Saturday, 13 April 2013

Respect State Marijuana Laws Act Introduced In Congress



NEW YORK -- Republicans and Democrats in Congress are coming together in defense of states' rights -- and marijuana.
Rep. Dana Rohrbacher (R-Calif.) introduced a bipartisan bill on Friday to protect marijuana users and businesses from federal prosecution when they are following state laws. The Respect State Marijuana Laws Act would shield both medical and recreational pot users.
"This bipartisan bill represents a common-sense approach that establishes federal government respect for all states’ marijuana laws. It does so by keeping the federal government out of the business of criminalizing marijuana activities in states that don’t want it to be criminal," said Rohrbacher, in a statement.
Despite promising not to go after medical marijuana dispensaries, the Obama administration has raided hundreds of them. Federal officials are still trying to make up their minds, moreover, about how to respond to recently passed referendums in Colorado and Washington state that legalized marijuana outright.
Rohrbacher's bill should take away any doubt: It would say that residents of states that take steps to reform drug laws on their own shouldn't be subject to federal harassment.
A Pew Poll released last week showed that a broad majority of Americans, even when they don't agree with legalizing marijuana, believe the federal government should not step in to punish users in states that do. Sixty percent of Americans said the federal government should not meddle in states that legalize pot.
"Marijuana prohibition is on its last legs because most Americans no longer support it," said Steve Fox, national political director for the Marijuana Policy Project. "This legislation presents a perfect opportunity for members to embrace the notion that states should be able to devise systems for regulating marijuana without their citizens having to worry about breaking federal law."
The bill is cosponsored by Reps. Justin Amash (R-Mich.), Don Young (R-Alaska), Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) and Jared Polis (D-Colo.). Rohrbacher, whose state has a large medical marijuana program, has previously introducedlegislation seeking to reclassify marijuana at the federal level as a drug that does have medical uses.
The bipartisan makeup of the bill's cosponsors reflects increasing support among Republicans for ending or shifting the country's war on drugs. In the past two months, for example, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has called for lessening marijuana penalties and evangelical media titan Pat Robertson has announced his support for outright legalization.
HuffingtonPost

17 Times In Detention, Joe Okei-Odumakin Opens Up: I Met My Husband In Prison



She was recently honoured in America with the Woman of Courage award. In this no-holds- barred interaction, she tells her story. Excerpts:
To people, you are just an activist, but who exactly is Joe Odumakin? Joe Okei-Odumakin was born on 4 July, 1966 in Zaria, Kaduna State. I have three elder brothers and lost a younger one while growing up. I grew up as a tom boy because I was born in the midst of boys, I play football a lot. I love defending people’s rights and it started during my kindergarten level.
I attended a missionary school because my parents were staunch Catholics; I had wanted to be a nun. That was what I wanted all my life. I attended St Barnabas Primary School. After that, I attended Queen Elizabeth Secondary School, Ilorin because my parents were based in Ilorin.
I did my A Levels in Kwara State Polytechnic where I was at the School of Basic Studies in 1984. Like I said, I wanted to be a nun at the age of 14 but my father threatened to disown me. I was too young to be disowned. Not only did my father threaten to disown me, he also was to print my obituary because he said I did not want to procreate.
After that I cried all through the day and night, I then told my mum to tell my father that I was willing to continue my education. When my father returned from his trip to the United Kingdom, he then took me to one Dr Acho, who was the Director of Basic Studies, and told him that that I would be living in his house. I lived there for a week and promised my father I would stay on campus. My father then opened a hard cover note book for me to clock in and out.
After a year, I saw a poster which read, ‘Rethink Nigeria’, which was a left wing movement, and seeing it, I felt I should go for the meeting. On getting there, I went through the agenda, but there was no opening or closing prayer and I made an observation but people shouted at the same time ‘who brought this thing here? Throw her out, they are talking about serious national issues and this thing is talking about prayers’. So, I had to leave. But three weeks after, I was called upon again. I was addressed as ‘reverend sister, and told, ‘we won’t include opening or closing prayers, but you can come for our meeting’.
I went there and still observed the same thing. They were so violent with me, held me by neck and led me out and, since then, I vowed never to be part of the meeting. That was how after my A Levels, I got admission into ABU Zaria but the institution was too far for me and my second choice was the University of Ilorin where I read English Education and graduated in 1987.
I did my Youth Service at the 35th Amphibious Battalion with soldiers. I interacted with the soldiers intensely. I came back to the University of Ilorin in 1990 to do my master’s in guidance and counseling.
While I was at the University of Ilorin in 1985, I had a lecturer who saw that I was brilliant and asked what I wanted to become in life and I told her that wanted to become a nun.
She was the one who motivated me to read about Martin Luther King and other people like Karl Max, Malcom X. That was how the thing started in January 10, 1985 and, by March 1985, the position of secretary for Women in Nigeria, Kwara State branch was vacant. When it was time for us to reel out our manifesto, first person to speak; I started quoting from Martin Luther King’s book, people started hailing me and the third person did not bother to come up.
That was how I became the secretary of Women in Nigeria, Kwara State branch in 1985. That was how I became born again into the struggle.

