Wednesday, September 17, 2014

340 Cases Under Surveillance in Rivers State --Ebola


Liberia Battles Spreading Ebola Epidemic
The Rivers Commissioner for Health, Sampson Parker, on Wednesday 
said there were 340 Ebola Virus disease (EVD) cases under surveillance in the state.
Parker made the remark in Port Harcourt during a sensitization 
workshop at Ogu, in Ogu/Bolo local government area.
He said the state government was not in a hurry to reopen primary 
and secondary schools because of the situation.
Parker stressed that government would announce a date for re-opening 
of public schools after assessing the situation in the next few weeks.
The commissioner advised people of the area to imbibe a healthy
 life style to avert contracting the disease.
Parker urged them to always wash their hands with soap and water.
“We want schools to reopen as soon as possible, but we are still assessing
 the situation before we can do anything,’’ he added.
He called on the people to always report cases of deaths and stop the
 habit of burying dead bodies in a hurry.
The commissioner urged people of the area to alert local government 
disease surveillance officers as soon as there were cases of deaths.
“As a matter of fact, every death must be reported to local government health
 officials before anybody can touch it,’’ Parker said.

England v India: Should cricket introduce red and yellow cards?

Unlike in most other team sports, cricket umpires have no power to eject
 players from the field of play, with any penalties imposed by officials -
 such as the International Cricket Council's match referees - after the match.
Introducing football-style red and yellow cards would enable umpires to deal 
with misdemeanours as and when they occurred, but would be a fundamental 
change to a sport proud of its gentlemanly traditions.
The concept has been frequently considered by the MCC and was 
discussed by the ICC earlier this year.
Here are the cases for and against, plus your chance to have your say.
Behaviour on a cricket field is getting worse and will continue to get 
unless the umpires are given more power to intervene.
We need a system that operates throughout the formative years of a cricketer's career and acts as a deterrent against bad behaviour. Players need to understand that if they behave in a certain way they will be punished, and if they repeat their offence then the punishment will escalate.
Wakankar has been
Prakash Wakankar


That is where the idea of red and yellow cards comes in. It may sound radical but they said the same about bringing in coloured clothing 20 or so years back.
The exact working of the system would need more thought and discussion, but I would suggest a yellow card should be shown to a bowler for persistently abusing a batsman. I am not talking about sledging, but personal abuse and foul language that has no place in the game.
The card would result in them having to leave the field at the end of the over for a fixed period of time. If that bowler was in the middle of a great spell, or if the captain has a strategy based around him, it could be really harmful to the team. That evening, in the team meeting, the player could be singled out for having cost his side the game.
If a batsman is repeatedly wasting time, then the umpire could show him a yellow card, meaning he is is retired for an hour or until the next wicket falls. If a fielder misbehaves, he is demoted down the batting order, and so on.
And if something really serious happens - I'm thinking of the infamous dust-up between Javed Miandad and Dennis Lillee or something equally inexcusable - then the umpires would show a red card and you'd be out of the match.
This can all be refined, but the fundamental aim is to handle misdemeanours on the field and let the umpires be the boss on the cricket pitch.
Dennis Lillee of Australia and Javed Miandad of Pakistan
Dennis Lillee of Austra






Let's keep the lawyers out of this. No-one is killing anybody, after all.
 Let the umpire take charge in the same way that the referee does in football, rugby or hockey. Why should cricket be different?
Waiting until after the game and then issuing a fine achieves nothing.
 Unless the punishment causes hurt where it hurts, it has no effect.
Look what happened to South Africa fast bowler Vernon Philander in Sri Lanka.
 He was accused of ball-tampering, and it was established that he tampered 
with the ball and yet what did he get? A fine of 75% of his match fee.
I don't know whether he writes the cheque or whether his board pays it for him,
 but either way it's no deterrent to anyone thinking of tampering with the ball.
Introducing cards would add another level of theatre to the game, but that is merely incidental. The important thing is to make sure the game is played the way it is supposed to be played.
If you introduced red and yellow cards from the grassroots of the game, players would learn to respect their opponents and avoid the kind of behaviour that might see them have to leave the field.
Make the umpire the boss and it will remove all the animosity that is blighting our game.

Liverpool: Champions League form must improve - Steven Gerrard


Captain Steven Gerrard said Liverpool must improve to fprogress in the Champions League after they needed his late penalty to beat Ludogorets 2-1.
The 2005 winners looked set to drop points against the Group B underdogs when Dani Abalo cancelled out Mario Balotelli's opener in stoppage time.
But Gerrard's spot-kick secured victory for Liverpool, who visit Basel next before a home tie against Real Madrid.
Play media
Champions League: Brendan Rodgers praises 'persistent' Liverpool
"We did OK but it wasn't better than OK," he said. "There's a lot to learn."
Gerrard acknowledged Liverpool were caused problems on the counter-attack in their first match in the Champions League since 2009.
But he praised striker Mario Balotelli after the £16m summer signing from AC Milan scored his first goal for the club against theBulgarian champions.
With eight minutes left, the Italian controlled the ball and turned in a single movement before steering it into the net with                                      the outside of his right foot.
                                     Gerrard said: "You have to give Mario credit. It didn't go his                                          way for long periods but the sign of a good goalscorer is to                                            keep going and get a chance.

Defence Headquaters denies retiring GOC attacked by soldiers

There were reports earlier today that the Nigeria Military has retired the former GOC,
 the 7 Division of the Nigerian Army, Maiduguri, Maj. Gen. Abubakar Mohammed,
who was attacked by soldiers at their barracks in Maiduguri on May 14th.
 But the Defence HQ just tweeted denying the report...

Nigerian troops celebrate after killing hundreds of Boko Haram men in Konduga

Nigerian troops this morning September 17th successfully crushed another attempt
 by Boko Haram members who were on a revenge mission to Konduga, in Borno State. 
According to a statement by Defence HQ, 3 Hilux vehicles, 1 Amoured Personnel
 Carrier and a cache of arms and ammunition were captured by the troops.
 Hundreds of the militants were said to have been killed. Troops are now
 combing the vicinity, in a cordon and search operation to determine the 
heavy casualties suffered by the terrorists in the encounter. See pics of the
 captured weapons armored tanks after the cut...



Ex-minister thrown into rubbish bin by angry mob

It's Ukrainian politics so I don't care much for the details..:-).. but a former minister named
 Vitaly Zhuravsky was attacked yesterday morning September 16th by an angry 
mob as he walked past a crowd outside the parliament building in Kiev, the Ukrainian capital.  

The minister was grabbed by the screaming mob and bundled head first into the half 
full rubbish bin and they proceeded to pelt him with the rubbish, pour water on him
 and hit him on the head with a car tyre. They are mad at him and other lawmakers
 because of Ukraine's recent trade pact with EU. See photos after the cut...



Bomb blast, sporadic gun shots reported at Kano College

According to a breaking news report, a bomb blast just went off at the
 Federal College of Education in Kano. Details are sketchy but residents
 of Kabuga area where the school is located say sporadic gunshots
 followed immediately the bomb went off this afternoon.
 The whole place is said to be in a chaos right now. Armed security are
 said to have gone to the area...

Women’s World Cup: Canada names squad to face Super Falcons, others

Canada has named their squad to play at the FIFA Women’s World Cup in Australia & New Zealand. Led by Head Coach Bev Priestman and capta...