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Libya test for Flying Eagles

Libya test for Flying Eagles

The
national U-20 football team, the Flying Eagles will today square up
against their counterparts from Libya in the first of two warm-up
matches between both sides ahead of the Africa Youth Championship
coming up month in Libya.

The Flying Eagles
have been camped for over six weeks in Abuja where they have already
played a number of friendly matches with local club sides, as well as
the home-based Super Eagles.

For the team coach,
John Obuh, the match against Libya will help him know how ready his
lads are for the African challenge which lies ahead of them when the
youth championship begins on March 18.

Quality opposition

The Flying Eagles
team which departed the country on Sunday morning with 25 players and
officials promised to make the best of the friendly.

“We need to play
quality friendly matches to shore up our confidence. Libya is a good
side and we hope they will give us the quality position we are craving
for,” said Obuh, who led the national U-17 team to a second-place
finish at the 2009 cadets World Championship hosted by Nigeria.

The Flying Eagles
will likely face a good opposition in the form of the Libyans who only
recently won the North African Football Union Cup, after beating
Algeria 1-0 in the finals.

After today’s game,
both sides will meet again on Wednesday; the Flying Eagles will fly out
for a training tour camp in Antalya, Turkey afterwards.

The contingent of
25 players and nine officials will arrive in Turkey on February 17,
where they will be joined by four overseas-based players.

The team will spend
25 days and play a number of friendly matches in Antalya, before flying
to Tripoli on March 14 for the continental showpiece.

Nigeria are drawn
in a tough group against reigning world and African champions Ghana,
Cameroon and Gambia in Group B of the championship, which ends on April
1.

The Flying Eagles
opening match of the tournament will be against the Ghanaians, before
games against Cameroon in Benghazi and Gambia in Tripoli.

The top four teams at the championships will get a slot for the FIFA U-20 World Cup to be staged by Colombia later this year.

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Leone Stars hit back at Siasia

Leone Stars hit back at Siasia

Super
Eagles coach, Samson Siasia has been criticised for labelling the coach
of the Leone Stars of Sierra Leone, Christian Cole, a comedian.

The Super Eagles
handler, while answering questions at a post-match press conference
after last Wednesday’s international friendly in Lagos, which ended 2-1
win in favour of Nigeria, called Cole a “comedian coach”. Siasia’s
comment was a reaction to an earlier statement by the Leone Stars
coach, also at the press conference, that his side were better than the
Super Eagles.

Cole, had accused
the Beninese match referee, Crespin Acuidissou, of giving “undue
advantage” to the Super Eagles, saying that such a move on the part of
the referee “will not help Siasia and his team” ahead of future
engagements.

He also said that
if any future game between both sides were to be “taken to a neutral
ground,” his side “will beat the Eagles.”

Head to head

The Leone Stars
have only got the better of the Super Eagles on just two occasions in
21 meetings. The last time they won the Eagles was in April 2001 when
they recorded a 1-0 win in a World Cup qualifier in Freetown. For their
part, the Super Eagles have won 14 of these games.

‘Inappropriate comment’

Despite the statistics, the Leone Stars have demanded an apology.

The Sierra Leonean
sports administrator, Gorge Wilson, feels Siasia owes Cole an apology.
He added that the apology will help prevent animosity between both
teams.

Wilson also told the Sierra Express Media that he would “like to throw a challenge to Siasia that Sierra Leone can beat Nigeria.

“Nigeria do not have a better side than the Leone Stars, we can beat them,” he insisted.

“Siasia calling
coach Christian Cole a comedian is insulting and inappropriate.
Football is a game of sport, although you want your team to win each
and every game, this is not always possible, however, determination,
effort, and true sportsmanship goes a long way too.

“As a coach, Siasia should know better on how to address a fellow
coach and to criticise in a professional way, not by throwing out some
off-hand comment that has no foundation. In fact, Siasia in his
capacity as head coach should display leadership qualities rather than
childish derogatory comments.”

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Quiros wins in Dubai after eventful final round

Quiros wins in Dubai after eventful final round

Spain’s
Alvaro Quiros produced a bizarre final round which included a
hole-in-one to capture the Dubai Desert Classic by one shot on Sunday.

The 27-year-old
Quiros, celebrating his fifth European Tour success, also chipped in
for an eagle and took a triple bogey after losing a ball up a palm tree
in a final-round 68 to finish 11-under-par.

Denmark’s Soren
Hansen, needing to birdie the last hole to deny Quiros, posted a 70 to
end with a 10-under-par tally, the same as South African James Kingston.

Struggling Tiger Woods ended his desert campaign with a final-hole double bogey in a closing 75 for a four-under-par score.

Briton Lee Westwood
dropped three shots in his closing two holes and posted a 72 but
remains world number one after nearest ranking rival Martin Kaymer of
Germany ended in a share of 31st place.

Quiros’s ace, his fourth on the European Tour, came at the 11th.

“I played a three-quarter wedge shot and it was the perfect shot, but that happens just once a year,” he said.

