Tuesday 26 January 2016

Sierra Leone: Economic growth is the only solution to unemployment: Officials





major challenge for Sierra Leone until the government addresses the economy, Mr. Anthony Koroma, chairman of the National Youth Commission.

Mr. Koroma said the high rate of graduates annually, estimated at some 10, 000, thanks to a proliferation of colleges and universities across the country, was bound to make the situation even more difficult.

“The only way of addressing this problem is for the government to create the proper environment for economic growth and that will see more employment opportunities,” Koroma said.

Updated figures are hard to come by but various sources have put the rate of youth unemployment in the country at 70 per cent. Yet the segment of the population comprises over 60 percent.

Many of the youths barely attain high school education, which situation has been blamed for a rise in the crime rate.

US Imposes Sanctions On Hezbollah members who have citizenship in Sierra Leone






The U.S. government imposed sanctions on Hezbollah members and assets — but these sanctions did not hit the Shiite extremist organization in Lebanon, where it is based, or even in the Middle East.

They were levied on three Hezbollah figures, an amusement park and a supermarket based in Nigeria, showing the vast reach of the Iran-backed group. Mustapha Fawaz, Fouzi Fawaz and Abdallah Tahini, all born in Lebanon, are accused of being part of the group’s “Foreign Relations Department” in the Nigerian capital Abuja.

The Fawaz brothers, who have citizenship in Lebanon, Nigeria and Sierra Leone, own Amigo Supermarket and Wonderland Amusement Park and Resort in Nigeria. But according to the statement announcing U.S. sanctions, they are really running a Hezbollah front.

“The FRD [Foreign Relations Department of Hezbollah] claims to be in charge of “community relations;” but the primary goal of the FRD in Nigeria is to scout recruits for Hezbollah’s military units, as well as to create and support Hezbollah’s terrorist infrastructure for its operational units in Africa and globally.”

All three men were accused of working with the FRD. Tahini’s responsibilities included, according to the U.S. Treasury, recruiting and supporting Hezbollah’s African networks.

Monday 25 January 2016

SLPP “KUSS KASS” ATTRACTS LONDON POLICE.




London Police have reportedly intervened after a section of the SLPP “Paopa” rudely interrupted a meeting organized by supporters of Kandeh Yumkelah in London. 

Details of the fracas are still sketchy but pieces of information gathered by the Platinum International media network have  suggested that the KKY team are up in arms to challenge Retired Brigadier Maada Bio’s dominance in SLPP politics.

It has also emerged that a cross section of the SLPP UK branch are desirous to see the backs of a paopa dominated UK SLPP Executive. 

The atmosphere was reportedly tense inside the meeting hall with members from both camps having heated verbal exchanges and scuffles. The development alerted the London metropolitan police.
It is not yet clear if arrests were made. It is however disheartening to note that the SLPP can export violence to a foreign land. 

“This is very shameful……the SLPP has now shown the world that they are not a serious opposition” remakes one angry caller from London this evening. 




Four Sierra Leonean women detained in midnight raid in Malaysia for prostitution





foreigners detained in midnight raid in Subang Jaya


BY RAYMUND WONG

The Subang Jaya Municipal Council (MPSJ) and the Immigration Department raided three business premises for vice activities in a joint operation which saw 14 foreigners detained.

The operation, which began at midnight and ended early this morning, saw the enforcement team raiding an illegal massage parlour-cum-brothel and a pub, both located in Bandar Puteri, Puchong; and a cafe located in USJ, Subang Jaya.

MPSJ corporate and strategic management deputy director Muhammad Azli Miswan told reporters that the raids found that the foreigners had broken the law, including conducting illicit businesses.

“We often find foreigners from Africa or other parts of the world, like China, conducting illicit businesses or they have a licence but are not following what the licence allows them to do, some even do prostitution,” Muhammad said.

Azli said that the foreigners caught were in their 20s to 40s and were from China, Vietnam, Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone.

“Six women were caught in the illegal massage parlour which also operated as a brothel,” he said, adding that MPSJ had confiscated the business’s equipment under MPSJ Beauty and Wellness Centre 2007 by-law, in which the operator will be fined a maximum of RM1,000.

Azli said the remaining eight foreigners who were detained by the Immigration Department had no proper documentation.

“They will be processed by the Immigration and placed in the depot before being deported back to their countries,” he said, adding that all 14 foreigners would be detained under Section 6(1)(c) of the Immigration Act 1959/63 for not having valid travel documents.

Azli said although the pub had a valid licence, it was only supposed to serve food and drinks and not entertainment.

