Monday, 21 October 2013

Photos from Okon Goes to School actor Ime Bishop's white wedding


Okon goes to the altar...:-). Comic actor Ime Bishop Umoh married his boo Idara Saviour yesterday Saturday October 19th in Uyo, Akwa Ibom state. Congrats to them. See more photos after the cut..

 

Video: Big Girl Caught In The Act With Married Man; Angry Wife Stríp Her Unclad


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A popular big girl in town recently got more than she bargained for as the wife of a wealthy man who she has been enjoying “good times” with in different hotels finally caught her red handed. This time she didn’t invite the sugar dáddy, said to be a well connected businessman, to a hotel but followed him to his house after she learnt that the man’s wife had traveled out of town.
The secret lovers went in but something happened as soon as they took off their clothes…
TON gathered that the man’s wife showed up from no where and chased this so called big girl out of her house with only pánts and, even the pánts, she later took it off her wáist on the street.
While trying to escape, the lady ran into a house to seek refuge but once the woman in the house heard what she had done, she immediately drove her out again into the hands of the angry wife. It was indeed a “bad market day” for this beautiful lady.

Photos: Baby Born With Ears Under Its Chin


Birth defects are quite common around the world, some more than others. Every once in a while we see one that just catches our attention and makes us think back to whether or not we’ve seen it before. In this case, it appears to be a rare deformity that caused a baby born with ears under its chin. The image, taken from the popular photo site Imgur shows a newborn baby who was born with a few cranial birth defects, such as a deformed mouth and jawline, but more prominently the placement of the ears stands out.
The placement of the ears in this case is somewhat reminiscent of where gills would be on an aquatic animal, or fish. Perhaps they simply failed to migrate to the side of the head after they were formed. In the first trimester of pregnancy, the ears form along the jaw line out of cartilage. At some point during the second trimester the ears typically migrate to their correct place on the side of the head. This is the normal process that appears to have failed during the second trimester, which resulted in the low placement of the ears as well as the deformed jaw line. The Mayo Clinic states that by 18 weeks of gestation, a fetus should be able to hear, as well as have fully formed ears.

Asari-Dokubo establishes two universities – ‘King Amachree Automobile/ICT Royal Academy’ and ‘King Amachree Arts Academy’


The leader of the Niger Delta People’s Volunteer Force, NDPVF, Muhajid Asari-Dokubo has joined the swelling rank of private university proprietors with his establishment of a university in the neighbouring Republic of Benin.
Mr. Asari-Dokubo, who already owns a soccer academy in the West African country and another one in Abuja, said the university, which will be known as King Amachree African University, KAAU, had already been accredited to commence degree programmes beginning September 2014.
He told PREMIUM TIMES in an interview in Abuja that the proposed university, named after his ancestor, was a product of his two existing institutions in Benin Republic, namely King Amachree Automobile/ICT Royal Academy and King Amachree Arts Academy. Both of them, he added, currently award Diploma to their students.
Mr. Asari-Dokubo said he chose to establish the institutions in Benin Republic because he does not only live there, but has adopted it as his country.
“What we have now, we are awarding only diploma now. “By next September, Insha Allah, the university will start,” Mr. Asari-Dokubo, who dropped out of University of Calabar, he said. “For now we have King Amachree Automobile/ICT Royal Academy and King Amachree Arts Academy. Two of them were merged. We have merged the two of them into king Amachree African University. “King Amachree is my great ancestor. He was king of the Kingdom of new Calabar.”
On his soccer academy, the 50 year old Mr. Asari-Dokubo, an indigene of Rivers State, who refused to be tagged a former militant, said it was established to train the youth in soccer free of charge. “We plan to engage the youths. It is free. We have a soccer academy in Abuja and we have another one in Republic of Benin,” he said.
More Nigerians are forced to go to Benin Republic, Ghana, Togo and other neigbhouring countries to acquire education due to the incessant labour disputes and industrial actions within the Nigerian university system as well as the deplorable state of education in the country.
Currently, students of both the federal and state universities in Nigeria are at home due to the strike embarked upon by the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, over the refusal of the Federal Government to honour its 2009 agreement with the union.
Other unions within the education sector, including the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities, SSANU, have also embarked on solidarity strike while the Nigeria Union of Teachers, NUT, and Non-Academic Staff Union, NASU, are reportedly on the verge of doing towing that path.
Students of the over 50 private universities in Nigeria, whose fees can only be afforded the rich, are however, in session.
Mr. Asari-Dokubo is, like former Niger Delta militants enjoying massive patronage from the current administration, believe to be very wealthy but his source of income is largely unknown.
There were speculation he made his fortune stealing crude oil in the Niger Delta. But he denied engaging in such practices, telling PREMIUM TIMES he had never been part of any act capable of endangering the Delta.

