Donald Trump Is Elected President in Stunning Repudiation of the Establishment

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Image result for trump wins presidency


Donald John Trump was elected the 45th president of the United States on Tuesday in a stunning culmination of an explosive, populist and polarizing campaign that took relentless aim at the institutions and long-held ideals of American democracy.
The surprise outcome, defying late polls that showed Hillary Clinton with a modest but persistent edge, threatened convulsions throughout the country and the world, where skeptics had watched with alarm as Mr. Trump’s unvarnished overtures to disillusioned voters took hold.
The triumph for Mr. Trump, 70, a real estate developer-turned-reality television star with no government experience, was a powerful rejection of the establishment forces that had assembled against him, from the world of business to government, and the consensus they had forged on everything from trade to immigration.
The results amounted to a repudiation, not only of Mrs. Clinton, but of President Obama, whose legacy is suddenly imperiled. And it was a decisive demonstration of power by a largely overlooked coalition of mostly blue-collar white and working-class voters who felt that the promise of the United States had slipped their grasp amid decades of globalization and multiculturalism.
THE NEW YORK TIMES


WELCOME TO A NEW WEEK

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    Image result for happy new week image



                      SOBER REFLECTIONS

Do you know?
Your BIRTH came through Others
Your NAME was given by Others
Your were EDUCATED by Others
Your INCOME indirectly comes through Others
Your RESPECT is given by *Others*
Your first BATH was given by *Others*
Your last BATH will be done by *Others*

Your FUNERAL service will be organised by *Others*

and
Your PROPERTIES and BELONGINGS will later be inherited by *Others*
Hmm..... I still wonder why some of us let our EGO, our TIME, our CAREER, our MONEY and our BELIEF undermine the worth of *Others* in our lives, when indeed all our making depends on *Others*.
It's high time we all simplify, re-adjust and modify OUR LIVES to love one another and live peacefully with *Others*, because at one point or the *Other* we will need each *Other*.
_You may share with *Others*
_Goodmirning and do have a beautiful week. 

GUEST WRITER: A PROPHET HAS NO HONOUR AT HOME

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PROMISE LESS; SURPRISE OFTEN

 KAYODE OYÄšRO

On October 20 2016, Nigeria’s business pride, Aliko
Dangote fired thirty-six expatriates working for his

company, Dangote Group and replaced them with
blacks, Nigerians. Fantastic move!
Let me take some time to X-ray why Nigerian business
tycoons import expatriates into their kennels. I am not
in their shoes, so, I cannot certainly tell their reason(s)
for employing whites. But from observation, “technical
competence” and “pride” may be the dominant
rationales.
While the first reason can be excused, I find the
second reason baseless and shamefully ridiculous. I
find the self-gratifying ego of the “I have so and so
numbers of expatriates working in my team” behavior
as a loud belch of inferiority complex.
What is special in having white men work for you when
these guys are sometimes “uneducated folks” who only
acquired one or two skills from technical schools?
Is having them work for you a measure of quality or
success in business?
Okay, let’s agree that these whites employed by
Nigerians were recruited because of their technical
know-how and capability, the question now is: is it a
crime to give Nigerians who also have the same
technical skill and wherewithal the same chance?
Let us put sentiments aside and reel simply on the
wheels of logic. The cost of maintaining an expatriate
in Nigeria is suicidal. As their employer, you pay their
remuneration in foreign currency, any currency they
want – no thanks to the Naira interchange rate.
Second is: you lodge them in five stars hotels all
through their stay – correct me if I am wrong. You also
must get them home-made dishes. This means getting
all their meals from a Chinese restaurant if the so-
called expatriate is a Chinese. The same applies to
others from other climes. Overhead cost will run you
bankrupt if care is not taken.
The savvy Nigerian Industrialist, Aliko Dangote
definitely identified this wasteful spending. Every
business owner is always looking for wise ways to cut
operational costs and still get the best in terms of
quality input and profitable output. Letting go of those
expatriates and replacing them with Nigerians who can
do the job (and who are less expensive to maintain
unlike the money-gulping expatriates) is business
sense for Africa’s richest man. But while his decision is
laudable, must he wait for recession and the
skyrocketing foreign interchange rate to force him
before he can replace those expatriates with qualified
Nigerians?
Let us face it. Nigerians are brilliant, intelligent and
upward-mobile thinking people. We have the brain. Call
my position here sentiments and I will tell you
perception is relative and impression is subjective.
There are amazing Nigerians who are techies and
technocrats in their respective fields of endeavour.
Google is full of thousands of Nigerians in the
Diaspora who are holding key positions and doing
amazingly fantastic, delivery-wise. The black techie
guy that accompanied Zuckerberg of the Facebook
fame to Nigeria the other day is a Nigerian and top
techie at Facebook. He is just one out of many
thousands Nigerians making the waves outside there if
you ask Google.
It is not only in the world of business that competent
Nigerians have been abandoned for expatriates, the
world of sports, football especially, is also replete with
this trend. Many a time in history, the FA had spent
millions of bucks on white coaches when some
Nigerian coaches can do better, with far lesser cost of
maintenance. If you doubt me, scroll down the pages
of history and check the coaches with the highest
number of nation cup wins, world-cup qualifiers and
general performance and you will be waohed!
I think the expatriate glorification phenomenon is a
mindset that must be purged. Call it Inferiority Complex
or Low Self-esteem and you are all correct!
I do not have any qualms with multi-national Nigerian
businesses that employ expatriates on the basis of
merit and not ego. But it is time to reinforce IN ACTION
that the Hamitic Theory is a defeated hypothesis.
Everything good that has ever happened to Africa was
not brought about by non-Africans.
With the biting recession and surging index of
unemployment in Nigeria, other business owners in the
giant of Africa may need to borrow a leaf from
Dangote. They may need to show the expatriates in
their team the exit door and replace them with
Nigerians who have commensurate competence and
experience. Aside that this move is cost-effective for
them, serving them the pink letter and substituting
them with qualified Nigerians is indeed proof of
patriotism.

