Tuesday, 10 December 2013

ASUU: FG withdraws ultimatum

THE Federal Government , Tuesday, said  it was withdrawing the ultimatum given to striking university lecturers to resume or be sacked following appeals from well-meaning Nigerians and substantial compliance with the directive by some members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities.
According to the Federal Government, the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN has confirmed that a sum of two hundred billion Naira agreed with ASUU at a meeting with President Goodluck Jonathan on the 5th of November ,2013 has been fully paid into a Revitalization of Universities Infrastructure Account.
Addressing Journalists, the Senior Special Assistant (SSA) to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe who showed to newsmen the CBN letter which was signed by the Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr Tunde Lemo and addressed to the Accountant General of the Federation, confirmed that the total sum of two hundred billion Naira was the balance in the account as required.
Okupe who noted that what the federal government was interested in was how to resolve the six month old crisis in a peaceful manner for the overall interest of all concerned, said, "right now, the issue of ultimatum is not a matter for discussion anymore. There has been substantial compliance nationwide. If I say you must return to work on the 9th and 70% of the people that I am talking to have returned to work, that is substantial compliance.
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Iyayi's Death: Autopsy Shows No Bullets – Medical Source

A medical exam conducted to unravel the cause of death of Festus Iyayi showed no evidence of bullets, a source familiar with the autopsy has informed SaharaReporters. Mr. Iyayi, a professor of business management at the University of Benin who was also a well known novelist and academic activist, he died November 12 in an automobile accident near Lokoja. Mr. Iyayi was on his way to attend a meeting of the Academic Staff Union of Universities when the vehicle in which he was traveling was hit by a car in the convoy of Governor Idris Wada of Kogi State.
Our source said that a team of pathologists who included experts and witnesses from ASUU, medical doctors at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital and the Nigerian government carried out an autopsy and unanimously determined that Mr. Iyayi was not shot.
With the official report of the autopsy still being put together, our source disclosed that the participants in the autopsy confirmed the presence of holes in Mr. Iyayi's body, even though they could not trace the piercings to any bullets. He added that medical examiners recovered no pellets from the late Professor's body.
The autopsy was reportedly done about a week before the commencement of Mr. Iyayi's funeral. The late academic's funeral ended yesterday with a "thanksgiving Mass at Saint Mathew's Catholic Church in Ugbegun, Edo State. Mr. Iyayi's remains were buried in the same town on Saturday.
A renowned Nigerian writer and activist, Mr. Iyayi was a former national leader of ASUU. He also served as a former President of the Committee for the Defense of Human Rights (CDHR). 
SaharaReporters disclosed that Mr. Iyayi was killed in a crash involving the notoriously reckless convoy of Kogi State Governor, Mr. Wada. Mr. Iyayi was on his way to Kano to attend a council meeting of ASUU executives to discuss the next step in a long-running strike by lecturers that has grounded Nigeria's public universities and mired the country's education in a crisis.
 However, members of the late Professor Iyayi's family and activists close to him said they have not been informed of the final results of the autopsy. His son, Omole,  told Saharareporters earlier today that the family had not received any official autopsy reports from doctors in Benin. He said they were therefore surprised at the conclusions.

Www.saharareporters.com/news-page/iyayis-death-autopsy-shows-no-bullets--medical-source
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SHOCKING: 'Killer' of Lee Rigby - Adebolajo describes moment Woolwich soldier died as he takes to the witness stand.

Woolwich 'murderer' Michael Adebolajo today admitted killing Lee Rigby in a 'military attack' and  described his attempts to decapitate him at the Old Bailey today.

The 28-year-old's account of knocking down the Fusilier and trying to cut off his head led to Drummer Rigby's widow running from the court.

He and Michael Adebowale, 22, are accused of murdering Fusilier Rigby by running him down with a car and then hacking him to death with a meat cleaver and knives near Woolwich Barracks in south east London on May 22.

He told the court: 'After I struck the neck, I used another of the knives I had sharpened to try and remove the head but I was unsuccessful in this attempt.'

He went on: 'We planned a military attack which obviously involved, sadly - it's not something enjoyable, something fantastic - the death of a soldier. It's a military attack.'

When asked whether the killing was political, he told the jury: 'Jihad by its very nature is political.'

Adebolajo described the killing of Fusilier Rigby as a 'military operation'.

He said: 'No Muslim hopes to have to kill anybody, that's the first thing to make clear.

'Just as a general plans attacks knowing full well that when he plans this attack people will die, this is what happens in war, so when we target a soldier this is a similar thing.

'It's not a casual joke. It's a military operation. This is how we see it.

'To fight Jihad for the sake of Allah, it's not something that is to be taken lightly, fun or something like this.

'Those responsible for sending British troops to kill Muslims, it just so happens, those people who have influence and control over the military are the Government, yes.'