Nigeria’s most famous blogger, Linda Ikeji, drew the anger of Covenant University students, Wednesday, after she posted a blog that appeared factually incorrect about their mate.


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Linda incurred the rage after she posted a story about the death – suicide – of a Covenant University student, Ndubuisi Brown.
Linda had in a post, said Brown committed suicide. Apparently, Brown drowned in a Lagos beach.
She has since apologized.
“Covenant University Students, I apologize. Your friend died, he didn’t commit suicide. But thanks for making me trend. It’s been a while,” she tweeted.

Shop for your shoes... NaijaFeet style!!


"We've done it again. We've upped the game. Our fabulous new collection of male and female shoes just arrived. Take a look at click here to www.naijafeet.com. we guarantee you'll find something that matches your sense of style. Be it Conservative or subtly flirtatious. We deliver straight to your doorstep anywhere in Nigeria. AtNaijafeet we don't just sell shoes. We style your feet."   

Arsenal have door opened in chase for £25 million Bundesliga star


Arsenal have been given hope in their chase for Borussia Dortmund striker Robert Lewandowski
It is no secret that Arsene Wenger plans to spend in the January window and add a top-class striker, despite Olivier Girouds good form
But the Polish hitman appeared to be Bayern bound with reports indicating he had signed a pre-contract with the Bundesliga giants.
However, it seems this could have been misconstrued, with Lewandowski opening the door to a Premier League move.
“I will be able to sign a contract in January, but I have never said that I will sign a contract with Bayern,” he told a national newspaper.
“It was a misunderstanding. It is true I had the opportunity to speak with Sir Alex Ferguson (last year), but we didn’t mention the transfer.
“One day I would like to play in the Premier League. It would be a great experience.”
The striker is world class and hopefully Wenger makes a swoop
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Thursday, 17 October 2013

Wizkid shares another pic with his son


I guess he's done hiding his son. Second photo of himself with his son in two days. He posted this pic this morning. That boy

Kim K posts first post baby bikini pic online & Kanye West responds



Kim K this morning shared her first post baby bikini body and her baby daddy Kanye responded on his Twitter page...he wrote 'Heading home now' Lol. He must have been turned on by the pic..Kim is sexy sha!

Faze releases two hot singles - Ifeoma and Lambo


Former Plantashun Boiz member Chibuzor Orji popularly known as Faze is back with two hot new singles. Ifeoma and Lambo. Listen to Ifeoma below and Lambo.

Click here to download
 

US debt crisis: Congress passes deal


Katy Watson reports on the deal struck over the US budget crisis
The US Congress has passed a bill to reopen the government and raise the federal debt limit, with hours to spare before the nation risked default.
The Democrat-controlled Senate passed the measure by 81 votes to 18, and the Republican-controlled House of Representatives by 285 votes to 144.
Despite reluctant support from the House Republican leadership, most of the party's lawmakers voted against it.
It came hours before the deadline to raise the $16.7tn (£10.5tn) limit.
The bill yanked the US back from the brink of a budgetary abyss by extending the treasury's borrowing authority until 7 February.
It also funds the government to 15 January, reopening closed federal agencies after 16 days of partial government shutdown and bringing hundreds of thousands of employees back to work.
President Barack Obama signed the bill into law early on Thursday morning.
Following the deal, shares in Tokyo closed higher, while in Europe they fell slightly in early trading.
'Governing by crisis'
The White House budget office said federal workers should return to work on Thursday.

The deal, however, offers only a temporary solution and does not resolve the budgetary issues that fiercely divide Republicans and Democrats.
President Obama warned that US lawmakers must "earn back the trust of the American people".
"We've got to get out of the habit of governing by crisis," the Democratic president added, speaking after the Senate vote on Wednesday evening.
"My hope and expectation is everybody has learned there's no reason why we can't work on the issues at hand, why we can't disagree between the parties without still being agreeable and make sure that we're not inflicting harm on the American people when we do have disagreements."
Also speaking after the first vote, Senate Democratic Majority leader Harry Reid said: "Let's be honest, this is pain inflicted on a nation for no good reason and we cannot, cannot make the same mistake again."

