I saw hell in Ghana, says prof accused of inciting Nigerians

Augustine Nwagbara, a professor from the University of Lagos, said he suffered a harrowing experience with Ghanaian authorities while on sabbatical leave.

Nwagbara narrated the ordeal on Thursday when he paid a courtesy visit to Abike Dabiri-Erewa, chairman of the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM), in Abuja.

He said the video of him that went viral on the social media where he was said to be inciting Nigerians against Ghana was painted in such a way to blackmail him

“They said I was sacked, then dismissed, which was another wrong word to use, as you cannot dismiss somebody on sabbatical in your country,” he said, adding that he was subjected to a series of interrogations by the University of Education, Winniba in Ghana

“As I speak with you, I have not received any letter of sack or dismissal whereas various factions of the letters are already in circulation in Ghana and on social media.

He, however, commended Olufemi Abikoye, the Nigerian High Commissioner in Ghana, for his prompt intervention in the whole saga.

“But for him, I probably would have been a dead man,” he added.

Nwagbara, a professor of English, was in Ghana on a one-year sabbatical in December 2018 and a purported video of him addressing an informal meeting of Nigerians living in Ghana where he was quoted to have insulted Ghanaians, went viral.

Nwagbara said the doctored video was allegedly said to have been released by a journalist working with a Ghanaian private TV station.

Receiving the professor in her office, Abike Dabiri-Erewa said 1036 Nigerians were deported by Ghanaian authorities for controversial reasons in 2017 and 2018.

“We are proud of you as one of our best brains. You are an asset to your country. Not surprising, you’ve received offers from other Universities to complete your sabbatical before returning to the University of Lagos,” a statement released by Abdur-Rahman Balogun, NIDCOM’s head of media, quoted her to have said.

“Between January and June 2019, 509 Nigerians were forcefully deported while 527 Nigerians got deported in 2018”

“We are not going to tolerate any country treating Nigerians shabbily.

She called for caution and warned that such treatment should not be allowed to degenerate to the level of retaliation.

The cable.

Elizabeth Ndubuisi’s Murder: South Africa Promises Thorough Investigation

Chairman, Nigerian Diaspora Commission, Hon Abike Dabiri-Erewa, accompanied by Dr. Chudi Ndubisi, brother of Elizabeth Ndubuisi, who recently died in a South African Hotel, while attending a conference met with the South African AG High Commissioner on Tuesday.

The Acting High Commissioner, Bobby Moore, promised a transparent, fair and just investigation, saying that it is being treated as a high profile case and investigation will be thorough.

Press Release:Dabiri-Erewa calls for open investigation into the death of Nigerian Ph.D Student In Malaysia.

A statement from  the Office of  Chairman/CEO of   Nigerians in  diaspora commission. Hon. Abike Dabiri Read:

“Our attention has been drawn to the death of Mr. Thomas Orhions Ewansiha, We are saddened at the demise of this Nigerian student who was pursuing his Ph.D. in management, at the Limkokwing University of Creative Technology in Selangor, Malaysia.

“Ewansiha had a valid student pass, but he was still detained for 14 days by the Malaysian authorities until he suffered a seizure while in custody. 

“My heart goes out to his family, his young widow and two who’ve suffered such a painful loss. 

“I urge the Nigerian High Commission in Kuala Lumpur, to open an investigation into the death of Ewansiha. We must ensure that the welfare of our countrymen in Malaysia is not compromised” the statement end.