Asked if the attack was designed to intimidate the public, Adebolajo said: 'The truth is this, the Government and the British public have become aware of Jihad over the past years, a lot of people know the only reason it is occuring is because of foreign policy.'

Adebolajo denied that he threw Fusilier Rigby's body into the path of an incoming vehicle.

He told the jury he wanted to deter 'have-a-go heroes' from approaching him.

He refused to answer questions about how long he and Adebowale had allegedly spent planning the attack.

Adeboloja said he should be ransomed back to other jihadi fighters, set free or killed if he is found guilty
When asked when he had tried, unsuccessfully, to buy bullets for the gun, he said: 'I will not be specific, but it was a long time before the incident.'

Adebolajo told the jury that he had not planned to run down Fusilier Rigby with his car.

'As for the colliding with the soldier, that was not something that was pre-meditated. It just so happened that Allah caused him to cross in front of my car.'

He admitted that he was 'not 100% sure' that Fusilier Rigby was a soldier at the time of the attack.

Fusilier Rigby's widow Rebecca left the courtroom in tears as Adebolajo claimed the soldier was moving after he was hit by the car.

He told the jury the 25-year-old had moved, and was 'maybe semi-conscious, but he did not sit up or stand up'.

Adebolajo admitted striking Fusilier Rigby's neck but denied hitting his head.

He said the soldier had already been killed by the time Adebowale left the smashed car and arrived at his side.

Addressing Adebowale in the dock briefly, he added: 'He (Adebowale) struck him twice with his knife - and forgive me for speaking my brother - but I prevented him doing anymore because I said he was already dead.'

Adebolajo said he handed a letter to an eyewitness to make it clear that the events happened 'for one reason and one reason only - that's foreign policy'.

He said: 'The life of this one soldier might save the lives of many, many people, not just from Muslim lands but from this country.'

Adebolajo said he asked people at the scene at Woolwich Barracks to film him to 'make it clear to everybody why the soldier lost his life' and 'how this can be avoided in the future'.

Asked why he ran at the police when they arrived, he said: 'I was almost certain that I would be shot to death.'

Adebolajo said he had 'nothing but admiration' for the firearms officers who applied first aid after he was shot.

Turning to his hospital treatment, he said: 'I believe this country, from what I experienced, we have the best nurses on the planet.'

'They show so much kindness to me while I was handcuffed to my bed,' he said. 'In Islam we respect this, but we don't respect oppressors.'

Adebolajo told the court a number of times: 'I am a soldier.'

He also said he was shocked at how long it took for Fusilier Rigby's body to be buried.

'It shocked me to the core. I thought surely he would be buried by now, because obviously he's a soldier like myself, and in Islam we bury our deceased immediately.'

The 28-year-old told the jury that he has no complaint against the police marksman who shot him in the wake of the killing.

'When I read the statements of the armed officers, I thought maybe they thought I was going to be a jobsworth, trying to claim some type of compensation because my humerus was shattered etc etc.

'It was a man who shot me, the female she Tasered me. I have no grievance with them, they are not the ones who are killing Muslims. They are just doing their duty.'

'My religion is everything... Al Qaeda are my brothers': Lee Rigby's 'killer' speaks of how he converted to Islam at university following strict Christian upbringing

One of the men accused of murdering soldier Lee Rigby loves Al Qaeda and says members of the terrorist group are 'his brothers', the Old Bailey heard today.

Michael Adebolajo, 28, told the jury his 'religion is everything' and admitted he hoped to be accepted into Paradise as a martyr for Adebolajo today denied murder on the grounds he is a 'soldier of Allah', with the soldier's relatives sat feet away.

Asked who Al Qaeda were by his counsel, David Gottlieb, Adebolajo replied: 'Al Qaeda, I consider to be Mujahideen.

Evidence: Woolwich suspect Michael Adebolajo, who was surrounded in the dock by guards, today said he killed Lee Rigby because he is 'at war'
'I love them, they're my brothers. I have never met them. I consider them my brothers in Islam.'

He added: 'Mujahideen are the army of Allah.'

He went on: 'My religion is everything.

'When I came to Islam I realised that... real success is not just what you can acquire, but really is if you make it to paradise, because then you can relax.'

Adebolajo said he converted to Islam in his first year at Greenwich University.

When asked about his attitude to people in authority, he said: 'Generally speaking, I don't get along with them, generally. In most instances I don't get along with authority, except for my mother and my father.'

As ground rules were set out for his giving evidence, including not speaking over the judge, he said: 'I don't believe in the law.'

When asked what his defence to the charge of murder is, Adebolajo said: 'I'm a soldier. I'm a soldier of Allah and I understand that some people might not recognise this because we do not wear fatigues and we do not go to the Brecon Beacons and train and this sort of thing. But we are still soldiers in the sight of Allah as a mujahid.
Father-of-six Michael Adebolajo's youngest child was just four days old when he killed Lee Rigby, the Old Bailey heard today.