“We have confiscated their equipment and issued compound notices under Section 6(1) of the Selangor Entertainment and Places of Entertainment Enactment 1995, which carries a maximum fine of RM25,000,” he said. – January 23, 2016.


Davido and rumoured Guinean girlfriend seen partying in NY together



Looks like Davido and his rumoured Guinean girlfriend, Sira are still together. The singer and the 20 year old beauty (in black) slowed down their PDA on social media after Davido's daughter was born last year. She was seen with her sister and friend at Davido's Sony Music Global record deal celebratory party at Lagos Lounge in New York. More photos after the cut....


Sunday 24 January 2016

Isha Johansen and the other side of FIFA: I don’t get paid, I don’t even take an allowance”




By: Mihir Bose 

Isha Johansen, President of the Sierra Leone Football Association, has a little game she plays with taxi drivers whenever she comes to London. The taxi is taking her to Oxford Street, Selfridges, and the taxi driver asks, “Going on another shopping spree are you? Going to shop till you drop?” 

“No,” replies Johansen, “I am just going to pick up some makeup. I’ll give you two guesses about what I do for a living?” The taxi driver responds, “You are a model or you are in acting or something like that?” and Johansen says, “No, I’m in football”. This prompts the taxi driver to ask, “Are you a football agent or something?”

For Johansen this is so much part of the drill while travelling in London taxis that she says, “It’s always the same and I always tell taxi drivers, ‘if you can guess what I do I’ll double your fare.’ I have never had to because nobody can guess that I run a football association. I guess I’m different. And I guess perhaps that’s what Sepp also saw.”

The Sepp she is talking about is, of course, Sepp Blatter and the reference is to the fact that Blatter helped her become the first female President of an African Football Association, and one of only two female football Presidents in the world. He also supported her as she struggled with her many football enemies. We shall come back to Blatter later but now let us look at the barriers Johansen had to break through, not only was there the glass ceiling of sex to be overcome but there were also the problems in Sierra Leone football and the country at large which in the last decade has seen a ruinous civil war and has had to cope with Ebola.

“That was a nightmare. It started a year after my election. It was like being in one of those zombie movies. Mentally it was horrible, we were fighting an enemy that you couldn’t see. We had been through the civil war and we knew who our enemies were, we could see them coming so you knew how to take shelter, how to protect yourself. But with this illness that guy sitting over there could have Ebola. He is sneezing and coughing, he is feeling poorly and you go and hold him, take him to the hospital. He dies and you die two or three days after. It was one of the most frightening things you could ever think of. I survived by the grace of God really. We had to lay off a lot of the staff. We were not in a good place at all, everything came to a standstill, a lot of families left. Football came to a standstill, not only could you not play football, you could not even watch football in cinemas, you couldn’t be in groups of more than ten.” 


Sierra Leone’s football was shunned by the rest of Africa and failed to qualify for the Cup of Nations. For Johansen the whole experience proved the hollowness of the talk that Africans are supportive of each other. “As Africans we need to be more supportive of each other in times of need. We all like to think that Africans unite but sometimes we fall short of that.”

Ebola has now been eradicated but the problems she faced when she tried to take over Sierra Leone football has not gone away. She faced two opponents when she stood for election two years ago, Rodney Michael, a businessmen and the former Internazionale striker Mohamed Kallon. Just before the election both were ruled ineligible candidates and Johansen was elected unopposed. But the bitterness generated remains. “They called themselves ‘the aggrieved party’. They wanted a stake in the football. I said: ‘OK, fine, let’s work together.’ We tried to bury the hatchet. But it didn’t work.”

This saw Kallon, an old friend, accuse her of hitting him in the face. Johansen’s version is during an argument he grabbed her arm and she reacted instinctively in self-defence. She has been called a prostitute on the radio by one of her opponents and a journalist has said she was a disgrace to womanhood.

As she presents it many of her opponents are part of gambling syndicates that want to control football in Sierra Leone. “It is not illegal to gamble in Sierra Leone but it is illegal to be involved in football administration if you are betting. Those that call themselves stake holders who are in the betting business seem not to want to understand that section 25 of FIFA ethics clearly states that if you are directly or indirectly involved with football gambling, you cannot run for any position. My executive has been completely remodelled. None of the syndicates are there. People who are involved in gambling will simply not be allowed into administration in this country’s FA, it’s as simple as that. If you are referee you cannot be involved in gambling. If you are coach you cannot be.”


