Thursday, 19 September 2013

Female Teacher Reveals Why She Had s*x With 12-year-old Boy


A teacher has been accused of having s*x with 12-year-old boy.

ethel-anderson-large
She claims she sent him P0*nographic texts messages as “s*xual therapy” to motivate him to be a better student.
“That was my purpose, to gain his attention. And yes, I did it in an inappropriate way,” Ethel Anderson, who was 29 at the time the abuse began, said in court.
According to reports, over 230 pages of sexually explicit text messages were sent between the teacher and student.
According to Bay News 9, prosecutors obtained more than 230 pages of sexually explicit text messages between the teacher and student.
Although she admitted sending the texts, she denied any contact occurred, and claimed the victim threatened to turn her in.
The victim, now 14, also testified about the alleged abuse on Tuesday.
“We sat on the couch and we started doing s*xual stuff. At first I told her to stop… she was rubbing on my leg, but then it just led to more,” the victim told the court. “She would say she wanted me so bad and she wanted me to go farther [sic]… I just did not want to lose my virginity to a teacher.”
It was reported that the abuse occurred during math tutoring sessions at Anderson’s home between December 2011 and February 2012.
In testimony, the victim told the court that at the time, he thought he was “living a guy’s dream… [of] dating a teacher,” but that he didn’t tell anyone because he “knew she’d get in trouble.”
If convicted, Anderson faces up to 30 years in prison.
 Huffington Post

Steer clear of my state, Aliyu warns Wike

by

Gov Aliyu Babagind

Niger State governor, Dr Babangida Aliyu, has warned the acting Minister of Education, Mr. Nyeson Wike, to stay clear of his state, saying the affairs of the education sector are run by riff raffs.
Reacting to the comment allegedly made by the minister on the state of education in Niger State, Aliyu, while signing into law the state University of Education bill, yesterday in Minna, said the minister was not fit to make such uncomplimentary statement about the state.
He said if Wike feels that he can fight his state governor, Amaechi Rotimi, he cannot fight other state governors in the country that way, hence, he should desist from such.
“I don’t know when he got into education; education is not for riff raffs, he should be warned. If he thinks he can fight the governor of his state, he cannot fight other governors, he should take his time,” Aliyu warned.
On the reason for setting up the University of Education, which is to be sited at the current location of the state College of Education in Minna, he said the ivory tower will offer opportunity for the training of teachers not only for the state, but for the whole of northern Nigeria that has no such specialised university.
“All the states in the northern part of the country cannot boast of 50 per cent qualified teachers to man their primary schools and the University of Education in Minna will attempt to bridge that gap and also train people in other areas.”
The governor further added that when the university becomes operational, the state government will set a deadline for unqualified teachers to be certificated in the state.
In his remark, the Speaker of the Niger State House of Assembly, Hon. Adamu Usman, said between 2007 and this year, the Assembly has passed 30 bills, saying that the laws have impacted positively on the lives of the generality of the people of the state.
He said the law on special universities makes it compulsory for the state to set aside at least two per cent of its budget for the funding of the university.
He also argued that setting up the new university will not affect the operation of the Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University in Lapai that is also owned by the state government.

NationalMirror

Dr. Peregrino Brimah: The Ex-CIA Chief Petraeus CUNY Protests And American Exceptionalism


