Tag: US

  • US finally backs Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala for Next WTO Director

    US finally backs Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala for Next WTO Director

    The Biden administration on Friday, Feb 5, said the U.S. would support Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala as the next director-general of the World Trade Organization, hours after South Korea’s trade minister stepped out of the race.

    The Biden administration’s decision is the last hurdle standing in the way of Ms. Okonjo-Iweala assuming the top job at the WTO, after South Korea’s Yoo Myung-hee pulled out.

    Last year, Ms. Okonjo-Iweala was supported by a majority of WTO members, but the Trump administration backed Ms. Yoo, saying she was better qualified.

    The office of the U.S. Trade Representative said in a statement Friday: “Dr. Okonjo-Iweala brings a wealth of knowledge in economics and international diplomacy from her 25 years with the World Bank and two terms as Nigerian Finance Minister.”

    The statement added: “She is widely respected for her effective leadership and has proven experience managing a large international organization with a diverse membership.”

    The USTR added it “looks forward to working with a new WTO director-general to find paths forward to achieve necessary substantive and procedural reform of the WTO.”

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is set to be the first woman and the first African to run the Geneva-based trade body.

  • Maina’s son, Faisal escapes to US – EFCC

    Maina’s son, Faisal escapes to US – EFCC

    Faisal Maina, the son of Abdulrasheed Maina, former Chairman, defunct Pension Reformed Task Team (PRTT), has fled to the United States of America (USA), the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has said.

    EFCC’s counsel, Mohammed Abubakar, informed Justice Okon Abang of the Federal High Court, Abuja about the situation on Thursday.

    According to Abubakar, Faisal sneaked into America through the Republic of Niger.

    Earlier at the sitting, Justice Abang, in a committal proceeding ruling, ordered Faisal’s surety, who is a member of the House of Representatives, Sani Dan-Galadima. representing Kaura-Namoda Federal Constituency of Zamfara, to forfeit a property used as a bail bond.

    Faisal was granted a N60 million bail with a surety in the like sum who must be a serving member of the House of Representatives.

    Recall that his father, Maina, also escaped to Niger Republic, but was repatriated back to the country.

  • 12 officers charged in killing of 19 migrants near US-Mexico border

    12 officers charged in killing of 19 migrants near US-Mexico border


    The Tamaulipas state police are accused of murder, abuse of power and making false statements.

    Twelve police officers have been arrested in Mexico following the discovery of 19 charred corpses near the U.S. border, Tamaulipas Attorney General, Irving Barrios, said on Tuesday.

    The Tamaulipas state police are accused of murder, abuse of power and making false statements.

    The bodies were discovered on January 22 in a burned-out pickup truck next to other burned cars in the town of Santa Anita in north-eastern Mexico.

    The people had been shot dead, according to media reports.

    Among them, according to Barrios, were migrants from Guatemala.

    Media had reported that almost all of the victims were Guatemalans.

    Tens of thousands of Central Americans every month flee poverty and violence in their homeland to seek a better life in the U.S.

    One of the four dead identified so far was a Mexican migrant smuggler, according to Mr Barrios.

    The possible involvement of other police officers, as well as criminal groups smuggling Central American migrants into the U.S. and fighting for control of the region, is still under investigation, Barrios said.

  • Vladimir Putin signs law extending nuclear arms treaty between US and Russia

    Vladimir Putin signs law extending nuclear arms treaty between US and Russia

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed a law ratifying the extension of New START, an important arms control treaty with the United States, a week before it was due to expire, the Kremlin said in a statement on Friday, January 29.


    The treaty limits the number of strategic offensive weapons both countries can have.


    The nuclear arms control agreement has been extended for five years until February 5, 2026, the Kremlin said.


    It limits each country to no more than 700 deployed intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) and heavy bombers; no more than 1,550 warheads on deployed ICBMs, deployed SLBMs and heavy bombers for nuclear armaments; and a total of 800 deployed and non-deployed ICBM launchers, SLBM launchers, and heavy bombers.


