Wednesday, 10 December 2014
Monday, 8 December 2014
A landslide win for Nyesom Wike

The former Minister of State for Education, Chief Nyesom Wike, on Monday emerged the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party in Rivers State, in a peaceful primary conducted at Community Secondary School, Nkpolu in Port Harcourt Local Government Area.
Wike, who immediately gave his acceptance speech after the result of the primary, polled 1,083 votes, while Dumbari Dimkpa came a distant second with 21 votes.
West Ibinabo got three votes while Emmanuel Georgewill and Lee Maeba got one vote each.
However, 17 out of the 24 governorship aspirants boycotted the exercise.
The PDP governorship primary in the state was conducted amidst heavy security presence as operatives of the Nigeria Police Force,
Department of State Security and Special Anti-Robbery Squad were on the ground to ensure the security of lives and property.
Department of State Security and Special Anti-Robbery Squad were on the ground to ensure the security of lives and property.
Emeka Ihedioha leads in PDP Governorship primaries?

Former governor of Imo State, Chief Ikedi Ohakim and Deputy Speaker House of Representatives, Emeka Ihedioha, is facing each other in fierce contest at the governorship primaries as both had won considerable number of loyalists in the just concluded House of Assembly, House of Representatives primaries in the state.
It was gathered that both governorship aspirants appear favoured for the party flag-bearer as both appear neck-to-neck in support they enjoy from delegates to cast votes at the governorship primary election.
The result of the House of Representative primaries conducted over the weekend recorded major upset as three incumbent members lost their seats.
The former speaker of the state House of Assembly during Ohakim’s regime, Goodluck Opia from Ohaji- Egbema Oguta/Oru West Federal Constituency recorded an upset by defeating incumbent member, Gerald Irona. The former Imo State lawmaker polled 70 votes to floor his opponent and the serving legislator who scored 35 votes.
The two other serving federal lawmakers that lost out in clinching the PDP ticket include Hon. Jerry Alagboso for Orlu/Orsu/ Oru East Federal Constituency and Chudi Uwazuruike for Okigwe South respectfully.
In Aboh Mbaise Ngor Okpalla Federal Constituency, Bid Eke was declared the party flag-bearer by defeating former PDP state publicity secretary, Barr. Enyinnaya Onuegbu, while in Mbaitoli Ikeduru, Henry Nwawuba defeated Mrs. Ijeoma Nwafor, daughter of former INEC chairman Maurice Iwu.
However, the results from both Ahiazu Mbaise and Ezinihitte Mbaise and Njaba/ Nwangele/Nkwerre/ Isu federal constituency respectfully show that the two serving federal legislators, Nnana Igbokwe and Jones Onyeriri won the party ticket while a former House of Representatives member, Mrs. Patricia Udogu won in Ideator North and Ideator South Federal Constituency.
Hon Ezenwa Onyewuchi representing Owerri Federal Constituency retained his position while Nkwere Isu/Njaba and Okgiwe Federal Constituencies, Jones Onyeriri and Obinna Onwueuariri were declared winners respectfully.
Thursday, 4 December 2014
Second joint declaration signals new step in path toward unity

Pope Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew exit the Patriarchal Cathedral of St. George following the Doxology Nov. 30, 2014. Photo courtesy of John Mindala/Ecumenical Patriarchate.