Ex-CIA Chief Petraeus being followed by protesters at CUNYPerhaps you have read about the CUNY (City University of New York) student and faculty protests against US ex-General David Petraeus teaching a course on public policy at a CUNY campus. Last week and on Tuesday, September 17th, students came out to denounce the ex-General teaching at their school. In recorded videos, the students booed this top level US General and boss of the CIA who has been at the head of various US missions, agencies and wars. They chanted, "Petraeus out of CUNY," and called him a "war monger," among other names.
In the entire sequence of events, I was thrilled at the exceptionalism the US has portrayed and saw the need to relay the many features of and leading up to this event to my fellow 'developing' world countrymen. In this regard, I have to disagree with Russia's president, Vladmir Putin, who said US is not exceptional. I believe it is without a doubt, and there are many things that must be picked up from the great country, most especially by nations like ours who attempt to copy for instance, their presidential democratic system, without first realizing the uniqueness of the people who are able to utilize it.
Firstly, it is without doubt amazing to appreciate that ex-Generals are recruited to teach in US universities. This ultimate recycling of not only knowledge, but also real experience—by the employment of retired generals, presidents and other government officials, to teach students—is not just important, but essential toward building dependable character and reinforcing and perfecting the ability for patriotic nation building. But to apply this to Nigeria for instance, first we would have to have government officials who actually know something about what they do or did. I am not sure we have many of these.
Secondly, the General is to be paid $150,000-200,000 for teaching this course. I wonder, when I compare to my country, if our ex-government officials will ever be enticed by such offer to prepare, teach and grade classes for college students. Nigerian top officials are known to be some of the most highly paid in the world. A Nigerian senator earns 240 million naira (about 1.7 million US dollars) in salaries and allowances, for literally doing nothing—passing no laws and solving no crises. We are pretty far from ever realizing and reaping such valuable educational potential.
Next, I noticed a staunch opposition to the ex-General's appointment as regards compensation. Groups contested his income and the CUNY administration was forced to revise his reimbursement in July and reduce it to just $1. Now even at $150,000 for a decorated ex-General and CIA boss, who will actually teach a class to 'mere' students? In Nigeria, students are worthless. The college teachers have been on strike for a couple of months, demanding better wages, and the government has been more interested in securing or rather, fighting over their political future. When you compare the salary scales in America and Nigeria, you ultimately see why education is of no importance in one, while it is of most importance in the other. The salaries of teachers and government officials are virtually reversed from Africa to the US. Teachers in America make more than government officials. So a retired government official is tempted and almost always ends up in colleges teaching, while in Nigeria, reimbursement for teaching is so pathetic, teachers—like the current president—prefer to abandon their schools and get into bountiful politics.
This brings us to the reason (given) why Petraeus was even sacked or why he claimed he retired. For having an affair! The mordancy of it. Officials in America get fired or impeached for having affairs! Simply exceptional!
In the protests, I was even more amazed. Ex-General David Petraeus, who has been heckled and booed at his every appearance, was the US chief of Intelligence, for God sake. A decorated army official; like his policies or detest them, he was at the helm of US affairs, seeking victory for the US, albeit, to the detriment of other nations. You might expect people in Iraq or Libya, families of the dead, who were at the sharp edge of his sword, to protest against him, but American students? The passion of the protesters, some of whom, 6 to be precise got thrown to the ground yesterday, according to reports and arrested, cannot be ignored. They were pissed! They hated the ex-General. They hated his policies; they rejected his military campaigns and conquests in the various countries around the world. They almost made the poor man walk into oncoming traffic! In Nigeria, we have leaders who are 10 times as vicious as he was, not to outsiders, but to Nigerians, and there are no protests when these political cabals walk by.
And that is another point. The ex-General actually walked. You could see him with his teaching bag, walking on New York streets. I am talking about the ex director of the CIA for heavens-sake. That CIA we watch in movies. Yes, he walked, on and on, with no security detail. He possibly took the public train to work. In Nigeria, the big wigs never walk, they never carry their bags, and they never take public transport. They have a driver and an oddly to do that for them. They are too high and mighty to even drive themselves. Would we ever see our ex presidents and ex heads of security, those NSA bosses who only succeeded in enabling and masterminding the creation of all forms of terrorist groups and ethnic militia in our country, walking by? They know better. And even if they did walk by, will we be as exceptional as these US students who risk getting beat-down and arrested to challenge and reject those who they see as monsters?
We have a long way to go, but I believe in baby steps. At least, take a step.
Dr. Peregrino Brimah

