Archive for nigeriang

Imoke to flag off Obudu Race

Imoke to flag off Obudu Race

Cross
River State Governor, Liyel Imoke, will flag off the 6th edition of the
Obudu International Mountain Race coming up this Saturday at the Obudu
Ranch Resort.

William Archibong,
the Chairman of the Local Organising Committee, stated that the
governor has accepted to once again flag off this year’s race, which
will witness the staging of the second edition of the African Nations
Mountain Running Championships for both men and women.

“He will be
assisted by Bruno Gozzelino, the President of the World Mountain
Running Association, who has confirmed he will be here for the race,”
he said. Top stars, including the defending men and women champions,
Ethiopia’s Habtamu Fikadu Awash (men) and Mamitu Daskaas (women), as
well as three former champions led by reigning world champion, Andrea
Mayr of Austria, have all arrived for the race.

So much to win

Meanwhile, the
total prize money for this year’s race, according to Archibong, has
been increased by over $35,000 following the introduction of the
women’s version of the African Nations Mountain Running Championships.
The total prize money has gone up from $245,500 to $278,000. The prize
money for the first to the 10th position for this year’s race remains
the same, with the winners in each gender category going home with
$50,000 each, while $20,000 and $9,000 respectively will go to the
second and third placed finishers. The African Championship draws a
prize money of $15,000 for first team position, $10,000 for second and
$7,500 for third team position for both men and women.

The prize monies
for best Nigerian finishers in both gender categories, as well as the
respective winners of the men’s and women’s Media Race are also
unchanged with the top three finishers going home with $2,000, $1,500
and $1,000 respectively. Also unchanged are that for the Children’s
Race, where a total of N590,000 will be shared among the top 10
finishers with the top three in the boys and girls categories carting
home N100,000, N80,000 and N50,000 respectively.

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‘Friends of Rugby’ takes the game to schools

‘Friends of Rugby’ takes the game to schools

The Friends of Rugby, a group that promotes the sport, have concluded plans to host a school rugby tournament.

The tournament, to
be known as the Mike Ukome 12-A-Side Schools Rugby Tournament, is
scheduled to hold this Saturday at Saint Saviours School, Ikoyi, Lagos,
from 12 noon through to 6pm. Seven schools will be participating in the
tourney: St. Saviours School, Children International School, Corona
School and Toyibat. Others teams which will participate in the one day
event, which will herald the main 7’s Schools Tournament coming up
early next year, are Dowen College, British International School and
Addax Colt.

“We have decided to
return to the basics, which we started some 12 years ago by hosting a
schools rugby tournament,” said Ntiense Williams, the Secretary of the
group. “You will remember that there was Vitamalt Schools Rugby Program
which heralded Schools Rugby in Nigeria, and then came the Emeka Ukome
Annual Schools Tournament, which ran for almost five years
uninterrupted. According to him, in the last two years, nothing has
been heard about the Emeka Ukome Tourney, so the group decided to
revive it under a new name, Mike Ukome, so as to “give the school
children some rugby to enjoy and start getting involved in the
beautiful game of rugby at a tender age.”

According to the coordinator of the schools program, Emeka Ukome: “I
am very thankful to FOR and in particular Kelechi Mbagwu with his hard
working team for giving back hope to schools rugby, especially the Mike
Ukome Cup,” he said. He then went ahead to explain the format which the
tournament would take. “The event will be a 12-A-Side rugby tournament
for four categories of boys and girls namely, Under-12’s, Under-14’s,
Under-16’s & the Girls events,” he said.

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Premier League youth sides to take centre stage

Premier League youth sides to take centre stage

The
Nigeria Premier League (NPL) have made known their intention to
organise a championship involving the youth sides of all the teams
taking part in this season’s Premier League championship.