But what motivated you to become an activist?
One quotation stuck me when I read Martin Luther King where he said ‘our lives begin to end when we keep silent about things that matter’. I felt my life was ending because I was silent about things that matter. I called my lawyer-friend and told him to prepare my will and, then, I had mattress and books. I told him that ‘if anything happens, give my mattress to motherless babies, give my books to the University of Ilorin library’.
What motivated me really were those books that I read and I wondered how people were giving their lives to the struggle. I wondered how Rosa Parks refused to get up in the bus and so I found out that a lot of people had given their lives to struggles. I situated that within the Nigerian context and I pondered on military dictatorship in Nigeria.
I also had to fathom the fact that we got independence in 1960 and, by 1985, if a child was born at that time, that child would have become a man or woman; and if that man is still on diapers, there is cause for one to worry. That was how I started and then, Karl Max had said that every onlooker is either a coward or a traitor. All those things and several other things and then situating it to our own environment, it was then I saw a leaflet with the name of Dr Beko Ransome Kuti, President, Committee for the Defence of Human Rights, and I called him on phone.
Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin We spoke and I introduced myself, that I was the secretary for Women in Nigeria. He said he was in Lagos and asked me if I wanted to come over and I said yes. The next day, I took off for Lagos; when I saw him, he was packing his books and he said he had an appointment with the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi and that he needed to confirm from Gani if he could come with me.
He put a call through to Gani and he said I could come. That was how we went to Gani’s chambers. It was the same day that I saw him (Beko), Gani and also Fela. By the time we were through with Gani, Beko was going to see Fela and he asked if I wanted to see Fela and I said I would like to see Fela. Fela, apart from Bob Marley, was another musician I loved listening to.
When I saw Fela, he asked in pidgin, ‘wetin be your name? (What is your name?) I said Joe, he said ‘that one no be name; wetin be your native name?’I told him Obiagali. He said what was the meaning and I said my, ‘Mind is not at rest’. Then said a few things about Nigeria.
There were a lot of things I picked from Fela’s life and that was how I started. We had Committee for the Defence of Human Rights in 1989, Campaign for Democracy in 1991, Institute for Human Rights and Democratic Studies but my own base was Ilorin.
Anything that I am doing, I put 100 percent commitment to it, and so, in terms of the struggle, I was dedicated. We took the Jehovah Witness approach and then, in Kwara State, I started as secretary, then treasurer, deputy and then chairperson.
Batted with urine I was in and out of detention for about 17 times. At that time, I always liked to go to the hottest zone each time there was heavy protest. During the IBB time, when they were to paste posters, I came to Lagos for a meeting and I said, ‘ if I am in Lagos, I will follow them to paste posters at Dodan Barracks’, but Beko advised that I go back to my base in Ilorin. I went back to Ilorin but I made sure I pasted my posters at the police headquarters. We went for the pasting at 1 a.m and somebody with a bike would take us, drop us very close and then will go and take cover.
So, I pasted mine at the police headquarters but some of the security bulbs there were not functional; it was under that cover that I put starch and pasted. But, unfortunately for me that day, a police officer was talking with his colleague. The person came near where I was pasting and I had to lie still and he urinated all over my head but I was still lying down. At the end, being a tipsy person, he stepped on something and called for a torch to be brought.
The moment I heard that, I didn’t know whether to run or lie down. When the person brought the torch, he thought it was a big snake as he saw somebody lying on the ground. He flashed the torch and saw posters with Babangida’s face being crossed. He said ‘you have the effrontery to come to the police headquarters?’
Immediately after that, he picked me up and started beating me. The other one said, ‘Why are you wasting time, kill her’, but the bike man that brought us said ‘don’t kill her oh, we have seen you’. They poured the starch on me and the next thing I knew was that I found myself in the cell, I was already tired. When I woke up, I was covered with starch and I was like that for two days. I also recollect what my mother was telling my father that he should have allowed me to be a nun.
My father was a top civil servant, he was serving under a military government and I was the one leading the protest. They went and ransacked his house, he was also arrested, and it was like that for sometime.