She admits that the whole system may not have been completely purged but insists, “the main players like the executive members, higher up the administrators cannot be involved, I simply won’t allow that. Like many people in power they feel that they [her opponents] are above it and this is where the friction is and it continues to be so. So it is a struggle. And like all gambling syndicates they have got their feelers in all sectors in society. That makes it difficult. They tried to remove me several times simply because I am driving good governance. My FA was chronically corrupt. Not under my regime. It is not. The old guard who still have a bit of influence among the stakeholders cause trouble. Not to remove me. But just to cause destabilisation. The gambling syndicates keep in the background as if they know nothing about it. They are part and parcel of it.”

“If they can’t remove me which they can’t, they’ve tried, they’ve really tried, they try to create mayhem and credible people, credible donors and organisations don’t endorse or sponsor the FA simply because there is too much chaos. It’s a shame. I’ve only got two years left because I would have loved to have been able to impact a lot of good into the system. It’s not too late. It needs a lot of change in the mindset of people.”

This change will clearly not be easy as illustrated by the story she tells about what happened to her vice president and exco members which may indeed have been an attempt on her own life. “They were attacked, abducted, beaten, robbed whilst going to an area called Bo in the southern part of Sierra Leone, an area where the gambling people are. They went to carry out the identification process. You cannot have a proper congress if the delegates are not validated. FIFA has rules that say the FA should ensure that all the regions have been properly identified, they should run their own elections, appoint their own people. Then a seven man committee will go and verify the authenticity of these people. That was the process they were doing.”

“And they [my opponents] didn’t like it so my vice president and some excos who were on that mission got hijacked, beaten up. And there were rumours that they thought I would be in the convoy, that they wanted to kill me.”

And this is where Blatter and FIFA came in. When her opponents formed an interim body which tried to remove Johansen and told FIFA it was taking over the Sierra Leone Football Association FIFA refused to formally recognise this group which meant Johansen remained. “Sepp Blatter was particularly keen to see the match fixing inquiry was opened so at least it could pave the way for a smoother running of football administration for me.”


This explains why despite all the scandals that have plagued FIFA, and which has seen Blatter banned for eight years, when I ask whether she can still believe in his integrity she can say, “I do not know. There were some good sides to Sepp Blatter. I and most African countries, indeed the world, should give him credit for bringing female football to the fore. He encouraged women to play football and he encouraged female football to grow which it has done. We see the figures, we see the ratings we see how popular it is. And it is going to be on the increase.”

And then she adds, “And from a personal side he was very concerned about me being a woman in a man’s world. How I would fare? He took that personal interest. Every time I would go to FIFA he would stop and ask me how I am carrying on? How I am tackling issues?”

Johansen, of course, was at last year’s Congress and although she was attracted by what Prince Ali offered she voted for Blatter because she says she had pledged her vote to him.

The vote came after the Swiss police at the request of the US Justice Department had early one morning gone to the hotel where the FIFA top brass were staying and arrested several high ranking FIFA officials including FIFA executive members. This says Johansen, “was a very surreal time. Shock and total confusion. We had had a late night with friends talking to the family and there was a lot of excitement for the next day. It was my first congress. I came down for breakfast. There were few people in the breakfast room. There was this dead silence in the breakfast room. I thought everybody had a hangover or something. And people were whispering. My colleagues said, ‘Did you hear what happened’. And I said , ‘No’. In fact it was my husband who was in Sierra Leone who informed me by text about what had happened. He said, ‘Are you allright.’ I said, ‘ Yeah. I am just a little bit late for breakfast.’ He said, ‘There have been arrests. They are arresting FIFA officials’. I said, ‘What.’ And then, of course, breakfast was no longer breakfast. You did not feel like having breakfast. I started looking round to see who of my colleagues were there. Yes, it wasn’t pleasant at all.” 




Johansen skates round the question as to whether following the arrest Blatter should not have withdrawn from the election as Michael Platini suggested. “To be honest everybody was confused including Blatter himself. I honestly do not believe the man knew or believed the magnitude of what was happening. Maybe in hindsight he should have stepped down. But then, perhaps, he thought he could take on and address the situation. And bring those to book. I think maybe those who are closest to him could have advised him that at the end of the day this is going to fall on your head. But I strongly believe the man that I know, the little bit I know, wanted to take on this situation head on, bring those who were guilty to book, name them and shame them.”

Johansen says this despite the fact that her father, a banker, himself behaved very differently. “My father was head of a banking institution and things went terribly wrong in Sierra Leone. He had a very dysfunctional managerial situation. But at the end of the day he had to be held accountable. And he was held accountable. The bank closed. So I see this very much the same. First of all the top has to be held accountable for what has gone wrong.”