The US Treasury has been using what it called "extraordinary measures" to pay its bills since the nation reached its current debt limit in May.
It said those methods would be exhausted by 17 October, leaving the US unable to meet all of its debt and other fiscal obligations.
Politicians, bankers and economists had warned of dire global economic consequences unless an agreement to raise the US government's borrowing limit was reached.
Meanwhile, ratings firm Standard & Poor's said on Wednesday that the partial US government shutdown, the first in 17 years, had already shaved $24bn from the American economy and would cut growth significantly in the fourth quarter.
Spurred on by hardline conservatives, congressional Republicans forced the standoff on 1 October by demanding that President Obama defund or delay his signature healthcare overhaul.
'Shameful'
But they have emerged with little to show for it - under the bill just passed, the law commonly known as Obamacare escapes relatively unscathed.
Congressional Republicans, who have borne the brunt of blame in opinion polls for the budget row, conceded defeat on Wednesday.
"We fought the good fight," Republican House Speaker John Boehner said as lawmakers lined up to vote on the bill. "We just didn't win."
Mr Boehner said in a statement: "Our drive to stop the train wreck that is the president's health care law will continue."
In the House of Representatives, 144 Republicans voted against the bill. But 87 voted in favour, allowing it to pass.
Amid warnings that the debacle could damage the party's prospects in next year's midterm elections, the political autopsy has already begun.
"This has been a really bad two weeks for the Republican Party," Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said.
Senator John McCain, who was the party's 2008 presidential nominee, told the upper chamber it had been "one of the more shameful chapters I have seen in the years I have spent here in the Senate".
He told the BBC that it was "disturbing when Republicans attack Republicans", and that "we're going to continue a debate within our party as to the direction of the party and how we should handle things."
"I'm guardedly optimistic and confident that we won't revisit it this way again," he said. "The reaction of the American people is very very negative and understandably so."
Graph showing US debt ceiling and which party holds presidency, House/Senate

Coen brothers receive France honour


Joel and Ethan CoenThe Coen brothers have won four Oscars to date for their films No Country For Old Men and Fargo


US filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen have received France's highest cultural honour at a ceremony in Paris.
The brothers, who won three Oscars in 2008 for their crime drama No Country For Old Men, were each made a Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters.
Accepting the award, Joel said: "Sometimes life plays jokes on you - some of them are very unfortunate, some of them are very fortunate.
"This is one of the most fortunate jokes I think life has played on us."
The award is given by the French government to people who "significantly contributed to the enrichment of the French cultural inheritance".
Eight of the Coen's films have premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, with 1991's Barton Fink winning the Palme d'Or.
Their latest film, Inside Llewyn Davis, also won the Grand Prize of the jury at this year's festival.
Released in the UK next January and starring Carey Mulligan and Justin Timberlake, the film tells the story of a struggling singer-songwriter against the backdrop of the 1960s New York folk scene.
French Culture Minister Aurelie Filippetti, who presented the honour to the pair, said: "We have extremely strong links between French cinema and American cinema so it's natural there's this recognition for two of the greatest directors in the US today."
Other recent recipients of the honour from the world of film and music include Ringo Starr, Bono and Bruce Willis.

Why the world’s technology giants are investing in Africa



ChildYoung people gaining access to technology is key for Africa, tech companies say
"I don't understand. Why is it that the media only seems to talk about Africa when bad things happen?"
The man behind the counter at my hotel in the Ghanaian capital, Accra, was talking to me about my job, and why I was visiting.
He looked genuinely pained. He told me he is a big fan of the BBC - in west Africa the World Service and language services have a big following - but it seemed to him that the media outside the continent often only noticed when bad things happened.
It's arguably a fair point. That's not to say the positive stories don't get reported, but he can be forgiven for seeing the headlines and thinking all the world sees is war, famine and pestilence.
In fact, Africa is booming, with growth of 5.6% predicted for 2013,according to the World Bank - although research suggests this has yet to trickle down to the very poorest on the continent.
The middle class in sub-Saharan Africa is expanding rapidly. With the seemingly unstoppable growth of the mobile phone, greater access to the internet, and an increase in access to education, change is happening, and more people have more disposable income to spend.
So it's no surprise that the big technology companies are investing in Africa. But is this the whole story?
Is it driven by philanthropy or a desire to get in on the ground before their competitors? Or does Africa offer other opportunities? I spoke to three tech giants about why they were investing in the continent.

IBM

IBM labThe opening of IBM's research centre in Nairobi takes the company's total of research labs around the world to 12
The company has bolstered existing investments in the continent by opening a research facility in Nairobi, with the official inauguration celebration happening at the end of October.
According to IBM, this is the first research facility that does both applied and exploratory research on the continent.