Prior to the start
of the 2010/2011 season, the NPL made it mandatory for all the 20 teams
taking part in this season’s championship to register a youth team made
up of players under the age of 18. Plans are now underway by the NPL to
have these youth teams compete against one another in its bid to
develop youth football amongst the 20 clubs taking part in this
season’s top-flight. Spokesman for the NPL, Emeka Nwani, said that the
move is to ensure that the feeder teams of the 20 clubs are also
actively involved in playing the game rather than taking the back seat.
According to Nwani, the competition will take a format that will see
the various teams grouped into six zones as the NPL wants to take into
cognizance the fact that a league system will be financially too
demanding on the clubs.

20 teams, six zones

“The NPL will soon
organise a competition for the feeder teams of the 20 clubs taking part
in this season’s Premier League,” said Nwani. “Remember that the NPL
told all the clubs before the start of this season to ensure that they
set up their feeder teams with the age limit of players not more than
17 years. So in order to make sure that these feeder teams, or youth
teams as you will like to call them, are not just there for the sake of
being back-ups for the senior teams, the NPL has decided to start a
competition for them very soon. The competition will be in a zonal
format. This format we believe will be good for the clubs for the time
being.”

Nwani further revealed that the champions of the six zones are
expected to converge at a yet to be determined venue to feature in a
playoff that will determine the winner of the youth cup. The NPL media
man also took time to warn clubs of the grave consequence of fielding
players that are older than the stipulated 17 years during the proposed
competition. “The NPL will not condone a situation where clubs field
players that are older than 17 years. Once we discover that, I can
assure you that appropriate sanctions will be meted out to such a club
or clubs,” said Nwani.

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Osayomi may get six months ban

Osayomi may get six months ban

Damola
Osayomi may be handed a six months ban if the recommendation of the
doping committee of the Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN) is
ratified by the world athletics body (IAAF).

Sunday Bada, the
Technical Director of the AFN, stated that the committee has finished
its deliberation and have forwarded their decision to the IAAF. “The
AFN doping committee have met and have made appropriate
recommendations,” he said. “For Osayomi, her case is a mild one because
it is a case of stimulant and the punishment ranges from a warning to
six months or one year ban.” Osayomi was stripped of her gold medal in
the 100 metres event of the last Commonwealth Games in New Delhi,
India, after testing positive to a banned substance methylhexaneamine,
which was only recently added to the World Anti-Doping Agency’s
prohibited list.

Aside Osayomi,
another Nigerian, Gabriel Okon, also tested positive to the same drug
and would most likely serve out the same length of ban as Osayemi.
However, Folsahade Abugan, who was caught over the use of steroids at
the same Games will face a lengthier ban. “Her case is different as she
was caught for using steroids,” said Bada. “She would have to serve out
the maximum ban, which is between two and four years because that is
what the rule says.” Abugan who is a former world junior 400 metres
champion had tested positive for a steroid and waived her right to have
her “B” sample tested at the Commonwealth Games. Her silver medal in
the 400 metres event as well as the other silver medal she won as part
of the Nigerian quartet in the 4×400 metres event were subsequently
taken away from.

Preventive measures

Meanwhile, the
National Sports Commission (NSC) Chairman, Ibrahim Bio, has stated that
stringent measures will soon be put in place to curb a re-occurrence of
drug related issues in the country’s sports circles. Bio said the
measures included the setting up of committees and agencies, as well as
fashioning out disciplinary and enforcement plans against offending
athletes, coaches and officials. “In order to forestall a repeat of the
incidence at future global events, the NSC is proposing a number of
measures or steps which, if implemented, will go a long way to keep our
athletes drugs-free under strict supervision,” he said.

He said the NSC was setting up a national anti-doping committee to
co-ordinate all anti-doping activities in the country, in line with the
World Anti-Doping Agency codes and regulations. “Any athlete who
henceforth tests positive for drugs use will, in addition to the
sanctions from the federation, be made to face disciplinary and
punitive actions which will serve as a deterrent to others,” he said.