It is as if her gratitude for Blatter’s help during her struggles with her football enemies in Sierra Leone prevents her from seeing what Blatter should have done. She does agree, “the world of football has been tainted. It isn’t pleasant every time you mention the name FIFA. I feel bad personally as a new comer into FIFA. It is not a good time but it will pass”. She quickly adds, “But these things happen not just in football but in the banking world, big organisations. They have had their bad moments. And they pick themselves up. The organisation will reform itself. It has to. When real change comes, we see it in governments and in other organisations, it comes with a massive tornado. And it topples the top. And this is what is happening in FIFA.”

But can FIFA really reform itself without outside intervention? After all the corruption that has convulsed FIFA is the result of actions by the US Justice Department and the Swiss authorities with the Americans calling FIFA a mafia style organisation.

Her response is revealing, “I would just say FIFA is an organisation that sticks very closely to its own and like most big organisations they will go all out to protect their own and if wrong doing is being seen to happen they will try their utmost to address these issues internally. But clearly FIFA has not been able to do that and has meant that outsiders have had to come in to do the job for us like the justice department, police coming in arresting people, extraditing people. That makes it really sad. It is very disheartening. We have gone wrong. FIFA has gone wrong in quite a few places. But they will get it together. It will fall back into place.”




When I ask can this be done without outside intervention there is for the first and only time in our conversation a long pause and then she says slowly, “I think so. I think it can run itself without outside intervention, if you got the right people in the right places. If the chairman of the ethics board is correct. The chairman of the disciplinary board and the chairman of integrity and the people who do the checks and the balances are correct and proper, why not? Why should you have an outside body coming in to run? I see no reason why.”

And she rejects the argument of those who say many of FIFA’s problems are due to the fact that Blatter on getting elected made himself executive President enabling him to give Platini £1.3 million without any written contract which has since seen both man banned for eight years. “I think he [President of FIFA] should be an executive President, he should be hands on.”

Johansen does see some merit in how the Americans have organised sport where the commercial part is completely separate from the amateur side unlike the European model and says, “You do have a point there. All of this stems from one thing and one thing alone. It is the money. Too much money and how you manage this money. Maybe that could be an option.”

However, she will not have any truck with the new FIFA model proposed by Gerhard Aigner, former UEFA chief executive. This is that FIFA should become a supervisory body composed of the football confederations and not have individual countries as members. “I think there will be a lot of chaos. I think it’s good to have a body like FIFA. This is football after all and where money is concerned it can become chaotic.”

Johansen herself has no need for money. “I don’t get paid, I don’t even take an allowance. I’ve got means. My husband is the managing director of a cement factory and is also the honorary consul general for Sweden and Norway [he is Swedish] but having said that I am not brimming over with cash. If I took the monies that was owed to me, and our FA owes me quite a bit of money, there would be no money in the coffers. ”

“We get $250,000 a year from FIFA, the norm, what’s that? The government refuses any money so we need endorsements. We have no deficit at the moment but we cannot manage on $250,000. The only reason we were able to manage is because we had some bonuses that came through $750,000, so we had close on $1million and we used all that to fund 16 matches. We took out the under 23, the under 20, the first team back to back world cup qualifiers, African nation qualifiers, 16 matches. ”




And she adds proudly, “I can’t be corrupted because of money, but that doesn’t mean I don’t want to make money. I would like to set up my own small businesses to earn, even if it is football related. I could do with a lot more money I’ll tell you that. The difference between myself and most Africans, and definitely I’ve been told, maybe some women as well, women of leisure who like all the good things but they don’t want to work for it, I will bust my behind working. I am a workaholic you know. I am always thinking of new things.”

If this makes her sound very self-righteous then she can claim that her background is very different to many who run football in Africa. “My background is unusual. Very much so. Like owning a football club. They started from zero [cofounded by her father]. It is now in the premier division. I don’t run it. I would love to see it stand up on its own and get endorsements.” Educated in England, her son goes to school here and she says, “my mother lives here.” Indeed soon after we spoke she went to see her mother in Brixton before flying back home.

Her opponents in Sierra Leone have made much of her privileges and she says “They see me as an elite woman. I make no apologies for my privileges. And I feel no guilt. What saddens me when you have people like myself who have money, who have influence, who have exposure but they cannot do things for people who are less privileged who have no way of getting anywhere close to some of the privileges we have. I take great offence to these kind of slurs and my opponents pray on the ignorance and lack of education of these youngsters and their parents to further their own interests.”