Trump seizes on cables scandal to jam UK

Trump seizes on cables scandal to jam UK

Only a month after basking in the pageantry and lavish hospitality that only Queen Elizabeth II can lay on, President Donald Trump is back to telling Britain who is boss.
With a devastating pair of tweets on Monday that all but declared Ambassador Sir Kim Darroch persona-non-grata, the President did more than simply feed a personal grudge. He turned Britain’s extreme discomfort into political leverage over America’s best friend.
By making it clear he would prefer an envoy more sympathetic to his worldview, Trump is effectively trying to make it more difficult for another country to get accurate diplomatic reporting and internal intelligence on an administration that has alarmed many foreign allies — not just Britain.
Trump could have turned the other cheek and sought the high ground amid the rumpus over the UK ambassador’s unsparing memos about his character and dysfunctional White House.
    That is not the President’s way.
    Where other US leaders might have chosen a less contentious route, Trump seeks to escalate, indulging his ruthless sense of another party’s weakness.
    In lashing out at the British government and its envoy, Trump showed familiar traits — he’s thin skinned and reacts poorly to public criticism — even when it comes from a country and a government he’s often rebuked himself. And he rarely lets pass a chance for revenge.
    Trump’s tweets sent a mutli-pronged message to London that its ambassador, a career diplomat who was Monday branded an anti-Trump globalist by his foes back home, is no longer welcome in the White House.
    Trump’s tweet dealt a likely fatal blow to Darroch’s strenuous efforts over two years to manage the almost-impossible task of forging stable ties with Trump’s tumultuous White House.
    In a sign that he is now out in the cold, the ambassador, who had contacts throughout the administration, was dis-invited from a dinner with Trump, the Emir of Qatar and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Monday night.
    Trump also took what may be a final swipe at outgoing British Prime Minister Theresa May, accusing her of making a “mess” of Britain’s exit from the European Union — a body Trump disdains.
    And he made clear that the “special relationship” under her successor who will take over in a couple of weeks will be on his terms, a sentiment that could have enormous political and diplomatic implications in London and beyond.
    “The good news for the wonderful United Kingdom is that they will soon have a new Prime Minister,” Trump tweeted.

    ‘This is a relationship that is bigger than this situation’

    The President’s intervention makes the next British prime minister — expected to be formerForeign Secretary Boris Johnson — effectively a supplicant to the US President.
    His first order of business will be to repair Britain’s most important diplomatic relationship. It’s difficult to see how that might be accomplished without effectively appointing a new ambassador to Washington whom Trump finds favorable.
    Britain will become increasingly beholden to the United States if it finally leaves the European Union since it will need a new free trade deal with Washington. By establishing fresh leverage over the UK, Trump improved his position ahead of a negotiation in which both sides expect him to drive a hard bargain.
    The Trump administration also wants to peel the UK off from its European partners and hopes it will join its effort to punish Iran. Britain still supports the Iran nuclear deal that Trump exited and has come under pressure from top US officials.
    Trump’s state visit to London last month — masterminded by Darroch — was seen as Britain’s best chance to deploy its own leverage to win over the President.
    But if anyone thought that the warmth of his Buckingham Palace welcome in a successful state visit last month would cause Trump to give Britain a pass when it needed it, they were wrong.
    Ironically, Darroch had predicted as much in one of a flurry of dispatches dating back two years that were handed to the “Mail on Sunday” by an unknown leaker.
    “We might be flavor of the month, but this is still the land of ‘America First,'” wrote Darroch, who in other memos described Trump as “inept” and his administration as mired in chaos.
    British diplomats spent the weekend trying to contain the damage from the Mail’s scoop that rocked US-UK relations.
    Given the decades of friendship forged in war between Washington and London, it’s likely that the current tensions will eventually be seen as just a wrinkle in a long relationship.
    “Nobody is in a great position here,” former Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told CNN’s Erin Burnett on Monday, noting that Trump felt insulted and Britain embarrassed by the leak.
    He added: “I would hope that we all recognize that this is a relationship that is bigger than this situation” and “any one personality.”