‘KayodÄ› Oyero writes from Lagos, South-West, Nigeria.
He tweets @Imodoye_1

FIFA rankings: Nigeria move up

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Nigeria continued their impressive rise in football after climbing to 60th in the latest FIFA Rankings, which were released by the world football body on Thursday.

Three-time African champions  moved up four spots in the rankings from 64 to 60, while their 2018 World Cup qualifying opponents Algeria and  Cameroon retained their previous spots. The other team in their group, Zambia, failed to progress in  the rankings.
The Super Eagles are also ranked 11th in Africa, after their 1-0 victory at home against Tanzania in September in an inconsequential Gabon 2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier was followed by a 2-1 victory over Zambia in their opening Russia 2018 World Cup qualifiers in Ndola on October 9.
African champions Ivory Coast  are first on the continent followed by Senegal.
 Algeria, who the Eagles will host in Uyo in next month’s second Russia 2018 World Cup qualifier, remain 35th in the world. They played a 1-1 draw with Cameroon in their first World Cup qualifier at home. The Algerians also remain third in Africa.
The Cameroonians also retained their 59th position, which they held in September, to remain in the top 10 teams on the continent. Zambia however dropped two places from 92nd to 94th in the latest ranking.
Ivory Coast moved up three places to be ranked 31st in the world while Senegal climbed seven spots from 39th to 32nd in the world. Tunisia, who are fourth in Africa, went up four places from 42nd to 38th while Ghana dropped two places from 43rd to 45th. Egypt, DR Congo, Congo and Mali complete the top nine teams in Africa.
Argentina maintained their number one position  while Germany replaced Belgium as the second best team in the world. Brazil are now third while the Belgians have dropped to the fourth position on the ranking table. Colombia, Chile, France, Portugal, Uruguay and Spain complete the top 10 in the world.
 PUNCH.                

Chimamanda on effect of Buhari's first era on her parents

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As it was in the beginning, it is now, only she is not sure if this is how it will continue to be. Nigerian writer Chimanda Adichie has memories of what her parents went through during the first time President Muhammadu Buhari ruled Nigeria as a military head of state. They are not so fond but scaring. Excerpt from OP-ED by Chimamanda Adichie for the New York Times: On how her parents fared during Maj. Gen Buhari’s era in the 80s. She wrote: “I was 7 years old the first time I recognized political fear. My parents and their friends were talking about the government, in our living room, in our relatively big house, set on relatively wide grounds at a southeastern Nigerian university, with doors shut and no strangers present. Yet they spoke in whispers. So ingrained was their apprehension that they whispered even when they did not need to. It was 1984 and Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari was the military head of state. Governmental controls had mangled the economy. Many imported goods were banned, scarcity was rife, black markets thrived, businesses were failing and soldiers stalked markets to enforce government-determined prices. My mother came home with precious cartons of subsidized milk and soap, which were sold in rationed quantities. Soldiers flogged people on the streets for “indiscipline” — such as littering or not standing in queues at the bus stop. On television, the head of state, stick-straight and authoritative, seemed remote, impassive on his throne amid the fear and uncertainty…” Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Chimamanda Adichie’s parents She also noted the lopsided method employed to fight corruption. She noted: “Nigerians who expected a fair and sweeping cleanup of corruption have been disappointed. Arrests have tended to be selective, targeting mostly those opposed to Mr. Buhari’s government. The anti-corruption agencies are perceived not only as partisan but as brazenly flouting the rule of law: The Department of State Security recently barged into the homes of various judges at midnight, harassing and threatening them and arresting a number of them, because the judges’ lifestyles “suggested” that they were corrupt.” “There is an ad hoc air to the government that does not inspire that vital ingredient for a stable economy: confidence. There is, at all levels of government, a relentless blaming of previous administrations and a refusal to acknowledge mistakes. And there are eerie signs of the past’s repeating itself — Mr. Buhari’s tone and demeanor are reminiscent of 1984, and his military-era War Against Indiscipline program is being reintroduced.” Ending her essay in a typical homourous Nigerian way, Adichie wrote: “In a country enamored of dark humor, a common greeting among the middle class now is “Happy recession!”



















