Friday, 16 October 2020

FoodAssistance: Happy world food day

 



What is it?

Food assistance is provided in anticipation of, during, and in the aftermath of a humanitarian crisis. Its objective is to save lives and livelihoods to avert emergency rates of acute malnutrition or detrimental coping mechanisms.

Through its humanitarian food assistance, the European Union aims to ensure the availability of, access to, and consumption of safe and nutritious food for the most hungry and vulnerable people in crises.

Why is this important?

According to the 2020 Global Report on Food Crises, more than 135 million people across 53 countries required urgent food, nutrition, and livelihoods assistance by the end of 2019. Food crises were fuelled by conflict, climate shocks and economic turbulence. This number is substantially increasing in 2020 due to additional factors such as the coronavirus pandemic or the locust upsurge in East Africa. The number of people in the world facing food crises has remained well over 100 million in the last 4 years, and the number of countries affected has risen.

The 2020 State of the Food Security and Nutrition in the World reports that almost 690 million people were hungry around the world in 2019, while the coronavirus could push an additional 83-132 million people into chronic hunger.

How are we helping?

The European Union provides humanitarian food assistance to victims of food crises around the world and invests in reducing the risk of famine. Since 2010, the EU has been rolling out its humanitarian food assistance policy and supported more than 100 million people lacking access to sufficient amounts of safe and nutritious food. Overall, almost one fourth of the EU annual humanitarian aid budget is used to provide emergency food assistance and nutrition, making the EU one of the world's major donors in this sector.


EU food assistance is adapted to each specific crisis situation and to the needs of different groups, for example, children under the age of 5. The EU provides the most vulnerable people with essential and nutritious food items during critical times.


If the availability of food in shops and markets is sufficient and the victims of disasters have lost their financial resources to purchase food, the EU prefers helping vulnerable people get access to the food they need by providing them with cash transfers. This is often more efficient and effective than shipping sacks of rice or flour across the globe.


The EU prioritises providing sustainable solutions and restoring self-reliance by building resilience and protecting the livelihoods of households at risk of food shortages. It does this in a number of ways, for example, equipping vulnerable family farmers with seeds and toolkits so that they can grow their own food and restore their livelihoods and capacity to produce.


The European Commission is a member of the Food Assistance Convention and commits to provide a minimum of €350 million annually to alleviate food insecurity. The EU has largely exceeded its commitment in 2019 allocating in total €400 million for humanitarian food assistance and nutrition.


source: ec.europa.eu

Thursday, 15 October 2020

He made me watch porn - 13years old girl narrates years of sexual abuse in Lagos


 


A 13-year-old girl, Wednesday, October 14, alleged that her aunt’s husband, who she calls ‘Daddy’, would play pornographic videos for her to watch then rape her.

 

She alleged he had been abusing her sexually in his shop and at their apartment on Surulere Street, Ojo area of Lagos, with a threat to kill her if she told anyone.

 

The revelation followed the arrest of the  48-year-old suspect, Mr. Charles Ekwe, whom the victim refers to as ‘Daddy’, by the gender-based unit of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, NSCDC, Lagos State Command, Monday, October 12.

 

The teenager has been living with her aunt since she was nine years old, after her father’s death.

 

She alleged that the suspect forcefully penetrated her whenever her aunt was out of sight.

 

She said: “Each time daddy wanted to do it, he would show me blue film (pornography) in his phone.

 

“He did it many times. I cannot count the number of times he did it. I was scared to report to my aunty because Daddy threatened to chase me out of the house and kill me if I did.”

 

The girl's aunt, Mrs blessing Ekwe, noticed all was not well with the teenager and questioned the girl.

 

Upon inquiry, the teen disclosed how she had allegedly been subjected to sexual abuse by her uncle.

 

Mrs Eke was said to have taken the teenager to the hospital, where a medical examination conducted on her confirmed her hymen broken.

 

During interrogation, the suspect told NSCDC operatives that he only fondled the girl’s genitals. He also admitted subjecting her to watching pornography on his phone.

 

The NSCDC Lagos State Commandant, Mr. Ayeni Paul, while addressing journalists, said: “The sexual abuse suspect will face the full wrath of the law and will be handed over to the appropriate agency for further investigation and prosecution.

