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Politics

Ahead of the eighth season of the popular reality TV show, Big Brother Africa, many residents of Abuja have expressed different opinions on the impact of the programme on the society.

The 2013 season with the theme, "The Chase," is scheduled to begin from May 26, and would feature 26 new housemates from 14 countries, all competing for $300,000 and other prizes. The show that would take place in South Africa will have the contestants spend 91 days in the Big Brother House.

While some fans described the show as pretty unique and entertaining, some people complained that it demonstrated some level of immorality.

A housewife, Miss Ijeoma Amaefula, said past editions of the TV show recorded special moments and features, expecting the new season to show suspense, emotions, drama, fun and excitement.

"I'm super excited that it is back. I have thoroughly enjoyed the past seasons and I look forward to a better season," Amaefula said.

Miss Maimuna Idris, said the adventure surrounded by controversies, romances, heartbreaks, conspiracies and alliances make the show to be interesting, adding that "It further creates an avenue to get exposure, I wish I am the one that will represent my country and because of the fame I wish the programme is sustained."

However, some others described the programme as not encouraging and requested that it should be stopped.

Mr Ufere Chinwendu, a lawyer, said it was addictive and would not encourage the spiritual growth of the citizenry, saying, "It is morally bad, spiritually dwindling and promotes carnality among the youth because it does not attract any positive change to the society." Another lawyer, Miss Fortune Augustine, said she withdrew from watching the programme because she could not get any good lesson from it.

"I could not get any lesson from the little I watched so I suggest the organisers should use the money for better things. I am not learning anything from the idea of exposing the body and having sex on the screen," Augustine said.

Similarly, Miss Tomiwa Aluko, a student, insisted that she was not encouraged by the programme, adding that it is discouraging with no positive impact on the viewers.

"There is always immorality in Big Brother, just drinking, smoking, partying and indecent exposure. There is no lesson there as they are just encouraging nudity and I will tag it corrupt entertainment."

Despite the mixed feelings, M-Net Africa Managing Director, Biola Alabi, said Africa Magic strives to deliver the best in entertainment "and Big Brother Africa remains at the forefront of our plans. We want to give audiences and loyal fans of the show, a truly unforgettable viewing experience once again."

 

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Two Nigerians have been sentenced to seven years in prison over the deaths of at least 80 children who took adulterated teething medicine.

The officials from the company which made the My Pikin syrup were found guilty by a court in Lagos.

After children started dying in 2008, the mixture was found to contain engine coolant.

The judge also ordered that the company be closed and its assets forfeited to the state.

The paracetamol-based syrup, used for treating sore gums, was found to have been contaminated with diethylene glycol, used as an engine coolant.

It caused the babies' kidneys to fail.

My Pikin means "my baby" in Nigerian pidgin, the language widely used in Lagos.

Troops patrol the streets of restive north-eastern Nigerian town of Maiduguri, Borno State, on 30 April 2013Troops are already present in large numbers in Nigeria's north-east

Nigeria has sent a "massive deployment of men and resources" to combat Islamist militants in three north-eastern states.

A statement said the drive was aimed at "asserting the nation's territorial integrity" and "enhancing security".

On Tuesday President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency in Yobe, Borno and Adamawa states after a series of deadly attacks by militants.

Fighters from the Boko Haram group are blamed for most of the violence.

The group, which has its roots in north-eastern Nigeria, is linked to bloodshed in which some 2,000 people have died since 2010.

Boko Haram has seized control of parts of the north-east over the past three years, and much of the violence has been confined to that region.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis

image of Will RossWill RossBBC Nigeria correspondent

There is no doubt that the situation in northern Nigeria is deteriorating fast and now President Goodluck Jonathan has admitted as much. No-one else in the government had dared say a word.

The frequency and scale of the attacks carried out by Boko Haram have forced the president to take action and to silence some of his critics who accuse him of being out of touch and slow to react.

Some analysts have suggested that if left to fester there is little to stop Boko Haram from setting up its own Islamic institutions in the extreme north-east.

Will more boots on the ground improve the situation? Much will depend on how the troops behave. Analysts argue that the military has already lost the battle for hearts and minds and residents feel trapped between the two sides of this murky conflict.

However, the group did bomb Nigeria's capital Abuja in 2011 and 2012.

The militants have forged closer links with al-Qaeda-linked militants in the Sahara region and have access to increasingly sophisticated weaponry. They are believed to move back and forth across frontiers, particularly the Cameroon border, say analysts.

Nigeria, a multi-ethnic nation of more than 160 million people, is also affected by conflicts over land, religion and oil.