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Madueke marches on at Dala

Madueke marches on at Dala

After
displacing the number one seed, Sunday Emmanuel, in the first round of
the ongoing Dala Hard court tennis tourney in Kano State, Nonso
Madueke, have secured a slot in the quarter finals of the event after
defeatind Ganiyu Salami in two sets, 6,3, 6,4 in one of yesterday’s
round two games.

Madueke will now
square up with Lawal Shehu who ousted Monday Igbinovia 6, 4, 6, 2 in
the today’s first quarter final match. Mohammed Ubale, National junior
tennis coach, described the upset recorded by Madueke as a welcome
development as it has put the other top players on their toes. “It is
always good to have upsets like this in tournaments, it makes the event
more interesting instead of seeing the same people winning and winning
always,” he said.

Others that have
also secured places in the quarter finals include the tournament’s
number two seed Candy Idoko, Kehinde Alade, Henry Atseye, Destiny
Da-Silva and Cliford Enosoregbe In the female category, there was
another upset as Biola Akewula beat Nosa Esorea 6,4, 6,3 to zoom into
Semi final while the number 1 seed Fatima Abinu thrash Aminat Quadri
6,2 6.1 to also a book her place in the last four.

The winner of the men single’s event will get N500,000 while the Ladies will get N250, 000 for their efforts.

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Roddick’s semi-final hopes fading after Berdych defeat

Roddick’s semi-final hopes fading after Berdych defeat

Andy
Roddick’s hopes of reaching the semi-finals of the ATP World Tour
Finals were hanging by a thread, on Wednesday, as the American was
beaten 7-5 6-3 by revived Czech Tomas Berdych at the O2 Arena.

A second
consecutive defeat for Roddick, after his three-set thriller against
Rafael Nadal, on Monday, means he could be eliminated if Novak Djokovic
beats world number one Rafael Nadal in the later Group A match.
Wimbledon runner-up, Berdych, who was disappointing against Djokovic,
on Monday, saved two set points at 4-5 in the first set and that proved
to be a pivotal moment as the confidence that has been missing of late
came flooding back. He earned his first break point on the Roddick
serve in the following game and converted it in ruthless fashion when
he smacked a 110mph second serve straight back past his motionless
opponent with a rasping forehand.

Berdych held serve to move a set ahead, and Roddick was left
smashing his racket in frustration when he dropped serve again at 2-2
in the second – missing the sideline by a fraction with a smash after a
superb defensive lob by Berdych. World number eight, Roddick, never
regained his composure and serving at 3-5 he pulled a limp forehand
into the net on match point down to hand tournament debutant Berdych,
who had managed just eight wins since losing to Nadal in the Wimbledon
final in July, a morale-boosting victory.

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Super Falcons target historic win over Germany

Super Falcons target historic win over Germany

Nigeria’s Super Falcons will come up against their German counterparts later today in an international friendly.

The Germans are the
reigning world champions, while the Super Falcons are the reigning
champions of Africa. The match, billed for the German city of
Leverkusen, is the first game to be prosecuted by the Super Falcons
since their successful campaign at the African Women’s Championship in
South Africa, and serves as part of their build-up towards next year’s
FIFA World Cup taking place in Germany.

Nigeria’s contingent of 18
players and eight officials earlier in the week departed for Germany
well aware that they have always lost anytime they came up against the
Germans, who will be aiming for an unprecedented third successive world
title next year. The very first game between both sides at senior level
took place back in 1991 at the FIFA World Cup in China, with the Super
Falcons suffering an embarrassing 4-0 defeat at the hands of the
Europeans in a group stage encounter decided in Jiangmen.

