Thursday, 30 January 2014

Two FCMB Workers Steal N13.5m From Bullion Van

Two men have been arraigned before an Ebute-Meta Magistrate's court for allegedly stealing €50,000 belonging to the First City Monument Bank Plc.

The men Adeyemi Adebayo, 32, and Ogundare Julius, 46 has been revealed to be working for the bank and where asked to transport the money in a bullion van from the bank's headquarters at Marina, Lagos, to a branch of FCMB at Adetokunbo Ademola, Lagos Island.

Adebayo, the cash transit officer, allegedly connived with Julius, the bullion driver, to divert the money to an agreed place.

The matter was said to have been reported at the police station when the bank officers at the receiving branch did not see the funds.

They were subsequently arrested and arraigned on Tuesday on four counts of conspiracy and stealing.

The charges reads in part, "That you, Adeyemi Adebayo and Ogundare Julius, on December 31, 2013, at First City Monument Bank Plc Headquarters, Marina, Lagos, in the Lagos Magisterial District did conspire between yourselves to commit felony to wit: Stealing.

"That you being the cash transit officer and bullion driver respectively to First City Monument Bank Plc, Marina in the aforesaid magisterial district, did steal the sum of €50,000, property of FCMB."

The police prosecutor, Inspector George Nwosu, who stood in for the resident prosecutor, ASP Etim Ekankuk, said the offences were punishable under sections 409, 18, 72, 285 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, Nigeria 2011.

The defendants said they were not guilty and elected summary trial.

The defence counsel, Ola Ogunbiyi and Lekan Ayinla, asked for the defendants bail in liberal terms.

The magistrate, Mrs Demi Ajayi, admitted the defendants to bail in the sum of N1m each with two sureties in like sum.

"The sureties must be at least 40 years, gainfully employed and resident in Lagos. One of the sureties must be a blood relation of the defendants with evidence of tax payment and affidavit of means. The address and means of livelihood of the sureties must also be verified," she added.

The matter was adjourned till February 19, 2014 for mention.
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UK Archbishop criticises Nigerian and Ugandan anti-gay laws

The Archbishops of Canterbury and York have written to the presidents of Nigeria and Uganda, after being asked about laws there penalising gay people.

The letter said homosexual people were loved and valued by God and should not be victimised or diminished.

Nigeria and Uganda have both passed legislation targeting people with same-sex attraction.

The letter is also addressed to all primates (heads of national Churches) in the worldwide Anglican Communion.

Archbishops Justin Welby of Canterbury and John Sentamu of York said the letter was a result of "questions about the Church of England's attitude to new legislation in several countries that penalises people with same-sex attraction".

The letter comes as Archbishop Welby starts a five-day tour of Africa.

'Draconian'

In Nigeria this month, President Goodluck Jonathan signed into law a bill which bans same-sex marriages, gay groups and shows of same-sex public affection.

In Uganda – Archbishop Sentamu's native country – a bill allowing for greater punishments for gay people, and those who fail to turn them in to police, has been passed by parliament, but blocked – for now – by President Yoweri Museveni.

The laws have been heavily criticised by gay and human rights groups.

UN human rights chief Navi Pillay described the Nigerian law as "draconian".

She said she had rarely seen a piece of legislation "that in so few paragraphs directly violates so many basic, universal human rights".

In their letter, the archbishops reiterated their support for a document known as the Dromantine Communique, published in 2005 by the primates of the Anglican Communion.

The communique said: "We continue unreservedly to be committed to the pastoral support and care of homosexual people.

"The victimisation or diminishment of human beings whose affections happen to be ordered towards people of the same sex is anathema to us.

"We assure homosexual people that they are children of God, loved and valued by Him and deserving the best we can give – pastoral care and friendship."

'False gospel'

Archbishop Welby's stance on homosexual relationships has created tension with more traditionalist Anglicans.

Last October, he held talks with members of the Global Anglican Future Conference (Gafcon), which condemns those who preach what it calls a "false gospel" claiming God's blessing for same-sex unions.