TheParadigm

The Right to Contest: GEJ and The Constitution, By Babayola Toungo


In a suit instituted by Buba Marwa against Nyako (later joined by four other goveors and INEC), the Supreme Court of Nigeria delivered a landmark judgement on January 27th, 2012, asking the five governors to step down from their offices handover to their successors.
For those among them eligible for second term in office, they were to submit themselves to the electorate for another mandate. But critically, the court pronounced that the tenures of the five governors elapsed since May 29th, 2011 thereby bringing to an end the issue of tenure elongation or otherwise.
The governors, who were made to go for re-runs for the 2007 elections always assumed the period they spent governing their states before their victories were annulled was “awuf” – bonuses if you may. The Court was emphatic that the Constitution does not make room for anybody elected into an executive office spending a day more than the maximum allowable eight years and if we are to go by the governors’ reasoning, then some of them might have stayed in office for a period of nine years or more. The Supreme Court ruling was very clear and unambiguous.
With this Supreme Court ruling in mind and the provision of section 135 subsection 2b, which is similar to section 180 subsection 2b, I find it hard to comprehend the “no vacancy in the Villa” campaign going on. I am also at a loss as to whether the Supreme Court ruling was only for the governors or that it encompasses all executive offices seeing the similarities in sections 135 and 180 of the constitution. The noise about Goodluck Jonathan contesting or not in 2015 and its legal implications taking into account the said ruling readily comes to mind. Section 135 of the 1999 constitution (as amended) deals with the issue of tenure and is explicit on the period. Subsection 2 of section 135 says “subject to the provisions of subsection (1) of this section, the president shall vacate his office at the expiration of a period of four years commencing from the date when: (a) in the case of a person first elected as president under this constitution, he took the Oath of Allegiance and Oath of Office; and (b) the person last elected to that office took the Oath of Allegiance and Oath of Office or would, but for his death have taken such oaths.
Taking the Supreme Court ruling and Section 135 (2b), one will be forgiven to assume Jonathan is legally barred from contesting in 2015 irrespective of how high the decibel level of Clark and Anenih’s chorus singers – the likes of Abba Gana, Ameh Ebute, Jerry Gana, Asari Dokubo, et al. Before Jonathan’s attack dogs descend on me, I would like us to study these legal positions carefully and dispassionately in order to locate where Jonathan’s ambition fit in.
The Supreme Court ruling says maximum allowable period of eight years made up of two terms of four years each. Therefore if Jonathan is to contest in 2015 and be forced once again on Nigerians for another four years, that will make him president for nine years since he took over from the late Umaru ‘Yar Adu’a on May 6th, 2010.
This goes against the grain of the Supreme Court ruling and since by convention all rulings and judgements from the Supreme Court are part of our sources of law, this particular one becomes a law of the land in as much as it is consistent with the constitution of the country.
So if the governors affected by the ruling forfeited their “awuf” period, it is only rational that Jonathan should also be affected by the ruling seeing the similarities between sections 135 and 180 of the constitution, our grund norm. This is without prejudice as to whether he promised our mercenary governors that he would not contest in 2015 before they “endorsed” him and rig him into office in 2011.
On the other hand section 135 subsection 2b of the constitution makes it clear that a person’s tenure ends from such a time that the last person so elected into such office will have taken another oath but for his death – meaning the tenure of the dead person might have elapsed and he may seek for a renewed mandate but for his death. Jonathan took over from ‘Yar Adu’a whose first term would have expired by May 29th, 2011 and might have taken another Oath of Allegiance and Oath of Office were he to have contested and won the election but for his death. And the second tenure will come to an end by May 29th, 2015.
