Twenty-four people are now known to have died in the collapse of a four-storey residential building in the Nigerian commercial capital, Lagos, the Nigeria Red Cross said on Thursday. ”Three bodies were pulled out today [Thursday], while one injured person died in the hospital last night [Wednesday],” said Red Cross disaster officer Umar Maigira.
Nigerian rescuers battled with shovels and picks to save people trapped for a second day beneath the rubble of a collapsed building in Lagos on Thursday as the Red Cross said the death toll stands at 24. Hopes were fading that anyone could survive another night trapped in the debris as rains fell on the area and shortages of equipment hampered diggers.
Liberia will celebrate its independence anniversary next week with something of a light show when Monrovia’s street lights are turned on for the first time in 15 years, officials said on Wednesday. Officials made the announcement to delegates at a United States-backed investment conference, hoping to underline progress since the election of President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf in November.
The latest spike in oil prices to near a barrel is ”very uncomfortable” and is hurting the world economy, the president of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) said on Wednesday. Edmund Daukoru, who is also Nigerian minister of state for petroleum, said the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah was responsible for the latest jump.
At least four people were killed and dozens trapped when a four-storey residential building collapsed in Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial city, witnesses said on Wednesday. The building, consisting of 36 flats, a penthouse and some shops, collapsed at around 7.30pm local time on Tuesday, trapping dozens of people.
Officials from the United States and African diaspora on Tuesday urged African countries to look inwards to find economic breakthroughs and much-needed investments. Florizelle Liser, a senior official in the US Trade Representative Office, said African nations had advantages they could learn to exploit.
Stressing gains in financial stability and democratisation, African heads of state meeting hundreds of foreign business leaders in Abuja, Nigeria, called on Monday for stepped-up investment in the continent. ”Africa is changing. Both economic and political landscapes are improving,” said Nigerian Foreign Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.
Twin explosions hit oil installations belonging to Italian oil company Agip in Nigeria’s volatile south-eastern delta region, officials said on Thursday. Officials suspected sabotage in the explosions on Wednesday along two pipelines in Baleysa state.
The entourage of Nigerian Vice-President Abubakar Atiku has alleged there is a plot to bar him from contesting next year’s presidential election by trying to implicate him in a corruption probe involving a prominent telecoms businessman who is being investigated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission.
At least eight people were killed and several injured following renewed clashes between security forces and outlawed groups in the south-eastern Nigerian market town of Onitsha, residents said on Tuesday. Fighting erupted on Monday when a joint patrol team of police and army attempted to dislodge the groups from the town.
A Dutchman abducted on Thursday in Nigeria’s violent oil-producing Niger Delta is in good health but his kidnappers’ demands are not yet known, a spokesperson for Bayelsa state in the delta said on Friday. Gunmen seized the man, who was working on an unfinished Shell gas plant in Bayelsa, from a houseboat after disarming police on guard.
A team of experts from West African regional economic grouping the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), said on Tuesday Liberia would need about -billion to rehabilitate its power sector, ravaged by long years of civil war. ”Resuscitation of Liberia’s power system requires a lot of funding,” said a seven-member team.
Nigerian leader Olusegun Obasanjo once had a notice posted at the gate of his farm and presidential retreat: ”No dogs and journalists allowed.” Obasanjo saw it as a joking reference to what he considered unfair criticism from the press. The sign is gone, but tensions between the president and the press linger.
Torrential rain brought Nigeria’s main city of Lagos virtually to a standstill on Friday as streets, flooded with more than 50cm of water in places, blocked traffic. A cloudburst over the commercial capital of 16-million people was followed by ceaseless rain, inundating residential and business districts alike, notably Victoria Island, which lies below sea level.
Uneasy calm returned to the Nigerian market city of Onitsha on Thursday after almost a week of violence that claimed at least seven lives and left more than 200 prisoners freed, police said. ”Our men are on top of the situation. There is calm everywhere now. But the curfew imposed … is still in force,” state police spokesperson Fidelis Agbo told Agence France-Presse.
Several people were feared dead after an oil tanker exploded while discharging fuel at Nigeria’s main seaport in Lagos on Wednesday. ”It is still difficult to [tell] the exact number of dead, but there were indications that could have been several human and material casualties,” Christopher Borha, public relations manager of the Nigerian Ports Authority said.