Players in 1991 now coaches in 2010

Current Super
Falcons coach, Eucharia Uche, and her assistant, Ann Agumanu, were both
in that Super Falcons squad; while current Germany coach, Silvia Neid,
was a midfielder in the German team and grabbed the game’s opening
goal. It took another 12 years before both sides were to meet again;
this time in a friendly match decided in the German city of Trier,
which served as a build-up game for both sides ahead of the 2003 FIFA
Women’s World Cup in the United States. And as was the case in 1991,
the Germans triumphed by three goals to nil. A year later, both sides
met in yet another friendly decided in Germany, this time around in
Offenbach, with the Germans triumphing 3-1. Nigeria’s only goal of that
game was scored in the 86th minute by Ajuma Ameh, but it served only as
a consolatory goal as the Germans went on to re-establish their
two-goal advantage three minutes later through Steffi Jones.

A month later, the
Germans came up against the Super Falcons in the women’s football event
of the Athens 2004 Olympics. And this time around, after a goalless
first half, it was the Nigerians who shot into the lead five minutes
after the restart through Mercy Akide only for Steffi Jones to restore
parity in the 66th minute, before substitute Conny Pohlers grabbed the
winning goal nine minutes from time. Both sides also met again at the
2008 Olympics in Beijing and, yet again, it was the Germans who
triumphed but this time by a lone goal scored in the 65th minute by
Kerstin Stegemann who made 191 appearances for the Germans.

The only player who has accumulated more caps than Stegemann is
Birgit Prinz, who has made 207 appearances with the last of them
arriving in last month’s 2-1 win over Australia. The 33-year-old
three-time women’s World Footballer of the Year, who on Tuesday made
known her plans to retire from football after next year’s World Cup, is
also the record goalscorer for Germany with 126 goals.

Her last goal,
however, arrived in February in Germany’s 4-0 drubbing of Denmark at
the Algarve Cup in Portugal where she grabbed her side’s second goal.
Inka Grings, who grabbed Germany’s equalizer in last month’s win over
Australia, scored twice against the Danes at the Algarve Cup and the
32-year-old has an impressive record of 59 goals in 86 appearances for
the Frauen Nationalmannschaft.

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Commodifying nature in an age of climate change

Commodifying nature in an age of climate change

For about two
weeks, starting from next Monday, the world will be locked into another
session of negotiations on how to tackle climate change. The
conference, to be held in Cancun, Mexico, has drawn less excitement
than its predecessor held in Copenhagen, Denmark, a year ago.

The excitement of
Copenhagen was partly driven by the false information that circulated
that the Kyoto Protocol was ending at that meeting. Though there were
serious, but failed efforts, made at that conference to lay the
protocol to rest, its first period actually ends in 2012, while a
second commitment period will be entered into as soon as the first
period elapses.

But why would
anyone want to kill the protocol and why should it be sustained? The
Kyoto Protocol is seen by some as the only legally binding instrument
to which the industrialised and highly polluting nations can be made to
commit to cutting emissions at source. From this perspective, when
countries fight to abolish the protocol, they are simply trying to
avoid making any real commitment to tackling climate change.

One problem with
the workings of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC) and the ongoing negotiations is that it bases a chunk
of its reasoning and framings on the market logic. This follows the
path created by the mindset that has built a vicious paradigm of
disaster capitalism, in which tragedy is seen as opportunity for
profit. What do we mean by this?

Rather than take
steps to curtail emissions of greenhouse gases responsible for global
warming, some people are busy devising ways of making every item of
nature a commodity placed at the altar of the market. Through this,
everything is being assigned a value and many others are privatised in
addition.

What makes this
offensive is firstly that you cannot place a price on nature, on life.
Secondly, speculators are hyping the utility of the carbon market as a
means of fighting climate change. Some of the ways this manifests is
through the carbon offsetting projects by which polluters in the
industrialised countries continue to pollute, on the calculation that
their emissions are being compensated for elsewhere.

As Friends of the
Earth International stated in a recent media advisory, “Carbon trading
does not lead to real emissions reductions. It is a dangerous
distraction from real action to address the structural causes of
climate change, such as over-consumption. Developed countries should
radically cut their carbon emissions through real change at home, not
by buying offsets from other countries. Carbon offsetting has no
benefits for the climate or for developing countries – it only benefits
developed countries, private investors, and major polluters who want to
continue business as usual.”