“I had fallen back
to second or third so that hole-in-one was the positive point of the
round. It gave me a good advantage.” Starting his final round a shot
behind the leaders, Quiros began with a bang after chipping in from
five yards off the back of the green for an eagle at the second.

But he lost the
lead when his drive at the eighth landed in bushes forcing him to take
a penalty drop. However, Quiros’s ball plugged in the waste sand from
where he skied the ball some 30-yards into a palm tree.

A pair of
binoculars was required before Quiros, in the company of Chief Referee
John Paramour, could confirm that the ball in the tree was his. Quiros
took a penalty drop but walked off with a triple bogey.

He quickly shook off his misfortune to birdie the ninth and the hole-in-one then put him back in front for good.

Woods misfortune

Woods heads home still seeking a first win since November, 2009. “It was a very frustrating day,” the American said.

“But I got off to such a poor start, to be two-over through three holes and I just couldn’t make it up from there.

“When it was calm this week, I hit the ball pure, and that’s the thing. When the wind blows,

I have to shape shots and hit shots differently and all of my old feels are kind of out the window.

“That’s the thing about making changes, as I’ve said, I’ve been all
through this before with my last two instructors, and it will come
around. I just need more work and more practice.”

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Chelsea just need to win

Chelsea just need to win

With
Tottenham’s 2-1 win over Sunderland, Chelsea were shoved into fifth
place and out of Champions League spot. So there is just one goal for
today’s match at Craven Cottage – the Blues must take three points! But
it will not be easy because during the first leg in November, it was a
nervy 1-0 win for Chelsea over their London neighbours.

Michael Essien
scored the goal but was sent off late in the second half for a
dangerous tackle on Clint Dempsey. At that time, Chelsea were still in
first place, four points ahead of Manchester United but things are a
lot different now.

Chelsea manager,
Carlo Ancelotti, is happy to have extra days to prepare for today’s
encounter but the Italian admits that his side have to be at their best
today to beat a Fulham side that is playing well and getting results.

“It is perfect to
be able to play on this Monday, the players have more time for recovery
after the international matches but we can still prepare for Fulham,
which will not be easy because I think Fulham now are having their best
moment of the season,” Ancelotti said.

“They are playing well with confidence so for us to be able to take more time and play on Monday is good.”

Taking on former players

They will also be
coming up against a former Chelsea player in Steve Sidwell, who was
transferred from Aston Villa in January. Sidwell has been like a nomad
since he left Chelsea three years ago but seems to be settling well
after his move to Fulham.

“The reason I left
Chelsea was to go and play football but it didn’t work out at Villa and
the same situation occurred. I left Villa to come and play football and
it’s working out,” Sidwell, who made a handful of appearances for the
Blues said.

Fulham coach Mark
Hughes, also a former Chelsea player will try to nullify the Chelsea
midfield and that could mean dropping one of his two strikers,
possibly, Moussa Dembele, into the hole and mandating Adam Johnson, to
run the channels behind Chelsea’s full backs, who are pseudo-wingers.

Hughes has already
ruled out his former team from challenging for the league title. “It’s
hard to see how they can win the title.

They’ve lost seven matches at this point.

“They’re in a very
difficult position and historically losing no more than six games has
been the benchmark. Even if they don’t lose again, I think it will be
beyond them to put together a run that will overcome the teams above
them.”

Fulham’s Ghanaian
right back, John Pantsil has scored two own goals in his last three
matches and Chelsea could target that channel in the hope that his
gaffes will continue.

Brazilian
midfielder, Ramires is back in the squad but Jose Bosingwa will face a
late fitness test. Ancelotti is happy with the additions and believes
his side now possesses more power.

“Now we have a strong squad with David Luiz and Torres, we’ve improved our ability and we have more power.

The squad was good, but now it is even better.”

Fitting Drogba and Torres together

Ancelotti is also
looking for a formula to fit in both Didier Drogba and Fernando Torres,
who had a subdued debut against Liverpool, as a two pronged attacking
unit.

“In attack we can
choose whether to play with two up front or with the Christmas tree, it
depends on the game that we want to play. When we play with two
strikers Nicolas Anelka can be in the number 10 position, in the hole,
but with one striker he can play on the right,” he said.

“Florent Malouda
can also play there, and sometimes we tried last year Frank Lampard at
the beginning of the season which was not bad.

Malouda can also
play in the Christmas tree, but I don’t need to think of him as a
central midfielder because we have a lot of options there.”

Chelsea midfielder
Gael Kakuta, on loan to Fulham cannot face his parent club, while
Nigerian holding midfielder, Dickson Etuhu is a doubt with a hamstring
problem. Bobby Zamora is still recuperating from a broken leg while
former Arsenal defender, Philippe Senderos is a long-term absentee with
an Achilles’ tendon complaint. Former Chelsea and Barcelona striker,
Eidur Gudjohnsen could also make a first start, after arriving on loan
from Stoke City.

Whatever formation is employed in today’s game by Ancelotti, Chelsea owner, Roman Abramovich will be expecting a good result.