Nigerian police intensified efforts on Wednesday to seek the release of two Filipino oil workers a day after they were kidnapped near the oil city of Port Harcourt, a spokesperson said. "We are making frantic efforts to effect their release," Rivers state police spokesperson Ireju Barasua told Agence France-Presse.
Forced off his land in Zimbabwe, 60-year-old Hunter Coetzee has farming in his blood, but it’s Nigerian soil under his fingernails now after the first harvest in his new home. ”Nigeria has offered us hope and succour. We are here for good,” he said contentedly, six years after he thought he had lost everything.
A summit of African leaders, farmers and international agriculture experts aimed at tackling soil degradation and food shortages in the world’s poorest continent opened on Friday in Nigeria. The African Fertiliser Summit, which began in Abuja with a two-day technical session, was being attended by about 500 delegates from across the world.
Five South Koreans taken hostage by Nigerian militants were freed on Thursday, said the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend), which had been holding them. "In fulfilment of our earlier pledge, all five Korean prisoners captured by our unit in the attack on the Daewoo camp were released at 4pm [local time] today, Thursday June 8 2006," Mend said.
African leaders, farmers and heads of international development agencies will meet in Lagos on Friday hoping to bring a new lease of life to the continent’s degraded soil and so tackle food shortages affecting over 200-million Africans. The theme of the summit, which runs from June 9 to 13 is "Nourish the soil, feed the continent."
Nigerian separatist group Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend) claimed responsibility on Wednesday for the kidnapping of five South Korean oil workers and offered to exchange them for the group’s jailed leader. Mend said the raid was a response to a court decision Tuesday to deny bail to the Niger Delta’s best-known guerrilla leader, Mujahid Dokubo Asari.
Two of eight Western oil workers abducted by armed militants off a drilling platform in southern Nigeria were freed early on Sunday, but the other six are still being held, the president’s office said. ”Only two have been released so far according to the negotiation team,” presidential spokesperson Remi Oyo said.
Unknown people have plunged parts of six states in the south-east and southern regions of Nigeria into darkness by vandalising electricity power lines, Power and Steel Minister Lyel Imoke said on Wednesday. The damage led to the collapse of five major 330kV towers serving the south-eastern states of Abia, Imo, Akwa Ibom and Cross River.
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo on Monday urged Nigerians never to compromise on good governance and to shun corruption, in a speech to the nation marking the return of democracy seven years earlier. "We must never compromise on the need for good governance. It is the key to democratic sustainability and consolidation," Obasanjo said.
Ridding the oil-rich Gulf of Guinea of pirates is likely to top the agenda at a three-day conference on African maritime security starting on Monday in the Nigerian capital, Abuja. Two hundred delegates representing 47 countries and 13 international organisations are expected at the second Sea Power for Africa Symposium.
Since 1956, when Shell first struck oil in Nigeria, the Anglo-Dutch oil giant has never been under fire like it has since the beginning of the year, analysts said on Wednesday. Shell’s foray into Nigeria’s lucrative oil industry began with the historic feat of striking the first oil well in Oloibiri in present-day southern Bayelsa state.
South African President Thabo Mbeki has described his Nigerian counterpart Olusegun Obasanjo’s acceptance of the scrapping of a plan to extend his tenure as an outstanding act of statesmanship, an official statement said on Tuesday. Obasanjo (69) must step down in May 2007 after serving two four-year terms.
Ghana aim to give their long-suffering fans something to smile about when they make their World Cup debut after a 44-year wait to play in the finals. One of Africa’s most powerful footballing nations, the ”Black Stars” have won the Nations Cup four times while their clubs and teams have dominated continental and junior international competitions.
Nigerian authorities on Friday allocated two lucrative oil blocks to companies based in the Niger Delta in a bid to douse tensions in the oil-rich restive southern region. Two oil firms — Cleanwaters Consortium and Niger Delta United — were allocated operating production licences 289 and 233 respectively during a bidding exercise.
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo on Thursday accepted Parliament’s rejection of a constitutional change that would have enabled him to stand for a third term in office, saying it was victory for democracy. "For me and for all members of our party, the outcome is victory for democracy," Obasanjo said.
The Nigerian Senate on Tuesday rejected a constitutional amendment that would have allowed President Olusegun Obasanjo to run for a third term in office in 2007. ”By this result, the Senate has said clearly and eloquently that we discontinue further proceedings on this amendment Bill,” Senate President Ken Nnamani said after the vote.