The primates of seven national Anglican churches in Africa attended October's Gafcon meeting, including Uganda and Nigeria.

Archbishop Welby has said some gay couples have loving, stable and monogamous relationships of "stunning" quality.

But he says he still supports the Church of England's opposition to active homosexuality.
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'Four Million Nigerians Suffering From High Blood Pressure'

A medical doctor at the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital Professor Ibrahim Katibi has said that over
40million Nigerians are suffering from high blood pressure. Katibi, in his paper titled: "Health and wellness" presented at a forum organized by medical associates in Ilorin, described high blood pressure as a silent killer disease and a serious condition that can lead to coronary heart disease.
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N25,000 Won't Give You Quality Education says Lagos Govt.

Lagos state government has yesterday said giving the huge financial demands of providing quality tertiary education in it's state-owned university, students should not expect to pay N25,000 as tuition as quality tertiary education cannot be cheap.
Speaking on the appropriation for Lagos State University, LASU, Commissioner for Economic Planning, Ben Akabueze said, the state government will spend N9.2 billion for capital and recurent expenditure in the state university in 2014.
He said: "LASU is not funded by the tuition fees paid by the students. It is not possible in today's world to get quality tertiary education at N25,000. Many Nigerians pay more than that to fund their children's education at the primary education level. Government around the world spends more money funding basic education than tertiary education. This is to create platform for more people to be educated."
"We have N9.2 billion that would be spent on LASU in 2014. Out of the N9.2 billion, N2.6 is for capital expenditure while N6.6 billion is for recurrent expenditure."
The commissioner added that the state budgeted the sum of N2.7 billion for Adeniran Ogunsanya College of Education, AOCOED, Ijanikin, Micheal Otedola College of Primary Education, MOCOPED; N1.2 billion and Lagos State Polytechnic, LASPOTECH; N3.6 billion.
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Nigerian courts suspend trial of gays

Two Islamic courts in Bauchi, northern Nigeria have been forced to suspend the trials of 10 men accused of homosexuality because of fears of mob violence, judges and officials have said.

An angry crowd last week pelted stones at seven men suspected of breaking Islamic law banning homosexuality after their hearing was adjourned at the Unguwar Jaki Upper Sharia Court in Bauchi.

Police were forced to use teargas and fire shots in the air to disperse the mob, who were demanding summary trial and execution for the defendants.

The seven had been due to reappear before the same court on Tuesday.

But registrar Isa Bununu told AFP: "We can't continue with the trial in view of the security breach we had during the last court session.

"The court will have to suspend the trial pending the review of the security situation with relevant authorities to avoid a repeat of the mob action we saw last week."

Nigeria banned same-sex marriage and civil unions earlier this month in a move that won widespread support in the religiously conservative country but triggered international outrage.

Homosexuality was already banned under sharia Islamic law, which exists alongside state and federal laws in the majority Muslim north of Nigeria and carries the death sentence.

A separate trial of three other suspects at another sharia court in the Tudun Alkali area of the city was also put on hold.

All 10 defendants were arrested on suspicion of belonging to a gay club.

"The trial has been suspended because of the stoning incident in the other court, which we are trying to avoid here", said judge Nuhu Mohammed Dumi.

"The remand notice for the suspects expired today (Tuesday) but we will have to extend it."

Dumi suggested that the new trial date would not be publicised and the suspects brought to court in secret to avoid unrest.

Lawyer Suleiman Musa, defending the three, has objected to his clients' continued detention but Dumi said the decision was for their own safety.

"The families of the three suspects… came to me requesting bail and I told them that it was in their interests to stay in prison because they risk losing their lives at the hands of an angry mob if they are released on bail," he said.

"They realised the danger."

Tuesday's aborted hearings left the Unguwar Jaki court almost empty apart from a few support staff and two litigants in a separate case waiting for the judge.

Rows of brown benches face the judge's desk, behind which a copy of the Koran in a sheepskin bag for oath-taking and a horsewhip for flogging convicted criminals hang on the wall.

Men and women are usually seated separately.

Sharia proceedings are considered quicker, simpler and more straight-forward than secular courts as well as cheaper. They normally deal with marital, inheritance and financial disputes.