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Scarlet Puddle

Scarlet Puddle

Blaring horns from
the trailer ahead jarred Adaeze out of her mind walk. An expectant
mother who sat to the left of the bus driver, buried her teeth in a
brownish loaf of bread. Beside her was another middle-aged woman
nodding back and forth as she battled sleep. Adaeze thought of them,
shook her head and muted a hiss.

The dry wind stung
her eyes. She squinted, but never lost gaze of the mobile images, which
cast a fuzzy greenish relief over the western skies. She adjusted the
blue-coloured scarf, drooping over her eyes, to savour the orange sun.
Her thoughts rolled back to her lover. Rufus loved the setting sun. Its
parting burst of golden rays, heralding a final sinking into the pit of
the night, bewitched him.

Thinking of Rufus
made Adaeze slide into self-doubt. She should have gone home to tell
her parents about her decision to go look for him in Port Harcourt. She
would not bother to guess what their reaction would be. Her father
would say that if she still had some brain in her head, she ought to be
far from Rufus. Her mother would add, “If Rufus’s parents do not
approve of you, keep your distance.” Her parents would not understand
because they never lived in her heart. Adaeze loved Rufus. She also
knew that Rufus loved her dearly. That, for her, was everything. It was
greater than the colonial seal of the queen of England or the federal
fiat of the newly independent Nigeria.

It was one year and
a month into independence, November 1961; the harmattan haze brushed
the skies. Adaeze sat dourly in the bus heading towards Port Harcourt.
The running images of tall palm trees, with low-level plants saddled
between them, fanned her eyes. She looked at her wrist. It was 6:20
p.m. A wave of anxiety flooded her mind. Why is Rufus not back from
work on a day he had promised he would be home early? What could be the
problem?

Adaeze hissed
again, aloud this time around. She wished she could divest her mind of
worries and be free to snooze just like the woman in front of her,
whose head now rocked the headrest and her wide-open mouth wheezed a
filtered snore.

The trailer hooted
again, the bus jerked and slowed down. Adaeze raised her head. They
were approaching Imo River. Port Harcourt was drawing near. Her heart
pounded, as the bus made an abrupt stop by the river. Where could Rufus
be? A sense of foreboding crawled inside her. The driver’s side was on
the right ledge of the bridge and as Adaeze peered in his direction ,
she observed him shake his head.

“A terrible accident happened here this morning.” The driver’s voice filled the bus.

“What’s that?”
Adaeze asked, turning in the direction of the driver’s view. His full
moon afro hair shielded her from seeing what was amiss.

“An accident.” The driver turned backwards.

“Ewoh.” She shifted
from her position, wove her lean body through spaces between the
passengers on the right side of the bus to see the carnage for her
self. A big Mammy wagon had skidded off the road and crushed itself on
the thick stem of a heavyset tree by the hem of the river. The impact
felled the tree.

She probed the
wreckage as if searching for something. On the lorry’s tailboard was a
strip boldly written: En Broda Hoods we stand. Cherubic images of
Nnamdi Azikiwe on the right and Tafawa Balewa on the left waving the
green-white-green flag bordered the message. Was anything familiar with
the vehicle? She wondered. No.

Adaeze tried
recalling the inscription on the bus Rufus had boarded that morning but
realised that, unlike other days, she did not commit it to memory. She
almost bit off her lip in regret.

She shook feverishly as she returned to her seat.

“Anything the problem?” a man sitting next to her, asked.

“I don’t know. It is just that my friend, went to work in Port Harcourt since morning and has not returned.”

“Why do you worry? Pitakwa is home of fun. The person probably went out with friends.”

Adaeze nodded and muttered an inaudible “Thank you.”

Whatever kept Rufus
in Port Harcourt was to Adaeze more serious than the man had assumed.
He did not know that Rufus never said one thing and did another. She
began to pray silently for his safety.

The engine of the
trailer in front erupted into a volcano of sound and smoke. Their bus
jerked and its Austin engine replied with a thunderous rev and their
journey continued. The thick smoke oozing from the trailer shrunk her
bus driver’s visibility to arms length. The choking tang joined the
acrid smell of the fish in one of the baskets under her seat to
nauseate her. She burped and then covered her nose with an end of her
scarf. The driver whistled the National Anthem but the droning engine
drowned a greater part of the song.

Fifteen minutes
later, they were at the Mile 2 Diobu Motor Park in Port Harcourt.
Adaeze ran out of the bus terminal. A Volkswagen beetle almost knocked
her down as she hurried to cross the road. The screech of its brakes
threw her off balance and she missed falling by whiskers. She ran back
and waited for the car to cross.

“Craze woman, you wan die for my hand? God no go gree! See im head, yeye!” the enraged driver jabbed at her.

As he drove away, a
bumper sticker on the rear fender of the Volkswagen jumbled Adaeze’s
sense of co-ordination. It read Make Babies Not Wars. She smiled and
took more care as she crossed the road.

“Wharf.” She flagged a taxi down.

“Which one?” the taxi driver asked.

“Where the Elder Dempster ships berth.” Adaeze’s hand was on the doorknob.