Married Adebolajo told the jury that having a wife and children was not an excuse not to fight.

He said 'Allah might throw me in the hellfire' if he 'did not fight for this reason'.

Earlier he described how he was brought up as a Christian who became a 'soldier of Allah'.

He admitted today to killing the Fusilier but denies murder, he told the jury.

He told the jury of eight women and four men: 'My parents used to take us to church every Sunday. The memory that sticks in my mind... is probably every New Year's Eve in the evening around 11 o'clock we would gather around in candlelight and read passages from the Bible.'

Adebolajo told the court that he took the name Mujahid, meaning fighter, in 2002 or 2003.

'Growing up I never did think of killing a man. This is not the type of thing that the average child thinks of and I was no different.

'When a soldier joins the Army he perhaps has in his head an understanding that he will kill a man at some stage. When I became a mujahid I was aware that perhaps I might end up killing a soldier.'

In 2010 he tried to travel to Somalia but was captured in Kenya and brought back to the UK.

Adebolajo said: 'There's a lot more to the story but I won't mention that.'

He said that, growing up in Romford, the 'vast majority' of his friends were white British, and one, Kirk Redpath, joined the Army and was later killed in Iraq by an IED.

Adebolajo said: 'I hold Tony Blair responsible for his death.'

He told the jury that he and Adebowale prayed to Allah that they would attack a soldier and not a civilian.

'To be 100 per cent, I don't believe there's a way to know 100 per cent that was a soldier, however there were some steps that we took.

'For example before we started out on that day and the night previous to that I started worshipping Allah and begging him that ... we strike a soldier and a soldier only.'

Planning: Adebolajo said today that before he killed Lee Rigby he 'started worshipping Allah and begging him that we strike a soldier and a soldier only'
Adebolajo earlier told the jury that he used to attend demonstrations 'in the hope it might make a difference'.

He added: 'I was somewhat naive.'

Adebolajo told the court that at one demonstration he was arrested and sent to prison.

He said that in his cell he realised the demonstrations were 'impotent rage'.

'In reality, no demonstration will make a difference,' he added.

Background: Adebolajo, 28, pictured in a police interview, said today he was brought up as a Christian but became a Muslim when a student at Greenwich University
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BE YOUR OWN DOCTOR: Can the colour of my urine indicate a health problem?

Doctors have used it as a guide to health for hundreds of years. Now, a swatch chart aims to help you do it yourself. Just be glad you don't have to taste your wee, as doctors once did.
When you go for a pee, you probably don't pay attention to what it looks like. But if you haven't been tempted to check it before, a new colour chart from the Cleveland Clinic in America showing the spectrum of possible urine shades could convince you to do so. A pale straw colour is normal, while a brown-ale tinge may indicate dehydration or, more seriously, liver disease. By swatch-matching your urine colour to the Cleveland Clinic's diagram, you can see whether or not you are healthy.
The solution
The study of urine has been widely valued by doctors since ancient times. In 700AD it was established as a diagnostic tool by the monk and philosopher Theophilus.
He was such a fan that he wrote a treatise called De Urinis (On Urine) and systematically classified urine by colour and consistency. Old men, he said, had thin and white urine because they were melancholic. Nowadays, doctors are unlikely to eyeball your urine without sending it off to be analysed in a laboratory. Since the colour can be altered by medicines and food as well as more serious causes such as infections or cancers, what hues should worry you?
Pink to reddish urine can be due to beetroot (called beeturia), blackberries or rhubarb, but if you haven't eaten any you should see your doctor.
The list of other causes sounds alarming as it includes bladder infections and bladder, kidney or prostate cancer – but it is most likely to be none of these. Blood in the urine can be caused by heavy exercise, such as long-distance running – in medieval times, it was blamed on too much dancing or over-energetic sex (both of which could, theoretically, cause blood to get into the urine). Blood in the urine, however, may be more rusty brown than bright red or pink and may also be invisible to the naked eye.
Blue or green urine (truly alarming) can be caused by a range of drugs, including cimetidine, but also by rare medical conditions such as porphyria (and allegedly by Clorets breath mints). It can indicate infection with a bacteria called Pseudomonas. Foaming urine may be harmless but can also indicate too much protein due to kidney problems. Cloudy, white urine may be due to urine infections, harmless phosphate crystals, or possibly sexually transmitted infections. Very dark urine can indicate serious jaundice, and orange urine can be caused by vitamin supplements (for example, vitamin C), drugs and possibly carrots. So looking at your urine should be of interest. In earlier times, doctors also tasted it (sweet urine means diabetes), but you don't need to go that far.
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