Thursday, 8 January 2015

FREE FOOTBALL BETTING TIPS FOR THE DAY



SPAIN, FA CUP
19:00  Granada CF – Sevilla      2
21:00  BarcelonaElche    1

ENGLAND, LEAGUE 2
19:45  LutonShrewsbury        1

PORTUGAL, FA CUP
20:00  Maritimo – Nacional        1

GREECE, FA CUP
13:00  Skoda Xanthi – Zakinthos         1
15:15  AEK Athens – Atromitos Anthinon     1
15:15  Panthrakikos – Iraklis Psachnon          1
17:13  Chania – Panathinaikos    2

EGYPT, DIVISION 1
17:30  Ismaily SC – EL Dakhleya         1
12:30  Ittihad EL Shorta – Misr EL Makasa     1X
15:00  EL Raja Marsa – Smouha SC       1

Dosu tips Enyeama for CAFaward

2015-01-08 10:15 
 Lagos - Former Nigerian goalkeeper Joseph Dosu has said the Super Eagles' safest hands, Vincent Enyeama, stands a 90% chance of being crowned the 2014 Glo/Caf African best player of the year.

The Lille of France shot stopper is hotly challenged for the coveted award that will be held in Lagos on Thursday by the title holder Yaya Toure of Ivory Coast and Gabonese international Pierre Emerrick-Aubameyang.

Dosu said the former Enyimba goaltender has performed excellently in the year under review and deserved to be crowned the best player in Africa.

Yaya Toure defeated Nigeria’s Mikel Obi in the immediate past edition of the yearly award in Lagos, Nigeria.

Read more at Supersport

Owners of structures on NNPC's property directed to vacate

2015-01-08 10:15
Abuja - The Federal Government has warned those who encroached on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation's (NNPC) right-of-way to vacate such locations.

The Public Affairs Manager of Pipelines and Products Marketing Company (PPMC), Nasir Imodagbe, stated this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.

Imodagbe said government was set to clear all structures obstructing the oil pipelines’ “Right of Way” across the country.

He said the mandate of PPMC was to clear obstructions to secure the company’s right-of-way.
The spokesperson, who decried the high level of encroachment on the right-of-way, said that there would be no compensation for anyone whose structure is demolished.

He said that those encroaching on the stretch were illegal occupiers of government land because they had no approval from government before they built on the pipelines’ right-of-way.

He explained that oil pipelines passed through the way and that no structure was expected to be on it.
“Any structure on it is illegal, ” he said.

He said demolition had already been carried out on the stretch in Lagos and some areas in the northern part of the country.

He said those who encroached on the company’s right should therefore stay clear and not wait for the demolition team to arrive.

While stressing that government was poised to reclaim the entire oil pipelines right of-way, he stressed that the aim was to stem the activities of vandals on the pipelines.

He said the plan was also to keep those areas safe for law-abiding citizens and to safeguard installations and infrastructure built with tax payers’ money.

Jonathan denies hating the north

2015-01-08 11:25
Abuja - President Goodluck Jonathan in Abuja on Wednesday dismissed insinuations that he hated the northern part of the country.

Speaking when a delegation of the Northern Elders Council (NEC) visited him at the Presidential lodge, Jonathan wondered what informed such suggestion.

He also flayed the attitude of some people, who paraded themselves as statesmen but make provocative statements just to create enmity and division in the country.

Citing projects executed by his administration in the north and appointment of many northerners into key positions in his government, Jonathan said he would provide documents to prove his critics wrong.


"Some people say Jonathan hates the north; I have heard that statement and I tell Namadi Sambo; `they say I hate the north but you are here as my Vice-President'.

"I tell the National Security Adviser and my Principal Secretary the same thing. In fact my Principal Secretary (Hassan Tukur) has been my friend since I was the deputy governor of Bayelsa

"I never knew I was going to come here as Vice-President not to talk of President. But I have known him since I was the deputy governor of Bayelsa.

"My Chief Detail, Yusuf, is from Borno and has been with me since I was a deputy governor in Yenagoa.
"I see him as a good person and I have carried him along with me. So I had to ask how can somebody wake up and say I hate the north?'' he said.

The president stated that out of the 12 new federal universities established by his administration, nine were in the north while only three were in the south.