I also remember the time I swore in my life never to put on skirt. It was during one of the rallies that we had which was against Abacha in 1994. I was in Ilorin. I was in shirt and blouse and I was the one leading the protest while I was addressing the rally, soldiers came around and I was serious beaten. My shirt was torn and I was thrown inside the gutter.
But fortunately, I saw a scarf which I tied around my waist because my skirt had been torn and I had virtually nothing on. I was seriously beaten and, in the course of that, I sustained serious injuries, I was kicked underneath several times. That was how they took me to the cell and I was like that for three days. That was the last time I vowed never to put on skirt.
With this robust story, how have you been able to marry activism with the home front? If one fails in one, one has failed in all. I learnt from my mother when I was growing up. If I am going for the protest or anything, I make sure that I prepare about six different kinds of soup and keep them in the freezer just like I learnt from my mother who always went once a while to the market.
I used to go to the market, but I put a stop to it because when anytime I get there by 10 am, people who have problems will come and those who appreciate me.
I will be in the market from ten in the morning to two in the afternoon and will end up buying nothing. Now, I send people to the market to help me buy things and, when I am around, I like cooking. The house must be thoroughly cleaned; the bed sheet must be thoroughly cleaned and, then, when I was growing up, I know that my dad still had time to look at my homework. I still find time to look at my children’s homework.
Honestly, balancing the home front has not been easy because, in those days during the military dictatorship, I had vowed that I was not going to marry except there was democracy until I met Comrade Yinka Odumakin in prison; one thing led to the other and we got married. Shortly after our marriage, there was no honeymoon. We were in a hotel in Ilorin and the manager called us that we should leave.
Why? They said some troublesome people were in the hotel and that he did not want to leave his job as manager. After the reception in Ilorin, we got to the hotel around 2:30 pm and, ten minutes after we got there, we decided to leave for Lagos. When we arrived Lagos, we had to leave for Pa Ajasin’s burial the next day.
One thing was that in 1998, 13 months after my marriage, I was to address a press conference in Pa Abraham Adesanya’s office. That morning, I was feeling funny. We were to go to Apapa, but, had to go to the doctor’s place. The doctor said it was labour sign and I said, ‘ doctor, you have to stop this labour because I have a press conference to address’. The doctor said the labour sign was advanced labour, this was around 7:30 am.
My mother was with me in the hospital, and then, by 9:10 am, the baby came; the baby sneezed and cried. As they were cleaning the baby, I left for Apapa to address the press conference. Nobody knew that I had just delivered a baby not to talk of being pregnant except my husband who was also at the press conference. Immediately after the press briefing, I returned to the hospital.
When I arrived at the hospital, my mother asked where I was and I told her that I went to address a press conference; my mother then said ‘you are an extremely strong girl’. I told the doctor to discharge me because there was nothing wrong with me. That was how we left.
Aside activism, what are your other hobbies? I read a lot and I love watching History Channel.
There is this argument in some quarters that the death of Gani Fawehinmi, Beko Ransome Kuti, Pa Abraham Adesanya and others has really affected activism in Nigeria and has made activism to be on the decline. What is your position because many people believe that most of the ills in the country are going unchallenged and what you people usually do now is to make noise?
Beko Ransome-Kuti was the live wire of the human rights movement, while Gani was the heart beat of the struggle. At the inception of this same struggle, there was a rallying point because we had military dictatorship. The likes of Beko and Gani went to the battle with their eyes closed and their death has left a gap in the human rights and pro-democracy movement.
We still have some of our warriors around like Professor Wole Soyinka but, really, one of the things that have kept us down in this country remains the convocation of a Sovereign National Conference. I know that until Beko breathed his last, he worked tirelessly for the convocation of a Sovereign National Conference. Not only him, Pa Enahoro and Gani all worked for us to have SNC. The practical example Beko took then at the National Arts Theatre at Iganmu in 1990 which Babangida smashed, he said there were no-go areas on the issue of nationhood.