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We believe research for Africa, solving Africa's grand challenges, has to be done on the ground in Africa”
Dr Kamal BhattacharyaIBM Research - Africa
"The key thing is… the great growth story of Africa," says Dr Kamal Bhattacharya, the director of IBM Research - Africa.
"We know that financial inclusion is the big challenge. About 80% of the population has no access to financial services. There is the lack of access to energy, safe water, sanitation, food security.
"As scientists we believe that science and technology is an enabler to express your needs, it is an enabler to shape your own future.
"And this is why IBM is making this very significant investment into Africa, starting with Kenya. We've hired some of the top talent from all over the world, the African diaspora, people of African origin, also people who contribute to the growth of Africa, and we bring them all together here.
"We believe research for Africa, solving Africa's grand challenges, has to be done on the ground in Africa and this is why we set up and made this investment."
Dr Kamal Bhattacharya, Director IBM Research - Africa (right) and Dr Uyi Stewart, Chief Scientist, IBM Research - Africa  (left) Dr Uyi Stewart (left) and Dr Kamal Bhattacharya will celebrate the official opening of IBM's 12th research facility in Nairobi
His colleague, Dr Uyi Stewart, is chief scientist at the lab. Originally from Nigeria, the role has brought him and his family back to the continent after nearly 10 years in New York.
"People ask us: 'Can you do African research from New York?' Yes you can. It is possible, you can do research from anywhere.
"But you will miss the mark... In order to capture value, and deliver innovation that leads to commercially viable products that impact people's lives, we have to be here, in the local ecosystem."

Microsoft

Schoolchildren with tablet computerThe 4Afrika initiative wants to focus on young people and access to technology
Fernando de Sousa heads Microsoft's 4Afrika initiative, which focuses on encouraging innovation, increasing access to technology and building skills in the local workforce.
The division backs projects across the continent including access to training, roll-out of broadband in rural areas, infrastructure, agriculture and healthcare projects, as well as their App Factories, hubs designed to nurture young developers creating apps for the Windows phone platform.

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It's not just about networks, it's not just about PCs. It's about the end economic impact, it's about the skills”
Fernando de SousaMicrosoft's 4Afrika
Building these projects has a very personal resonance for Mr de Sousa, who was born in Mozambique and ended up spending time in a South African refugee camp as a child after the outbreak of civil war.
"We said we want on focus on young people. We want to focus on skills, we want to focus on small and medium enterprises. We want to focus on access to technology.
"Let's take Kenya - so we start with TV white spaces in a village in the Maasai Mara.
"It's now evolved into a national policy conversation - President Kenyatta has said he wants 1.3 million students to have a [connected] device by September 2013. And he travelled to the Masai Mara to go and see what we're doing.
"It's not just about networks, it's not just about PCs. It's about the end economic impact, it's about the skills.


"[Now] we have 11 countries that have formally submitted requests for us to implement TV white spaces technology."
But Mr de Sousa is clear about the motivation behind the initiative.
"There is a corporate social investment part of Microsoft which has nothing to do with Microsoft 4Afrika. And I think that that is a well-established process, we do a lot of donations in that space.
"This is about being on the ground and creating huge consumers. There's no debate about the fact that our objective is enabling economic development.
"In proving the value of technology as the enabler for that development, it's not just creating consumption of technology, but it's actually more importantly creating the ability for knowledge to be developed, for technology to actually be built in Africa.
"Because that actually drives the IT ecosystem, that drives the IT industry, that makes technology relevant."

Salesforce.com

students at Junior School at St Martin'sThe Foundation has paid for schools to get on the internet and sponsored students
Isabel Kelly is the international director of the Salesforce.com Foundation, the philanthropic arm of the customer relationship management and services technology giant.
She joined the company 11 years ago from campaigning group Amnesty International.
Isabel KellyIsabel Kelly spent more than 10 years at Amnesty International
The Foundation was started with an initial investment from the company, as well as access to Salesforce.com software, which is licensed to non-profits, and staff members volunteering.
The first project in Africa for the Foundation was the suggestion of an employee, who had a brother who was volunteering in a school in the Kibagare slum in Nairobi.
"We gave some refurbished hardware to them, we paid for them to get the internet," Ms Kelly says.
"And so the school has taken on a bit of a focus on technology, we sponsored about 40 girls through the school, over the 10 years."
One of the sponsored pupils from a particularly difficult background would go on to become a lawyer working for the Kenyan Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission.
Gilbert Ambani, CIO at Juhudi Kilimo, addressing the group at a Salesforce.com Foundation's non-profit workshop at the ihub Gilbert Ambani, from Juhudi Kilimo, addresses a group at a workshop at the iHub
The Foundation has its own revenue stream from the bigger NGOs it works with (customers include the Grameen Foundation) and also funds training in how to use the Salesforce platform, and workshops for start-ups at places like Nairobi's iHub and mLab.
Meanwhile, a host of social enterprises are using Salesforce tech to power their organisations - like Juhudi Kilimo, a micro-finance social enterprise, focusing on small, rural farmers in Kenya, and Honeycare, an organisation that helps farmers turn to honey production.