     The deal between Russia and the US is the last major deal between both countries after the Trump administration pulled out of a separate nuclear arms control agreement with Russia, the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF), in 2019, claiming China needed to be part of the agreement and also reduce it’s Nuclear arsenal.


    According to the Kremlin, Putin and US President Joe Biden spoke on the phone on Tuesday this week expressing “satisfaction” over the exchange of diplomatic notes between both countries on extending the treaty. 


    On Wednesday, the Russian Parliament voted to ratify the five-year extension of the treaty.


    The landmark treaty was first signed for a period of 10 years by former US President Barack Obama and former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in 2010. It took effect on February 5, 2011.

    “Renewing the Treaty meets the national interests of the Russian Federation, makes it possible to maintain the transparency and predictability of strategic relations between Russia and the United States and to support global strategic stability; it will have a beneficial effect on the international situation, and contribute to the nuclear disarmament process,” the Kremlin said in the statement published Friday evening.


    Last week, White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters “that the New START Treaty is in the national security interests of the United States, and this extension makes even more sense when the relationship with Russia is adversarial, as it is at this time.”


    Psaki added that it was the “only remaining treaty constraining Russian nuclear forces and is an anchor of strategic stability between our two countries.”

  • Melania Trump Could Be Set To Divorce Donald Trump, Expert Says

    Melania Trump Could Be Set To Divorce Donald Trump, Expert Says

    Melania Trump’s reported move to get her own office space could be a hint she plans to split from Donald Trump, an expert claims. 

    The former First Lady’s move “could well be preparatory steps for explaining to Donald that she’d like to separate”, the relationship guru says.

    Her office is currently functioning out of the former President’s private club, Mar-a-Lago, CNN reports

    But Melania is said to be looking for separate space in the Palm Beach area.

    It is reported that Melania will maintain three of her White House staff as she looks to build on the “Be Best” campaign she ran while in office.

    While running the campaign she seemingly turned a blind eye to her husband’s own social media bullying.

    Family mediator Louisa Whitney, of LKW Family Mediation, told the Daily Star that while it’s not unusual for someone to have been unhappy in a relationship for some time but to have stayed for a variety of reasons – there can be “preparations for the separation”.

    She says this includes purchasing new property, being sure a person will have an income in the event of a separation or setting up counselling for emotional support.

    Whitney said: “Melania’s wish for a separate office could well be preparatory steps for explaining to Donald that she’d like to separate – she might be seeking to set up a role for herself that builds on the work she did as First Lady. 

    “She might also want to be setting up an identity for herself in her own right. It can be hard I think for anyone separating to establish themselves as just that person rather than part of a couple – especially if their partner was more high-profile, more outgoing or better-known than them.”

    Tina Wilson, a leading relationship expert and Founder of Wingman app, agrees that Melania seems to want to “forge her own path” with the office move – but says that may just be with her business activities.

    Wilson says: “As the former first lady, Melania has been under the microscope for the last four years, being analysed, criticised, loved and hated as she has stood by Donald, who has revelled in the attention.

  • US court gives Dangote’s ex-mistress 20 days to respond to lawsuit

    US court gives Dangote’s ex-mistress 20 days to respond to lawsuit

    The Miami-Dade County Court in Florida, United States of America, has given a 20-day ultimatum to Autumn Spikes, the embattled ex-mistress of Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, to respond to a lawsuit he filed against her.

    According to the court summons served on Spikes, failure to respond to the suit before the expiration of the ultimatum could lead to her losing the case, money, wages, and property.

    Dangote had filed the suit on January 22, demanding the sum of $5 million from Spikes, alleging that she had defamed his character and blackmailed him by sharing a viral video clip showing her seated beside him while lying down on the same couch, with part of his buttocks exposed.

    A copy of the court’s ‘civil action summons’ which was served on the African-American lady on Thursday, said she had ‘20 calendar days’ from the day she was served to file her response, warning her of the consequences of failing to respond to the suit filed by the billionaire businessman.

    The summons reads in part:

    “A lawsuit has been filed against you. You have 20 calendar days after this summons is served on you to file a written response to the attached Complaint with the clerk of this Court.

    “A phone call will not protect you. Your written response, including the case number given above and the names of the parties must be filed if you want the court to hear your side of the case.

