Monday, 3 November 2014

Iyanya Gets Surprise Birthday Party From Friends In London!

It’s the sexy and talented Iyanya himself so you would expect all the ladies swooning over him as he celebrated his birthday at a party throw for him by his friends in London. The singer is currently on tour in the UK. Emma Nyra and Ubi Franklin of MMMG record label were on deck to give the singer a great time as well…….. Read full article here: http://stargist.com/2014/11/03/iyanya-gets-surprise-birthday-party-from-friends-in-london-photos/ | NIGERIA CELEBRITY NEWS, NOLLYWOOD ENTERTAINMENT GIST, GOSSIP, PHOTOS & BIOGRAPHY

Wizkid Arrested For Smoking Weed In A Kenyan Hotel

In a report according to Kenyan publication, Standard Digital,Nigerian singer Wizkid was arrested at his Nairobi Crown Plaza hotel room on Saturday afternoon and quizzed by police only hours before his flight back to Lagos. The arrest was in connection with allegations that he was caught smoking illegal substances. The incident happened at around 1pm just as the Caro singer was checking out of his hotel room where he has been staying for a week, since his last week’s concert. According to our sources, Wizkid was caught smoking ‘weed’ inside the hotel in which smoking is prohibited. The hotel’s Front Officer asked him why he was smoking before the two got into a heated argument attracting security officers who ended up calling the police to arrest him. Before police officers cuffed him and drove him to Capital Hill police station where he was quizzed, the hotel had already charged him with Sh50, 000 smoking penalty, which he paid through his credit card. Coming to his rescue was his newly found Kenyan flame Victoria Kimani, who followed him to the police station shortly after he had been arrested. Victoria had been with the singer at the hotel the previous day. Wizkid was due to leave for Lagos at around 3pm and was forced to cancel the flight due to the drama.

See Photos Of Kcee’s 2014 Customized Gold Cadillac Escalade

Music star Kcee just added to his fleet of cars a 2014 fully pimped gold colored Cadillac Escalade.This dude is definitely balling. See more photos below

Why Tambuwal should step down?

