Saturday, May 30, 2015

32-team World Cup format intact for Qatar 2022 - Blatter



FIFA president Sepp Blatter said on Saturday after talks between football chiefs the 2022 World Cup will remain a 32 team competition with no change to the share between the regional confederations.

Europe and South America had feared an attempt to cut their places, but Blatter said: "there is no change."

The decision taken by FIFA's executive committee means that Europe will still have 13 places at the Qatar tournament and Africa five.
Asia and South America each get four places and a chance at a playoff. North and Central America get three places and a playoff chance while the Oceania winner enters a playoff.

Qatar will qualify automatically as the hosts.
UEFA chief Michel Platini had said ahead of the meeting that remaining at 13 places was a "red line" for the European confederation.

Prince Ali bin al Hussein, who challenged Blatter for the FIFA presidency, had proposed increasing the number of teams.

But Blatter said on Friday that the World Cup should "not be touched."

Amadi Nwokocha- NIDO-Qatar Presidential Manifesto




The two-year restoration plan of Amadi Nwokocha, one of the presidential candidate of Nigerians in Diaspora Organisation Qatar (NIDO-Qatar) elections, scheduled to hold on 5 June.







The Nigerians in Diaspora Organisation – Qatar Chapter (NIDO-Qatar) formerly the Nigerian Community in Qatar Association (Dohanaija) was formed by a group of eminent Nigerians in 2002 as a social, non-religious and non-political forum where members can mingle, get-together as well as provide support for one another.

The organisation operates as a charitable entity and its main financial sources are from fees, levies, voluntary contributions, donations and grants.

Membership is made  up of Nigerians, presently residing in Qatar and they are mostly professionals in different sectors including Oil and Gas, Education, Hospitality, Transportation, Media, Aviation, Engineering and Construction, Medical as well as Pharmaceutical fields.

 Among the objectives of the forum were:
To promote unity, love and harmony amongst all Nigerians living in the State of Qatar
To promote the image of Nigeria and protect her interest at all times.





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Wednesday, May 27, 2015

General Buhari: from coup leader to 'born again democrat'

Lagos Muhammadu Buhari, who will be sworn in on Friday as Nigeria's new president, is a one-time coup leader who once ruled Africa's most populous nation with an iron fist.
But he has undergone a remarkable transformation from military general to as he calls it a "converted democrat" whom many see as the solution to Nigeria's many problems.
His election victory over President Goodluck Jonathan two months ago was the first time power had changed hands to an opposition party at the ballot box in Nigeria's turbulent political history.
Yet commentators say he will still need to delve into his army past to tackle rampant corruption, Boko Haram security concerns and economic troubles over the next four years.
"For him to succeed in tackling these knotty problems, he will need to behave like a dictator in spite of the constitution, ignore criticisms and keep abay sycophants," said one former army officer who took part in Nigeria's first military coup in 1966.
"This is the time for him to bear his fangs against graft," added social commentator Tokede Williams. "A man called upon to be a hawk must catch chickens."


Buhari, 72, has already pledged the corrupt and corruption will have no part in his administration and that he intends to lead by example.
Unusually for a Nigerian leader, he did not accumulate much in the way of spoils during his 20 months in charge of a military regime from December 1983.
The devout Muslim, who has had to fend off claims from opponents that he is a religious zealot, is known to have only one simple bungalow in Daura, his home town in the northern state of Katsina.
He also took out a bank loan to pay the 27.5-million-naira ($136,000, 123,000 euro) fee just to contest for the presidential ticket for his All Progressives Congress (APC) party.
In office, his conduct will be closely watched for signs of excesses from his previous time in power that notably saw a crackdown on "indiscipline" and corruption.
Critics of the regime and political opponents were thrown in jail, including the Afro-beat music legend Fela Kuti, who was known for his outspoken lyrics.
Umaru Dikko, a former minister to the elected president Shehu Shagari that he overthrew, was found drugged in a crate on a plane at Stansted Airport, in an attempt to smuggle him back to Nigeria.
Critics of Buhari, particularly outgoing President Goodluck Jonathan's Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), even suggested: "Once a tyrant, always a tyrant."
"At his age, it is always difficult for somebody to change his normal way of life overnight. A leopard doesn't change his spots suddenly," said one lawyer close to the incoming administration.
"However it all depends on those guiding him in office. Buhari is used to the military command structure and the tendency to be autocratic will always be there."
Softly spoken Buhari himself has rejected the description of "dictator" and vowed to operate "under democratic rules", without conducting a witch-hunt against the previous administration.
"Let's put the past behind us, especially the recent past. We must forget our old battles and past grievances and forge ahead," he said in his acceptance speech on April 2.
This month, he announced he would no longer be referred to as "General Buhari".


Buhari's previous time in power ended in a bloodless barracks coup led by Ibrahim Babangida in August 1985.
He slipped out of public life but returned as head of a government agency, the Petroleum Trust Fund, bankrolling development projects with additional revenue from oil sales.
At the agency, he again showed an autocratic but effective style.
"He is not very communicative, he is reticent but quite knowledgeable without flaunting it," said Ayo Banjoko, a Lagos-based political analyst.
"He is imbued with a messianic zeal. He has a rigid and intransigent disposition and he believes this country must and should be purged of its ills, especially corruption."
Buhari's military background and previous role as a northeastern governor have seen him viewed as best-placed to tackle the Boko Haram insurgency that has killed 15,000 since 2009.
Last July, he narrowly escaped death after a suicide bombing on his car as it travelled through the northern city of Kaduna. Many blamed the militants after he had previously criticised the group.
Buhari is divorced from his first wife Safinatu, with whom he had five children, and married Aisha, 44, in 1989. They also have five children together.


AFP

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Obasanjo meets Qatar's Assistant Foreign Minister in Doha




DOHA 
Nigeria’s former president Chief Olusegun Obasanjo is currently visiting Qatar where he met HE Assistant Foreign Minister for International Cooperation Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani on Thursday.

According to Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs website, Obasanjo discussed bilateral relations between the two countries, in addition to issues of common interest on the African and international arenas.
The meeting was attended by a number of Foreign Ministry's officials. 

When the news of the former president reached Nigerian residents in Qatar, they were already itching to meet OBJ as he's fondly called to talk about the incoming administration of General Muhammadu Buhari who defeated incumbent president Goodluck Jonathan in the March 28 election.