    “If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case, and your wages, money, and property may thereafter be taken without further warning from the court. There are other legal requirements.

    “If you do not know an attorney, you may call an attorney referral service or a legal aid office listed in the phone book.”

    The messy fight between Dangote and his secret mistress of over 10 years became public knowledge when, on January 1, Spikes released the video on her Instagram page with the handle, @allorounda1, after he reportedly ended the affair.

    The video must have irked Dangote who said she had breached the Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA), he had with her prior to calling off the affair. He went further to sue her for libel and defamation of character.

    Spikes again took to her Instagram page to say that the billionaire had ‘insulted’ her by offering her a ‘paltry’ sum of $15,000 for her to keep quiet over their affair.

    She added that Dangote had “pressured and influenced” her to sign the NDA and offered to pay her $2,500 every month as palimony to keep her from exposing details of their affair.

  • Russia welcomes U.S. proposal to extend nuclear treaty

    Russia welcomes U.S. proposal to extend nuclear treaty


    The two countries control about 90 per cent of the world’s nuclear weapons stockpile.

    The Kremlin says it welcomes the U.S.’ readiness to extend the New START treaty on curbing nuclear weapons stockpiles, but warned that success will “depend on the details.”

    Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov made the position of the Kremlin known on Friday, two days after the inauguration of the Joe Biden and Kamala Harris presidency in the U.S.

    The New START (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) agreement went into effect in 2011 and is set to expire on February 5, at which point there would be no deal between the U.S. and Russia setting controls on weapons stockpiles and allowing inspections.

    Mr Biden’s new administration proposed a five-year extension this week.

    “Russia is for preserving New START and for extending this treaty in order to gain time for talks and contacts.

    “We can only welcome the political will to extend this document,” said Mr Peskov.

    But he added that “everything will depend on the details of this proposal, which is yet to be studied.”

    The U.S. proposal had already received support from other parts of Russia’s political elite.

    Diplomat Mikhail Ulyanov called Mr Biden’s move an “encouraging step” on Twitter.

  • US Resumes WHO Support, Launches $1.9 Trillion COVID-19 Plan

    US Resumes WHO Support, Launches $1.9 Trillion COVID-19 Plan

    The United States said on Thursday it would resume its funding for the UN’s health agency as President Joe Biden shifts towards greater international cooperation in the fight against Covid-19, while also launching a $1.9 trillion plan to tackle the pandemic at home.

    On his first day in the job, Biden confirmed he had reversed the decision of former president Donald Trump to quit the World Health Organization (WHO).

    “Under trying circumstances, this organisation has rallied the scientific and research and development community to accelerate vaccines, therapies and diagnostics,” top US scientist Anthony Fauci told a WHO meeting via video-link, confirming that the US would continue to pay its dues to the organisation.

    Biden was a fierce critic of Trump’s approach to tackling the virus in the US, which with more than 400,000 people dead is the world’s worst-hit nation.

    The new president is seeking to vaccinate 100 million people in the next 100 days, increase the use of masks and testing, expand the public health workforce and offer more emergency relief to those struggling with the restrictions.

    “For almost a year now, Americans could not look to the federal government for any strategy,” said Jeff Zients, coordinator of the new Covid-19 task force. “As president Biden steps into office today, that all changes.”

    Virus cases are approaching 100 million globally, with more than two million deaths and many millions — from Beijing to Berlin — still living under lockdowns, curfews or other restrictions.

    Europe has been particularly hard hit, though the Russian capital Moscow announced on Thursday it was lifting many of its harshest restrictions as Mayor Sergei Sobyanin expressed “cautious optimism” over the current figures.

    – ‘War zone’ –

    More contagious coronavirus variants have travelled quickly around the globe, tempering optimism that mass vaccination campaigns would bring a swift end to the worst phase of the pandemic.

    And the WHO has repeatedly warned that richer countries are hogging the vaccine, a point underscored by data from Africa suggesting the second wave is proving far more deadly than the first.

    John Nkengasong of Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention said more infections meant more pressures on ill-equipped health systems, adding: “That also means you’re overwhelming the ability of nurses, doctors to manage patients.”