“Are you sure it’s not their office you mean?”

“Yes, the office.”

“That’s at shed twelve”

“Yes.”

As the driver’s
left hand engaged the gear, Adaeze’s mind engaged worry. She tried to
wave the gale of pessimism off her mind but the bars of doubts grimly
stood against her. She feared that Rufus couldn’t have been hale and
hearty and still be in the office when he was due home by 3:30 p.m. He
was a man with character. When he was leaving in the morning, he had
promised her that he would return earlier. They would spend time in her
shop before going home. He knew she closed by 5:00 p.m but his bicycle
was still in her shop as at 6:00 p.m. when she closed and came looking
for him.

Thinking about the
bicycle, she began to reconsider her action. Was going immediately
after Rufus the wisest step to have taken? What if we miss our paths?
What if he gets there before me? Since I have the shop keys with me,
how would he be able to take his bicycle? That means he will have to
walk another four miles home after a tiresome day’s job. “Good
gracious,” she yelled.

“Anything the problem?” The taxi driver braked.

“No.” Adaeze was embarrassed.

Minutes later, the
taxi stopped. A bold Elder Demptster Shipping sign welcomed her. She
paid the driver and stepped out. The harmattan wind was colder and less
dusty. It must be the sea breeze.

“Good evening.”

“Evening. How are you young woman?” A dark looking man, the receptionist, welcomed her. “May I be of any help to you?”

“Yes sir. My name is Adaeze Ukonu, I am Rufus Esiaba’s relation. He is in the morning shift and…”

“Make yourself
comfortable, Adaeze. Do you care for water or a drink?” His calm and
kind voice temporarily lifted off her load of worry.

“Nothing,” she replied and took a seat opposite him.

She tried studying his face. Maybe it could reveal an attempt to conceal something from her. She found nothing of the sort.

“Wait. Let me check
the duty register and our movement logbook. We have a ship that had a
problem at mid sea and some members of our staff went offshore at short
notice this afternoon. Rufus is probably among them.”

“Okay. Thank you.” Hope coursed through her mind, enlivening her voice.

The clock on the
wall tolled seven times. A large moth joined a party of night insects
flocking the fluorescent tubes above the receptionist’s table. An empty
bottle of Tango sat on his window ledge.

Adaeze watched him
anxiously. The whirling fan hummed. Her fingers drummed her laps
nervously. The receptionist gasped, cleared his throat as he worked.
One of the insects above lost its wings and landed on the thick
exercise book. The man pinched it away and flipped to the next page.

Adaeze’s eyes never
left him. He raised his head from the book. His brows creased. He
asked, “When did you say Rufus left home?”

The question scared her. “This morning.”

“I’m afraid his
name is neither on the daily staff attendance register nor in the log
of the names of those who went offshore.” He paused thoughtfully,
walked past her, turned and said, “You are sure his destination was
work.”

“I am sure. He was dressed for work and had his work things. I mean his bag and the rest.”

The receptionist looked at her with concern. “Wait a moment,” he said and broke into quick strides out of the office.

While Adaeze waited
for him, she studied the office. It was a large room painted sky blue
with three large windows on both sides. It had two large desks. The
wall had a picture of Queen Elizabeth II. There was a footnote
underneath the picture. She did not bother to read it, as her ears
caught the doubled footsteps approaching the office. She hoped the
receptionist was returning with Rufus.

“This is Mr. Ibeme. He was in the morning shift and would have known if Rufus came to work or not.”

“Mr. Douglas, what could have gone wrong?” Mr. Ibeme looked at the receptionist. “This is quite unlike Esiaba,” he added.

“I wouldn’t know, really.”

“I hope I am
wrong,” Adaeze said, as tears gathered in her eyes, “But I have my
fears. I have my suspicions,” she said in between sobs.

“What could they be?” Douglas asked.

“There was an accident near the Imo River this morning.”

“Yes, it was all
over the radio,” he encored. “But if Rufus was involved he would have
given them our office address to locate us.”

“What if he lost his life?”

“Don’t be silly, Woman,” Douglas scowled.

“Must it be death?” Ibeme queried.

Adaeze said nothing.

Ibeme took over the receptionist’s table while Douglas led her out of the premises in search of Rufus.

The coastal
harmattan wind was cooler and the air fresher outside. It was getting
late as vehicles on the road became fewer. Darkness had phased out
daylight completely. However, beams of headlamps, street lamps and
multiple neon lights on buildings helped to awaken the night. Douglas
checked his watch it was already 7.30p.m. He waved down a taxi.
“Waterside Police station.”

“Enter.”

They drove silently until they reached the station.

It was a 1945
building. The imprint of the builder and the year were on the crown of
the yellow and blue house. There was a crowd of anxious people milling
around.

“Obi Amadi,” A burly Lance Corporal called names from a sheet of paper between his thrown up hands.

“Whose names are on that list?” Douglas asked a man nearby.

“Raphael Okorobia,” the policeman continued.

“Whose names?” Douglas nudged the seemingly absent-minded man.

“Those identified in the accident.”