NAIJ.COM

Buhari wasted opportunity to boldly reform Nigeria – Chimamanda

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Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozie Adichie says President Muhammadu Buhari has squandered the massive goodwill and support he had upon his inauguration as President and missed an opportunity to set Nigeria on the right path.
“Mr Buhari ascended to the presidency with a rare advantage — not only did he have the good will of a majority of Nigerians, he elicited a peculiar mix of fear and respect,” she wrote in an opinion for The New York Times, published on Tuesday.
“For the first weeks of his presidency, it was said that civil servants who were often absent from work suddenly appeared every day, on time, and that police officers and customs officials stopped demanding bribes.”
She said although she experienced political fear for the first time, aged seven, under Buhari’s military regime in 1984, she welcomed his election 30 years later in 2015 because “he represented some form of hope”.
“Because for the first time, Nigerians had voted out an incumbent in an election that was largely free and fair,” she said.
“Because Mr Buhari had sold himself as a near-ascetic reformer, as a man so personally above board that he would wipe out Nigeria’s decades-long corruption.”
Although she acknowledged that Nigeria was difficult to govern, she said Buhari wasted an opportunity through his actions – from his appointments to his economic decisions.
“He had an opportunity to make real reforms early on, to boldly reshape Nigeria’s path. He wasted it,” she said.
“Perhaps the first clue was the unusually long time it took him to appoint his ministers. After an ostensible search for the very best, he presented many recycled figures with whom Nigerians were disenchanted.
“But the real test of his presidency came with the continued fall in oil prices, which had begun the year before his inauguration.”
She explained that while the plunge in oil prices was bound to have a catastrophic impact on the economy because it was “unwholesomely dependent on oil”, Buhari’s actions made it even more so.
She cited the policy of defending the naira through which the official exchange rate was kept “artificially low” but caused the exchange rate to balloon on the black market and restriction of access to the central bank’s foreign currency reserves, which “spawned corruption”.
She said while the exchange rate crisis caused the price for everything – rice, bread, cooking oil – rice and forced businesses to fire employees with some folding, “the exclusive few who were able to buy dollars at official rates could sell them on the black market and earn large, riskless profits — transactions that contribute nothing to the economy.”
According to her, although Buhari believed, rightly, that Nigeria needed to produce more of what it consumed, and he wanted to spur local production, local production could not be willed into existence if the supporting infrastructure was absent.
“And banning goods has historically led not to local production but to a thriving shadow market,” she added.
“His intentions, good as they well might be, are rooted in an outdated economic model and an infantile view of Nigerians.
“For him, it seems, patriotism is not a voluntary and flexible thing, with room for dissent, but a martial enterprise: to obey without questioning.”
Adichie also faulted Buhari’s handling of the herdsmen/famers clashes in the country.
She said, “Since Mr. Buhari came to power, villages in the middle-belt and southern regions have been raided, the inhabitants killed, their farmlands sacked. Those attacked believe the Fulani herdsmen want to forcibly take over their lands for cattle grazing.
“It would be unfair to blame Mr. Buhari for these killings, which are in part a result of complex interactions between climate change and land use. But leadership is as much about perception as it is about action, and Mr. Buhari has appeared disengaged.
“It took him months, and much criticism from civil society, to finally issue a statement “condemning” the killings. His aloofness feels, at worst, like a tacit enabling of murder and, at best, an absence of sensitive leadership.
“Most important, his behavior suggests he is tone-deaf to the widely held belief among southern Nigerians that he promotes a northern Sunni Muslim agenda.
“He was no less opaque when the Nigerian Army murdered hundreds of members of a Shiite Muslim group in December, burying them in hastily dug graves. Or when soldiers killed members of the small secessionist pro-Biafran movement who were protesting the arrest of their leader, Nnamdi Kanu, a little-known figure whose continued incarceration has elevated him to a minor martyr.”
In terms of the war on corruption, she said, “Nigerians who expected a fair and sweeping cleanup of corruption have been disappointed. Arrests have tended to be selective, targeting mostly those opposed to Mr Buhari’s government.
“The anti-corruption agencies are perceived not only as partisan but as brazenly flouting the rule of law.”
PUNCH

HAPPY NEW MONTH

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Welcoming you to the month of February in which you shall experience great, full and complete testimonies, joy, happiness, greatness and all the good things of life even when the month of February is not a 'full' month.
We trust that as you have kept faith with our blog, u will continue to visit our blog and also make your comments.
HAPPY NEW MONTH PSHEVYOFGOD BLOG READERS AND VISITORS

Word of the Day(Merriam Webster Dictionary)

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January 14, 2016

brogue • \BROHG\  • noun

1 : a heavy shoe often with ahobnailed sole

2 : a stout oxford shoe withperforations and usually a wingtip

Examples:

"Canvas isn't the chosen mediumof many shoemakers, so it was a bit exciting and a bit confusingwhen Toms Shoes, purveyors of the ever-casual espadrilles,announced its intention to makebrogues." — Andrew Burmon,Men's Journal, 19 Aug. 2013

"The X-Men star, who played JeanGrey in the superhero movies,wore patent brogues, where thechunky style helped emphasiseher slender legs which wereencased in thick opaque tights." — Ciara Farmer, DailyMail.co.uk,26 Nov. 2015

Did you know?