…Obasanjo indicted me because of third term
Senator Adolphus Wabara, a two term senator was elected president of the Senate in June 2003 but stepped down on April 5, 2005 to clear his name over his alleged involvement in the N55 million bribe for budget scandal. In this interview, the former Senate President asserts that his indictment on public television by President Olusegun Obasanjo was the consequence of his failure to support the alleged third term script of the administration. He also frontally demands the resignation of Speaker Aminu Tambuwal as presiding officer of the House of Representatives saying the minority cannot lead the majority just as he endorses President Goodluck Jonathan for another term. Excerpts: Some have flayed the adoption of President Jonathan as the PDP’s sole presidential candidate for the 2015 election as undemocratic. Do you agree? The PDP is the greatest party in the African continent. I don’t see anything wrong in adopting a candidate. It was only mentioned that he’s being adopted as a sole candidate. But every other person democratically has the right to contest. It is not sacrosanct; just that at that moment in time, because of the good job the President has been doing, it was necessary to say please continue, we endorse you as the sole candidate. But that does not say no other person can pick a form. How do you see his chances given the number of formidable aspirants in the APC? The PDP will win. Jonathan will win. We are just praying and begging that he accepts the olive branch of him coming to pick up the ticket. He will win because I know the opposition. I’m not a prophet, but I can assure you that as soon as a candidate emerges from the opposition, the opposition will collapse from that particular moment. Wabara Wabara Are you saying that the PDP should not lose sleep over the opposition? The PDP should not lose sleep; the PDP should continue to prepare their agenda, their manifesto and what they want to do for Nigeria and Nigerians this time around. They should build on what they have done so far and not lose their sleep on the opposition. In fact, we have other parties now joining the PDP. These are parties that ordinarily would have joined hands with APC, but they are coming into PDP. That means there is something we are doing right. It’s a phase and it will take some time before we will get there. With the level of performance we have seen, would you say this government has really performed these four years? There is absolutely no doubt about that. I am 66 years old and I think I have seen so many birthdays and so many years; I’ve seen so many governments in Nigeria. When he presented a book, his scorecard on May 29, he gave facts and you can see the record of his performance. Just go and read that book. Nobody puts pen on paper if he or she is not sure of what he is writing. If you read that book, you will now see what Jonathan and his government have done for this country. You cannot say he has done everything, but at least you will see the trend where we are going, where he started from and what we have achieved now. You almost find a PhD in his governance. Scientists don’t make too much noise. Given the development in the House of Representatives, what is your response to the spate of defections by lawmakers? Frankly, it is unfortunate. It is really unfortunate that we did not nip this in the bud early enough and we need the judiciary to help the National Assembly out of this problem. Vantage position But be that as it may, it was because we the PDP did not nip this issue in the bud. We were at vantage position at the start of this defections in the National Assembly. So, we did not invoke the law. But it’s like when a dog bites a human being, it’s no story. But when a human being bites a dog, it becomes a story. Of course, some people would say that it looks as if people are now leaving the PDP, that’s why we are now opening the pages of the law to stop them. It pains me again due to the fact that all these movements are done on personal interest basis and it’s not national interest or the interest of the people you are representing, which makes it very absurd. But I know that with time, this cross carpeting will be a thing of the past. Do you think he should resign his position? With the speaker of the House of Representatives now defecting to the opposition, to me, I think he should resign his Speakership because, clearly, according to our rules and our laws, it is the party with the majority membership of the House that runs chambers. If he now sits down and finds that his APC is in the minority, he should just resign. Since what he wants is to be the governor of Sokoto State, then he goes there to face that. Immediately, the PDP will elect another Speaker. He should not overheat the polity. He is a gentleman that is loved by many. I also love him, no matter that he has left my party. He is a good fighter, but he should not mess up his good name by clinging to power unnecessarily. Otherwise, if he gets impeached, he will probably not even make the governorship anymore because it will tarnish his image. If he allows himself to be impeached, then he cannot even run for the governorship of Sokoto State. So, he should just resign and wish Nigerians well. What is the latest on the alleged bribe for budget scandal given that you stepped down as Senate President in 2005 to clear your name on the issue. Not much has been heard about the case again? You see, I’m a man from a very humble home that one would expect that things should take their natural courses. That’s why I waited for that judgment discharging me from the Court of Appeal. That judgment was challenged by the ICPC up to the Supreme Court. One thing is very clear and no member of judiciary will say that I, Senator Adulphus Wabara, that I have come to lobby for anything I’ve not lobbied anybody. But I have exhausted my patience as we speak. Even if I was going to be imprisoned by Obasanjo because I refused his third term bid, I would have served the term and I would have been out by now. I’m just asking the judiciary to expedite action as per the judgment delivered in the Supreme Court that this matter should be taken back to the lower court for a retrial and it should be done expeditiously. It is two years now since that Supreme Court judgment and I have not been arraigned in court again. I want to now hold the bull by the horns. I’m going to ask my lawyer for whatever it is worth to now ask for mandamus to compel the ICPC to prosecute the case in accordance with the judgment of the Supreme Court. Discharge from this matter In the ten years that the case has lasted, (Dimeji) Bankole’s case came and it’s gone. (Vincenr) Ogbulafor’s case came after my case; even the Speaker of Lagos. So, why is my own hanging for 10 years? I will not die until I’m either imprisoned or I’m cleared and discharged from this matter. So, I will be asking my lawyer to discharge that case for want of prosecution. How can the accused person be begging government and the ICPC that the case should be tried in accordance with the judgment of the Supreme Court? I had a judgment clearing me from the Appeal Court. They went ahead to appeal in Supreme Court. But for two years now, I’m still hanging. Please, I am calling on the government of Nigeria and the judiciary that they should take up this matter as quickly as possible. This is 10 years of my life gone for nothing. I thank God that I’m living in good health but I don’t want to die. That stigma cannot be on my neck because I did not commit any offence. I repeat, I did not commit any offence. You talked about naivety. Why did you say you are naive? The issue of naivety is that I have not behaved like a Nigerian. If I were to have behaved like that, this case would have been over. I also would not have resigned my position. I was once number three citizen of this country. So, I know what obtains in governance. But I have been naïve and I didn’t go to anybody. In fact, they will even think that I’m arrogant – some will even say why has this man not even come to see us or to come to appeal for assistance. I didn’t go to anybody. Even the judgment that came in my defence at the appeal Court, I never knew. I was in London when that judgment was given. I never knew who gave that judgment. I never went to anybody and that is the way God will get me out of this problem. I’m going through a phase, but ten years in one’s life time, for crying out loud is unfair on this government. So, they should either prosecute or unchain me. That’s what I mean by naivety. You mean your resignation in 2005 was due to naivety? When I was Senate President, it was not my father’s sit. As soon as Obasanjo wanted me out because I opposed his third term bid and that even brings me back to another issue; that is why he refused to even give me my national award which I ought to have gotten in 2003. Immediately after being sworn in I was supposed to have gotten that GCON in 2003. Whatever he contrived came up in 2005. But because he had approached me in 2003 a month or two after we came in, on this third term thing and I didn’t know where he was coming from, I said no, Your Excellency, this cannot work. In 2003, he told me clearly that the way I was working, in 2007, I will continue as Senate President. I said excuse me sir, how can I continue as Senate President when by 2007 the equation will change; the zoning will change and it will be a northerner who will become the Senate President as we have now. That was the end of my discussion with him on that day and that was what cost me my GCON in 2003. It is not even the case of N55 million bribe for budget scandal; that one came up in 2005. - See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/11/defection-tambuwal-step-wabara/#sthash.ybC0BZxc.dpuf