Cancun will
obviously be crawling with carbon speculators and traders, as was the
case in Copenhagen. And they have good reasons to be there. They will
be there because policy makers on both sides of the divide see benefits
in the schemes, even though the so-called benefits are pecuniary and
are actually harmful to Mother Earth. But as far as the money enters
the pockets of some poor countries, the rich countries can go on
polluting, having paid their “penance.”

Not just money alone

The world appears
deaf to the need for real actions to curb climate change, and the focus
remains on money. In fact, while many of the items of the Cancun agenda
have stalled, with regard to reduction of carbon emissions in the
industralised nations, there is no shortage of proposals on how carbon
markets can be brought in to give appearance of action.

Reducing Emissions
from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) is one of such schemes in the
scheme. Quick progress is being made on REDD and already, talks are
advancing on other variants of the scheme. Indigenous and forest
community people are opposed to REDD and object to its implementation,
as attention is being focused on forests merely as carbon stocks for
mercantile purposes. Significantly, many see REDD as not seeking to
stop deforestation, but merely to reduce it.

It is also argued
that that any reduced deforestation may not be sustained, as
deforesters may just shift to another forest or zone to continue with
their activities. In other words, REDD is a pretty fiction that may
pump money into the pockets of some countries and corporations, but
will marginalise forest peoples and will not help to fight climate
change. The attraction, as critics have said, is that if this mechanism
is linked to the carbon market, it will allow developed countries pay
money to REDD-projects that preserve forests in developing countries,
and in return receive carbon credits – buying the right to pollute.

There will also be
strident rejection of any role at all for the World Bank in the climate
finance architecture that may be devised in Cancun.

The atmosphere is
set for a somber, winding series of negotiations. However, social
movements and other civil society groups are set to push up the voices
of the people, as already broadly articulated in the Peoples Agreement,
reached at the World Peoples Conference on Climate Change and the
Rights of Mother Earth held in April 2010 at Cochabamba, Bolivia.

The environmental
justice movement that took first serious steps in Copenhagen is sure to
take firmer steps on the streets of Cancun and in thousands of Cancuns
being planned for a multitude of locations around the world.

The message in
Cancun, if we must expect motions towards real actions to tackle
climate change, is that governments must pay attention to what the
people are saying, to the real challenges faced by vulnerable peoples
around the world, and not lend their ears to carbon speculators.

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Nigeria seeks African Development Bank support

Nigeria seeks African Development Bank support

The Federal
Government is exploring prospects of enlisting the support of the
African Development Bank (ADB) towards the execution of some critical
projects in the country’s power sector.

Olusegun Aganga,
the finance minister, said this on Tuesday, when Donald Kaberuka, the
ADB president, visited him in his office in Abuja.

“We have to take
advantage of the opportunities in the ADB to solve problems facing
African nations. As Africans, we believe that we have to manage our
issues by ourselves through the partnership with ADB,” Mr. Aganga said.

The minister, who
identified the Independent Power Projects (IPPs) as one area that
requires some attention, expressed optimism that the ADB would be able
to join the World Bank in providing the partial risks guarantees to
interest the Independent Power producers.

The finance
ministers and Central Bank governors in five African countries (C-10
Committee) had in its last meeting in Washington to discuss how issues
affecting Africa’s development could be tackled, directed Nigeria,
Egypt, South Africa, and Kenya to get together to explore creative ways
to solve the infrastructural issues affecting the African continent.

The meeting with
the ADB boss, Mr. Aganga explained, was in furtherance of that agenda,
considering the continued supportive disposition of the bank to the
government’s development efforts, particularly with the ongoing reforms
in the country to check the infrastructure deficit in the power sector.

Ineffective institutions

Besides, the
minister said the Primary Mortgage Institutions (PMIs), like Bank of
Industry (BOI), Nigerian Agricultural and Cooperative Banks (NACB),
Nigerian Export-Import (NEXIM) Bank, and National Economic
Reconstruction Fund (NERFUND), which were established to provide
support to government in the execution of it policies, have not been
living up to expectation.