Did you expect brogue to bedefined as "an Irish accent"?You're probably not alone. Ourdefinition is different becausebrogue has two homographs(words that are spelled—and inthis case pronounced—the samebut have different origins or partsof speech). Brogue the shoecomes from the Irish word bróg,which probably derives from an Old Norse term meaning "legcovering." Brogue the accentcomes from a different Irish word,barróg, which means "accent" or "speech impediment."

THE WORD FOR TODAY (Thursday 14 January 2016

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Be Trustworthy in Little Things!

'Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much.' Luke 16:10 NIV

Jesus said: ‘ Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much, and whoever is dishonest with very little will also be dishonest with much. So if you have not been trustworthy in handling worldly wealth, who will trust you with true riches? And if you have not been trustworthy with someone else’s property, who will give you property of your own? ’ (Luke 16:10–12 NIV) God won’t promote you beyond your current level of competence and commitment. Indeed, He’ll keep bringing you back to these two things until you get them right. As you walk with Him, He’ll increase your faith by testing you in settings that require only a little faith. And if you pass, He’ll expose you to circumstances that require more faith. Each time you prove your willingness to trust Him at a higher level, He will reveal a little more of Himself and entrust to you a greater measure of blessing. That’s how it works. Every small step of faith leads to a deeper, richer and more rewarding relationship with Him. When Michelangelo was painting the frescoes in the Sistine Chapel he spent endless hours lying on the scaffolding perfecting the details. It was a miserable job. A student, curious about why the renowned sculptor took such pains with details that could only be seen from a distance, asked, ‘Who will know whether or not it’s perfect?’ The master artist replied, ‘I will!’ And so will your Master—Jesus! What you’re doing today matters. It’s the determining factor in what God will call you to do tomorrow. So be trustworthy in little things.

SoulFood: 1 Sam 3:1-11, Act 9:1-9

The Word for Today is authored by Bob and Debby Gass and published under licence from UCB International Copyright

THE WORD FOR TODAY (Wednesday, 13 January 2016

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Speak Up

'There is...a time to be silent and a time to speak.' Ecclesiastes 3:1; 7 NIV
The Bible has a lot to say about not criticising and passing judgment. But there are times when silence isn’t ‘golden’, it’s deadly. For example: (1)
Silence is deadly when you use it as a passive, retaliatory means of expressing your anger or displeasure . That’s called ‘emotional manipulation’. Jesus said, ‘ If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault between you and him alone. If he hears you, you have gained your brother. ’ (Matthew 18:15 NKJV) Jesus is recommending pretty assertive behaviour by commanding us to take the initiative in addressing the ‘trespass’. Trespassing is the unauthorised crossing of a boundary, and many times we feel like we’ve been trespassed against or wronged. However, rather than addressing the issue directly with the offender, we resort to sulking and pouting. Jesus says, ‘Don’t do that!’ Your lack of communication can leave the wrongdoer unaware of their behaviour and make them more likely to repeat it. (2) Silence is deadly when you fail to defend someone against unwarranted criticism or vicious rumours . Don’t let fear of alienation and rejection cause you to let slander and character assassination go unchallenged, especially when you’re aware of facts to the contrary. (3) Silence is deadly when it results in your making an undesirable decision by default . The fact is, silence can indicate consent. Prayer was taken out of public schools in the United States because the majority stayed silent instead of speaking up. The Scripture says, ‘ There is…a time to be silent and a time to speak .’ So have the courage of your convictions and speak up!

SoulFood: Lev 23:26-25:55, Luke 2:41-52, Ps 74:1-11, Prov 2:6

The Word for Today is authored by Bob and Debby Gass and published under licence from UCB International Copyright

Word of the Day(Merriam Webster Dictionary)

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January 13, 2016

chirography • \kye-RAH-gruh-fee\  • noun

1 : handwriting, penmanship

2 : calligraphy

Examples:

"This envelope had the air of anofficial record of some period longpast, when clerks engrossed theirstiff and formal chirography onmore substantial materials thanat present." — NathanielHawthorne, The Scarlet Letter,1850

"The stone bore confusingetchings: Arabic numeralscoupled with Roman; the letter 'H' in ancient Spanish chirography; apuzzling mass of ovoid figures,circles and rectangles; and theweblike drawing that gave it itsname." — Evan Moore, TheHouston Chronicle, 6 May 2001

Did you know?

Though some might argue thathandwriting is a dying art in the age of electronic communication,this fancy word for it persists. Theroot graph means "writing" andappears in many common Englishwords such as autograph andgraphite. The lesser-known rootchir, or chiro-, comes from aGreek word meaning "hand" andoccurs in words such aschiromancy ("the art of palmreading") and enchiridion ("ahandbook or manual"), as well aschiropracticChirography firstappeared in English in the 17thcentury and probably derivedfrom chirograph, a now rare wordreferring to any of various legaldocuments. Chirography shouldnot be confused withchoreography, which refers to thecomposition and arrangement ofdances.