Douglas’s
discomfort was evident. He moved towards a notice board where those who
could read, checked the names on the same list the burly policeman was
calling from. “Excuse me sergeant,” he called at one of the several
police officers pushing files behind the counter.

“Yes.” The sergeant regarded him.

I have a problem. A
colleague of mine, left home for work this morning without showing up
in the office the whole day. We have even checked your board and his
name is not there.”

“Where does he come to work from?” The sergeant asked, fishing out a short note pad and a pen from his breast pockets.

“Obioma, near Aba.’

“Assuming he was in the accident that happened today, can you identify him?”

“Yes.”

“I will give you
the names of the hospitals they were taken to and you may go there and
search for him. If he is not there, then return early to tell us.”

“Okay.”

The police officer wrote the names of the hospitals on a sheet of paper and handed it to Douglas.

It was 8:45 p.m
when they got to the second hospital – Green Waterside Clinic. The
night nurses guided them into the male ward. It was a long hall with
twelve windows six on either side. The smell of drugs filled the air.
It was different from the antiseptic freshness of the Catholic hospital
earlier visited. The ceiling fans maintained a constant buzz in the
rather quiet hall.

Rufus was not there.

They left for the Naval Hospital where, according to the nurse, the most seriously wounded were taken to.

Adaeze began to cry when she heard this and Mr. Douglas tried to console her. “Be positive.”

The Naval Hospital at the waterside was a small but very effective one.

“Can we help you Lady and Gentleman,” said the male nurse.

“Yes. We have a problem.”

“Accident victims?”

“Yes,” Mr. Douglas answered, “A man. A young man.”

Rufus was not there.

“Where then could he be?” Adaeze began to cry.

“Well, I presume you may need to return to the police station. They may be in a better position to make suggestions.”

Something in the
naval officer’s voice seemed to alarm Mr. Douglas. He looked at Adaeze
and nervously turned towards the male nurse. He went towards him and
whispered something.

“Okay, thanks.” The man said in Adaeze’s hearing. “How did you come here?”

“We used a cab,” said Douglas.

“I am not sure you
would be able to find one this time, it is already late. But don’t
worry, I am on my way home, I could give you a lift.”

“That’s very kind of you”

“My pleasure,” the naval man said.

They drove into the
police station at about 11:30 p.m. The place was less busy than it was
a few hours earlier when they first called.

The naval man called the desk officer on duty and told him what the problem was.

“Wait. I will be
back in a moment.” The policeman disappeared into an inner office and
returned with a file. He invited the naval officer into the inner room
while Douglas and Adaeze awaited their return.

After eight minutes, the policeman returned alone. He also invited Douglas to join them.

Adaeze was alone
and unsettled. She prayed silently that the policeman would be able to
furnish them with useful information on Rufus’s whereabouts.

What if he is dead?
The mere thought of this gave her cramps. Cold sweat broke on her
brows, and she felt a hand squeeze her heart. The sound of the
harmattan wind suddenly became a dirge in her ears. She felt nausea and
her legs could hardly bear her weight. Adaeze found a spot on the
stairs outside and sat down.

She turned the
moment she heard their voices. Her eyes queried the three men
curiously. The policeman’s eyes were non-committal, the naval man’s
were saying, no he is alive, but she could not trust Mr. Douglas’s.
They were moist.

“Mr. Douglas, what is the matter?”

“Nothing. I am just worried that we don’t seem to be making any headway.”

She moved close to him; let him hold her hand as they returned silently into the naval man’s car.

It was past 12.00
midnight. Adaeze shook visibly. Douglas held her tighter but said
nothing. She sensed that he was equally worried. She wondered if he was
keeping something from her.

The naval man tried several times to bring up a discussion but met a contiguous wall of silence.

Adaeze regarded at
him and shifted her gaze. The naval man didn’t know Rufus. He didn’t
know what he meant to either Douglas or her. Adaeze looked at Douglas
again and his unusual quietness worried her. “Are you sure there is no
problem?” she whispered in his hearing alone.

Mr. Douglas simply shook his head avoiding her gaze.

At that moment,
Adaeze suspected he knew something she did not know. Since he entered
and came out of the policeman’s office he had become unusually quiet.
Maybe they showed him Rufus’s belongings or a proof that he was either
dead or in a critical condition.

Mr. Douglas stole a
look in Adaeze’s direction and their eyes met. He had wanted to look
away but something in her eyes pleaded with him to tell her something.

“Ada, I will have to find you somewhere to rest, maybe sleep for a while. Our friend…”

“Max Spiff,” the naval man interjected, offering his name.

“Max Spiff and I will continue the search. I am hopeful that we will find him before morning.”

“Mr. Douglas, I
left my family at home in search of Rufus, I don’t intend to rest for a
second until I find him. Please let me continue with you,” she pleaded.

“Okay, Mr. Douglas, let her be.” Max spun the car noisily towards the creek where they had earlier come from.