Jonathan said his government also initiated Almajiri education in the north to bring the region at par with the south in terms of education development.

He expressed happiness that state governments in the north had keyed into the imitative, which he said had greatly expanded access to education in the region.

The president expressed concern over provocative statements by some elderly Nigerians, who parade themselves as statesmen.

"Some people call themselves statesmen but they are not statesmen; they are just ordinary politicians.
"Being a statesman is not because you have occupied a big office before but the question is what are you bringing to bear?

"Are you building this country or are you a part of people who tell lies to destroy this country and to create enmity between people who ordinarily would have been living together?

"At the appropriate time Nigerians will know all of us even though I know most of you know us but the younger ones do not know.

"Some people are hiding under some clogs, some big names and creating a lot of problems in this country,'' he said.

Wednesday, 7 January 2015

Insurgency: Niger, Chad still part of multinational force

2015-01-07 12:00
Abuja - The Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshall, Alex Badeh, says Niger and Chad republics are still part of the multinational force fighting insurgency in the North East.

Badeh said this while fielding questions from State House correspondents in Abuja on Tuesday.
He spoke after a meeting of service chiefs, governors and members of the National Assembly from Borno, Yobe and Adamawa over the security challenges in the area.

The meeting was presided over by President Goodluck Jonathan.
The chief of defence staff, however, confirmed that the two countries had withdrawn their troops from Baga in Borno.

He reassured that the army would overcome the challenges of insurgency in the country.

Badeh, however, stressed the need for further collaboration with the security agencies in Chad, Niger and Cameroun to check the activities of the insurgents.

On the call for the closure of borders between Niger, Chad, Cameroon and Nigeria, Badeh said it would be a difficult task due to the porous nature of the border areas.

He reiterated the commitment of the military to stamp out Boko Haram in the country.

France on high alert as 12 die in Paris shooting

33 minutes ago
Paris - Twelve people have died after masked gunmen stormed the Paris offices of a satirical newspaper on Wednesday, in France's deadliest terror attack in at least two decades.

French President Francois Hollande said the attack on the weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which has frequently drawn condemnation from Muslims, is "a terrorist attack, without a doubt", and said several other attacks have been thwarted in France "in recent weeks”.

France raised its alert to the highest level, and reinforced security at houses of worship, stores, media offices and transportation. Top government officials were holding an emergency meeting.

Paris prosecutor's spokesperson Agnes Thibault-Lecuivre confirmed 12 people were killed.
Luc Poignant, an official of the SBP police union, said the attackers escaped in two vehicles. A witness, Benoit Bringer, told the iTele network he saw multiple masked men armed with automatic weapons at the newspaper's office in central Paris.

Threatened before
The extremist Islamic State group has threatened to attack France before, and minutes before the attack Charlie Hebdo had tweeted a satirical cartoon of that extremist group's leader giving New Year's wishes.
Charlie Hebdo has been repeatedly threatened for publishing caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad, among other controversial sketches, and its offices were firebombed in 2011.

The 2011 firebombing came after a spoof issue featuring a caricature of the Prophet Muhammad on its cover. Nearly a year later, the publication again published crude Muhammad caricatures, drawing denunciations around the Muslim world.

Wednesday's attack comes the same day of the release of a book by a celebrated French novelist depicting France's election of its first Muslim president. Hollande had been due to meet with the country's top religious officials later in the day.
AP

At least 11 dead after gunmen storm French newspaper

2015-01-07 13:44
Paris - A French police official says 11 people are dead in a shooting at a satirical weekly newspaper in central Paris.

Xavier Castaing, head of communications for the Paris police prefecture, confirmed the deaths.
French President Francois Hollande was headed to the scene of Wednesday's shooting at Charlie Hebdo, a satirical weekly that has drawn repeated threats for its caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed, among other controversial sketches.

Earlier, a police union official in Paris said one journalist was among the dead and three officers have been wounded in the shooting.

Luc Poignant, an official of the SBP police union, said the attackers escaped in two vehicles.
A witness to the attack on Wednesday, Benoit Bringer, told the iTele network, that he saw multiple masked men armed with automatic weapons at the newspaper Charlie Hebdo, in central Paris.
AP