Vatican City, Nov 30, 2014 / 03:44 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In the second joint declaration they have signed since May, Pope Francis and Patriarch Bartholomew reaffirmed their shared desire for full Christian unity, as well as their concerns for the Middle East.
“We, Pope Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, express our profound gratitude to God for the gift of this new encounter,” the declaration, signed by the two on Nov. 30, read.
In addition, the two expressed their “sincere and firm resolution, in obedience to the will of our Lord Jesus Christ, to intensify our efforts to promote the full unity of all Christians, and above all between Catholics and Orthodox.”
The signing of the declaration fell at the end of the Divine Liturgy celebrated in Istanbul’s Orthodox cathedral of St. Gregory on Nov. 30 in honor of the feast of St. Andrew, patron and founder of the Orthodox churches.
It also fell on the final day of Pope Francis’ three-day apostolic voyage to Turkey, which was made largely upon the invitation of the patriarch to participate in the festivities for St. Andrew’s feast.
Pope Francis and Patriarch Bartholomew pointed to the Joint International Commission, instituted exactly 35 years ago by Ecumenical Patriarch Dimitrios and St. John Paul II.
The commission, they noted, “is currently dealing with the most difficult questions that have marked the history of our division and that require careful and detailed study,” and encouraged all their faithful to join them in praying “that all may be one, that the world may believe.”
Attention was then drawn to the current situation unfolding in the Middle East, particularly Syria and Iraq.
“We are united in the desire for peace and stability and in the will to promote the resolution of conflicts through dialogue and reconciliation,” they said, and encouraged all who are in positions of responsibility to strengthen their commitment to assist peoples affected by violence, and to enable them to stay in their land.
Bartholomew and Francis lamented the tragic situation of the many who have been forced to leave their homes due to violence, as well as the lack of respect for the value of human life and the indifference of many in front of the situation.
“We cannot resign ourselves to a Middle East without Christians, who have professed the name of Jesus there for two thousand years,” the declaration read, and affirmed that they share in an “ecumenism of suffering” for all those affected.
They said that just as the blood of the martyrs served as the seed of fertility for the growth of the initial Church, so too will the suffering of modern Christians serve as a key tool in building ecumenical unity.
In addition the Pope and the Patriarch also called on the world to foster solidarity and a greater dialogue with Islam that is based on friendship and respect.
“Muslims and Christians are called to work together for the sake of justice, peace and respect for the dignity and rights of every person, especially in those regions where they once lived for centuries in peaceful coexistence and now tragically suffer together the horrors of war,” they said.
As Christian leaders, the two called on all religious leaders of the world to make every possible effort to strengthen interreligious dialogue in order to build a culture of peace. They offered particular prayers for peace in Ukraine, which has a rich historical Christian presence.
They closed the declaration by praying that all churches throughout the world would be “untiring witnesses to the love of God,” and asked that the Lord grant the gifts of peace “in love and unity” to all of humanity.
In addition to signing their second joint declaration, Pope Francis and Patriarch Bartholomew have made several other significant gestures of friendship, including a shared moment of prayer in Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulcher during the Roman Pontiff’s trip to the Holy Land in May, as well as at the Vatican in June for an invocation for peace between Israel and Palestine.
During last night’s prayer vigil anticipating the feast of St. Andrew, they shared another historic moment when Pope Francis asked the patriarch for a favor: “to bless me and the Church of Rome.”
He then bowed to receive the blessing and was embraced by the Patriarch, who traced the sign of the cross on the pontiff’s head and kissed it.
“We, Pope Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, express our profound gratitude to God for the gift of this new encounter,” the declaration, signed by the two on Nov. 30, read.
In addition, the two expressed their “sincere and firm resolution, in obedience to the will of our Lord Jesus Christ, to intensify our efforts to promote the full unity of all Christians, and above all between Catholics and Orthodox.”
The signing of the declaration fell at the end of the Divine Liturgy celebrated in Istanbul’s Orthodox cathedral of St. Gregory on Nov. 30 in honor of the feast of St. Andrew, patron and founder of the Orthodox churches.
It also fell on the final day of Pope Francis’ three-day apostolic voyage to Turkey, which was made largely upon the invitation of the patriarch to participate in the festivities for St. Andrew’s feast.
Pope Francis and Patriarch Bartholomew pointed to the Joint International Commission, instituted exactly 35 years ago by Ecumenical Patriarch Dimitrios and St. John Paul II.
The commission, they noted, “is currently dealing with the most difficult questions that have marked the history of our division and that require careful and detailed study,” and encouraged all their faithful to join them in praying “that all may be one, that the world may believe.”
Attention was then drawn to the current situation unfolding in the Middle East, particularly Syria and Iraq.
“We are united in the desire for peace and stability and in the will to promote the resolution of conflicts through dialogue and reconciliation,” they said, and encouraged all who are in positions of responsibility to strengthen their commitment to assist peoples affected by violence, and to enable them to stay in their land.
Bartholomew and Francis lamented the tragic situation of the many who have been forced to leave their homes due to violence, as well as the lack of respect for the value of human life and the indifference of many in front of the situation.
“We cannot resign ourselves to a Middle East without Christians, who have professed the name of Jesus there for two thousand years,” the declaration read, and affirmed that they share in an “ecumenism of suffering” for all those affected.
They said that just as the blood of the martyrs served as the seed of fertility for the growth of the initial Church, so too will the suffering of modern Christians serve as a key tool in building ecumenical unity.
In addition the Pope and the Patriarch also called on the world to foster solidarity and a greater dialogue with Islam that is based on friendship and respect.
“Muslims and Christians are called to work together for the sake of justice, peace and respect for the dignity and rights of every person, especially in those regions where they once lived for centuries in peaceful coexistence and now tragically suffer together the horrors of war,” they said.
As Christian leaders, the two called on all religious leaders of the world to make every possible effort to strengthen interreligious dialogue in order to build a culture of peace. They offered particular prayers for peace in Ukraine, which has a rich historical Christian presence.
They closed the declaration by praying that all churches throughout the world would be “untiring witnesses to the love of God,” and asked that the Lord grant the gifts of peace “in love and unity” to all of humanity.
In addition to signing their second joint declaration, Pope Francis and Patriarch Bartholomew have made several other significant gestures of friendship, including a shared moment of prayer in Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulcher during the Roman Pontiff’s trip to the Holy Land in May, as well as at the Vatican in June for an invocation for peace between Israel and Palestine.
During last night’s prayer vigil anticipating the feast of St. Andrew, they shared another historic moment when Pope Francis asked the patriarch for a favor: “to bless me and the Church of Rome.”
He then bowed to receive the blessing and was embraced by the Patriarch, who traced the sign of the cross on the pontiff’s head and kissed it.
The economics of oil have changed. Some businesses will go bust, but the market will be healthier