The issue is not whether Nigeria needs a Sovereign National Conference but the thing is that can we still get delegates in the midst of Boko Haram in the North, in the midst of kidnapping in the East?
The reason some of us did not participate in politics then was that we had the feeling that the Constitution that we have is not perfect. There is nobody that will go in there that will not come out unscratched. Some activists joined politics because they felt we should not sweep the house from outside but from inside and, unfortunately, they were swept off because they campaigned for Obasanjo’s third term.
Few of the activist felt they could not remain on the streets, like what happened in 1999 and, then, powerful people who had business in governance could just hijack it. If we were part of the making of governance, it is not going to be possible, but one thing you should know is that all of us cannot go into politics. The reason some of us have not dared it is because the Constitution is totally flawed, it is not workable. Secondly, we must create an enabling environment where people can come and there will be a level playing ground, the electoral system should be properly strengthened; our institutions should also be properly strengthened.
Like what you just said that a lot of people just come around to make noise, one thing you should know is that activism is a very laborious task. Going out to sensitize and mobilize people is laborious. You should also realize that we do not have that central issue that brings all of us together.
There is the need for total stock-taking and change of tactics. We have always agitated for non-violent protests, I remember a time during the struggle that over 200 people were killed, I was shot on my right leg. There is no other language than a non-violent language.
Even if Tunisians, Egyptians, Libyans did not complain in the comfort of their homes, no matter what happens, we should not get desperate to the extent of taking up arms and ammunition.
But, by and large, we need to do a lot more, it is just like dropping a cube of sugar in the ocean; but, historically, those who contributing positively, I am sure that history is taking note of them. We still have a few of us who are really active in the struggle. I tell people that activism is no job.
But there are some people who believe that activists take activism as full time jobs… Activism is no job. Anyone who engages in full-time activism means that the person has another way of survival. Being on activist I, realized the importance of education; right from the time I was in Ilorin, I was employed by the Teaching Service Commission, I was doing part-time lecturing at the polytechnic, I was a WAEC marker, I take part-time lesson for big shots in the society who want you come and teach their children and you are well paid at the end of the day. So, by the time I put all of these together, it is worth it. I prefer teaching in private universities though the public universities are good, but I need what would give me time and I have my reasons anyway.
As I speak with you now, I am on contract with two private universities and I do a lot of local and international rapporteur and I am paid. I have lots of work I am editing, I write biographies and I make presentations so that, at the end of the month, I know the amount that will come to me. When that amount comes, I give 60 per cent to the struggle, while I keep the rest 40 per cent. When international organizations come to Nigeria and I am called upon, I present my CV, I do their job and I go.
Can you recount how many times you have been detained and your worst experience during the struggle? We had lots of detentions that were not recorded, but the one I can remember is that I have been detained about 17 times and the worst of the detention was at Alagbon. I was detained in Ilorin and I developed typhoid fever. I was detained for about three weeks, I was on treatment and my father came to sign an undertaking that I will be of good behaviour but I refused. The chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress then, Comrade Bisi Bakare, came with my father and appealed to me and said ‘he who fights and runs away, lives to fight another day’. When my father wanted to sign, I refused and so they left. After they left, the drip I was given was violently removed; infact, my vein tucked up. Shortly, I saw my parents and the NLC president.
Which year was this? It was in 1994. They took me inside a vehicle with another one behind us, we were on our way to Lagos. But on our way, after Ogbomosho, my stomach turned because the drip that was used to sustain me had been removed and I had not started eating. I told them I wanted to ease myself, but they refused thinking I wanted to run away. They told me to ease myself in the vehicle but the driver appealed to them that they should allow me go into the bush and ease myself.
As the vehicle stopped, I ran and they started firing but I did not care if anything hit me. I got there and relieved myself. That was how we stopped over four times before we got to Lagos. On getting to Lagos, I was pulled with the handcuffs on my hands and legs. When Chief Gani Fawehinmi saw me, he was angry and told them to remove the handcuffs on my legs and hands. That was how they took me to the cell and, in the small cell, there were over 14 of us.
Naij.com