“All these
institutions were set up by government to help execute government
policies in the different sectors of the economy. But, unfortunately,
government is not seeing the benefits of these institutions at the
moment,” he noted, adding that government is working on ways to ensure
that they become more active in providing finance to the real sector of
the economy of the country’s economy.

“We will see a big
difference and change in how government execute works with the PMIs.
The ADB has worked in so many countries to promote this effort by
sharing ideas to empower them to deliver their mandate to the economy.

“Government has
decided to empower all the banks in the country to work closely with
all these institutions towards the empowerment of Small and Medium
Enterprises (SMEs) and the development of the power infrastructure, to
ensure that they are provided with the support they require to execute
government policies the way they should have been done,” he said.

The ADB president
said he was in the country to, among others, explore ways of working
with the Federal Government to handle the assignment handed by the C-10
in Washington, adding that he was of the conviction that Africa will
come out of the global economic crisis stronger, if its resources are
properly managed to the benefit of the people.

“We are here to
interact with the Federal Government on ways to consolidate on the
achievements so far and to accelerate efforts on the development of
infrastructure in the country,” he said.

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Tiger buys into Nigeria food business

Tiger buys into Nigeria food business

South Africa’s
Tiger Brands, maker of food and consumer goods, agreed to buy 49
percent of the food business of Nigeria’s UAC, as it ramps up expansion
in fast-growing African markets to offset slack demand at home.

Tiger also said on
Wednesday it had acquired Deli Foods Nigeria, an unlisted biscuit
maker, and had formed a joint venture with Ethiopia’s East African
Group to manufacture and sell personal goods and food. It did not say
how much it paid for any of the transactions.

Tiger, which also
reported a slight decline in full-year profit, becomes the latest South
African firm to make a push into poor but rapidly growing sub-Saharan
frontier markets.

“Africa is a long
way from being developed, but fast-moving consumer goods such as food
will continue to be a staple consumption, and Tiger Brands wants to be
part of the action,” said Zaheer Joosub, an analyst at Citigroup in
Johannesburg.

Home to about 1
billion people, Africa’s population is expected to double by 2050. Many
frontier economies boast growth rates of 7 percent or more, far
outstripping the projected 2 to 3 percent in South Africa, the
continent’s largest economy.

In what may be the
biggest bet on the long-term outlook for the African consumer, U.S.
retailer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc., is in talks to buy a controlling stake
in South Africa’s Massmart, which also has a presence in some frontier
African markets.

Focus on Nigeria

Tiger Brands said Deli Foods and the Ethiopia business would initially add 500 million rand in annual sales.

The UAC deal will
give Tiger a big presence in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and
sub-Saharan Africa’s second-largest economy, while for UAC, which is
struggling to fend off increased competition, the deal with Tiger is
“very positive”, said Akinbamidele Akintola, an analyst at Renaissance
Capital, in a note to clients.

“This strategic partnership might help turn around the operations of the business to regain market (leadership),” he said.

Tiger Brands, which
makes bread, breakfast cereal, and energy drinks, reported headline
earnings per share of 1.39 rand for the year to end-September, compared
with 1.41 rand last year.

Headline EPS is the main profit gauge in South Africa and excludes certain one-time and non-trading items.

Sales from
continuing operations fell 2 percent to 19.3 billion rand, hurt by
lower food prices and the weaker business environment. Tiger said that
while there was a steady increase in sales in recent months, it
remained cautious about the outlook for the first half of the new
financial year.

Shares of the
company were up 0.8 percent at 185.33 rand by 1018 GMT, compared with a
flat Johannesburg All-Share index. Tiger Brands shares have gained 8
percent so far this year, compared with a nearly 12 percent rise in the
benchmark.

Shares of UAC were little changed, outperforming a 0.7 percent dip in Nigeria’s All-Share index.

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