    However, the US provided a boost to efforts to share out vaccines across the world by announcing it intended to join the Covax initiative, a pool of doses supplied by countries and companies.

    Germany meanwhile confirmed it was willing to help Russia to develop its Sputnik vaccine — which has been rolled out by Moscow despite still being in clinical trials.

    And early results from studies of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine suggested it would be effective against the British variant, which is fuelling a surge that has overwhelmed UK hospitals.

    “When you go into a hospital… in some cases it looks like a war zone,” said the British government’s chief scientist, Patrick Vallance.

    – ‘Auspicious’ rollout –

    Britain is facing record daily death tolls and has rammed through the approval of several vaccines, betting heavily on the jabs as an ultimate solution to the contagion.

    But the same urgency is not being felt everywhere.

    The Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan plans to vaccinate its entire population, but not until after March 13 because the period before has been deemed “inauspicious”.

    The shots will start after that, the prime minister’s office said, adding that it was “important we roll out the nationwide vaccination on an auspicious date”.

    In Japan, however, time is of the essence. With six months to go until the Tokyo Olympic Games, questions are intensifying over the viability of holding a tournament that will require thousands of athletes to fly in around the world.

    Olympic chief Thomas Bach said there was “no reason whatsoever” to believe the games would not go ahead, adding: “This is why there is no plan B and this is why we are fully committed to make these games safe and successful.”

    While sports officials grapple with scheduling headaches and event cancellations, some politicians have had their reputations trashed by the virus.

    Mongolia’s Prime Minister Khurelsukh Ukhnaa quit Thursday after protests prompted by the treatment of a coronavirus patient and her newborn baby.

    TV footage showed the woman being moved to an infectious disease centre wearing only hospital pyjamas and plastic slippers, despite temperatures of minus 25 degrees Celsius ( minus 13 degrees Fahrenheit).

    “As a prime minister, I must take the responsibility,” Khurelsukh said, describing the footage as “heartbreaking”.

  • President Trump receives highest award as he leaves office

    President Trump receives highest award as he leaves office

    President Trump receives highest award as he leaves office

    Embattled outgoing US President Donald Trump on Friday received Morocco’s highest award for his work in advancing a normalization deal between Israel and Morocco, Reuters reports.

    Trump received the Order of Muhammad award in a private ceremony in his Oval Office, presented to him by Princess Lalla Joumala Alaoui, Morocco’s ambassador to the United States.

    The Order of Muhammad is an award given only to heads of state. It was a gift from Morocco’s King Mohammed VI to President Trump.

    White House senior adviser Jared Kushner and Middle East envoy Avi Berkowitz also got other awards from the Moroccan King for their work on the Israel-Morocco deal, which was reached in December.

    Donald Trump leadership helped broker deals between Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco in the last five months.

    However, the deal was not sealed without heavy criticism because Trump agreed that the US would recognize Morocco’s sovereignty over Western Sahara.

    President Trump’s tenure ends on Wednesday, having lost his second term bid to Joe Biden

  • Kamala Harris finally receives congratulatory call from Trump’s presidency

    Kamala Harris finally receives congratulatory call from Trump’s presidency

    Mike Pence, the Vice President of the United States of America has finally called the Vice President-elect Kamala Harris offering assistance.

    This development marks the first contact at that level between the Donald Trump administration and the incoming administration.

    The Vice President has increasingly taken on the public roles involved in government transition.

    Trump, who had in the heat of the crisis pledged to work toward a smooth transfer of power, has yet to contact President-elect Joe Biden or even acknowledged that Biden won the election.

    Pence, on the other hand, was at the Capitol for Biden’s certification by the Congress last week when Trump supporters stormed the venue in an attempt to stop the process.

    The Vice President’s call to Harris was the latest step by the vice president to uphold some of the political norms that this outgoing administration has destroyed.

    “He called to congratulate and offer assistance,” Reuter quoted a source familiar with the situation.

    Harris, along with Biden, will be inaugurated on Jan. 20. And while Pence will be at the swearing-in, Trump will not.