Most Physicians' Spouses, Partners Say They're Happy


"Show me a doctor whose wife is happy," an old cartoon caption goes, "and I'll show you a man who's neglecting his practice."

The joke assumes that the norm for physician marriages is unhappiness and that physicians are "medical men," as they were called in a less liberated day.
A new study published online in Mayo Clinic Proceedings last month turns the joke on its head in several ways. It reports that 86.8% of physicians' spouses and partners said in a national survey that they were satisfied — and 55.4% extremely so — with their relationship with their stethoscoped other. Furthermore, 27.1% of these spouses and partners were men.
In addition, neglecting a medical practice is not the formula for keeping a physician's mate happy, it turns out. A multivariate analysis of the survey findings shows that the number of work hours logged by a physician per week is not a factor associated with extremely satisfied spouses and partners. Rather, the best predictor of the strongest relationships is the number of waking minutes the couples spend together. The only other factor associated with extremely satisfied spouses and partners is the number of nights per week the physician is on call.
The study is not the first to challenge the stereotype of the troubled medical marriage. It cites a single study in which 90% of married adults rated their relationship as favorable, and another in which 88% said they were either satisfied or completely satisfied.
All in all, physicians and their mates fare about as well as everyone else in domestic matters: Their satisfaction level roughly matches that for all married US adults in several surveys.
Few Physicians See Their Mate More Than 2 Hours Daily
The study authors identified physicians' partners and spouses for their line of questioning by asking physicians in an earlier survey to supply the email addresses of their mates if they were willing to be surveyed about relationship satisfaction. The researchers obtained email addresses for 1644 spouses and partners; of these, 891 sent back a completed questionnaire.
The median age of the responding spouses and partners was 51 years compared with 55 years for the physician. About 57% of physicians' mates worked outside the home, and almost 87% had children. Their demographic picture was consistent with that of the physicians, which suggests that survey participants were representative of physician mates as a whole, according to lead author Tait Shanafelt, MD, a hematologist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and coauthors.
In these pairings, physicians worked a median 55 hours a week, whereas mates working outside the home put in a median of 40 hours (30 for women and 40 for men).
Good relationships need face time, the study suggests. Among couples who were together fewer than 20 minutes a day, slightly more than 20% of physician spouses and partners reported that they were extremely satisfied. This percentage exceeded 70% for mates who were with their physician partner more than 120 minutes each day.
Table. Face Time in Physician Marriages
Average Number of Minutes Spent Each Day With Spouse or PartnerPercentage of Spouses and Partners of Physicians
≤209.3%
21 - 4517%
46 - 9024.3%
91 - 12021.2%
>12028.5%
Source: Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
Dr. Shanafelt and colleagues write that the study does not establish a causal link between minutes logged and satisfaction and allows for the possibility that happy couples are inclined to hang out more and unhappy couples less. Nevertheless, "the dose-response relationship between time spent together and satisfaction is notable," the authors write, adding that previous studies of physician marriages uncovered the same pattern.
"These data underscore that creating and protecting time together may be one critical ingredient for healthy relationships with physicians and that achieving it can mitigate many of the negative effects of excessive work hours and a demanding professional life," write Dr. Shanafelt, director of the Mayo Clinic Department of Medicine Program on Physician Well-being, and colleagues.
The study delved into some of the negatives of a medical marriage. The authors report that at least several times a week, when physicians came home, 34.1% were irritable, 43.5% were too tired to engage in family activities, and 46% still had their minds on that day's patients. Slightly more than 1 in 10 spouses and partners of physicians had seriously considered divorce in the previous 12 months. Still, 80.9% said they would choose a physician for a life partner again.
Dr. Shanafelt and coauthors acknowledge that survey results may skew to the sunny side because physicians who enjoy happy relationships may be more likely to put researchers in touch with their mates. However, one finding weakens that argument, they write: The percentage of physicians who said they had contemplated divorce in the last 12 months was 11.0%, which is remarkably close to the percentage of spouses and partners who had divorce on their minds. That similarity "would suggest that both satisfied and dissatisfied physicians provided contact information for their spouses/partners."
In an accompanying editorial, lead author Mary Warner, MD, from the Department of Anesthesiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, and coauthors write that Dr. Shanafelt's study "provides evidence that physicians and their spouses or partners make pretty good couples, with relationships...that are as stable and satisfying or better than those of the general population."
However, there is more about these relationships to explore, Dr. Warner and coauthors point out. Of the physician spouses and partners surveyed, 10.2% were physicians themselves and another 30.7% were some other kind of healthcare professional. Does relationship satisfaction differ among these groups? In addition, the study does not parse out what percentage of physicians are in same-sex relationships, which raises even more questions about who is feeling what — questions that few researchers asked in the days of medical men and their long-suffering wives.
The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
MedscapeNews