This privileged background may explain why, unlike most other African administrators, she did not feel the exposure of FIFA corruption in the British media proved the British were racist. In 2014, just before the FIFA World Cup in Brazil, that is how CAF labelled allegations in the Sunday Times. But she says, “I do not feel there is a racist agenda in the British press. I don’t like to speak on behalf of Africa. Different FAs will have their own ways of dealing with things.”



For her the most difficult task remains, “Being a woman in football administration, being a woman in leadership, being a woman in a male dominated arena in Africa. Some African countries have got it right like Namibia, East Africa are doing quite well, Ruanda in women’s leadership, South Africa, even Ghana and Nigeria have some women in leadership positions who are respected, they get the job done without any hindrance.”

But not so in her own country. “Sierra Leone, from what I have experienced, it’s all lip service, it’s a politically correct thing to be seen to be doing, subscribing to the gender equality business. I am very very disappointed in the way I have been treated and the government has sat by and watched it. I am extremely disappointed [by the lack of support from] women in positions in the judiciary, politicians, legal capacity. I never played the gender card going into football and I’m happy I didn’t because really it’s not about Isha at the end of the day, it’s about women as a whole, women in leadership. It’s not about a football problem, it’s a national problem.

“Corruption in football is no different to corruption in banking. It’s just that football has a lot of noise, a lot of emotion behind it, whereas the bankers don’t. So I am most disappointed in women gender groups that they have not been able to be more vocal in Sierra Leone.”

As for the rest of Africa she says, “It depends how much Africa knows. It’s only in the past couple of months that my situation has been highlighted in places like South Africa”.

Her visit to England and meeting Greg Dyke has also been a help. “Greg is concerned about the viciousness towards me as a woman, he seems very interested in the African continent and how the Africans fare.” There is talk of a match with England but before that she feels, “First of all Sierra Leone, Africa should wake up, they need to understand that the world is watching now, just like the world is watching FIFA. Just because you think you are in an African country you can’t be doing things with impunity any more. Because at the end of the day when you need money and support you come to the west so you can’t sit in your corner there and think you can just do things anyhow.

“That’s the message I gave to Greg. I would like to see the FA stand up and support the drive for bringing good governance and integrity back to football be it by a woman, be it by an alien. And he’s very up for that. And I also said we need money, we are so broke it’s unbelievable, the government’s stopped funding the FA.”




make “the English FA come out with something. I hope it is pretty soon. It’s a case of the international community saying look, there’s one woman in the whole of Africa, there’s two in the world, but the woman is only trying to drive good governance for goodness sake, only trying to clean up football. And, like Greg himself said, ‘the things that you are doing now, perhaps if FIFA had done that before maybe they wouldn’t have found themselves in such a rut. You understand these kind of things like cleaning up.”

Mihir Bose was the first sports editor of the BBC. He has worked for various media outlets and launched the Inside Sport column for the Daily Telegraph. Now a freelance journalist he has written 29 books. His most recent books are The Spirit of the Game: How Sport Made the Modern World and Game Changer: How the English Premier League Came to Dominate the World. Follow him on twitter @mihirbose




Donald Trump says he could shoot someone and still not lose voters


During a rally on Saturday in Iowa, Donald Trump said he wouldn't lose any support in the presidential race, even if he shot someone... 
"I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose any voters, OK?" - Donald Trump.
Donald Trump's comment came during a campaign rally Saturday at Dordt College in northwest Iowa. The 1,500-seat theater completely filled with hundreds more watching the speech from an overflow room.

More than 1 million people in Russia are HIV-positive, official says


Russia's AIDS epidemic is at a dangerous tipping point after the number of people registered HIV-positive passed the 1 million mark, the country's top AIDS specialist said on Thursday, warning the rate of infection had reached record levels.
Vadim Pokrovsky, the head of the federal AIDS center, told Reuters that the prevalence of the disease was on the verge of becoming common throughout the population, instead of concentrated primarily within a certain group.

Almost 20 percent of the country's drug users and nearly 10 percent of the country's gay people were HIV-positive, he said. Between 55 and 60 percent of cases are linked to drug use and around 40 percent to heterosexual sex. Gay sex accounted for only about 1.5 percent.