    Search for the leaker

    Back in London, May’s government repeatedly said it stood by Darroch and decried the motives of the unidentified leaker.
    Different theories are being floated about the motivation of the leaker. Possibly, he or she was an official sympathetic to anti-European, pro-Trump factions in the Conservative Party who want Darroch gone to insert a new ambassador more ideologically in tune with Trump.
    Perhaps someone from the next government wanted to send a sign to Trump that the days of traditional UK diplomats favorably disposed to the EU and the international establishment are numbered. In Tuesday’s “The Sun” newspaper, Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt — Darroch’s boss and Johnson’s last remaining rival in the leadership race — said officials would consider whether a hostile foreign power keen to disrupt relations between the US and Britain was behind the leak.
    Trump’s friend, Nigel Farage, the anti-Europe Brexit Party leader who Trump has said would be a great ambassador in Washington, sought his own political leverage.
    He blasted the current UK ambassador to Washington on his LBC Radio show as a “globalist,” adding “Kim Darroch is anti-Trump.”
    The British government was left in a vulnerable position after Trump barred the doors for Darroch.
    After all, the ambassador was only doing his job — providing blunt assessments of a foreign government to his superiors back home. If Trump can force Darroch home, he would send a message to any foreign government keen to exploit Britain’s willingness to bend to the will of a host nation.
    And by replacing Darroch, the British government would be playing right into the hands of a leaker, who must have left British diplomats abroad uncertain whether their critical memos about foreign leaders will end up in the newspapers.
    May’s office released a statement expressing May’s “full support” for Darroch.
    “We have made clear to the US how unfortunate this leak is. The selective extracts leaked do not reflect the closeness of, and the esteem in which we hold, the relationship,” a spokesman said.
    “At the same time we have also underlined the importance of Ambassadors being able to provide honest, unvarnished assessments of the politics in their country.”  
      So in the short term at least, Britain probably cannot afford to withdraw Darroch because of the precedent it would establish at home and to its envoys around the world.
      Darroch was expected to leave by early next year anyway. It would not be a surprise if the new British Prime Minister finds a way to quietly finesse his departure before then.

      Whistleblower says he was pressured by Trump administration to reverse environmental decision

      Whistleblower says he was pressured by Trump administration to reverse environmental decision

      In the summer of 2017, Arizona developer Mike Ingram’s proposed housing and golf course project in the desert was facing a road block because of a decision by the Department of the Interior.
      A field supervisor for the US Fish and Wildlife Service had determined that it was “reasonably certain” that threatened and endangered species could be harmed.
      But that decision suddenly changed following a secret breakfast meeting at a Montana hunting lodge between Ingram — a donor to President Donald Trump and co-owner of the Arizona Diamondbacks — and David Bernhardt, then the Trump administration’s deputy Interior secretary.
      Following the meeting, which did not appear in Bernhardt’s official calendar and has not been previously reported, the field supervisor says he was pressured to reverse his decision, allowing the project to move ahead.
        “I felt pressured to reverse my decision … in simplest terms, I was rolled,” Steve Spangle, then a 30-year veteran of the Fish and Wildlife Service, told CNN in an interview. “I made a decision, which was my authority to make in Arizona, and that was overruled by higher-ups in the administration.”
        The meeting is one of at least 11 interactions Ingram had with top officials at the Interior Department and Environmental Protection Agency during the Trump administration, according to a CNN review of emails and calendars.
        The meetings and the reversal suggest yet another example of Trump administration officials siding with executives and business leaders in the industries for which they have oversight.
        A lawsuit filed by environmental groups earlier this year has put the project on hold once again. The House Committee on Natural Resources is also investigating what happened. Committee Chairman Raul Grijalva has asked Interior for documents and raising “questions about whether a key permit decision at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service was inappropriately reversed.”
        The Villages at Vigneto is designed as a development of 28,000 homes, golf courses and a resort community planned for the sprawling patch of mesquite scrub expanse just east of Benson, Arizona.
        Local officials welcome the development; Benson Mayor Toney King said it’s desperately needed to bring jobs back to the area. “We’ve been fighting really hard to get growth here,” King told CNN. “We’ve had generations of kids that have left and they can’t come back. There are no jobs.”
        Interior declined to answer any of CNN’s specific questions for this story, and instead provided a one sentence statement: “U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has reexamined the issue at hand and using the best available science as required under the Endangered Species Act issued the same exact conclusion.”
        Lanny Davis, a prominent Democratic attorney representing Ingram’s El Dorado Holdings, told CNN there is no evidence of any political influence by his client, and any suggestion of influence is “innuendo.”

        DABIRI-EREWA CONDOLES WITH FAMILIES OF VICTIMS OF AIRSTRIKE ON MIGRANTS CENTRE IN LIBYA

        Hon. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Chairman/CEO Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM) has condoled with the families of nine Nigerians involved in early Wednesday’s airstrike on migrant detention centre in Libya, which killed 44  migrants.

        In a statement ,she said it was disheartening  that nine Nigerians have been identified as victims in the unfortunate incident

        According to Abdurahman Balogun, the Commission”s media aide,said it was regrettable that migrants survived a  treacherous journey only to be killed in someone else’s war in Libya.