Messi, Lloyd, Luis Enrique and Ellis triumph at FIFA Ballon d’Or 2015

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Lionel Messi has won the FIFA Ballon d’Or for the best player in the world for the fifth time, while US midfielder Carli Lloyd has claimed her first-ever FIFA Women’s World Player of the Year award. FC Barcelona coach Luis Enrique
Martínez and US national team coach Jill Ellis have also been named for the first time as FIFA
World Coaches of the Year for Men’s and Women’s Football respectively. The winners were chosen by the coaches and captains of the
national teams as well as by international media representatives invited by FIFA and France Football. The entire electoral procedure was
overseen and monitored by PricewaterhouseCoopers Switzerland (PwC).
The awards were presented on Monday evening (11 January 2016) during a 90-minute show at Zurich’s Kongresshaus that was hosted by
Northern Irish actor James Nesbitt and British journalist Kate Abdo. The musical entertainment for the 1,100 guests and TV viewers in over 190
countries and territories around the world was provided by British pop star Leona Lewis and young Croatian cellists Luka Šulić and Stjepan Hauser, known as 2CELLOS.
This year’s FIFA Fair Play Award was presented to all the football organisations and clubs around
the world that are working to support refugees. Former German international Gerald Asamoah, who campaigns for the welfare of refugees, received the award from former South African icon Lucas Radebe on behalf of all the
awardees. This year, the world has witnessed a refugee crisis in the Middle East and Europe because of conflict in Syria. Many innocent
people have fled their homes in desperate conditions to find safety for themselves and their
loved ones. Society has responded and the world of football has also contributed to the cause.
Clubs and football organisations all over the world have acted to help welcome and support refugees as they integrate into local
communities. International players’ union FIFPro received votes from 26,478 professional players from
around the world for the FIFA FIFPro World XI , the best team of 2015, with the following result:
Manuel Neuer (Germany/FC Bayern Munich) in goal; Dani Alves (Brazil/FC Barcelona), Marcelo
(Brazil/Real Madrid), Sergio Ramos (Spain/Real Madrid) and Thiago Silva (Brazil/Paris Saint-
Germain) in defence; Andrés Iniesta (Spain/FC Barcelona), Luka Modrić (Croatia/Real Madrid)
and Paul Pogba (France/Juventus) in midfield; and Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal/Real Madrid), Lionel Messi (Argentina/FC Barcelona) and
Neymar (Brazil/FC Barcelona) in attack.
The FIFA Puskás Award for the best goal of the year was also presented after 1.6 million football fans cast their votes on FIFA.com, FIFA on
YouTube and francefootball.fr. This award, which is a tribute to Ferenc Puskás, the captain and
star of the 1950s Hungary team, was won by Brazilian Wendell Lira from Goianésia, who
topped the poll with 46.7 % of the votes ahead of Lionel Messi (33.3 %) and Alessandro Florenzi
(7.1%).

The awards at a glance

The FIFA Ballon d’Or was presented for the sixth
time since the merging of the FIFA World Player
of the Year award and France Football’s Ballon
d’Or award in 2010.
• 165 national team coaches, 162 national team
captains and 171 media representatives
submitted their votes for the FIFA Ballon d’Or
award. Lionel Messi won the title with 41.33% of
all votes ahead of Cristiano Ronaldo (27.76%)
and Neymar (7.86%).
• 136 national team coaches, 135 national team
captains and 106 media representatives voted
for the FIFA Women’s World Player of the Year
award. Carli Lloyd came out on top with 35.28%
of all votes, ahead of German Célia Šašić
(12.60%) and Japan’s Aya Miyama (9.88%).
• 167 national team coaches, 161 national team
captains and 171 media representatives voted
for the FIFA World Coach of the Year for Men’s
Football award. Luis Enrique Martínez won the
award with 31.08% of all votes after leading FC
Barcelona to four titles (La Liga, Copa del Rey,
UEFA Champions League and FIFA Club World
Cup) in 2015. Second and third place were
claimed by Pep Guardiola (FC Bayern Munich,
22.97%) and Jorge Sampaoli (Chilean national
team, 9.47%) respectively.
• 137 national team coaches, 137 national team
captains and 106 media representatives voted
for the FIFA World Coach of the Year for
Women’s Football award. Jill Ellis won this prize
after leading the US women’s national team to
glory at the FIFA Women’s World Cup™ in
Canada. She secured 42.98% of all votes, ahead
of Japan coach Norio Sasaki (17.79%) and
England women’s national team coach Mark
Sampson (10.68%).

Buhari urges unity among Nigerians, hails armed forces

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President Muhammadu
Buhari on Sunday called on
Nigerians to build on things
that unite rather than divide
the country in spite of
diverse cultures and
religions.
He gave the advice at the
Inter-Denominational Church
Service to mark the 2016
Armed Forces and
Remembrance Day at the
National Christian Centre,
Abuja.
Represented by Vice
President Yemi Osinbajo, the
President said the nation was
proud of the contributions of
the armed forces for ensuring
peace, justice, freedom and
prosperity of the nation.
“Let us renew our
determination to build a
strong and united nation
where freedom, justice, peace
and prosperity are easily
within reach; a nation where
we emphasise those things
that bind us rather than those
things that divide us.
“We are a country of diverse
cultures and even religions
but let us tap more into that
diversity for strength rather
than for strife.”
According to him, the country
today celebrates the families
of the fallen heroes, their
wives and children as well as
their other family members.
“No one has suffered as much
loss as you have and no one
can truly understand your
pain but today our nation
commends you.