Russia registered its millionth HIV-positive patient - a 26-year-old woman in the south of the country — on Wednesday, said Pokrovsky. But he added the real number of HIV-positive Russians could be as high as 1.5 million, or 1 percent of the population, based on his and other expert estimates.
"The epidemic is gathering strength. Unfortunately the measures that have been taken have clearly not been enough," Pokrovsky said.
He warned that Russia was "on the threshold" of moving from a concentrated epidemic, where HIV is highly prevalent in one subset of the population, to a generalized epidemic, where HIV rates among the general population are sufficient for sexual networking to drive new infections.
"We're in a transitional phase," he said. "In separate regions we can say there is already a generalized HIV epidemic."
The Russian epidemic has been driven by very harsh drug laws and a lack of harm reduction and needle exchange programs, as well as repressive homosexuality laws, according to UNAIDS and the World Health Organization.
A report released by UNAIDS in 2014 called out Russia for its "appalling record" on HIV and drug policy. "The Russian Federation… continues to steadfastly deny the evidence on the effectiveness of harm reduction, and the rates of HIV infection among people who inject drugs in the country are among the highest in the world," it said.

A federal law banning "gay propaganda" has also hindered access to HIV prevention services among the LGBT community, according to activists.
Pokrovsky said 204,000 people had died of HIV in Russia since the first case was recorded in 1987. He expected the number of new cases in 2015 to be at least 93,000, up from just under 90,000 in 2014.
That, he said, would be the largest number of new cases since Russia began keeping data almost 30 years ago.
The escalation comes as Russia struggles financially, beset by low oil prices, Western sanctions and a falling ruble.
Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev called last October for a series of urgent measures to respond to the growing epidemic. The government plans to spend 40 billion rubles ($475.20 million) on fighting HIV/AIDs in 2016. Pokrovsky said 100 billion rubles was needed.

Government data shows 24,000 HIV-positive people died in 2014, the last full year for which data is available. Of those, around 12,000 died as a direct result of AIDS. Pokrovsky said the real number who died from AIDS was likely to be higher.
He said he expected data for 2015 to show a 5-10 percent increase in the number of deaths.


Saturday 23 January 2016

Bill Cosby Wins In Court As Judge Dismisses Defamation Lawsuit !




Renita Hill filed the claim saying she had been "emboldened" by the actions of Mr Cosby's other alleged victims but a Pittsburgh federal judge dismissed the case "with prejudice" meaning it cannot be amended and refiled.





Seven women are suing him,claiming he portrayed them as liars when they went public with their accusations but Mr Cosby filed a counterclaim, alleging their claims were only for financial gain.

The 78-year-old is also seeking unspecified monetary damages and said the women inflicted emotional distress.
Ms Hill's defamation case said she was made out to be a "liar" and "extortionist" when the comedian, his wife and his lawyer issued blanket denials.

But judge Arthur Schwab agreed with Mr Cosby's legal representatives that the statements were opinions protected by the First Amendment.

'Innuendo and undisclosed facts'

"Even considering these three statements together as a combined, single statement, this newly 'conjoined' statement does not lead to an inference that the plaintiff is a 'liar and an extortionist'," he said.

Ms Hill's legal representative, George Kontos, said he would be appealing the decision, adding he strongly disagreed with the judge's reasoning.
"The basis of his opinion is these are constitutionally protected, 'pure' opinions,'' said Mr Kontos.
"But, looked at as a whole, they contain all sorts of innuendo and undisclosed facts."

Mr Cosby has not responded specifically to Ms Hill's allegations that he drugged and assaulted her several times after they met on the TV show Picture Pages in 1983.She claims she was 16 at the time and the abuse continued for four years. She also says Mr Cosby helped pay for her college fees and travel to cities where he was performing.

Mr Cosby has repeatedly denied all accusations against him made by more than 50 women.
He has, however, admitted in court proceedings that he obtained and gave women sedatives over the years, but he maintained the women took the drugs willingly.

At the end of 2015, prosecutors in Pennsylvania charged the comedian with an alleged sexual assault in 2004. It was the first time Mr Cosby had been charged with any offence after months of accusations.
He is currently on $1m (£675,000) bail.
bbcnews.




Jimmy B denies endorsing Yumkeleh for Sierra Leone presidency- “Am not SLPP or APC”


following an interview on 98.1 radio democracy this morning where the godfather of sierra Leone music jimmy Bangura aka Jimmy B some miscreants are now on social media misinforming the nation that a man who has spent his entire life trying to entertain sierra Leoneans both home and abroad as a member of the main opposition sierra Leone people’s party SLPP .the general public is hereby informed that the music legend has never been a party card carrier for any political party and he has no intention of joining a political party for now ,but he clearly stated that he supported late president Kabba because he believes in his leadership qualities  then as an individual and their was nothing wrong for such because the man was a democrat who respected the sacred document called the constitution of sierra Leone.