THE official charter of OPEC states that the group’s goal is “the stabilisation of prices in international oil markets”. It has not been doing a very good job. In June the price of a barrel of oil, then almost $115, began to slide; it now stands close to $70.
This near-40% plunge is thanks partly to the sluggish world economy, which is consuming less oil than markets had anticipated, and partly to OPEC itself, which has produced more than markets expected. But the main culprits are the oilmen of North Dakota and Texas. Over the past four years, as the price hovered around $110 a barrel, they have set about extracting oil from shale formations previously considered unviable. Their manic drilling—they have completed perhaps 20,000 new wells since 2010, more than ten times Saudi Arabia’s tally—has boosted America’s oil production by a third, to nearly 9m barrels a day (b/d). That is just 1m b/d short of Saudi Arabia’s output. The contest between the shalemen and the sheikhs has tipped the world from a shortage of oil to a surplus.
Fuel injection
Cheaper oil should act like a shot of adrenalin to global growth. A $40 price cut shifts some $1.3 trillion from producers to consumers. The typical American motorist, who spent $3,000 in 2013 at the pumps, might be $800 a year better off—equivalent to a 2% pay rise. Big importing countries such as the euro area, India, Japan and Turkey are enjoying especially big windfalls. Since this money is likely to be spent rather than stashed in a sovereign-wealth fund, global GDP should rise. The falling oil price will reduce already-low inflation still further, and so may encourage central bankers towards looser monetary policy. The Federal Reserve will put off raising interest rates for longer; the European Central Bank will act more boldly to ward off deflation by buying sovereign bonds.
There will, of course, be losers (see article). Oil-producing countries whose budgets depend on high prices are in particular trouble. The rouble tumbled this week as Russia’s prospects darkened further. Nigeria has been forced to raise interest rates and devalue the naira. Venezuela looks ever closer to defaulting on its debt. The spectre of defaults and the speed and scale of the price plunge have unnerved financial markets. But the overall economic effect of cheaper oil is clearly positive.
Just how positive will depend on how long the price stays low. That is the subject of a continuing tussle between OPEC and the shale-drillers. Several members of the cartel want it to cut its output, in the hope of pushing the price back up again. But Saudi Arabia, in particular, seems mindful of the experience of the 1970s, when a big leap in the price prompted huge investments in new fields, leading to a decade-long glut. Instead, the Saudis seem to be pushing a different tactic: let the price fall and put high-cost producers out of business. That should soon crimp supply, causing prices to rise.
There are signs that such a shake-out is already under way. The share prices of firms that specialise in shale oil have been swooning. Many of them are up to their derricks in debt. Even before the oil price started falling, most were investing more in new wells than they were making from their existing ones. With their revenues now dropping fast, they will find themselves overstretched. A rash of bankruptcies is likely. That, in turn, would bespatter shale oil’s reputation among investors. Even survivors may find the markets closed for some time, forcing them to rein in their expenditure to match the cash they generate from selling oil. Since shale-oil wells are short-lived (output can fall by 60-70% in the first year), any slowdown in investment will quickly translate into falling production.
This shake-out will be painful. But in the long run the shale industry’s future seems assured. Fracking, in which a mixture of water, sand and chemicals is injected into shale formations to release oil, is a relatively young technology, and it is still making big gains in efficiency. IHS, a research firm, reckons the cost of a typical project has fallen from $70 per barrel produced to $57 in the past year, as oilmen have learned how to drill wells faster and to extract more oil from each one.
The firms that weather the current storm will have masses more shale to exploit. Drilling is just beginning (and may now be cut back) in the Niobrara formation in Colorado, for example, and the Mississippian Lime along the border between Oklahoma and Kansas. Nor need shale oil be a uniquely American phenomenon: there is similar geology all around the world, from China to the Czech Republic. Although no other country has quite the same combination of eager investors, experienced oilmen and pliable bureaucrats, the riches on offer must eventually induce shale-oil exploration elsewhere.
Most important of all, investments in shale oil come in conveniently small increments. The big conventional oilfields that have not yet been tapped tend to be in inaccessible spots, deep below the ocean, high in the Arctic, or both. America’s Exxon Mobil and Russia’s Rosneft recently spent two months and $700m drilling a single well in the Kara Sea, north of Siberia. Although they found oil, developing it will take years and cost billions. By contrast, a shale-oil well can be drilled in as little as a week, at a cost of $1.5m. The shale firms know where the shale deposits are and it is pretty easy to hire new rigs; the only question is how many wells to drill. The whole business becomes a bit more like manufacturing drinks: whenever the world is thirsty, you crank up the bottling plant.
Sheikh out
So the economics of oil have changed. The market will still be subject to political shocks: war in the Middle East or the overdue implosion of Vladimir Putin’s kleptocracy would send the price soaring. But, absent such an event, the oil price should be less vulnerable to shocks or manipulation. Even if the 3m extra b/d that the United States now pumps out is a tiny fraction of the 90m the world consumes, America’s shale is a genuine rival to Saudi Arabia as the world’s marginal producer. That should reduce the volatility not just of the oil price but also of the world economy. Oil and finance have proved themselves the only two industries able to tip the world into recession. At least one of them should in future be a bit more stable.
PDP: Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, has been suspended by the National Working Committee.
According to a press statement released on Thursday in Abuja and signed by the National Legal Adviser of the party, Barrister Victor Kwon, the decision to suspend Tukur was taken by the NWC at a meeting held in Abuja on Thursday.
The meeting was presided over by the embattled Acting National Chairman of the party, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu.