 

“This is a heinous crime and all perpetrators of such, when caught, will be made to pay dearly.”

 

He also said the ”the gender-based unit of the Corps saddled with the responsibility of handling rape, domestic violence, sexual assault and defilement, as well as child abuse cases, has well-trained officers to handle such cases.”

 

He, therefore, enjoined members of the public to report such cases to the command, for prosecution.


source: lindaikejisblog

Global Hand washing Day




Did you know 40% of the world’s population do not have access to a basic handwashing facility? #GlobalHandwashingDay today is a day for action.


Help us promote handwashing now and in the future
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#HandHygieneforAll means no one is left behind

Wednesday, 14 October 2020

5 important things to know about COVID-19’s impact on girls on International Day of the Girl


Falling on 11 October, International Day of the Girl Child is a United Nations day that brings attention to “girls’ rights and the unique challenges girls face around the world.” Empowering young girls early in life can give them the “potential to change the world — both as the empowered girls of today and as tomorrow’s workers, mothers, entrepreneurs, mentors, household heads, and political leaders.”

However, as we’ve seen with previous health crises, COVID-19’s lingering economic and social impacts on young girls and women could have dire effects. In our recent series on COVID-19’s impact on women, we’ve explored how the pandemic is impacting girls’ education, how it’s impacting maternal care worldwide, and much more. Now, we’re diving deeper into COVID-19’s impact on girls and young women, specifically. Here are five ways the pandemic is impacting girls globally.

1. COVID-19’s is threatening girls’ education

Even prior to COVID-19, 90% of children in low-income countries could not read and understand a simple story by the age of 10. Then, by April 2020, pandemic-related school closures affected 91% of enrolled learners (boys and girls) worldwide. For girls, however, these school closures could have more dire effects due to factors such as inaccessibility to remote learning toolsdeprioritization of education, and teen pregnancy.

Prior to COVID-19, the past two decades saw the number of girls not enrolled in school drop by 79 million globally. The pandemic is threatening that progress, as it could result in 20 million girls in developing countries potentially being out of school even when this pandemic is over, and many more will have lost out on months of learning.

2. The toll on girls’ unpaid work

Before COVID-19, women and girls engaged in more unpaid work compared to men and boys. Unpaid work ranges from child care and family care to at-home work like cleaning and cooking. Although varying from country to country, globally, women and girls work three times more at home than their male counterparts.

Now, as young women and girls are “caring for elderly and ill family members, as well as for siblings who are out of school,” that divide in unpaid girls’ work has and will continue to increase.

3. Higher risks of gender-based violence

The pandemic is putting young women and girls at at higher risk for gender-based violence, child labor, and exploitation due to increased economic stress on families and quarantine measures. Effects of “stay at-home orders and movement restrictions” are major contributors to this increased risk.

In fact, if the lockdown causes a 20% increase in violence, a year-long lockdown could result in 61 million cases of intimate partner violence.

4. COVID-19 could increase child marriage numbers

COVID-19 could cause a spike in child marriages as it has “disrupted efforts to stop this practice.” An additional 13 million child marriages could happen within the decade because of it.

5. COVID-19 could cause 2 million avoidable cases of female genital mutilation

The pandemic has severely affected prevention programmes and measures that protect girls from female genital mutilation (FGM). As a result, COVID-19 could result in 2 million avoidable cases of FGM within the next 10 years.

Why raising awareness is necessary

Just reporting the facts is half of the battle — raising awareness and bringing attention to why girls’ empowerment around the world is necessary is the key to making a difference. That’s why, as part of our series exploring COVID-19’s impact on women and girls, we’re also profiling women and girls who are fighting for gender equality and a better future. Stay tuned for more in the series.