Boko Haram's Abubakar Shekau: The 'craziest commander of all'

ln a field already crowded with bloodthirsty braggarts, the leader of Boko Haram has achieved the dubious distinction of becoming arguably the most menacing figure ever to appear in a jihadist video. Vicious and sneering in equal measure, Abubakar Shekau’s cackling laughter and rambling manner give him more of the air of a psychopath than a militant. By comparison, the late Osama bin Laden comes across as almost measured. And as Nigeria has learned the hard way in the last five years, his terrifying on-screen persona is no act. Shekau is considered the group’s most ruthless commander by far, and has played a key role in taking it down the path of all-out war on the rest of Nigeria. While it is the kidnapping of the schoolgirls that has earned him world notoriety, his group is already believed to have murdered up 5,000 people in the last five years, many of them innocent villagers. Born in north-east Nigeria and believed to be around 40, Shekau is a member of the Kanuri ethnic group, who are spread throughout central Africa, and who were among the region’s first embracers of Islam in the early Middle Ages. Today, a minority of militant Kanuri are said to make up the bulk of Boko Haram’s followers, and while the group originally pursued largely local grievances, under Shekau it has adopted much of al-Qaeda’s ideology. He took over after the 2009 death of Boko Haram’s founder, Ahmed Yusuf, and has since shut down all dialogue with the Nigerian government. More moderate commanders who have argued with him have often been killed. Indeed, another Boko Haram affiliate, Ansuru, which has kidnapped foreigners and published videos of their executions online, cut ties with Shekau altogether because they found him too difficult to deal with. He is the craziest of all the commanders,” said one intermediary. “He really believes it is OK to kill anyone who disagrees with him.” Nonetheless, his tactical skills have earned him a large following of fighters, and he also has contacts with al-Qaeda groups in Mali, who sheltered him in the city of Gao after he was injured during a capture attempt by the Nigerian army. In late 2012, he declared his group’s allegiance to al-Qaeda, expressing admiration for Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian jihadist who beheaded the kidnapped Briton Ken Bigley in Iraq in 2004. Shekau has demonstrated similar bloodthirst, saying in one video: “I enjoy killing anyone that God commands me to kill - the same way that I enjoy killing chickens and rams.” His grasp on world affairs, however, is limited: in the past, he has issued warnings against Margaret Thatcher and the late Pope John Paul II, apparently unaware that both were already dead. The prospect of dealing with such a loose cannon as Shekau makes it all the harder for those trying to free the hostages. And for the families of the kidnapped girls, it is even worse. “You just have to look at him to see he is deranged,” said one. “He is just a sadist, out to kill.”

