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Wednesday, 18 August 2021

Several killed in attack at Shell facility in Nigeria’s southeast

 Southeast Nigeria has seen a wave of deadly violence targeting security personnel and government facilities since the beginning of the year

Several killed in attack at Shell facility in Nigeria’s southeast


SEVEN people have been killed in an attack on a convoy transporting workers to a Shell oil and gas project in Nigeria’s southeast, police say.


No group claimed responsibility for Monday’s attack, but southeast Nigeria has seen a wave of deadly violence targeting security personnel and government facilities since the beginning of the year.

Police have previously blamed the violence on the Indigenous People of Biafra or IPOB, an outlawed movement seeking independence for ethnic Igbo people of the region, but the group has denied the accusation.

Imo state police spokesman Michael Abatan told AFP news agency on Wednesday that gunmen opened fire on a convoy of buses heading to a Shell gas plant in the area.

‘We lost one policeman and six oil workers in the attack by the gunmen,’ he said.

He said an investigation was under way ‘to arrest the gunmen and determine the motive for the attack.’

SPDC, the Nigerian subsidiary of Shell, confirmed the attack ‘by unknown gunmen, on a convoy of buses taking staff of its contractor’ to a project site in the Ohaji area.

‘We have since shut down the project site while the incident has been reported to the police for investigation,’ the company said in a statement.

Attacks on oil and gas facilities by armed groups seeking a larger share of Nigeria’s oil wealth for the people of the Niger delta used to be common until an amnesty deal in the 2000s helped to restore peace.

Monday’s attack came on the same day President Muhammadu Buhari signed into law a new energy bill that aims to provide oil companies with a clearer framework for investing and working in Nigeria.

The law also seeks to address the demands of local communities in crude-producing areas, though some community leaders say it has not gone far enough to provide them with a share of revenue from oil extracted from their land.

Nigeria is currently battling several security challenges, including a 12-year-long armed rebellion in the northeast, kidnappings for ransom and banditry in the northwest, herder-farmer violence in northern and central states, and separatist agitations in the southeast.

Buhari, a retired general and former military leader first elected in 2015, is under fire for his government’s inability to stem the violence.

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Uganda scraps controversial anti-pornography ‘miniskirt’ law

 Constitutional court throws out a controversial law whose provisions included a ban on wearing miniskirts in public

Uganda scraps controversial anti-pornography ‘miniskirt’ law

UGANDA’S constitutional court is scrapping a controversial anti-pornography law whose provisions included a ban on wearing miniskirts in public, in a decision hailed by women’s rights campaigners.


The judgement on Tuesday said that the 2014 legislation, which had been dubbed the ‘anti-miniskirt law,’ was ‘inconsistent with or in contravention of the constitution of the republic of Uganda.’

‘Sections … of the Anti-Pornography Act are hereby declared null and void,’ Justice Frederick Egonda-Ntende said in Monday’s ruling, which also struck down the powers of a nine-member committee tasked with enforcing the law.

The legislation criminalised any activity deemed pornographic, from wearing short skirts to writing risque songs, and led to increased public harassment of women who wore clothing considered too revealing.

In 2014, Ugandan pop star Jemimah Kansiime was arrested for performing in a music video that showed her in her underwear. Currently on trial, she faces up to 10 years in jail, although the future of the case is unclear because of the new ruling.

Women’s rights activists welcomed the verdict, which followed street protests by campaigners calling for the legislation to be dropped.

‘This has been a bitter struggle and we are grateful [that] those who believe in the rights of women have emerged victors,’ Lillian Drabo, one of the nine petitioners who challenged the law, told the AFP news agency on Tuesday.

The petitioners said the legislation encouraged the harassment and mistreatment of women in public and denied them control over their bodies, as well as access to public spaces.

The government’s lead counsel Imelda Adong told AFP they were ‘studying the ruling’ and would respond in due course.

Uganda’s former minister for ethics and integrity, Simon Lokodo, was a longtime champion of the law, threatening to close a prestigious private school in 2016 for stocking copies of a British children’s book which was deemed too sexual.

In the past, Lokodo ordered police to arrest men who have sex with prostitutes and described a popular local television dating show as prostitution.

Local media reported that he also confronted Proscovia Alengot Oromait, then Uganda’s youngest member of parliament, when she wore a short skirt in parliament.

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Your anger, your life

 Accra, Aug.17, GNA – It is a cozy Saturday morning. All is calm and one can hear the beautiful birds chirping happily. But suddenly, another sound interrupts the calmness.

Your anger, your life

Scenario
Mr Opoku and his wife are involved in a heated argument. Mrs Opoku has caught her husband flirting with another woman on a phone call, a confirmation of her recent suspicions, regarding her husband’s sudden change in attitude-lateness to home after work and refusal to eat dinner.

Mr Opoku, a church elder, is a respected figure in the community and so pleaded with his wife to keep the issue between them.

Mrs Opoku, still angry over the incident, reluctantly accepts the apology.

A few days later, she cuts off her husband’s head with cutlass while he was bathing, out of anger.

Mrs Opoku, though regretted the deed, is still serving her life imprisonment sentence.

Anger is a normal healthy human feeling unless one fails to manage it properly.

The Oxford English Dictionary defines “anger” as a strong feeling of annoyance, displeasure, or hostility.

Consequences of anger

Unbridled anger can lead to loss of respect, divorces, relationship break ups, loss of years of valuable friendships, loss of job opportunities or promotion, generational environmental transfer (raising a generation of timid or aggressive children), among others.

Out of anger, people have verbally and emotionally abused those they once upon a time claimed to dearly love.