When they got to
the hospital and began to look for the morgue attendant, the truth
dawned on Adaeze. She needed no one to tell her that it was not Rufus
but his body that they had come there to fetch. They spent about two
hours searching for the morgue attendant. The reality she faced at that
moment devastated her. She left the men with the task and found a quiet
spot where she crooked her head in her elbow, and emptied her sorrows
in tears. When they could not find the attendant, Max had to plead with
the medical director to provide the spare keys.

“Douglas, do you have the courage to look inside the morgue? It is not usually easy,” Max,asked.

“I honestly don’t know. “

Flanked by Adaeze
and a nurse, with gloves, nasal masks and other paraphernalia, the two
men moved to the morgue section of the hospital.

On reaching the
white square building, the group beheld a long trail of blood running
out from the morgue and forming a scarlet puddle outside. They could
not immediately comprehend what it was; the bodies should be in crates
before freezing.

Max dashed forward. He urged the rest to join him.

The moment the
hospital nurse opened the door towards them; waft of morphine hit their
nostrils. Everyone ran back except Max. He switched on the light and
took a step backwards. On the floor of the morgue was the bleeding body
of a young man lying face down. Max bent down, and began to check his
pulse.

He looked frantically backwards and beckoned on the nurse who stepped forward.

On seeing the colour of the victim’s shirt, Adaeze hastened in.

“I’m afraid the guy is alive,” Max said under his breath.

At that moment, Douglas joined them.

He bent over, turned the head of the victim, looked intently at his face, and screamed, “That’s him! That’s Rufus.”

A thin line of hope
illumined Adaeze’s dulled eyes as she felt Rufus’s body with the back
of her hand as a mother would a sick child.

Adaeze moved to lift the body but Max signaled to Douglas to take her away. The nurse guided her out of the morgue.

Max’s eyes
carefully followed the blood from the puddle outside, to the stains on
the inner side of the door, through the marks left by Rufus’s body on
the floor, to the red droplets marking the edges of one of the crates
in the morgue. “Thank God we are here. We must take him to the hospital
right now. He has lost some blood,” said Max.

The military nurse
clearly was able to figure out what happened, “Rufus must have gained
consciousness, tried to get out of the morgue and when he couldn’t, he
slid back into a blackout.”

Douglas nodded.

Max brought down
the stretcher cradled onto the wall, “Douglas please, let’s get him out
of this place fast.”

Adaeze shuffled away from the mortuary entrance from where she had
watched them carry Rufus away. Her whole body shook with trepidation–a
mix grill of nervousness, physical exhaustion and shock. She drifted
towards the open field between the wards and the morgue. Her thoughts
were as unsteady as her wobbly hands. What would have happened if she
did not come looking for Rufus? What would… what? The incident silenced
her. It was also a moment of deep awakening for her. Rufus’s luck was
her luck. If death could not snatch him from her, nobody, no
human–neither her parents nor Rufus’s parents–could stop her from
loving and living with him. She was sure of this more than she was of
anything else.

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Atiku, Ribadu lament Port Harcourt tragedy

Atiku, Ribadu lament Port Harcourt tragedy

Former vice
president, Atiku Abubakar yesterday demanded investigation into the
death of some Nigerians at the PDP presidential rally in Port Harcourt
on Saturday.

In a message of
condolence issued by his media office in Abuja on Sunday, Mr Abubakar,
who lost to President Goodluck Jonathan at last month’s presidential
primaries of the party, described the death of the Nigerians as a
tragedy.

No fewer than 16
people lost their lives during a stampede at the Liberation Stadium,
Port Harcourt where the PDP held its presidential campaign rally at the
weekend.The former vice president, however, implored the ruling party
and the government not to desert the families of the deceased as they
are ‘heroes of democracy’.

The campaign
organisation of the presidential candidate of Action Congress of
Nigeria (ACN), Nuhu Ribadu also described the deaths as avoidable and
tragic loss. In a statement by its Director of Media and
Communications, Ibrahim Modibbo, the organisation said it sympathises
with the family of the deceased and prays that “God will grant them the
fortitude to bear the loss.”

The organisation
however asked all political parties to ensure that adequate security
measures are taken before, during and after campaign rallies and
programmes. The organisation also called for the police to be more
efficient in their duties, particularly during this campaign season as
“more political rallies will definitely take place.”

Medical assistance

In the wake of the
tragic incident ,the governor of Akwa Ibom State, Godswill Obot
Akpabio, has set up a team of medical experts to assist some of the
victims of the stampede.

The governor, in a
statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Usoro I. Usoro, said
that “a delegation headed by the Commissioner for Health, of the state,
Louisa Ukpe, left Uyo for Port Harcourt, immediately after the
incident, to offer medical assistance towards fore-stalling further
loss of lives.

“The team is also
expected to search all hospitals and other health facilities with a
view to identifying all Akwa Ibom indigenes who might have been
involved in the incident and offer immediate help to them.” Mr. Akpabio
said that the victims of the stampede were part of the teaming crowd of
supporters that thronged the Liberation Stadium to show overwhelming
solidarity to their son, Mr Jonathan.