So taking the relevant sections and subsections of the constitution and the supreme court judgment regarding the five governors in (Marwa V. Nyako), Goodluck Jonathan will spent nine years as the president of Nigeria. One year more than the constitutionally stipulated period. If this is the case, and that is my understanding, then Jonathan doesn’t have the constitutional right to contest for the office of the president of Nigeria, irrespective of how bloody his campaign is going to be (bloody according to one of his closest lieutenants).
The doctrine of necessity doesn’t have a room here or any element of good luck. In anticipation of this constitutional roadblock, Jonathan appeared to have deployed his uncouth campaign co-ordinators to launch verbal missiles and threats against those who may have the guts to call for the application of the right things. The likes of Edwin Clark, Ahmed Ali Gulak and Asari Dokubo have been throwing threats like confetti at the same people they want to garner support for their dozy candidate. Spent forces like Abba Gana and Ameh Ebutteh have been recruited to give the campaign a touch of national spread.
Goodluck Jonathan and his handlers believe because of the good luck in his name, is born to lead us whether we like it or not. Ali Gulak went to the ridiculous extent of saying God has packaged Nigeria and Nigerians and handed us over to Goodluck Jonathan. Gulak also in a recent press conference said nobody should stampede Jonathan into declining to contest in 2015 because the constitution guarantees him the right to contest. But my reading of section 135 appears to suggest otherwise. The constitution can ‘stampede’ Jonathan into bowing out.
The refrain by the Jonathan campaigners that northerners claimed to have been born to rule doesn’t hold water anymore because with the campaign of brimstone by his supporters, Nigerians are beginning to know those who claimed to be born to rule. With gerantocrats and creek riff raffs threatening that there will not be Nigeria if Jonathan isn’t given a second term, with the security agencies looking the other way, they have the right to claim the sobriquet of being to rule. The fact that no northern politician ever raised the spectre of violence on account of his perception that he may be barred from contesting should effectively put to rest this fallacy. In a civilised society anyway.
Instructively while Edwin Clark, Asari Dokubo and Ayo Oritsejafor are beating the drums of war and no security agency deem it necessary to even slap them on the rest, Senator Sani Ahmed Yerima was arrersted from the Radio Nigeria Kaduna during a phone-in programme in a commando style operation with the Kaduna state Police Commissioner leading a posse of men in five trucks. His offence? He was said to have threatened that the leadership of the then yet to be registered All Progressives Congress (APC) will take to the streets in the event Jega’s INEC refuse to register their party. Yerima had to write an undertaking before he was released. No such treatment for Clark or Dokubo.
If it is alright for those in Jonathan’s corner to be sending barbs in the direction of those who opposed his style of administration and the undisguised ambition of contesting in 2015, why is it a gargantuan security issue when any opponent of the presidency voice his disagreement to Jonathan? Case of different strokes for different folks? If it is okay to block the passage of an elected governor, the chief security officer of a state according to the constitution, then Jonathan’s people shold be ready to either throw more people in jail or kill them. If you can’t take the heat, get out of the kitchen.
If Goodluck Jonathan and his horde of Gulaks have honour (though I doubt they have) he shouldn’t contemplate contesting, constitutional right or not for the simple fact that he promised at four different occasions not to go for a second chance when voted for in 2011. The promise that stands out to me was the one made in Addis Ababa. I pray his handlers may not tell us he made the promise while in the toilet since the president’s stomach have something against Addis.