To the extreme, just like in Mrs Opoku’s case, some have physically abused or even murdered others and ended up spending majority or almost the rest of their lives in imprisonment.

Health wise, anger increases one’s heart rate and puts them at risk of heart attack or stroke due to hypertension.

Anger can raise one’s blood sugar level through the release of cortisol into the blood stream, cause a general agitation of the nervous system, indigestion, sexual dysfunction, delays in healing, headaches, insomnia and aggravation of ulcers.

CAUSES OF ANGER

Epictetus, a Greek Stoic Philosopher said, “it is not the event or situation that causes anxiety, but the individual’s evaluation, appraisal or interpretation of the event or situation that causes anxiety”.

Thus, whether or not one becomes angry is a matter of perception (what might create anger in one person may not trigger anger in another).

People get angry when they feel attacked, powerless, being treated unfairly or when they experience physical pain or threat.

IS ANGER AN EMOTION OR BEHAVIOUR?

Reverend Albright Asiwome Banibensu, a licensed Psychologist says anger, though an emotion or feeling, forms part of three interlinked stages (Thinking, Feeling and Behaviour) of influence that humans experienced.

He says there are four stages involved in the cycle of violence namely; tension build up, explosion, reconciliation and calm or honeymoon stage.

“The way you think, affects the way you feel. The way you feel affects the way you behave. If you behave in a certain way too often it becomes a habit. So anger can become a behaviour. A person can be motivated to be belligerent habitually if that gets him rewarding results,” he said.

POSITIVE SIDES OF ANGER

Rev Banibensu, also the National Vice President, Ghana Psychological Association (GPA) says anyone who does not experience or show some amount of anger may actually be suffering from a psychological disorder.

“Anger is reasonable and has many positive sides. A number of people who got angry because others looked down on them, have been provoked to move from their comfort zones and achieve successes. Ephesians 4:26 says, ‘Be ye angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath.’ In short, you are permitted to be angry but don’t misbehave if you are,” he said.

HOW TO PROPERLY HANDLE YOURSELF WHEN ANGRY

“Any person capable of angering you becomes your master; he can only anger you when you permit yourself to be disturbed by him.”— Epictetus

Rev Banibensu says there are three communication channels usually used by angry people.

Thus, Passive (holds anger in), Aggressive (shows or explodes with anger) and Assertive (expresses anger in a healthy way).

The Psychologist says in order to communicate healthily when angry, one has to first work on his or her belief system.

One can also ask questions such as whether or not it is really a sign of weakness expressing anger or a sign of hypocrisy not expressing it.

Also, does the object or subject of one’s anger really intend to make them angry?

“You have to also know your rights. You have the right to say ‘no’ or to offer no reasons or excuses for justifying your behaviour. You have the right to judge if you are responsible for finding solutions to other people’s problems. You have the right to change your mind and to disagree with someone’s opinion. You have the right to make mistakes and be responsible for them.”

“Communicate your feelings gracefully and honestly. You may use the sandwich method by saying something truthfully nice first. For example, you can say something like, ‘I am glad you are my friend, but I felt sad that you recently spoke ill about me. We need to discuss that. This shouldn’t destroy our friendship because you are still a great friend,’” he added.

He recommends the Biblical method of reconciliation in Matthew 18:15 which says, “If your brother sins against you, go and show him his fault, just between the two of you. If he listens to you, you have won your brother over.”

Rev Banibensu says it is totally impossible to prevent anger. He says avoiding trouble spots only shuts down communication.

As such, they should rather open up about their displeasures and talk about them.

He says people should know why they are angry, think through to see if it is really necessary, face the situation, be assertive and learn to let go.

“Exercise regularly and stay fit, because when you are in peak physical condition, you will get less angry easily. Work with the less privileged. It can make you dissipate the energy needed to be angry,” he added.

Finally, Rev Banibensu suggests an appointment with a Licensed Psychologist or a Counsellor, regularly.

GNA

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Across Africa in Five Minutes


Across Africa in Five Minutes

 Nigeria


Nigeria’s state-owned oil company is to be disbanded under a new law which came into effect on Tuesday. The government said the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation would be replaced by an independent company.

President Muhammadu Buhari said the Petroleum Industry Law, which was nearly 20 years in the making, marked the end of decades of uncertainty and under-investment in the energy sector.

Egypt

The office of the Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett says he has received an invitation from the Egyptian President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi for an official visit in the next few weeks.

A statement from Mr Bennett’s office said the invitation was conveyed by the Egyptian intelligence minister during a meeting with the Israeli leader in Jerusalem.

Kenya

A Kenyan man is reported to have been allowed to leave Qatar after earlier being detained on charges of receiving money to spread misinformation.

A migrant rights group says that Malcolm Bidali – a security guard who blogged critically about the conditions of foreign workers in Qatar – paid a hefty fine before leaving the country on Monday.

Ghana

Accra, Aug. 18, GNA – An Accra Circuit Court has sentenced a land guard to four years imprisonment in hard labour for defrauding the Member of Parliament for Komenda-Edina-Eguafo-Abrem Constituency in the Central Region of four plots of land.

Nii Amoo Dodoo denied the offence but was found guilty after the trial.
In sentencing Dodoo, the Court presided over by Madam Evelyn Asamoah said it considered the seriousness of the crime and the fact that it was premeditated.

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Apelo por Escolas Seguras e Sustentáveis no Âmbito Climático || Call for Safe and Climate-Friendly Schools in Angola

Assunto: Apelo por Escolas Seguras e Sustentáveis no Âmbito Climático Excelentíssima Senhora Vice-Presidente da República de Angola,  Espera...