        She said that it was painful that the affected Nigerians , who were due to be airlifted back to Nigeria, were cut down in their prime

        The NIDCOM boss reiterated her calls for Nigerians especially the youths to shun movement into hostile countries, and if they must travel, go legally with a legitimate mission to those countries.

        Dabiri-Erewa prayed for the repose of the souls of all that died in the airstrike and sent condolence message to the  families of the victims
        She noted that over 13.000 migrants had been brought home so far, from Libya, and thanked the International  Organization for Migration IOM , NEMA and other international agencies involved in the evacuation of the migrants, while she called on the UN to hasten up in the protection of other detention centres from such attacks.

        At least 44 people were reportedly killed including nine Nigerians at a detention center in Tajoura, east of Tripoli in Libya, Wednesday morning through an airstrike attack.

        It was learnt that some of those killed had been profiled to leave the country in the coming days.

        In addition to those killed, IOM said that more than 180 others staying in the same detention center were registered to return to their home countries through the U.N. agency’s voluntary migrant return program, which helps arrange their documents and transport.

         IOM has moved around 40,000 migrants out of Libya through the same program.

        The airstrike on the Tajoura center, where around 600 people were being held, came less than two months after another airstrike landed less than 100 meters from the center, injuring two .

         Abdur-Rahman Balogun
         Head of Media
         NIDCOM .

        jimmy carter trump russia interference

        jimmy carter trump russia interference

        Former President Jimmy Carter suggested Friday that a full investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election would show that Donald Trump didn’t win the presidency.
        “There’s no doubt that the Russians did interfere in the election. And I think the interference, although not yet quantified, if fully investigated would show that Trump didn’t actually win the election in 2016. He lost the election and he was put into office because the Russians interfered on his behalf,” Carter said at the Carter Center’s retreat in Leesburg, Virginia.
        Asked if he believes Trump is an illegitimate president, Carter paused for a moment.
          “Based on what I just said, which I can’t retract,” Carter said to audience laughter.
          Special counsel Robert Mueller’s report found that Russia waged a “sweeping and systematic” influence campaign during the 2016 election with the goal of electing Trump, but did not establish a conspiracy between Trump’s campaign and Moscow.
          Until now, the former one-term Democratic president had shared a warmer relationship with the current President more than Trump has had with any other living president.
          Though he has been critical of Trump’s foreign policy and accused him of deepening racial divisions, Carter has also shown a willingness to help Trump.
          He took a phone call from Trump in April — the first time the two had spoken — to discuss US-China trade negotiations.
            Carter also offered to travel to North Korea in order to meet with Kim Jong Un on Trump’s behalf, according to a Democratic US lawmaker.
            In 2017, Carter told The New York Times that the media was “harder on Trump than any other president certainly that I’ve known about.”

            Ocasio-Cortez invites Megan Rapinoe to the House of Representatives in place of the White House

            Ocasio-Cortez invites Megan Rapinoe to the House of Representatives in place of the White House

            On Tuesday, US women’s soccer co-captain Megan Rapinoe went viral after making it clear that she was not going to go to the White House if her team won the World Cup.
            So, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez decided to invite the team to another house: The House of Representatives.
            Ocasio-Cortez posted her invitation Friday just hours after the team defeated host France to reach the World Cup semifinals. Rapinoe scored both goals in the 2-1 win.
              “It may not be the White House, but we’d be happy to welcome @mPinoe & the entire #USWMNT for a tour of the House of Representatives anytime they’d like,” the New York congresswoman wrote.
              Rapinoe accepted the invitation tweeting: “Consider it done @AOC”
              Rep. Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts got into the conversation and said she would bring red velvet cake for the occasion.
              Rapinoe made her comments about not wanting to go to the White House to a reporter for Eight by Eight, a soccer magazine.
                President Trump responded to Rapinoe’s comments on Twitter saying “I am a big fan of the American Team, and Women’s Soccer, but Megan should WIN first before she TALKS! Finish the job!”
                The team will play England in the semifinal on July 2.