PremiumTimes

Nollywood Actress Gets Beaten By Movie Director’s Wife For Having Sex With Her Hubby


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It has been reported that a well-known Nollywood actress was given the beating of her life by the wife of a top Nollywood director for allegedly having an affair with her husband.
According to Nigeriafilms.com:

There is no doubt that Asaba, the Delta State capital has become a home for movie productions in Nigeria. It still baffles many why producers have decided to pitch their tent in Asaba.

Investigations by Gists from Edo/Delta have revealed that production is cheaper in Asaba and that is why producers are thronging there to make their movies, but the height of immoralities being practised in Asaba is really giving the people there cause.

The latest is that a top Nollywood Director’s wife fought an A-List actress on a movie set in the capital town for sharing her hubby with her.

The director is Lagos based but was contracted to do the movie in Asaba. He is a top shot in Nollywood and hails from one of the South-Eastern states. Gists from Edo/Delta learnt that this notable film director, was having a fling with the actress who was playing the lead role in the movie.

This actress is fair complexioned also from South East. Sources said the duo were staying in the same hotel in the heart of Asaba.

It was gathered that the director had been dating the actress for a while now and his wife was suspicious of it. It was learnt that one of the crew members, who is a close friend of the director’s wife leaked the romance between the actress and the director to the director’s wife.

Luck ran out on the actress as she was caught red handed on the bed of the director by his wife. The director’s wife was said to have dragged the actress out of the room after beating her to a pulp and tore her clothes with her upper region jumping out.
This keeps one guessing doesn't it? Who do you think the actress and director are?

Naij

God, I need a husband – Popular blogger Linda Ikeji cries out on her 33rd birthday

 

By

Linda Ikeji is no doubt one Nigeria’s most successful entertainment bloggers with over 40,000 hits per day on her blog.The model turned blogger has no doubt carved a niche for herself on the blogsphere few years after dumping the modeling industry.
However, the acclaimed Nigeria’s queen of blogger, who turned 33 on Thursday, has a burning desire.
Linda, while informing her teeming readers of her birthday said she needed a husband but had to wait for God’s time since she can’t marry herself.
Hear her, “Yay, it’s my birthday today…and I feel so blessed! It’s been an incredible journey for me and I love where my life’s journey has brought me. I have a great family, great friends, a job I love, LIBers who have my back, money in the bank and a future so bright, I gotta wear shades. Haha. What else can a girl ask for? OK, a husband, but that will come in God’s time…lol.
So I’m having a birthday party on the 27th and 28th of Sept in London and Manchester respectively, hosted by Cokobar.
Hmmm…imagine if only 10% of my readers wished me a happy birthday…the number of comments would be insane and so cool. Haha! Love you guys…thanks for everything! *hugz*” ”

DailyPost

‘Most Wanted’ Delta Kidnap Kingpin Gives President Jonathan A 60-Day Ultimatum To Address Demands Or Face Attacks On Oil Facilities


Kidnap Kingpin, Mr. Kelvin (5th from left) and other members of his gang during the giving of 60 Days ultimatum to the F
By SaharaReporters, New York
A dreaded and ‘most wanted’ kidnap kingpin in Delta State who doubles as leader of the new Liberation Movement of the Urhobo People (LIMUP) today gave President Goodluck Jonathan a stunning 60-day ultimatum to address the sufferings of the Urhobo as well as grant amnesty to kidnappers or face attacks on oil facilities in the area.
Known simply as Kelvin, the bandit, who wore a mask and was surrounded by members of his gang who were dressed in military fatigues, said at a press conference that if Jonathan failed to address what he described as the ‘gross marginalization’ of the Kokori community and grant unconditional amnesty to kidnappers, he will have no option than to shut down oil facilities.
Present at the occasion were members of the Kokori, Ethiope East Local Government Area community, who expressed admiration of Kelvin and his men.

“The reason why we are here today is because of the continuous cheating of our people by the Federal government. The federal and state governments have been suffering us and now we want them to hear us because for over 50 years now they have been drilling oil from our community (Kokori), which is the second best oil in this country.

“Yet we have nothing to show for it, the community has no road, they do wooden bridges in areas that need a formidable bridge that will last for a long time. There is hunger everywhere, graduates have no work. So we want the government to listen to us.  In fact we are giving the federal government 60 days ultimatum to listen to us or else we will shut down all the well heads in the area,” he threatened.