PREMIUM TIMES

Switzerland to transfer another $300 million Abacha loot to Nigeria – Minister

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The government of
Switzerland is prepared to
transfer to the Nigerian
government, another $300
million recovered from the
family of former military
ruler, Sani Abacha, foreign
minister, Geoffrey Onyeama,
announced Monday.
The money is part of an
estimated $5 billion stolen
and stashed in foreign
accounts by the late dictator.
Nigeria has in the last 10
years received over $1 billion
from the Swiss and American
governments, but there are
growing concerns past
administrations misused the
huge sum.
PREMIUM TIMES reported in
December 2015 how former
finance minister, Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, with the
approval of former President
Goodluck Jonathan,
authorised the diversion of at
least N61.4 billion ($300
million and £5.5 million)
from funds recovered from
Mr. Abacha, to the Office of
the National Security Adviser,
Sambo Dasuki, few weeks
before the 2015 presidential
election.
The former minister said the
money, which was not
approved by the National
Assembly, was meant for
purchase of military
equipment for the fight
against Boko Haram.
The money is believed to be
part of at least $2.1 billion
slush fund later distributed
by Mr. Dasuki to politicians
ahead of the polls. An
ongoing investigation into the
scandal as led to the
indictment of several high
profile figures.

PREMIUM TIMES

THE WORD FOR TODAY( Tuesday, 12 January 2016

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Give God Your All

'Now to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think.' Ephesians 3:20 NKJV

If you only have a thimble-worth of capacity and you’re standing on the edge of a vast ocean, you have access to a lot of water but you won’t get much of it because your capacity is so small. If you have the capacity of a bucket you’ll get more than a thimble, but once the bucket is full the ocean can do you no more good. If you have a barrel you’ll get more than a bucket, but once the barrel is full you will still only have taken advantage of a miniscule part of the ocean. The idea is to offer God the biggest container possible. Offer Him all of you so that He can accomplish what He wants to do in your life. And no matter how successful you may be, you still haven’t maximised all that God wants to do in you and through you. Paul puts it this way: ‘Now to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works in us.’ When you give your life to Christ, the Holy Spirit takes up residence within you. That means if your life has been a failure thus far, He can turn it into a success. And if your life has been successful thus far, He can take you to a higher level of success. That’s why you should begin each morning by praying: ‘Lord, I make myself totally available to You this day; work through me to accomplish Your will.’ That’s a prayer God will answer.

SoulFood: Lev 21:1-23:25, Luke 2:33-40, Ps 71:17-24, Prov 2:3-5

The Word for Today is authored by Bob and Debby Gass and published under licence from UCB International Copyright

MESSI WINS 2015 BALLON D'OR

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The Barcelona star capped a stunning year with his fifth World Player of the Year gong, beating off competition from team-mate Neymar and Real Madrid rival Cristiano Ronaldo.Lionel Messi has won the 2015 Fifa Ballon d'Or ahead of Real Madrid rival Cristiano Ronaldo and Barcelona team-mate Neymar, claiming the prestigious award at Monday's ceremony in Zurich. Messi received 41.33 per cent of the votes,
with Ronaldo (27.76%) in second place and Neymar (7.86%) third.
It is the Argentina international's fifth World Player of the Year title - more than any other player in history - and thwarts Ronaldo's
quest to tie his haul of gongs, with the Madrid star having picked up the award in each of the last two seasons.
"It's a very special moment for me, to be back here on this stage winning another Ballon d'Or after being in the audience
watching Cristiano win for two years," Messi said upon receiving his award. "It's incredible that it's my fifth, it's much more than anything I dreamed of as a kid.
"I want to thank all those who voted for me first of all. I also want to thank obviously my team-mates, as I always say without them none of this would ever have been possible.
"And lastly I want to thank football for everything it has brought me - both the bad and the good - because it has made me grow and learn always."
The Ballon d'Or award caps yet another remarkable year for Messi, who secured five trophies and a famous treble with Barcelona in a dominant 2015, ending the Catalan club's four-year wait for another Champions League
victory - his fourth title in Europe's premier club competition.
Messi scored a remarkable 52 goals for club and country across the calendar year - five less than Ronaldo - as well as contributing 26
assists in 61 appearances, scoring or assisting every 0.78 games.
The 27-year-old first won the Ballon d'Or in 2009, before it merged with Fifa's World Player of the Year award, and won it every year afterwards until 2012 when his
stranglehold on the award was finally broken by Ronaldo.
GOAL.COM

THE WORD FOR TODAY (Monday, 11 January 2016

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Growing Older and Better

'I shall not die, but live, and declare the works of the Lord.' Psalm 118:17 NKJV