Acting today can affect change in future, and investing in and empowering young girls around the world is a big part of making that happen.


source: one.org 

Wednesday, 17 July 2019

El Chapo: Mexican drug lord sentenced to life in US prison

Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, the Mexican drug lord found guilty of running a murderous criminal enterprise that smuggled tons of drugs into the United States over three decades, was sentenced by a US judge on Wednesday to spend the rest of his life in prison.
US district Judge Brian Cogan imposed the sentence of life plus 30 years, which was mandatory under the law, at a hearing in federal court in Brooklyn.
Guzmán, 62, was found guilty by a jury in February of trafficking tons of cocaine, heroin and marijuana and engaging in multiple murder conspiracies as a top leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, long known as one of Mexico’s largest and most violent drug trafficking organizations.
In handing down the sentence, Judge Cogan said the “overwhelming evil” of Guzmán’s crimes was made readily apparent during the 12-week trial.
Raymond Donovan, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) agent who led the effort to capture and extradite the kingpin, said Guzmán’s conviction and sentence represented “justice not only for the Mexican government, but for all of Guzmán’s victims in Mexico”.
Guzmán, who did not testify in his defense, also addressed the court, speaking out in public for the first time since his conviction, albeit via an attorney.
“Since the government of the United States is going to send me to a prison where my name will never be heard again, I take advantage of this opportunity to say there was no justice here,” he told the court through his lawyer before sentencing.
Guzmán, who has lodged frequent complaints about the conditions of his detention, said that his incarceration during the case at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in lower Manhattan had been “torture”.
“I’ve been forced to drink unsanitary water. I’ve been denied access to fresh air and sunlight. The only sunlight I have in my cell comes through in the air vent,” he said.
“In order to sleep, I have to clog my ears with toilet paper because of the air from the air duct,” he complained. “My wife has not been allowed to this day to visit me, I have not been allowed to hug my daughters.
“I have been physically, psychologically, mentally tortured 24 hours a day.”
In a separate statement, the lawyer who had represented him through the trial described the three-decade sentence as “a farce” that “shows the corruption of the criminal justice system” compared with the 17-year sentence handed down to Vicente Zambada, a rival trafficker who cooperated with the government.
“Joaquín’s conviction and incarceration for drug trafficking will change nothing in the so-called war on drugs,” Balarezo said. “Sing like a canary, true or false, and reduce your sentence. As long as you do what the government wants you to do, you will be fine.”
Experts say that given the felon’s history of twice escaping maximum-security prisons in Mexico and the ongoing business of the Sinaloa cartel, the US government will probably demand the diminutive smuggler serve his sentence at the federal government’s “Supermax” prison in Florence, Colorado, also known as ADX for “administrative maximum”.
The facility is so secure, so remote and so austere that it has been called the “Alcatraz of the Rockies”. The institution has housed a virtual who’s who of international crime, including the British “shoe bomber” Richard Reid, World Trade Center 1993 bomber Omar Abdel-Rahman and the so-called Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski.
But Guzmán’s business with prosecutors is not yet complete. The government estimates that despite seizing nearly 200,000kg of Sinaloa cocaine, Guzmán amassed a fortune of an estimated $14bnbetween the 1980s and his 2014 arrest from his bulk smuggling operation.
In a filing last month, the US government put a precise figure on what it wants to collect from a drug lord whose tastes, like smugglers before him, ran large to four wives, four planes, a yacht, several beach houses, a gold-plated, jewel-encrusted pistol and a private menagerie containing lions, tigers, panthers and deer that he could visit “on a little train”. The figure? $12,666,191,704.00.
During his three-decade career as a smuggler, Guzmán, whose nickname means “Shorty”, developed a reputation as a Robin Hood-like figure that made him a folk hero to many in his home state of Sinaloa, where he was born in a poor mountain village.
Before he was finally captured in 2016, Guzmán twice escaped maximum-security prisons in Mexico. He was extradited to the United States to face trial in January 2017.
Guzmán made a name for himself as a trafficker in the 1980s by digging tunnels under the US-Mexico border that allowed him to smuggle drugs more quickly than any of his rivals. He amassed power during the 1990s and 2000s through often bloody wars with rivals, eventually becoming the best-known leader of the Sinaloa cartel.
His 12-week trial, which featured testimony from more than a dozen former associates of Guzmán who had made deals to cooperate with prosecutors, offered the public an unprecedented look at the cartel’s inner workings.
The witnesses, who included some of Guzmán’s top lieutenants, a communications engineer and a one-time mistress, described how he built a sophisticated organization reminiscent of a multinational corporation.
He sent drugs northward with fleets of planes and boats, and had detailed accounting ledgers and an encrypted electronic communication system run through secret computer servers in Canada, witnesses said.