Chibok girls to be handed over on Tuesday says Nigerian government

Campaigners calling for the release of over 200 Nigerian schoolgirls have said they are “cautiously optimistic” about a reported ceasefire between the government and al-Qaeda-linked militants that would include the release of the teenagers abducted by the group. Two senior government sources said on Saturday that they hoped the release would be completed by Tuesday. On Friday, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh announced a deal with Boko Haram for a ceasefire that would enable the release of the girls, who have been held since April. But within hours, Boko Haram had already broken the ceasefire, killing at least nine people in two attacks - one on the village of Abadam on Friday night, and another attack on the village of Dzur on Saturday morning. "I can confirm that FG (the federal government) is working hard to meet its own part of the agreement so that the release of the abductees can be effected either on Monday or latest Tuesday next week," one source told Reuters by telephone. A second source said: "We have confidence in those we are negotiating with but we are still doing it with considerable caution." The #BringBackOurGirls coalition in Abuja, the capital of Africa’s largest economy, added that they were waiting for official confirmation from the Nigerian president. A senior source at the presidency told The Telegraph that the transfer of the abducted schoolgirls – whose kidnap in April sparked global outrage – could take place “as early as next week”. The ceasefire announcement by Nigeria’s chief of defence staff came days after protesters marched in Abuja to mark the six-month anniversary of the girls’ abduction. Armed gunmen from Boko Haram kidnapped nearly 300 teenagers from the Government Girls' Secondary School in Chibok in the northern Borno state. The school had been closed for several weeks because of the security situation but the students had returned for exams. Some managed to escape, but 219 are believed to remain in captivity. But observers have expressed skepticism in the absence of a confirmed statement from Abubakar Shekau, the Islamist group’s leader. The announcement also came as President Goodluck Jonathan is expected to launch his bid for reelection in the February polls. Shekau last year dismissed a ceasefire deal announced by the Nigerian government, stating that whoever had negotiated it did not represent him. In a video released by Boko Haram in May, Shekau claimed responsibility for the abductions and also threatened to “sell” the schoolgirls. Nigerian government spokesman Mike Omeri acknowledged that there had been a false alarm about a deal with Boko Haram last year, but added that this ceasefire had been confirmed by both military and presidency officials. “We are very sure that the path to peace has opened and are optimistic about the direction of discussions,” he told The Telegraph, in reference to ongoing talks between the government and the Islamist group, reportedly mediated by the Chadian president. Mr Omeri also confirmed that the military have ceased operations against the extremists, amid speculation of a possible prisoner swap for the release of the schoolgirls and other Boko Haram hostages. In the kidnapped girls’ hometown, reactions were muted, but hopeful. "We don't know how true it is until we prove it," said Bana Lawan, chairman of Chibok Local Government Area, told the Associated Press. "We will know the negotiations were successful when we see the girls physically. And then we will know it is true. And then we will celebrate."

Chinedu Ubachukwu wins Gulder Ultimate Search 11

Twenty-four-year-old Chinedu Ubachukwu has emerged winner of the 11th season of Gulder Ultimate Search (GUS), which ended last night. Ubachukwu and 13 others were in the Aguleri jungle in Anambra State for 26 days, for the adventure reality show which aired on digital and terrestrial television channels. A graduate of Petroleum and Gas Engineering from the University of Port Harcourt, Ubachukwu, who hails from Anambra State, edged out co-finalists, Emmanuel Afolabi and Nne Cosy Joe, to discover the mythical General’s Helmet, a symbol of this year’s search aptly tagged The Mission. As promised by Nigerian Breweries Plc., organisers of the show, Ubachukwu, by his feat, automatically qualified for the grand prize of N10 million and a brand new Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV). Perhaps the winner’s familiarity with the topography of Anambra North local government area was an added advantage for his victory. It is not clear what part of the state he hails from, but Ubachukwu had said, in a previous interview, that his place is not far from Aguleri, giving the reason he should win the contest.

 
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