Kelvin, who was declared ‘most wanted’ by security agents last year for allegedly masterminding a high profile kidnap and killing some security personnel, rejected the names he and his gang have been called.  He declared them as being far from the truth, stressing that the mission and vision of his group is nothing but to draw the attention of the world to the criminal neglect of his oil-bearing community and the Urhobo nation.

According to the visibly angry Kelvin, “For over fifty years, they have exploited our land in the guise of oil exploration with nothing to show for it in terms of development. There are no good roads, no industries for the youths to work, our women and mothers cannot farm again because of the devastating effect of the oil exploration on our land.

“Fifty years of oil exploration has left our men prostrate without no meaningful source of livelihood. Most of them can no longer fend for their families and all attempts to draw the attention of the State Government and the Federal Government of Nigeria to the plight of the community have been greeted by repression, so we have no other alternative than to bear arms against the nation, in order to drive home our demands since the only language Nigeria understands is violence.”

Asked Kelvin, “When the Ijaws and Itsekiris where agitating with arms, we the Urhobo youths chose to be peaceful, but what did we get?  We are rather left out completely in the amnesty program. Is it not the same oil that the Ijaws and Itsekiris produce that is also produced in Kokori, which has the second best oil in Nigeria?  So what is our crime?”

He said that his group does not fear the army, should the government want to send it in, warning that when his group is ready to attack, “no amount of security” can stop them as they have the backing of “top people” in Nigeria and abroad.
“The reason why they have been hearing of the name Kelvin is because of what I just told you now.  I am the Kelvin; I am like two million Kelvin. I am not a kidnapper. What is happening as a result of our activities in the state and the country is for the federal government to know that we are angry,” he explained.

He warned that the cease fire and peace currently being enjoyed in Delta State was not the work of men of the Joint Task Force or of large numbers of security men parading the streets, but that his group had simply decided to give peace a chance by giving the State and Federal Government the benefit of the doubt.
However, he warned, “After this 60 days ultimatum, if we do not see any meaningful attempt by the authorities to address our plights, we would shut down all oil facilities in Urhobo land and there is no amount of security personnel that can stop us. I know I cannot fight the federal government alone but I will do things that will touch their marrow.”

He promised to “strike decisively and promptly with a devastating effect,” adding that his no empty threat as the people are behind his group in this struggle in this struggle, and to fear is to die many times.
“We have to take our destiny into our hands, since the Nigeria nation has failed us,” he said.
“The government must listen to us because while Boko Haram will be destroying in the north we will be destroying from this way. We will destroy all the well heads in the whole of Urhobo nation not only in Kokori after the expiration of the 60 days ultimatum. Then the Federal government will know that we don’t make empty threats. But we will remain calm within the next 60 days, but if they think we cannot do anything then they will hear from us after the expiration of the 60 days ultimatum.”

Several members of the community expressed their support of Kelvin and his dreaded gang.  One, who pleaded for anonymity stated that they were throwing their weight behind Kelvin.
“Kokori is suffering,” he declared.  “There are no jobs for the youths, graduates whom their parents borrowed money to see them through their tertiary education roam the streets with nothing to do and business has been very slow for our market women because there is no flow of income.  What we want the government to do is to build schools, hospitals, banks and cottage industries that can employ the men and teeming youths of the community.”

Chief Saroke Edah and two other women who spoke on behalf of the women described Kelvin as God-sent, and backed up his complaints that despite their feeding the nation with their God-given oil wealth for the past 50 years, their community lacks good infrastructure and schools, as well as empowerment for the youths and women.

“We thank God for using our son, Kelvin to fight for our cause,” they said.  “He is not a criminal, as the government of Delta State wants the world to believe.  Him and his group are fighting for what is just, equitable and legitimate. Therefore, he should not be given a bad name. If the government had provided jobs for these youths and our husbands, would they take up arms to ask for what rightly belongs to them? Where the oil is found in Kokori, the land belongs to Kelvin’s grandfather and yet the family has nothing to show for over fifty years of oil exploration. Is this not injustice?”