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Saturday, 6 July 2019

Ruga: Don't force us to invade and destroy the North with deadly weapons,Biafra group warns


Biafra group warns
The Biafra Nations Youth League, BNYL, has threatened to force northerners out of the Southeast and South south.
The group said it does not see reasons the northerners would be safe in the East whereas the Easterners were being threatened in the North.
BNYL was reacting to the threats issued by a Coalition of Northern Groups to expel Southerners from the north if the Federal Government did not rescind the suspension of RUGA in 30 days.
Deputy Leader of BNYL and Head of Operations, Biafra Broadcasting Service, BBS, Ebuta Victor Takon in a statement to DAILY POST on Saturday, said his group would take appropriate measures to expel northerners, especially the Fulani if Abdul Azeez Suleman and his group did not withdraw their threat.
Takon said his group will make sure that the Biafra youths were armed by every means possible to defend themselves against any attack.
“Only a fool will sit in his house and watch himself killed when he knows what to do,” the group declared.
“I think this time we will not only be on the defensive angle, we will invade the north, it is only weak people that waits for their enemies to invade their lands to attack them while they continue to defend.
“We were on defensive side in 1967-1970 Biafra war, this period we will mobilize to invade the north, it is not a mouth but fact.
“Let them take time to do research about us, we are not noise makers, those who are from towns close to the creeks in the Niger Delta and Bakassi Peninsula will attest to the fact that we are never noise makers.
“They want to see what we are made up of and we will gladly show them.
We could be very dangerous even as we are non violent.”
He stated reasons the group had not reacted to Fulani attacks.
“Some of our elders are cowards.
“They want until the battle reaches their door step, none is encouraging a counter attack but now they have seen it.
“The truth is that our people are armless, they take us for a ride because community youths do not have weapons to operate.
“Fulani killers targets the grassroots, and most Pro Biafra movement are not focused on grassroots to checkmate herdsmen.
“That is why it appears difficult to engage them, unless a well organized counter attack will be carried out against them.
“They thought we lack arms, we don’t. What the sponsors of these Fulani invaders do not know is that it is easier for us to acquire arms that are more deadlier than theirs if we decide to follow the pattern of creek militants.
“This Fulani menace is not ordinary, they are being sponsored by high profiles in the north to conquer the South.
“If care is not taken they will succeed, but not in our generation unless generation yet unborn will allow that.
“It is time our people sit up, support those who are about to die in defense of our land.”
source:Dailypostng

Saturday, 6 April 2019

FUTO foursome sex: Police finally confirm death of third student

The police in Imo State have confirmed the death of the third student who allegedly engaged in a sex romp in the state on Tuesday.
The police who said that the three persons, including their female colleague were all students of the Federal University of Technology, Owerri, disclosed that substances suspected to be Tramadol and Indian hemp were found in the hostel where two out of the four students died on Tuesday.
The state Commissioner of Police, Rabiu Ladodo, who confirmed the death of the third student, Aka Uche, 27, to our correspondent on Thursday, urged parents to discourage their children from taking to drugs.
The CP said, “Yes, I can confirm to you that the third student is dead. I just got the information today (Thursday) that he has died. He died in the hospital where he was admitted. His death has risen to three the number of persons who died from the incident. The girl among them is alive and I learnt that her condition is stable.”

Police Public Relations Officer in the state, Orlando Ikeokwu, had said, “On April 2, information was received from the caretaker of the Sunshine Lodge in Ihiagwa, Owerri, that the students of the Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Ugochukwu Kingsley, one Richard and one Aka Uche were engaged in a sex romp with one Onyinyechi Okafor, also a student of the same university.
“Police detectives from the Nekede Division promptly mobilised to the scene and found the four victims completely naked and unconscious. The police operatives recovered substances suspected to be Indian hemp and tramadol from the scene.
“The victims were immediately conveyed to the police clinic and two of the victims, Kingsley and Richard, were certified dead by the medical doctor on duty.”
source: punchng