'Big trouble'

Wednesday's Ministry of Defence statement said the army, police and other security agencies had begun operations to "rid the nation's border territories of terrorist bases and activities".

The declared aim that it will assert the nation's territorial integrity comes a day after the president said the state no longer controlled the entire territory of Nigeria, a somewhat embarrassing admission, says the BBC's Will Ross in Lagos.

The operation will focus on enhancing security of governmental structures after the president said attacks on government buildings and killings of officials and other civilians amounted to a declaration of war.

Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe are three of the poorest states, far removed from the southern oilfields that feed government coffers.

"We've had a lot of problems [of] border crime, and criss-crossing of the border by the insurgents, and there's also evidence that some of the insurgents really are non-Nigerians," presidential spokesman Doyin Okupe told the BBC.

"As long as the terrorists can go in and out unchallenged, then we're in big trouble."

Residents and reporters in the north-east said there had already been an influx of extra troops and military hardware.

"I have never seen soldiers on the move quite like this before," said Ahmed Mari, who lives in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state.

"A lot of fighting equipment has been deployed to Maiduguri," Hajja Maimuna, whose house is close to Maiduguri's Air Force base, told Nigeria's Daily Trust website.

"We are really terrified... Even though the state governor has not been removed, which is good, the truth is that Maiduguri is now a garrison town, full of angry soldiers who are ready to kill at the slightest provocation."

Boko Haram, whose name means "Western education is forbidden" in the local Hausa language, is fighting to overthrow the government and create an Islamic state in the north.

Although they often attack Christians and government targets, they have also killed many Muslim civilians.


Joint Military Task Force in Maiduguri, Nigeria (30 April 2013)Nigerian troops have been trying to flush out militants from their strongholds

About 120 militant Islamists have been arrested in Nigeria's north-eastern city of Maiduguri, as they were organising the burial of a commander, an army spokesman has said.

The military has also recaptured five areas from the militants, he added.

There has been no independent confirmation of what the army has said.

President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency in three north-eastern states last week to quell the insurgency by the Boko Haram group.

It has carried out a wave of bombings and assassinations since 2009, saying it wants to establish an Islamic state across Nigeria.

A second Islamist group, Ansaru, joined the insurgency in 2012, taking foreigners hostage.

Officials say some 2,000 people have fled to neighbouring Niger, while more have crossed into Cameroon, since the army launched its offensive in the states of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe last week.

'Shallow graves'

Some 2,000 soldiers were deployed to the region last week, in the biggest campaign to date against the Islamist militants.

The army has said it is also sending an extra 1,000 troops to Adamawa state.

Militants fleeing towards neighbouring Chad and Niger are being "contained", military spokesman Chris Olukolade said, in a statement on Monday.

"Advancing troops also observed a few shallow graves believed to be those of hurriedly buried members of the terrorist groups," he added.

Brig Gen Olukolade said the 120 militants who were arrested were being interrogated, bringing to more than 200 the number of Islamists the army says it has arrested since last week.

The militants were seized as they were preparing for the funeral of a commander killed in a battle with government troops, Brig Gen Olukolade added.

The army had secured five towns and villages in remote parts of Borno state after "destroying all the terrorists camps" in the area, he said.

The military said last week it had carried out air strikes, destroying militant bases in Sambisa game reserve, south of Maiduguri, and elsewhere.

US Secretary of State John Kerry has urged the Nigerian army to show restraint and not violate human rights as it pursues the militants.

Mr Kerry said there were "credible allegations" of "gross human rights violations" by the Nigerian military.

Last November, Amnesty International accused Nigeria's security forces of carrying out widespread abuses in their campaign against Boko Haram, including extra-judicial killings, enforced disappearances and torture.

More than 2,000 people have died in violence in Nigeria since 2010, most of which is blamed on Boko Haram.

There has been growing concern that the group could be receiving backing from al-Qaeda-linked militants in other countries.

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opinion BY JIBRIN IBRAHIM (ALLAFRICA.COM)

Nigeria's President, Goodluck Jonathan, on the 14th May 2013 declared a state of emergency in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States. He explained that he was responding to the incessant terrorist attacks and other security challenges that have recently plagued Nigeria.

The declaration is in accordance with the provisions of section 305(3 (c) (d) (f) Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 as amended, which states that the President shall have power to issue a state of emergency only when "there is actual breakdown of public order and public safety, there is a clear and present danger of an actual breakdown of public order and , safety in the federation or any part to require extraordinary measure to restore peace and security or to avert such danger" and there is any other public danger which clearly constitutes a threat to the existence of the Federation.