Paul Ryan On Abortion: 'We Want A Country Where It Isn't Even Considered'



WASHINGTON -- Rep. Paul Ryan, the Republican vice presidential nominee in 2012 and an abortion opponent, said Thursday that anti-abortion activists should try to build a broad coalition and find common ground with supporters of abortion rights as a way to advance their agenda.
Ryan, R-Wis., said in a speech to the Susan B. Anthony List that those who oppose abortion "need to work with people who consider themselves pro-choice – because our task isn't to purge our ranks. It's to grow them."
"We don't want a country where abortion is simply outlawed. We want a country where it isn't even considered," he said.
Ryan told the organization that seeks to elect women who oppose abortion rights that "labels can be misleading." He pointed to former GOP Sen. Scott Brown, whose 2010 election in Massachusetts nearly derailed President Barack Obama's health care law. Brown supports abortion rights. In contrast, Ryan told the group that former Michigan Rep. Bart Stupak, who opposed abortion, "delivered the votes that passed it into law."
Many opponents of abortion disagreed with the health care overhaul because it requires most employers to cover birth control free of charge to female workers as a preventative service. The law exempted churches and other houses of worship.
Ryan said critics often urge abortion opponents to abandon their beliefs but "that would only demoralize our voters." But he said anti-abortion activists should work with people of all beliefs to plant "flags" in the law – "small changes that raise questions about abortion."
He said some people who support abortion rights oppose taxpayer funding of abortions or parental notification of minors' abortions. Others, he said, support the reinstatement of the so-called Mexico City policy, which bans American aid from funding abortions. Obama waived the order soon after taking office in 2009.
Marjorie Dannenfelser, the group's president, said it plans to target Senate seats in 2014 held by Democrats Kay Hagan of North Carolina and Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, both of whom support abortion rights.
HuffingtonPost