The governor
however urged Nigerians to vote overwhelmingly for Mr Jonathan as a
mark of honour in memory of those who died in the incident. “Today and
always, we will always remember their loyalty and support which they
carried to the end. Our heart goes out to them. We mourn with the
families of those mourning and pray with a deep sense of sorrow that
the Almighty God should console them over this unexpected calamity”,
the governor said.

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Military dissolve Egypt’s parliament

Military dissolve Egypt’s parliament

Troops took control
of Tahrir Square, the fulcrum of protests that swept Hosni Mubarak from
power, to allow traffic through central Cairo on Sunday, as military
rulers struggled to get life in Egypt back to normal.

There were heated
rows in Tahrir Square on whether to keep up protests or comply with
army orders to help put Egypt back on its feet. “The people want the
square cleared,” one group chanted. “We will not leave, we will not
leave,” replied another.

The Arab world’s
most populous country was taking its first tentative steps toward
democracy and protest organisers were forming a Council of Trustees to
defend the revolution and urge swift reform from a military intent on
restoring law and order.

Police officers
gathered to demand higher pay and a security guard said warning shots
were fired in the air. No one was hurt, however. Earlier, troops, some
wielding sticks, pushed protesters aside to reopen Tahrir square to
traffic.

“Revolution continues”

Protest leaders
want the immediate release of political prisoners, the lifting of a
state of emergency used by Mubarak to crush opposition and dissent, the
closure of military courts, fair elections, and a swift handover of
power to civilians.

Despite Mubarak’s
resignation, some protesters have said they plan to stay in the square
to ensure the military council keeps its promises on transition. They
plan a big demonstration next Friday to celebrate the revolution and
honour those killed.

The Higher Military
Council has given no timetable for a transition, but tried to reassure
with a statement on Saturday affirming a commitment to democracy and
its treaties, aimed particularly at Israel with which Egypt has a peace
treaty.

The military is
expected on Monday to ban meetings by labour unions or professional
syndicates, effectively forbidding strikes, and to tell all Egyptians
to get back to work. On Saturday, the army said it would uphold Egypt’s
international obligations.

These include a peace treaty with Israel, whose defence minister has
been in touch with his Egyptian counterpart, who heads the military
council. Interior minister, Mahmoud Wagdy, has said Egypt needs “the
speedy return of the police to duty,” saying 13,000 inmates who escaped
from prison early in the uprising were still on the run.

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Ogun PDP candidate asks Daniel-led faction for cooperation

Ogun PDP candidate asks Daniel-led faction for cooperation

The governorship
candidate of the People’s Democratic Party in Ogun State, Tunji Olurin,
yesterday extended a peace offering to the opposition within the party
led by the state governor, Gbenga Daniel, asking that they work
together to move the state forward rather than sit on the fence.

Mr. Olurin spoke
with journalists in Abeokuta shortly after a church service to mark the
second year’s anniversary of Chapel of Christ The Glorious King,
located within the complex of the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential
Library in Abeokuta.

“We are all
citizens of Ogun State; there is no winner or loser in this issue. It
is our responsibility to join hands together to develop Ogun State.
Those who are in opposition, I will personnaly call them, embrace them
to come together with me on board to develop the state,” he said.

Accompanied by his
running mate, Tunde Oladunjoye, the party candidate who emerged from
the Olusegun Obasanjo faction of the party said his administration’s
focus would be to make rural areas attractive and stop rural-urban
migration.

“By the time we
make rural areas attractive, we will not have rural-urban migration
anymore, because most of our children go to the cities to sleep under
the bridges because they couldn’t make ends meet in their villages,”
Mr. Olurin said. “We want to transform the villages, we want to give
them the same facilities they could not get in the cities, so they can
remain there, we shall accelerate development.”

He said he is very confident about his ticket, just as he said he would embark on his campaign soon.

The Daniel faction
of the party, however, appears to have foreclosed working with Mr.
Olurin. The state Commissioner for Information and Strategy Sina
Kawonise, said there was no going back on the stance of his group,
which he said was to stick by the recent ruling of an Abeokuta High
Court which declared the Obasanjo group as illegal, null and void.

“The court
judgement still stands; the law is clear on that,” Mr. Kawonise said,
adding that the former president was earlier given a proposal to
resolve the crisis, but rejected it.

Reports at the
weekend alleged that Mr. Obasanjo had refused to entertain the plea of
a reconciliation committee sent by the party to harmonise the list of
candidates produced by the two factions. But the chairman of the PDP’s
harmonised executives, Dayo Soremi, described as false reports that the
former president tore a purported peace list supposedly sent by
President Goodluck Jonathan.

One list

In a press
statement issued yesterday in Abeokuta, Mr. Soremi said: “Our BOT
chairman and elder statesman has absolute respect for the office of the
president, which he had occupied as a military head of state and as a
two-term civilian president. We wish to state categorically that there
were no two lists of candidates in Ogun PDP, other than the one
submitted by the harmonised executives and approved by the national
leadership of our party.

“The list
containing our party’s flagbearers have been submitted and accepted by
INEC. The only alteration we made was the accommodation of Dimeji
Bankole, as directed by President Goodluck Jonathan.”

