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Globacom’s Head of Corporate Sales, Kamaldeen Shonibare, (middle) flanked from left by Glo ambassador, Ini Edo, Brenda Akhigbe of Glo Post-paid Sales, Mrs. Abimbola Umozurike of Glo Customer Care and Glo ambassadors, Chidinma Okebalama (Chee) and Monalisa Chinda during the launch in Lagos yesterday.

A new revolutionary post-paid product tagged Infinitiser launched by Globacom on Tuesday has offered subscribers a rare opportunity to make free 24-hour calls to the 26 million subscribers on the company’s network. Additionally, subscribers will enjoy 1 free gigabyte of data per month.



Brenda Akhigbe of Glo Post-paid Sales and Glo ambassadors, Monalisa Chinda and Chidinma Okebalama, (Chee) during the launch of Glo’s first-of-its-kind post-paid package, Glo Infinitiser, in Lagos yesterday.

Kamaldeen Shonibare, Globacom’s Head of Corporate Sales, while speaking at the launch of the product in Lagos, said all the benefits would be activated once a subscriber to the product pays the N5,000 monthly charge. He described it as the biggest post-paid product offering ever in Nigeria.
He said the “Infinitiser gives a golden opportunity to achieve more, enables you to talk endlessly with loved ones and business associates, helps you to close your deals and get fulfillment. It eliminates the difference between day and night because you can make free calls on it 24/7”, he said.
It is targeted at existing and potential prepaid and post paid customers. Kamaldeen said the new product, in addition to the free Glo to Glo calls and the free 1GB of data monthly, also offers 25k per second for calls to other networks, N4 per message for on-net sms and international calls at the rate of N9 per minute to 7 destinations among which are the US, UK landline, Canada, India, China, Singapore and Hong Kong.
He also said subscribers would start enjoying the benefits once they paid the monthly subscription fee of N5,000. “The new product offers subscribers more reasons to come on board and enjoy the unlimited benefits offered by the Glo network”, he said.
“This product is outstanding.  It is a super Closed User Group (CUG) which will appeal to business customers, high net-worth individuals, business owners and senior managers within the corporate, SME and Public sectors”, he added.
Kamaldeen disclosed that subscribers who are currently on the post paid platform are eligible to migrate to the new Infinitiser while individuals who currently spend more than N5,000 to recharge their pre-paid lines monthly also stand to benefit by subscribing to the new post paid platform. He said subscribers on other networks should also port in to Glo to enjoy the special package and still maintain their numbers.
Globacom in a statement advised those wishing to port to the new postpaid product to formally apply and fill the subscriber agreement forms at the Gloworld shop nearest to them. He said their lines would be activated after paying the monthly deposit of N5,000 which will qualify them for the free calls and monthly free 1GB data bundle.


The UK has withdrawn some staff from its embassy in LibyaThe BP move follows UK advice about uncertainty in Libya

Oil giant BP has withdrawn some non-essential staff from operations in Libya following UK government advice about uncertainty in the country.

BP described the withdrawal as a "precautionary measure", adding that it would monitor the security situation.

The Foreign Office withdrew British embassy staff from the capital, Tripoli, last week.

Gunmen have besieged the justice and foreign ministries recently, demanding that Gaddafi-era officials be expelled.

The gunmen blocked the buildings two weeks ago, parking pick-up trucks with anti-aircraft guns outside. The siege was lifted by Sunday and employees at both ministries were back at work.

Parliament passed a law last week barring Gaddafi-era officials from political office.

BP said in a statement: "Following FCO advice given to us by the British Embassy in Tripoli, and purely as a precautionary measure, we have brought non-essential overseas staff out of Libya for the time being in a phased reduction of numbers.

"Our Libyan staff remain and the office continues to operate. Fewer than a dozen people are affected.

"We will continue to monitor the security situation and move people back in to Libya when it is considered safe to do so."

On Friday, the Foreign Office said some embassy staff in Libya had been withdrawn in response to "ongoing political uncertainty".

It said it was temporarily withdrawing a "small number" who work with Libyan ministries, while the UK embassy remains "open as usual", including for consular and visa services.

The Foreign Office currently advises against all but essential travel to Tripoli and against all travel to other parts of Libya, such as the eastern city of Benghazi.