                Hon.Abike Dabiri-Erewa: lauds Introduction of Diaspora Professionals Healthcare Initiative (DPHI) for improved healthcare delivery

                Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Executive Chairman/CEO, Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM), on Friday applauded the introduction of the Diaspora Professionals Healthcare Initiative (DPHI) aimed at improving healthcare delivery in the country.

                Mr. Gabriel Odu, Media Assistant of NIDCOM, made this known in a statement.

                The commendation is coming against the backdrop of the 25th Anniversary of the Association of Nigerian Physicians.

                According to Odu, Dabiri-Erewa disclosed this in her presentation at the 2019 Annual Scientific Convention and Assembly of Association of Nigerian Physicians in the Americas (ANPA) held in the U.S.

                The convention on ‘National Health and Development Initiatives: Role of the Diaspora’ was organized with the objective of promoting constructive and efficient collaboration between medical personnel in the country and those in the diaspora.

                “The healthcare delivery system in Nigeria is in for a better deal making it more robust, accessible, affordable and effective especially in rural communities.

                “The DPHI is to among other things harness the abundant resources of highly skilled Nigerian Diaspora healthcare practitioners and increase their participation in Nigeria’s efforts to strengthen its health systems.

                “Build abilities by placing Nigerian healthcare professionals from the Diaspora in volunteer positions in government tertiary and secondary level institutions and hospitals in Nigeria,” Odu said.

                He quoted Dabiri-Erewa as urging ANPA to restructure its medical missions to make it more sustainable and well-documented for posterity.

                He also said that the commission’s operational objective was in tandem with the 3-point Agenda of the President Muhammad Buhari administration in terms of national security, anti-corruption crusade, and economic growth and diversification.

                “The Nigerian Diaspora is part and parcel of the building blocs of accelerated economic prosperity using their resources, global exposure and aligning with home-based professionals to get to the next level,” Odu added.

                He explained that with the establishment of the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission the issue of Brain Drain will be reversed to Brain Gain and more recently Brain Circulation.

                He further said that NIDCOM would provide the needed platform for a one-stop-Commission for Diaspora matters.

                M-Net switches the broadcasting times of Chicago Med and Chicago P.D. for next Tuesday, 2 July, to make the ‘One Chicago’ 3-way crossover event play out perfectly.

                M-Net switches the broadcasting times of Chicago Med and Chicago P.D. for next Tuesday, 2 July, to make the ‘One Chicago’ 3-way crossover event play out perfectly.

                M-Net (DStv 101) tells me it’s switching the linear broadcasting order of the episodes of the brand-new seasons of Chicago P.D. and Chicago Med around next Tuesday, 2 July for one week, in order to have the “One Chicago” 3-way crossover between the various Chicago drama series play out chronologically in the correct order.

                TVwithThinus reported yesterday that M-Net finally fixed the scheduling of Chicago FireChicago P.D. and Chicago Med by having the new seasons of all three American drama series start on the same night on the channel.

                With a big 3-episode crossover involving all three seasons during the second episode of all three seasons, the Chicago series now perfectly align in order for viewers to see it happen correctly as characters from each of the series appear in both of the other series.

                During next week’s “One Chicago” crossover event, a highrise fire requires the help of the firefighters, paramedics and doctors, as well as the police.

                While M-Net beautifully fixed the biggest problem by having all three Chicago series broadcast at the same time, a little problem remained: the “One Chicago” crossover should play out starting with the fire (Chicago Fire), people going to hospital (Chicago Med) and the police solving the case and finding the person who escapes from hospital (Chicago P.D).

                M-Net has however scheduled the series to be broadcast weekly in the order of the 7th season of Chicago Fire (19:00), Chicago P.D. (20:00), Chicago Med (21:00).

                Just for next week, 2 July, Chicago Med will start at 20:00, followed by Chicago P.D. (21:00).

                Another Chicago crossover will happen with the 15th episode of Chicago Fire later in this season, continuing in the 15th episode of Chicago Med where no episode switching on M-Net is necessary since Chicago Fire is airing before Chicago Med anyway.

                M-Net says that for 2 July it is switching Chicago Med and Chicago P.D. in order to accommodate the crossover broadcast and that the change is already reflecting on MultiChoice’s DStv electronic programme guide (EPG) as well.

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