Civil cases are resolved by either testimony of witnesses, valid documents, confession or by swearing an oath on the Koran.

To be proven, the charge of sodomy, like adultery, requires the testimony of three reliable witnesses or a voluntary confession.

But the death sentence is rarely, if ever, carried out.

Dumi last week dismissed the testimony of a prosecution witness against two men accused of being gay lovers because they had not been caught "in the act".

On January 16, however, he sentenced a 20-year-old man to 20 lashes in public and ordered him to pay a 5,000 naira ($30) fine for breaking the law on homosexuality.
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What Dreams Are Made Of: Understanding Why We Dream (About Sex and Other Things)

Do they predict the future or simply rehash the past? By figuring out why we dream, researchers are hoping to nail down what the nightly cavalcade of images and events means. 

Ever since Sigmund Freud published his controversial theories about the meaning of dreams in 1900, we have been fascinated with the jumble of experiences we seem to live through while we slumber. Freud was convinced that dreams represent some unfulfilled desires or hoped-for wishes, while later investigators saw a more pragmatic quality to them, as reflection of waking life. None of these theories, however, have had the benefit of much in the way of solid, objective data.

At least, until now. Two new developments in research — brain imaging and big data — may offer some stronger answers. More detailed and timely snapshots of the brain at work, combined with the information researchers amassed about dreams from experiments in sleep labs, is gradually peeling away the mystery of dreams, and revealing their meaning.

From a strictly biological standpoint, scientists have learned much about the physiological process of dreaming, which occurs primarily in REM sleep. "During dreaming," says Patrick McNamara, a neurologist at Boston University School of Medicine and the graduate school of Northcentral University in Prescott Valley, Ariz., "the limbic part of the brain—the emotional part—gets highly activated while the dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex, the executive part of the brain, is under-activated. So the kind of cognitions we experience during dreams are highly emotional, visually vivid, but often illogical, disconnected and sometimes bizarre." That suggests that our dreams may have some role in emotional stability.

That does not necessarily mean, most dream researchers believe, that dreams are random expressions of emotion or devoid of some intellectual meaning. While some scientists maintain that dream patterns are strictly the result of how different neurons in the brain are firing, Deirdre Barrett, a psychologist and dream researcher at Harvard Medical School, believes they represent something more.  "I think it's a fallacy that knowing brain action negates a subjective, psychological meaning any more than it does for waking thought. I think dreams are thinking in a different biochemical state."

Defining that state, not to mention understanding the rules under which that universe operates, however, is a challenge. It may represent a complex interplay between emotional and cognitive information, says McNamara, so that dreams serve to help our brains process emotional memories and integrate them into our long-term memories. And because traumatic events are associated with higher levels of the stress hormone cortisol, they can cause nightmares. Researchers believe that excessive amounts of cortisol can impair the interaction between the hippocampus and the amygdala, the two main brain systems that integrate memory. "The memories don't get integrated," he says, "but just sit around. In post traumatic stress disorder, they get re-experienced over and over."

In fact, from sleep studies in which people were exposed to images, learning tasks or other experiences immediately before they dozed off and then examined when they awakened, many scientists believe that dreams can help us rehearse for challenges or threats we anticipate—emotionally, cognitively and even physiologically. In our dreams we may try out different scenarios to deal with what's coming up. Although much of the evidence for this is anecdotal, McNamara says, someone practicing piano or playing video games in waking life may start to do the same while dreaming. People solving a puzzle or studying a foreign language, he adds, can have breakthroughs with dreams that go beyond the perceptions that simply taking a break from the problem can produce. 

And now, Barrett says, brain imaging holds the promise of being able to help scientists "see" what until now could only be reported by subjective, possibly inaccurately recalled, dream accounts. For example, in research with rats trained to run through mazes to get rewards, investigators were able to record neuron activity in sleeping rats and determined that the rats were running the same mazes in their dreams.