Mr Mugabe, 89, is seeking to extend his rule in elections


Zimbabwe's authorities have ignored a court ruling to free an activist accused of calling President Robert Mugabe a "limping donkey" at an election rally, his lawyer says.

Charles Kwaramba said prosecutors had invoked a controversial law to keep Solomon Madzore in detention.

Mr Madzore denies a charge of insulting the president.

His MDC party is challenging Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF party in elections due later this year.

The election will herald the end of the coalition government the two parties formed after elections marred by violence and alleged vote-rigging five years ago.

Mr Mugabe, in power since 1980, will be challenged by Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.

Meanwhile, police on Tuesday arrested Zimbabwe Independent newspaper editor Dumisani Muleya and his reporter, Owen Gagare, on a charge of publishing falsehoods or information prejudicial to the state.

'Fabricated'

Mr Madzore, the leader of the MDC's youth wing, was arrested last week for allegedly calling Mr Mugabe 89, a "limping donkey" who should be put out to pasture, the BBC's Brian Hungwe reports from the capital, Harare.

He allegedly made the remark at a campaign rally in Mushumbe, Mashonaland Central Province on 27 April.

Mr Kwaramba said a court had granted Mr Madzore bail on Monday, but he had not been released because prosecutors were citing a contentious appeal law to hold him for another seven days.

"My client was formally charged and he denies the charge - even uttering the statement to the effect that President Mugabe is a donkey," Mr Kwaramba said.

"He believes the charges are politically motivated and fabricated."

Under Zimbabwean law, a person could be jailed for up to a year or fined $100 (£64) for insulting the president's office.

In 2011, policeman Alois Mabhunu, was sentenced to 10 days in prison after he used a special presidential toilet at a trade fair.

Mr Tsvangirai's spokesman Luke Tamborinyoka told the BBC that the MDC would scrap the law if it won elections.

"No-one is above the law and immune from criticism, President Mugabe included," he said.

"In a democratic society such laws should never have space."

The journalists' arrests came after their newspaper published a report alleging that army generals have been in secret talks with Mr Tsvangirai to discuss the post-election period.

The newspaper said it stood by the report.

Most military chiefs in Zimbabwe, who fought with Mr Mugabe in the 1970s war of independence, are publicly hostile to Mr Tsvangirai.

They have accused him of being a puppet of Britain, the former colonial power - an allegation he denies.

No date has been set for the elections - the first under a new constitution which is supposed to expand civil liberties in Zimbabwe.

Kenya's Roman Catholic Church has condemned a Catholic group for a billboard and newspaper advertising campaign promoting condom use.

The US-based Catholics for Choice was planting "negative attitudes" that could destroy the nation's "moral fibre", church leaders said.

Catholics for Choice defend it, saying it could curb the spread of HIV.

Around 1.6 million people out of Kenya's population of 41.6 million are living with HIV, according to the UN.

Catholics are heavily divided over the use of condoms.

A television advert urging married women to use condoms was recently pulled from Kenyan television following an outcry from religious groups.

'Sex is sacred'

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

Remember if the moral fibre of any nation is destroyed, then you have destroyed the nation as well”

John Cardinal NjueKenya Catholic Church

Catholics for Choice has said its "condoms4life" campaign shows "an authentically Catholic message".

The group has run advertisements in newspapers and billboards in Kenya showing a smiling couple with the slogan: "Good Catholics Use Condoms".

"We believe in God. We believe that sex is sacred. We believe in caring for each other. We believe in using condoms," the advert reads.

But Cardinal John Njue, chairman of the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the church promoted pro-life, not pro-choice.

"Catholics for Choice are not Catholics in the sense of the one, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church," he said in a statement.

Cardinal Njue called for the advertisements to be stopped.

"Remember if the moral fibre of any nation is destroyed, then you have destroyed the nation as well," he said.

Catholics for Choice said it launched its campaign after pressure from religious groups forced the Kenyan government to drop an advertisement in March promoting condom use in marriage.

"The campaign is vital because the bishops' recent activities are not representative of Catholic teachings or beliefs. Catholics do support the use of condoms, and they do use them to protect themselves and their partners," campaign co-ordinator Jon O'Brien said in a statement last month.

The Kenyan bishops' anti-condom remarks contradict the view of Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI who stated in 2010 that "where the intention is to reduce the risk of infection" condoms can be "a first step in a movement toward a different way, a more human way, of living sexuality", Mr O'Brien said.