Today people are living longer and enjoying better health. Given that fact, it would be wise to glean from their wisdom and value their talent. You may have noticed that television advertisers are targeting younger and younger people. Why? After all, isn’t a tube of toothpaste sold to an eighty-year-old just as profitable as one pitched to a kid? The idea that life should be winding down at sixty or seventy makes no sense. Immanuel Kant wrote one of his best philosophical works at the age of seventy-four. Verdi penned his classic ‘Ave Maria’ at eighty-five. Alfred Lord Tennyson was eighty when he wrote ‘Crossing the Bar’. Michelangelo was eighty-seven when he completed the Pietá, his greatest work of art. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes set down some of his most brilliant opinions at the age of ninety. Titian painted his famous Allegory of the Battle of Lepanto at the age of ninety-eight. President Ronald Reagan was one of the most powerful men in the world at seventy-five. Noah was over six hundred years old when he came out of the ark and helped to start the world all over again. David the psalmist wrote two things worth noting about getting older: (1) ‘ They shall still bear fruit in old age ’ (Psalm 92:14 NKJV); (2) ‘ I shall not die, but live, and declare the works of the Lord.’ When the spotlight moves from you to the younger generation, don’t be discouraged. Just serve faithfully in the shadows, knowing that one day God will reward you openly for all you have done.

SoulFood: Lev 18-20, Luke 2:16-32, Ps 71:1-16, Prov 2:1-2

The Word for Today is authored by Bob and Debby Gass and published under licence from UCB Internationa

PRAYER FOR TODAY

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Good morning, how was ur weekend? Welcoming u to a new week of new and good things for your life. Wishing u d very best. SHALOM

THE WORD FOR TODAY (Sunday, 10 January 2016

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Be Trustworthy in Little Things!

'Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much.' Luke 16:10 NIV
Jesus said: ‘ Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much, and whoever is dishonest with very little will also be dishonest with much. So if you have not been trustworthy in handling worldly wealth, who will trust you with true riches? And if you have not been trustworthy with someone else’s property, who will give you property of your own? ’ (Luke 16:10–12 NIV) God won’t promote you beyond your current level of competence and commitment. Indeed, He’ll keep bringing you back to these two things until you get them right. As you walk with Him, He’ll increase your faith by testing you in settings that require only a little faith. And if you pass, He’ll expose you to circumstances that require more faith. Each time you prove your willingness to trust Him at a higher level, He will reveal a little more of Himself and entrust to you a greater measure of blessing. That’s how it works. Every small step of faith leads to a deeper, richer and more rewarding relationship with Him. When Michelangelo was painting the frescoes in the Sistine Chapel he spent endless hours lying on the scaffolding perfecting the details. It was a miserable job. A student, curious about why the renowned sculptor took such pains with details that could only be seen from a distance, asked, ‘Who will know whether or not it’s perfect?’ The master artist replied, ‘I will!’ And so will your Master—Jesus! What you’re doing today matters. It’s the determining factor in what God will call you to do tomorrow. So be trustworthy in little things.

SoulFood: 1 Sam 3:1-11, Act 9:1-9

The Word for Today is authored by Bob and Debby Gass and published under licence from UCB International Copyright

PRAYER FOR TODAY

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Top of d morning to u.  Wishing u a happy second Sunday of d month. U will always be d first choice on all d good sides. SHALOM