In other experiments with humans, scientists monitored volunteers who slept inside an fMRI scanner while hooked up to EEG electrodes that measured brain wave activity. When the EEG indicated they were dreaming, the participants were awakened and asked what images they had seen in their dreams. The investigators were later able to match certain patterns of brain activity to certain images for each person.  "There's a crude correspondence between the brain scan and the image. "From the scan, you can guess it's an animal with four legs," says Barrett. Despite the primitive state of this dream decoding, the ability to actually glean content from a dream is getting closer.

Mining big data bases of reported dreams holds another kind of promise. Until now, researchers have been working on relatively small samples of dream accounts, usually fewer than 200 per study. But new dream websites and smartphone apps like DreamBoard and Dreamscloud are encouraging thousands of people to report their dreams into larger repositories so researchers can finally answer their most urgent questions.  McNamara, for example, is excited to study dreams from different countries to see whether there are cultural differences in what people's brains do when they aren't awake.

The data bases also provide an opportunity to investigate the intriguing but under-studied realm of sex dreams. Until recently, says McNamara, they represented only 10% of reported dreams, likely because people are not eager to share this type of content with researchers in white lab coats. But self-reporting via the apps and websites, despite its potential biases, may provide more information on these types of dreams. "This is a wide open area crying for investigation," he says.

McNamara is also eager to study individuals' dreams over time to observe differences and changes in emotional tone, colors, words and other significant patterns and connect these to events in their lives. That would bring him closer to answering whether dreams are, in fact, prophetic — it might be possible, for example, that certain kinds of dreams precede getting the flu, or that other other dreams are more associated with happier events.

Such investigations could also reveal more about less welcome dreams, such as nightmares, and potentially lead to ways to control or avoid them. Barrett plans to mine the new database to study how often nightmares occur, and how they relate to an individual's trauma or a family history of anxiety disorder. One of her first projects will involve the dream data from DreamBoard.com, which has accumulated 165,000 dreams over the last two years. Because Dreamboard has coded the dreams by the gender, colors, emotions (joy, anxiety, anger) and the number and categories of people in a dream, Barrett says she can identify basic patterns.

We already know, she says, that women dream equally about men and women while men's dreams are two-thirds populated by men. Research so far also shows that men's dreams may show slightly more anger and physical aggression while women's display a bit more sadness and verbal hostility. Interpreting what these differences mean, however, will require deeper studies.

What's been discovered so far, however, suggests that such studies could reveal an enormous amount about what role dreams play in our lives, and how important they are for biological, psychological or social reasons. With this research, McNamara believes, scientists can find out if what shrinks have been saying for years is true — that reflecting on our dreams is useful and can give us insight into ourselves. Psychologists say so, and many people think so. But this research, he says, gives us the potential to know.
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Mu’azu rules out automatic ticket for PDP legislators

The National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Ahmad Mu'azu has said the party will not give automatic tickets to its members to contest the 2015 general elections.

Muazu announced this while answering questions from newsmen after a closed-door meeting with the PDP caucus of the House of Representatives on Wednesday in Abuja.

He said that automatic tickets were only given by parties that were undemocratic.

"We have a democratic process and we will go through that, those that deserve it will surely get it," he said.

He said that he was not aware of any promise made by the immediate past national chairman of the party, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, of giving automatic ticket to any member.

On the meeting, the chairman said it was normal for the party leadership to consult with the lawmakers.

Muazu added that the party would not disclose the strategy it would use to woo back members that defected to the All Progressive Congree (APC).

In attendance at the meeting were the Govs. Emmanuel Uduaghan of Delta, Liyel Imoke of Cross Rivers, Ibrahim Shema of Katsina, Ramalan Yero of Kaduna and Muazu Aliyu of Niger and Theodore Orji of Abia states.

The Deputy Governors of Kogi and Jigawa states also attended the meeting.

The Governors of Anambra, Mr Peter Obi and Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo came in briefly in company of Gov. Godswill Akpabio but left before the meeting began.

Earlier in an address of welcome, the Majority leader of the House, Mulikat Akande-Adeola (PDP-Oyo), had demanded that the party offer automatic tickets to the lawmakers to contest in 2015.
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