I Cannot Blame Anyone For Boko Haram Insurgency – IBB



ibbFormer Military President, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida has said that amnesty for members of the dreaded Boko Haram sect is part of the solution to end the present security challenges even as he stated that the elite and the government should share the blame in allowing the situation to escalate.
IBB who was speaking with journalists in Minna Thursday, noted that though the detail of the terms of amnesty for the committee to be set up by the Federal Government was not yet out, the amnesty programme would help to solve the security challenges.
IBB said, “I do not know the terms of reference of the committee; therefore, I cannot speak about the plan until the terms of reference had been released.”
According to him, “the problem did not start in one day but it was a gradual thing before it came to this level owing to negligence by the government, the elite and the people, but I cannot blame anyone”.
“Some 20 years ago, we did not have this problem. What was the state of things then? What have we forgotten that we have not done that led to the present challenges? This is what we have to look at too,” he added.
He stated that every Nigerian has a role to play in making sure the challenges were overcome. “If we all come together – elite, the media, the ordinary people and the government – by taking a common stand just as the people of Azare in Bauchi did to tackle their security challenges, the  challenges would be overcome” IBB declared.
InformationNigeria

Service Chiefs Endorse Amnesty For Boko Haram, Insist On Military Presence In Volatile States



service-chiefs_highresThe military authorities are expected to present a common report and recommendations to the panel set up under the auspices of the National Security Adviser (NSA), Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd), last week where they would endorse amnesty for Boko Haram but insist on retaining soldiers on the streets of the volatile states.
It would be recalled that last week, President Goodluck Jonathan mandated the NSA to set up a panel to study the possibility or otherwise of granting amnesty to the Boko Haram sect whose members have been terrorising some states in the north.
Following government’s latest decision, the chief of defence staff, Admiral Ola Sa’ad Ibrahim, last Tuesday, met with all the service chiefs where they deliberated on the proposed amnesty for the Boko Haram sect members.
The meeting, which lasted several hours according to military sources, reportedly reviewed what transpired at the Security Council meeting. Each of the service chiefs was said to have presented his position before all were merged for onward transmission to the NSA panel as a memo.
Faulting the call for the withdrawal of soldiers from the streets, another source disclosed that the service chiefs, in their report, stated that the soldiers should remain there as long as the bombings persist.
If their recommendations are accepted, some retired military officers might be among those that would constitute the Amnesty Committee. Their recommendations might have been submitted ahead of next week’s Security Council meeting.
InformationNigeria

White House Declares The Obamas’ 2012 Income



OBAMA family
American President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle reported about $600,000 (about N90million) in income last year and were taxed at the rate of 18.4 percent, the White House said Friday.
It noted that Obama has called for a 30 percent tax rate for wealthier Americans like himself.
Two-thirds of the $608,611 in adjusted gross income reported by the Obamas came from the president’s salary of $400,000 (about N63m) a year.
The overall figure is down from 2011, when the couple made nearly $800,000, thanks in part to proceeds from book sales.
The Obamas also paid nearly $30,000 in state taxes in Illinois, where they own a home in Chicago, and donated $150,000 to charity last year, said White House spokesman Jay Carney.
Carney also noted that Obama supports the so-called “Buffett Rule” — a minimum 30 percent rate for individuals making more than a million dollars a year.
Named after billionaire investment wizard Warren Buffett — who famously complained he paid a lower effective tax rate than his secretary — the idea has been rejected by Congress, where Republicans opposed to higher taxation control the House of Representatives.
“Under the President’s own tax proposals, including limitations on the value of tax preferences for high-income households, he would pay more in taxes while ensuring we cut taxes for the middle class and those trying to get in it,” Carney said in a statement.
Vice President Joe Biden and wife Jill, who works as a university professor, reported $385,072 in adjusted gross income in 2012 and paid $87,851 in taxes, the White House said.
President Obama pays for his own expenses out of his $400,000 annual salary, including food, drinks, and dry cleaning. The president is presented with a weekly menu, and they buy the groceries. It is so for all American presidents.
InformationNigeria