Jimmy Bangura also told the nation that the statement made by Collabo that 98% of musicians wants MORE TIME for president Koroma is false and he and all the others like steady Bongo, King Fisher, Daddy Saj, Emerson etc do not support more time and advised Collabo to refrain from using the name of artists to propagate rumor and he promised to call on Collabo as his younger brother to advise him on the issue and he also stated that anything against the constitution he will not support.
As more time is now thing of the past let me remind all that the selected vice president of sierra Leone Dr victor Bockarie Foh has warned all those using the name of his Excellency the president Dr Bai Koroma for more time to desist and that president Koroma is a democrat and will not run for a third term or more time or extra time as the Ebola is amongst the many challenges of governance system.
Finally music legend Jimmy Bangura is not a member of any political party in sierra Leone even though he stated that as a citizen he has the right to vote as many others,his main aim is to contribute to the socio- economic development of his country.


Incredible story of a Monkey that adopted a lost puppy


This monkey adopted a lost puppy on the street of New Delhi, India and they have been living together ever since. According to local media reports, the monkey never lets the puppy stay out of his reach. They eat and play together and whenever other dogs try to mess with the little puppy, the monkey chases them away. This is amazing because monkeys and dogs don't generally get along. See more photos after the cut...


Photos: Celine Dion & her kids at late husband René Angélil's funeral

I
The heart broken singer led her three children, Rene Charles, 14, twin boys Nelson and Eddy, 5, to the funeral of her late husband. A huge number of well-wishers also gathered for the funeral service, filling the aisles of the church and the area outside. The funeral service was broadcast live yesterday

Angélil died of throat cancer at the age of 73 on January 14.





 brother Daniel two days after Rene, following his battle with cancer.

Angelil started out as a singer in the 1960s, forming Montreal, Canada pop rock group The Baronets with his childhood friend Pierre Labelle. He went into management when the band split in the 1970s, and represented fellow Quebec entertainers Rene Simard and Ginette Reno, among other pop acts.

He won the Felix Award for Manager of the Year in 1987 and 1988, but his career really took off when he discovered Celine Dion as a pre-teen. Rene helped the French-speaking singer develop her signature sound throughout her teens and they fell in love, marrying in December, 1994. Celine, who is 26 years younger than her husband, became his third wife.

Angelil suffered a string of medical setbacks over the past two decades - he had a heart attack in 1992 and underwent cancer surgery in 1998. He also battled and beat throat cancer, but the disease returned in 2013, forcing him to undergo surgery again. The health crisis forced him to step down as Dion's manager, and in September, 2015, his wife revealed that Angelil's cancer was terminal.







Celine's 14-year-old son Rene-Charles made his mum proud at the funeral of his father Rene in Montreal, Canada yesterday by delivering a heartfelt tribute and a promise to live up to his dad's standards.

The teenager arrived at the Notre-Dame Basilica with his mother and twin brothers, Nelson and Eddy, and comforted Celine throughout the service, which was streamed online and telecast in Canada.  The family were also joined by Angelil's adult sons Patrick and Jean-Pierre from a previous marriage.

The singer looked on proudly as Rene-Charles addressed the thousands of mourners first in French and then in English.






War on women: Sierra Leone’s religious leaders wage war against women



on Thursday convened an inter-faith summit to discuss the fate of the proposed controversial Safe Abortion Act recently passed by parliament.

The Act could not become law after the Inter-Religious Council asked
President Ernest Bai Koroma not to give it his signature, which is required to make it into law. The religious leaders then decided to convene a meeting to come up with a final position.

At Thursday’s meeting held at the Saint Anthony’s Catholic Church in Freetown, presentations were made by representatives of the various religious denominations in the country. The Council also invited other stakeholders, including the medical profession, lawyers, and women’s groups.

Almost all those who spoke kicked against allowing the Act to become law.
The ‘Safe Abortion Act 2015′, passed in December, has been promoted as a response to high fatalities and post birth injuries due to unsafe abortions. If it becomes law, the Act will allow women to have an abortion during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy at will which appears to be the major bone of contention.

“The biggest crime before God is shedding blood,’ said Archbishop
Tamba Charles, the head of the Catholic Church in Sierra Leone.

The Deputy Minister of Justice, Mr Arrow Bockarie, said he was alive today because his parents did not abort him, while Health Minister Dr Abu
Bakarr Fofanah said the law would increase unsafe abortion rather than decrease it.

A presentation by the Medical and Dental Council also showed that the
regulatory arm of the medical profession in the country was against the law.

The Inter Religious Council is now set to present its position paper to the President on Wednesday, after a planned meeting with parliament early next week.