El Chapo, Escaped Mexican Drug Lord, Is Recaptured in Gun Battle

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MEXICO CITY — He became a byword for government incompetence, a figure who seemed invincible after he burrowed his
way out of the country’s most secure prison.
But on Friday, nearly six months after his escape, Joaquín Guzmán Loera,the Mexican drug lord known as El Chapo, was captured again after a fierce gun battle near the coast in his home state,
Sinaloa, Mexican officials said. “Mission accomplished: We have him,” President Enrique Peña Nieto announced.
The arrest ended one of the most
extensive manhunts undertaken by the government, involving every law
enforcement agency in the country and help from the United States.
But it was the marines, Mexico’s most-trusted military force, who managed to capture the fugitive in an early morning raid that left five people dead, the Mexican authorities said. An American official also described the raid as “a
Mexican op, planned and executed by Mexico .”
The government said late Friday that it had been watching a home in Los Mochis for more than a month when law enforcement officers finally saw movement on Thursday. Officials said that during the ensuing raid, Mr. Guzmán managed to slip away through the sewers, and then he surfaced, stole a car and was apprehended. The authorities took him to a hotel to wait
for backup. The capture of the drug lord concludes a deeply embarrassing chapter for the
government of Mr. Peña Nieto, which has been waylaid by a series of security and corruption scandals that reached
their low point with Mr. Guzmán’s
daring escape.
Now, a looming question is whether the Mexican authorities will try to hold Mr.
Guzmán for a third time — he has
already escaped from prison twice — or whether they will hand him over to the Americans. Mexican officials are busily debating the
issue. Some are arguing for a “fast-track” extradition that could put him in the United States quickly, while others want to continue a previous process that could take months, according to two people with knowledge of the discussions. Mr.
Guzmán, the head of Mexico’s most
powerful cartel, is facing indictments in at least seven American federal courts on
charges that include narcotics trafficking and murder.
With operations that span much of
Mexico, his organization has specialized in smuggling tons of drugs into the
United States through vast networks of tunnels deep beneath the border. His success has made him among the richest drug dealers in history: Forbes magazine estimated his net worth at close to $1billion.
Mr. Guzmán stunned the world last
summer when he stepped into the
shower in his cell, in the most secure wing of the prison, and abruptly vanished in full view of a video camera. Guards later discovered a small hole in
the shower floor.
It led to a mile-long tunnel to a
construction site. The tunnel was tall enough for Mr. Guzmán to walk through standing upright — his nickname translates to Shorty — and had been dug more than 30 feet underground. It was equipped with lighting, ventilation and a motorcycle on rails. Some engineers
estimated that the tunnel took more than a year and at least $1 million to build.
The prison break humiliated the
government of Mr. Peña Nieto, which had proclaimed the arrests of Mr. Guzmán and the leaders of other drug cartels as crucial achievements in restoring order and sovereignty to a country long beleaguered by the horrific violence associated with organized crime. It was particularly embarrassing
because Mr. Guzmán had already
escaped from prison in 2001, when his conspirators managed to smuggle him out. By some accounts, he escaped that
time by hiding in a laundry bin.
There are still major questions ahead, including the potential extradition of Mr. Guzmán to the United States. Shortly after Mr. Guzmán was captured in 2014,
the attorney general of Mexico at the time refused to extradite him to the United States, saying that the criminal would serve his time in Mexico first before he was sent to another country. Officials and analysts said it was an effort to show sovereignty and put some
distance between the Mexican
authorities and their American
counterparts, who often used a heavy hand to influence policy in Mexico. But that stance came to haunt the Peña Nieto administration after the kingpin escaped. The United States had issued a
formal request for his extradition less than three weeks before Mr. Guzmán broke out. A few months later, the Mexican government extradited several top drug lords to the United States, suggesting a new spirit of cooperation in the wake of
Mr. Guzmán’s escape. The people
extradited included an American citizen, Edgar Valdez Villarreal, a notorious figure known as “La Barbie,” as well as people charged with participating in the murders of a United States Consulate worker and an American immigration and customs agent.
While the likelihood that Mr. Guzmán could escape from an American maximum security prison is considered low, extradition would still come at a cost to the image of the Mexican state, some analysts say. “Extraditing him is a
way to say we cannot cope with this with our own institutions,” said Pablo A. Piccato, a history professor at Columbia University. “While this is something everyone knows, obviously the government has not been able to publicly recognize this or tackle it in the past.”
Several senior politicians from Mr. Peña Nieto’s party were already calling for
extradition, including Emilio Gamboa, the head of the governing party in the Senate, who told local news media that he agreed with the idea. In a statement on Friday, the American attorney general, Loretta E. Lynch, commended the Mexican authorities “who have worked tirelessly in recent months to bring Guzmán to justice.” But she did not directly answer the extradition question. The Justice Department “is proud to maintain a close and effective relationship with our Mexican counterparts, and we look forward to continuing our work together to ensure
the safety and security of all our people,” she said.
In the aftermath of Mr. Guzmán’s escape last July, American officials were frustrated with what they considered Mexico’s resistance to accepting help in the manhunt. After his escape, American officials offered to give their Mexican
counterparts whatever assistance they could.
When Mexico rebuffed the offer, many officials in both countries worried that Mr. Guzmán might never be caught. In October, security forces said they had
located Mr. Guzmán in the remote
northwestern mountains where he had been hiding out, an area known as the Golden Triangle at the border of his home state of Sinaloa, Durango and Chihuahua. After a gun battle, officials said, he escaped, with wounds to his face
and leg. The authorities ultimately captured Mr. Guzmán in Los Mochis, a coastal town of
about 250,000 people that has long been known as a center of boxing in Mexico. “People knew he would be caught any time; the government was going after him hard,” said Adrián Cabrera, a blogger in Culiacán, the capital of  Sinaloa, adding that Mr. Guzmán was
still a popular figure in Sinaloa.
“The new corridos will start coming out pretty soon,” Mr. Cabrera said, referring to the songs often used to glorify the exploits of local drug traffickers. “He’s from here. He has a lot of sympathy here. It’s his turf.”
When Mr. Guzmán was finally
recaptured, the president broke the news himself, via Twitter. Given his sagging popularity — his ratings are the lowest of any president in the last 25 years — Mr. Peña Nieto seemed eager to declare the success personally.
In a statement on Friday, Mr. Peña Nieto said that the arrest was the culmination of months of work, an example of Mexico’s ability to overcome adversity.
“Our security institutions have
demonstrated that our citizens can trust them and that they have the stature, strength and determination to accomplish any mission they are tasked with,” Mr. Peña Nieto said.
Mr. Guzmán’s lawyers have already filed legal injunctions against his extradition to the United States. Wherever he ends up, few people here think that his capture will change much for the government’s popularity, life for Mexicans or the strength of the Sinaloa cartel. “This won’t have much effect on their internal structure,” said Eduardo
Guerrero, a Mexico City-based security analyst. “They are prepared for this kind of news. They probably even have a protocol for it.”

THE NEW YORK TIMES