head of police in the Kyiv region said Renaud had been killed and another journalist wounded by Russian forces in Irpin, east of the capital.

    “The invaders cynically kill even journalists of the international media who try to show the truth about the atrocities of Russian troops in Ukraine,” Andriy Nebitov wrote on Facebook.

    “Of course, the profession of a journalist is a risk, but US citizen Brent Renaud paid his life for trying to highlight the aggressor’s ingenuity, cruelty and ruthlessness.

    In a statement published on social media, New York Times deputy managing editor Cliff Levy said the publication was “deeply saddened” to learn of Mr Renaud’s death, who he described as a “talented photographer and filmmaker”.

    Though Mr Renaud had contributed to the Times previously, he had not been on assignment for the publication in Ukraine.

    “Early reports that he worked for Times circulated because he was wearing a Times press badge that had been issued for an assignment many years ago,” a statement he shared from a New York Times spokesperson said.

    According to his social media pages, Mr Renuad had been documenting the plight of refugees in the country.

    He and brother Craig Renaud “have spent the last decade telling humanistic verite stories from the world’s hot spots,” according to their website, with their work spanning HBO, NBC, Discovery, PBS and Vice News.

    This includes covering “the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the earthquake in Haiti, political turmoil in Egypt and Libya, the fight for Mosul, extremism in Africa, cartel violence in Mexico, and the youth refugee crisis in Central America.”

    A military base in Yavoriv, near the Polish border, was hit during a Russian missile attack killing at least 35 people and wounding 134 others this morning, Ukrainian authorities said.

  • U.S. urges Americans in Ukraine to leave country

    U.S. urges Americans in Ukraine to leave country

    The U. S. has again urged its citizens in Ukraine to leave the country immediately amid alleged threats of Russian military action, the U,S. State Department said in a travel advisory.

    “Do not travel to Ukraine due to the increased threats of Russian military action and COVID-19 and those in Ukraine should depart now via commercial or private means.

    “If remaining in Ukraine, exercise increased caution due to crime, civil unrest and potential combat operations should Russia take military action some areas have increased risk,” the advisory said.

    On Jan. 23, the state department authorised evacuation of U.S. diplomats’ family members and of direct hire employees.

    The department also recommended that U.S. citizens, who were present in Ukraine should consider departing right away due to unpredictable security situation.

    Earlier in February, Ned Price, State Department spokesperson says it is estimated that some 6,600 U.S. citizens permanently live in Ukraine in October, while some news outlets reported that there are at least 30,000 Americans in the country.

  • [Trending video]: Woman gives birth on flight from Ghana to US

    [Trending video]: Woman gives birth on flight from Ghana to US

    In a trending video that has gone viral, a woman was delivered of a baby while on flight from Ghana to the United States.

    The video which was shared by Media personality and author, Nancy Adobea Anane, on her Instagram page saw the woman and her baby in good health.

    According to Anane, the child who was due to be born in February decided to arrive 34,000 ft above sea level.

    Thankfully, there was a Ghanaian practicing in the USA, Dar. Ansah-Addo onboard the same flight and with his help and the whole United crew, a bouncy baby boy was born.

    “On board @united Flight UA 977 today, a lovely baby boy was born.

    “The baby Who was due late February decided to arrive 34,000 ft above sea level.

    “Dr. Ansah-Addo a Ghanaian practicing in the USA made himself available when the pilot called for assistance of medical personnel on board.

    “With assistance from the whole United crew, a bouncy baby boy was delivered 2hours to landing.

    “The flight was met on arrival by paramedics upon landing at the Washington Dulles international airport.

    “The baby and his mother GG are currently under medical care,” she said.

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  • PHOTOS: US woman delivers set of twins ‘2 years apart’

    PHOTOS: US woman delivers set of twins ‘2 years apart’

    A US woman, based in California, known as Fatima Madrigal has given birth to a set of twins ‘two years apart’.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Madrigal gave birth to the twins at Natividad Medical Center in Salinas, California.

    Baby Aylin Yolanda Trujillo was born exactly at midnight in 2022, but her twin brother, Alfredo Antonio Trujillo was born 15 minutes before in 2021.

    Alfredo was born at 11:45 p.m. on Dec. 31, 2021 while his sister, Aylin, entered the world at exactly 12 midnight of Jan. 1, 2022.

    Although fraternal twins Alfredo and Aylin Trujillo were only born 15 minutes apart, they have two different birth years.

    This makes their birthdays not just fall on different days, but in different months and years.

    “It’s crazy to me that they are twins and have different birthdays. I was surprised and happy that she [Aylin] arrived at midnight,” the twins’ mother, Madrigal said.

    The hospital said that twins with different birthdays are rare, adding that the chance of twins being born in different years is one in two million.

    “This was definitely one of the most memorable deliveries of my career… It was an absolute pleasure to help these little ones arrive here safely in 2021 and 2022. What an amazing way to start the New Year!” family doctor, Ana Abril Arias said.

    See photos of twins below:

  • Omicron: New York records rise in hospitalised children

    Omicron: New York records rise in hospitalised children

    With Omicron cases on the rise, New York health officials have reported an spike in hospitalized children, as the White House promised Sunday to quickly resolve the United States’ Covid-19 test shortage.

    The New York State Department of Health warned “of an upward trend in pediatric hospitalizations associated with Covid-19,” in a statement Friday.

    In New York City, it “identified four-fold increases in Covid-19 hospital admissions for children 18 and under beginning the week of December 5 through the current week,” it said.

    Approximately half of the admissions are younger than five, an age group that is vaccine ineligible, the department added.

    The number of Covid-19 cases in the United States is on the rise, with an average of nearly 190,000 new infections daily over the past seven days, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University.

    The arrival of the new Omicron variant, compounded by holiday celebrations that typically include travel and family reunions, have caused a rush on tests in the United States, where it is difficult to get one in many locations.

    Top US pandemic advisor Anthony Fauci on Sunday acknowledged a Covid “testing problem” and vowed to make more tests available to Americans next month.

    “One of the problems is that that’s not going to be totally available to everyone until we get to January and there are still some issues now of people having trouble getting tested,” Fauci told ABC News.