PDP’s former national chairman, Bamagar Tukur
It was disclosed that the former chairman was suspended for daring to return to his position as the national chairman of the PDP.
READ ALSO: PDP Chieftain Wants Mu’azu Sacked
The 395th meeting of the ruling party was to deliberate on recent national developments as they affect the party and the court case instituted against the National Chairman of the Party, Ahmed Adamu Mu’azu by Tukur.
After hours of deliberation, it was gathered that the NWC decided to suspend Tukur and an aspirant to the House of Representatives in Adamawa State, Aliyu Abuba Gurin for one month and referred them to the National Disciplinary Committee for infringing on section 58(1)(a)( b)( h)( l) of the PDP Constitution 2012( as amended).

PDP National Chairman, Adamu Muaz
The NWC reasoned that for instituting a claim and counter claim in suit FHC/ABJ /821/2014; Gurin vs PDP & 3 others without first exploring and exhausting the party’s internal mechanism of redress and for attempting to stop the forthcoming National Convention to nominate the party’s presidential candidate as well as regularize the position of the National Chairman and other members of the National Working Committee is unacceptable.
It would be recalled that a suit filed by Tukur seeking the removal of Mu’azu was dismissed by the Federal High Court in Abuja last week.
Justice Evoh Chukwu who is the trial judge dismissed the case after hearing arguments by parties on Tuesday morning.
Tukur had told the court that he was forced to resign his position as the national chairman of the party.
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