Pope Francis was chosen as the head of Catholic Church last month after Pope Benedict stepped down, saying he was too frail to carry on in the job.

The new pope has not commented about the use of condoms since his elevation to the papacy.

The BBC's Stephen Evans: "The authorities have admitted that things went wrong

An alleged member of a German neo-Nazi cell has gone on trial in Munich in connection with a series of racially motivated murders.

Beate Zschaepe, 38, is accused of being part of the National Socialist Underground (NSU), which killed 10 people, mostly of Turkish background.

She denies the murder charges. After entering court, she stood with folded arms and turned her back on the camera.

The case sparked controversy as police wrongly blamed the Turkish mafia.

The head of Germany's domestic intelligence service was eventually forced to resign over the scandal. It also emerged that intelligence files on far-right extremists were destroyed after the cell's activities came to light.

Four male defendants are also on trial with Ms Zschaepe, facing lesser charges of having helped the NSU.

She faces life in prison if convicted.

This police video shows alleged Neo-Nazi Beate Zschaepe in an identity parade.

Critics have accused authorities of turning a blind eye to the crimes of right-wing extremists, the BBC'S Steve Evans reports from Munich.

Officials deny this, saying mistakes occurred because the murders were spread across different regions, each with different police and security agencies.

The killings took place over a seven-year period, and none of the victims or locations was high-profile.

Execution-style killings

Ethnic Turkish community groups and anti-racism campaigners demonstrated outside the courthouse on Monday demanding justice. Some suspect the police of institutional racism, which may have helped the neo-Nazis to act with impunity, our correspondent says.

Before the trial got under way a large crowd of journalists had gathered outside, along with dozens of people hoping to get seats in the court. About 500 police officers were deployed and nearby streets were cordoned off.

map timeline of German neo-Nazi killings

Ms Zschaepe is charged with complicity in the murders of eight ethnic Turks, a Greek immigrant and a German policewoman between 2000 and 2007, as a founding member of the NSU.

She is also accused of involvement in 15 armed robberies, of arson, and of attempted murder via two bomb attacks.

Prosecutors say the aim of the execution-style killings was to spread fear among immigrants and prompt them to leave Germany.

Her lawyers say she is refusing to speak in court. Only the trial opening was broadcast, in line with German legal restrictions.

The four male defendants are:

  • Ralf Wohlleben, 38, and Carsten Schultze, 33, accused of being accessories to murder in the killing of the nine men - they allegedly supplied weapons and silencers
  • Andre Eminger, 33, accused of being an accessory in two of the bank robberies, in the 2004 nail-bombing in Cologne's old town that injured 22 people, and two counts of supporting a terrorist organisation
  • Holger Gerlach, 39, faces three counts of supporting a terrorist organisation.

The NSU cell remained undetected until Ms Zschaepe gave herself up in November 2011, after police discovered the bodies of two of her alleged accomplices.

Uwe Mundlos, 38, and Uwe Boenhardt, 34, appeared to have shot themselves after a botched bank robbery.

After their deaths, the gun used in the murders of the 10 people was discovered.

Ms Zschaepe shared a flat in Zwickau, in the old East Germany, with the two men who were found shot dead.

The arson charge against her relates to a fire which she is alleged to have started in the flat before giving herself up. She told police she was the one they were looking for.

In addition, a video emerged showing pictures of the corpses of the victims and identifying the "organisation" behind the murders as the NSU. The video had a cartoon Pink Panther totting up the number of dead.

Uwe Mundlos, Beate Zschaepe and Uwe Boehnhardt Uwe Mundlos, Beate Zschaepe and Uwe Boehnhardt were believed to be the cell's only members

Only then did the authorities conclude that the killings were the work of neo-Nazis.

They had previously treated some of the families of the victims as suspects in their murders.

As a result, the trial has taken on a meaning beyond the charges in court, as it is also puts the spotlight on attitudes towards the murder of members of ethnic minority groups, our correspondent says.

An earlier start date had been set for the trial, but it was delayed for weeks amid a dispute about the seat allocations, as Turkish media were not guaranteed places.

Turkish media have now been given four seats, but several leading German newspapers missed out in the lottery, AFP news agency reports.

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