Friday 22 January 2016

Liberia asks IMF for additional finance and more time



Dear Madame Lagarde

In March 2014, Liberia was hit by the unprecedented outbreak of the deadly Ebola Virus Disease (EVD). (photo: IMF Chief Lagarde and president Sirleaf). 

The outbreak permeated the social and economic fabric of our country, significantly undermining our economic activities and thwarting our medium-term development program – the Agenda for Transformation (AfT).

However, the measures put into place, including actions aimed at preventing and controlling infection rates, increasing community engagements and ensuring safe burials, as well as the support of our development partners and the international community, have led to successful containment of the epidemic.

On September 3, 2015 our country was declared Ebola free for the second time by the World Health Organization (WHO). Liberia became the first of the three most-affected countries in West Africa to have been declared Ebola free after more than a year of battling the epidemic, even though more recently there have been a few isolated cases.

We are grateful to the IMF for the financial support it provided to Liberia during the crisis for a total of US$130 million through an ad-hoc augmentation under the ECF, disbursement under the Rapid Credit Facility (RCF), and debt relief under the Catastrophe Containment and Relief (CCR) Trust.

The economic impact of Ebola has been compounded by the steep decline in commodity prices.

Prior to the outbreak, our country had been growing at about 8 percent on average since 2011, domestic institutions were being re-built and social and health indicators were improving. However, the epidemic weakened activity in all sectors of the economy, with real GDP growth declining from close to 8½ percent in 2013 to 0.7 percent in 2014.



Ebola in LiberiaAs the country embarked on the road to recovery in 2015 after the devastating Ebola crisis, it is being further confronted by the sharp decline in prices of our major exports, namely iron ore and rubber.

As a result, planned investments in the mining sector have been put on hold by existing mining operators.  A prolonged period of low commodity prices would significantly undermine our tax and export revenues, and could significantly weaken our medium term growth prospects.

We remain fully committed to the objectives set under our ECF-supported program, although the Ebola outbreak weakened our capacity and led to delays in program implementation.

Taking into account the extremely challenging context, looking back to June and December 2014, our performance remained broadly satisfactory. We met most of the end-June 2014 quantitative performance criteria (PCs) and indicative targets (ITs) except the floor on government revenues, net foreign exchange reserves position, and the ceiling on net domestic assets of the central bank.

We missed the floor on government revenues owing to shortfalls in tax and nontax revenues. The floor on net foreign exchange position was missed following a placement of reserves with a domestic LIBERIA 2 bank.

Nonetheless, revenue performance improved markedly in FY2015 in part with the establishment of the Liberia Revenue Authority (LRA) on July 1, 2014. We met only two out of seven end-December 2014 PCs due to the Ebola outbreak.

We met three out of seven structural benchmarks (SB) (payroll cleanup, publication of FY2016 budget calendar, and pilot on integration of credit-financed projects into the Integrated Financial Management Information System (IFMIS)), whereas the SBs on enhancing cash and liquidity management, strengthening the quality of national accounts and submitting the insurance law were completed but with a delay.


Thursday 21 January 2016

Impurity reigns in Sierra Leone: Allie Kabba sent back to prison

Sierra Leone tonight  is a simple, though chilling statement by supporters of opposition politician Alie Kabba: “Where there is no justice, there can be no hope”.

Alie Kabba has once again been denied bail and sent to the country’s notorious maximum security prison, after court received ‘orders from above’. He will next appear at the High Court, where he can present his evidence and plead his innocence.

Supporters of Kabba say that he is a political prisoner of conscience, whose freedom has been denied once more by a politically controlled court in Freetown, on a flimsy and orchestrated technicality regarding the terms of his bail.

Only in Sierra Leone are you likely to find the rather bizarre contradiction of having a member of parliament – IB Kargbo, who has committed serial crimes, by first failing to declare to the country’s electoral commission that he was still working as a public servant whilst contesting a by-election; and worse, using ministerial letter headed paper to write a letter soliciting an unlawful agreement with the Lebanese government, to import waste into Sierra Leone for cash.

Despite these serious crimes, IB Kargbo walks a free man, a parliamentarian and a presidential adviser. No one in the judiciary and the government is batting an eyelid, whilst Alie kabba is sent to maximum security prison today, for alleged bigamy involving a government minister – a charge the government is struggling to prove.

Why? IB Kargbo is a senior member of the ruling APC and a close confidante of the president; Alie Kabba is a candidate for the presidency in 2018, and he is seen as the most powerful critic of the government’s failed policies.