Mr. Soremi
expressed his happiness over the reaction of people to the
Olurin/Oladunjoye governorship ticket since it was confirmed with the
presentation of flag in Ibadan last Tuesday.

“I can tell you that even opposition parties in Ogun State are already imploding since the ticket was announced,” he said.

A socio-political
organization, Gateway Democrats Coalition (GADECO) at the weekend
described the gubernatorial candidacy of Mr. Olurin as a unifying force
for the 2011 gubernatorial election in Ogun State. The group noted that
the political situation in the state required a leadership that would
return it to its prosperous past and restore hope in the citizenry.

“We believe firmly that Adetunji Olurin’s candidacy will restore
needed hope, peace and bring back the unity of Ogun State,” GADECO
National Coordinator, Adeola Shoaga, said. “The recovery of Ogun State
from the scars of political crisis that has overtaken development
activities in the state in the last five years depends solely on the
election of a credible and “big picture” leader like Mr Olurin.”

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‘Nigeria should learn from Egypt revolution’

‘Nigeria should learn from Egypt revolution’

Nigerians should
draw the right lessons from the 18-day revolt which saw the end of
former Egyptian leader, Hosni Mubarak after 30 years and do the needful
to effect a regime change in Nigeria at the April polls, presidential
candidate of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), Muhammadu
Buhari (Rtd) said .

Mr. Buhari who
praised the resilience of Egyptians who made exceptional sacrifices to
assert their collective will, said their tenacity has again confirmed
the truism that no force on earth can stop a united people.” He also
said Nigerians must gird their loins and insist on free and fair
elections that will usher in accountable leadership in April polls.

“Unlike the
Egyptians who went through self-denial for 18 unbroken days to achieve
their aspiration for leadership change, Nigerians just have to take
their voter cards, and ensure that their votes count and are properly
counted. It is time to demonstrate people’s power to free our country
from those who have held it hostage for the last 12 years and are
threatening to keep it for the next 60 years,” he said.

Peaceful doggedness

In a statement
signed by his media aide, Yinka Odumakin, Mr. Buhari equally commended
the organisational zeal of the Egypt demonstrators, their peaceful
conduct and doggedness even in the face of intimidation and provocation.

“Christians formed
rings round Muslims as they observed their Jumat prayers during the
demonstrations. For us as a people, we need to also move from balance
of hate to balance of faith as the Egyptians practically demonstrated
on the field of battle for change. Rather than allow ourselves to be
divided by our faith, we must emphasise what binds us together and
collectively fight against that hydra headed monster of corruption .
With all sense of modesty, this is part of what the Buhari-Bakare
candidacy represents,” he said.

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POLITICAL MANN: Egypt: Republicans fear over Islamic radicalism

POLITICAL MANN: Egypt: Republicans fear over Islamic radicalism

Should we fear the
uprising in Egypt? American conservatives are caught up in an unusually
open argument about the crowds in Cairo.

“This isn’t about
Egypt,” said top-rated television personality Glenn Beck. “This is the
story of everyone who has ever plotted, or wanted, to fundamentally
change or destroy the Western way of life.” Beck is telling his
enormous audience that the protests against Hosni Mubarak are part of
an international Islamic resurgence sweeping all the way from Asia to
England. His opinions are among the most extreme in mainstream America
today, but there are a range of opinions about Egypt among Republicans
and others on the right.

“Only a child can
believe that a democratic outcome is inevitable,” writes conservative
columnist Charles Krauthammer “And only a blinkered optimist can
believe that it is even the most likely outcome.”

Broadly speaking,
members of President Barack Obama’s Democratic Party welcome the end of
dictatorship as complicated and potentially dangerous but inherently
desirable.

Obama’s stance
seems to have evolved since the demonstrations started; his latest word
is that the Mubarak regime should take prompt, careful steps to move
towards democracy. Most Republicans in Congress have quietly supported
the president’s position. But outside of Washington some prominent
Republicans are breaking ranks.

Influential
Republican strategist Newt Gingrich says the administration has been
naive about Egypt’s most popular opposition movement, because of its
roots in Islamic radicalism.

“The Muslim
brotherhood is a mortal enemy of our civilization,” he said. “This
administration, I think, does not have a clue about those realities.”
Like Gingrich, former Alaska governor Sarah Palin is considered a
possible presidential candidate. She says she’s disappointed that the
Obama administration hasn’t established what’s ahead in Egypt.

“Nobody yet has
explained to us – surely they know, more than the rest of us know – who
is going to take the place of Mubarak,” she said. “They know what’s
going on and aren’t telling us.” It’s not clear that the White House is
hiding anything. A lot of America’s plans are being unsettled
unexpectedly by the sudden upheaval in Egypt.

President Obama
clearly believes that the country and the region will benefit from more
democracy. American conservatives aren’t quite as convinced.

Jonathan Mann
presents Political Mann on CNN International each Friday at 18:30
(CAT), Saturday at 3pm and 9pm (CAT), and Sunday at 10am (CAT).

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