The President in his speech argued amongst other issues that the terrorists have established control over several parts of the nation, destroyed state property and hoisted strange flags suggesting the exercise of alternative sovereignty in some parts of the country. No one can reasonably challenge the veracity of this position. The Proclamation is likely to be transmitted to the National Assembly today, 15th May 2013. According to the Constitution - Section 305(2) & 6(b) "The President shall transmit such copies of the gazette with details to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, each of whom shall forthwith convene a sitting to consider the situation and decide whether or not to pass a resolution approving the proclamation."

The same section of the Constitution further states in subsection 6 that a proclamation issued by the President shall cease to have effect within two days when the National Assembly is in session or within ten days when it is not in session, after its publication, if there is no resolution supported by two-thirds majority of all the members of the each House of the National Assembly approving this proclamation.

Our understanding is that what is proposed with the state of emergency is only to send in more troops into the affected states and equip them with sweeping powers of arrest, detention, search etc. The utility of this remains doubtful especially within the context of the recent Baga debacle where over 200 citizens were allegedly murdered by security agents and thousands of houses were burnt and destroyed.

The anti-community approach of security agencies has been consistently criticized by community leaders and elders such as the Borno Elders' Forum who have postulated that the path to resolution of the crisis is the withdrawal of security agencies from the states. In the last two weeks, we have been inundated with reports that the Baga Massacre has actually led to an expansion of the ranks of Boko Haram as more foot soldiers have been enlisted. See for example the statement "If a man gives me 20,000 naira [£80] today, then I will work with him for life. That is what I hear Boko Haram is doing. What else is there for us to earn money here? ("http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/may/09/nigeria-war-boko-haram-new-ground-zero).

The opinion of informed citizens is that security forces continue in their approach of massive violations of human rights and non-adherence to the principles of the rule of law enshrined in their rules of engagement. Nigeria, it will be recalled, committed to the Geneva Declaration 2006 on achieving measurable reductions in armed violence by 2015 but we are not on course to achieve it and a rethink of our approach is imperative.

We do not yet know how the declaration of the State of Emergency by President Jonathan would impact on the administrative system of the states concerned. According to the President: "the Governors and other political office holders in the affected states will continue to discharge their constitutional responsibilities. We recall that in December 2011, state of emergency was declared for fifteen local governments and in practice, what happened was that the statutory allocations for these local governments were withheld during the imposition of the emergency rule further crippling the day to day activities of the LGAs, families of its staff and even the security situation. Emergency rule did not lead to an improvement of the security situation in the said local governments. Are we going to have a situation in which the statutory allocations to the affected states are simply handed over to JTF commanders while the State Governors are left without resources to govern?

The Centre for Democracy and Development is concerned that insurgents have been killing innocent Nigerians and escalating the state of insecurity in the country. The State therefore has a responsibility to take steps to re-establish public safety. Be that as it may, the path towards public safety cannot be an expansion of violations of the rights of Nigerians. We believe that the human rights of citizens should not be secondary to the provision of security. Public safety and human rights should be promoted in tandem.

It is also important to place on the agenda the need for a critical evaluation of the legal regime governing the declaration of emergency rule in Nigeria. We must reflect on the appropriate conditions under which emergency rule is declared to prevent what has sometimes been interpreted as the selective imposition of emergency rule. There is a need to evaluate sections 305(4) as amended prescribing that the governor of a state requests the president to declare a state of emergency where there is a breakdown of law and order and it should only be when the Governor refuses that the President should act.

The Centre for Democracy and Development believes that the country needs to win the war against terrorism. This would require addressing the root causes of the menace, primarily poverty, unemployment and bringing to book perpetrators/violators of human rights, particularly security agents accused of extra judicial killings. It is this approach that will instill confidence in the nation's security architecture.

Secondly, special attention should be placed on training and retraining of our security agencies on human rights and counter terrorism. Our security agencies need to improve their information sharing and government should invest in providing equipment and logistical support. Thirdly, our security agencies should collaborate more with the local communities rather than antagonizing them. We acknowledge that the scale of violence today is unprecedented since the Biafran civil war. The containment strategy we adopt should therefore seek a path that will lead to an early resolution. It is on this basis that we call on the National Assembly to reflect seriously on the request that will come before them and above all to spell out conditionalities for an anti-terrorism strategy that is respectful of the human rights of citizens and communities.

Dr. Jibrin Ibrahim, renowned political scientist and civil society leader, is Executive Director at the Centre for Democracy and Development in Abuja

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